- Joined
- 2/7/08
- Messages
- 3,261
- Points
- 123
A riveting article about Goldman Sachs by Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
... they are completely "insided" in a lot of things.
This does make GS look like the law firm in The Devil's Advocate. As far as I tell from the article, the author didn't suggest anything illegal, just unfair advantages. And the fact that this has been going for a long time suggests it will not change anytime soon.
The truth is that all is speculation, feelings rather then evidence. "Inside information" is nothing new and certainly U.S. is not the worst market in this respect. Goldman Sachs is a powerful bank, but Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Bank of America are stronger or at same level. And yet, only GS is the bad bank because they emerged better from the crisis. This is simply not true.
Credit Suisse, Deutsche did just as well, Morgan Stanley is not very far.
GS has done better than Citi or BofA due to its business model. For instance, GS focus on private banking. Still parts of Citi/BofA conglomerates produced significant profits.
Why are they supposedly too big too fail? Why not let them go under and start something afresh? The hundreds of billions -- surely this money could go to common people and would be more effective in reviving the moribund economy, would it not? But the large financial institutions have the political clout.
My understanding is that many of these big banks didn't want to receive these so-called cursed money in the first place. First, they didn't want to be perceived by the market as vulnerable and secondly, they don't want to be limited under the TARP rules. Just see how fast they try to return this money. The fed literally had to force the big banks into this TARP thing, according to the recent reports.The hundreds of billions -- surely this money could go to common people and would be more effective in reviving the moribund economy, would it not? But the large financial institutions have the political clout.
Of course, like you mentioned, one alternative is to break everything altogether and start anew. But this process can be very costly: no financial intermediaries to make markets, move capital from endowments to projects, advise financial decisions etc. Letting Goldman fail will definitely deepen the current recession, which is not a politically advisable thing to do. Whether or not it's intrinsically correct to let everything fail is beyond me, but I think the government learned several things during the Great Depression -- the interventionist policies we see today is a residue of that experience.
Not sure how all the common people will make all the rescue money work without the existence of strong, stable financial institutions.
My understanding is that many of these big banks didn't want to receive these so-called cursed money in the first place. First, they didn't want to be perceived by the market as vulnerable and secondly, they don't want to be limited under the TARP rules. Just see how fast they try to return this money. The fed literally had to force the big banks into this TARP thing, according to the recent reports.
The United States is a corrupt nation. There is a revolving door between high finance and top government jobs.
Analysts predict the bank earned more than $2 billion in the March-June period, thanks to its trading prowess across world markets. If they are right, the bank's rivals will once again be left to wonder exactly how Goldman, long the envy of Wall Street, could have rebounded so dramatically only months after the nation's financial industry was shaken to its foundations.
The obsessive speculation has already begun, along with banter about how Goldman's rapid return to minting money will be perceived by lawmakers and taxpayers who aided Goldman with a multibillion-dollar cushion last fall.
bigbadwolf said:There seems to be a disconnect between financial firms like this and what is happening on Main Street, USA. And the US government seems to be extremely partial to the former but indifferent to the latter (of course since the government is partly constituted of executives from financial firms, the reason is clear).
Your quote reminds me of a nice quip from the late George Carlin:
"Think about how stupid the average person is. And then realize that half of them are dumber than that."
The disconnect in prosperity, I believe, stems from a disconnect in culture. Some people want things more than others.
The disconnect in prosperity, I believe, stems from a disconnect in culture. Some people want things more than others.