Life Lessons From A 30-Year Wall Street Veteran


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Authored by Nicholas Colas via ConvergEx,

Talking to a journalist a few days ago I realized that I can now add “30-year Wall Street veteran” to my list of epithets.  It’s not as catchy as “wily Odysseus” or “wine dark sea”, but then again my life on the Street doesn’t really qualify as Homeric either.  Rather, it’s been more like watching an old school Broadway musical, complete with lots of big personalities whose stories are often best told with small anecdotes.

Along the way those people have taught me everything I know about a career in New York finance.  They all bubble up to what sound like clichés, but only because they are true.  But below the surface… Well, how you learn those clichés is never boring.

Lesson #1: Set expectations and then beat them.  Everything on Wall Street carries with it the weight of expectations, from careers to asset prices.  In both cases, their values only change when outcomes differ from what was expected.

The best example I ever saw: Years ago I worked with a wily investment banker who played the expectations game better than anyone else I ever saw.  He knew that the success of an Initial Public Offering or secondary share issuance often came down to perception.  Did the institutional buyside think he was marketing a hot deal, or a cold one?

Since his deals invariably had roadshow lunches in major cities like New York and Boston, he always did the following:

  • If 100 investors had RSVPed for a lunch, he would have the room set for 70 people but order food for 100.
  • As the crowd started to file for lunch, he would have the wait staff very ostentatiously reorganize the dining room and roll in those big pieces of plywood that serve as table tops past the waiting investors.
  • This always worked to set up a buzz in the room. “This must be a hot deal if this many people showed up unexpected.”

Lesson #2: Know your client.  Another Street cliché, but most people underestimate what the word “Know” really means.

Walking around town many years ago with the CFO of a US auto company as we visited investors, he told me that he knew even before the meeting started if it would be productive.  I found this hard to believe.  The meetings were with all different kinds of Wall Street players, set up by my firm’s salespeople weeks ahead of time.

“You watch…  If your salesperson knows the receptionist by name and talks to them about their kids, that’s going to be a good meeting.”  He was right.  At the next meeting, we saw a chatty salesperson from my company looking at new baby pictures at the receptionist desk.  Next two meetings – no rapport at the front desk, and listless inattentive investors.

Another example: know when your client gets hungry.  Sitting at a conference table working on a large M&A transaction (the largest one in the auto space in the 1990s), the group needed to call the client’s Treasurer.  I reached for the phone.

The senior banker told me to stop; “It’s 11:30am.  Bob (not his real name) is on a diet – he needs to lose a lot of weight.  Let’s let him get lunch.  We’ll wait until 1:30pm.”  And we did.  The call went fine.

Lesson #3: Don’t worry too much about what you don’t know, but rather what you’re sure of that’s actually wrong.  That’s an old Mark Twain saying, but it is a lesson you learn quickly on Wall Street as well.

Take, for example, the most basic assumption that corporate managements who own a lot of stock will try to do what’s best for the company.  I have covered two companies (both investment banking clients of my firm) as a brokerage analyst where the CEOs eventually either went to jail for fraud or narrowly avoided that fate.  A third company went bust in a fairly spectacular fashion, just a year or two after raising equity.

All three CEOs owned a lot of stock – maybe too much, which is combination with a lack of moral compass led them to unwise actions.  Yes, management teams should always own some piece of the business they manage.  But that’s no reason to assume that this will magically guide them to better performance.  Sometimes it just leads to desperati

Russia’s New Voicemail: “Press 2 For Services Of Russian Hackers, Press 3 For Election Interference”


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With the Russian election hacking scandal having gone from the merely strange, to the bizarre, to the ironic, to the McCarthyist, and most recently, jumping the patently absurd shark – as of last night, anyone who is against Hillary is “influenced by Russia” according to a former Clinton advisor – Russia decided to have some fun at the expense of US paranoia.

On Saturday, the ministry posted the following audio file of the “new” automated telephone switchboard message for Russian embassies.

“You have reached the Russian embassy, your call is very important to us. To arrange a call from a Russian diplomat to your political opponent, press 1. To use the services of Russian hackers press 2. To request election interference, press 3 and wait until the next election campaign. Please note that all calls are recorded for quality improvement and training purposes.”

And just to make it clear, it is April 1: as AP observes for the countless spy agencies, and congressional committees still trying to explain how Moscow subliminally influenced millions of Americans to vote for Trump instead of Hillary, a ministry officer confirmed that the post was a joke.

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“Who’s Worth What” – White House Releases Financial Disclosures Of Key Staffers


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President Trump night released details of the personal finances of his staffers late on Friday, including his son-in-law Jared Kushner and daughter Ivanka, which once again confirmed that most of the people in his immediate circle are very wealthy. The legally required disclosure documents provided a snapshot of assets and positions held by personnel when they first entered their new jobs at the White House, and before they started selling stocks and other assets that could pose conflicts of interest, according to White House ethics officials.

