Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Wall Street Report: Inside The G20 Summit

Stocks to Watch:

GOOG, RIMM, INTC, CSCO, GE

The Dow [.INDJ] rosed +216.48 (+2.79%) to 7978.08; and the Nasdaq [.IXIC] continued its climb to the top at +51.03 (+3.29%) at 1602.63 to almost erase all of its losses for the year !


G-20 Agrees to Regulatory Crackdown, Bolsters IMF Resources

April 2 (Bloomberg) -- World leaders agreed on a regulatory blueprint for reining in the excesses that fed the worst financial crisis in six decades and pledged more than $1 trillion in emergency aid to cushion the economic fallout.

The Group of 20 policy makers, meeting in London, called for stricter limits on hedge funds, executive pay, credit- rating companies and risk-taking by banks. They also boosted the resources of the International Monetary Fund and offered cash to revive trade to help governments weather the economic and social turmoil. They sidestepped the question of whether to deliver more fiscal stimulus in their own economies.

The G-20 commitments amount to a transatlantic compromise and an effort to rewrite the rules of capitalism to address an integrated world economy that has outgrown the ability of individual governments to keep it in check. The leaders met as mounting unemployment demands a response even as stocks rose amid signs the global economy may be stabilizing.

“Global problems require global solutions,” U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown told reporters after hosting the talks. “Our prosperity is indivisible.”

Galvin Charges Madoff 'Feeder Firm' Fairfield Greenwich with Fraud

Massachusetts regulators today civilly charged Bernard Madoff “feeder firm” Fairfield Greenwich Group with fraud for assuring clients that it thoroughly monitored the now-disgraced financier’s work.


“Investment advisers have a fiduciary responsibility to their clients under law, (but) the allegations against Fairfield . . . outline a total disregard for such responsibility,” Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin said in filing a complaint on behalf of Massachusetts investors.


Galvin said Fairfield marketing materials claimed the firm closely tracked $7 billion of client money put into what turned out to be Madoff’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme.

Read more here .

The Fairfield Greenwich Group site: https://www.fggus.com/