The year is 1986, and the air on the fortieth floor of Salomon Brothers crackles with a savage energy, a scent of ambition and raw, unchecked greed. This is Wall Street in its most unbridled form, a realm where men, barely out of college, are thrust into a maelstrom of high-stakes trading, their voices hoarse from screaming orders, their minds honed for the kill. I arrived here, an art history graduate from Princeton, bewildered and somewhat naive, yet eager to seize the elusive brass ring. My journey began in the firm's notorious training program, a crucible designed to forge bond salesmen out of raw recruits. Here, the lectures were often less about finance and more about self-aggrandizement, delivered by managing directors who reveled in their own exploits. We, the trainees, were subjected to the petty cruelties of both our instructors and each other, a prelude to the "Law of the Jungle" that governed the trading floor itself.
The firm, Salomon Brothers, was then at the zenith of its power, a colossus largely thanks to its pioneering work in the nascent mortgage bond market. Before my arrival, a quiet revolution had taken place, spearheaded by figures like Lewis Ranieri, who transformed the humble home mortgage into a tradable security. This innovation unlocked a torrent of wealth, turning savings and loan institutions into eager customers and Salomon into an unstoppable money-making machine. The bond traders, these self-proclaimed financial entrepreneurs, saw themselves as titans, while the rest of the banking world were mere timid sheep.
Life on the trading floor was a relentless performance of alpha-male posturing, fueled by aggressive trading, lavish self-indulgence, and pranks that often bordered on outright abuse. The true currency, beyond the millions exchanged daily, was status, constantly fought for and fiercely defended. Our chief entertainment, the game that lent its name to this era, was "Liar's Poker." Played with dollar bills, it was a high-stakes contest of reading bluffs, honing one's ability to deceive, and understanding the subtle tells of human nature - skills indispensable in our world of high finance. It was in this environment that I witnessed the legendary chairman, John Gutfreund, challenge the king of the game, John Meriwether, to a hand for one million dollars, a testament to the colossal egos and casual disregard for immense sums of money that permeated the firm.
My own path led me to the London office, where the art of bond sales was less about sophisticated financial models and more about the raw ability to persuade, to cajole, and at times, to outright bluff. My initial efforts were clumsy, occasionally leading to punishing losses for clients. Yet, I learned quickly, adapting to the ruthless rhythm, discovering the subtle dance of "jamming bonds" - persuading clients to buy questionable securities - and the inevitable consequence of "blowing up customers." The ethical lines blurred, and I found myself navigating a moral landscape where pretense and calculated deceit were not just tolerated, but often rewarded handsomely. I became a "Big Swinging Dick," a bond salesman capable of moving millions with a single call, generating vast profits for Salomon and a ringside seat for myself to the leveraging of America.
But no gravy train runs forever. Even as Salomon soared on the back of mortgage bonds, the seeds of its decline were being sown. Other banks began to poach our best traders, and in a twist of fate, Salomon itself developed new financial products that undercut the very value of the traditional mortgage bonds we had championed. The unrestrained personal excess of the mortgage bond department's leaders eventually forced the firm's executives to take a stand. The rise of Michael Milken and his junk bonds also presented a new, formidable challenge, leaving Salomon scrambling to catch up in a rapidly evolving market.
The world I inhabited was one where economic decisions at a national level - such as the Federal Reserve's move to fix the money supply and let interest rates float - transformed securities markets, making bonds incredibly lucrative. America borrowed at an unprecedented pace, and my job, in essence, was to channel the savings of those outside America to the consumers within it. Yet, beneath the roaring success, a sense of unease began to grow. The unabashed pursuit of riches, the financial swindles, the toxic machismo, and unfettered excess, all pointed towards an inevitable reckoning. After two successful, albeit ethically challenging, years, I chose to step away, leaving behind the cacophony and the high-stakes game of Liar's Poker, carrying with me the vivid, often unsettling, memories of a defining era on Wall Street.