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The Joy of Sachs
The American economy remains in dire straits, with one worker in six unemployed or underemployed. Yet Goldman Sachs just reported record quarterly profits — and it’s preparing to hand out huge bonuses, comparable to what it was paying before the crisis. What does this contrast tell us?
First, it tells us that Goldman is very good at what it does. Unfortunately, what it does is bad for America.
Second, it shows that Wall Street’s bad habits — above all, the system of compensation that helped cause the financial crisis — have not gone away.
Third, it shows that by rescuing the financial system without reforming it, Washington has done nothing to protect us from a new crisis, and, in fact, has made another crisis more likely.
Let’s start by talking about how Goldman makes money.
Over the past generation — ever since the banking deregulation of the Reagan years — the U.S. economy has been “financialized.” The business of moving money around, of slicing, dicing and repackaging financial claims, has soared in importance compared with the actual production of useful stuff. The sector officially labeled “securities, commodity contracts and investments” has grown especially fast, from only 0.3 percent of G.D.P. in the late 1970s to 1.7 percent of G.D.P. in 2007.
Such growth would be fine if financialization really delivered on its promises — if financial firms made money by directing capital to its most productive uses, by developing innovative ways to spread and reduce risk. But can anyone, at this point, make those claims with a straight face? Financial firms, we now know, directed vast quantities of capital into the construction of unsellable houses and empty shopping malls. They increased risk rather than reducing it, and concentrated risk rather than spreading it. In effect, the industry was selling dangerous patent medicine to gullible consumers.
Goldman’s role in the financialization of America was similar to that of other players, except for one thing: Goldman didn’t believe its own hype. Other banks invested heavily in the same toxic waste they were selling to the public at large. Goldman, famously, made a lot of money selling securities backed by subprime mortgages — then made a lot more money by selling mortgage-backed securities short, just before their value crashed. All of this was perfectly legal, but the net effect was that Goldman made profits by playing the rest of us for suckers.
And Wall Streeters have every incentive to keep playing that kind of game.
The huge bonuses Goldman will soon hand out show that financial-industry highfliers are still operating under a system of heads they win, tails other people lose. If you’re a banker, and you generate big short-term profits, you get lavishly rewarded — and you don’t have to give the money back if and when those profits turn out to have been a mirage. You have every reason, then, to steer investors into taking risks they don’t understand.
And the events of the past year have skewed those incentives even more, by putting taxpayers as well as investors on the hook if things go wrong.
I won’t try to parse the competing claims about how much direct benefit Goldman received from recent financial bailouts, especially the government’s assumption of A.I.G.’s liabilities. What’s clear is that Wall Street in general, Goldman very much included, benefited hugely from the government’s provision of a financial backstop — an assurance that it will rescue major financial players whenever things go wrong.
You can argue that such rescues are necessary if we’re to avoid a replay of the Great Depression. In fact, I agree. But the result is that the financial system’s liabilities are now backed by an implicit government guarantee.
Now the last time there was a comparable expansion of the financial safety net, the creation of federal deposit insurance in the 1930s, it was accompanied by much tighter regulation, to ensure that banks didn’t abuse their privileges. This time, new regulations are still in the drawing-board stage — and the finance lobby is already fighting against even the most basic protections for consumers.
If these lobbying efforts succeed, we’ll have set the stage for an even bigger financial disaster a few years down the road. The next crisis could look something like the savings-and-loan mess of the 1980s, in which deregulated banks gambled with, or in some cases stole, taxpayers’ money — except that it would involve the financial industry as a whole.
The bottom line is that Goldman’s blowout quarter is good news for Goldman and the people who work there. It’s good news for financial superstars in general, whose paychecks are rapidly climbing back to precrisis levels. But it’s bad news for almost everyone else.
- Posted in


44 Comments so far
Show AllHere's another brilliant piece (must-read) from Matt Taibbi explaining how Goldman Sucks has the system gamed.
The real price of Goldman's giganto-profit:
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/22847
I agree, it's a must-read. It's SO MUCH MORE than the TARP money that GS got - it's unbelievable!
