http://www.msnbc.com/news/993249.asp?0sl=-20&cp1=1
I guess we can thank God for Spitzer, because the SEC is not doing its job.
I guess we can thank God for Spitzer, because the SEC is not doing its job.
Originally posted by: rjain
Erm, if Putnam went out of business, how would you get your investments back? What would those people with only Putnam funds do with their retirement money that they managed to salvage? Of course, the administrators of those plans should be beaten with a pointy stick for even thinking that underperforming the indices is a good feature of a fund, but that's besides the point.
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
Originally posted by: rjain
If Putnam is forced to close shop, how will you redeem your fund shares?
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
This is America. Welcome.
When your company screws up, you suffer. It's the government's job to protect the consumer and investor, not employees of corrupt companies. The employees can blame the management and the "bad apples" for their troubles.
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
This is America. Welcome.
When your company screws up, you suffer. It's the government's job to protect the consumer and investor, not employees of corrupt companies. The employees can blame the management and the "bad apples" for their troubles.
So the guy sweeping the floor, secretaries, middle managers, etc should just have to eat it because few POS high up in the company do something illegal and the SEC fines and lawsuits them out of existence? That makes a lot of sense. As far as it not being the goverments job to protect employees, I'll notify the Dept of Labor, NLRB, etc.
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
This is America. Welcome.
When your company screws up, you suffer. It's the government's job to protect the consumer and investor, not employees of corrupt companies. The employees can blame the management and the "bad apples" for their troubles.
So the guy sweeping the floor, secretaries, middle managers, etc should just have to eat it because few POS high up in the company do something illegal and the SEC fines and lawsuits them out of existence? That makes a lot of sense. As far as it not being the goverments job to protect employees, I'll notify the Dept of Labor, NLRB, etc.
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
This is America. Welcome.
When your company screws up, you suffer. It's the government's job to protect the consumer and investor, not employees of corrupt companies. The employees can blame the management and the "bad apples" for their troubles.
So the guy sweeping the floor, secretaries, middle managers, etc should just have to eat it because few POS high up in the company do something illegal and the SEC fines and lawsuits them out of existence? That makes a lot of sense. As far as it not being the goverments job to protect employees, I'll notify the Dept of Labor, NLRB, etc.
Companies that break the law, cheat their customers, or even make business mistakes, go out of business, taking the jobs with them. That is something these cheaters and executives need to think about, not regulators. SEC's job is to protect investors, not financial sector employees. Consumers who drop Putnam will look somewhere else to put their money, and other hopefully honest companies will step in to provide that service, providing employment to honest Putnam employees. If SEC does not shut down Putnam, it'll hurt the whole mutual fund sector, because if SEC is lax, investors won't trust the system. So people in honest companies will be hurt, instead of flushing out the cheaters.
Originally posted by: WinstonSmith
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
Originally posted by: SuperTool
Originally posted by: Ultra Quiet
It is a very tricky thing when you start going after companies like this. The people who were responsible should certainly be prosecuted, the company should pay restitution at a minimum but when you go after the company you run the risk of punishing people ( by them losing their jobs because of fines,lawsuits, etc that are filed against the company) who had absolutely nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
This is America. Welcome.
When your company screws up, you suffer. It's the government's job to protect the consumer and investor, not employees of corrupt companies. The employees can blame the management and the "bad apples" for their troubles.
So the guy sweeping the floor, secretaries, middle managers, etc should just have to eat it because few POS high up in the company do something illegal and the SEC fines and lawsuits them out of existence? That makes a lot of sense. As far as it not being the goverments job to protect employees, I'll notify the Dept of Labor, NLRB, etc.
Companies that break the law, cheat their customers, or even make business mistakes, go out of business, taking the jobs with them. That is something these cheaters and executives need to think about, not regulators. SEC's job is to protect investors, not financial sector employees. Consumers who drop Putnam will look somewhere else to put their money, and other hopefully honest companies will step in to provide that service, providing employment to honest Putnam employees. If SEC does not shut down Putnam, it'll hurt the whole mutual fund sector, because if SEC is lax, investors won't trust the system. So people in honest companies will be hurt, instead of flushing out the cheaters.
I think you ought to distinguish between the "company" and management.
Do you think the execs really care what happens to their employees? They care about power and money. If you close Putnam, guess what? Some other company will quietly hire their management. So the bad guys keep raking in bucks, and the little guys get shafted, and the public is no better off for it, still having funds managed by these types.
Take their money, and keep them out of the business.
