Upon hearing Greenspaner’s seemingly carefree yet extremely overbearing statement, Benett nodded slowly.
Indeed, on this planet, as long as the United States government was determined to do something, no country would be able to stop them, let alone an individual.
“Also, are you seriously going to abandon Layman?”
Facing Benett’s question, Greenspaner smiled and asked back, “Are you interested in Layman, Mr. Benett?”
Shaking his head, Benett said, “You know, my investment style is to focus on long-term holding of a company, and I only hold their stocks, never interfering i In the company’s operation and management. Layman’s performance or internal management seems very problematic to me, and I would not consider holding stocks in such an investment bank.”
Greenspaner said with a shrug, “The fall o
f Layman is nothing. There will never be a company in the capital market that won’t go bankrupt. It simply does not exist. Since they caused the problem themselves, they have to solve it by themselves. The Federal Reserve or the taxpayers will not take out so much. money to rescue a company that cannot b e saved.
“This is the consensus that everyone has come to, so now Layman is either waiting for bankruptcy or must find a capital injection before then. Aside from those two options, there is no other way.”
“In other words, the Freemasons also
approved this.”
“That’s right.”
Greenspaner gave Benett an affirmative
answer.
How did investment banks such as Colossal, Mayland, Layman, and Morgan get so big? They must be supported by capital and political power, and this support was derived from one of the most powerful and ancient underground
organizations in the United States.
The Freemasons.
Behind almost all large consortia that could be mentioned was the shadow of this organization.
However, the world knew too little about i
t. Many people only knew its name, but
did not know the members, organization
structure, and mode of operation.
This was another system of United States
society that ordinary people might not be
exposed to throughout their entire lives.
They would never know that everything from something big like a car or a house t o something small like sundries and food was actually deeply influenced by this organization.
Because of the strong national power of
the United States, the influence of this
organization radiated to many countries
and industries around the world.
Obviously, Benett knew something about
this.
“The real owner of Layman has already.
taken a default attitude towards this, and a s early as a few years ago, he and his family had begun to withdraw Layman’s profits and funds. What is left now is just a n empty shell full of debts.”
“I understand.”
Benett nodded calmly.
At this moment, Dugg, who had just left
the meeting, sat in the car with a blank
expression on his face. His face looked
terrifyingly gloomy.
“Sir, shall we go directly to the
company?” The driver turned his head
and asked.
“Just drive around here. Don’t go back to
the company.”
After Dugg gave his order, he lifted the
partition between the backseat and the
front seat. Then, he took out his phone to make a call.
After a while, the call connected.
“My old friend, do you have something important to discuss since you’re calling
me at this time?”
The hearty voice on the phone eased Dugg’s mood. He said, “Layman now needs your asset management company t o help contact investors for a capital injection.”
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Life at The Top