Curiously, the White House did not actually create a public depository of the filings, so AP, Propublica and the NYT created a shared drive for all the disclosures so far.

Here are the key highlights via the NYT and Reuters:

  • Jared Kushner and wife Ivanka Trump released a 54-page report which included “scores of assets worth six- and seven-figures”. According to a NYT breakdown, the president’s daughter and son-in-law are the beneficiaries of a sprawling real estate and investment business worth as much as $740 million, despite their new government responsibilities. Ivanka will maintain a stake in the Trump International Hotel in Washington, and earned from $1 million to $5 million from January 2016 to March 2017, the value of stake was estimated at $5 million to $25 million. Kushner held executive positions with 266 LLCs, corporations, groups and non-profits, which he has resigned from since January.
  •  Stephen K. Bannon, the president’s senior adviser, made between $1.3 and $2.3 million last year according to his 12 page disclosure report, which showed stakes in various advisory companies and movie studios but no stock holdings. Bannon’s pre-White House bank accounts, real estate and other holdings were valued at between $3.3 million and $12.6 million. Bannon disclosed $191,000 in consulting fees he earned from Breitbart News Network, the conservative media organization; $125,333 from Cambridge Analytica, a data firm that worked for the Trump campaign; and $61,539 in salary from the Government Accountability Institute, a conservative nonprofit organization. All three organizations are backed by the major Republican donors Robert Mercer and his daughter, Rebekah profiled recently. According to the NYT, Bannon’s most valuable asset was Bannon Strategic Advisors Inc., a privately held consulting firm from which income from his other investments appeared to flow into. It was valued at $5 million to $25 million. He also listed the value of his Bannon Film Industries at $1 million to $5 million. His bank accounts were valued at as much as $2,250,000, while he listed rental real estate valued at as much as $10.5 million.
  • Gary Cohn, the former Goldman Sachs president and now head of the White House National Economic Council, disclosed assets worth $252 million to $611 million. Little information was given on several of his assets and only indicated they were worth more than $1 million. That makes Cohn, now the director of the National Economic Council and a central adviser to Mr. Trump, one of the wealthier members of the already-affluent Trump administration, which includes more than one billionaire. According to the NYT, in addition to the millions of dollars in cash and stock Cohn received from Goldman that made up the lion’s share of his personal assets, he held a slew of positions in publicly traded stocks — many of which he has already said he plans to sell — and in various private entities. Those entities include a stake valued at more than $1 million in a consumer education and consulting business called Payoff, a position in a cosmetics retailer also valued at more than $1 million, investments in several self-storage concerns in Ohio valued at $100,000 or more each, and an investment in a venture capital fund run by Andreessen Horowitz, the Silicon Valley powerhouse, valued at $100,000 or more.
  • Kellyanne Conway, one of Trump’s top advisers, was not quite in the same wealth category as some of her superrich colleagues. Conway made over $800,000 last year, her filing shows. As head of her own consulting firm, Conway’s clients included an assortment of conservative causes, including the National Rifle Association and the Tea Party Patriots, as well as Cambridge Analytica, the political data firm that advised Mr. Trump’s campaign. She was also paid for a speaking engagement at Point72 Asset Management, the investment firm run by the billionaire stock picker Steven A. Cohen.
  • Reince Priebus, White House Chief of Staff, disclosed assets of between $604,000 and $1.16 million and income of $1.42 million. About $566,000 of his income came from the Republican National Committee and the rest from his partnership in a Milwaukee law firm.
  • Reed Cordish, a Baltimore real estate developer before he become Trump’s technology adviser, disclosed pre-White House assets of between $92 million and $798 million. He had income of between $48 million and $55 million.
  • Julia Hahn, a former Breitbart.com reporter until she went to work in the White House, disclosed a PNC custodial account valued at $500,000 to $1 million. Various stock funds listed on her financial disclosure are worth as much as $1.5 million. As the NYT put, it “her work as a journalist was also nothing to sneeze at.” As a reporter, she made $117,217 last year at Breitbart. On top of that, she earned $74,082 from Laura Ingraham’s radio show.
  • Dina Powell, who serves on the National Security Council, made between $1.08 and $6 million last year. Her assets stand at over $9 million.
  • Donald McGahn, chief White House Counsel, disclosed income of $2.4 million at Jones Day, where his clients included Trump, the NRA, and Aaron Schock (the Illinois lawmaker charged with federal corruption).
  • Omarosa Manigault, a former contestant on Trump’s reality show the Apprentice and now is a White House adviser, had a modest income under $100,000. The disclosures showed she is a beneficiary of a trust established by her late fiance, actor Michael Clarke Duncan, worth between $1 million and $5 million. Manigault is currently engaged to a Florida pastor. Forms show she received a wedding dress, veil and accessories worth $25,000 for an appearance on the reality show “Say Yes to the Dress.”
  • Peter Navarro, Trump’s trade czar and resident China hawk, is not a wealthy man, but his salary as an economics professor at a public university wasn’t bad. According to his disclosure form,Mr. Navarro earned $240,000 in salary and bonuses from the University of California, Irvine. He also earned $10,500 for delivering a speech in November to the Casket & Funeral Supply Association of America.
  • Sean Spicer, the press secretary, reported stakes in the Coca-Cola Company, McDonald’s and several real estate investments. But, despite his much-discussed taste for cinnamon-flavored gum, he reported no investments in chewing gum companies (although he does invest in Walmart, which sells chewing gum).
  • Sebastian Gorka, a deputy assistant to Mr. Trump and a former editor at Breitbart News, reported consulting fees of $38,200 from Breitbart. He also reported royalties of $50,000 to $100,000 for his book “Defeating jihad: The Winnable War” — and also said that he signed a contract for a second book.
  • Boris Epshteyn, who served during the presidential campaign as one of Mr. Trump’s chief attack dogs and television talking heads, stills owes over $50,000 on college loans he took out more than a decade ago, his filing indicates. Recently, Mr. Epshteyn left his White House post under circumstances that were unclear.
  • Jason Greenblatt, the Trump Organization lawyer tasked with helping to bring peace to the Middle East, disclosed $1,025,000 in compensation from Mr. Trump’s company last year.
  • Michael Ellis, who reportedly shared intel on Trump surveillance with House Intel Chairman Devin Nunes, owes more than $30K in student loans.

