World Business

Goldman case exposes open secret on Wall Street

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-04-19 15:27
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Goldman case exposes open secret on Wall Street

Journalists make reports at the headquarters of Goldman Sachs in Manhattan borough in New York April 16, 2010. [Xinhua]

BEIJING - The US Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Goldman Sachs with civil fraud for misleading investors about a financial product tied to subprime mortgages, according to news reports on Monday.

Wall Street Journal said in a report that the SEC's case against Goldman last Friday has told an open secret on Wall Street.

The SEC's case is not the only suit to raise its horizons. A fortnight ago, General Electric (GE) told a reporter that the SEC had required information about reassurances that its CEO Jeffrey Immelt made two years ago about GE's ability to refinance its debt.

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In his recent memoir On the Brink, the former US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Immelt told him at the time that GE was having problems selling short-term debt.

GE said later that it was cooperating with the SEC and that its disclosures were accurate.

The SEC's case against Goldman is its biggest assault on a Wall Street firm in a matter stemming from the financial crisis, according to the New York Times.

Scholars in Georgetown University believe the Goldman suit has exposed the open secret that SEC is a strict patrol for the financial market. "The agency is more certain of its role as a tough watchdog for the markets," said a law professor Donald Langevoort.