For a guy that knew little to nothing about financial markets Matt did a fantastic investigative reporting job.
He gave the article to Goldman and asked for a response (correction) and when they had nothing factual to dispute but criticized the messenger he knew he had got it right.
The last act of a failed government is to loot the treasury.
Tony Vodvarka
the only solution to the present crisis is redistribution of wealth, redistribution TO the wealthy caused it in the first place
we must have a redistribution FROM the wealthy to regular people
this redistribution caused by the bank bailouts is a further redistribution, TO the wealthy and will exacerbate the problem
the solution is simple...getting the rich to share is the hard part
Wall Street firms have made so much money off of Americans in the last year, they should fully fund healthcare reform. Lord knows they are rolling in more than enough of our dough.
I think firms like Goldman Sachs have been around greed so long they understand its psychological underpinnings, specifically that it isn't normal in the rest of us but can be 'stoked' by the right combination of seed capital and hype. Once stoked, they then sit back and time the predictable wild-fire, profiting from both its flame up and die down.
Their job is made a lot easier by all the institutional investors out there offering individuals tax breaks for pooling their investment capital under the investing power of a few 'smart guys': pension funds, etc. Goldman's specialty is to seduce these guys, fleece them, and split. They are now working on the US Government. Taibbi's Rolling Stone piece is recommended reading on this.
Taibbi's Rolling Stone piece is not recommended, it is mandatory.
Sioux Rose
EKATON: Just got around to reading that article. It confirms what I knew, albeit in fine detail. Makes one realize that the dictionary requires a whole new definition for the word DISGUSTING, rolled into amoral, diabolical, unjust, and scathing for its willful deceit against so many. The arrogant practice of evil furthered in the light of day. Evil to the 2nd power?
Sioux Rose
UBREW: I hope you won't mind my expanding upon your post to offer an astrological observation that I've seen more often than I'd like to admit.
My Class A example was a particular female who actually came from old Getty oil money, grew up in a posh part of Naples, etc. When I complete a reading I let clients ask questions and her question was whether or not she would be able to sell her car, which she knew had a CRACKED engine block. It was more important for her to dump this dangerous product than take a loss and save herself the karmic debt. (I did my best to explain).
Years later she was enjoying living off some of the family money in her penthouse with a view of the Atlantic and on a whim she'd purchased a small beauty salon. Bored with the actual work required to make it profitable, she put it up for sale. She invited me and her old circle of acquaintences to celebrate the sale, and as it turned out we had probably the worst service I've ever had in a restaurant, plus the food brought to us was cold. Later when I learned the facts of this sale I understood how the unenjoyable meal reflected the entire tenor of her greed. She purposely used her driving a Mercedes and living in a penthouse to present the false appearance that this little beauty salon had won her these appendages of success. A hard-working waitress had dumped her entire life savings into this enterprise, presuming it to be profitable.
She later did something equally unethical involving me, and that was it. I have my own "3 strikes rule." I happen to know another woman from old money who has lived on a trust fund much of her adult life. Both of these women seem like absolute carbon copies of one another and they reside on opposing coastlines, almost living the same script. Although I realize MANY do not fit this mold, they are both born under the Zodiac sign of Cancer, also that of Bush, Jr. and Cancer represents one's family designation. It seems to refelct America's own version of royalty via family lineage. Since our nation holds a July 4 birth date, this inclination to profit from another's loss seems to reflect the darkest apsect of this Zodiac sign. In healthy Cancer persons there is a strong quest for security, but in the unbalanced it becomes an insatiable appetite enacted through unmitigated greed.
I realize there are MANY Cancer persons who have overcome these trends, but when I see those who reflect it, I wonder if they don't tell us something vital about the sickness of our nation.
Krugman is always half admirable, half contemptible for doing the dirty job of trying to present some truth and still be published in the NY Times.
Damn it's hard not to wanna see the heads of Goldman execs on pikes!
If you like Kucinich check out his friend Stephen Zarlenga over at "monetary.org." He's making the case for Fed nationalization and his book "The lost science of money" is available as a torrent. Michael Hudson's got something brewing too.
There needs to be a website that acts as a portal for all the progressive economists so newbies can get educated quickly.
