praise for
TRANSFORMING WALL STREET
A Conscious Path for a New Future
“In her new book, Kim Ann Curtin delivers brilliant answers to the capitalist bashers and wolves of Wall Street alike.”
—OSWALD GRUBEL, former group CEO, UBS AG
“Bravo! Finally a book on conscious capitalism from the streets of Wall Street.”
—CHIP CONLEY, bestselling author and hospitality entrepreneur
“Our entire planetary future depends upon bringing more consciousness to finance. It’s not an exaggeration to say that this single book might just get us there. Kim Ann Curtin offers us new visions and voices, principles and practices, that all come together and speak truth to money with a cry straight from the heart.”
—RAPHAEL CUSHNIR, author of The One Thing Holding You Back and Surfing Your Inner Sea
“Kim Ann Curtin’s book reveals the truth that many business leaders already know in their hearts: business can be, and should be, a force for good.”
—PROFESSOR LYNN STOUT, distinguished professor of corporate and business law, Jack G. Clarke Business Law Institute, Cornell Law School, and author of The Shareholder Value Myth
“In reexamining the philosophical origins of capitalism, and putting a spotlight on those who have practiced it true to its evidently ‘conscious’ core, Kim Ann Curtin makes one believe in the American Dream again. Once you read this book, you’ll never look at what you do and how in quite the same way.”
—TAHL RAZ, business journalist and author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Never Eat Alone
“This extraordinary book is a Rosetta Stone for financial leaders and anyone who wishes to transform his or her relationship with money. Kim Ann Curtin brilliantly bridges the world of investment with the journey of awakening. She demonstrates that it is possible to claim inner reward amidst our quest to succeed in the marketplace. If every financier read this book and applied its principles, the world would be a far happier and more prosperous place.”
—ALAN COHEN, author of The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
“Kim Ann Curtin elevates and deepens the debate over necessary reform of Wall Street and today’s unstable global casino finance. Deeply researching Adam Smith’s overlooked The Theory of Moral Sentiments provides context for this research into the deeper motivations and worldviews of the ‘Wall Street 50’ in finance whom Curtin interviews. Beyond blaming and shaming, she identifies positive trends, thus showcasing possibilities for reforming markets, metrics, and models for more sustainable financing of our common human future.”
—HAZEL HENDERSON, author of Mapping the Global Transition to the Solar Age and Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy, and President, Ethical Markets Media (USA and Brazil) Certified B Corporation
“Wall Street’s backbone is trust. And there is no osteoporosis of trust; it crumbles all at once. Transforming Wall Street: A Conscious Path for a New Future provides us with financiers who honor and understand this trust, proving that capitalists can indeed live consciously.”
—HIS HOLINESS SRI SRI RAVI SHANKAR
“Kim Ann Curtin’s experience coaching ‘conscious capitalism’ comes through as she captures the practices of 50 leading Wall Street financiers, academics, and futurists who allow Wall Street to serve not greed but the greater good.”
—KEITH FERRAZZI, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Never Eat Alone and Who’s Got Your Back
“There is no conflict between making money and morality. As Barry Ritholtz, who is quoted here, succinctly states, ‘It comes back to integrity. If you have integrity, it doesn’t matter what you do for a living.’ The evils often attributed to capitalism almost invariably come from other sources, such as crony capitalism, which is the exact opposite. Self-interest is not the same as selfishness. Such narrow thinking would fail to delineate between the motivated entrepreneur and the armed robber; the former enhances society’s wealth through self-interest, while the latter destroys it through selfishness. The idea that the corporation’s job is to maximize shareholder value is a myth that neither serves the interests of society, the corporation, or ironically, even shareholders (beyond the short-term). These are just a sampling of the ideas explored in Transforming Wall Street, a book that probes fifty leading Wall Street figures for their insights on more important questions than how to make money in the markets.”
—JACK SCHWAGER, author of Market Wizards
“This book is a superbly textured insight into the world of Wall Street. By skillfully mixing the perspectives of fifty ‘participants’ Kim Ann Curtin addresses one of the critical questions of today—can one harmonize a spiritual sensitivity with the realities of working in the financial community? The book is useful on many levels—from entry level to the board room. There is no jargon; there is no rote. Reading this book is an enlightening and thrilling experience. Buy it and read it.”
—ROBERT MONKS, shareholder activist and author of The New Global Investors: How Shareowners Can Unlock Sustainable Prosperity Worldwide
“There are a lot of good people on Wall Street, but the most notorious ones are known to the public for the wrong reasons. Every day, conscious capitalism faces resistance on Wall Street. We need more good people on Wall Street. This book sheds light on the good actors and provides readers with a toolkit to follow in their footsteps.”
—BRAD KATSUYAMA, President and CEO, IEX Group, Inc.
“Kim Ann Curtin does a real service by showing people that there is more to Adam Smith than greed and reminding us of what he really believed.”
