A Conflict of Interest is Not a Conflict of Interest If It Involves Goldman
Naked Capitalism
04 Maggio 2009
The "all animals are created equal, but some are more equal than
others" logic appears to operate in full force as far as Goldman is
concerned. Violations of normal rules of conduct are not merely
tolerated, but are asserted to be acceptable.
Now admittedly,
the latest news tidbit, of former Goldman co-chairman Steven Friedman
staying on as chairman of the New York Fed after Goldman became a bank
holding company, isn't as troubling as when current Goldman chief Lloyd
Blankfein was the only Wall Street denizen to meet with Hank Paulson
when the Treasury was deciding what to do about AIG. Readers may recall
that Goldman had the biggest exposure to AIG and thus had the most to
benefit from a course of action that would be generous to
counterparties (who had chosen of their own cognizance to enter into
contracts with the big insurer).
What is disturbing about the
Wall Street Journal is the moral blindness of too many of the key
actors, namely Friedman himself and some Fed officials. Let's parse
some of the key bits of the Wall Street Journal story:
The
Federal Reserve Bank of New York shaped Washington's response to the
financial crisis late last year, which buoyed Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
and other Wall Street firms. Goldman received speedy approval to become
a bank holding company in September and a $10 billion capital injection
soon after.
During that time, the New York Fed's chairman,
Stephen Friedman, sat on Goldman's board and had a large holding in
Goldman stock, which because of Goldman's new status as a bank holding
company was a violation of Federal Reserve policy.
The New York
Fed asked for a waiver, which, after about 2½ months, the Fed granted.
While it was weighing the request, Mr. Friedman bought 37,300 more
Goldman shares in December. They've since risen $1.7 million in value.
Yves
here. It's bad enough that Friedman owned Goldman shares while involved
in policy discussions that would affect the bank. The fact that he went
and bought more shares is breathtaking. Of course, this shows a huge
deficiency in Fed procedures. Directors should be barred from trading
stocks in any institution regulated by the Fed. While it is technically
not inside information (you need to be an insider of the company in
question, that is, have a fiduciary duty to its shareholders), it
certainly raises the specter of trading on privileged information.
It
would be a scandal if someone on the FOMC were to be found to be
trading interest rate futures. Being party to discussions about
regulatory policy (as in having advance knowledge of how things are
likely to play out) means one similarly has advance knowledge of facts
that investors would find important.
Yet we get this comment from Friedman:
Last
week, following questions from The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Friedman,
71 years old, disclosed he would step down from the New York Fed at
year end. In an interview, he said he made the decision because the
waiver letting him own Goldman stock and be a Goldman director expires
at the end of the year. He added: "I see no conflict whatsoever in
owning shares."
Yves here. So we get the Big Lie. A conflict is not a conflict. The Journal does find someone to take issue with this view:
Jerry
Jordan, a former president of the Fed bank in Cleveland, says Mr.
Friedman should have stepped down once Goldman became a bank holding
company in September and thus fell under the Fed policy barring stock
ownership by certain directors of Fed banks. "Any kind of financial
transaction at all by any of the directors is always a problem," Mr.
Jordan said. "He should have resigned."
Yves again. But we then get the Fed's defense:
New
York Fed officials say that to have forced Mr. Friedman off the board
while it sought a Geithner successor would have deprived it of two
leaders at a crucial time.
"Steve Friedman is a very capable
chairman," said Tom Baxter, the New York Fed's general counsel, "and
was the kind of person who we needed to head the search" for someone to
succeed Mr. Geithner.
In Washington, the Fed's general counsel, Scott Alvarez, also says Mr. Friedman was needed during the New York Fed's transition.
Yves
here. While I have trouble with that notion, there appears to have been
no consideration of a compromise, say having Friedman head the search
committee and recuse himself from discussions and decisions that could
benefit Goldman.
The article provides more detail on normal Fed procedures:
The
Federal Reserve Act bars directors representing the public interest
from owning bank stocks or being bank directors or officers. Because
Goldman had always been an investment bank, Mr. Friedman's board
membership there and his ownership of about 46,000 Goldman shares, at
that time, hadn't run afoul of this rule. Now it did.
The
regional Fed banks have three classes of directors: Class A, elected by
member banks and representing them; Class B, elected by banks but
representing the public; and Class C, representing the public but
picked by the Fed. Under law, directors in Class C, including Mr.
Friedman, and Class B can't be officers or directors of banks, and
Class C directors like Mr. Friedman also can't own shares of banks.
This means not of bank holding companies, either, by the Fed's
interpretation of the 1913 law.
Mr. Baxter, the New York Fed
general counsel, realized that the bank's chairman was now in violation
of the Fed rules. But the institution had just lost another director,
Richard Fuld Jr., a few days before the September collapse of the firm
he led, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. So on Oct. 6, at the urging of
New York Fed lawyers, Mr. Geithner asked the Federal Reserve Board for
a waiver enabling Mr. Friedman to continue owning Goldman stock and
serving on Goldman's board.
While Fed officials in Washington
weighed the request, Mr. Baxter stayed in touch with a senior lawyer
there, pushing for a decision, says a New York Fed official. This
official says that in conversations with Mr. Friedman, who began
voicing concern about the delays in December, Mr. Baxter suggested that
the Fed policy should be considered to be in abeyance until the waiver
came through.
Mr. Friedman's role grew more prominent in November after Mr. Geithner became the pick for Treasury secretary...
Mr.
Friedman saw that Goldman's battered stock was trading below book
value, or assets minus liabilities. On Dec. 17, he bought 37,300
Goldman shares at an average price of $80.78, a $3 million purchase,
according to regulatory filings
Yves here. Recall that
in the waning days of the Bush Administration, it wasn't clear how bank
friendly the new Administration would be. Even thought Geithner was
Treasury secretary designate, there was some discussion in the press as
to the divergent views within the Obama economic policy team, and
whether that would create creative friction or conflict. Conflict (or
having Volcker, who is not a fan of innovative finance, have a strong
voice) could have kept bank valuations at bay.
Thus while
Goldman's stock was arguably cheap, cheap stocks can get cheaper. One
of the important inputs to the wisdom of going long would be knowing
how bank friendly the new Administration's policies would be. To think
that Friedman didn't have some insight into that question by virtue of
his advantaged position is naive.
Source > Naked Capitalism | May 04