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Wall Street awards itself billions in Christmas bonuses
By David Walsh
19 December 2006
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Wall Street is awarding itself tens of billions in bonuses
this winter. The fantastic amounts of money being handed out to
investment bankers, securities traders and the like is symptomatic
of the vast social divide that blights every aspect of American
life.
Investment bank Goldman Sachs is leading the pack. The firm
reported an increase in quarterly earnings of 93 percent and will
distribute some $16.5 billion in bonuses to dozens of its bankers
and traders. The top rainmakers, as they are called,
will each take home as much as $20 to $25 million just in bonuses,
while traders who booked big profits will take home a chunk
of those profits, up to $50 million apiece, according to
a December 13 article in the New York Times. The report
cited the comment of one New York-based investment firm, Anyone
at the bonus line at Goldman Sachs died and went to bonus heaven.
It doesnt get any better than this.
Another piece on the December 3 financial page of the Times
suggested that bonuses are expected to be a cash pile of
more than $100 billion across the Street this year. That
estimate presumably includes companies of all sizes. Last year
major investment banks and trading firms handed out $21.5 billion
in year-end bonuses. Options Group, a New York executive search
firm, predicted 2006 bonuses would rise 15 to 20 percent.
The staggering figure of $100 billion in total bonuses is more
than twice the annual budget of the US Department of Housing and
Urban Development and nearly twice the US Department of Education
budget. Washington spends $20 billion annually on foreign aid
to the entire world. The yearly budget of the City
of New York, which employs 250,000 people, amounts to $50 billion.
The $16.5 billion in bonuses at Goldman Sachs alone
is more than New York City pays to educate 1.1 million children
in its schools, the largest local school budget in the US. Goldman
Sachs is giving out more in year-end financial rewards than the
federal government spends on the nations largest low-income
housing program, the Housing Choice Voucher Program ($15.9 billion),
which covers some 2 million households.
Goldman Sachs top employees are not alone. Investment
bank Morgan Stanley awarded its chief executive, John Mack, $40
million in stock and options for 2006, according to a regulatory
filing on December 14. When Mack rejoined Morgan Stanley in June
2005 (he was ousted as president of the bank in 2001), he received
a new-hire award of 500,000 restricted stock units, valued at
$26.2 million. In February 2006, Morgan Stanley announced that
it had awarded Mack $13 million in cash, stock and other compensation
for his first five months on the job. Aside from his salary, therefore,
Mack has received compensation worth nearly $80 million in 18
months at Morgan Stanley.
Macks $40 million bonus, however, is expected to be eclipsed
by the amount eventually handed out to Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd
Blankfein. His 2006 bonus will probably top $50 million, according
to analysts. Other executives in the $40-$50 million category
include James Cayne of Bear Stearns, Stan ONeal of Merrill
Lynch and Richard Fuld of Lehman Brothers, notes the Wall Street
Journal.
Much of the bonus money is paid out for those involved in massive
mergers and acquisitions. The New York Times revealed what
it termed the dirty little secret of corporate mergers:
There is a torrent of multibillion [dollar] takeovers and
mergers at the end of every year to influence bonuses for
all involved in the deal, especially the bankers. The newspaper
added, Corporate Americas biggest cheerleaders and
boosters need to get paid.
Bankers at Goldman Sachs and the other firms receive bonus
money for a deal announced this year, and receive another reward
when the deal closes next year. Even if the merger eventually
fails to come about, the bankers keep their bonus money.
The nature of Goldman Sachs activities underscores the
parasitic character of modern-day American capitalism. According
to the Times, the investment bank has transformed
its business to capitalize on sea changes in the capital markets,
particularly new opportunities in far-flung markets and a shift
from issuing and trading plain-vanilla stocks and bonds to building
and trading complex derivative products.
Two episodes demonstrate how Goldman Sachs makes some of its
billions. In the second quarter of 2006, it spent $2.6 billion
for a 5 percent stake in the Industrial & Commercial Bank
of China, the largest state-owned bank in that country. When the
latter went public in October, Goldman Sachs reaped a windfall.
For the fourth quarter, it made nearly $1 billion on the investment.
Goldman Sachs earned a further half a billion dollars on the
sale of Accordia Golf, a portfolio of Japanese golf courses it
began to acquire in 2001. This is a far cry from the manufacturing
operations of a Henry Ford or an Andrew Carnegie.
Goldman Sachs is a particularly well-connected financial institution.
The present US treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, is a former
chairman and CEO. His three immediate predecessors were Jon Corzine,
former US senator (and present governor of New Jersey), Stephen
Friedman, who became chairman of the National Economic Council
(and later chairman of the Presidents Foreign Intelligence
Advisory Board, in which capacity he still works) and Robert Rubin,
who served as Treasury Secretary in the Clinton administration.
The billions in bonuses will have a material impact, in the
first place, on New York City, further widening the social gap.
