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Blankfein denied such a conflict in a feisty exchange. "We do hundreds of thousands, if not millions of transactions a day, as a market maker," he said, noting that behind every transaction there was a buyer and a seller, creating both winners and losers. Levin vigorously pressed about an e-mail between Goldman executives describing one product called Timberwolf as "one s----y deal." "Your top priority is to sell that s----y deal," Levin said. "Should Goldman Sachs be trying to sell a s----y deal?" "I didn't use that term with respect to this deal," the executive responded. Other senators repeated the language in their questioning. Blankfein said the company didn't bet against its clients -- and can't survive without their trust. He repeated the company's assertion that it lost $1.2 billion in the residential mortgage meltdown in 2007 and 2008 that touched off the financial crisis and a severe recession. He also argued that Goldman wasn't making an aggressive negative bet
-- or short -- on the mortgage market's slide. He and other executives described their use of complex trading tools as a way to reduce risks for the company and its clients. Earlier, Levin said that financial industry lobbyists "fill the halls of Congress, hoping to weaken or kill legislation" to increase regulation. He accused Wall Street firms of selling securities they wouldn't invest in themselves. That's "unbridled greed in the absence of the cop on the beat to control it," he said. The Goldman witnesses strongly denied that the firm intentionally cashed in on the housing crash by crafting a strategy to bet against home loan securities while misleading its own clients.
"I will defend myself in court against this false claim," said Fabrice Tourre, a French-born 31-year-old Goldman trader who was the only individual named in the SEC suit. "I deny
-- categorically -- the SEC's allegation." The SEC says Tourre marketed securities without telling buyers they had been chosen with help from a Goldman hedge fund client that was betting the investments would fail. The commission alleged that Tourre told investors the hedge fund, Paulson & Co., actually bought into the investments. Tourre said he didn't recall telling investors that. Tourre said: "I am saddened and humbled by what happened in the market in 2007 and 2008. ... But I believe my conduct was proper." Was Goldman harmed by the hearing? "Despite the interrogation, the Goldman team hasn't really provided any new information," market analyst Edward Yardeni said. "And the (senators) aren't creating a more damaging view than already existed." "Right now, it looks like the PR battle has been fought to a draw," Yardeni added.
[Associated
Press;
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