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Review: Money and Power

Award-winning financial writer William D. Cohan has produced a warts-and-all portrait of Goldman Sachs

May 18, 2011 09:10
Goldman Sachs employees being  sworn in a year ago in Washington before testifying to a Senate sub-committee

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

2 min read

By William D. Cohan
Allen lane £25

Investment banker-turned-author William Cohan is becoming the master of the Wall Street biography. Having plundered the archives at his former employer Lazard and chronicled the rise and fall of Bear Stearns & Co in House of Cards, he has now aimed even higher with an examination of Goldman Sachs.

The book's prologue is a devastating critique of the behaviour of Goldman in the run-up to, and aftermath of, the 2007-09 financial panic now regarded as the nearest the world came to monetary meltdown for more than a century. It tells how Goldman ruthlessly turned the table on its rivals by taking massive bets against the sub-prime mortgage debt which was at the heart of the crisis, effectively helping to destroy Lehman and Bear Stearns.

Goldman likes to portray itself as an investment bank devoted to public service. Some of this is true. Its former partners included the legendary Sidney Weinberg, who steered the firm through the Great Depression and served in successive US administrations.