Po,
Monetary.org is a great website. Here are a several more worth reading:
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/dollar-deception.php
http://www.professorfekete.com/articles.asp
Here's an interesting article to ponder: http://www.gata.org/node/4843 (follow the links)
It's predictable where the next bubble will be: Goldman Sucks is one of the big supporters of cap and trade legislation.
If only we could switch this to a straight energy tax to mostly replace income tax on all but high incomes. We taxpayers would keep our money, instead of giving it to Goldman-Sachs and their ilk.
From the NYT today re: bankster bailouts/sudden profits:
"Without those one-offs (asset sales,) the banks, despite two taxpayer-financed bailout dollars apiece, would have lost billions."
So what does PK mean by: "You can argue that such rescues are necessary if we’re to avoid a replay of the Great Depression. In fact, I agree."
But the banks HAVE NOT BEEN RESCUED. They would have 'lost billions' if they didn't sell off a couple of chunks.
PCRoberts, yesterday: "The worst of the economic crisis has not yet hit. I don’t mean the rest of the real estate crisis that is waiting in the wings. Home prices will fall further when the foreclosed properties currently held off the market are dumped. Store and office closings are adversely impacting the ability of owners of shopping malls and office buildings to make their mortgage payments. Commercial real estate loans were also securitized and turned into derivatives.
The real crisis awaits us. It is the crisis of high unemployment, of stagnant and declining real wages confronted with rising prices from the printing of money to pay the government’s bills and from the dollar’s loss of exchange value. Suddenly, Wal-Mart prices will look like Nieman Marcus prices." counterpunch.org
There's not enough demand for most prices to go up much, other than Goldman-Sachs schemes to raise oil and commodity prices for periods of time.
I don't get Krugman: first he's says it was necessary to bailout Sachs because otherwise we'd be in another Great Depression, then he says bailing them out is great for them but not for us.
Which is it now??
If it really is the latter, he should be thanking Obama.
Clinton was quite good at playing the Sachs as well...
The Lewinsky affair was a "wag the dog" distraction...
To confuse the public about who WJC was really blowing...
Not just the optional war in Kosovo, but the financial class war as well...
The Clinton & Owebama appointees and cabinet picks read like a rogues gallery of corporate criminals and intelligence operatives & bankster elites, many of the same folks who worked for gollum sachs and the NYFed & Kissinger & assoc, and the CIA front banks that have been laundering the black eagle trust gold...
Same folks who worked for the Reagan & bush admins, who orchestrated the destabilization of the ruble & selling off russia's assets for pennies to their bankster buddies...
Same ones who orchestrated the okcity bombing & 9-11 to cover their tracks and destroy the evidence of ongoing investigations into the mena Arkansas/CIA drug connection, the securities certificates in the basement vaults of the world trade center, and the office of naval intelligence in the pentagon...
Same ones who created the subprime loan scam, worthless derivatives, and intentionally crashed the economy...
Read epheidner : collateral damage I & II
Sioux
G.M. The arc of your intellect sure is adept at connecting a lot of dots. Bravo.
I would also offer another solution: taking your money out of the mega-banks and depositing it in credit unions. I have belonged to one for more than twenty years. The corrupt, greedy mega-banks are not too big to collapse. My attitude is: take them down the mega-banks by withdrawing your money and placing it in a credit union or a local bank that you know is ethical and not corrupt.
"Your money" in the bank is not what they're cheating. It's the big stuff: debt, in the form of (sub-prime, for example) loans. Credit unions generally aren't big enough to wheel and deal in the massive financial "products" that drive capitalism and big business, and which got us into this mess...
Krugman supports Obama while I support Barr. Obama fought to bailout Goldman Sachs while Barr opposed it. Hey, don't blame Goldman Sachs. Blame Obama for bailing it out.
Excuse me. The bailout began while your buddy GW Bush was still in office with his Goldman Sachs Treasury Secrectary, Henry Paulson. Yes, Obama is complicit and has continued Bush's policies, but the blame belongs to both Bush who started it, and Obama who could have stopped it but didn't. Fucking troll...
