Government Agencies SEC

  • Steve Jobs

    When it comes to Apple and Steve Jobs' health disclosures, indeed any perceived cover-up, it all comes down to what was known, and when. Easy questions to ask, but harder questions to answer.

  • Don't think these double-strength funds equal double the profits. As we've found out, that's just not the case.

  • The Mad Money host offers suggestions to the incoming SEC chair on how to deal with these market-damaging funds.

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    The embattled money manager claimed returns of as much as 12% a year. That's not what we found.

  • The regulator has no excuse for missing the alleged $50 billion fraud, Cramer says.

  • The investigations into Bernard L. Madoff are expanding into offshore tax havens, the New York Times reported.

  • Not only do they hurt the market, but they're virtually useless to their investors.

  • Bernard Madoff

    Eric Swanson received a startling call last Thursday from his wife, Shana D. Madoff, who said that something was terribly wrong. Officials from the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department had swooped down on the offices of Madoff Investment Securities, where Ms. Madoff was the compliance lawyer, seizing records and asking pointed questions as they began investigating one of the largest frauds in Wall Street history.

  • Christopher Cox

    As the Securities and Exchange Commission begins an internal examination into how it missed the red flags of one of the largest frauds in history, it will inevitably discover that Bernard L. Madoff was a Wall Street pioneer who over the last 20 years alternately impressed and infuriated the agency’s top policy makers, the New York Times reports.

  • Cramer's giving out an award for the market's top decision-maker.

  • Bernard Madoff

    Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox has asked the agency's inspector general to investigate the SEC's conduct with regard to the alleged Ponzi-scheme linked to money manager Bernard Madoff, CNBC has learned.

  • Cramer offers hard proof that bear raiders operated unchecked in their effort to profit from the American financial system's near collapse.

  • Bernard L. Madoff

    Many of those who say they were victimized by long-time investor Bernard Madoff's alleged "Ponzi" scam are up in arms that the Securities and Exchange Commission, Wall Street's top cop, didn't crack down on his activities sooner.

  • Bernard Madoff

    The list of investors who say they were duped in one of Wall Street's biggest Ponzi schemes includes some of the world's biggest banks and hedge funds, the super rich and the famous.

  • In the wake of the Madoff scandal, former SEC commissioner Laura Unger called for SEC reform.

  • Bernard L. Madoff

    Bernard Madoff said he only had about 25 clients but the list of potential victims of what prosecutors say was a $50 billion Ponzi scheme may actually be in the hundreds—or thousands.

  • Cramer says just such an opportunity is coming.

  • Big money is manipulating the market, forcing the little guy to cash out. Here's how you survive.

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    Documents in a divorce case show that Pequot Capital Management or its C.E.O., Arthur Samberg, is paying millions to a figure in a notorious S.E.C. probe. But why?

  • There's a net roots campaign to send the Mad Money host to Washington.