NYT
 
 (http://dealbook.nytimes.com/) 

 
July 15, 2013,  8:57 pm  
On Wall Street, a Culture of Greed Won’t Let Go
By _ANDREW ROSS  SORKIN_ 
(http://dealbook.nytimes.com/author/andrew-ross-sorkin/) 
 
Ethics. Values. Integrity. 
Wall Street firms spend a lot of time using those catchwords when talking  
about developing the right culture. Bank chief executives often discuss how 
much  effort they devote to instilling a sense of integrity at their 
institutions. The  firms all have painstakingly written codes of conduct, 
boasting, 
“Our integrity  and reputation depend on our ability to do the right thing, 
even when it’s not  the easy thing,” as _JPMorgan  Chase_ 
(http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=JPM&inline=nyt-org) ’s 
says, or, “No 
financial incentive or opportunity — regardless of the  bottom line — 
justifies a departure from our values,” as _Goldman  Sachs_ 
(http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=GS&inline=nyt-org)  
says. 
And yet a new report on industry insiders about ethical conduct, _to  be 
released on Tuesday_ 
(http://www.secwhistlebloweradvocate.com/LiteratureRetrieve.aspx?ID=182189) , 
disturbingly suggests that Wall Street’s high-minded  
words may largely still be lip service. 
Of 250 industry insiders from dozens of financial companies who responded 
to  questions — traders, portfolio managers, investment bankers, hedge fund  
professionals, financial analysts, investment advisers, among others — 23  
percent said that “they had observed or had firsthand knowledge of wrongdoing 
in  the workplace.” 
If that’s not attention-grabbing enough, consider this: 24 percent said 
they  would “engage in insider trading to make $10 million if they could get 
away with  it.” 
As we approach the fifth anniversary of the onset of the financial crisis  
this September, it appears memories are shorter than ever. If the report is  
accurate, the insidious culture of greed is back — or maybe it never left. 
The questions were posed last month by the law firm Labaton Sucharow at the 
 behest of one of its partners, Jordan A. Thomas, a former assistant 
director and  assistant chief litigation counsel in the enforcement division of 
the _Securities  and Exchange Commission_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/s/securities_and_exchange_commission/index.htm
l?inline=nyt-org) . The results are a telling reminder of the continued  
challenges the industry faces, challenges that appear endemic. 
While the results may not be scientific, they are stark. For example, 26  
percent of respondents said they “believed the compensation plans or bonus  
structures in place at their companies incentivize employees to compromise  
ethical standards or violate the law.” 
There is a view that the ethical problems come from the very top: 17 
percent  said they expected “their leaders were likely to look the other way if 
they  suspected a top performer engaged in insider trading.” It gets even more 
 troubling: “15 percent doubted that their leadership, upon learning of a 
top  performer’s crime, would report it to the authorities.” 
There is nothing acceptable about these responses. 
Wall Street has a very real problem, whether the leaders of the industry 
want  to believe it or not. 
It is often said that it is unfair to paint an entire industry with a broad 
 brush, and it is. There are clearly good people out there doing good work. 
A  large majority falls in that category. But the numbers presented in the 
report  reflect an unsettling reality that there may be more than just a few 
bad apples  in the industry, too. It should be considered a red flag when 
insiders say this:  “28 percent of respondents felt that the financial 
services industry does not  put the interests of clients first.” 
Perhaps oddly, the problem is most pronounced among the youngest employees 
in  finance, the next generation of leadership on Wall Street. 
Remember the question about whether an executive would commit insider 
trading  for $10 million if there were no repercussions? Well, if you parse the 
numbers  by seniority in the industry, respondents with under 10 years of ex
perience were  even more likely to break the law: 38 percent said they would 
commit insider  trading for $10 million if they wouldn’t be caught. 
That result is particularly striking since I would have expected the next  
generation of financiers to be the most interested in helping to build a 
new,  anti-Gordon Gekko culture on Wall Street. 
Virtually every top M.B.A. program in the country now teaches ethics 
classes,  many of them required. In 2008, a coalition of students started the 
_MBA 
Oath_ (http://mbaoath.org/) , a voluntary pledge among students to  “create 
value responsibly and ethically.” So far, more than 6,000 students have  
signed the pledge. 
And yet, the report and other anecdotal evidence suggest that whatever is  
being done both in the classroom and on the job is not enough. According to 
a  controversial study called “_Economics Education  and Greed_ 
(http://bit.ly/12R9sop) ” that was published in 2011 by professors at _Harvard_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/h/harvard_universi
ty/index.html?inline=nyt-org)   and Northwestern, an education in economics 
surprisingly may be making the  problem worse. 
“The results show that economics education is consistently associated with  
positive attitudes towards greed,” the authors wrote. “The uncontested 
dominance  of self-interest maximization as the primary (if not sole) logic of 
exchange, in  business schools and corporate settings alike, may lead people 
to be more  tolerant of what other people see as morally reprehensible.” 
The problem is compounded by a trait shared by everyone, no matter their  
industry. “People predict that they will behave more ethically than they  
actually do,” _according to a  2007 study_ 
(http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/08-012.pdf)  led by Ann E. 
Tenbrunsel, a professor at Notre 
Dame. “They then  believe they behaved ethically when they didn’t. It is no 
surprise, then, that  most individuals erroneously believe they are more 
ethical than the majority of  their peers.” 
That may help explain why, in the Labaton Sucharow report, 52 percent said  
they “believed it was likely that their competitors have engaged in illegal 
or  unethical activity in order to be successful.” 
It may also explain why 89 percent of respondents “indicated a willingness 
to  report wrongdoing” yet so few do. 
As part of the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul law, the S.E.C. developed a 
$500  million whistle-blower program that pays 10 to 30 percent of penalties 
collected  to the whistle-blower. The fund still has some $450 million in it, 
despite  recent remarks by Stephen L. Cohen, associate director of the 
S.E.C.’s  enforcement division, that we should expect bigger payouts soon. Mr. 
Thomas of  Labaton Sucharow helped develop the whistle-blower program when he 
was at the  S.E.C., and he now represents whistle-blowers. 
“We are seeing a culture of silence,” he said. “There’s an unwillingness 
to  come forward.” 
Greed, for far too many, is still good, apparently. There’s still much work 
 to be done before the catchwords become the  culture.


-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to