By way of Liquid Funding Ltd, Jeffrey Epstein did have that crucial link to Bear Stearns, and a very serious one. Seldom — as in never — noted in the press, Epstein was a key architect of the riskiest and most dangerous products ever devised to promote the Wall Street ponzi. The acronyms HELX CBOS CLOS were Bear Stearns products, should stand out from the page shown like beacons to every reader, financial constructs heavily leveraged by Jeffrey Epstein from 2001 until 2007.
HEL is of course a home equity line of credit, while CBO represents collateralized bond obligations and CLO represents collateralized loan obligations. The year was 2007, and the bubble was just beginning to burst; Epstein created, modified and employed the riskiest products on Wall Street, which eventually caused the entire US financial system to crash.
Now, the reason Jeffrey Epstein is key to the financial crash of 2008-2009 is because he had the backing of the largest investors on Wall Street to enable him to do his derivative dirty work and the real key connection to Bear Stearns. He invested for multi-billionaire Leon Black. >
He invested for multi-billionaire Les Wexner, and arguably Epstein leveraged these dangerous products on behalf of the most influential investors on Wall Street – and for Bear Stearns. And he did it offshore with no accountability.
So this is the solution to the mystery of Jeffrey Epstein not that he is a blackmailer or Israeli spy or middleman for the New World Order – even if he is all of those things – no, he is the criminal who worked on behalf of America’s most powerful billionaires and Bear Stearns, to bring down the US financial system, to then deliver even greater wealth to those billionaires today, in the aftermath of that collapse.
According to a database created by The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists containing files leaked from the law firm Appleby, Jeffrey Epstein, who is under indictment as a sex trafficker and assaulter of underage girls, was the Chairman of Liquid Funding Ltd. from November 9, 2001 to at least March 19, 2007. The offshore business had been incorporated in Bermuda on October 19, 2000 and according to the Fitch ratings firm, it had $6.7 billion in outstanding liabilities in 2006.
In a regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission in February 2003, Bear Stearns, the Wall Street investment bank that Epstein had resigned from under murky circumstances in 1981, confirmed that it was a 40 percent owner of Liquid Funding Ltd., writing as follows:
“At November 30, 2002, the Company had an approximate 40% equity interest in Liquid Funding, Ltd. (‘LFL’), a AAA-rated special purpose vehicle established to participate in the repurchase agreement and total return swap markets. A subsidiary of the Company acts as investment manager…”
The subsidiary that acted as investment manager for Liquid Funding Ltd. was Bear Stearns Bank Plc in Dublin, Ireland, which functioned outside of U.S. regulatory authority and was a wholly owned subsidiary of Bear Stearns Ireland Limited, which was wholly owned by the U.S.-regulated Bear Stearns Companies Inc.. The U.S.-based Bear Stearns was one of the myriad Wall Street banks that imploded during the financial crisis of 2008 and received both publicly-announced and secret bailouts from the Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, via its Wall Street compromised regional bank, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Just who it was that owned the remaining 60 percent of Liquid Funding Ltd. is unknown at this time, but if the off-balance sheet structure follows the typical pattern, a number of those listed in the leaked documents as serving as a director or officer, including Epstein, are likely to have invested funds.
According to an October 24, 2006 announcement from the ratings agency, Fitch, Liquid Funding Ltd. was a Structured Investment Vehicle (SIV) — the same structure that played a major role in blowing up another major Wall Street bank, Citigroup, during the financial tsunami that cratered Wall Street in 2008. (See Law Firm that Silenced Harvey Weinstein Accusers also Involved in SIVs that Tanked Citigroup.)
According to Fitch, Liquid Funding Ltd. could issue liabilities up to $20 billion, made up of commercial paper, guaranteed investment contracts, medium term notes, and repurchase agreements. Both Fitch and Moody’s gave the medium-term notes to be issued by Liquid Funding a AAA-rating as well as gave it a AAA-rating as a counterparty. And, notably, both ratings agencies gave its commercial paper a Tier 1 rating, meaning that it could now end up in money market funds purchased by average Americans seeking a low-risk, liquid investment. (Until 2008, it was rare for money market funds to “break a buck,” meaning give back less than the original principal invested.)
