Where I’m from, which, incidentally, is still where I am and always hope to be, working for Goldman Sachs was the pinnacle of achievement and success. I went to the best private schools, I was given every opportunity; tutors, music lessons, access to high culture in the form of theater and museums. My college education was paid for. I came into adult life without any obligations or debts. I was bred to be either a lawyer or a banker. And coming out of college just after the turn of the millennium, Goldman Sachs was where everyone wanted to be.
How Far The Mighty Have Fallen
I am going to say this loud and clearly. If I worked for Goldman Sachs today, I resign as soon as I possibly could. This is starting to make me sick to my stomach:
As far back as 2000 and 2001, Goldman helped Athens quietly borrow billions to mask its poor finances by creating derivatives that essentially transformed loans into currency trades that Greece did not have to disclose under European rules.
They make money helping a sovereign country hide its debt. And then…
Mr. Bernanke said the Securities and Exchange Commission was also concerned about how derivatives — financial instruments that are largely unregulated and do not trade on public exchanges — have contributed to Greece’s problems. “Obviously, using these instruments in a way that intentionally destabilizes a company or a country is counterproductive,” he said.
Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut and the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, also took aim at credit-default swaps, which allow banks and hedge funds to wager on whether a company or country might default.
Critics say the swaps have contributed to Greece’s problems and increased the odds of a financial collapse.
“We have a situation in which major financial institutions are amplifying a public crisis for private gain,” he said.
“Amplifying a public crisis for private gain.” What was done was technically legal. And I don’t care. It is still clearly wrong, and that is precisely what is so decrepit about our society right now. Just because you can do something, does not mean you should.
Although that is not how I was raised. I was raised to “get mine.” Not by my parents, or my teachers, or tutors or professors. Nah, they were all good people. Moral, honest, authentic. It was my culture. It was the culture around me that said it was OK, in fact, that it was advisable, to seek out my own private gain at all costs. No thought should be paid to the effects of my private gain. No thought given to what society gained or, more likely, lost by my singular attention on my own situation.
Next Steps For Goldman Sachs
Prosecution is probably the most appropriate action that could be taken, but since there is no justice in this world, or if there is, its probably being directed by former Goldman employees, I’m not holding my breath. So what are the next steps for Goldman?
Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman’s Chief, should immediately hold a very public press conference and apologize. But what would he be apologizing for?
- For profiting on both ends of a very fucked up trade whereby Goldman made money helping Greece hide its debt obligations so that it could gain entry into the Eurozone, and then, when Greece was weakened, deploying sophisticated derivatives to bet on Greece’s default. Blankfein should simply say, “We got this wrong, and although nothing illegal occurred, it still wasn’t right and we are immediately going to refund our profits from these activities and donate our time and advice to the Greek government, to help them find a way out of this.”
- Blankfein should then go on and apologize for the larger problem of which Goldman is a very big part. That problem is the short-term lunacy of Wall Street’s demands, of minimizing long term financial, environmental and cultural sustainability to the demands of quarterly earnings. He should apologize for putting Goldman’s profits above societies well-being.
- He should announce a commission made up of internal and external independent experts to examine Goldman’s actions, philosophies and culture over the past decade. That commission should be given the power to make sweeping changes to Goldman’s operating ethos. Futhermore, he should announce that 6 months from today, the results of that commission will be made public and that he will be present at another press conference to take questions from the press, for as long as they wish to ask them.
- Blankfein has an opportunity to show real leadership. As the head of the most prominent investment bank, and a private citizen, he can show, by example, that changing the culture of greed, of “getting mine,” is no longer functioning, and that furthermore, it is clearly and without a doubt hurting the whole of society. Our political class is not capable of this kind of leadership. Republican and Democrat alike. But private citizens can show true leadership, and in times like these, can have even more of an effect than even our elected officials.
- Blankfein should immediately announce pay caps. I don’t care how hard you work, or the risks involved in what you do; no one should make more than $10 million a year. He should put these caps in place for 10 years, and mandate there will be no workarounds, no hiding of actual payments. He should urge every other bank and financial institution to follow his lead. He should openly dare people to quit. “If you think that $10 million is too little, then we don’t want you here.” Let them leave. The people who do, and there will certainly be a handful, are NOT the people that Goldman wants. I don’t know who would want them, but remind me not to invest my money with them, mmkay?
