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How You Finance Goldman Sachs’ Profits
This is perhaps the most important thing I learned over my years working on Wall Street, including as a managing director at Goldman Sachs: Numbers lie. In a normal time, the fact that the numbers generated by the nation's biggest banks can't be trusted might not matter very much to the rest of us. But since the record bank profits we're now hearing about are essentially created by massive federal funding, perhaps it behooves us to dig beneath their data. On July 27, 10 congressmen, led by Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.), did just that, writing a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke questioning the Fed's role in Goldman's rapid return to the top of Wall Street.
To understand this particular giveaway, look back to September 21, 2008. It was a frenzied night for Goldman Sachs and the only other remaining major investment bank, Morgan Stanley. Their three main competitors were gone. Bear Stearns had been taken over by JPMorgan Chase in March, 2008, Lehman Brothers had just declared bankruptcy due to lack of capital, and Bank of America had been pushed to acquire Merrill Lynch because the firm didn't have enough cash to survive on its own. Anxious to avoid a similar fate, hat in hand, they came to the Fed for access to desperately needed capital. All they had to do was become bank holding companies to get it. So, without so much as clearing the standard five-day antitrust waiting period for such a change, the Fed granted their wish.
Bank holding companies (which all the biggest financial firms now are) come under the regulatory purview of the Fed, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the FDIC. The capital they keep in reserve in case of emergency (like, say, toxic assets hemorrhaging on their books, or credit derivatives trades not being paid) is supposed to be greater than investment banks'. That's the trade-off. You get access to federal assistance, you pony up more capital, and you take less risk.
Goldman didn't like the last part. It makes most of its money speculating, or trading. So it asked the Fed to be exempt from what's called the Market Risk Rules that bank holding companies adhere to when computing their risk.
Keep in mind that by virtue of becoming a bank holding company, Goldman received a total of $63.6 billion in federal subsidies (that we know about-probably more if the Fed were ever forced to disclose its $7.6 trillion of borrower details). There was the $10 billion it got from TARP (which it repaid), the $12.9 billion it grabbed from AIG's spoils-even though Goldman had stated beforehand that it was protected from losses incurred by AIG's free fall, and if that were the case, would not have needed that money, let alone deserved it. Then, there's the $29.7 billion it's used so far out of the $35 billion it has available, backed by the FDIC's Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, and finally, there's the $11 billion available under the Fed's Commercial Paper Funding Facility.
Tactically, after bagging this bounty, Goldman asked the Fed, its new regulator, if it could use its old risk model to determine capital reserves. It wanted to use the model that its old investment bank regulator, the SEC, was fine with, called VaR, or value at risk. VaR pretty much allows banks to plug in their own parameters, and based on these, calculate how much risk they have, and thus how much capital they need to hold against it. VaR was the same lax SEC-approved risk model that investment banks such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers used, with the aforementioned results.
On February 5, 2009, the Fed granted Goldman's request. This meant that not only was Goldman getting big federal subsidies, but also that it could keep betting big without saving aside as much capital as the other banks. Using VaR gave Goldman more leeway to, well, accentuate the positive. Yes, Goldman is a more risk-prone firm now than it was before it got to play with our money.
Which brings us back to these recent quarterly earnings. Goldman posted record profits of $3.4 billion on revenues of $13.76 billion. More than 78 precent of those revenues came from its most risky division, the one that requires the most capital to operate, Trading and Principal Investments. Of those, the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities (FICC) area within that division brought in a record $6.8 billion in revenues. That's the division, by the way, that I worked in and that Lloyd Blankfein managed on his way up the Goldman totem pole. (It's also the division that would stand to gain the most if Waxman's cap-and-trade bill passes.)
Since Goldman is trading big with our money, why not also use it to pay big bonuses? It's not like there are any strings attached. For the first half of 2009, Goldman set aside $11.4 billion for compensation-34 percent more than for the first half of 2008, keeping them on target for a record bonus year-even though they still owe the federal government $53.6 billion, a sum more than four times that bonus amount.
