http://www.wamufraud.com / An older site, dedicated to disgruntled customers of their loan division, presented in the interest of fairness and a complete picture. Many links.
100 I need shares. 200 I need shares badly, but do not take the stock down. 300 Take the price down so I can load shares 400 Keep trading it sideways (auf der Basis von Angebot und Nachfrage) 500 Gap the stock. This Gap can be either up or down, depending on the direction of the 500 signal.
----------- Geduld ist eine Tugend, die man an der Börse manchmal verlieren kann ! @as61
I think there is lot of "evidence" (mails, memos, etc) in the recent court filing on KCCLL http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/... which have not been discussed yet, e.g. from exhibit 6 on page 518:
•Had spoken to FDIC about bank receivership •FDIC met with "West" - they had to open books •We indicated to anaylze, but did not expect it to work for us •We indicated we [...] would not participate in auction •Approach is to work directly with FDIC
tapas90
: Öffnungszeiten Börse bis Neujahr den 06.01.2010
Heiligabend, 24. Dezember
Geöffnet: USA (Halbtags) und Kanada Geschlossen: Deutschland, Schweden, Norwegen, Dänemark und Finnland
Erster Weihnachtsfeiertag, 25. Dezember
Alle Börsen haben geschlossen.
Mittwoch, 30. Dezember
Die deutschen Börsen haben am letzten Handelstag des Jahres verkürzte Öffnungszeiten und sind bis 14.00 Uhr geöffnet.
Silvester, 31. Dezember
Geöffnet: USA und Kanada Geschlossen: Deutschland, Schweden, Norwegen, Dänemark und Finnland
Neujahrstag, 1. Januar
Alle Börsen haben geschlossen.
Dienstag, 6. Januar
Geöffnet: Deutschland, Norwegen, Dänemark, USA und Kanada Geschlossen: Schweden und Finnland
Zwischen 28. und 30.12.2009 sind alle Börsen, außer der kanadischen Börse am 28.12.2009, wie gewohnt geöfnet. Außerdem ist die deutsche Börse am 30.12.2009 nur bis 14.00 Uhr geöffnet.
----------- Geduld ist eine Tugend, die man an der Börse manchmal verlieren kann ! @as61
tapas90
: Paar Gedanken von enis21 im Forum eingestellt.
Thoughts on Settlement and EC 22-Dec-09 09:08 am
I spent this weekend listening to the court hearings and looking at the court motions. Thinking about this case on my ride home from work yesterday, it all came to me. Here is my theory (In my humble opinion) which seems to make a lot of sense (I believe) and hopefully is correct.
1. Weil has negotiated a global settlement which DOES include a recovery for commons and the settlement is imminent. It will likely be a very good settlement for commons (High single digits) but not a great one (Double digits). It is a settlement which will make Weil look good and the Judge will be happy to approve.
2. The trustee is rushing with the EC not because the commons will otherwise be wiped out in a settlement but in order to CYA (Cover his ass). The Trustee has knowledge the settlement is coming and is worried that since it is not a great settlement, he may have legal exposure for not having created an equity committee prior to settlement and his office could be sued later for failure to perform his fiduciary duties as the argument will be the equity committee could have gotten more money in settlement.
3. The battle in court between the Trustee and Rosen could be over whether the EC is necessary in order to settle the case. Weil would be opposed to it since if a settlement is in place, an EC of the largest shareholders could easily screw it up. It is one thing for retail to fight settlement of an extra $1 or 2 but the biggest holders with millions of shares could really throw a wrench in any deal. Weil's position is at this moment we need billions to get to commons so no EC however if we settle and Judge approves as fair, we are done. I feel Rosen's statement in court was almost to convince the Trustee that there is 7 Billion until we reach equity so if we suddenly settle there is no liability on your part for not approving an EC, so don't bring it.
4. I also believe the above scenario on the EC is more realistic than the Trustee is rushing the EC to save the commons from being shutout of settlement. The case has come too far at this point for the Judge to approve anything that wipes out the commons. She has shown from this case and decisions on others we have seen to be very fair minded. After the allegations in the adversary complaints, the 2004 motion and the recently filed 3rd party 2004 motion, there is no way she will allow the commons to be wiped out unless she is satisfied there is no action against FDIC and JPM. Forgetting about the MOR and NOL for a minute, the allegation against FDIC and JPM could be worth billions. 1 week ago WMI filed the 3rd party 2004 request with numerous documents which support wrongdoing. The Judge would never accept a settlement without commons unless it was argued that debtors have no case against against FDIC and JPM and since they just filed the motion, Weil can't turn around and say our discovery showed no case and therefore we need to settle with just the money on hand. Won't happen.
Bottom line is I believe the EC is to protect the Trustee and not to save the commons from extinction. All IMHO