Why There Are No Brave Old People In Finance

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Why there are no brave old people in finance:

interview on Wall Street an hour early, because I didn’t want to be late. I sat in a Chock Full o’Nuts coffee shop nursing a cup of coffee, the one cup I could afford, checking my watch every couple of minutes. When 9:00 a.m. arrived, I went into the headquarters of Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette at 140 Broadway, up to the thirty-sixth floor.

So we formulated a clear set of expectations, which I laid out in a welcome speech to our new analysts. It boiled down to two words:. If we delivered excellent performance for our investors and maintained a pristine reputation, we would have the opportunity to grow and pursue ever more interesting and rewarding work. If we invested poorly or compromised our integrity, we would fail.we hired a young banker from the corporate finance division at Drexel Burnham Lambert.

And right on cue, a few months after we closed, steel prices began to nosedive. Edgcomb’s inventory was now worth less than they had paid for it and dropping in value every day. The profits we anticipated, which were to pay our borrowing costs, never materialized. We couldn’t make our debt payments. Edgcomb was imploding, just as David Stockman predicted it would.

I had fallen into a trap common to many organizations. In my enthusiasm to give a new partner a shot with the Edgcomb deal, I had made myself and the firm vulnerable. I had succumbed to a good sales pitch. I learned later that one of the analysts on this new partner’s team had opposed the deal. He couldn’t see it ever working. But the partner had told him to keep his doubts to himself.

We decided to involve all of our senior partners in our discussions of investments. We would never again allow one person single-handedly to green-light a deal. During my career, I had gotten things more right than wrong, but Edgcomb had shown that I was far from infallible. My colleagues had decades of experience. By working together, arguing and applying our collective wisdom to evaluate an investment’s risks, we hoped we could examine our deals more objectively.

 

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En tanto haya valores morales en las finanzas... ¿Por qué no?

If they are smart old people they have retired and living out their lives fully and intentionally

Pretty simple. Steve Swartzman is willing to compromise moral values in the pursuit of wealth. I hate Elizabeth Warren, but if she's elected, guys like this will get the wealth tax they deserve.

Interesting, u realized the most junior person is the most honest. Wouldn't that be the person paid the least? Us peons have always understood that. But for some reason the trickle down economics just haven't reached us.

'Back in 1969, I arrived for my first interview on Wall Street an hour early, because I didn’t want to be late,' writes billionaire Blackstone cofounder Stephen Schwarzman

They made money and retired; now the business is different?

Bravery has nothing to do with Finance or financial aspects... Financial education does

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