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Can Wall Street Change?

Most of the American public were horrified back in 2008 when they learned just how ruthless and unethical some Wall Street banks were when it came to their client’s money. Since the fall of Lehman, the mortgage-backed security crisis and the Great Recession, changes (namely Dodd-Frank) have taken place to ensure that what happened in the Fall of 2008 will never (hopefully) happen again. But is it really working?

According to Greg Smith, who recently resigned from Goldman Sachs, not much has changed.

Smith was employed for 12 years as a London-based executive director for Goldman, overseeing equity derivatives. He resigned today and promptly issued an Op-Ed piece that was published in the New York Times.

In it, he tells how he joined Goldman right out of college and was immediately enamored with the firm’s culture, which revolved around teamwork, integrity and always doing the right thing for the client.

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That was then.

Now, as he scathingly writes, the firm’s culture has been lost and the decline in the firm’s moral fiber could well bring down one of the world’s largest banks. What once was a place that did right by clients is now a place where profits are placed above people.

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According to Smith, there are three quick ways to become a leader at Goldman:

a) Execute on the firm’s “axes,” which is Goldman-speak for persuading your clients to invest in the stocks or other products that we are trying to get rid of because they are not seen as having a lot of potential profit. b) “Hunt Elephants.” In English: get your clients — some of whom are sophisticated, and some of whom aren’t — to trade whatever will bring the biggest profit to Goldman. Call me old-fashioned, but I don’t like selling my clients a product that is wrong for them. c) Find yourself sitting in a seat where your job is to trade any illiquid, opaque product with a three-letter acronym.

He goes on to tell how over the last 12 months he has heard five different managing directors refer to their own clients as “muppets,” how junior analysts are learning from these same people and how little senior management does not understand that if clients don’t trust you, they will eventually stop doing business with you. He concludes:

I hope this can be a wake-up call to the board of directors. Make the client the focal point of your business again. Without clients you will not make money. In fact, you will not exist. Weed out the morally bankrupt people, no matter how much money they make for the firm.

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And get the culture right again, so people want to work here for the right reasons. People who care only about making money will not sustain this firm — or the trust of its clients — for very much longer.

This can be said about any organization operating in any industry.

Though we must take this OpEd as exactly that (an opinion) there is fact sprinkled throughout Smith’s diatribe: Trust may be the single most important, intangible asset an organization can gain and without it, a company is nothing. If not immediately, then eventually.

Property Insurance and Disaster Recovery

How well a company can recover from a disaster often hinges on the quality of the recovery plan. And as Joshua Gold and Lawrence Bartelemucci of Anderson Kill & Olick point out in a new article, this plan needs to be in place before a disaster strikes. In order to develop the most effective plan, certain key considerations, both from an insurance perspective and a property perspective, must be addressed. Developing a checklist of these items can make all the difference. For example:

  • Is your space worth rehabilitating? If it is, then your company will need to contract for design and construction services to rehabilitate the current space or rebuild on site. If the space that will be rehabilitated is leased, your company needs to coordinate its efforts with the landlord.
  • If it is not worth rehabilitating, then your company must consider how it will dispose of the space (for example, selling the property or cancelling the lease), and how it will acquire new permanent space. In addition, your company will need to contract for design and construction services for its new space. This process should involve a zoning analysis to ensure that your company can build what it needs and conduct its operations on the chosen site.

For more insight, be sure to check out their article, only on RMmagazine.com.

Managing the Risk of Cyberattacks: When Will Boards Learn?

Even after the many cyberattacks initiated by Anonymous and Lulzsec, it seems boards are still not exercising appropriate governance over the privacy and security of their digital assets, that’s according to a new study by Carnegie Mellon CyLab entitled “Governance of Enterprise Security.”

The study says that “even though there are some improvements in key ‘regular’ board governance practices, less than one-third of the respondents are undertaking basic responsibilities for cyber governance. The 2012 gains against the 2010 and 2008 findings are not significant and appear to be attributable to slight shifts between ‘occasionally,’ ‘rarely,’ and ‘never.'”

A look at the numbers:

And even with the advancement of enterprise risk management throughout organizations, it seems there is still a disconnect between boards and senior executives understanding that privacy and security and IT risks are a part of ERM. A whopping 58% of those surveyed said their board did not review the organization’s insurance coverage for cyber-related risks.

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The survey proved that they do not have full-time senior level personnel in place to manage privacy and security risks.

Less than two-thirds of the Forbes Global 2000 companies surveyed have full-time personnel in key roles responsible for privacy and security in a manner that is consistent with internationally accepted best practices and standards.

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Moreover, the common practice of assigning security personnel both privacy and security responsibilities creates segregation of duties issues at line responsibility levels.

Though there are signs of progress compared to previous years, the 2012 CyLab survey shows a serious lack of attention at the top in regards to cybersecurity.

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Cavalcade of Risk #152

Welcome to the 152nd edition of the Cavalcade of Risk, a roundup of risk and insurance-related posts from around the web. In this edition, we’re highlighting posts from the spectrum of the risk management and insurance industry, from corruption and fraud to life insurance and workers comp. Think of it as a great mélange of minds in the blogging business.

The next CoR host is Jason Shafrin of the Health Care Economist blog. Don’t forget to check it out.