Monday, October 18, 2010

Goldman: Polishing Off the Tarnish

After over 140 years in business, the prestigious investment bank that has long been the envy of many companies that have come and gone. Goldman continues to make all kinds of money irrespective of the scandal launched by the SEC investigation this past Spring, which precipitated a hearing on Capital Hill. This was to be only the beginning of a bad year for the gold plated maverick, at least where their reputation is concerned.

Not long after the SEC investigation ended in a $500 million settlement, a German bank; Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg (LBBW), filed a suit claiming the firm knowingly sold $660 million of subprime mortgage-backed securities to a subsidiary of LBBW.
As to be expected, Goldman began to take action to buff off the tarnish derived from the unbecoming headlines of greed and deception. To this end the company formed a Business Standards committee, which is headed by Goldman’s chairman and vice chairman, Jerry Corrigan and Michael Evans, respectively. The Business Standards committee will review strategies to rebuild its once stellar reputation.

A series of surveys conducted by Goldman’s Business Standards Committee revealed that their clients believe that Goldman will make them money, but do not feel that they are trustworthy. If the Goldman committee approaches this “perception” issue the way it aggressively approaches its other business strategies, this will soon be a vague memory.

K. Reilly
The Cohn-Reilly Report


___________Comments

Kirsten said...

Goldman has been able to escape criticism for a century. I saw a documentary about GS that talked about how many of the good old boys from the firm went on to work for presidents, so they have been essentially "untouchable" until now. It makes you wonder if they have been doing transactions like this all along
OCTOBER 28, 2010 7:03 AM

1 comment:

  1. Goldman has been able to escape criticism for a century. I saw a documentary about GS that talked about how many of the good old boys from the firm went on to work for presidents, so they have been essentially "untouchable" until now. It makes you wonder if they have been doing transactions like this all along.

    ReplyDelete