Exile on Wall Street: One Analyst’s Fight to Save the Big Banks from Themselves by Mike Mayo is one of the more important books to be published since the start of the financial crisis. Part memoir, part revelatory narrative of Mike’s career, this highly personal but informative book provides some very important information about how Wall Street works – or doesn’t – and confirms the view of many people than most deals are bad deals, done only to enrich the parties but not investors.
By way of disclosure, I need to say that Mike and I both worked at Prudential Securities in the early 2000s, he as an analyst and myself as a tech banker, so we never really got to know each other. It may interest readers of The Big Picture to know that I have just joined Tangent Capital Partners in New York. I will be focusing on financial advisory and asset management opportunities, but remain Vice Chairman of Lord, Whalen LLC, parent of Institutional Risk Analytics. Maybe I’ll get to serve as receiver for Bank of America when they go belly up, but I digress.
A decade before Prudential, Mike and I almost crossed paths at the Fed, but he worked at the Board of Governors in Washington while I was at the Fed of New York. The former is supposedly in charge of the central bank’s operations, but the latter is the older and more important part of the Fed system. When Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was President of the New York Fed, he dispensed gifts and subsidies to Goldman Sachs and other banks without the prior knowledge or objection of Chairman Ben Bernanke and the other members of the Fed Board of Governors. Suffice to say that there are no tennis courts at the New York Fed.
Mayo provides a lot of important detail about how the major Wall Street firms operate and, in particular, why the larger banks and their clients are more concerned about making money than creating value. Mike learned as did I that truth is not beauty on Wall Street, except in those few, generally smaller firms that have been able to preserve a culture of client service and quality. As Mike points out several times in Exile, many large cap mergers are done simply to cash out the managers.
“Two things are worth noting about these super-size banks,” Mayo writes. “First, much of their growth has come from mergers and acquisitions. They are not growing like Google, by creating a product and doing it better than anyone else. Instead they are just buying out their competitors… Secondly, many of these banks would likely not have grown to their current size without federal assistance in the past. In all the bank crises of previous decades, bank failures were thought to be too economically disruptive. But government bailouts – including the most recent round – didn’t resolve that problem. They merely delayed it, allowing banks to keep growing in size and scope, making the potential cataclysm next time that much bigger.”
This quote hints at one of my criticisms of Exile on Wall Street, namely that Mike does not yet appreciate that nobody in Washington or on Wall Street wants banks, especially the largest banks, to behave. There are many places in the book where I expected Mike to turn that corner of epiphany and state this case, but let me do it for him.
Whether you talk of the National Bank Act of 1865, the creation of the Fed in 1913 or the subsequent birthing of the housing GSEs in the 1930s, both the business community and their lackeys in Washington were more concerned about stoking employment and sales today than in safety and soundness of money or banks. I touched on this point in my 2010 book, Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream, which begins with this quote from Hayek’s “Denationalization of Money” essay:
“I do not think it is an exaggeration to say that it is wholly impossible for a central bank subject to political control, or even exposed to serious political pressure, to regulate the quantity of money in a way conducive to a smoothly functioning market order. A good money, like good law, must operate without regard to the effect that decisions of the issuer will have on known groups or individuals. A benevolent dictator might conceivably disregard these effects; no democratic government dependent on a number of special interests can possibly do so.”
If you look at the decision to allow national banks to make real estate loans three quarters of a century ago or the S&L crisis in the 1980s, the point was jobs, jobs, jobs. This is why the socialists in the neo-Keynesian economic camp led by Paul Krugman chatter constantly about printing more money to grow nominal employment, even if these “workers” cannot afford to buy food at the grocery story due to galloping inflation.
The other, related point to make about Mayo’s memoir is his somewhat embarrassing paean to Paul Volcker. Like Mike, I have great personal regard for Chairman Volcker as a public citizen, but we cannot allow the author of a book about the bad behavior of large banks to get away with this omission. Simply stated, Paul Volcker is the father of “too big to fail.” A former Chase banker, Paul Volcker has always been an advocate of bailouts going back to the Penn Square Bank failure. As I wrote in Inflated:
“In his 2010 book Senseless Panic: How Washington Failed America, former FDIC Chairman William Issac confirms that Mike Bradfield, then general counsel of the Fed and now in the same position at the FDIC, demanded that the FDIC bail out Penn Square Bank, no doubt with the knowledge of Volker and other Fed governors. Issac responded that he would if the central bank shared the cost, but the Fed balked.”
Overall, Mike Mayo deserves great kudos for writing this readable and very personal narrative of his years on Wall Street. Like Mike, I have spent a lot of my career fighting the tendency of big banks and politicians alike to paper over the truth in the name of expediency. Exile on Main Street is a valuable, firsthand account of why in our democracy big banks and the people who run then tend to be less concerned about creating value for investors than in extracting value for themselves. And as long as America remains a messy, ill-managed free market system, it is likely to remain so.
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Like Erick, Herb Cain is not ready to endorse
by septembergurl (Diary)
McConnell has only one concern
by wbb1950
It is as if the GOP Senate fumbled the ball
by Kyle-MI (Diary)
House GOPers must accept this Senate legislation
by geoph
AWESOME!
by jakeofalltrades
Newt has changed
by izoneguy (Diary)
Hi, mikeevergreen. Read this.
by Moe Lane (Diary)
great point Menlo - lies, damn lies and statistics
by Mike gamecock DeVine (Diary)
Mortgage Securities
by morninginamerica
Re: acat - full disclosure: I was banned by LGF
by tailfins1959
Really?
by Menlo (Diary)
Just like the TARP vote
by Glaucon (Diary)
It might not be the sole criteria
by gabs
Heh. Thank you, fedfarmer. You make my case that 2012 is shaping up for a repeat of 1992/1996...
by acat (Diary)
But Newt's Changed!
by jakeofalltrades
And finally, Alex Jones is now calling Redstate
by kowalski (Diary)
I'm neither
by windwaker24
My concern is that it would be used against him in the election
by Change Jar Conservative (Diary)
Hate-filled rubbish
by Glaucon (Diary)
HA!
by WA_Cowboy
5*
by thirstyboots
Finally, a Serial adulterer in the room: Gingrich’s Past, Our Disaster
by izoneguy (Diary)
Be bummed by Brown, but not disappointed
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name that candidate
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Anyone but Johhny Bob McDolerich
by jakeofalltrades
theres no defense of a government pension system that permits full time workers to withdraw a defined benefit
by federalfarmer1
jrfromdallas, maybe Sarah is waiting for Erick to start
by texasroots
Guess I am just a dumb bigot.
by Aaron Gardner (Diary)
I'm the fourth best president in American history ~ Barack Obama
by izoneguy (Diary)
"when did debate performance become our sole criteria
by nancysabet
Geo, you are not even debating on "merits"
by sunshinek67
Seams you have a selective reading problem.
by gekster (Diary)
newt is the only one that has reduced the growth of government
by federalfarmer1
I don't know what you are smoking
by Kyle-MI (Diary)
Not one criticism of Perry that has any substance, then?
by jakeofalltrades
Here in Indiana, we've come to expect these
by turningtables
It's not "free money" 'farmer
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Does the data include fraud?
by Menlo (Diary)
Would you prefer an Alex Jones link, jake?
by acat (Diary)
jakee, It is not the Senators who are the problem
by Kyle-MI (Diary)
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