The Daily - The Bank That Kept Saying Yes to Trump
Episode Date: May 23, 2019At a time when most Wall Street firms had stopped doing business with Donald J. Trump, a single bank lent him more than $2 billion. We look at the two-decade relationship that could unlock the preside...nt’s financial secrets. Guests: Natalie Kitroeff, a business reporter for The New York Times, spoke with David Enrich, the finance editor and author of the forthcoming book “Dark Towers: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Destructive Bank.” For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: A real estate mogul made toxic by polarizing rhetoric and a pattern of defaults. A bank with longstanding financial problems and a record of misconduct. Read about President Trump’s tumultuous history with Deutsche Bank.A federal judge on Wednesday ruled against a request from the president to block Deutsche Bank from complying with congressional subpoenas.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, at a time when most Wall Street firms
had stopped doing business with Donald Trump,
a single bank lent him more than $2 billion.
Natalie Kitchereff talks to our colleague, David Enrich,
about a two-decade-long relationship that could unlock the president's financial secrets. It's Thursday, May 23rd.
So, what's the story of Deutsche Bank? Oh man, I can go back 150 years. Is that what we want to do?
Yes. Okay. So founded in 1870, it was a bank that was supposed to help German companies
expand all over the world. And it banked exclusively for German companies. It was
primarily a financer of infrastructure projects. So it did a lot of railroad work,
companies. It was primarily a financer of infrastructure projects, so it did a lot of railroad work, things like that. And this is all going well and according to plan until the rise
of Hitler and the Nazis in the 1930s. And at this point, Deutsche Bank's role goes from being
a force for kind of industrialization and good stuff to being a force for evil. The bank's logo
disappears and it's replaced by a swastika. Yikes. It very quickly
becomes an important part of the Nazi military machine. Deutsche Bank financed the construction
of Auschwitz. It financed the company that was making chemicals and gas for Auschwitz's gas
chambers. And as Germany laid waste to Europe and conquered all these countries, Deutsche Bank would come in and take over those countries' banks and conduct what's called Aryanization, basically removing Jews and other non-Aryans from these companies and replacing them.
So it's part and parcel of the Nazi military machine.
And after the war ends, the bank's CEO is tried and convicted of being a war criminal.
The bank is regarded by the Western powers as having been a participant in war crimes and being a criminal entity.
So what happens to Deutsche Bank after the war?
After the war, it becomes a leading force for the reconstruction, redevelopment, and reunification of Europe.
And the bank and its leaders, they essentially become a force for good in the world and help rebuild the Western world that has been shattered by World War II.
And this lasts for a couple of decades.
And then there's this succession of CEOs who try to figure out which direction to take the bank. And the choice they
take is to go headlong along this path of chasing Wall Street riches. And that means they all of a
sudden need to go from basically zero to 60 in the United States. And that leads them to decide
to start getting into all these new businesses in the U.S. They want to get bigger in stock and
bond trading. They want to get bigger in mergers and acquisitions. And they want to get bigger in stock and bond trading. They want to get bigger in mergers and acquisitions. And they want to get bigger in commercial real estate, especially in New York City.
So how are they received on Wall Street? Does anybody know them? one day a sign appeared in the lobby of the offices, and it was a phonetic pronunciation
of how to say the bank's name. And it turned out the reason that sign was necessary is that a lot
of employees had been mispronouncing their employer's name as Douche Bank. Yikes. It's
problematic. So what's the strategy? If nobody can even pronounce your name, what's the strategy
you pursue on Wall Street? You take more risks than anyone else.
It's that simple.
There's a whole kind of category of potential clients out there that can't be banked by normal financial institutions because they're considered too risky.
They've defaulted on past loans.
The projects they're pursuing are crazy.
And this is a whole kind of group of people that's out there that is very eager to find a big bank that's willing to do business with them.
And Deutsche Bank decides to fill that void.
And so summer of 1998, phone rings at Deutsche Bank and there's a broker on the line who says,
would you be willing to make a loan to Donald Trump? And the guy in the commercial real estate business at Deutsche Bank says,
we would be willing to make a loan to just about anybody right now.
Have him come on in.
What's Trump's reputation on Wall Street at this point?
Deadbeat.
He keeps defaulting on loans.
He keeps sticking lenders with hundreds of millions of dollars of losses.