When, if ever, will Paul Krugman be willing to call a spade a spade. He drops terms like "abuse", "heads they win, tails other people lose", "playing the rest of us for suckers" but then "all of this was perfectly legal" through his article. He describes Goldman Sachs selling piles of mortgage backed securities even as it was also selling them short. Other economists who look at this, have a name for it all: criminal fraud. One is William Black of the University of Missouri-KC who was centrally involved in picking up the pieces of the 1980s savings and loan disaster, when some of the scammers and thieves did indeed go to jail.
Granted Desmoulins' point above that Krugman is walking a fine line to point something out and still get published in the increasingly contemptible print organ of the ruling elites' Ministry of Truth: The New York Times. Tagging the Wall Street bankster/gangsters as criminals who have pulled off the largest criminal heist in human history, would almost certainly doom him to going down the corporate media memory hole never to be heard from again. Maybe Krugman figures the best he can do in this environment is to use mild words and descriptions as "hint-hint" and hope readers will put two and two together to reach their own conclusion. Lately the gangster/banksters have been taking out full page NY Times ads to tell any remaining suckers of their deep, truly deep, concern for the economy and homeowners. So even more in this time of sharply reduced ad revenues, the NY Times isn't going to allow writers to bite the corporate criminal hands that feed it as they get a cut of the public trillions that have been handed to the banksters. So money talks and the truth walks----into obscurity.
Sioux Rose
COURT JESTER: Excellent post.
The same Modus operandi was used when under Clinton the F.C.C was deregulated. There were a few voices asking that given the enormous profits to be gotten directly from this "information frontier" which ultimately existed as the PUBLIC'S airwaves, that a percentage of its use be given back to citizens in the form of genuine public television where debates between political candidates (where the vast majority of their campaign money ends up going) would be aired. Instead, the deal was made with NOTHING given back to citizens/taxpayers. Free enterprise is free for exactly whom?
So here we go again. After the Great Depression, after the lessons that should have been learned from the S & L scam (and learned they were, only to be updated and improved upon by the likes of Arthur Anderson and the Enron gang, to name a significant few) the money is granted BEFORE any compromises, like sane regulations (such as Glass-Steagall) are put back into place to guarantee against a recurrence. As Krugman GENTLY points out, it's all but inevitable that worse will recur given the FACT that malfeasance was so richly rewarded, and nary a security guard yet placed to stand watch against a further encroachment upon what's left of the vaults housing the dramatically reduced public treasure (our life savings, etc).
Crime never paid better! It just is better dressed!
Gold In Sacks represents the death of the United States. It is not merely the disease of fevered, rampant greed. Gold In Sacks and their ilk delight in the very act of defrauding others, especially those who think they are as smart as Gold In Sacks. The swindle, the idea that you royally fucked over some sucker, is as important as the money itself. These people own this nation and they will destroy it.
Its to the point now that Sachs alone is costing every man, woman, and child alive in the US (and elsewhere for that matter) who does not work for Sachs lost income. Companies like this need to be dismantled or at least extremely regulated if people want to stop being impoverished by them.
"Regulation" with extreme prejudice.
Guaranteed to make you smile - Max Keiser verbally crucifies Goldman on their criminal behavior!
Note: Listen carefully to what the other economist is saying.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSwWy4E6I04
By gaming the system Sachs has put itself in the position of benefiting from the destruction of the financial system. They are certainly not Bullish on America.
Two images come to mind. The ship is sinking and the criminal who ended up with all the gold, can't bring himself to abandon the gold and save himself. That may just be wishful thinking on my part.
The other is the game of Monopoly. When one person gets all the money, the rules say that he's the winner. However if it is still snowing outside in the blizzard season, then the players start over, by taking the money from the "winner" and redividing the resources. I've always felt that starting over was the equivalent of a revolution. We seem to moving towards the "starting over" condition.
yeah they've got
sachs of gold...man!
Sachs cannot benefit indefinitely. If policies that benefit them accelerate the collapse of the dollar, they will suffer the same consequences as the rest of us. It is enormously foolish to pump up the banks on the one hand, and ignore deeper underlying problems that will inevitably lead to a catastrophic collapse. Perhaps lawmakers feel so constricted by the status quo, that they are terrified to change what really needs to be changed.
