Sitting onstage in Washington’s Ronald Reagan Building in July, Lloyd Blankfein said Goldman Sachs had stopped using its own money to make bets on the bank’s behalf.
'We shut off that activity', the CEO told more than 400 people at a lunch organized by the Economic Club of Washington, D.C., slicing the air with his hand. The bank no longer had proprietary traders who 'just put on risks that they wanted' and didn’t interact with clients, he said.
The team’s survival shows how Goldman Sachs has worked around regulations curbing proprietary bets at banks. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker singled out the company in 2009, saying it shouldn’t get taxpayer support if it focuses on trading. A section of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act known as the Volcker rule, drafted to prevent banks from taking on excessive risk, limits short-term investments made with firms’ capital.
The law doesn’t bar longer-term wagers. That leaves room for other risky investments, according to Matthew Richardson, an economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. Bets that last months can go awry and belong outside federally backed banks, he said.
Michael DuVally, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, said in an e-mail that MSI engages in long-term investing and lending. A 2011 proposal for implementing the Volcker rule uses a 60-day cutoff to classify short-term trades.
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Secret Goldman Team Sidesteps Volcker After Blankfein Vow
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