Forget Galleon: What about Goldman’s Ex-Boss?
by Matt Taibbi
Recently
by Matt Taibbi: Wall
Street's Naked Swindle
The deal
contributed to the more than $14 billion that over 18 months was
handed to Goldman Sachs, whose former chairman, Stephen Friedman,
was chairman of the board of directors of the New York Fed when
the decision was made. Friedman, 71, resigned in May, days after
it was disclosed by the Wall Street Journal that he had
bought more than 50,000 shares of Goldman Sachs stock following
the takeover of AIG. He declined to comment for this article.
In his resignation
letter, Friedman said his continued role as chairman had been
mischaracterized as improper. Goldman Sachs spokesman Michael
DuVally declined to comment.
AIG paid
Societe General $16.5 billion, Deutsche Bank $8.5 billion and
Merrill Lynch $6.2 billion.
~ via New
York Feds Secret Choice to Pay for Swaps Hits Taxpayers
Bloomberg.com
Its kind
of amazing that with all the uproar over the Galleon business, nobody
is making much hay over the recent revelations about the AIG bailouts,
which make former Goldman chief and former New York Fed chairman
Stephen Friedman look every bit as guilty of insider machinations
as Raj Rajaratnam of the Galleon fund.
Its impossible
to grasp the totality of Friedman/Goldmans grossness with
regard to the AIG story without a little context. Remember the basic
timeline. In the middle of the mortgage bubble, Goldman Sachs found
a patsy-buffoon named Joe Cassano at a little corner of AIG called
AIG Financial Products, or AIGFP. Cassano was recklessly writing
hundreds of billions of dollars worth of credit default swaps for
banks like Goldman and Deutsche, essentially insuring certain investments
for these banks, including extremely risky mortgage-backed deals.
Goldman took
out billions of these CDS positions with Cassano, who had written
upwards of $440 billion of these CDS without having even a fraction
of the money he would have needed to cover that bet in the event
of a disaster of the type that actually ended up taking place, specifically
a downgrade of AIGs credit rating that forced Cassano to pony
up wads of cash to cover those positions.
The important
thing to remember about all of this is that just because Goldman
was buying insurance from Cassano, that doesnt
mean they were being responsible. On the contrary: Goldman was creating
well over ten billion dollars worth of exposure to a guy that they
must have known was an absolute idiot. Now, in a world where actual
capitalism existed, Goldman should then have been highly invested
in making sure that AIG did not go under. A dead and bankrupt AIG
should not have been good news to a company like Goldman Sachs,
which had billions of dollars riding on AIGs financial health.
But if anything
Goldman behaved throughout the runup to AIGs collapse like
it couldnt care less if the company died. In fact Goldman
accelerated AIGs demise by making margin calls against AIG,
for both the CDS deals and for deals it had done with Win Neuger,
who was running AIGs securities lending business. What really
sank AIG was the fact that the downgrade of its credit rating permitted
companies like Goldman to demand large sums of money from AIG in
the form of these margin calls, and AIG could not get its hands
on enough cash to meet its demands, resulting in the death spiral
situation we all witnessed last September. Of all the firms making
such demands against AIG, Goldman was the most aggressive (I have
more on this coming out in a forthcoming book) and my sources who
were involved in the AIG bailout bunker scene of a year ago almost
to a man report that Goldman and its chief Lloyd Blankfein took
an extremely hard line with AIG.
Why would it
act like that? Well, in a normal capitalistic situation, it wouldnt.
But Goldman, it turned out, had an ace in the hole. It seems that
when the state stepped in and decided to bail AIG out, its former
director, Stephen Friedman, was among those making the decision
that AIGs counterparties should be paid 100 cents on the dollar
for its CDS debts. It never made sense that AIG/AIGFP would decide
on its own to pay its creditors 100 cents on the dollar for its
debts, but now we know, thanks to reporting from Bloomberg,
that it wasnt AIGFP and its CFO Elias Habayeb who was making
that decision.
It was, instead,
a group of people from the New York Fed who gave that order, a group
that included Tim Geithner and Friedman. Goldman ended up getting
almost $14 billion from AIG after the bailout. And Friedman, we
later found out, bought 50,000 shares of Goldman stock after this
deal was struck. He resigned in May from the Fed, a few days after
the Wall
Street Journal broke the story about Friedmans stock
purchases.
Friedman surely
had information about key moves involving the bank like Goldman
getting paid off at par in the AIG bailout, or Goldman getting a
federal bank charter overnight so that a mountain of cheap Fed money
could save it from bankruptcy before the market got it. That
he bought 50,000 shares in Goldman after the AIG bailout and is
not in jail right now is sort of amazing, until you consider that
it will be a cold day in hell before a former head of Goldman Sachs
is arrested for insider trading, even when he gets caught doing
it red-handed.
All of this
matters for two reasons. One, its yet another example of how
Goldmans success isnt attributable to how smart
the bank and its employees are.
Instead of
working something out with a company it had stupidly become overexposed
to, Goldman instead hastened AIGs demise because it was, perhaps,
the one way it could cash in fully on its reckless deals
by forcing it into the arms of the government and getting the taxpayer
to pony up for Cassanos dumb calls.
Had AIG proceeded
to an ordinary bankruptcy, had the companys downfall happened
via normal market procedures, Goldman might have gotten 40, 50,
maybe 60 cents on the dollar. If that! Instead it got completely
paid off, among other things because its connections to the government
actually incentivized it to cripple a company to which it was exposed
to the tune of billions.
Second, the
non-punishment of Friedman just stands out like a hairy, golf-ball-sized
mole on the face of the American capital markets. No question about
it, its interesting that Galleon and Raj Rajaratnam are getting
perp-walked by the FBI (note that its the FBI, and not the
castrated and seemingly completely captive SEC, thats going
to be pushing these enforcement actions). Galleon isnt small
potatoes and from what I understand there are other hedge funds
with even higher profiles that may fall later on. These are surprising
and meaningful moves and it suggests that the enforcement community
is not yet completely corrupted.
But Goldmans
continued impunity leaves a mighty stink-cloud over American business,
no matter how many Raj Rajaratnams get dragged off to jail.
Thanks again
to Eric Salzman over at MonkeyBusiness, by the way and good
luck with your new thing.
This article
originally appeared on True/Slant
and is reprinted with permission.
November
5, 2009
Matt
Taibbi is the author of The
Great Derangement
and Spanking
the Donkey.
Copyright ©
2009 True/Slant
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