But capital is still key. Capital is the lifeblood that pumps through a financial organization. You can't trade without it. As of June 26, 2009, Goldman's total capital was $254 billion, but that included $191 billion in unsecured long-term borrowing (meaning money it had borrowed without putting up any collateral for it). On November 28, 2008 (4Q 2008), it had only $168 billion in unsecured long-term borrowing. Thus, its long-term unsecured debt jumped 14 percent. Though Goldman doesn't disclose exactly where all this debt comes from, given the $23 billion jump, we can only wonder whether some of it has come from government subsidies or the Fed's secret facilities.
Not only that, by virtue of how it's set up, most of Goldman's unsecured funding comes in through its parent company, Group Inc. (Think the top point of an umbrella with each spoke being a subsidiary.) This parent parcels that money out to Goldman's subsidiaries, some of which are regulated, some of which aren't. This means that even though Goldman is supposed to be regulated by the Fed and other agencies, it has unregulated elements receiving unsecured funding-just like before the crisis, but with more of our money involved.
As for JPMorgan Chase, its profit of $2.7 billion was up 36 percent for the second quarter of 2009 vs. the same quarter last year, but a lot of that also came from trading revenues, meaning its speculative endeavors are driving its profits. Over on the consumer side, the firm had to set aside nearly $30 billion in reserve for credit-related losses. Riding on its trading laurels, when its consumer business is still in deterioration mode, is not a recipe for stability, no matter how much cheering JPMorgan Chase's results got from Wall Street. Betting is betting.
Let's pause for some reflection: The bank "stars" made most of their money on speculation, got nearly $124 billion in government guarantees and subsidies between them over the past year and a half, yet saw continued losses in the credit products most affected by consumer credit problems. Both are setting aside top-dollar bonuses. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon mentioned that he's concerned about attracting talent, a translation for wanting to pay investment bankers big bucks-because, after all, they suffered so terribly last year, and he needs to stay competitive with his friends at Goldman. This doesn't add up to a really healthy scenario. It's more like bad déjà vu.
As a recent New York Times article (and many other publications in different words) said, "For the most part, the worst of the financial crisis seems to be over." Sure, the crisis may appear to be over because the major banks of Wall Street are speculating well with government subsidies. But that's a dangerous conclusion. It doesn't mean that finance firms could thrive without the artificial, public-funded assistance. And it certainly doesn't mean that consumers are any better off than they were before the crisis emerged. It's just that they didn't get the same generous subsidies.
Additional research by Clark Merrefield.
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25 Comments so far
Show AllSo am I to take it that even if I am a member of a local credit union that I still finance Goldman Sach's profits? I can see how banks can be more convenient than credit unions enough to make it easier to fool most people into overlooking the outrageous fees in banks not found in credit unions. I thought about what RichM wrote to us on this the other day and I thought about my former days when I had an account in a big bank before switching to credit unions and I traced all the frustrations and issues I faced with my former bank account despite all those "conveniences" they always brag about in the commercials. Now that I added it all up, I feel scared as to what would have happened if I hadn't actually stumbled across a repairman who accidently educated me more about credit unions last year. I was always responsible in spending and paid my bills on time and yet the bank would find some way or other to gouge us this way and that.
Sigh, I guess the only way out is for all of us to resist paying taxes to Uncle Sam then. :(
I thought about what you said earlier and maybe it's true that people feel powerless and hopeless that even these small efforts won't help them. This also reminded me of having to console an online classmate of mine who was so intelligent and thoughtful and yet thought that he was wasted because he was given a C in the course while others got an A despite simply parroting the same bookish thoughts.
"Sigh, I guess the only way out is for all of us to resist paying taxes to Uncle Sam then."
Exactly right!
Neil M. Barofsky is a former assistant U.S. attorney from New York and currently, he is the Special Treasury Department Inspector General overseeing the Troubled Assets Relief Program, a.k.a. TARP. He is attempting to do his job, without political influence.
The other day, Glenn Greenwald interviewed Mr. Barofsky, and after adding up all of the programs available to the various banks and other institutions that are being subsidized by "we the people," Barofsky told Glenn Greenwald that the total amount, if all programs were maxed, would be around $24 trillion.
Several times, I have watched Amy Goodman interview Nomi, and at one point, she reported on Democracy Now! that we were already at $13.6 trillion.
You can listen to Glenn Greenwald's interview on July 26, 2009, with Neil Barofsky, at:
www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald
Sioux Rose
KAY: But the public hears $700 billion and presumes, like the Porky Pig character, "That's all, folks!"
