"Nobody who is hired help and who plays with other people's money "deserves" to earn $100 million," gripes the brilliant Steven Pearlstein in an outstanding article for the Washington Post. "That's certainly true in a moral sense. But it is also true economically.... Let's look at the fundamental asymmetry of risk in the investment business. If you were putting your own money at risk," Pearlstein continues, "there's the possibility of making lots more, but there's also the possibility you could lose it all. The same, however, can't be said if you are an investment banker, a hedge fund manager or a trader in credit default swaps. In that case, if you do well, you get a percentage of the winnings or the value of the deal. But if you do poorly and your clients lose money, the worst that happens is that your bonus is zero. You never have to give back anything from the bonus you earned last year. And, you still get a base salary comfortable enough to keep up payments on the Upper East Side townhouse, the summer place on Nantucket and the tuitions at Brearley. "No one cares about over-the-top compensation schemes when business is booming ... and when share prices are rising. But on the downside, everyone cares. During the "Great Bull Market" of the late 1990s, almost no one bothered to question the exorbitant option grants that Silicon Valley companies lavished on their employees (and on their board members!).
But once the "Great Bull Market" ended, and the NASDAQ imploded, a new bull market in recrimination and litigation began. Class-action shareholder lawsuits erupted from the smoldering remains of former Wall Street darlings, as desperate shareholders tried to recover some small fraction of their losses.
Would it not have been much better for these abused shareholders to sell when the selling was good? Would it not have been better to have raised a skeptical eyebrow toward the questionable corporate practices of the era and headed the other way..., even though questionable corporate practices were producing rising share prices?
"Excess compensation in one area leads to excess compensation in others," Pearlstein concludes. "And that, in the end, is how this arms race in executive pay comes about. It's more about envy than economics. The corporate executives complain they should make as much as the investment bankers, the bankers are upset if they don't make as much as the private-equity guys, the private-equity guys demand to make as much as the traders, and the traders won't sit still until they are paid like hedge fund managers.” Excess compensation also leads to sub-optimal shareholder returns. Greed and capital preservation just don't seem to mix very well, especially when the greed belongs to someone else and the capital belongs to you. The big brokerage firms make most of their money by speculating with capital that does not belong to them, or by levying fees and commissions on capital that their clients put at risk in the financial markets. In other words, shareholders and clients bear most of the risks. Yet, whenever any form of success arrives, Wall Street's elite always garner an outsized share of the rewards. That's asymmetry. And in this case, asymmetry might just be another word for "greed."
Bob Tonachio, CEO of Robert James & Associates, Inc., may be contacted at 1-800-530-5700 His firm charges no fees for advice and consultations are always free of charge. Clients, that followed his firm’s recommendations did not suffer losses in the recent bear market.
Glade Sun
The hired help deserve to skim off $100 million a year?
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FG First Baptist Church all smiles as their 'ship comes in'
Fairfield Glade First Baptist Church was right in the path of the right-of-way for the new widening project for Peavine Road. With a new site selected and the new church building well under way, on Feb. 6, TDOT officially presented Fairfield Glade First Baptist Church a check for $1,435,550 for their property.
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SMHS Rocket Club visits FG Rotary
Fairfield Glade Rotary Club warmly welcomed eight accomplished Stone Memorial High School students. The members of the SMHS Rocket Club team presented a detailed account of their most recent competition in the Team America Rocketry Challenge National Finals in Washington D.C.
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Dr. Smith to speak Feb. 15 on women's health
William E. Smith, MD, will speak on women’s health on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., at a free Community Seminar, in the conference room at the Cumberland Medical Center Wellness Complex in Crossville, at 130 Woodmere Mall, on Hwy. 127. Non members of the facility are welcome.
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Lake Tansi resident wins Holiday Challenge drawing
Betty Smith of Lake Tansi won a six-month membership for the Cumberland Medical Center Wellness Complex at Crossville because she successfully completed a Holiday Challenge to maintain or lose weight from Nov. 24 through Jan. 4.
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Read the latest edition of "The Bulletin"
The Crossville Chronicle-Glade Sun also publishes a newsletter called "The Bulletin" in which you'll find a schedule of Glade activities and events, a restaurant and dining guide, golf information, and even tour schedules. Click here for the latest PDF edition of "The Bulletin."
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Playhouse favorite Daniel Black to appear this Sunday at the Southern Stars Concert
The Southern Stars Symphonic Brass will be presenting their second concert in the Crossville Music Series on Sunday, Feb. 12, at 3:30 p.m. in the beautiful auditorium at Stone Memorial High School.
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Iles is Lions Student of the Month for January
Cumberland County High School senior Dimi Iles has been honored by the Fairfield Glade Lions Club as January “Student of the Month.” She was selected by Guidance Counselor Robin Hull to be so honored by the Lions Club.
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Three musicians join Big Band Sound
Two talented Tennessee Technological University students and a veteran drummer have joined the ranks of the Big Band Sound. They are Kurt Snider, Brant Poindexter and Sarah Ransom.
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Avalon Center asks you to "Let Your Heart Rule" in February
In 2010 Congress began dedicating the entire month of February to Teen Dating Violence Awareness and Prevention Month, a national effort to raise awareness about abuse in youth relationships and promote programs intended to help youth with teen dating violence issues. Throughout February, individuals and many organizations nationwide highlight the need to educate young people about healthy relationships, teach healthy relationship skills and prevent the devastating cycle of abuse.
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ENJOYING NATURE: How ‘fur’ would you go to get a great coat?
I saw in one of the magazines, that I sometimes read, that the Tennessee Fur Harvesters Association was having a fur sale in Crossville. “Fur harvesters” is another word for trappers. Trappers try to catch fur bearing animals like coyote, mink, and beaver for fun and profit. I talked Gary into going with me to see what we could learn.
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