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[BRIEFING.COM] It was a seesaw trade on Tuesday as the market traded down in the morning and then traded up in the afternoon. If anything, that was the opposite of what market watchers might have expected when taking stock of the positive... More
The subprime-mortgage crisis has been a financial catastrophe for much of Wall Street. But at Goldman Sachs, thanks to a tiny group of traders, it has generated one of the biggest windfalls the securities industry has seen in years.
The group's big bet that securities backed by risky home loans would fall in value generated nearly $4 billion of profits during the year that ended Nov. 30, according to sources familiar with the firm's finances. Those gains erased $1.5 billion to $2 billion of mortgage-related losses elsewhere in the firm.
On Tuesday, despite a terrible November and some of the worst market conditions in decades, analysts expect Goldman Sachs (GS, news, msgs) to report a record net annual income of more than $11 billion.
Goldman's trading home run was blasted from an obscure corner of the firm's mortgage department -- the structured-products trading group, which now numbers about 16 traders.
Two of them, Michael Swenson, 40, and Josh Birnbaum, 35, pushed Goldman to wager that the subprime market was heading for trouble. Their boss, mortgage-department head Dan Sparks, 40, backed them during heated debates about how much money the firm should risk.
This year, the three men are expected to be paid between $5 million and $15 million apiece, people familiar with the matter say.
Under Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman has stood out on Wall Street for its penchant for rolling the dice with its own money. The upside of that approach was obvious in the third quarter: Despite credit-market turmoil, Goldman earned $2.9 billion, its second-best three-month period ever. Blankfein is set to be paid close to $70 million this year, according to one person familiar with the matter.