By JOE NOCERA
Published: March 16, 2012
On
Wednesday, Howard Schultz, the chairman and chief executive of Starbucks, will take the podium at his
company’s annual meeting and talk about the importance of morality in business.
Joe Nocera
Yes,
morality. I don’t know that he’ll use that exact word. But there can be little
doubt that in recent years, especially, Schultz has been practicing a kind of
moral capitalism. Profitability is important, he believes, but so is treating
customers, employees and coffee growers fairly. Recently, Schultz has defined
Starbucks’s mission even more broadly, creating
programs that have
nothing at all to do with selling coffee but are aimed at helping the country
recover from the Great Recession.
In the
speech, Schultz plans to make a direct link between Starbucks’s record profits
and this larger societal role the company has embraced. He will make the case
that companies that earn the country’s trust will ultimately be rewarded with a
higher stock price. “The value of your company is driven by your company’s
values,” he plans to say.
I bring
up Schultz and Starbucks because this week we saw a different kind of American
capitalism on display — the “rip your eyeballs out” capitalism of Goldman Sachs. In the corporate equivalent of
the shot heard round the world, Greg Smith, a former Goldman executive, wrote
an Op-Ed
article in The Times as he was
walking out the door in which he described a corporate culture that values only
one thing: making as much money as possible, by whatever means necessary.
According to Smith, Goldman views clients as pigeons to be plucked rather than
customers to be valued. Goldman traders vie to see how much profit they can
make at the expense of their clients, even if it means selling them products
that are sure to “blow up” eventually. “It makes me ill how callously people
talk about ripping their clients off,” Smith wrote.
In the
wake of Smith’s article, plenty of people raced to Goldman’s defense. Michael
Bloomberg, New York’s billionaire mayor, whose company sells Goldman expensive
computer terminals, went
to Goldman Sachs’s headquarters in a show
of support. The editors of his eponymous firm published an editorial that mercilessly mocked Smith. They and others pointed out that
Goldman clients are big boys who can take care of themselves. Even some clients
agreed. “You better not turn your back on them,” one Goldman customer told The
Financial Times. Yet, he added, “They are also highly competent.”
But
there’s a reason Smith’s article has struck such a chord. It is the same reason
that Goldman Sachs, despite having come through the financial crisis largely
unscathed, has become the target of such astonishing venom, described as a vampire squid and the like. The reason is that the kind of amoral,
eat-what-you-kill capitalism that Goldman represents is one that most Americans
instinctively find repugnant. It confirms the suspicions many people have that
Wall Street has become a place where sleazy practices are the norm, and where
generating profits in ways that are detrimental to society is the ticket to a
successful career and a multimillion-dollar bonus.
Goldman
bundled terrible subprime mortgages that helped bring about the financial
crisis. Smelling trouble, it unloaded its worst mortgage bonds by cramming them
down the throats of its clients. It secretly allowed a short-seller, John
Paulson, to pick some especially toxic mortgage bonds that were bundled and
sold to Goldman clients — with Paulson profiting by taking the “short” side of
the trade. Just recently, Goldman had to admit that one of its investment
bankers had acted as a merger adviser to the El Paso Corporation while holding stock in Kinder Morgan,
which was trying to acquire El Paso. It would be hard to imagine a more blatant
conflict — yet no one at Goldman bothered to tell El Paso.
These
practices may not be illegal, but can you really say they represent the values
that we want to see on Wall Street or in our corporations? I can’t.
And
Goldman shouldn’t either. What has been amazing is that, despite three years of
nonstop criticism — including Congressional hearings and settlements with the
government — Goldman has not changed one iota. That is another reason Smith’s
article resonated. It confirmed that suspicion as well. Goldman’s response to
every controversy these past three years has been to bury them in a blizzard of
public relations. And this has been its response to the Smith article,
releasing, for instance, a companywide e-mail from Lloyd Blankfein, its chief executive, insisting that Goldman
does, too, care about clients. Consistently, Goldman’s attitude has been: This,
too, shall pass.
So far,
though, it hasn’t. And maybe, just maybe, it won’t. Maybe the time has come for
Blankfein to watch what Howard Schultz is doing at Starbucks. Sometimes, the
best way to do well really is to do good.

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