Financial industry employees collect more than 50 percent of the
wages paid in Manhattan, although their 280,000 jobs represent
less than a sixth of the total (1.8 million), and that first figure
itself is skewed, considering the relatively small percentage
of employees at Wall Street firms who make fabulous amounts. Meanwhile,
incomes for restaurant, hotel, retail and health care workers
stagnate, in many cases at near-poverty levels.
Real estate brokers, luxury automobile and jewelry dealers
salivated at news of the Wall Street bonuses. According to the
Times, There are few things that can gladden the
hearts of New York real estate brokers as much as the thought
of billions of dollars in bonuses paid on Wall Street, moving
from hedge funds and buyout fees to brick and stone, or in some
cases, glass and steel, as this uncertain year of wavering condominium
and co-op price draws to a close.
The newspaper continued: Not all buyers, of course, wait
for bonus season. Among recent transactions was the $19 million
sale of a co-op at 66 East 79th Street to J. Christopher Flowers,
a former Goldman Sachs partner who formed his own investment fund,
and who is listed by Forbes on its list of 400 richest
Americans with a net worth of $1.2 billion. Then, Kenneth D. Brody,
another former Goldman Sachs partner, who went on the head the
United States Export-Import Bank during the Clinton administration,
bought a fifth-floor apartment at 25 Sutton Place for $6.25 million.
The vast amount paid out for real estate in Manhattan and affluent
corners of the other boroughs is helping drive up housing costs.
For working New Yorkers, affordable rents are disappearing. And
social conditions for millions in the city continue to deteriorate.
In 2004, in the richest city in the world, an estimated
1.2 million people, including 400,000 children, lived in hunger
or in households where having sufficient food was always in question.
In 2005, the top fifth of Manhattans earners reported
making $330,244--about 41 times more than the $8,019 reported
by the bottom fifth. The Bronx remains the poorest urban county
in the country; more than half of its households headed by a woman
and including young children live below the poverty level.
As is the case with every other social phenomenon, there are
two holiday seasons in the US, one for the wealthy elite and another
for the overwhelming majority of the population. The gap is registered
by every significant social barometer.
In late November, Tiffany & Co. reported a 23 percent jump
in earnings on increased sale of $20,000 rings and necklaces.
The luxury retailer hiked its profit forecast for the year as
a result of the holiday demand.
The Bloomberg wire service noted, The US luxury
market has grown as the number of Americans with financial assets
of at least $1 million increased 6.5 percent last year, according
to the World Wealth Report published by Capgemini Group and Merrill
Lynch & Co. Tiffany and other US luxury retailers are poised
to have a strong holiday season, analysts said.
The Chicago Tribune commented, So far, its
a tale of two Christmases for retailers. Those stores catering
to luxury shoppers are faring better than discount stores.
The International Council of Shopping Centers noted that sales
at chain stores rose only 2.1 percent in November, reflecting,
in particular, the poor showing of Wal-Mart, where millions of
lower-income people shop, which experienced its worst performance
in a decade.
A report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities points
out that the disparities in consumer expenditure among households
at different income levels were greater in 2005 than in any year
on record. The top fifth of households made 39 percent of all
consumer expenditures in 2005, the highest share on record. The
bottom 20 percent of the population made only eight percent of
the expenditures, tied with 2004 for the lowest share ever.
The media and political establishment attempt to ignore this
vast social chasmor treat it as something of a joke. At
one point in American history, and not so terribly long ago, the
Goldman Sachs bonuses would have caused a furor. The amounts handed
out, while tens of millions lived in poverty, would have been
called a national disgrace. Congressmen would have demanded public
hearings. Now, there is a shrug of the shoulder in the media,
or an amused reference, or hints of envy and jealousy. The politicians,
many of them multi-millionaires like Corzine, prefer to say nothing.
If anything, the vast pay-outs are seen as a positive sign.
As a New York Times reporter, speaking for many, asserted,
Investment banking earnings are often proxies for the health
of the American and global economy.
On the contrary, the misappropriation of wealth to a handful
of speculators and glorified bottom-feeders is a sign of a diseased
social organism. The funneling of tens of billions into the hands
of the elite, who will spend it on themselves, on their homes,
yachts and private airplanes, means that useful and productive
projects go by the wayside and grave social needs go unmet.
The Goldman Sachs figures made a few people in the media nervous.
John Gibson, one of Fox Newss right-wing anchormen, wrote,
Yes, Im for capitalism, but please. Youve got
guys like [Democratic Party politician] John Edwards saying theres
two Americasthe rich and the poorplaying the class
game . . . My point is: Why do the fat cats have to work so hard
at proving him right when by and large we know hes wrong?
The Washington Post business page opined, Still,
news of Wall Streets Very, Very Good Year is likely to stir
some resentment on Main Streetnot because the economy is
so bad as much as it is yet another reminder of the ever-widening
gap between the super-rich and everyone else.
See Also:
Wall Street grabs $21.5 billion
in bonuses
[13 January 2006]
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