—DR. CRAIG SMITH, School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Glasgow
“In Transforming Wall Street, Kim Ann Curtin strips away layers of justifications and misconceptions to provide us with the true essence of capitalism and how it can be consciously used to maximize human potential. She deftly weaves together historic turning points and contemporary thought leaders to create a compelling argument that by using our economic systems more deliberately, we will be far more satisfied with the outcomes.”
—AMY DOMINI, founder of Domini Social Investments and author of Socially Responsible Investing: Making a Difference and Making Money
“Through her interviews, Curtin defines what true capitalism can be and should be. She exposes the situations that have hindered capitalism, such as government interference in free markets, from fulfilling its potential for long-term prosperity for everyone. Well worth reading.”
—JOHN A. ALLISON, President and CEO of the Cato Institute, Retired Chairman and CEO, BB&T
“Forcibly inspiring! Kim Ann Curtin brilliantly restores our faith in the fact that there is heroism in capitalism. She showcases a select group of practitioners who embrace the philosophy that best business practices are achieved when lives are bettered and communities are strengthened ahead of profits. In Transforming Wall Street: A Conscious Path for a New Future, Curtin introduces us to some leaders who define this new paradigm—those conscious visionaries who have changed the world not just by making money and driving shareholder returns BUT by leaving people better than they found them.”
—CYNTHIA D. DIBARTOLO, ESQ., Chief Executive Officer, Tigress Financial Partners LLC
“In Transforming Wall Street, Kim Ann Curtin’s rigorous research into modern day capitalism has managed to unearth some of its finest stalwarts, and in so doing, gets to the essence of what makes this economic system work and wherein lies its strengths and vulnerabilities. This is masterful writing, laced with honest and compelling arguments. A recommended read for all who would seek to learn more about capitalism’s past, present, and future.”
—DON SEYMOUR, founder, DMS Offshore Investment Services Ltd
“Kim Ann Curtin’s book Transforming Wall Street is full of interesting and innovative ideas about human nature, our interests in and motivations regarding money, and how we can apply capitalism in ways that will make our economy, society, and personal lives more satisfying. It is well worth reading.”
—JOHN C. WHITEHEAD, former Co-Chairman and Partner of Goldman Sachs, a former US Deputy Secretary of State and former director of the NYSE
“Kim Ann Curtin has bravely faced facts in the much-maligned recent history of Wall Street and woven together interviews from some of today’s most accomplished thinkers and players to create a brocade of strategies for conscious leadership that will, if implemented, make our financial power centers both successful and responsible again.”
—MARSHALL GOLDSMITH, author of the New York Times and global bestseller What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
“It’s only through practicing mindfulness with the intention of everyone’s financial benefit that you can call yourself a true fiduciary. Kim’s book reflects her inner wisdom in applying this process to our collective benefit.”
—MICHAEL MARTIN, MartinKronicle.com author, The Inner Voice of Trading
“Room to Read’s early development thrived thanks in large part to the conscious capitalism of Wall Street that Kim Ann Curtin eloquently discusses. Curtin’s analysis of the Wall Street 50 is a fantastic account of how the banking and hedge fund communities can—and are—making a tremendous impact on social causes. Room to Read’s global literacy and girls’ education efforts have impacted over 8 million children in Asia and Africa due in large part to philanthropic leadership and support from the finance community. Transforming Wall Street is a rousing take on the future of Wall Street’s contribution not only to Main Street but also to communities in Asia and Africa.”
—JOHN WOOD, founder, Room to Read and author of Leaving Microsoft to Change the World
“When it comes to spreading Conscious Capitalism, Wall Street and the financial sector are the final frontier, and to many, the greatest obstacle. Kim Ann Curtin’s book is a wonderfully positive and inclusive contribution to the dialogue of how the financial sector can reconnect with its invaluable and inherent higher purpose, which is to enable the spread of human and planetary flourishing by shepherding societal resources and directing them towards the most impactful areas. The breadth of thinking and depth of wisdom in this book are quite breathtaking. Let us all hope that it falls on receptive ears in the canyons of Wall Street and in financial capitals around the world.”
—RAJ SISODIA, FW Olin Distinguished Professor of Global Business and Whole Foods Market Research Scholar in Conscious Capitalism, Babson College, and Co-founder and Co-Chairman, Conscious Capitalism Inc.
TRANSFORMING WALL STREET: A Conscious Path for a New Future
Copyright © 2015 Kim Ann Curtin
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests write to The Wall Street Coach, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at PO Box 1401, New York, NY 10163.
Published by
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First edition
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Hardcover print edition ISBN 978-1-94098-459-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2014949516
All rights reserved.
Disclaimer: All interviews in this book have been edited for grammar and punctuation and to remove the repetitions and idiosyncrasies of human speech. They have also been edited for space to fit this book, but all the content is true to the spirit of what the interviewees originally said.
Editor: Tyler Tichelaar
Copyeditor and proofreader: Larry Alexander
Cover design: Alina Wilczynski, moonkissed media
Interior design: Karen Giangreco
I dedicate this book to Monsignor Thomas J. Hartman.
