Sterling Equities Inc., the investment firm led by New York Mets baseball team owner Fred Wilpon, said it has accounts at Bernard Madoff Investment Securities LLC, and is “shocked” by its founder’s alleged confession to fraud. “Among our various investments, we have accounts managed by Madoff Securities,” Sterling Equities said in a statement today. “We are shocked by recent events and, like all investors, will continue to monitor the situation.”Rico says the post title is Claude Rains in Casablanca, in case you didn't recognize it, but quite appropriate...
Bernard Madoff confessed to employees this week that his investment advisory business was “a giant Ponzi scheme” that cost clients $50 billion before two FBI agents showed up yesterday morning at his Manhattan apartment.
Sterling Equities, an investor in residential and commercial real estate, is ensnared in the alleged Madoff fraud at a time when New York City vacancies are rising and rents are falling as the city is forecast to lose about 165,000 jobs this year, including 35,000 in the financial industry. Wilpon and partner Saul Katz founded Sterling Equities in 1972, and bought a minority interest in the Mets in 1980 and became full owners in 2002, according to their Web site. The Mets, who finished in second place in the National League’s Eastern Division, on Dec. 10 agreed to pay $37 million over three years for relief pitcher Francisco Rodriguez, according to the New York Times. The 26-year-old right-hander made $10 million last season with the Los Angeles Angels.
Sterling Equities controls Sterling American Property Inc., a real estate investment firm that runs five property funds, and began raising money for a sixth fund, Sterling American Property VI, according to reports in the trade publication Real Estate Alert.
The fund plans to raise as much as $800 million to buy distressed real estate debt. Sterling will contribute $180 million of equity to the fund, according to the report. In the early 1990s, Sterling joined up with Bankers Trust Co. to buy more than $1.6 billion of mortgages and other assets from the Resolution Trust Corp. that administered the assets of failed savings and loan associations, Real Estate Alert said.
Investors, ranging from hedge funds that depend on outside managers to wealthy individuals, entrusted their money to the 70- year-old Madoff, who told employees before his arrest that his firm was “one big lie” and may have cost clients as much as $50 billion.
12 December 2008
I'm shocked to discover gambling here
Bloomberg.com has an article by Josh Fineman and Peter Green about the Madoff debacle:
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