Sioux Rose,
That's exactly correct!
"That's all folks!"
Sioux Rose
KAY: Juxtaposing the articles on the fight for health-care (universal/single payer), against the long one on the chain of U.S. military bases around the world, one can only feel a mix of devastating emotions to have to bear witness to such folly and unapologetically callous behavior on the part of those with the power to decide, or set policy. I call their bankrupt priorities "Mars rules" because war & weapons' development & military spending seem to know no ($ or moral) limit, but any investment in the public's welfare OR greener technology gets all kinds of hems, haws, delays, abstractions, and bull shit delivered by the truck load.
"but any investment in the public's welfare OR greener technology gets all kinds of hems, haws, delays, abstractions, and bull shit delivered by the truck load."
Bingo ! No green jobs and yet more unemployment and rising keeps going on. For a measly amount to improve public transportation, so much delays and stipulations and in the end the public is stuck in major traffic jams. 10 times that amount is quickly delivered to bailouts on W$ and war spending. It seems to take forever to do a simple repair on the metro rails and yet building warships is done so fast.
I'm sure that many Americans have no idea how much a trillion is.
Even among those who deplore the Wall Street bailout, many are resigned to it in the hope that it will get the economy rolling again and lift housing prices back up to the point where we can we can feel rich and carefree.
Which is all part of the conditioning.
No matter how you cut it, slipping 700 BILLION dollars into the pockets of a few is a massive shift of wealth. 700 billion is a HUGE shift of money.
So how do you make 700 billion seem a pittance? Make the true costs of the bailouts in the tens of trillions.
When the NEXT gravy train rolls around 700 billion will be naded out like Candy to these boys and no one will raise a fuss.
It all a con game and it all carefully planned. People are paid salaries in the hundreds of thousands to help design the OPTICS around such corruption.
Sioux Rose
Good article, although its conclusion is under-stated. I guess Nomi wants the emotions in response to this piece to be let out as one gigantic collective scream of outrage.
The whole concept and construct of what constitutes profit, no less a solid business model, has been gutted and replaced with crooks/gamblers/white collar criminals defining their own parameters. It would be one thing if it didn't result in so much pain and loss across the board; and it would be another thing, too, if all these Vegas-styled business protocols would be REGULATED. Then, too, it would be quite another thing if citizen-taxpayers weren't on the hook to bail out these BASTARDS when they produce the NEXT wreck. As is inevitable, given the fiscal equation in process.
Others in this forum speak of the laws of thermodynamics, and Dr. Seuss simplified it by teaching children that something does not generate from NOTHING. This passing paper all around is absent any product, any article of genuine worth. The entire basis for trade is all smoke and mirrors, market tactics linked with Barnum-style stoked emotions that function like a house of cards. It's been said about pricing, even in real estate, that the "worth" of a given entity is reflected in "what the market will bear." It's outrageous the degree to which perceptions are being manipulated to provide the appearance of growth and/or business (to Goldman, etc.) profits, when in reality, this dying patient has just received an infusion of BLOOD from persons who don't have much to lose! OUR life blood is feeding an insatiable vampire, and that's what we base our nation's economic "health" upon? Insane, corrupt, diabolical are just a few adjectives that come to mind to describe the nature of the heist that now passes for a remedy, or sound government (= Goldman SACKS!) policy. And there IS a metaphor here that simulates the way modern medicine operates. Quite often drugs are administered that alleviate the effects while never treating the cause. That is EXACTLY what's going on here. By pumping fresh bills into this cancerous financial system, the ILLUSION that things are improving has been created. What has been done to return the patient (our economy and rules of wise engagement applied to trade?) to HEALTH? NOTHING!!!!!! Just like one surge after another proclaiming "success" in these imperial wars. By the time the truth emerges, it's too late. But everyone wants their happy ending! Happiness courses are all the rage at universities as a compelling article on CD related 2 days ago. Just give everyone anti-depressants and SURELY a consensus will be reached, that all is well in domestic finance and international relations.
Again, today, the stock market is soaring. Is the current bubble being produced as the bankers/gamblers await the passage of Henry Waxman's "cap and trade" bill? I've been reading that this could be the next bubble, and the next house of cards, built on not much of anything -- it's an illusion, or maybe, more correctly, a delusion, although a handful of people will certainly make a pile of money at our expense.
