CNN:Attack on Goldman Sachs misfires (對早上NY時報那篇的反擊)

來源: 用戶名被占用了 2012-03-14 19:28:33 [] [博客] [舊帖] [給我悄悄話] 本文已被閱讀: 次 (7633 bytes)

Attack on Goldman Sachs misfires




By Matt Levine, Special to CNN




Goldman Sachs headquarters in New York City.


Goldman Sachs headquarters in New York City.




 

(CNN) -- The financial world is in an uproar about the New York Times opinion piece by Greg Smith, a former vice president in Goldman Sachs' equity derivatives business.



As a former vice president in Goldman Sachs' equity derivatives business who also made it into The Times when I quit, I can't help but feel a bit upstaged.


Part of my resentment comes from the fact that Smith is being touted as a high-level defector from the notoriously secretive ranks of Goldman Sachs. But calling Smith a senior Goldman executive, as many media outlets do, misunderstands the nature of titles at investment banks. Smith was an "executive director and head of the firm's United States equity derivatives business in Europe, the Middle East and Africa," which certainly sounds fancy. But, as the firm took pains to point out in response to the article, there are 12,000 employees with the title of "vice president" (in the U.S.) or its international equivalent, "executive director."


As for being head of that particular business, well, pretty much everyone at any investment bank is the head of some business or another. Clients prefer to deal with the head of a business, so senior bankers are practiced in introducing even their most junior colleagues as the head of something or other. My own semi-official titles -- among others, "vice president and head of the equity derivatives business for the North American energy industry" -- were as impressive as Smith's, but what I rarely mentioned was that that business consisted of me and one junior analyst. Smith's business lacked even the analyst!


More important, though, it is a mistake to read Smith's piece as a scandalous revelation of the decline of Wall Street culture.


Goldman exec quits, calling firm 'toxic'


Yes, there was once a time when big investment banks made most of their money by advising clients on mergers and capital raising, rather than by trading with clients. And yes, those times are long gone. But they were long gone when Smith started. And he was in the derivatives sales business, which has always and necessarily been a business in which Goldman is on one side of a trade and its clients -- or, in the more neutral term popular in such businesses, "customers" -- are on the other. Each dollar that Goldman makes comes directly out of its client's pockets.


Of course, Smith's clients, who included some of the largest hedge funds and asset managers in the world, knew this. They did not come to Smith for impartial advice about their personal and professional problems. Rather they came to him to execute trades at attractive prices and for trade ideas, ideas that they hoped would make them money but that they certainly expected would make Goldman money.


Thus, worries that clients will flee Goldman are overblown. Goldman's clients know that the firm is trying to make money off of them -- and they know that every other bank is trying to do the exact same thing. They are not looking for charity. They are looking for good ideas and good execution, and the bank that provides those benefits will continue to get business.


One question on everyone's mind is: Why now? March is a customary time to quit, since Smith's 2011 bonus check will have cleared, but why did it take him 12 years to figure out that Goldman's culture was rotten? After all, Matt Taibbi and the SEC have been saying similar things for years.


One possible answer is that Smith is part of a broader exodus. The past year has seen many departures by Goldman Sachs partners, including Smith's boss' boss' boss' bosses, David Heller and Ed Eisler. Those career traders are unlikely to have left because they felt sad for clients.


Instead, the widespread speculation is that they left because the money isn't good enough. Average pay at Goldman was down 15% in 2011, albeit to a still-healthy $367,000 per employee. Stricter regulations on proprietary trading and higher capital requirements will probably reduce profitability -- and pay -- for years to come.


Investment banking and trading are difficult businesses; bankers work long hours, travel frequently and are under intense pressure. Smith is hardly the first banker to worry about whether his work makes the world a better place. Working at an investment bank involves trading off those negatives -- stress, hours and a nagging sense of unfulfilled purpose -- against the positive aspects of the job, which can be loosely summarized as "huge paychecks." When that balance changes, a good trader re-evaluates his position.


Expect to see more departures from Goldman and its peer firms in the coming months. But don't take too seriously the idea that they're leaving because they're sick of making money off of clients. More likely, they're leaving because they're sick of not making as much money off of clients as they used to.


所有跟帖: 

用戶對花街很熱衷啊。。。有木有啊有木有 -Maguire- 給 Maguire 發送悄悄話 (0 bytes) () 03/14/2012 postreply 19:41:30

當然羨慕啦 -用戶名被占用了- 給 用戶名被占用了 發送悄悄話 用戶名被占用了 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 03/15/2012 postreply 07:25:03

瓦,高盛有一萬兩千個VP亞 -徒勞- 給 徒勞 發送悄悄話 (0 bytes) () 03/14/2012 postreply 19:45:54

VP就是小組長,文章裏不說了嘛。。。做幾年都是了 -Maguire- 給 Maguire 發送悄悄話 (0 bytes) () 03/14/2012 postreply 19:51:43

銀行恨不的人人都是微屁 -布哈林- 給 布哈林 發送悄悄話 (0 bytes) () 03/14/2012 postreply 19:51:52

在投行工作的,除了janitors,就是VP。典型的title inflation。 -lh- 給 lh 發送悄悄話 (0 bytes) () 03/15/2012 postreply 08:42:56

請您先登陸,再發跟帖!

發現Adblock插件

如要繼續瀏覽
請支持本站 請務必在本站關閉/移除任何Adblock

關閉Adblock後 請點擊

請參考如何關閉Adblock/Adblock plus

安裝Adblock plus用戶請點擊瀏覽器圖標
選擇“Disable on www.wenxuecity.com”

安裝Adblock用戶請點擊圖標
選擇“don't run on pages on this domain”