* * *

The full list of disclosures, which excludes president Trump and vice president Pence

President Trump Weekly Address – March 31st 2017


President Trump delivers the weekly address from the White House:

STEVE PIECZENIK ST CMD Mar 30 17 OPUS 2


Hear me on two issues: Brexit will have an IMPACT on U.S. and please Potus, get out of the Middle East, Its a disaster.

KOMMONSENTSJANE – HILLARY STILL SHORT ON EARS


Hillary might best hope her memory goes first.

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Clinton Cheered for ‘Alternative Reality’ Conway Jab?

hat2

It sounds like Hillary continues to be short on ears and long on mouth.

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – JOHN PODESTA CAUGHT HIDING MAJOR RUSSIAN TIES.


The Clinton Crime Family does include all most all the old Clinton associates from when Bill was the head Dom and Hillary the enforcer.

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The Horn News

podesta

WHERE IS LADY JUSTICE?

John Podesta caught HIDING major Russian ties!?

March 31, 2017

If the government ever gets around to investigating Hillary Clinton for her ties to Russia, she potentially faces serious jail time. And a new report shows that if she’s heading to jail, she won’t be going alone.
Her former campaign manager, John Podesta, would end up on trial with her, according to an article recently published by The Daily Caller.
When he began working for the Obama White House in 2013, Podesta covered up the fact that he owned 75,000 shares of a Russian-linked company, the report says.

That’s a clear violation of the law, experts all over the political spectrum agree – possibly one that would have given Russia leverage over American intelligence.
Podesta has fiercely denied the allegations. Since the publication, Podesta’s lawyers have sent The Daily Caller a “cease-and-desist” letter…

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – COURTS HAND TRUMP A HUGE VICTORY.


Trump will prevail its just going to take longer than we hoped it would take.

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Courts Hand Trump a Huge Victory – its not Wednesday – but the words are appropriate for  the occasion.

Praise

AMEN!

Although Donald Trump lost on healthcare yesterday, he got a big win in the courts. As Townhall reports:
The Trump administration can (finally) check off a win in court for the president’s revised travel ban. Virginia Judge Anthony Trenga upheld the White House’s travel order on Friday.
“The president has provided a detailed justification for the Order based on national security needs, and enjoining the operation of [executive order] would interfere with the President’s unique constitutional responsibilities to conduct international relations, provide for the national defense, and secure the nation,” Trenga wrote in conjunction with his decision.
He rejected the notion that the immigration ban was in any way a discriminatory religious test.
This is good news. Although it has no immediate impact on the state of the order, the Trump administration is currently appealing…

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – STATE DEPT EMPLOYEE UNDER INVESTIGATION FOR LYING TO FBI


The entire government is corrupt.

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State Dept. Employee Under Investigation for Lying to FBI
Keely Sharp

March 29, 2017
A U.S. State Department employee with access to sensitive diplomatic information was accused of failing to report her contacts with Chinese foreign intelligence agents who provided her with gifts in exchange for economic information, federal prosecutors said on Wednesday.
A State Department spokeswoman had no immediate comment on the charges of obstruction of justice and making false statements to the Federal Bureau of Investigation filed against employee Candace Claiborne in federal court in Washington.
Claiborne was paid almost $2,500 by a Chinese agent in 2011 in exchange for information about U.S. economic policy in relation to China, according to court documents.

The charges against Claiborne were announced just ahead of an April 6-7 meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at a time of heightened tensions between the world’s two largest economies over…

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Meet the Midwestern Contractor That Appears Hundreds of Times in the CIA WikiLeaks Dump


BIG BROTHER IS HERE!