Money to Burn (9 page)

Read Money to Burn Online

Authors: James Grippando

Tags: #Mystery And Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction - Espionage, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Capitalists and financiers, #Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense Fiction, #Thriller

BOOK: Money to Burn
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“It’s a crime to burn money,” he said, holding the flaming bill.

“Excuse me?”

“I just committed a crime,” he said. “Burning money is a federal offense.”

I watched him, not sure what to do, wondering if this guy was playing with a full deck.

“Are you going to turn me in?” he asked.

“I think you should leave.”

“But I need to know,” he said. “Are you going to turn me in?”

“Just beat it. I’m not going to turn you in.”

“That’s good,” he said, rising. Then he tossed the remnants of the burned hundred-dollar bill on the table and said, “That makes you part of the cover-up.”

I watched with curiosity as he turned and walked away, leaving me alone with the ashes.

15

W
ALL
S
TREET.

Midtown had been a comfortable home for Saxton Silvers since the destruction of its offices on 9/11, but actually standing before the New York Stock Exchange building and seeing the huge American flag draped over its massive stone columns never failed to get my pulse pounding. I was in a hurry, but I stopped for a moment to take it all in. History oozing from a concrete jungle of tall towers on narrow streets. Floor traders hustling back from lunch or the gym for the end-of-day frenzy. People everywhere, rushing with purpose.

And a seven-foot bear in a boxing ring.

“What the
hell
?” I said to myself.

The Exchange was actually on Broad Street, which was closed to cars. FNN had re-created the
Bell Ringer
set outside the building, complete with the signature boxing ring. Waiting “in the other corner” was a man dressed up like that lovable bear from
Jungle Book
who made “The Bare Necessities” one of Disney’s most hummable tunes. Bell was still inside the building, but his plan clearly was to don his boxing gloves and beat the snot out of that poor sloth in the road-show version of
Bell Ringer
.

“You got a cigarette?” the bear asked as I passed.

Immediately I suspected a setup—a test question planted by FNN to see if the founder of Saxton Silvers’ Green Division and chief proponent of investment in socially responsible companies supported Big Tobacco with his own nasty personal habit. I was officially paranoid.

“Sorry, dude,” I said.

Security at the NYSE was tight, but I had clearance. I was emptying my pockets at the metal detector when my cell rang. I stepped out of line to take the call. It was Eric.

“Change of plans,” he said. “We cut a deal with Bell.”

“A deal?”

“He’s been killing us for refusing to address the rumors, but if senior management responds, it only legitimizes them. Bell agreed to back off if we just give him someone to talk to.”

“Like who?”

“You.”

“Me?”

A minute ago I wanted to take it to Bell. But now I was afraid of what I might say to him.

“Listen carefully,” said Eric. “You are not the firm’s spokes-person on the subprime write-downs. But this nonsense about our former investment advisor of the year dumping his stock has to be stopped. Here’s the plan: You go on the air with Bell, you tell him about the identity theft, and you make it clear that you’re still bullish on Saxton Silvers. That’s it. You got it?”

“Yeah.”

“Michael, I need you to knock this out of the park. Understand?”

“Totally,” I said.

“Good. Just keep it short. I’ll be watching.”

I made it through security as quickly as I could, and fifteen minutes later I walked onto the trading floor. The “Big Board” is a truly grand space, and even folks who know nothing about the market are impressed by the marble walls rising up seventy-two feet to an ornate gilt ceiling, two more dramatic walls of windows, and the famous skylight through which many a devastated trader has looked up to the heavens and asked, “Why me?” Most trading was done away from the floor these days, but the NYSE still did some of it the old-fashioned way, with traders gathering around posts to buy or sell in an open outcry auction. Even with the rise of electronic trading, it remains an icon of American capitalism, the source of countless images of despondent traders, palms to forehead, personifying the pain and tumult of Wall Street’s slides.

I walked through a section of the floor known as “Jurassic Park,” a place where older traders, many of whom started out as runners, rested and reminisced about that one golden year—they all claimed to have had one—in which they raked in a million bucks in commissions. I was headed for “Rodeo Drive,” the corridor of elite trading posts for firms like Saxton Silvers leading up to the famed NYSE bell.

“Mr. Cantella?” a woman said, catching up to me.

I stopped, turned, and saw her FNN credentials hanging around her neck.

“You’re on in five minutes,” she said. “Mr. Bell told me to do your makeup.”

