By Brett Arends
To be read in the voice of Paul Harvey.
And on the eighth day God looked down on his planned paradise and said, “I
need someone who can flip this for a quick buck.”
So God made a banker.
God said, “I need someone who doesn’t grow anything or make anything but
who will borrow money from the public at 0% interest and then lend it back to
the public at 2% or 5% or 10% and pay himself a bonus for doing so.”
So God made a banker.
God said, “I need someone who will take money from the people who work and
save, and use that money to create a dotcom bubble and a housing bubble and a
stock bubble and an oil bubble and a commodities bubble and a bond bubble and
another stock bubble, and then sell it to people in Poughkeepsie and Spokane
and Bakersfield, and pay himself another bonus.”
So God made a banker.
God said, “I need someone to build homes in the swamps and deserts using
shoddy materials and other people’s money, and then use these homes as
collateral for a Ponzi scheme he can sell to pensioners in California and
Michigan and Sweden. I need someone who will then foreclose on those homes,
kick out the occupants, and switch off the air conditioning and the plumbing,
and watch the houses turn back into dirt. And then pay himself another bonus.”
So God made a bankerGod said, “I need someone to lend money to people with bad credit at 30% interest in order to get his stock price up, and then, just before the loans turn bad, cash out his stock and walk away. And who, when asked later, will, with a tearful eye, say the government made him do it.”
So God made a banker
God said, “And I need somebody who will tell everyone else to stand on
their own two feet, but who will then run to the government for a bailout as
soon as he gets into trouble — and who will then use that bailout money to help
elect a Congress that will look the other way. And then pay himself another
bonus.”
So God made a banker
This painfully funny tongue in cheek piece written by Mr. Arends was originally found on Marketwatch. With all due respect for the many hard working 9-5 bankers I know and have worked with this piece resonated with me when thinking of many of the charades of the Investment Banking community (think "Wall Street" wire houses) over the past decade or two.
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