He is viewed as the
embodiment of a bad credit risk. This is long before he becomes a reality TV star. So this is
in 1998. He at this point is a not very successful casino magnate and aspiring big ticket real estate
developer. And so Trump comes on in by himself, no entourage or anything, and presents
a proposal. He's looking to finance the kind of gut renovation of this Art Deco Tower, 40 Wall
Street. Before the ink is even dried on that loan, they agree to do another loan to do the ground up
construction of a residential tower right across from the U.N. in Midtown Manhattan. And it's just off to the races from there. So what does Deutsche Bank get out of this relationship with Donald Trump?
It gets two things. It gets money and it gets publicity. So the money is simple,
right? The bank charges high interest rates on these loans. It also collects fees for the
privilege of doing business with it. The other thing is a little more intangible,
but I think equally important, which is that the bank starts to use Donald Trump as a prop
to lure other clients. For example, the bank has an annual pro-am golf tournament up in Boston
every fall. And Trump becomes one of the celebrity participants. And he, you know,
works the crowds before and after he golfs, signing their $100 bills. And one year they do a promotional
video and they sit Trump down in the clubhouse at the golf tournament with the cameras rolling
and say, Donald, why do you like doing business with Deutsche Bank? And he says with a big smile
on his face, because they're so fast and easy. So for now, everything's kind of hunky dory.
Things are going well, right?
Everyone's happy.
What happens next?
So the early 2000s, Trump comes back to Deutsche Bank for another financial project.
And this one is different.
He's not looking to build a building or anything like that.
What he's looking for is money for his Atlantic City casinos.
And his casino company is deep in debt.
And so he gets Deutsche Bank to agree to help the casino company sell a bunch of bonds. And so the way that works is there's something called a roadshow. And Trump and Deutsche Bank go off to meet a bunch of institutional investors. And Trump is supposed to kind of give his financial pitch for why these investors shouldn't trust their money with his casino company. And
the roadshow seems to be going really well. There's big crowds, you know, people bring
cameras to the events. And at the end of this, Trump goes to his banker at Deutsche and says,
that went great. How much money did we raise? And the poor banker needs to break the news to Trump
that, yes, they did attract large crowds. And yes, people seemed happy to see them. But no, people were not willing to provide him with their money. Wow. So here's Donald Trump
trying to sell bonds, which basically means he's asking for loans and no one is biting.
No one would touch him. So the roadshow was a dud. And so Donald Trump comes in and assembles
the group that's responsible for going out and finding buyers for these bonds.
And he says, listen, fellas, I know this is not the easiest project you've ever done.
But if you can get this done for me, you will all be my guests at Mar-a-Lago for the weekend.
And lo and behold, that does the trick.
The sales guys managed to actually sell nearly $500 million of bonds, which is a very large number.
It's hard to sell that much risky debt.
So the sales process ends
and the banker calls back Trump and says,
great news, we did it.
We sold, I think, $480 million of these bonds for you.
And Trump is very, very happy, big smile on his face
and says, that's great, thank you so much.
And the banker says,
don't forget about what you promised our guys. And Trump says, that's great, thank you so much. And the banker says, don't forget about what you promised our guys.
And Trump says, what's that?
And the banker is not sure if he's serious and says,
you said you'd take them all down to Mar-a-Lago, remember?
And Trump says, oh, no, no one's going to remember that.
Kind of trying to weasel out of it.
And the banker says, look, that's all these guys have been talking about
for the past week or two.
Trump eventually agrees, and he sends up his private Boeing jet to New York and flies them
all down to Mar-a-Lago and spends a weekend together. And it's great that he's whining
and dining them, telling them great stories. And the relationship seems to have reached this new
level. Can I just pause and note with some surprise that all it took to get these guys to sell $480 million of risky debt was a trip to Mar-a-Lago?
On his private plane.
Bankers are humans.
The allure of Donald is great.
The idea of rubbing shoulders and spending alone time with a guy who is a celebrity, that's real.
So at this point, Deutsche Bank is winning.
Donald Trump is winning.
Everyone is happy.
And it takes a few months.
But Donald Trump, early in the new year, defaults on the bonds.
And this is a huge embarrassment for Deutsche Bank.
It costs them money, first of all, but it also means that the clients are left sitting on big losses.
So this has got to be a relationship ender.
It seems like it, but it wasn't.
Within months of the default, Trump is back talking to the commercial real estate guys at Deutsche Bank.
He wants to build a massive skyscraper in downtown Chicago and ask them to
provide him with more than $500 million to finance that. And Deutsche Bank, even though their
colleagues in the same building, in the same floor of the same building on Wall Street, had just
defaulted on these loans, they agree to make this massive loan to Trump to finance the construction
of the Chicago skyscraper.
