In the revolving door between Washington and Wall Street,
President Obama’s planned F.B.I. nominee,J, will be just the latest
to spin through. And it’s not unusual that the financial institution where Mr.
Comey, a former deputy attorney general, had worked was a hedge fund — you may
recall thatthe former Treasury secretary, had a short spell at D. E. Shaw,
making millions.
What may raise some eyebrows is the hedge fund itself:
Bridgewater Associates, the largest hedge fund in the world, with some $120
billion in assets under management.
The first thing that’s remarkable is Bridgewater’s success.
Since its founding by Ray Dalio in 1975, it has reaped huge returns. Mr. Dalio
was the second-highest-paid hedge fund manager last year, making $1.7 billion
despite his fund’s so-so performance, and Forbes estimates his net worth at
$12.5 billion. Mr. Dalio, however, is known as much for the work culture he
creates as the money he mints. He has written a 123-page manifesto titled “Principles” that is at the
center of the distinct philosophy being “lived out” at the fund.
It’s easy to poke fun at the 210 principles as a latter-day
model of EST or another 1970s personal discovery group. Take for example the
notation in Principle 18 of “pain + reflection = progress,” the Christian-like
maxim in Principle 122 to “teach your people to fish rather than give them
fish” and the last principle, which lets you know something your mother told
you: “Don’t try to please everyone.”
It’s not all about personal attitude. Some of the principles
express the harsh type of Darwinian capitalism that financiers tend to love.
Principle 131 states that “when people are ‘without a box,’ consider whether
there is an open box at Bridgewater that would be a better fit. If not, fire
them.”
I’m not really sure what the box is, but I think the principle
is saying if you don’t fit inside it, you’re gone.
And of course, because the principles are about being a better
person, there is some type of system intended to make you not just improve your
life but make you a better employee of Bridgewater. Principle 166, “design your
machine to achieve your goals,” sets up a number of objectives for running your
life to produce maximum outcomes.
All of this would be sort of comedic except that they are lived
out at Bridgewater. And all of the principles are subsumed to a fundamental
“truth.” Bridgewater employees are supposed to live in a world of “radical
honesty,” a concept that has raised controversy and something that most of us
don’t even live out in our homes let alone in the workplace. Employees are
encouraged to express their opinions and ideas without bar, criticize what they
see as employee failings and search for ultimate truth. Meetings and phone conversations
are recorded even at the highest level to make sure that there is a record and
no dispute of what is said. And no one is allowed to talk behind the back of
another. For those who want a taste, videos
are made by young, bright-faced,
mostly white employees about how Bridgewater changed their lives.
In an article
about the hedge fund, Institutional Investor’s Alpha magazine stated that
according to former employees at Bridgewater, “the focus is on an individual’s
flaws and mistakes rather than a balance between positives and negatives” and
that constant criticism can hurt. Alpha wrote that one employee said that “what
[Dalio] doesn’t understand is that if you kick a dog enough … [the dog] curls
up and just whimpers. And he kicks pretty hard.”
Because of all of this, The Daily Beast has called it the weirdest hedge fund out there, detailing how Harvard grads were running over themselves to
work there, participating in the mock debates that Bridgewater uses to
interview prospective employees. Because this is Bridgewater, these debates
don’t cover finance but rather topics like abortion.
When I asked Bridgewater to comment on its culture and Mr.
Comey’s tenure at the firm, I was referred to those videos online. Mr. Dalio
also commented that “President Obama could not have picked a man with greater
integrity or a stronger moral beacon than Jim Comey.”
So, what was a prominent Justice Department lawyer and potential
top G-man doing in a place like this?
First, for whatever reason, Mr. Dalio’s philosophy works.
Bridgewater makes real money, regularly making macroeconomic bets that beat the
stock market for its clients, including many of the nation’s pension funds. And
this system is intended to solidify and keep together 1,300 people at
Bridgewater headquarters in Westport, Conn.
On Wall Street, people don’t mock money. They worship it. So,
Mr. Dalio is often hailed as a genius. The
New Yorker, in a glowing profile,
doubted whether Bridgewater was a cult, saying no one was there against their
will. So, maybe the rest of us are living a world of nonsense and Mr. Dalio is
right.
The probable next director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation was part of this mind-set for about three years, from 2010 to
2013. Before that, Mr. Comey was general counsel at Lockheed Martin. There, he got
decently rich, making $6.1 million in 2009 alone.
He left to become Bridgewater’s general counsel in charge of the
legal, compliance and security departments. Presumably, it was for the money —
when Mr. Comey discloses his Bridgewater earnings, it will almost certainly be
a sum greater, perhaps far greater, than $6 million a year.
But did he buy into the Bridgewater culture? Or was it all about
the money?
If it is all about the money and Mr. Comey didn’t believe in the
firm or the culture, then this is perhaps a sad commentary on what people are
willing to do not just to be rich, but to be superrich. Mr. Comey could have
been quite comfortable in his previous job, yet he wanted more.
Or maybe not. Maybe the Bridgewater way is the way of the future
and Mr. Comey bought into this belief when he was there. In the New Yorker
profile, Mr. Comey was quoted as saying, “The mind control is working. I’ve
come to believe that all the probing actually reduces inefficiencies over the
long run, because it prevents bad decisions from being made.” Perhaps the
F.B.I. is about to experience what “radical honesty” means for government, as
well as what it means to fire people who don’t fit in.
Mr. Comey’s reasons for going to Bridgewater and what he thought
of the culture there are only speculation at this point. If he is nominated,
though, Mr. Comey may want to go before the Senate and let the public know what
he thinks of the hedge fund and why he worked there.
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