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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: David Yarrow, Stratton Oakmont (Color)

David Yarrow

Stratton Oakmont (Color)
Archival Pigment Print
Large (framed): 65x118
Standard (framed): 48x84
Ed of 20
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There was a time in Wall Street, and indeed the City of London, when the moral and ethical compass was not just temporarily misplaced, it was firmly lost. It was...
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There was a time in Wall Street, and indeed the City of London, when the
moral and ethical compass was not just temporarily misplaced, it was
firmly lost. It was an era expertly captured in both Oliver Stone’s
Wall Street and Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street. These two
masterful storytellers happily fed on an implausibly good menu of vice,
debauchery and excess. The astonishing reality is that these were not
stories of fiction - they were - in large parts, factual.

I
started work on an equity dealing floor in London in 1988, so I speak
with a little authority when suggesting that not everything that went on
at Stratton Oakmont was peculiar to that unhinged assembly of misfits.
The 1980s were the Wild West and dealing rooms were the playgrounds of
hard partying adrenaline junkies who believed that life was very much
for living. It was a corporate Babylon.

Of course, serious
business was going on, but so also was a great deal of monkey business.
Those looking for a profession that rewarded frat house behaviour were
attracted to the big investment banking dealing rooms. It was one big
ride in the late 1980s and early 1990s and both men and women were
complicit. Management unashamedly employed attractive and outgoing girls
on their sales teams; it was seen as smart business practice.

In
the new millennium, the subprime crisis and enlightened thought stopped
the party and now we are left with mere memories of a time when greed
was good, when “rookie numbers” were rookie numbers and expense accounts
and compliance were seriously out of control. But I am not sure how
much everyone remembers - it’s all a bit of a haze.

I would like to thank Jordan Belfort (The Wolf of Wall Street) for collaborating with me on this project.
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