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Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World
 
 

Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World [Kindle Edition]

William D. Cohan
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Review

Revelatory, engrossing, penetrating ... Cohan revels in a good bust-up (Financial Times )

The best analysis yet of Goldman's increasingly tangled web of conflicts

(Economist )

Startling ... lifts the lid on Goldman's pivotal role in the meltdown (Mail on Sunday )

Cohan portrays a firm that has grown so large and hungry that it's no longer long-term greedy but short-term vicious. And that's the wonder - and horror - of Goldman Sachs (Businessweek )

Cohan's book tells of bitter power struggles and business cock-ups (Guardian )

A definitive account of the most profitable and influential investment bank of the modern era (New York Times Book Review )

Product Description

When, in late 2008, the dust finally started to settle on one of the worst financial crises in history, only one Wall Street institution still stood virtually unassailed - Goldman Sachs. Why did Goldman survive, and even flourish, when so many of its peers were collapsing around them? Were the Goldman professionals simply the 'smartest guys in the room', the elite of the elite? Or was there more at work than simply the magic of 'The Goldman Way'?

In Money and Power William D Cohan peers behind the curtain to give us the inside story of why Goldman is so profitable, and so powerful. His behind-the-scenes account shows how, buttressed by the most aggressive and sophisticated PR machine in the financial industry, Goldman Sachs has continually projected an image of being superior to its competitors - smarter, more collegial, more ethical, more client-focused. But Cohan also reveals another way of viewing Goldman - as a secretive money-making machine that has walked an uneasy line between conflict-of-interest and legitimate deal-making for decades; a firm that has assiduously cultivated power and exerted its influence over government (to the extent that Sidney Weinberg, who ran the firm for nearly forty years, advised presidents from Roosevelt to Kennedy and was nicknamed 'The Politician'); a company kept in line by former CIA operatives and private investigators; a workplace rife with brutal power struggles.

William Cohan is the first author to chronicle and to interview the leaders of Goldman Sachs since the 2008 crash, and has gained unprecedented access to the firm's inner circle. Every living former chief executive of Goldman Sachs has spoken to him, as well as its current chairman and CEO, Lloyd Blankfein. Money and Power is the most penetrating study yet of these larger-than-life characters and their secretive world: the definitive account of an institution whose public claims of virtue look very much like ruthlessness when exposed to the light of day.


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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition
Try to get past the snake on the cover and the subtitle - there's nothing lazy or simplistic about this book. It's an amazingly complete look at an institution that says an awful lot about modern capitalism and how we got into this mess.

The most striking thing about the book is how much of it there is - almost 700 pages in the print edition. Mr Cohan has done a lot of research, interviewed an awful lot of people and come up with a lot of new facts. It's not for the faint-hearted - as a finance nerd I enjoyed reading for hours on how Goldman turned the subprime situation from a disaster to the foundation of global financial dominance, but many will have less patience.

The first half of the book covers the earlier history of the bank, and I'll confess I skimmed some of this. Mr Cohan uses this to build up to the central theme of what makes Goldman different from other banks; then, covering the period from 1998 on, the story changes gear and it becomes clear what we're hearing is based on verbatim accounts from interviews (and a lot of material that was subpeonaed by the US Congress).

Crucially, Mr Cohan has the skill to appreciate two things - in my experience it's rare for people to get both : just how good Goldman Sachs are at what they do; and just how few people outside the bank benefit from what they do. There's something deeply depressing about the maths genius (who found the Math Olympiad "laughably easy") who now spends his days building models to help good traders exploit suckers. Mr Cohan's refusal to follow the cheap sneer route makes the book actually all the more damning about our financial system.

Another of Mr Cohan's books "House of Cards" - covering Bear Stearns - makes an ideal companion to this book, covering as it does the *worst* of the investment banks, and the first to go under. If I had to define one thing about Goldman that defines it as a model of effectiveness it would be its trust in its people and hence its willingness to listen to relatively junior people, like those who picked up on the subprime meltdown and were allowed to build a bank-saving position. At the same time, the top men (and they were all men) at Bear were distracted by politicking and went under.

Yet even Goldman's skills were not enough, and the account of the rescue of the US financial system - as seen from inside its biggest beneficiary - are a compelling look at who controls our economy.

Mr Cohan writes well, has a nice sense of humour, and clearly a huge appetite for hard work. He bends over backwards to ensure he has the "Goldman line" on many of the accusations thrown at the bank, but shows no signs that I detected of having been "captured". If you read this book, you'll come away with a great sense of what makes a strong financial institution, but also a graphic account of how we created the environment where trading skills and political connections - rather than wealth-creating innovation - make a person fabulously rich.
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Be creative and take risk, he said. Take risk in your own careers, take risk in shrinking and growing businesses, take risk in moving people around, take risk in making decisions. &quote;
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Warren Buffett, the legendary investor with a knack for homespun observations about markets and human behavior, once observed, presciently, that it is only when the tide goes out do you find out who is not wearing a bathing suit. &quote;
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McGoldrick found six main factors for Goldmans prowess, with a devotion to teamwork at the top of the list, followed by a laserlike focus on the firms clients. A third factor was Goldmans extreme reluctance to hire from other Wall Street firms, preferring instead to recruit highly selectively from the nations top business schoolsthirty MBAs a year were hired from a pool of fifteen hundredbecause young MBAs have a certain plasticity to their character, &quote;
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