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To paraphrase Paul Krugman, it looks like the zombies have won. Insolvent banks continue to roam the earth, sucking up unfathomable sums of taxpayer capital, provided to hedge fund intermediaries

To paraphrase Paul Krugman, it looks like the zombies have won. Insolvent banks continue to roam the earth, sucking up unfathomable sums of taxpayer capital, provided to hedge fund intermediaries as nonrecourse loans. The scheme is designed to create inflated “auction” prices by incentivizing investors to over-bid on assets which carry almost no downside risk – for them, that is.

Geithner, Summers and company test-marketed the plan with friends and former colleagues on Wall Street thoroughly over the past month to find the formula that would send high finance into the fits of ecstasy we witnessed on Monday. Hedge fund directors were among Treasury’s most coveted focus groups.

On March 13, the Wall Street Journal reported on a typical consultation with hedge funds regarding the parameters of TALF, which was expanded substantially yesterday and now permits investors to use toxic debt as collateral:

Some of the biggest hedge funds in the business have participated in calls and meetings with other hedge-fund managers, lawyers and regulators about the program. They include Harbinger Capital Management, Highbridge Capital Management, Elliott Management Corp., Paulson & Co., Perry Capital, Citadel Investment Group, Cerberus Capital Management and D.E. Shaw Group.

As the Democratic Party that Rubin Built huddles with its Wall Street masters to plot the unloading of toxic assets at enormous expense and risk to taxpayers, LittleSis will explore conflicts of interest and cozy connections between prospective “investors”, Treasury regulators and Obama administration officials.

Today, we take a look at ties between the Obama team and D. E. Shaw, which, as reported by the Journal, helped to shape the new TALF, and presumably other features of the Geithner plan.

Here’s how it breaks down:

DE Shaw clearly wields a great deal of influence over the Obama economic team. These conflicts of interest should be front and center in media scrutiny of this hedge fund giveaway, which could send hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer money to firms like DE Shaw. Yet with the notable exception of Frank Rich, journalists, economists, and media pundits continue to ignore the relationships – financial, personal, and otherwise – that hedge funds like DE Shaw are leveraging to control the flow of taxpayer funds to Wall Street.

Meanwhile, the New York Times reported today that David Shaw made $275 million in 2008, more than the entire AIG bonus pool. This in a year when the fund was restricting withdrawals. How much of this money flowed straight out of government coffers?  It’s a valid question: hundreds of billions of bailout funds have passed through large Wall Street banks to counterparties like hedge funds over the past year.