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Related: About this forumWall St. Is Minting Easy Money From Risky Loans. What Could Go Wrong?
Wall St. Is Minting Easy Money From Risky Loans. What Could Go Wrong?
By Rob Copeland and Maureen Farrell
Dec. 27, 2024
In the fall of 2015, in the back booth of the retro Putnam Restaurant in Greenwich, Conn., Craig Packer, a partner at Goldman Sachs, sat across from Doug Ostrover and listened to an audacious pitch.
Mr. Ostrover, then 52, had recently left the investment colossus Blackstone and was mulling a dramatic midcareer effort to build a firm from scratch, one that would take on some of the biggest names in global finance. Quit your job, the billionaire financier told the 48-year-old Mr. Packer, and join me.
As Mr. Packer later recalled, Mr. Ostrover wanted to create a firm that would lend money to highly indebted, risky businesses willing to pay hefty interest rates for fast cash. If it succeeded, the new enterprise, and its founding partners, could dominate a new financial playing field with the potential for huge profits.
Mr. Ostrovers pitch (one he would also make to Marc Lipschultz, a two-decade veteran of KKR who would eventually become another founder of the nascent firm) was to leap into the business of private credit, a simple-sounding term that belies its complexity and its risk.
{snip}
Rob Copeland is a finance reporter, writing about Wall Street and the banking industry. More about Rob Copeland
Maureen Farrell writes about Wall Street, focusing on private equity, hedge funds and billionaires and how they influence the world of investing. More about Maureen Farrell
By Rob Copeland and Maureen Farrell
Dec. 27, 2024
In the fall of 2015, in the back booth of the retro Putnam Restaurant in Greenwich, Conn., Craig Packer, a partner at Goldman Sachs, sat across from Doug Ostrover and listened to an audacious pitch.
Mr. Ostrover, then 52, had recently left the investment colossus Blackstone and was mulling a dramatic midcareer effort to build a firm from scratch, one that would take on some of the biggest names in global finance. Quit your job, the billionaire financier told the 48-year-old Mr. Packer, and join me.
As Mr. Packer later recalled, Mr. Ostrover wanted to create a firm that would lend money to highly indebted, risky businesses willing to pay hefty interest rates for fast cash. If it succeeded, the new enterprise, and its founding partners, could dominate a new financial playing field with the potential for huge profits.
Mr. Ostrovers pitch (one he would also make to Marc Lipschultz, a two-decade veteran of KKR who would eventually become another founder of the nascent firm) was to leap into the business of private credit, a simple-sounding term that belies its complexity and its risk.
{snip}
Rob Copeland is a finance reporter, writing about Wall Street and the banking industry. More about Rob Copeland
Maureen Farrell writes about Wall Street, focusing on private equity, hedge funds and billionaires and how they influence the world of investing. More about Maureen Farrell
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Wall St. Is Minting Easy Money From Risky Loans. What Could Go Wrong? (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
20 hrs ago
OP
boonecreek
(205 posts)1. Well, here we go again.
2008-09 all over.
keithbvadu2
(40,531 posts)2. Become 'too big to fail' and your friends in Congress will bail you out.
in2herbs
(3,231 posts)3. Would the MAGAs be in favor of Congress bailing these guys out? I doubt it, but am realllly looking forward
to these guys asking to be bailed out while 45 or any R is in office.
Meadowoak
(6,296 posts)4. The same thing that always goes wrong when Republicans are in charge.
No rules, no regulations. We'll be in a financial crisis in no time. Also a well placed recession always lowers wages and benefits, a big win for corporations. God, I hate Republicans and everything they stand for.
Hugin
(34,755 posts)5. I had a chilling thought recently that I haven't yet been able to pin down...
Like how many on wall street are paying themselves by borrowing against their stocks. Are there those out there who are borrowing against the "value" of their crypto holdings.
Yes, it would be foolish for a financial institution to loan with crypto as collateral. But I'm guaranteeing there's some out there who would. This would explain the cryptoarchy's frantic push to legitimize their hoard.
Wow, the things that keep one awake at night.