Houston Chronicle

Wall Street begins warming up to Warren

- By Lananh Nguyen and Tyler Pager

There’s a new whisper on Wall Street: Maybe Elizabeth Warren isn’t so bad.

The Democratic senator, who rose to national prominence by calling for tough regulation after the financial crisis, is winning respect from a small but growing circle of senior bankers and hedge fund managers. As the presidenti­al candidate from Massachuse­tts takes aim at the “rich and powerful” with a slew of taxraising policy proposals, some financial types who fit that descriptio­n say she’s proven capable and makes some good points.

“If she ends up being the nominee, I’d have no trouble supporting her at all,” said David Schamis, chief investment officer of Atlas Merchant Capital, where he’s a founding partner alongside former Barclays head Bob Diamond. While Warren isn’t Schamis’ top choice, he said: “I think she is smart, hardworkin­g, responsibl­e and thoughtful. And I think she thinks markets are important.”

Schamis said people in his network who studied under Warren, a former professor at Harvard Law School, think highly of her, including some conservati­ves.

Warren emerged early as one of the strongest contenders for the Democratic nomination, and she’s been generating buzz in recent weeks with detailed policy proposals and a well-regarded performanc­e in the first major debate. A CNN poll taken after the two nights of debates and released Monday showed her in third place among Democrats with 15 percent, an increase of 8 points since a poll from the cable network in May. Former Vice President Joe Biden drew 22 percent and California Sen. Kamala Harris 17 percent.

For some Wall Streeters who lean liberal, Warren is an acceptable alternativ­e to candidates who trigger their most visceral objections: Republican President Donald Trump on the right and Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, on the left.

It would be “just wrong,” Warren told CBS’ “Face the Nation” in March, to call her a democratic socialist: “I believe in markets. Markets that work. Markets that have a cop on the beat and have real rules and everybody follows them.”

At other times, she has derided parts of the financial industry as predatory.

“I clearly don’t agree with everything she says, but I do give her credit for getting things done,” Tom Nides, a Morgan Stanley vice chairman and former deputy secretary of state under Barack Obama, said of Warren. He didn’t share which candidate he’s supporting.

Warren’s work to set up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in the wake of the crisis was “impressive,” Nides said. “You can’t argue with that. Having an idea, driving it to fruition and having set it up is really hard to do.”

Some who like Warren might find that their backing isn’t welcome. Former hedge fund manager Whitney Tilson recounted a 2016 episode in which she criticized him on Facebook for being a Wall Street insider who stood to gain from Trump’s policies. The attack surprised Tilson and his wife, who had previously made small donations to Warren and followed her career. She later apologized.

“I agree with her general assessment that we’ve allowed multiple systems to develop in this country that screw average folks in countless ways, from education, health care, criminal justice, trade, etc.,” Tilson wrote in an article last week. Despite the mishap, “I’m glad she’s running.”

More than a half-dozen other members of the industry agreed to discuss their warming views of Warren on the condition they not be named — underscori­ng the potential pressure they could face from associates for embracing someone who derides their business.

Indeed, Schamis and others were unwilling to commit to any candidate this early — either with their vote or their money. (His business partner, Diamond, previously donated to campaigns for Republican­s John McCain and Jeb Bush.)

Some said Warren certainly won’t be their first choice in the primary, though they could imagine supporting her in the general election. In addition to Biden and Harris, Wall Street executives have shown interest in candidates including Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Ind., and Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey.

Those drawn to Warren cited her intelligen­ce and stance on social issues. They expressed sympathy for her calls to bolster regulation after the financial crisis, within reason, and for her concerns about income inequality. There are worries among the Wall Streeters that if the wealth gaps keeps growing, it will trigger a more radical backlash — what they ominously called the pitchforks. Yet that doesn’t mean they support her proposal for a wealth tax.

And some privately predicted she will shift to the center if she becomes the nominee.

Warren has no plans to ease off the industry. “Nobody has been tougher on Wall Street than Elizabeth — and no one will be tougher on Wall Street as president than Elizabeth will be,” the campaign said in an emailed statement. “She wants to break up the big banks.”

Despite her steady criticism of the industry, Warren raised $625,025 from donors who work in the investment and securities firms for her 2012 Senate campaign, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics. Financiers were more comfortabl­e with Democrats then, and probably saw her as less of a threat, said Jeffrey Berry, a political science professor at Tufts University. But that likely changed during her first term as she establishe­d herself as one of Capitol Hill’s fiercest critics of the industry.

For her 2018 re-election bid, she drew $387,417 from the sector. To be sure, some backers may have felt less inclined to contribute because she was fending off an underfunde­d and a much weaker opponent.

Though she got $53,760 from the sector in the first quarter, it’s too early to project what she might raise for her presidenti­al bid.

Over the years, her views have become more accepted, Berry said.

“There is an increasing sense among the highly educated that the system is out of whack in terms of income inequality and so people who work with money day in and day out are acutely aware of that,” he said. “Her indictment of income inequality and the role that Wall Street plays in that is becoming more mainstream.”

 ?? Brian Cahn / Tribune News Service ?? Presidenti­al candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who rose to prominence calling for tough regulation of Wall Street, is starting to draw support from the very industry she vowed to regulate.
Brian Cahn / Tribune News Service Presidenti­al candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who rose to prominence calling for tough regulation of Wall Street, is starting to draw support from the very industry she vowed to regulate.

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