I considered it, then reminded myself that my grandparents were in town. Papa had grown up on the south side of Chicago, stood in bread lines at age nine, and fought with the fair-haired kids in the neighborhood who had a problem with the fact that little Vincenzo’s first and last name ended in a vowel. He just wouldn’t understand makeup on his grandson.

“I’ll pass this time,” I said.

“Suit your shiny self.”

Say that three times fast
, Papa would have said. I just didn’t have his gift for small talk—though no one could compete with the man who had managed to be on a first-name basis with every checkout girl at Publix a week after moving to Florida.

“Chuck’s waiting,” said Little Miss Anti-Shine. “I’ll take you to him.”

I followed her through the maze of trading posts, passing dozens of frenzied floor traders dressed in their mesh-backed jackets. I probably could have spotted a few friends, but I was busy gathering my thoughts on how to match wits with the one-and-only Chuck Bell, bear-slayer extraordinaire. Since Saxton Silver’s first announcement of subprime losses in the fall, Bell had been on a rampage against the firm, predicting its demise. I knew it wouldn’t be easy to confine our discussion to the sale of my own shares of Saxton Silvers stock. But I had to restrain myself. Eric had made it clear that I was not the firm’s spokesman on subprime.

I need you to knock this out of the park, Michael.

News stations were once unheard of near the floor, but now they routinely did live broadcasts there during trading hours. Bell was more of a studio guy, though he seemed pretty comfortable seated on his stool in front of the busy Saxton Silvers trading post. It was a high-energy backdrop for his show, and I noted that the sellers outnumbered—and were outshouting—the buyers. On the stool beside Bell was Rosario Reynolds. I was glad to see her there. Both times I’d appeared on her show I was treated fairly. Maybe it was because I was the only guy on Wall Street who didn’t call her Money Honey.

“All right, let’s bring on our first guest,” said Bell, speaking to the camera. “We’ve been talking about Saxton Silvers all morning, and here with us now in another
Bell Ringer
exclusive is Saxton Silvers’ two-time investment advisor of the year, Michael Cantella.”

I walked in front of the camera. There was no audience, no applause. But Bell did have his portable sound-effects machine. He held his microphone to it, and with the push of a button there was a loud
plop
—the sound of a rock dropping into a bucket of water.

Bell glanced over his shoulder at the trading screens and said, “That was the sound of Saxton Silvers stock dropping like a stone this morning.”

I took a seat on the bar stool next to Reynolds. Bell punched another button. It was the sound of a toilet flushing. I almost checked to see if Nana and her peanut-size bladder had crashed the Exchange.

“Will that be the sound of Saxton Silvers stock in this afternoon’s trading?” said Bell.

He hit the toilet-flushing button a second time. I tried to keep my composure, but it was quickly becoming apparent that, on the dignity scale, I had nothing on that poor slob in the bear suit out on Broad Street.

“Michael, thank you for coming. Now, let’s look first at some numbers.”

Bell launched right into a chart that showed my holdings of Saxton Silvers stock as of yesterday, the timing of the sale, the timing of Saxton Silvers’ announced subprime write-downs—and the money I allegedly pocketed by selling my stock.

“Quite a nifty job of timing the market there, my friend.”

“Well, you’re leaving out one key fact,” I said.

“Yes, yes, yes,” he said dismissively. “The most convenient case of identity theft in the history of Wall Street. You claim that someone stole your identity and unloaded all of your stock in Saxton Silvers on the night before the stock went into free fall.”

“Not just Saxton Silvers stock. All my holdings.”

“And why would someone target you in that way?” he asked.

“Why do thieves target anyone? Because they can, I guess.”

“Well, let’s look at the broader context here. Just a couple of hours ago the CEO of Saxton Silvers was on my show—”


My
show,” said Reynolds.

“Good one, Money Honey!” he said as he pressed the effects button to unleash a mock clanging of the NYSE bell. “That’s a Bell Ringer!”

“Whatever,” she said.

At that moment, I would have sworn that the “F” in FNN stood for freak show.

“Back to my point,” said Bell. “Stuart Wyle was on the air this morning telling
me
that everything we have reported from our sources about Saxton Silvers—the liquidity problems, repo lenders cutting off overnight lending, novation problems, and on and on—those are all just vicious rumors.”

Eric’s admonition—
you’re not the spokesman
—was buzzing in my ear. “I’m not here to talk about any of that,” I said.

