Chinese firm says won’t pay Goldman Sachs on options losses!

A small Chinese power generator possesses the impudence to challenge Goldman, who is doing ‘God’s work‘!

Message from China to Goldman Sachs:

kid-middle-finger


goldman-sachs-headquarters

BEIJING, Dec 29 (Reuters) – A small Chinese power generator on Tuesday rejected demands from a Goldman Sachs unit to pay for nearly $80 million lost on two oil hedging contracts, part of a long-running dispute over how China deals with derivatives losses.

Goldman Sachs (GS.N) was one of the foreign banks, along with Citigroup (C.N), Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley (MS.N), blamed by the state assets watchdog for providing “extremely complicated” and difficult to understand derivatives products. [ID:nPEK242617]

Shenzhen Nanshan Power (000037.SZ) (200037.SZ) said in a statement that it received several notices from J. Aron & Company, a trading subsidiary of Goldman Sachs (GS.N), for at least $79.96 million as compensation for terminating oil option contracts.

“We will not accept the demand by J. Aron for all the losses and related interests,” said Nanshan, in line with the stance it took last December.

“We will try our best to negotiate with J. Aron and resolve the dispute peacefully…but the possibility of using a lawsuit can not be ruled out when talks fail,” it added.

“J. Aron told us in one notice that if we do not pay the money, they will reserve the right to launch a lawsuit and will not send us any further notice.”

The State Assets Supervision and Administration Commission said in September that it would back state-owned companies in any legal action against the foreign banks that sold them oil derivatives, which resulted in losses when oil prices dived late last year. [ID:nPEK14474]

A Beijing-based Goldman Sachs corporate communication official declined to comment.

Nanshan said in October last year that two oil option-related contracts with J. Aron were signed by its officials without authorisation from the company. In December 2008 it said in a statement it had terminated the deals, and that it would not accept J. Aron’s demand for payment.

LONG-TIME TUSSLE

Many Chinese firms, especially airliners, suffered huge losses from complex oil options trading last year as oil price collapsed to nearly $30 a barrel.

A senior official from SASAC revealed last month that 68 Chinese firms suffered net losses of 11.4 billion yuan ($1.67 billion) by October 2008 on call and put options signed with foreign banks.

So far no legal action has been taken and many lawyers and industry analysts believe that Chinese firms and their foreign banks are quite likely to settle their disputes privately or through arbitration, similar to a handful of previous cases in the mid-1990s.

Only 31 firms are authorised in China to trade derivatives directly in the overseas market and the regulators started strictly prohibiting others from such trading since early 2009 after losses were exposed.

SASAC said last month that it had suggested companies without overseas derivatives trading licences trade on the domestic market or through domestic financial institutions.

For a related analysis [ID:nSP69447]

For a related factbox and scenario: [ID:nSP415840] [ID:nSP96058] (Reporting by Eadie Chen and Chen Aizhu; Editing by Michael Urquhart) ([email protected]; +8610 6627 1268; Reuters Messaging: [email protected]))

Tue Dec 29, 2009 5:56am EST

Source: Reuters

Let’s take a look at ‘God’s work’:

Goldman Sachs Banksters Arming Themselves With Pistols Against Public

Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein: I’m doing ‘God’s work’

Wall Street Banksters To Pay $30 Billion Record Bonuses In 2009

Absolute Perfection: Goldman Sachs Loses Money On Just One Trading Day In Q3

Goldman Sachs: Trading Perfection And Statistical Improbabilities

Goldman Sachs Takes On New Role: Taking Away People’s Homes

CIT Bankruptcy Filing Expected in Days; $2.3 Billion Taxpayer Money to Be Wiped Out; Goldman Sachs Receives $285 Million In Termination Fees

New York Fed’s Secret Choice to Pay for AIG Swaps Squandered Billions of Taxpayer Money:

…and remember who got the bailout money back then:
AIG Discloses Counterparties as Obama, Cuomo Assail Bonuses:

This time the bailout money from the U.S. taxpayer went to:
Goldman Sachs led beneficiaries, with $12.9 billion, followed by SocGen, France’s No. 3 bank, with $11.9 billion, and Deutsche Bank, Germany’s biggest lender, with $11.8 billion. Barclays Plc received $8.5 billion from AIG, Merrill Lynch & Co. got $6.8 billion, Bank of America Corp. got $5.2 billion and UBS AG got $5 billion.

US taxpayers pay Goldman Sachs for Swaps on Nonexistent Bonds

The Goldman Sachs Bankster Casino – Where The Hell Is The Outrage?

US: Utah approved a $27.3 million incentive package to keep Goldman Sachs, bringing the total amount to $47.3 million

On the Edge with Max Keiser (09/04/09): The Banksters have free reign in America

Goldman Sachs Loses Grip on Its Doomsday Machine

Goldman Sachs Code Theft BOMBSHELL?

Goldman Sachs Market Manipulation Dominance at Risk by Theft

New Secrecy Rule Lets Goldman Sachs Control Stock Prices Unmolested by Public Scrutiny

Goldman Sachs hires law firm to shut blogger’s site

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.