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Last week
both Paul Newman and Wall Street, as we have known it,
died.
And in the two deaths lies an interesting parallel.
One of the roles that lifted Newman to stardom was Hud
Bannon, the ruthless young man who ruined everything and
everyone he touched.
Hud, the central character in Martin Ritt's 1963 drama of the same name,
has no
regard for the consequences of his actions. So little
concern has Hud that he is perfectly willing to sell
diseased cattle to unsuspecting ranchers so that he can
take the cash and live in the high lifestyle he covets.
Here's Hud,
expressing his world view to his father Homer:
"This country is run on epidemics, where you been? Price
fixing, crooked TV shows, inflated expense accounts. How
many honest men you know? Why you separate the saints
from the sinners, you're lucky to wind up with Abraham
Lincoln." (Watch Hud give his definition of obeying
the law
here.)
Hud must have been the role model for all those
Bear Stearns, AIG, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch
executives—sell some diseased mortgages to the saps and
use the bonus money to
pay for their Southhampton houses.
As I replayed the recent Wall Street collapses over in
my mind, I realized that all three of the major
financial institutions I worked for—behemoths in their
time—have been killed off by staggeringly inept
management and unbridled greed.
My first job on Wall Street was as a trainee at Bankers
Trust, then the nation's fifth largest bank that catered
to Fortune 500 companies and the wealthy individuals who
owned and managed them.
For months, I was educated in the art of financial
accounting—how to read and analyze a credit report and
how to determine if a company merited a loan.
My superiors, unfortunately, didn't have the commitment
to honesty and integrity that had been drilled into us
novices.
Although I was long gone by the 1990s when disaster
struck, Bankers Trust eventually suffered a series of
reversals and lawsuits for misleading customers from
which it could not recover.
Included in the evidence presented against the bank were
audiotapes of several officers crowing gleefully that
their clients would never be able to understand the
complex derivative transactions executed on their
behalf.
In 1998,Germany's Deutsche Bank acquired Bankers Trust.
My next stop on Wall Street was at Merrill Lynch, the
"Thundering Herd" as it was widely known.
Among the many wonderful things about working for
Merrill was that it was universally recognized as the
most well-capitalized firm on the Street.
Everyone knew and trusted Merrill Lynch.
In 1971 Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith went
public to become Merrill Lynch & Company. Over time, the
new holding company developed into a multinational
corporation that operated in more than 40 countries and
managed nearly $2 trillion in assets.
But then in 2003, after three prosperous decades,
Merrill named the avaricious Stanley O'Neal Chief
Executive Officer and chairman. O'Neal's baby was the
sub-prime mortgage.
Now Merrill, after reporting a $10 billion fourth
quarter 2007 loss and a $2 billion net loss in the first
quarter 2008, is gone, off to its new Bank of America
headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina.
As with Bankers Trust, I bailed out of Merrill Lynch
when things were still good.
But unfortunately my next stop, the
Seattle First National Bank, didn't know when to
leave well enough alone either.
For years, Seafirst—the largest bank in the Pacific
Northwest—made traditional unsecured loans to
Boeing,
Weyerhaeuser and
Georgia-Pacific. Seafirst dominated the retail
banking market, taking in millions of dollars in demand
deposits.
In short, things in
Seattle were boring but profitable.
One day in the early 1980s, without warning, Seafirst
decided to participate in the worthless energy loan
portfolio of Oklahoma's
Penn Square Bank.
Seafirst knew nothing about the oil industry and was
completely hoodwinked by the
Penn Square crooks. None of the loans would have
been approved under the guidelines I learned in my early
Bankers Trust training.
Before anyone knew what happened, Penn Square collapsed taking with it Seafirst as well as America's seventh largest bank, Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust.
To save Seafirst from being seized by the federal
government a la Washington Mutual, Bank of America
rescued it. Eventually, the Seafirst name disappeared.
Bankers Trust, strike one, Merrill, strike two and
Seafirst, strike three.
An odd footnote to my corporate history is that despite
their billions and global influence, the giant
corporations I worked for are
long gone.
But I'm still around to tell you about what it was like
to work for them.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.