Wealth production.

 

REH

 

 

July 29, 2012 NYTimes


A Big Banker's Belated Apology


By
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/jeff_madrick/i
ndex.html> JEFF MADRICK


Last week,
<http://www.cnbc.com/id/48315170/Wall_Street_Legend_Sandy_Weill_Break_Up_the
_Big_Banks> in a CNBC interview,
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/sanford_i_weil
l/index.html?inline=nyt-per> Sanford I. Weill, the former chairman of
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/citigroup_inc/index.h
tml?inline=nyt-org> Citigroup, said that America should separate investment
banking from commercial banking. This separation, of course, was the prime
purpose of the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/g/glass_steaga
ll_act_1933/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier> Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, a
piece of legislation that Mr. Weill and other bankers had successfully
watered down, with Alan Greenspan's support, before Mr. Weill helped
engineer its official demise in 1999. Now, Mr. Weill, the creator of what
was once the largest financial conglomerate in the world, suggests that
Citigroup and others should be broken up. Banks can no longer "be too big to
fail," he told CNBC.

But what was most eye-catching was Mr. Weill's claim that the conglomerate
model "was right for that time." Nothing could be further from the truth.

Mr. Weill's original business concept - the justification of financial
conglomeration - was to provide one-stop shopping to any and all customers.
This could now include clients for investment banking, stock research,
brokerage and insurance. Then, with the
<http://www.nytimes.com/1998/04/07/news/07iht-citi.t.html> 1998 merger of
his Travelers Group with Citicorp, it could include savers, business
borrowers and credit card users, too. But few, even among his own
executives, ever believed the strategy would work.

Rather, conglomeration bred conflicts of interest in Mr. Weill's firms, and
others - the very conflicts that the original Glass-Steagall Act was
designed to prevent. This inevitably led to investment in and promotion of
risky, poorly run and, in some cases, deceitful companies that brought us
the high-technology and telecommunications bubble of the late 1990s.

Indeed, Mr. Weill's Citigroup was a primary underwriter of and one of the
two largest lenders to the oil and futures trading firm Enron, whose
accounting charade resulted in what was in 2001 the biggest bankruptcy of
its time. Citigroup was a major underwriter for the telecommunications
giants Global Crossing and WorldCom, which would later go bankrupt as a
result of flagrant accounting deceptions. There were many other, if less
visible, debacles.

At the heart of these fiascoes was the distortion of investment analysis
into a sales pitch. Citigroup not only lent to Enron, WorldCom and Global
Crossing and raised money for them, its analysts also aggressively promoted
these companies to individual investors and pension funds. This was the
bread and butter of Mr. Weill's "cross-selling" approach.

Traditionally, investment analysis on Wall Street had been fairly well
trusted as an independent opinion on which investors could rely. But there
was a shift during the speculative boom of the 1990s, when analysts were
directly compensated by their firms for promoting the sale of shares and the
purchase of bonds for investment banking and loan clients.

This happened across Wall Street, not just at Citigroup. As one well-known
analyst, Ronald Glantz, told Congress in 2001, "Now the job of analysts is
to bring in investment banking clients, not provide good investment advice."
In the late 1990s, according to the former Harvard Business School professor
D. Quinn Mills, only 1 percent of analysts' recommendations were to sell a
stock.

 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/jack_grubman/i
ndex.html?inline=nyt-per> Jack Grubman, Mr. Weill's star telecommunications
analyst, became the poster child for promotional investment advice, earning
up to $20 million a year. His most glaring error was to keep recommending
that investors purchase shares of Global Crossing and WorldCom, almost until
the moment they went bankrupt. Telecommunications investment banking fees
made a fortune for Mr. Weill's company. In 1998, Goldman Sachs tried to lure
Mr. Grubman, by then a money machine, to its firm. When the bubble burst,
Money magazine at last wondered whether Mr. Grubman was "
<http://money.cnn.com/2002/04/25/pf/investing/grubman/> the worst analyst
ever."

Mr. Weill had defended Mr. Grubman strongly,
<http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2002-09-08/crisis-at-citi> telling
Business Week that "Jack probably knows more about the business than anybody
I've ever met." In fact, Mr. Weill was proud of the so-called synergy
between investment banking and commercial banking that he is now seeking to
limit. He told two of his biographers that it was the major advantage of his
one-stop strategy. "The one you read about, which has worked out really
well, is the connectivity between our Citibank commercial banking business
and the corporate investment bank," he said, referring to Citigroup's
subsidiary, Salomon Brothers.

The hole the financial collapse of 2000 and 2001 left in the economy was
soon filled by the housing bubble. John C. Bogle, founder of Vanguard Funds,
figures trillions of dollars were lost by the American public. To stimulate
the recessionary economy, Mr. Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, drove
interest rates very low, and stoked the fires of the mortgage market. And
Citigroup, where Mr. Weill remained chairman until 2006, was at the center
of the mortgage excesses.

Observers who have been arguing that banks should be broken up shouldn't
especially cheer Mr. Weill's conversion to their views. Mr. Weill no longer
has anything to lose. And he hasn't come to terms with the damage the
financial giants did on his watch, which would have been a true test of his
sincerity. Indeed, if he were still running Citigroup, he would almost
certainly be singing a different tune.

 <http://rooseveltinstitute.org/people/fellows/jeff-madrick> Jeff Madrick, a
senior fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and the editor of
<http://www.challengemagazine.com/> Challenge magazine, is the author of
"Age of Greed: The Triumph of Finance and the Decline of America, 1970 to
the Present."

 

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