While the ratings agencies acknowledged that they understood the entity could issue up to $20 billion in various instruments, Fitch reported in 2006 that “Liquid Funding is capitalized with $37 million in drawn equity commitments and $63 million in undrawn equity commitments….” We have found nothing, thus far, to explain how $100 million in equity could support $20 billion in liabilities (other than possibly the fact that Deutsche Bank is still alive). It can’t be that Bear Stearns was guaranteeing the liabilities because Bear stated in a regulatory filing that “The Company’s maximum exposure to loss as a result of its investment in this entity is approximately $5.0 million.”
As a result of those Tier 1 ratings on Liquid Funding’s commercial paper, it ended up in some very big name money market funds. Two of JPMorgan’s money market funds held a total of $100 million; two Dreyfus money markets held at least $139 million; and a Frank Russell money market fund held $125 million. Those amounts are very likely the tip of the iceberg that ended up in money market funds.
The amount of toxic debris that had parked itself in supposedly safe money market funds in 2008 led to unprecedented action by the U.S. Treasury, which had to step in with a guarantee plan after a run commenced when it was learned that the bankrupt Lehman Brothers had sold its instruments to money market funds.
And that was just the beginning of bailing out the unprecedented greed and corruption that turned the Wall Street gambling casino into a ward of the U.S. taxpayer. If you were a hedge fund for billionaires or a foreign bank and the insolvent U.S. insurance company, AIG, owed you money because you failed to do your due-diligence in the selection of a derivatives counterparty, you got secretly bailed out at 100 cents on the dollar.
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kestrel9 ago
Liquid Funding Ltd. https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/80063035 and other connections https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/82004676
One of those connections (a shareholder) is https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/80094344 Liquid Funding Holdings LLC and the address (in Babylon, New York) is in c/o Global Securitization Services, LLC
https://www.gssnyc.com/
Frank Bilotta https://www.zoominfo.com/p/Frank-Bilotta/475888654
https://www.gssnyc.com/team/fbilotta/
Frank Bilotta Vice President Frank Bilotta joined Global Securitization Services, LLC in September 2000 and served as the firm's President from August 2005 to April 2012. Mr. Bilotta currently focuses on servicing clients' independent directorship and orphan subsidiary needs. Mr. Bilotta's legal, accounting, audit, and tax experience help ensure clients' needs are fulfilled by an experienced securitization professional. His extensive securitization background covers the technical and practical aspects that prospective clients should demand from their special purpose vehicle service provider. Fortune 1000 companies have selected Mr. Bilotta to serve as Independent Director for their SPV subsidiaries established to finance automobile loans and leases, commercial real estate, energy infrastructure and many other classes of financial assets. Prior to joining GSS , Mr. Bilotta spent 3 years at Lord Securities Corporation as Senior Vice President, where he was responsible for transaction execution and oversaw conduit administration for Lord's multinational bank and corporate clients. He was also independent director on a variety of structured finance vehicles. Previous to this, Mr. Bilotta spent 2 years at Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated as Manager of Securitized Debt, and 4 years at Lehman Brothers Inc. as a Vice President.
This is ongoing dig obviously. I had traced one line of connections to what we would consider the top 1% of the top 1% but I haven't put that all together yet. @letsdothis3 you are correct, it's all interconnected and mind boggling at the same time.
@think @Vindicator @new4now
kestrel9 ago
Hugh Goodwin Gillespie, shown as director of Liquid Funding Ltd. https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/82004676
His ties: https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/80069756 includes being director of The Young's Foundation https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/80069756
Another director of The Young's Foundation is Douglas Molyneux https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/80069756, he is also shown as director of Capitol Holdings Limited beginning in 1996.
Capitol Holding Limited mentioned here:
The Capital Holdings Funds http://www.capitalholdings.com/
So..Capitol Holding Funds is supported by Edmond de Rothschild Capitol Holdings Limited.