“I understand. But stay with me. Let’s assume that people in the market are lying about the financial condition of Saxton Silvers. Let’s assume that in the same twenty-four-hour period, Michael Cantella—the firm’s two-time investment advisor of the year—is wiped out by an identity thief. Is there something afoot here?”

“I don’t understand your question.”

“Are you prepared to say here on this show today that there is some kind of financial assault on Saxton Silvers?”

“I’m not saying that.”

“I think you are.”

“You’re saying it, not me.”

“Is it possible?”

“Is what possible?”

“That there is some connection between the rumors about Saxton Silvers and your alleged identity theft.”

“I can’t speculate on that.”

“Are you saying it’s
not
possible?”

“Well, anything’s possible but—”

“Aha!” said Bell, slapping his thigh. “Folks, you just heard it here on
Bell Ringer
—right from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Michael Cantella says there may be some financial conspiracy against Saxton Silvers. That’s a Bell Ringer!”

“What? No, I didn’t—” I started to say, but I was cut off by the sound of that damn pretend bell.

Ding, ding, ding, ding.

Bell checked the board again. “Perhaps someone out there has a serious interest in driving the value of the stock down fast—in ‘murdering’ Saxton Silvers virtually overnight. With the stock price already down as much as ninety dollars per share today, this supposed financial assassin is well on his way.”

“I’m not the one who said—”

Bell cut me off with another slap of the effects button. This time it was the sound of a telephone ringing.

“It’s for you, Michael,” said Bell, pretending to talk on his cell. “It’s Chicken Little. He wants his sky back.”

I needed this to end—quickly.

“Chuck, I’m here to talk about identity theft.”

“Yes, yes, of course. Let’s put this Oliver Stone conspiracy stuff aside. And for the moment, let’s just assume your claim is true. Here’s the question I have for my viewers,” he said, staring straight into the camera. “Why would any investor trust his money with a Wall Street investment bank whose fastest-rising star can’t even come up with a hack-proof password for his own account?”

Reynolds grumbled. “Oh, come on.”

“I’m serious,” said Bell.

“Hackers can be very sophisticated,” I said.

Bell said, “Investment banks are also supposed to be sophisticated.”

“I’m working with the FBI and the firm’s security director now to find out exactly what happened.”

“Was your account password protected?”

“Chuck, now you’re being silly,” said Reynolds. “Of course it was protected. And I would bet my last dollar that Michael Cantella is not the kind of dummy who would use his phone number or his wife’s birthday as a password.”

I hesitated. It was nice to have Reynolds’ support, but I didn’t want to start talking about passwords on the air. “Let me just assure our clients that their investment portfolios are intact.”

“Well, I hope so.”

Bell hit another button. This one was the sound of screeching tires and a car wreck.

“That’s enough crashing for one day,” he said. “Michael, thank you for joining us. I’m not saying that we believe you, but we do thank you.”

Had he offered his hand, I wouldn’t have shaken it. But he simply moved on.

“And now, ladies and gentlemen, are you ready for the
Bell Ringer
main event?”

As I walked away, I could feel the stares of surrounding floor traders who’d seen the interview—and then they ran off with their sell orders. I was trying to think of what to say to Eric, but I could still hear Bell building up the Wall Street battle of the century.

“It’s time for me to step outside and put another bear on the canvas!”

Cell phones weren’t allowed on the trading floor, but mine was ringing just as soon as I exited through the revolving door and stepped outside to Broad Street. It was Eric.

“What the hell just happened to you?” he said.

“He was putting words in my mouth.”

“It’s
Chuck Bell
. You should have cut it off. That whole exchange was supposed to last two minutes, tops.”

Two minutes?
I didn’t know he’d wanted it
that
short. “I’m sure I would have done better if I’d actually gotten to sleep last night.”

“That’s not going to cut it. We’re in a financial crisis. There are people in this firm who are looking to point the finger at someone other than themselves.”

He meant the structured-products people like Kent Frost. “I know.”

“Now they’ll say our stock dropped because Eric Volke let his fair-haired boy go on FNN, not because of a twenty-two-billion-dollar subprime nightmare.”

“Which is ridiculous.”

“They’ll say it anyway. Michael, you’ve always had your own mind. When we invited you to join management, you bucked company policy and refused to give up your book of business. When subprime started to look ugly, you stepped over division lines and wrote me a damned convincing memo about it. I actually respect all that. But I’m one of the few who does. To some people, you’re just trouble. And now I have to tell those same people that it was
my
idea to put you on the air.”

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