On his program, Jon Stewart played a Jim Cramer video from "Wall
Street Confidential" done for the internet in 2006, where Cramer
admitted to spreading rumors and manipulating markets as part of
the "game".
It was a breath of fresh air for thousands of investors across
the country who were begging for Mr. Cramer to be challenged.
"I understand that you want to make finance entertaining, but
it's not a fucking game," said Stewart to Cramer, who joined him
for an interview on "The Daily Show".
It is a stunning twist that the greatest piece of financial
oversight in at least a year would come from a comedian. But
Stewart was serious, suggesting that CNBC and Cramer were "snake
oil salesmen."
Indeed, Cramer, who now claims to be an activist against
unregulated short selling, admitted to being just the opposite in
2006, when he described ways he would personally short sell
companies and manipulate stocks. In fact, at that time, he
was on record defending the practice of naked short selling.
Nicholas Maier who worked for Cramer until 1998, wrote a book
called, Trading with the Enemy: Seduction and Betrayal on Jim
Cramer’s Wall Street (New York: HarperCollins, 2002). Here's
an excerpt:
Jim turns toward his head trader. "Mark, sell ten
thousand Bristol Myers."
"We never bought any Bristol Myers," Mark
replies.
"We own the calls," Jim corrects Mark impatiently,
aggravated by the delay.
"So sell it short?" Mark asks for clarification. Mark
knows that according to the SEC rule book, selling stock you
don’t already own (even if you do own the call options) must
be marked and executed as a short sale.
"You are confusing me with someone who gives a shit.
Just sell it! I said hit the fucking bid!" adds Jim, not interested
in wasting time over petty semantics. Skirting the "plus tick" rule
in this case won’t necessarily make us a lot of extra money,
but in Jim’s eyes, the rule is still an unenforceable
annoyance. "And don’t ever ask me that again!" (Trading With
the Enemy, pages 70-71).
Deep Capture journalist Mark Mitchell also wrote a book
describing Jim Cramer's background:
Cramer, who is a sociopath, owns TheStreet.com with
Marty Peretz, who is an aristocrat. Peretz is also the former
editor of the New Republic magazine. He dabbles in high finance and
Harvard professing, which has resulted in his entrusting a large
portion of his family fortune to a close-knit group of hedge fund
managers, several of whom were his students. For example, Cramer
was his student. Then Cramer was destitute. He lived in a car with
a loaded gun hidden under the seat. Eventually, though, Peretz gave
Cramer some money to start a hedge fund, which Cramer managed with
celebrated ruthlessness until he resolved to seek spiritual
enlightenment as a TV news host.
Cramer had originally planned to run his hedge fund
out of the offices of Ivan Boesky. Shortly before he was to move
in, however, the feds busted Boesky for insider trading, making him
one of the most famous criminals of the 1980s. (This is not
necessarily to suggest that Boesky is the "Sith Lord" mentioned in
Patrick’s "Miscreants Ball" presentation. Some people have
wagered that Patrick was referring to Michael Milken, a business
colleague of Boesky known as the "junk bond king," who also went to
prison in the 1980s. Patrick has since modified the analogy, saying
that the crime has multiple masterminds - "like Al
Qaeda").
When Boesky went to prison, Cramer worked instead
with hedge fund manager Michael Steinhardt. The media portrays
Steinhardt as a financial wizard, a deep thinker and an all-around
swell guy. The truth is, he’s a thug who perfected the
concept of trading on privileged information, and pounded it into
the heads of his employees. "What’s your edge!?" he’d
shout, pacing his trading room floor. "What’s your fucking
edge!?" After one of Steinhardt’s tirades, a top employee
(and the godfather to Steinhardt’s children) had a heart
attack. It is said that Steinhardt showed no
remorse.
Indeed, Steinhardt has one of the most fearsome
reputations on Wall Street. Which is perhaps unsurprising given
that Steinhardt’s father, Sol "Red" Steinhardt, was a mobster
once described by a Manhattan district attorney as the biggest
Mafia fence in America. Steinhardt Sr. worked for the Genovese
organized crime family, with goons like Meyer Lansky and Vinnie
"Blue Eyes" Alo, before he was sentenced to a number of years in
Sing-Sing prison.