"OUR life blood is feeding an insatiable vampire, and that's what we base our nation's economic "health" upon?" -- Sioux Rose
About three or four years ago, or so, I watched an interview with Gretchen Morgenson, a reporter for the NY Times, on a little-watched PBS program, THE OPEN MIND. She talked about the house of cards, and the fact that the market bubble was nothing but paper being moved around. However, she also pointed out in that same interview, that although the profits had no real substance, the excessive bonuses being paid to the CEOs and other executives were real money. In effect, they were making out like bandits. Ms. Morgenson was reporting on this long before the issue slammed us in the face, and she hoped at that time, there was still enough time to turn it around. But, alas, the "snakes in suits" were unstoppable, and here we are today, without many options.
Investment banks do not perform any public service and should not be entitled to any public funding. If the services they perform are valuable for Wall Street, then Wall Street should be providing the charitable bailout service.
How many reports of this nature will it take for us to wake up ? I use to think that as soon as the general public feels the pain of the enormous pole up their digestive exit, we would begin to witness continuous outrage as opposed to the occasional outburst. The USA will now be remembered as the dumbest and most arrogant culture to ever inhabit this planet. Ciao
You raise an interesting point. It's not the quantity that makes it work but the quality that does it. That said, our cornfed electorate can be hit an infinite number of times and nothing will register in their minds. The only way the public will feel the pain is when we hit it in the way that causes them to sit down and weep and learn. Think of it this way. If I'm not happy but I keep trying to tell my parents that I am, they'll find some question to ask until I acknowledge that I'm not and start to cry on their shoulders or I prove that I am indeed not and with genuine confidence. The public may have been trained to be in denial mode but it is possible to retrain them out of it. Which way works remains to be seen.
Hey, Nomi!
Thank you for this glimpse into your world, my world...
It makes one wonder: if all I'm good for is tax dollars, what am I worth when I make a lower wage, or no wage, and, therefore, pay less taxes, or none? What do the wealthy and powerful do when the big, fat bundle of tax money goes?
Enslave?
The way we finance housing and the basic necessities around here certainly works in their favor...
Wait... I thought we were becoming socialists under Obama? You mean I've been misinformed...?
Yes, you and Rick Blaine. And the president of the USA is not Captain Renault but Major Strasser whom I would like to paraphrase at this point: "Mademoiselle, perhaps you've noticed that in the United States, life is cheap."
Here's the short version:
We 'loaned' GS billions; they bet on black; they hit; they returned the loan without paying any interest or giving us our slice of the winnings.
Next week, they'll be on red, loose, and guess what? We'll 'loan' them another Xbillion for another fun time at Wall Street Casino Night.
Vat a country!
Meanwhile: "...meaning money it had borrowed without putting up any collateral for it..." Isn't that basically the story of the current 'housing crisis?' Lenders handing out money to anyone whether they had collateral (or an income) to back it up with or not?
Did I say vat a country already?!
"Next week, they'll be on red, loose, and guess what? We'll 'loan' them another Xbillion for another fun time at Wall Street Casino Night."
Not possible, GS runs the casino and the house always wins.
It came out this week that they get market orders from NYSE before anyone else. I'm sure this helps with their software that can be used to manipulate markets.
Bailing out GS is like paying off your abusive boyfriend's gambling debts – before he takes off and spends a fortune on some floozies.
Parasites (banksters) killing the host (us).
Yes,
Parasites = (banksters)
> . Parasitic pseudo-life sucking
___ pseudo-individual corporatist greed,
> . > . Sucking while thriving on the greed
_______ and suffering of warmongering despots,
> . > . > . Sucking while thriving on the greed
___________ and suffering of American despots,
> . > . > . > . Sucking while thriving on the backs
_______________ and slowly killing the American people
Yes,
_____ G _ R _ E _ E _ D _____
_____ S _ U _ C _ K _ S _____
.
We must each of us, choose more wisely
I used to be a pacifist. ...
-30-
"Numbers lie"
The ex-wall streeter still has much to learn. Numbers don't lie. People lie. Notice the very bizarre USan habit of assigning blame to the murder weapon instead of the murderer. This allows the media to be turned into a circus, good for nothing more than entertainment. No problems are solved, no justice is served.