Without your love, support, and encouragement, I simply would not be here.
Is the system going to flatten you out and deny you your humanity, or are you going to be able to make use of the system to the attainment of human purposes?
—JOSEPH CAMPBELL
Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.
—RUMI
That which you call your soul or spirit is your consciousness, and that which you call “free will” is your mind’s freedom to think or not, the only will you have, your only freedom, the choice that controls all the choices you make and determines your life and character.
—AYN RAND, Atlas Shrugged
Awareness is the greatest agent for change.
—ECKHART TOLLE, A New Earth
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.
—R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Why I Wrote This Book
How I Tackled This Project
The Wall Street 50, the Professors, and the Teachers of Consciousness
PART I: Capitalism: A Defense
Misconceptions About Adam Smith’s Capitalism and Ayn Rand
Shared Value Theory
The Myth of Shareholder Value
Summary—Capitalism: A Defense
PART II: Being a Conscious Capitalist
Becoming More Conscious
The Five Practices to Become More Awake
PRACTICE ONE: Self-Responsibility
PRACTICE TWO: Self/Other Empathy
PRACTICE THREE: Emotional Non-Resistance
PRACTICE FOUR: The Internal and External Journey
PRACTICE FIVE: Self-Awareness/Mindfulness
Summary—Being a Conscious Capitalist
How to Balance Being a Capitalist While Living Consciously
Being Morally Tested
PART III: The Future of Capitalism
If I Had a Magic Wand
The Wall Street 50’s Advice to Those On or Entering Wall Street
A Final Note and Invitation
Consciousness Steps
Acknowledgments
APPENDIX A: Consciousness Self-Assessment
APPENDIX B: My Story
APPENDIX C: Resources
APPENDIX D: Further Reading
The Wall Street Coach
About the Author
Footnotes
Preface
A few years back, Michael Lewis, in a Bloomberg interview, said he felt that those at the top of the Wall Street structure needed to display more “social obligation.” And the way to restore that was through shame.
While I agree with Mr. Lewis that we are absolutely in need of a Wall Street that honors its “social obligation” more successfully, I disagree it is through shame that we will or can accomplish this goal.
This book offers an alternative path to that restoration by focusing on what we do want for and from Wall Street and its leaders instead of what we don’t want. We have spent a lot of time, energy, and focus on those who have shown no integrity in the world of finance. We are well aware of the breaches of integrity that have occurred. We are clear on the lack of ethics displayed. We are painfully aware of the global impact this behavior has had and continues to have. We have been disgusted and repelled by much reprehensible behavior. It has discouraged and saddened many, but none more so than those who view themselves as capitalists. As any true capitalist knows, what we have witnessed is not capitalism but the very antithesis of it.
I propose the time has come to shift our attention toward what we want. To speak to the qualities we desire. If we want a Wall Street that capitalists can be proud of, then let us focus on those whom we can already be proud of and look at the qualities they share and encourage the same from the rest of our leaders, especially those in the making.
As an executive coach, one of my more powerful influences is Appreciative Inquiry (AI). Wikipedia describes it as:
That which takes an asset-based approach, believing that every organization, and every person in an organization, has positive aspects that can be built upon. And that to focus on only the dysfunction can actually cause organizations to become worse or fail to become better. AI argues, when all members of an organization are motivated to understand and value the most favorable features of its culture, it can make rapid improvements. [Emphasis mine]
I believe rapid improvements are needed and that the stories shared by the men and women I interviewed for this book will assist in creating these improvements.
These interviews took place between 2011–2014. I sought out the men and women of Wall Street who were working in integrity, the ones who were conscious. What do I mean by conscious? Those awake and aware—of their action and inaction. Those who are striving to work and live consciously. Those who follow their own moral code.
Doing my own research and welcoming friends, colleagues, and industry leaders’ suggestions (including the public’s via social media), I began a search for Wall Streeters who fit this definition of being conscious; then I decided on the number fifty for two reasons: 1) I felt fifty was a number high enough to have some gravitas, and 2) it reminded me of Hawaii Five-O, the elite forces unit that I loved on TV as a young girl. Since the slang expression “Five-O” is still used to indicate the presence of police in the area, I thought how apt that my Five-O are the “presence” of consciousness on Wall Street. Since then, a friend pointed out that fifty also represents the states in our union. So now I think of it as there being a Wall Streeter to inspire every state! Much to my delight, I discovered there are actually way more than fifty, but I had to stop somewhere.
As an executive coach, I’m about encouraging more consciousness for my individual clients and the organizations I advise. As a citizen of this country, not to mention the world, I definitely want to see more consciousness on Wall Street (and Main Street). I also want to encourage our younger generation to pursue capitalism consciously—to believe they can achieve great success without selling out one’s soul. I believe conscious capitalism is not only possible but the way out and the way forward. Who better to assist in proving this theory true than those who are the conscious capitalists of Wall Street? From the Wall Street Five-O we can learn how these capitalists not only live and work consciously but attribute their success to this quality. Their stories, I hope, will inspire Wall Street and Main Street to strive for this balance and emulate their qualities. They speak about the challenges they’ve faced (and face) and how they rose (and rise) to meet them. They discuss temptations resisted and how they managed to overcome them.