By Steinhardt Jr.’s own account, the principal
partners in his first hedge fund were the Genovese Mafia, Ivan
Boesky, Marty Peretz (the aristocrat who funded Cramer), and a man
named Marc Rich. Rich is closely connected to Ronald Greenwald,
described in the authoritative book Red Mafiya as the man who,
along with the Genovese family, brought the Russian Mob to
America.
In 1983, Rich was indicted for trading illegally with
Iran while Islamic revolutionaries were holding the American
embassy hostage in Tehran. Along with his associate, "Pinky" Green,
he fled to Switzerland. In 2001, Steinhardt, a big-time operator in
Democratic circles, convinced Bill Clinton to give Rich a
scandalous presidential pardon, but Rich remains in Switzerland to
avoid paying his tax bill.
In the early 1990s, Steinhardt shut down his hedge
fund after he was implicated in a scheme to corner the U.S.
treasuries market - a horrendous infraction with serious
implications for the U.S. economy.
So this is a rough crowd. Says one Wall Street
trader: "It was the day the bad guys came to town — when
Steinhardt and his people arrived."
One of Steinhardt’s people is Jim Cramer.
Another is Cramer’s wife, who was known as the "Trading
Goddess" when she worked as Steinhardt’s head trader. Maria
Bartiromo, a CNBC anchor known as the "Money Honey," is married to
the top partner in Steinhardt’s newest hedge fund. (A former
employee of Cramer’s hedge fund has written that Cramer often
fed tips to the Money Honey, trading ahead of her stories, and it
is rumored that she recruited him to CNBC.)
And then there is David Rocker, the short-selling
hedge fund manager believed to be scheming, along with Cramer and
Herb, with Gradient Analytics, the financial research shop under
SEC investigation in 2006.
Cramer says he’s met Rocker only once -
apparently while squeezing the grapefruit at some grocery store.
But the truth is, Cramer knows Rocker well. Rocker is a former
employee of Steinhardt’s hedge fund. He worked there at the
same time as the Trading Goddess.
And, until recently, Rocker was the largest outside
shareholder in Cramer’s website, TheStreet.com. Cramer
sometimes quotes the hedge fund manager on his television show, and
once interviewed him live. Rocker is also a regular writer for
TheStreet.com, where he bashes stocks that Cramer subsequently also
bashes in multiple stories on both the website and
CNBC.
In February 2006, the SEC is investigating Gradient
Analytics for disseminating false information about public
companies. The agency has affidavits from former employees who say
that Gradient’s "independent research" is produced by recent
University of Arizona graduates who know little to nothing about
finance and essentially take dictation from hedge fund managers,
including David Rocker.
One of these employees says that Herb conspired with
Rocker to hold his negative stories (premised on Gradient’s
false information) until Rocker could establish short positions.
This is called front-running - a jailable offense. It is reasonable
to suspect that Rocker had similar relationships with TheStreet.com
(of which he has owned a substantial portion) and other
media.
Not long before Cramer announced his SEC subpoenas,
Rocker sold all of his shares in TheStreet.com. Cramer sold around
$2 million of his own shares. If Cramer knew about the SEC
investigation before he sold his shares, which was almost certainly
the case, he was trading on insider information - another jailable
offense.
But Cramer don’t know nothin’ about
nothin’. And Herb thinks the SEC investigation is an outrage.
So Herb and Cramer have commandeered CNBC. They are live on CNBC.
Herb has jabbered something about a conspiracy - a conspiracy to
get Herb.
And now Cramer is going to show us
something.
He’s pulled out a big, red magic marker. Veins
are popping, rope-like, from his bald cranium. And he’s
snarling. Cramer is actually snarling while he uses the big red
magic marker to scribble something on a piece of
paper.
He holds the paper up to the camera.
It’s...it’s his government
subpoena...Cramer has vandalized his government subpoena! On live
TV... in big red letters...
It says, "BULL!"
In any case, Jon Stewart has done what no writer was able to do
and expose Jim Cramer on television, that almighty untouchable
venue.
But should we just be relying on a comedian to finally expose
powerful people who perhaps should be in jail?