Are they talking to each other? This sounds crazy.
I talked to one of the guys who was involved with the Mar-a-Lago junk bonds, as I like to call them,
and I asked him that very question. And he said, no, we didn't bother to tell them. That was just not the DB way. And it basically is shorthand for meaning the culture of the bank is one where we pursue
profits, short-term profits, at any price. Why on earth would you go screw up a different division's
business with Trump by spoiling the party? And so he kept it to himself. But Donald Trump this time
is personally on the hook for some of this money. So as part of this loan, in order to reduce the
riskiness of it
from Deutsche Bank's perspective,
he agrees to personally guarantee
$40 million of this loan.
So what happens with this loan?
Good afternoon and welcome to the Terrace at Trump.
I'm Keith Mullaney, the restaurant director here
at the Trump International Hotel and Tower Chicago.
And this is the terrace.
Well, the building starts rising along the Chicago River.
It's an amazing place.
We've got an amazing space here.
We've got the Wrigley Clock Tower in the background.
On Wednesdays and Saturday nights, there's fireworks right over there, right over the Sheraton.
It gets finished, and the loan is due in the spring of 2008.
This is the start of the financial crisis,
and so Trump is having trouble finding buyers for his luxury condominiums. Well, the advice is to just hold tight, see what happens, keep as much
cash as you can, even if it's not very much, just keep as much cash and you're going to be able to
make great deals because there are unbelievable opportunities out there right now. And Trump
probably could repay the loan, but that would be very inconvenient for him at that time, given
the scarcity of cash in the financial system. And so Trump tells his lawyers, look, can we find a way to wriggle out
of this? And so his lawyers start pouring over the fine print of these financial contracts with
Deutsche Bank. And one of them comes across a provision in the contract that's called a force
majeure provision, which is an act of God. So it basically means if there's an unanticipatable act of God,
like a natural disaster, for example,
that theoretically would allow Trump to void or delay the contract.
And it just so happened that a few days before the lawyers
started going through these contracts with a fine-tooth comb,
Dr. Greenspan, we want to start with you.
Alan Greenspan, who's the former Fed chairman.
We are in the midst of a once-in-a-century credit tsunami.
Had described the ongoing financial crisis as a credit tsunami.
And the lawyers look at each other and they say,
what is a tsunami if not a natural disaster?
The lawyer recounted to me how Trump was just ecstatic.
He was so pleased. And so a few days before the loan is due how Trump was just ecstatic. He was so pleased.
And so a few days before the loan is due, Trump sues Deutsche Bank.
And he declares the financial crisis to be a contract-voiding act of God.
And then, just to put a cherry on top, he accuses Deutsche Bank of having caused the financial crisis.
And just to put another cherry on top, he then accuses Deutsche Bank of having engaged in
predatory lending against him by trying to collect on the loan and demands $3 billion from them in
damages. And I can see your, you know, eyebrows arching because the chutzpah involved in suing
the bank for a loan you owe and accusing it of causing the financial crisis and of engaging in predatory lending against you.
I mean, that is bonkers.
I mean, I'm impressed.
I'm impressed.
I have to say I'm a little bit impressed.
Yeah.
So I've talked to the lawyers on the Deutsche Bank side who were involved in this, and this is comical to them.
It's a completely bogus legal claim that Trump is making.
And it's slowly dawned on them, though, that Trump owes them hundreds of millions of dollars,
and they actually need to deal with this lawsuit.
So Deutsche Bank then sues Trump,
demanding immediate repayment of the $40 million
that he had personally guaranteed.
And this litigation drags on
for the better part of two years.
We'll be right back.
At every turn of this story i keep wanting to ask so this has got to be the
end of the relationship it's sort of like when you hear your friend talking about a terrible
boyfriend and you keep hearing the things that he's done. And you're saying to yourself, well,
that's it. This is I mean, this is an abusive relationship at this point. And Trump is
torturing the bank and up to a senior level of the bank. They're like, we are done with this guy. So
the litigation eventually settles in 2010. And the settlement states that Trump has now two years, so until 2012, to repay the $40 million that he had personally guaranteed on the Chicago loan.
And that means Trump now has a problem.
He has two years to come up with tens of millions of dollars to repay Deutsche Bank.
And he hopes to continue expanding his real estate and his resort empire.
