President-elect Donald Trump will name longtime banker and
former Goldman Sachs executive Steven Mnuchin as Treasury
secretary, turning to a campaign loyalist and fundraiser for the
incoming administration's top economic cabinet post, a transition
official said Tuesday.
Mr. Mnuchin built his career sniffing out undervalued assets and
converting them into massive profits. But perhaps his greatest
trade just came in the political arena.
Mr. Mnuchin, 53, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker turned
Hollywood financier, parlayed a six-month stint as Donald Trump's
campaign finance chair into the president-elect's pick to be
Treasury secretary.
Mr. Mnuchin's Wall Street pedigree presents a contrast with the
populist themes Mr. Trump struck in his campaign, railing against
big banks and vowing to close tax loopholes that benefit hedge
funds. Mr. Trump also repeatedly attacked his rivals in the primary
and general elections for their Wall Street ties, especially those
connected to Goldman Sachs.
Mr. Mnuchin's links to the world of high finance, in particular
Goldman, go back to before he was born. His father, Robert Mnuchin,
started at Goldman in 1957 and spent his entire Wall Street career
at the firm. The elder Mr. Mnuchin was among those who pioneered
block trading, the buying or selling of large numbers of shares at
once. Steven's brother Alan also worked at Goldman.
"He's a person of great integrity," the elder Mr. Mnuchin said
of his son. "[We] expect he will do a good job in this very
exciting and demanding position."
If confirmed by the Senate as Treasury secretary, Mr. Mnuchin
will join a list of prominent bankers who made similar moves from
Wall Street to Washington, including two of his former bosses at
Goldman, Henry Paulson and Robert Rubin, who were both top Goldman
executives before running Treasury.
Despite his successful Wall Street career, Mr. Mnuchin has no
experience running a massive organization—the Treasury Department
has 86,000 employees—or in economic or financial policy-making. The
biggest entity Mr. Mnuchin has run was the technology division of
Goldman, which had over 5,000 employees.
Mr. Mnuchin's acquaintances describe him as smart, with several
people calling him "nerdy." He regularly attends New York
philanthropic galas. He has long held high-profile positions on
charity boards and is a former director of the Whitney Museum of
American Art. At an event for New York charity City Harvest in
2006, Mr. Mnuchin and his ex-wife were photographed with Mr. Trump.
Mr. Mnuchin is now engaged to Scottish actress Louise Linton.
Mr. Mnuchin joined Goldman in 1985. He worked in the
fixed-income department, eventually overseeing trading in
mortgages, U.S. government, money market and municipal bonds. He
made partner in 1994. Mr. Mnuchin later became the firm's chief
information officer.
When Goldman converted into a publicly traded company in 1999,
Mr. Mnuchin, like other partners, made millions. He later bought a
6,500-square-foot apartment in 740 Park Avenue, a storied Manhattan
co-op built by Jackie Kennedy's grandfather that is known as the
"billionaires' building."
At a recent conference, Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein called Mr.
Mnuchin a "highflier, a partner at a young age. He did very well.
He is a smart, smart guy."
In 2002, Mr. Mnuchin left Goldman and later was hired to run a
credit fund set up by billionaire George Soros.
In 2004, Mr. Mnuchin and two former Goldman colleagues founded
hedge fund Dune Capital Management LP with financial backing from
Mr. Soros. Dune soon expanded into the entertainment business,
striking up a film-financing deal with a unit of 21st Century Fox.
Among the films Dune financed was "Avatar," one of the all-time box
office hits.
21st Century Fox and News Corp, parent company of The Wall
Street Journal, share common ownership.
In 2008, IndyMac Bank in Pasadena, Calif., collapsed in one of
the largest bank failures in U.S. history. Mr. Mnuchin led a group
of investors, including funds run by Mr. Soros and other hedge-fund
and private-equity titans, who bought it from the government for
about $1.5 billion. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
agreed to cover a portion of any future loan losses, a lucrative
arrangement for Mr. Mnuchin and his partners. Regulators who
negotiated with Mr. Mnuchin found him to be the kind of
detail-oriented person who would "know the cost of every pencil,"
according to a person familiar with their thinking.
Mr. Mnuchin, who became chairman of the renamed OneWest Bank and
CEO of its parent company, relocated to Los Angeles and bought a
mansion in the Bel Air neighborhood.
The deal soon became controversial. In 2011, community activists
descended on Mr. Mnuchin's Bel Air home to protest over the
possible eviction of a homeowner who was behind on her mortgage
payments to OneWest.
In 2014, OneWest was sold to CIT Group Inc., earning Mr. Mnuchin
and Dune hundreds of millions of dollars in profits, according to a
person familiar with the matter. He later pocketed $10.9 million in
severance payouts when he left the company.
Despite the huge profits, OneWest's legacy continues to trail
Mr. Mnuchin, who now sits on CIT's board and owns more than 1% of
its shares.
A portion of OneWest's mortgage business is under investigation
by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Last July, CIT
said it was forced to take a $230 million charge as it cleaned up
accounting problems at OneWest. And two California housing groups
this month accused OneWest of discriminating against minorities by
not putting branches in their communities.
Meanwhile, 14 years after leaving Goldman, Mr. Mnuchin remains
in the firm's orbit, showing up at alumni events and involving
other ex-Goldman executives in his finance deals.
He has continued to work those angles as Mr. Trump's finance
chairman, a post he assumed in May. Mr. Mnuchin negotiated a joint
fundraising agreement with the Republican National Committee,
easing the way for major donors to give both to the party and to
Mr. Trump. The committee's chairman, Lewis Eisenberg, is a Goldman
veteran and contemporary of Mr. Mnuchin's father.
Write to Anupreeta Das at anupreeta.das@wsj.com and Rachel
Louise Ensign at rachel.ensign@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 29, 2016 18:55 ET (23:55 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
News (NASDAQ:NWSA)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024
News (NASDAQ:NWSA)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024