What does living consciously mean to them? How do they balance living consciously while capitalistically? Who influenced them? What are their values? How are they able to stay true to their integrity when large sums of money are at stake? If given magic wands, what would they do regarding Wall Street? What is their advice to those entering or working on Wall Street now? How does one become more awake and aware? These are the questions they answer in the pages that follow.
Additionally, I sought out what I describe as Teachers of Consciousness. These teachers and their wisdom have assisted me in my own awakening, expanding my consciousness along the way. I’ve asked them for the best advice to give someone interested in becoming more awake—how one might begin.
The Wall Street 50 are neither angels nor saints (nor are the Teachers of Consciousness). In fact, they would be the first ones to say they are far from perfect, yet they are worthy of emulation and our admiration. Their stories of conscious leadership are encouraging, and I hope they will inspire and move you into action. They are living examples of how capitalism can indeed live in harmony with consciousness.
Our fate is shaped from within ourselves outward, never from without inward.
—JACQUES LUSSEYRAN
Introduction
Why I Wrote This Book
“You want to write a book about the conscious men and women of Wall Street? People will think it’s some sort of Saturday Night Live comedy skit!” That was the response from a friend when I told him of my idea over three years ago. “People are too angry at Wall Street right now for this book to ever work.” My friend might very well have been correct, but it’s too late now, because in spite of the truth of his statements, I had to do it anyway. In the beginning, I had only considered writing a book about my own journey and what I had learned along the way. Yet the anti-capitalistic energy out there really gnawed at me and I just couldn’t shake it, and after witnessing a sign at an Occupy Wall Street protest that showed a man in a suit lynched from a tree, my decision was made.
I want to say right from the start that I’m not in denial about the problems on Wall Street. I did not support the bailouts. I don’t believe that is what capitalism is about. Actual fraud, and a willful cheating of honest people out of billions of dollars occurred. It was on many levels institutional, not just a few bad apples. And yet not a single person of stature has gone to jail or even trial. The media remains mostly a mouthpiece of the government and Wall Street, and it has not spoken truth to power; not only did it not offer up any serious solutions nor encourage any, but it also positioned what did occur as capitalistic when what happened and is still happening is the antithesis of it. “Crony capitalism,” is what Adam Smith, the “Father of Capitalism,” decried and what motivated him to write The Wealth of Nations. Most people don’t really understand Smith’s teachings, but I assure you he would be horrified over the behavior we’ve seen. When he spoke about The Wealth of Nations, he was talking about what all the people of a nation experience—not just those in business.
Regulations and laws exist to protect the people, and when they are flouted willfully and systemically, government needs to respond vigorously and with meaningful justice.
While reading Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments, the umbrella under which The Wealth of Nations actually sits, I realized that in addition to Smith accepting (more than advocating) man’s natural tendency to be concerned with his own self-interest, he also spoke of how we have a moral responsibility to our neighbor and community. He also said it is a given that mankind experiences empathy for others. I believe if we were to follow Smith’s philosophy, then we would practice and experience true “conscious” capitalism, the way it was meant to be.
One day walking past the Strand bookstore in Union Square, New York, I saw a sign in the window with this Toni Morrison quote, “If there’s a book that you want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.” So after watching three years of complaints, anger, and protests, and not seeing the changes that we had hoped to see, I thought I’d write this book.
How I Tackled This Project
In spite of what I acknowledge regarding the massive fraud that has occurred, this book comes out of my personal belief that there still are actually more men and women in finance that have integrity than those who do not. As one colleague said to me, “It wouldn’t work otherwise!” Yet this book is not a scientific study. It is one woman’s quest to discover whether what she believes in her heart is true: that capitalism is a good thing, that one can be successful while retaining one’s integrity, and that the more financially successful one is, the more good one can do in the world.
Having worked in finance now for more than fifteen years, I have had the privilege and honor to know countless men and women who have integrity in this industry. I have known many who lead moral lives personally and professionally. I think it’s important to acknowledge them. Are there jerks? Sure. They exist and I’m not denying them, but they are simply not the majority, and while I’m not ignoring the issues that exist in this industry and how serious they are, I believe the best way to tackle them is to focus on what we want more of and to learn from those who have been successful at navigating the financial world with their integrity intact. I hope their stories will inspire and encourage others to follow their lead. It’s time we have conscious leaders to look up to in this industry and perhaps those who are less aware or half asleep will awake and begin to see that one can indeed be a successful capitalist while retaining one’s soul or, at the very least, the conscious leaders will be emboldened to begin to crowd out those who are not.