Look, I had a short, barely noticeable career in finance. I wasn’t that good. I have many friends at Goldman Sachs and sprinkled all over the “Street.” I love and care for many of these people. It is true I am growing apart from them, a natural consequence of a new line of work, a new, less conventional lifestyle; in general I am becoming interested in things that no longer interest many of my friends. I try hard not to treat my friends in finance so badly. But I am finding it tougher and tougher to explain away why so many smart and talented people would sacrifice their lives for the illusions of security and financial well-being. I wish I could reach out their future selves and just tell them it’s not worth it.
The entire financial services industry has lost its moorings. It’s lost its fucking mind, and it needs drastic and immediate shock therapy knock it back into place. And there is a place for financial services in the 21st Century. But it is going to have to do some serious self-examination and self-correction. Because if it doesn’t, a whole lot of people are going to find themselves in jail. And whether its a jail with cells or a prison of the mind, an emptiness of the soul, doesn’t really make a difference. The fact is they’ll be imprisoned.
Image Source: Dan Deluca on Flickr






{ 18 comments… read them below or add one }
Amen bro! Thanks for this great article! I was not aware of this whole Greece issue, but it never ceases to amaze me, the extent that people will go through for personal gain. Bunch of whores is what they are!
whores!
thank you for this. the recommendations for blankfein are a little pie in the sky, but that’s part of the problem — the intellectual and moral disconnect between them and everyone else.
all in all, though, one of the most honest assessments i’ve read of current state of finance — especially the part about how you deal with friends in the industry, a problem i’ve faced myself. would love to hear you take that aspect apart more.
take care -
Alex
I think unfortunately it comes down to having less friends in that world, which is a shame because then we both lose something. But I am doing my darndest to keep those connections alive.
Z
Thanks for an amazingly fair-handed analysis of Goldman’s role in the current global financial system and for thoughtful suggestions about productive next steps. I’m forwarding this to my friends in finance.
Maudie Hampden Shah´s last blog ..Very, very interesting for anyone with health to care about – http://nyti.ms/cWCFPH
Maudie
Thanks again for the comment and for stopping by. I tried to be pretty even handed. But it is how i feel.
Hey Zach. Thanks for the article. I’ve also been thinking a bunch about Goldman during the last couple of years. (It’s hard not to during these times and given their role.) I’m with you that they’ve been making some very bad decisions lately. And, the lack of accountability is big problem. I also agree that compensation for the top executives is out of whack (probably true of other industries as well).
So, here’s my two cents: something needs to be done, but it’s going to require the people (Americans) to understand, and get outraged about, how Goldman is acting. If the public as a whole gets informed about this then they can put pressure on the companies and the govt.
I guess my point is that people are always going to try to “beat the system” and “the system” will never be perfect. So, we can continually play a game of cat and mouse, where companies like Goldman act immorally and the govt patches up the system to prevent it from happening in the future, but I think it’s going to be more effective if we can build some kinds of societal values that shun people who act this way.
Two other thoughts:
When informing people about this situation, I think it’s important to point out that companies like Goldman are huge institutions and many, many good people work there. That way, Goldman will understand (and the public’s attention will be focused on the fact that) no body wants to run them into the ground, we just need to change their culture because it’s hurting other people. Once their redirected, they can keep doing all the good work that they’re currently doing (including making lots of money).
The other thing that I think will help is to convince the people at Goldman that they can have their cake and eat it too, meaning that they can do business in the best interest of society and still make ridiculous sums of money. Look at how other billionaries have made their money. If they understand this then we should be in a better place.
Joe
Thanks for stopping by and for the comment. You are right that this has to be a bottom up people powered kind of movement where the message comes from the people. The thing about the rat race is, at the end of the day, its still run by rats.
Of course there are many great people who work at Goldman and similar institutions. That being said, I wouldn’t want to wake up every day walking into that place knowing there are other people in groups throughout the bank basically trading off misery and pain. That does happen. For me, that is part of what the bank does. It’s just contemporary investment banks and holding companies. It’s how they make their profits, outsized trading gains and pay ludicrous sized bonuses. If you are a good person who works there, it is silent acquiescence. At some point, you just have to make a choice. I know how bankers think and talk. They are extremely defensive about their industry, mostly because they know its all a joke. That is the heart of it, knowledge I gleaned across the street and through many institutions.
My friends in finance to this day feel the same way. I don’t want to ruin anything, let along institutions such as Goldman. I am not a tearing down kind of guy, more of a constructor.
