I'm Doing 'God's Work'. Meet Mr. Goldman Sachs
by John Arlidge
Number 85 Broad Street, a dull, rust-coloured office block in
lower Manhattan, doesnt look like a place to stop and stare,
and thats just the way the people who work there like it.
The men and women who arrive in the watery dawn sunshine, dressed
in Wall Street black, clutching black briefcases and BlackBerrys,
are very, very private. They walk quickly from their black Lincoln
town cars to the lobby, past, well, nothing, really. Theres
no name plate on the building, no sign on the front desk and the
armed policeman stationed outside isnt saying who works there.
Theres a good reason for the secrecy. Number 85 Broad Street,
New York, NY 10004, is where the money is. All of it.
Its the site of the best cash-making machine that global
capitalism has ever produced, and, some say, a political force more
powerful than governments. The people who work behind the brass-trim
glass doors make more money than some countries do. They are the
rainmakers rainmakers, the biggest swinging dicks in the financial
jungle. Their assets total $1 trillion, their annual revenues run
into the tens of billions, and their profits are in the billions,
which they distribute liberally among themselves. Average pay this
recessionary year for the 30,000 staff is expected to be a record
$700,000. Top earners will get tens of millions, several hundred
thousand times more than a cleaner at the firm. When they have finished
getting "filthy rich by 40", as the company saying goes,
these alpha dogs dont put their feet up. They parachute into
some of the most senior political posts in the US and beyond, prompting
accusations that they "rule the world". Number 85 Broad
Street is the home of Goldman Sachs.
The worlds most successful investment bank likes to hide
behind the tidal wave of money that it generates and sends crashing
over Manhattan, the City of London and most of the worlds
other financial capitals. But now the dark knights of banking are
being forced, blinking, into the cold light of day. The public,
politicians and the press blame bankers reckless trading for
the credit crunch and, as the most successful bank still standing,
Goldman is their prime target. Here, politicians and commentators
compete to denounce Goldman in ever more robust terms "robber
barons", "economic vandals", "vulture capitalists".
Vince Cable, the Lib Dem Treasury spokesman, contrasts the banks
recent record results profits of $3.2 billion in the last
quarter alone and its planned bumper bonus payments with
what has happened to ordinary peoples jobs and incomes in
2009.
Its even worse in the US. There, Rolling Stone magazine
ran a story that described Goldman as "a great vampire squid
wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood
funnel into anything that smells like money". In his latest
documentary, Capitalism: A Love Story, Michael Moore drives
up to 85 Broad Street in an armoured Brinks money van, leaps out
carrying a sack with a giant dollar sign on it, looks up at the
building and yells: "Were here to get the money back
for the American people!"
Goldmans reputation is suddenly as toxic as the credit default
swaps and other inexplicably exotic financial instruments it used
to buy with glee. Thats bad for the one thing it values more
than anything else: business. Being the prime target for popular
and political outrage could put Goldman first in line for draconian
new regulation. So it has, reluctantly, decided that the time has
come to speak out, to fight its corner. Thats how, on one
of those bright autumnal New York mornings when anything seems possible
even an invitation to break bread with the masters of the
universe I find myself walking past the security guard who
held up Michael Moore and into the building with no name.
"Aha! You catch us plotting in real time," says Lloyd
Blankfein, breaking away from a cabal of senior executives discussing
his trip to Washington the previous day. Blankfein, 55, Goldmans
chairman and chief executive, is wearing a grey suit with a jaunty
Hermès tie with little red bicycles on it. In his hand, hes
carrying one of those cups of coffee that look bigger than the human
stomach. Maybe its the caffeine, maybe its the tie
a birthday present from his daughter but hes in a remarkably
jolly mood for a man everyone seems to hate. "Its like
a safari here," he jokes. "Youve come in to look
at the animals."
Blankfein may be Wall Streets Sun God, but, with the economic
outlook stormy, he doesnt want to advertise it, so the merest
hint of a status symbol or horror! ostentation is
airbrushed out of his life, publicly, at least. Take his office
on the 30th floor. The chairs are the same ones that were there
when he became CEO three years ago. There are none of the $87,000
handmade rugs or $5,000 wastepaper baskets of Wall Street lore.
Theres no sign of irrational exuberance. Only coffee, which
arrives cold. It sets just the right tone for the job in hand. The
grand wizard of Wall Street is steeling himself for the hardest
sell of his life: hes here to argue for good ol capitalism,
for investment banks and for Goldman Sachs.
Luckily for him and his firm, hes a damn good salesman. He
starts with a little humility. He understands that "people
are pissed off, mad, and bent out of shape" at bankers
actions. Goldman played its part in the meltdown that almost destroyed
the global financial system. It, like most other banks, lent too
much money, made its first quarterly loss for more than a decade
last year and ended up taking bail-out cash from Washington. "I
know I could slit my wrists and people would cheer," he says.
But then, he slowly begins to argue the case for modern banking.
"Were very important," he says, abandoning self-flagellation.
"We help companies to grow by helping them to raise capital.
Companies that grow create wealth. This, in turn, allows people
to have jobs that create more growth and more wealth. Its
a virtuous cycle." To drive home his point, he makes a remarkably
bold claim. "We have a social purpose."
Social purpose? Those who have lost their jobs or seen their pay
slashed thanks to bankers who flogged dodgy mortgages and dreamt
up investments so complex not even they understood them, would gladly
tell him where to stick his social purpose. But the problem is,
Blankfein is a good advertisement for wealth creation. His own.
He is no scion of privilege, dispensing plummy-voiced homilies to
raw capitalism from his 30th-floor eyrie. Born in a tough neighbourhood
in the Bronx, the son of a postal worker and a receptionist, he
was the first in his family to go to college and used financial
aid to go to Harvard.
Even though he proudly pays himself more in a year than most of
us could ever dream of $68m in 2007 alone, a record for any
Wall Street CEO, to add to the more than $500m of Goldman stock
he owns he insists hes still "a blue-collar guy".
But what about the charge sheet? Bankers brought the world to the
brink of bankruptcy and instead of doing the decent thing and jumping
out of the nearest window, they turned up cap in hand to governments
to hoover up taxpayers money to save their skin. Now, just
one year on, they are carrying on as if nothing has happened, gambling,
and winning, handsomely, with our cash. Goldmans profits in
the second quarter were a record $3.4 billion. Most of the money
is being made in trading in bonds, currencies and commodities.
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the rest of the article
November
12, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 The Times
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