Posts Tagged ‘dow jones & company’

Fleeing Wall Street for Main Street; Investors Find Confidence in Real Estate

Monday, July 9th, 2012

Roy Oppenheim’s commentary was originally published on Yahoo! Homes and is being redistributed on South Florida Law Blog with their permission.

Wall Street SignA long time ago I left Wall Street for Main Street. It is a decision that I have never regretted. Both of the law firms I worked for, before my wife and I founded our own law firm, banked on the success of Wall Street’s largest banks.

Even back in the late ’80s, when Wall Street still had a certain level of prestige, I felt increasingly uncomfortable hitching my future success on that wagon.

Wall Street may have been an exciting place for a young lawyer, but leaving it allowed me to have the life that I was looking for and have a clear conscience at the same time.

And those feelings, which drove me to set up permanent residence on Main Street U.S.A, are no longer mine alone.

And that’s a good thing for our economy and our housing market. Because it is Main Street that will lead our economy back to greatness.

Confidence in Wall Street is eroding at a rapid pace, and distrust in the big banks isn’t just the domain of Occupy protesters or liberal politicians anymore.

The truth is that it is impossible to read the business section of any major newspaper or website without finding another glaring example of hubris or incompetence.

Jamie Dimon wishes that JP Morgan’s recent trading loss was only $2 billion. The Libor bid-rigging scandal just claimed the chairman of Barclays, and now several U.S. banks are being investigated for similar manipulation of interest rates.
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Politics of Foreclosure? The Wall Street Journal Needs a Reminder

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

Over a year ago I felt compelled to call out The Wall Street Journal after a particular column really got under my skin.

It’s time to call them out once more. Not for another column, but rather, a lack of one.

In October 2010 their column “The Politics of Foreclosure” made light of the plight many of my clients have undergone, and shrunk the foreclosure crisis down to a mere inconvenience for a few Washington insiders.

You and I, of course, know different.

And as the crisis grew wider and wider, and the expansiveness of the banks fraud became even more apparent, The Wall Street Journal’s Editorial Board continued to be a haven for outdated ideas, protection of the status quo and disgust for anyone trying to do good by the American homeowner.

When the AG settlement was first announced back in February, the Wall Street Journal called it a ‘bank job’ worthy of the Barker gang.

I found it disturbingly amusing that a settlement that was basically little more than a public spanking for the banks angered them so. The settlement didn’t land a single banking executive in jail, yet the columnists at The Wall Street Journal still treat the banks as the victims in the housing crisis.

The crisis, you know that the banks basically created.

The Wall Street Journal editorial board still believes the banks didn’t illegally foreclose on a single homeowner, something I personally know not to be true.

Either their editorial board is remarkably stupid or just ignorant.

And so I shouldn’t be all that surprised that they have been silent after the Department of Housing and Urban Development released audits that laid out how pervasive the culture of fraud was amongst our nation’s lenders.
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