He's now really into golf courses at this
time. And the solution to this problem comes from an unexpected source, his new son-in-law,
Jared Kushner. And Kushner, who's the CEO of his own small real estate company, Kushner Companies,
has a relationship with a woman at Deutsche Bank named Rosemary Vrablich. And Vrablich is what's called a private banker.
Her job is to provide loans and wealth management to very wealthy families and individuals. And so Kushner arranges for his father-in-law to meet with her. And at the meeting with Vrablich,
Trump basically describes his financial predicament. And Vrablich in this room hatches this idea that Deutsche Bank can
provide Trump with a series of loans that will do a number of things. The first is a loan that
will allow Trump to repay the money that he currently owes this other arm of Deutsche Bank.
There's no way. I mean, there's just no way. We're talking about one arm of the bank paying off a loan given to Trump by another arm
of the same bank. Yes, that is a very unusual situation. But the CEO at the time is a guy
named Joe Ackerman. And Ackerman, one of his visions for the bank in this post-crisis world
is that he wants the bank to be into businesses like private banking that are less risky and less aggressive than the traditional Wall Street model.
And so he's a big fan of the private bank, and he essentially overrides the concerns that the investment banking people had and blesses this new relationship with Donald Trump.
So I'm dying to know what happens next.
So I'm dying to know what happens next.
What happens next is this is, for the third time, the beginning of a long, beautiful relationship between Deutsche Bank and Donald Trump. There's the loan to repay Deutsche Bank for the Chicago loan. There's then a very large loan to finance the renovation of the old post office building in Washington. And then finally, in the spring of 2016,
there's one more loan request that comes through.
And this one is to finance work on Trump's golf resort in Turnberry, Scotland.
And this comes in through Rosemary for Appalachia again,
and it goes up through the food chain.
And this time it hits problems. Our country needs a truly great leader.
And we need a truly great leader now.
Donald Trump is running for president.
We need a leader that wrote the art of the deal.
At this point, this is around March of 2016,
he is the leading candidate for the Republican nomination.
And he's a polarizing figure.
We need somebody that literally will take this country and make it great again.
And this, for a lot of the executives of the bank, was the first time that they realized the full extent of the relationship and the financial exposure that they had to Trump, now the presidential candidate.
And the notion of Deutsche Bank being the chief financial enabler of this guy
was very scary for executives in New York and Frankfurt. And they said, no way, this stops here.
And the plug was essentially pulled on the financing that
Deutsche Bank was providing to Trump. What do you think they were scared of?
There are a number of fears. The most obvious fear was just a public relations debacle.
Donald Trump owes at least $250 million to banks. Deutsche Bank is reportedly the only
big bank that continues to make significant loans to him.
There are already headlines that are starting to come out about Deutsche Bank's pivotal role
in allowing Trump to build his business and kind of help him survive financially.
In the first days of his campaign, Donald Trump has insisted that his record as a businessman
gives him the experience he needs to run the country.
But is that record as good as he says?
And for someone who is not popular in most of
the world and you're a global bank, that is not an attractive set of facts. The other bigger concern,
though, is Deutsche Bank executives started to realize that if Trump became president,
they had a very tricky problem on their hands. And it was this because the private bank had
structured these loans in a way that Donald Trump personally guaranteed the bulk of them, that meant that if Trump became
president and defaulted on his loans, which empirically, that's actually the likelihood.
And if he did that in office as president of the United States, that meant that Deutsche Bank would
be faced with a very unattractive choice. On the one hand, they could do what they were contractually
entitled to,
which is seize the president's assets. They could take his private plane. They could take
Mar-a-Lago. They could empty the cash in his bank accounts. But that's picking a very public
and ugly fight with the most powerful man in the world. But the other option is actually in a lot
of ways uglier, which is to not enforce the terms of the contract and to basically let it slide if
Trump stops paying back his loans.
That's essentially cutting an enormously lucrative break to the president,
whose administration, by the way, wields enormous power over the bank
because Deutsche Bank has a huge U.S. operation and is regulated by the Trump administration.
So both of those choices are very bad.
And Deutsche Bank executives started to realize that they might be in this terrible situation.
So obviously he becomes president.
What happens?
Deutsche Bank executives who I talked to have recalled to me waking up on November 9th, 2016,
realized that Trump had been elected president and just immediately were overwhelmed by nausea. They realized that
they had a huge, huge problem on their hands. So the good news for Deutsche Bank is that at this
point, both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue are controlled by Republicans. The Republicans are
not going to investigate Deutsche Bank and its ties to Trump because they support the president.
