There is a huge story about Bear Stearns that has gone unreported in the press. It is not about the money lost, risks taken, financial carnage or the Fed and JP Morgan coming to the firm's rescue. It's about another sort of loss, but one that is nevertheless very relevant to the success of the venture capital industry. It also explains why New York's Silicon Alley is a second center of U.S. entrepreneurial activity after Silicon Valley.
This also a personal story, about the start of my career in New York, and how I got to know Bear Stearns.
In 1994, I was attending business and law school, getting a joint JD/MBA degree at Washington University in St. Louis. While attending classes, I held a part-time position for a small, local investment bank, Pauli and Co. Chris Pauli was a Bear alum, and he had come to St. Louis to set up his own investment bank in Bear's image. Working with him at Pauli and Co. convinced me that my career lay in venture capital. I took part in two public offerings, met a wide range of CEOs, and was inspired to get into the business of funding small companies that wanted to do great things.
Some VCs and entrepreneurs might find this humorous, but Chris told me that the path to a successful VC career meant going to New York and getting hired by an investment bank, as he had done. He gave me the name of a Bear senior investment banker, Humbert Powell.
After haranguing him for several weeks, Humbert agreed to meet with me on my next trip to New York. I got a single interview, but it didn't lead anywhere. But this only made me more motivated -- there seemed to be a willingness on the part of investment banks to put me in their recruiting processes, as long as I made the requisite effort.
So, I decided to take a calculated gamble in time and money, neither I which I had much of, paying for my trips to New York myself, and putting my studies on the back burner. I ended up visiting New York about a half-dozen times over the next few months. I also sent at least a hundred letters, and made dozens of calls every day before, during and after classes and work, trying to break into the investment banking industry. Merrill, DLJ, Goldman, CSFB, Morgan Stanley -- I contacted just about every one of the big banks and a lot of small ones as well. I still have all the rejection letters in my attic to prove it, and to remind my kids of some of the challenges they may face when they get older.
In 1994, I was only able to find two Washington University alumni working on Wall Street. One of them worked at Goldman, and didn't return my calls (later, I heard that he became a partner there, and eventually made so much money he left the business).
The second alum was working for Bear. His name was Joe Swanson, and it just so happened that he was connected to folks on the Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO) trading desk. He took my call, and we met. I kept up the connection and called him each time I was in town. Finally he said, "Steve, I'll give you a shot." I got a full interview with the CMO junior traders and a job offer a few days later.
From my perspective, this was a minor miracle. Bear has a reputation of hiring "from the mailroom," or bringing up people from the lower ranks of the organization. The firm was especially interested in those people whom the senior Bear execs called PSDs, which stands for Poor, Smart and having a strong Desire to succeed financially. I was hired as a summer associate and was not "poor" in the financial sense of the word, but I was essentially one step above the mail room, hand-delivering inventory sheets each morning, and running the calculations at night. However, I was poor in another sense -- I didn't have the right connections or pedigree to get my foot in the door of most Wall Street firms. Investment banks have traditionally hired from just a handful of Ivy League business schools, and "WashU" wasn't in that class.






Comments
Thanks for the memory. I'm a former PSD, too. Was there "just a few years" before you :) I don't think that I worked with many who went to college. We just worked hard.
There is another thing that seems to have gotten lost in Bear Stearns over the past year or so. It's that if you even "thought" that you were loosing money on something; you had to come clean the moment you knew, and then do something about it -- cut your losses, don't dwell on it and move on.
I'm currently working for an Australasian merchant bank, chaired by a former Bear Stearns VP, and am please to say the PSD spirit is still alive and well here. In fact, my fellow Analysts and I were all given a 'PSD talk' not too long into our inductions!
I came into the firm through an unusual route (BSc graduate with no financial background), but was hired on condition that I applied myself to learning finance on the job. Without this opportunity it would have been a lot harder for me to break into the commercial world. It's only a shame the Bear isn't around today. From what I've heard, I'd have liked to work there.
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