If so, the whole structure will HAVE to implode, before the choke hold of special interest groups is broken, meaning the collapse of many entrenched institutions: big insurance, too-big-to-fail-banks, the military industrial complex (at least a major contraction here), etc. It is my feeling that all of this is coming. It only a question of when.
Sioux Rose
CHESS: About that nebulous "when" thing, I'll go on record here. Watch these dates:
First perturbation is September 15-25. (This one could be weather-related, but it can really throw ordinary affairs into a topsy turvy mode.)
Second one kicks in around Halloween and holds through November-December, 2009. And what happens here will fully impact the next 9 months.
Third one is in late May-June 2010. And this one carries a portent of violence coming from a unique sector, or arising from a highly unexpected and possibly unconventional source. (It also has characteristics that would favor martial law.)
One astrological factor active in autumn 2008 will be highlighted again in September 2009, March 2010-June 2010. Next autumn (2010) the U.S. budget will feel the constraints. I would not rule out interference from OTHER nations, an outside force doing what it can to rope in Wall St.
Interesting, Rose. Do the think there is anything to the Mayan Calendar that supposedly predicts some major change or event occurring in 2012?
Sioux Rose
CHESS: Funny you should ask. I regard my nightly bike rides into a lush forest as the time when "The guides" tweak my intuition. In other words, it's when my thought process opens to what needs to be shown to me. And last night I got a little dictation on PI and the PROPERTIES of the circle, that we see geometry these days as a bunch of dead angles on 2-D pieces of paper. However the ancient mathematicians had a far deeper understanding of mathematics; and I believe this would have been true of the Mayans.
Before Michael Klare ammended his prediction, he cited the next few years as the time frame for the END of oil. Oil is the natural resource directly affiliated with the sign of Pisces, for via its ruler, Neptune/Poseidon, it relates to the treasures of the sea, which includes the ancient sediments that became oil. The end of this age appears to be corresponding with the end of oil, and of course since big $ influenced the piss-poor decisions of too many leaders, gearing up for other sources of energy has not been put into place. Thus it's inevitable that severe challenges to our current way of life will emerge. Will these prove sufficient to scale back CO2 emissions, and thus halt the destruction of inter-connecting ecosystems so as to sustain human life into the next century? And then there is the issue of weapons trafficking, and how hungry, dispossessed persons will behave when their sense of security is threatened.
The oil issue, added to the climate issue, added to economics mixed with making weapons # 1 on Santa's wish list in too many lands, all coalesce into one stinking witch's brew. The astrology, as related, definitely suggests the arrival of MAJOR challenges and destabilization in the next 18 months; and yes, these stellar events seem to serve as prelude to 2012. It is yet to be seen how accurate the ancient mathematicians prove.
I would add that as opposed to END times, per se, that something else is intended to arise; and it would likely resemble a human experiment based less on the Mars-rules-rites of competition (aggression & warfare their natural conclusions) and more upon creativity and cooperation. Civilizations have not always evolved along a Mars-rules axis. Indeed other potentials exist, and in this phase of human evolution, will prove mandatory. The rest is open to the collective mingling of our specks of free will.
Thank you for sharing this insight...
I remember years ago visiting Chichen Itza, and upon entering that site, one could feel an inexplicable confluence of energy or energies. The night before, my portly friend and I were arguing (we looked like Laurel and Hardy because I was so skinny then) because he felt I was 'pushing' him [to move faster than he wanted to, ha ha]. All was forgotten when we reached the summit of El Castello, and beheld the beauty of the Yucatan peninsula below. We visited the 'warriors temple,' the Well of Cenote (which had failed to yield much of the gold of sacrificed virgins; the water could not be pumped out because it is continuously being fed by underground caves), and the Ballpark with nearly perfect acoustics, where it is believed that 'players' played to the death. I'm not generally superstitious, but there was a definite energizing influence, almost making me wonder if I'd been there before.
