In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘Financier welfare’

Goldman Sachs, Welfare Queen

Posted by seumasach on March 26, 2009

Wall Street’s most storied firm is surviving on taxpayer dollars

Daniel Gross, Slate.com

Financial Post

While it was singed in the credit meltdown, Goldman Sachs, the alpha male of Wall Street, has emerged as a survivor. The cover of last week’s Barron’s heralded the resurrection of Goldman and Morgan Stanley – “the sole standouts,” as Andrew Bary called them. The company’s shares have rallied back above $100, and its market capitalization is nearly $47 billion. Goldman’s emergence from the wreckage could be seen as yet another glorious chapter for the firm. Charles Ellis, in his book about Goldman, The Partnership, lionized the firm as the only company “with such strengths that it operates with almost no external constraints in virtually any financial market it chooses, on the terms it chooses, on the scale it chooses, when it chooses, and with the partners it chooses.” For the paperback, Ellis might want to add the following proviso: so long as the government is willing to give it billions of dollars.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »