Goldman’s Jonathan Egol Helped the Firm Short Its Own Clients
While pure capitalists might appreciate the genius of this maneuver, on a human level it seems like an uncool thing to do.
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While pure capitalists might appreciate the genius of this maneuver, on a human level it seems like an uncool thing to do.
The villainization of Goldman Sachs continues.
The 'Times' CEO whisperer explains why top Wall Street figures missed a meeting.
From those who received extraordinary assistance, an extraordinary commitment is demanded.
“The question isn’t who is going to let me; it’s who is going to stop me.”
Haven't we had to put up with enough from this organization?
"See, we got to $70 million because xy2 + yx + x = 0."
"Has it really come to this?" asks Alice Schroeder in Bloomberg. Probably not, no.
Finally, the bank gets advice from someone people actually listen to.
Watch an animation based on this week's cover story about the fight over AIG bonuses.
Three hundred Goldman employees are spending this Thanksgiving on garbage duty.
The firm has created a $500 million initiative to assist small businesses.
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