Anyway, my son and I saw a documentary on the Mayans, and it spoke about the accuracy with witch they predicted astronomical events (the Mayans are also credited with 'inventing' the concept of zero, and apparently human sacrifice did not get into high gear until they were conquered by Toltec warriors). On the day of the spring equinox, the shadow of a serpent manifests and appears to descend down the one side of El Castello (tracking the sun as it moves across the sky). During 2012, the winter solstice sun will align the galactic equator, an event occurring only once every 26000 years! It will take 36 years to precess through the Galactic equator, or last 36 years. Pretty amazing that an event such as this could be predicted by an ancient civilization.
Would be fun to discuss this with you over coffee, Rose. :o)
Sioux Rose
CHESS GAME: As to those presences. A few scenarios jump to mind. First, the work of Gordon Michael Scallion, a high-clairvoyant who makes it a point to go to places like Gettysburg to free the souls STILL there. Time outside a body is not experienced as such while in one, clocked to the earth's orb about the sun, and such.
I was asked to read someone's tarot in Key West and didn't have my cards with me. We were told there was a shop on Duval street that carried some. I walked in and had to quickly bee-line back out. It was a head shop and I can tell you I felt the presence of old druggie sailors inside that place. Open empaths like me are not wise to go into bars and places that lower spirits congregate. The psychic energy field that accompanied the body does not imediately dissipate when the body ceases to own a viable heartbeat. These fields remain a part of the soul embodiment and continue into eternity. Many persons who do not believe in an afterlife, or think heaven/hell are supposed to resemble what they were taught from fundamentalist sources cannot summon a sense of where they are once the body is disposed of. That explains ghosts and hauntings. Even exorcism, an old rite and ritual, is based on freeing a soul enmeshed in a dense frequency or low level field of vibration when it is time to "move on."
In Pat Rodegast's book, "Emmanuel I" based on sessions where she acted as trance-medium to a higher intelligence (out of body/discarnate spirit) there is an aspect of her book (and work) where she invites questions from the audience. A psychiatrist asked basically when it was appropriate to give medication to a client hearing voices, and the channel answered, "I am not offended by that question," to which the audience broke out in laughter.
When we consider that we only hear a small range of the decibel scale, or see a shortened range of light frequencies, that we use less than 10% of our brains, and based on so-called modern civilization, the illusion of progress is just that... it becomes rather self-limiting to suppose that THIS is all that flesh is heir to, that there is not a lot more to this picture we term "life" that what we, in our short-sightedness purport to exist.
P.S. I have been to those ruins, but I was in high school, with my parents and thus not of the mindset to really tap in.
P.S.S I hope a lot of us can do coffee... CD is overdue for a cosmic picnic!
I now see why Wall Street did not want Mr Krugman as Treasury Sec . He tells the truth .
Hmmm
I am curious as to why no mention of the Feds cupability in the "rebirth" of Goldman Sachs. It bears remembering that our government told us last fall that without a bailout the entire ecomony was in jeopardy of collapse. Since January of 2008 the Fed has given out in cash, loans and garantees nearly 13 TRILLION dollars of our money. How much of that has gone to Goldman? The United States Senate no less has held hearings on this issue. They went so far as to haul officers of the fed up to the hill to get the "answers".
The answer given by the fed? first, they said we don't really know; then they said you don't need to know; finally they said if you don't stop poking your nose in our business we might just crash the the whole damn economy! So as it stands today we the people don't have a clue as to where our 13 TRILLION has gone. This should be the burning question of the day. Goldman sachs 18 billion in bonuses is just chicken feed
Another thought occured to me : If Sachs was packaging garbage and selling it then short selling it , an astute financial scholar with a half way decent smeller and working in the banking business , the SEC , the Federal Reserve , the Treasury Department , or just some inqusitive PROFESSOR of ECONOMICS , would have gotten wind of the stench and set off some kind of alarm to let the rest of the people on this earth know their life savings was in jeopary . My question is : Did any of the above mentioned group of people profit by from the activities of Sachs ?
from Les Miz:
We know where the wind is blowing
Money is the stuff we smell,
And when we're rich as Croessus,
Jesus, won't we see you all in hell!