My search for those who are conscious or act with integrity on Wall Street first began by word of mouth. I’d ask friends and colleagues whom they thought qualified. Then I began to post on social media, asking the public to recommend those they thought were the good guys of Wall Street. The names started to pour in. In the end, I researched and interviewed over ninety people—many of whom currently work on The Street or in finance in some capacity, a handful I see as the titans of finance, and some who previously worked on Wall Street. Once the men and women from Wall Street whom I consider “conscious financiers” shared their personal journeys with me, I became even more inspired to bring their stories forward. I believe these Wall Street 50 who share their experiences will breed hope and, ultimately, inspire others in the industry and beyond to emulate them. I then sought out the four professors whose work had enlightened me in understanding capitalism more clearly and understanding who Adam Smith really was and what he advocated. Then last, but certainly not least, I interviewed those whom I call the “Teachers of Consciousness,” teachers who have had an impact on my own personal growth and have done what I call, “the work on themselves.” Each of them has studied, developed, and increased his or her own consciousness through a variety of methods, and they share in common the experience of having been face to face with their own dragons in the basement of their souls. I have always sought out teachers who have been “through it.” And each of these teachers has. They share how you, yes you, can expand your own vision. They have influenced my own awakening, and I hope they will influence yours.
A lot of these Wall Street 50 are world renowned, yet amazingly not one of them asked me for a non-disclosure agreement. They gave me amazing access to meet with them one-on-one without seeing my questions first, nor having a PR person present. They answered my questions while allowing me to record our conversations. Keep in mind they knew I had not yet secured a publisher, nor did I have the professional credentials as a reporter or a writer. What made them agree? I believe it was their desire to be heard. I believe each of these men and women strive to live and work consciously. They are as upset and frustrated with the unconsciousness on Wall Street as anyone. Perhaps they were simply glad that someone noticed they were operating under a set of values.
It’s important to note that only one self-selected himself. Frank Casey emailed me, having seen my post on Albourne Village seeking conscious financiers. He wrote me and spoke about how he and his colleagues spent nearly nine years trying to stop Bernie Madoff. After speaking to Frank multiple times and hearing his astonishing story of unstoppableness, I chose to include him. I remember being thrilled that he had reached out since I knew he was one of the threesome who brought down Madoff. I had watched in horror and disbelief, along with the rest of the world, when that scandal broke, and I was pretty excited to speak with one of the men who helped bring him down. I was especially curious to find out what it was that motivated him to be so dogged about it—they worked on it for ten years! Frank, along with Harry Markopolos and Neil Chelo, spent years imploring the authorities to shut Madoff down, and in spite of being ignored by every government agency for an entire decade, they didn’t stop.
I wish I had been able to interview more women, but I struggled to find women who would agree to be interviewed. Women in general seemed to be less comfortable being in the spotlight in this industry since it is still quite the man’s world. I think that is too bad because I believe more women in this industry would help. I want to encourage more women to join this industry. One of my Teachers of Consciousness described this situation as needing more hina (feminine) energy. Kauila Clark, who is respectfully regarded as a Hawaiian Kahu, a Keeper and a Guardian of Hawai’i’s ancient wisdom, said the industry is currently filled with only ku energy (male energy) and when anything or anyone has too much of either energy—it will be out of balance.
Some people will scoff at this book. That’s okay. I believe that what you seek, you find. Energy flows where attention goes. I believe there is consciousness on Wall Street, but not as much as there needs to be. Being the proponent that I am of Appreciative Inquiry, I know the way to get more of something in an organization is to focus on what you want, not what you don’t. One of the books I read early in my research was Michael Martin’s The Inner Voice of Trading. In it, he quotes Ed Seykota, a well-known commodities trader who pioneered Systems trading, as saying, “each person gets what they want from their trading.” Meaning that we are the co-creators (albeit unknowingly) of our experiences. I believe not only is that true, but that to some extent every person co-creates what he or she gets from life as well, and that has to do with a person’s consciousness and how he views and engages with the world around him.
It is also because I believe in co-creation that I wrote this book. I believe that if people believe capitalism is wrong, or that wealth can only be achieved in an illicit way, that will unconsciously prevent people from attaining or even seeking wealth, for fear of being tarnished in some way.
Many soulful people think that money is dirty or bad or wrong. The word rich has become a derogatory adjective. I believe money is energy. And that we can re-design our relationship to money into one that is fueled with love and abundance instead of fear and scarcity. Together, we can perform a “blood transfusion” on the money we earn, create, spend, and donate. Barbara Wilder speaks about this in her book Money is Love. Barbara teaches that as we begin to remove our negative thoughts and feelings surrounding money and we redefine money as love, we bring the power of love into all of our monetary transactions. Barbara states, “This in turn opens our hearts to allow money to flow abundantly into our lives and from this place of harmony we can then send money back out into the world on a flow of love and gratitude. Money healed can begin to heal all that it touches. And because money flows like blood through the planet, diseased it causes disease, but infused with love, money can become rejuvenating. . . . Money is the blood of the planet. Heal the money and we can heal the world.”