And so for two years, Deutsche Bank executives are kind of breathing
a sigh of relief a little bit.
Their nightmare scenario is not likely to become reality.
And then in November 2018,
Democrats take the House.
Democrats here are really stepping up their fight
for the president's personal and business financial records.
Frustrated House Democrats have issued a subpoena
for those six years of President Trump's tax returns. Issuing subpoenas to several financial institutions and
the president's longtime lender Deutsche Bank. It's the latest escalation in a standoff between
the president and Congress and again this time the administration is refusing congressional demands.
So as soon as Democrats regained the House, Deutsche Bank started proactively cooperating with investigators on Capitol Hill.
So in April, two congressional committees issued subpoenas to Deutsche Bank demanding a whole variety of very detailed financial information.
A week or two before Deutsche Bank was prepared to hand that over, Trump and his family filed a lawsuit against Deutsche Bank
seeking to prevent it from complying with that subpoena.
So what does Deutsche Bank represent to Democrats?
It's the Rosetta Stone for Democrats.
It's the key to unlocking Donald Trump's personal and business finances.
I mean, the tax returns in particular are something that Trump has broken with decades of precedent and refused to publicly
release his tax returns. But this actually goes way beyond the tax returns. And it has the potential
to answer some of the real unsolved mysteries of the Trump family finances. And where has he been getting his money. He's had a
lot of cash. Where does it come from? There's a million unanswered questions and the answers to
a lot of them are hiding inside an electronic vault at Deutsche Bank. I can't help but note
that after decades of Trump taking advantage of Deutsche Bank's willingness to bet on him, to take risks by
working with him. And after decades of him messing with them, kind of, now he's in this position
where this bank that he's had this torrid, tortured, as you say, relationship with, has the key to his finances
that he is so desperate to keep out of the public eye. I mean, the tables seem to have turned in
this way. This time, Deutsche Bank is a big risk to Trump. That's true. The risk actually still goes both ways.
And this is the culmination of a decades-long,
symbiotic, very risky relationship.
Deutsche Bank has the potential
to spill the president's innermost financial secrets,
but President Trump and his administration
has enormous sway over the future course of this bank
because the administration regulates the bank and
the administration's Department of Justice has at least one open criminal investigation into the
bank for laundering money overseas. So it's kind of like mutually assured destruction, except for
the fact that now Congress, since they have subpoenaed Deutsche Bank for the records, assuming a federal judge does not get in the way of the bank complying,
Deutsche Bank is going to be handing over some extremely explosive materials
for the whole world to see.
These are all secrets that Trump has spent the past several years
trying to keep hidden from public view.
And there's a very real chance that right now they could all come tumbling out.
David, thank you.
My pleasure.
On Wednesday afternoon, a federal judge rejected President Trump's request
to block Deutsche Bank from complying with congressional subpoenas for his financial records.
The judge dismissed the president's argument that the subpoenas have no legitimate purpose and were being used to harass him, concluding that his argument would not prevail at trial.
Here's what else you need to know today.
So I came here to do a meeting on infrastructure with Democrats,
not really thinking they wanted to do infrastructure or anything else other than investigate.
President Trump on Wednesday stormed out of a scheduled meeting
with Democratic leaders about infrastructure
and declared that he was no longer willing to work with them
until they end the congressional investigations into his conduct.
And I just saw that Nancy Pelosi, just before our meeting,
made a statement that we believe that the president of the United States is engaged in a
cover-up. Well, it turns out I'm the most, and I think most of you would agree to this, I'm the
most transparent president probably in the history of this country. After cutting short the meeting
at the White House, the president marched into the Rose Garden to recount his confrontation with the Democrats, which included House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. So I just wanted to let you know
that I walked into the room and I told Senator Schumer, Speaker Pelosi, I want to do infrastructure.
I want to do it more than you want to do it.
I'd be really good at that. That's what I do.
But you know what? You can't do it under these circumstances.
So get these phony investigations over with.
Afterward, both Schumer and Pelosi accused the president of staging his walkout,
calling it a political performance that allowed him to avoid the difficult work of creating an infrastructure plan.
It's clear that this was not a spontaneous move on the president's part.
It was planned.
And, of course, then he went to the Rose Garden with prepared signs that had been printed
up long before our meeting. We want the president to do infrastructure. We want our Congress to
perform its constitutional responsibilities and create jobs, create income, create wealth
for the average American. We can do both. It's clear the president doesn't want to do any of that.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.