PERSONAL FINANCE

Did Bernie Madoff Steal Your Money?

How the $50 billion scandal will affect average Americans.

 
PHOTOS
What About Us?

Wall Street's problems have captured the attention of Congress, the White House and the media. But ordinary folks are wondering if anyone is paying attention to them. A look at how Americans are coping with the economic crisis.


 
 
 
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

 

Anyone taking secret delight in watching fat cats lose their fortunes in the Bernie Madoff meltdown should put their schadenfreude on hold: you could get dragged in before the final tally is made. Pensioners, municipal workers, students on scholarship and middle-class Americans all are likely to be burned by the spectacular flare-out of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities. The scandal is estimated to have cost investors upward of $50 billion and may be one of the biggest Ponzi schemes on record.

"It keeps getting bigger and bigger," says New York attorney Matthew Gluck, whose law firm, Milberg LLP, is one of several representing investors who believe they were wronged by the money manager now accused of fraud. "We've been getting so many calls, we've sort of lost count." The records kept by Madoff's firm are "utterly unreliable" and will take months to sort out, Stephen Harbeck, president of the Securities Investor Protection Corp., said on Bloomberg television. SIPC, which insures brokerage accounts, is helping manage the liquidation of the firm's assets; it's now in bankruptcy court.

Direct investors in Madoff's firm number in the dozens, and you probably know who they are by now—they range from Hollywood players like Jeffrey Katzenberg and Steven Spielberg to international banks like HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland, as well as a slew of significant Jewish charities. But other investors may not even know that they have money invested indirectly with Madoff through private money managers, hedge funds and pension funds. Still others might become collateral damage: folks who depend on those investors for income.

"Madoff may indirectly hurt my company," writes Suffern, N.Y., Web developer Barry Schwartz on his Web page. Within hours of the scandal breaking, at least one of his clients, a Madoff account holder, had asked him to halt work on a project in progress and was uncertain if he'd be able to pay his bill. Another worried Wall Streeter, Matthew Lifshotz, was helping his parents trace the money in their teachers' pension fund to see whether any of it was involved indirectly. "My parents are retiring and counting on this money," he says. "They may be invested in this. There is no real way for them to know." Two specific pension funds—the town of Fairfield Employees Pension Fund in Connecticut and the Massachusetts State Pension Fund—have reported that they had money invested with Madoff.

Employees and beneficiaries of Jewish charities will be hard hit, too. The Jerusalem Post estimates that as much as $1.5 billion in assets held by Jewish philanthropic groups may have evaporated while under Madoff's management, not counting additional billions in the accounts of individual investors who supported those charities. Three nonprofit groups that supported a variety of civil-rights, criminal-justice and Jewish educational causes announced plans to shut down immediately after hearing about the extent of their losses. Some of the programs they funded will disappear with them. Several prominent Jewish federations, such as the ones in Los Angeles, Washington and New York, have had as much as 10 or 11 percent of their endowments invested with Madoff. "It was already a grim giving season, and the timing couldn't be worse," says Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. She expects the first, most immediate cutbacks to appear in social services, such as programs that offer driving and meals to the elderly.

Then there is the Palm Beach effect. Many of Madoff's individual investors owned luxury homes, boats and golf club memberships in the Florida community, and some realtors and boat brokers reported busy weekends fielding calls from Madoff victims looking to sell yachts and mansions to raise cash in a hurry. Area officials said they are bracing for a ripple effect of laid-off household workers, slow traffic in shops and empty restaurants, though it's not clear that all of that is attributable to the Madoff meltdown rather than the generally weak economy. Not all of the immediate victims are über-rich, either. One retired Boynton Beach, Fla., couple, Joan and Arnold Sinkin, say they lost their entire $1 million nest egg and are putting their townhouse on the market.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: TheGardener @ 01/05/2009 3:08:18 PM

    What on earth is all this fuzz about? Our entire value system is based on deceit and lies and you are going to use Madoff as a scapegoat while the dude around the corner and in the UN, has his church, mosque, synagogue, temple - and hell knows what other little boys and girls club they invent to sell an afterlife insurance they cannot pay out; on top of it all, these dudes are all tax exempt!.

    You people need to check the foundations on which you build a society. Madoff is the least of the wickedness out there. He didn't kill anyone. Good Grief people get your values straight.

  • Posted By: John-Brown-Fla @ 01/05/2009 12:28:32 PM

    The first paragraph of the SEC???s Introduction states, ???The mission of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is to protect investors ???..

    Will someone, please, tell me what they have done to protect the people that invested with the likes of Bayou Group LLC and Bernard L. Madoff???s stuff?

    The SEC regulators have access to, are supposed to avail themselves of and act on information that investors would be considered insiders and prosecuted for having such access and information and acting on it. These are very regulators that are supposed to be our insiders and protect our interests but do not seem to expose or regulate the crooks. The SEC has been absolutely negligent and likely implicated in the Madoff fraud. Apparently they have not bothered to monitor Madoff???s activities and have even resisted investigating the many complaints received. Now they want to further perpetuate the fraud by ducking out and have the Bankruptcy Court take over to clean up this mess.

    The Bankruptcy Court, looking for money to firstly fund the exorbitant lawyer???s fees, then huge accountant???s fees and then possibly court costs that will occur, will now punish the easily targeted honest investors that have acted in good faith and have been forced to comply with edicts imposed by the SEC regulators.

    In their zeal to bring monies into the Bankruptcy Court, I would hope the Court will look to the negligent SEC regulators as individuals and to the agency as a whole as being financially liable. I don???t really think the Court has the guts to do it but if they did it would be much more appropriate than trying to rob investors that had the good sense realize there might be something wrong and get out before the collapse.

    The biggest Ponzi scheme in the history of the world is what ???Social Security??? has become. When it finally goes broke, will the trustee in bankruptcy try to recover our Social Security benefits?

  • Posted By: drelkin @ 12/31/2008 1:53:25 PM

    People ask what happened to the money. Isn't it obvious? It was paid out as dividends to investors--that is the nature of a Ponzi scheme. In fact, I would bet that many investors took out most of their earnings, which I have heard were between 10-12% annually. Thus, these investors got their money back so long as they were in the fund for between 10 and 8-1/3 years.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

 

Up and Coming Newsweek Stories on Digg

Discover more Newsweek content on Digg
 
 
From Bernard Madoff to AIG, Wall Street has reinvented excess. But the Masters of the Universe didn't invent greed. A look at the despots, robber barons and others who made our shortlist.


 
 
PHOTOS
Wall Street's problems have captured the attention of Congress, the White House and the media. But on the country's Main Streets ordinary folks are wondering if anyone is paying attention to them. A look at how Americans are coping with the economic crisis.

 
 
From Bernard Madoff to AIG, Wall Street has reinvented excess. But the Masters of the Universe didn't invent greed. A look at the despots, robber barons and others who made our shortlist.


 
 
PHOTOS
Wall Street's problems have captured the attention of Congress, the White House and the media. But on the country's Main Streets ordinary folks are wondering if anyone is paying attention to them. A look at how Americans are coping with the economic crisis.