I believe we all have a relationship with money whether we are connected to it or not. How we choose, consciously or unconsciously, to co-create with it drives us into either having more or less of it in our lives.
Susan Davis, one of my Wall Street 50 and the founder and president of Capital Missions talked about this point with me in one of the interviews I conducted. Here is what she said:
The reason I chose to operate in a for-profit world, as opposed to a not-for-profit world, is that in the for-profit world, you make your own money, so you control your own destiny, whereas in a not-for-profit world, you have to be kind of hat-in-hand to donors who are really difficult to find and to keep in touch with. So, that’s why I wanted to be self-funding. But my intention behind money has always been love, and your intention behind anything is what actually manifests, and so when your intention is love, you manifest love. Money is really just a medium; you could be manifesting help, or you could be manifesting a garden to feed your family; there are so many things that can be manifested, but when corporations only focus on making money, even if it means destroying the Earth that supports us, well then “this” manifested money won’t build but destroy, so first it has to be healed. . . . It has been very well proven that altruistic people are happier, healthier, and live longer, and people are more likely to act generously than not. But since we’ve set up our global economy based on an incorrect assumption that humans are selfish and greedy, we are suffering the consequences now of that belief. When we destroy the Earth that supports each of us with its air, water, and soil, then we need to change the intention. That’s why I went into finance—because we have to fix this thing. We made a major mistake; we have got a ladder up against the wrong wall, and we have to get our ladder up against the right wall and get everybody on Earth up that ladder because we have to restore the Earth that supports us instead of destroying it. That’s why I focused on finance.
Imagine the power of co-creation when we use money as if it were love to build, not to destroy, to serve others too rather than to hoard it only for ourselves. Ultimately, I’d like to see these fifty conscious Wall Streeters be brought together in a consortium to co-create solutions globally. They could become a Special Forces Unit that informs all leaders of the world on economic issues. A think tank of sorts. They could create the new model of finance. My friend, Andrew Hewitt—creator of Game Changers 500, which takes the Fortune 500 idea and instead lists the 500 most purpose-driven organizations—recently suggested we put before them these questions: “What does the new model of finance look like? What kind of ecosystem will support it?”
Perhaps the new model of finance begins with crafting principle-based practices as well as principle-based regulation. I can remember during Occupy Wall Street seeing some finance people try to begin a dialogue with some of those in the Occupy movement to educate them on what issues really needed to be focused on. I’ll never forget Peter Schiff, author of How an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes, patiently trying to educate the crowd, despite being yelled at, that it wasn’t capitalism, but crony capitalism, that was the enemy, and how their movement and platform could be more successful if they understood that.
Now more than ever, it’s time to hear from the conscious leaders in the finance industry. That is why I sought these fifty out. They have much to say and all of Wall Street needs to hear from them as well as the other conscious leaders in this industry. I want those who slumber in this industry to be roused awake, and those on the fence to come forward and begin the transformation of finance. My hope is that this book and these fifty will encourage a movement that will begin the creation of a new Wall Street. How? By encouraging more people to become aware of how they work and live. The philosopher, futurist, inventor, and global thinker, R. Buckminster Fuller, said, “If humanity does not opt for integrity, we are through completely. It is absolutely touch and go. Each one of us could make the difference.” I hope this book will inspire more individuals to make that difference.
In David Whyte’s book The Heart Aroused: Poetry & the Preservation of Soul in Corporate America, he opens with this quote from Irene Claremont de Castillejo:
Only a few achieve the colossal task of holding together, without being split asunder, the clarity of their vision alongside an ability to take their place in a materialistic world. They are the modern heroes . . . artists at least have a form within which they can hold their own conflicting opposites together. But there are some who have no recognized artistic form to serve this purpose, they are the artists of the living. To my mind these last are the supreme heroes in our soulless society.
You, reader, are that hero. The time has come for you to come forth and create the change you and the rest of the world seek for and from Wall Street. Together we can co-create this change by waking up, standing up, speaking up—first to our souls, then to our families and friends, then to our colleagues, our staff, our CEOs, and board members—about the way we run our firms. We can do this with our wallets in addition to our words and our choices.
How? It starts as everything does . . . with ourselves. We begin by waking up, by increasing our own self-awareness, and by developing our emotional and spiritual intelligence, and as our own consciousness and awareness expands we increase the level of it in our world. It is time for the conscious capitalists to take back Wall Street and the entire financial world. This is the time and we are the people.
It is better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.
