The Greek
debt crisis offers another illustration of Wall Street’s powers of persuasion
and predation, although the Street is missing from most accounts.
Blankfein and his Goldman team helped Greece
hide the true extent of its debt, and in the process almost doubled it. And
just as with the American subprime crisis, and the current plight of many American
cities, Wall Street’s predatory lending played an important although
little-recognized role.
In 2001, Greece was looking for ways to
disguise its mounting financial troubles. The Maastricht Treaty required all
eurozone member states to show improvement in their public finances, but Greece
was heading in the wrong direction.
Then
Goldman Sachs came to the rescue, arranging a secret loan of 2.8 billion euros
for Greece, disguised as an off-the-books “cross-currency swap” - a complicated
transaction in which Greece’s foreign-currency debt was converted into a
domestic-currency obligation using a fictitious market exchange rate.
As a result, about 2 percent of Greece’s
debt magically disappeared from its national accounts. Christoforos Sardelis, then
head of Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency, later described the deal to
Bloomberg Business as “a very sexy story between two sinners.”
For its services, Goldman received a
whopping 600 million euros ($793 million), according to Spyros Papanicolaou,
who took over from Sardelis in 2005. That came to about 12 percent of Goldman’s
revenue from its giant trading and principal-investments unit in 2001 - which
posted record sales that year. The unit was run by Blankfein.
Then the deal turned sour. After the 9/11
attacks, bond yields plunged, resulting in a big loss for Greece because of the
formula Goldman had used to compute the country’s debt repayments under the
swap. By 2005, Greece owed almost double what it had put into the deal, pushing
its off-the-books debt from 2.8 billion euros to 5.1 billion.
In 2005, the deal was restructured and that
5.1 billion euros in debt locked in. Perhaps not incidentally, Mario Draghi,
now head of the European Central Bank and a major player in the current Greek
drama, was then managing director of Goldman’s international division.
Greece wasn’t the only sinner. Until 2008,
European Union accounting rules allowed member nations to manage their debt
with so-called off-market rates in swaps, pushed by Goldman and other Wall
Street banks. In the late 1990s, JPMorgan enabled Italy to hide its debt by
swapping currency at a favorable exchange rate, thereby committing Italy to
future payments that didn’t appear on its national accounts as future
liabilities.
But Greece was in the worst shape, and
Goldman was the biggest enabler. Undoubtedly, Greece suffers from years of
corruption and tax avoidance by its wealthy. But Goldman wasn’t an innocent
bystander: It padded its profits by leveraging Greece to the hilt - along with
much of the rest of the global economy. Other Wall Street banks did the same.
When the bubble burst, all that leveraging pulled the world economy to its
knees.
Even with the global economy reeling from
Wall Street’s excesses, Goldman offered Greece another gimmick. In early
November 2009, three months before the country’s debt crisis became global
news, a Goldman team proposed a financial instrument that would push the debt
from Greece’s healthcare system far into the future. This time, though, Greece
didn’t bite.
As we know, Wall Street got bailed out by
American taxpayers. And in subsequent years, the banks became profitable again and
repaid their bailout loans. Bank shares have gone through the roof. Goldman’s
were trading at $53 a share in November 2008; they’re now worth over $200.
Executives at Goldman and other Wall Street banks have enjoyed huge pay
packages and promotions. Blankfein, now Goldman’s CEO, raked in $24 million
last year alone. Meanwhile, the people of Greece struggle to buy medicine and
food.
There are analogies here in America,
beginning with the predatory loans made by Goldman, other big banks, and the
financial companies they were allied with in the years leading up to the bust.
Today, even as the bankers vacation in the Hamptons, millions of Americans
continue to struggle with the aftershock of the financial crisis in terms of
lost jobs, savings, and homes.
Meanwhile, cities and states across America
have been forced to cut essential services because they’re trapped in similar
deals sold to them by Wall Street banks. Many of these deals have involved
swaps analogous to the ones Goldman sold the Greek government.
And much like the assurances it made to the
Greek government, Goldman and other banks assured the municipalities that the
swaps would let them borrow more cheaply than if they relied on traditional
fixed-rate bonds—while downplaying the risks they faced. Then, as interest
rates plunged and the swaps turned out to cost far more, Goldman and the other
banks refused to let the municipalities refinance without paying hefty fees to
terminate the deals.
Three years ago, the Detroit Water
Department had to pay Goldman and other banks penalties totaling $547 million
to terminate costly interest-rate swaps. Forty percent of Detroit’s water bills
still go to paying off the penalty. Residents of Detroit whose water has been
shut off because they can’t pay have no idea that Goldman and other big banks
are responsible.
Likewise, the Chicago school system - whose
budget is already cut to the bone - must pay over $200 million in termination
penalties on a Wall Street deal that had Chicago schools paying $36 million a
year in interest-rate swaps.
A deal involving interest-rate swaps that
Goldman struck with Oakland, California, more than a decade ago has ended up
costing the city about $4 million a year, but Goldman has refused to allow
Oakland out of the contract unless it ponies up a $16 million termination fee -
prompting the city council to pass a resolution to boycott Goldman. When
confronted at a shareholder meeting about it, Blankfein explained that it was
against shareholder interests to tear up a valid contract.
Goldman Sachs and the other giant Wall
Street banks are masterful at selling complex deals by exaggerating their
benefits and minimizing their costs and risks. That’s how they earn giant fees.
When a client gets into trouble - whether that client is an American homeowner,
a US city, or Greece - Goldman ducks and hides behind legal formalities and
shareholder interests.
Borrowers that get into trouble are rarely
blameless, of course: They spent too much, and were gullible or stupid enough
to buy Goldman’s pitches. Greece brought on its own problems, as did many
American homeowners and municipalities.
But in all of these cases, Goldman knew very
well what it was doing. It knew more about the real risks and costs of the
deals it proposed than those who accepted them. “It is an issue of morality,”
said the shareholder at the Goldman meeting where Oakland came up. Exactly.
Πηγή: csmonitor.com
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