But, I don’t see anything other than brute arrogance out of Goldman. Their press releases make me sick,if they even deign to make them, They truly do feel they are above the law, Gd’s and the states. They very well may be!
Z
Great article. And this is coming from someone from Greece. But, our government was also to blame for this mess. They used the swaps to smuggle away the debt, causing long-term damage both in financial and credibility terms. Short sightedness at its best!
But what r we talking about? After such a devastating greed-driven crisis nothing really changed in the ways of the financial world. The Blankfeins of this world are not the Darth Vaders that at the critical moment they’ll choose the light side of the force. They are greedy, dark and they’ll remain that way.
It’s a historic opportunity for change but I don’t see it coming (that soon)
Petros
Thanks for stopping by and for the kind words. You are absolutely right that Greece very much got itself into its own trouble. As do, for instance, many American homeowners. That being said, we’ve got to put a stop to the kind of predatory business practices that take advantage of human foibles and human nature, and begin building a culture that educates and enlightens and improves. Sounds lofty, but its not as hard as they say it is. Most of the time its just pure laziness.
Z
That’s a lot of vitriol and certainty for someone who doesn’t actually have half a clue what he is talking about! I would speculate that you were raised to think you were entitled to be in charge, but don’t have enough to offer the world (yet) to deserve or acquire legitimacy or power. So you throw digital feces. I guess an outlet is good, but I hope you don’t act on your fantasies–and I worry that believing them
will prevent you from developing your potential to contibute to society.
Goldman Sachs is not about you. Greece is not about you. The situation is not one that you understand even the basic facts of.
Thanks for the comment. I mean this is my outletto rant. I don’t think I ever stated that this situation was about me. That being said why don’t you enlighten me as opposed to just driving by and saying how wrong I am.
I am listening and willing to look at your perspective
Mr. Cohen:
Very good article. I am correct in that you did work for GS at some point, am I not?
I would like to republish this post in our blog, http://www.GoldmanSachs666.com. I usually just write about an article like this, then quote some snipets from it and give a direct link to the article.
The reason I ask permission is that I would like to post the article in its entirety and indicate that I have your permission to do so.
I would also like to invite you to be a guest writer on our blog writing more on GS. If you were an insider at one time then stories from someone like you would be very interesting to our readers. Please email me if you are interested at the email I have provided to this comment. We can then exchange phone numbers and discuss this further.
FYI, Wall Street Journal MarketWatch reporter David Weidner just listed us in his “10 Wall Street Blogs You Must Bookmark Now”.
Agian, good post.
Larry Rubinoff
Publisher, GoldmanSachs666.com
Adam
Great post. As you might recall – I re-tweeted it.
Funny thing. Over the weeekend I got an email confirming that I applied for a job at GS. That was obviously strange since I did not (nor do I have any intention) of applying for a gig at GS.
Just wondering – did you get anything like that? Is somebody trying to get us a job?
Digidave´s last blog ..Spot.Us: New Designs and Features and What Comes Next
weird dave. of course i remember your RT. Whenever an allstar of the Twitterverse retweets me i pay attention:)
I didn’t get any job offers this weekend, but i did receive some strangely out of place comments. I once did interview at Goldman and had a rollicking good time.
But if you me and Rachel Sterne want to start our own financial services firm I might be down for that. Jay Rosen can be our comptroller. I trust him.
Z
Pay caps and limits on derivatives trading are like fighting online music sharing. Greed knows no bounds. It regulates itself ultimately. Like a kid with a *spending problem, capitalism will eventually burn all its bridges, sovereign nations with perfect credit will no longer be able to borrow, and then the world will return to fundamental sanity. Greed regulates itself eventually. This recession is just a precursor, not the 2nd coming of Christ. I like the intention behind your thoughts but it’s impossible to fight the tide.
Kind regards,
CSxo
Cassel, thanks for the read and for the comment. I think you make a good point and as a free marketer the last thing I ever want to do is impose these things from a top down government way. I would prefer the corporations themselves do it as a self policing and preservation method.
Right now the market is so out of whack that I am not sure how much unregulated greed we can take…how about you?
Z
THIS IS CORRECT VERY GENEROUS AND CORRECT OF YOU TO POST THIS . HOW EVER THE MEDIA WILL NOT LIKELY REPORT THIS IN SUCH LAYMANS TERMS .
THANKS