—CHINESE PROVERB
The Wall Street 50, the Professors, and the Teachers of Consciousness
THE WALL STREET 50
In writing this book I interviewed over seventy people who either work or have worked on Wall Street, and I’ve slimmed those down to what I call The Wall Street 50. These fifty people are quoted on the following pages:
BILL ACKMAN, founder, Pershing Square Capital Management
DARA ALBRIGHT, founder, NowStreet
JOHN ALLISON, former CEO, BB&T Bank
JOHN BOGLE, founder, The Vanguard Group
JOSHUA BROWN, CEO, Ritholtz Wealth Management
ERIC CARANGELO, VP, State Street
FRANK R. CASEY, member of The Fox Hounds
GLEN DAILEY, Glen Capital Management
ROB DAVIS, founder, Hedge Funds Care, Help For Children
SUSAN DAVIS, founder, Capital Missions
CYNTHIA DIBARTOLO, founder, Tigress Financial Partners
AMY DOMINI, founder, Domini Social Investments
JONAH FORD, co-founder, Ceres Hedge
JOSEPH GRANO, founder, Centurion Holdings
ALEX GREEN, founder, The Oxford Club
ERIC GRESCHNER, founder, Regatta Research
OSWALD GRUBEL, former Group CEO, UBS AG
MORIHIKO GOTO, founder, Goto Capital Markets Inc.
JANET HANSON, founder, 85 Broads
CARLA HARRIS, managing director, Morgan Stanley
HAZEL HENDERSON, founder, Ethical Markets Media
MAYRA HERNÁNDEZ, Grupo Financiero Banorte
R. PAUL HERMAN, founder, HIP Investor
MARLEE-JO JACOBSON, founder, SafeMoneyMetrics
ERIKA KARP, founder, Cornerstone Capital
BRAD KATSUYAMA, co-founder and CEO, IEX Group Inc
DR. HENRY KAUFMAN, former managing director, Salomon Bros Inc.
DR. ANDREW KUPER, founder, LeapFrog Investments
SCHUYLER “SKY” LANCE, co-founder, SustainVC LLC
PETER LEEDS, founder and CEO, PeterLeeds.com
MISHA RUBIN (LYUVE), partner, Ernst & Young
MICHAEL MARTIN, trader and author
ROBERT MONKS, shareholder activist and author
MAKOTO OZAWA, trader, Fountainhead Capital
DEEPAK PAREKH, Chairman of HDFC
JOSEPH PERELLA, partner, Perella Weinberg Partners
ARNAUD POISSONNIER, founder, Babyloan
ANDREW H. PRITCHARD, Independent IB and Sales
BARRY RITHOLTZ, founder, Ritholtz Wealth Management
JAMES B. ROGERS, founder, Beeland Interests
ANDREW SCHEFFER, finance advisor, Buddhist monk
JACK SCHWAGER, author, Market Wizards
GEORGE SCHWARTZ, COO, Boston Private Bank & Trust
DON SEYMOUR, founder, DMS Offshore Investment Services Ltd
AARON SMYLE, founder, Smyle & Associates
MICHAEL STUART, co-founder, Clark & Stuart
JASON APOLLO VOSS, content director, CFA Institute
SOL WAKSMAN, founder and president, BarclayHedge Ltd.
JOHN WHITEHEAD, former Co-Chair, Goldman Sachs
FRED WILSON, co-founder, Union Square Ventures
THE PROFESSORS
I interviewed these professors for Part I: Capitalism: A Defense. They articulate in a simple and compelling way how misinformed our corporations and educational systems are regarding capitalism. These professors speak to what capitalism was meant to be and what it originally hoped to achieve:
PROFESSOR MICHAEL PORTER, Bishop William Lawrence University Professor at Harvard Business School
PROFESSOR LYNN STOUT, Distinguished Professor of Corporate and Business Law, Cornell University
PROFESSOR CHRISTOPHER J. BERRY, FRSE Emeritus Professor (Political Theory), Honorary Professorial Research Fellow, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow
PROFESSOR CRAIG SMITH, Adam Smith Lecturer in the Scottish Enlightenment (School of Social and Political Sciences) University of Glasgow
THE TEACHERS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
These teachers are featured throughout the book to assist the reader in understanding how to live and work more consciously while capitalistically:
PATRICIA ABURDENE, social forecaster and author of Conscious Money
PETER BLOCK, consultant and author of The Answer to How is Yes: Acting on What Matters
KAUILA CLARK, Hawaiian Kahu
ALAN H. COHEN, M.A., author of The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
CHIP CONLEY, author of Peak: How Great Companies Get Their Mojo from Maslow
RAPHAEL CUSHNIR, present moment awareness expert and author of The One Thing Holding You Back
RASANATH DAS, monk, former investment banker
DAVID HOULE, futurist, author of Entering the Shift Age
YASUHIKO GENKU KIMURA, founder of Vision-in-Action, former Zen Buddhist priest
CHARLES LAWRENCE, shaman
HIS HOLINESS SRI SRI RAVI SHANKAR, spiritual leader
DR. DAN SIEGEL, neuroscientist, author of The Mindful Brain
NEALE DONALD WALSCH, author of Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue
CINDY WIGGLESWORTH, founder of Deep Change, Inc.
