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Printable version |
From: | "Nick Kearney" <nickk@quicksilver.net.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 1 Jul 2002 20:35:19 +1200 |
Team
This makes interesting reading. I wouldn't
doubt it but have never heard of it.
Anyone know of this? Interesting
stuff.
Nk
Crisis Team Hit Or Myth
By Robin Bromby For Australian Financial Review
Friday June 28 2002
At 2:32pm Wednesday, something extraordinary happened
at the corner of Wall and Broad streets. New York Stock Exchange’s Dow Jones
Industrial Average, struggling since the opening bell after the WorldCom fraud
revelations, threw off its problems and from an intraday low of 8927 shot
skywards to 9160 by 3:29pm, leaving a chart movement resembling the north face
of the Eiger.
Quite some reversal in the face of such bad news for
investors. Could it be the work of the much talked about but never seen
Plunge-Protection Team? There is a belief fast gaining ground that this team
represents a powerful and secretive hand that is ready to act at any time the
Dow looks ready to tank big- time. It is reputed to consist of Fed chairman Alan
Greenspan, the US Treasury Secretary, and select insider Wall Street brokerages,
including Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch along with bankers like Citigroup.
When needed, so the theory goes, funds are pumped into stocks and futures to
derail any market panic. Such a group’s existence first came to light in
Washington Post five years ago. The paper reported that, after the October 1987
crash, President Ronald Reagan signed an executive order authorising a working
group on financial markets aimed at coming up with strategies dealing with stock
market crises. No one heard much more about it. Until January 1997 when Dr
Greenspan made a speech saying the government would directly intervene in the
market “in rare circumstances.” That lead to the Post’s investigation and the
belief that such interventions have occurred has never died. In January popular
online brokerage TheStreet.com wrote: “That may investors believe a so-called
‘plunge-protection’ team exits may be as important as whether it’s fact or myth.
Such beliefs may explain why many investors rode the markets down in the past 22
months and why most continue to have faith in the stock market and in
Greenspan.” New York Post reported October 2000 that when the Dow dropped 400
points the previous day, Goldman Sachs, Merrills and others saved the market
through heavy futures purchases. “You and I will probably never know whether the
Fed was behind the futures purchases and Alan Greenspan will never admit he is
interfering in a supposedly free market,” the paper added. Meanwhile the London
Observer reported it had information the Plunge Team was preparing to spend
“billions of dollars” to avert a repeat of 1929 and 1987, adding that
Washington’s strategy was to use the investment houses' brokers and
investment advisers to discourage short selling by the
public.
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