All of these people were fascinating to talk to and I will introduce many of them in more detail in the pages that follow. My interviews with these people were all extensive, lasting an hour or more, and the transcripts would fill many volumes. I have only provided the fundamentals of their words in these pages to illuminate the main points I wish to make. If I have left anyone or anything out, I sincerely apologize because you all led me to a better understanding of the topic of consciousness, capitalism, Wall Street, and how we can change finance and the world by living and working more consciously. All the interviewees were welcoming, gracious, and more than willing to share their knowledge and personal stories for the benefit of my readers and the world at large.
PART I
CAPITALISM—A DEFENSE
Misconceptions About Adam Smith’s Capitalism and Ayn Rand
Two of the most important theorists in history regarding capitalism were Adam Smith and Ayn Rand. Adam Smith is often known as the Father of Capitalism and Ayn Rand’s opinions on capitalism have been debated for the better part of a century now. Unfortunately, both of these people have been misinterpreted by the media and teachers, often dismissed, and seldom read. People think they know what Adam Smith said from a short mention of him in a high school history book. More people know about Ayn Rand from what is said about her in the media than from actually reading her books. Both Smith and Rand would be appalled by how many perceive or understand capitalism today. It is time they be vindicated and we reeducate ourselves about their ideas. Countless books have been written about both Smith and Rand and I encourage my readers to read those books and more importantly, to go back to the source and read Smith and Rand themselves.
Before I share the interviews I had regarding Smith and Rand, I will briefly introduce them with a short biography and a few key passages from their works.
ADAM SMITH, THE FATHER OF CAPITALISM
PROFESSOR
Christopher J. Berry
MEET THE REAL ADAM SMITH
Christopher J. Berry, Professor of Political Theory at the University of Glasgow, is a leading expert on the life and work of Adam Smith. Here he gives an overview that describes the making of the man, the global significance of his writing, and explains why Smith’s work still resonates with us today and why it’s moral.1
CHRISTOPHER: Adam Smith was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland in 1723. He entered Glasgow University at the early—but for the time not unusual—age of fourteen. He studied logic, metaphysics, math, and later Newtonian physics and moral philosophy under some of the leading scholars of the day. The seeds of Smith’s two great books were sown in his professorial years. The Theory of Moral Sentiments appeared in 1759 and drew on his lectures, and his second great book The Wealth of Nations was published in 1776. If Smith of popular repute is the “Father of Capitalism,” the advocate of “market forces,” the enemy of government regulation, and believer in something called the “invisible hand” to produce optimum economic outcomes, then he would be a disappointed parent. All his work is deeply steeped in moral philosophy. Indeed, the simple fact that the final edition of Moral Sentiments, containing extensive revisions, appeared in 1790, the year of his death, tells us that Smith’s commitment to the moral point of view endured alongside and beyond the publication of The Wealth of Nations.
The Theory of Moral Sentiments is a leading example of a particular approach to moral philosophy—one that regards it not as sets of rationally or Divine-ordained prescriptions but as the interaction of human feelings, emotions, or sentiments in the real settings of human life. In many ways, it is a book of social and moral psychology. What we can call economic behavior is necessarily situated in a moral context. But more than that, the key theme of the book is an opposition to the view that all morality or virtue is reducible to self-interest. Indeed, his opening sentence declares that everyday human experience proves that false; he writes:
How selfish soever a man may be supposed, there are evidently some principles in his nature which interest him in the fortune of others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though he derive nothing from it except the pleasure of seeing it.
Our morality is founded on certain truths about human nature. Everyone is capable of sympathy, or fellow-feeling, and that ability enables us to imagine what we would feel if we were in the situation of another and, once we have made that imaginative move, we can then judge whether those feelings are appropriate. We have to learn about “situations” but Smith believes that happens because humans are social creatures. Smith illustrates the natural fact of human sociality by likening society to a mirror. It is this responsiveness to others—pleasure in their approval, pain in their disapproval—that Smith used to explain why the rich parade their wealth while the poor hide their poverty. The rich value their possessions more for the esteem they bring than any use they get from them, and it is this disposition to “go along with the passions of the rich and powerful” that establishes the foundation for distinctions of status. And it is this desire for esteem that explains the incentive we all possess to better our condition. This is one of the links between The Theory of Moral Sentiments and The Wealth of Nations. In many ways, the moral interactions Smith describes in Moral Sentiments bear on the practices that characterize his contemporary commercial society. The very complexity of that society meant that the bulk of inter-personal dealings were with strangers.
A “society of strangers” is a commercial society which Smith identifies in The Wealth of Nations as one where “every man is a merchant.” A commercial society’s coherence—its social bonds—do not depend on love and affection. You can coexist socially with those to whom you are emotionally indifferent. As Smith famously said:
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves not to their humanity but to their self-love and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. Nobody but a beggar chooses to depend chiefly upon the benevolence of his fellow-citizens.
Nothing in this means that Smith is denying the virtuousness of benevolence. When Smith came to write The Wealth of Nations, he made it clear that the “wealth” lay in the well-being of the people. This covered not only their material prosperity but also their moral welfare.
QUOTES
Man, according to the Stoics, ought to regard himself . . .. . . .. . .
The Theory of Moral Sentiments,