As she nears 100, Irene
Bergman has some advice for enjoying a long career on Wall Street: Don’t do
anything stupid.
Consider investment returns,
the financial adviser at Stralem & Co. said in an interview at her New York
apartment, where, surrounded by paintings from Dutch masters, she telephones
her clients. While many investors nowadays obsess over quick profits, it’s best
to wait at least three years, or better yet, many more, before evaluating
holdings. But don’t be afraid of revising your thesis, she said. If thorough
research favors a portfolio shift, have courage and make changes.
“The longer you’re in the
business, the more pessimistic you get,” Bergman said in her soft voice, noting
she currently thinks shares are too expensive. Still, “I’m able to get bullish,
because when I look at a stock, I can imagine where it was 40 years ago.”
As one of the oldest working
professionals in an industry run by men half her age, Bergman offers a rare
perspective. She recalls the small private firms founded by German Jews of the
19th century that came to define Wall Street before their partnership model
gave way to public listings, and honor succumbed to an ever-fiercer push for
profit.
“The way of doing business has
changed,” she said. “It’s much more competitive, much more knives-in-the-back.”
Vodka, Scotch
Guests at Bergman’s midtown
Manhattan apartment, where she’s lived for more than 60 years, may be invited
to sip a vodka or scotch, while seated on furniture crafted in Europe before
World War II. The French Louis XV chairs are off-limits.
Four personal assistants
attend to her needs around the clock, and she calls on colleagues at New
York-based Stralem including Chairman Hirschel Abelson when she needs research
on particular securities. While she never married and doesn’t have children,
she does own a Maltese named Fanny.
Her career was a
near-realization of a dream she had as a teenager. In an essay at the time, she
wrote that she wanted to follow her father, a private banker, onto the Berlin
Stock Exchange. He made that world seem so “lively,” she said. She would have
been the first woman to attain that position.
Fleeing Nazis
Those aspirations stalled when
the Nazis chased her Jewish family from Germany and then Holland. They came to
the U.S. In 1942, Bergman began working as a secretary at a bank. Fifteen years
later, she joined Hallgarten & Co., a member of the New York Stock
Exchange.
“Women on Wall Street were not
very popular,” she said. She would join Loeb Rhoades & Co., and in 1973,
Stralem, where she finally felt like she belonged. “This was the first place
where I was treated like an equal.”
Stralem oversees almost $2
billion in assets and runs a strategy focused on identifying “up-market” and
“down-market” stocks. It manages money for institutions and individual
accounts, 11 of which are Bergman’s. She serves on its investment committee.
Bergman, who stopped visiting
the office in December and turns 100 in August, attributed her longevity to
good genes, not any special diet. She said she stayed physically fit by riding
dressage horses until she was 80 and mentally sharp by forgoing retirement.
Bergman speaks with Stralem colleagues daily and talks with some clients every
week.
Recessions,
Depressions
“She’s been through multiple
business cycles, ups and downs, recessions, depressions, and has a good feeling
for where things are going,” said George Falk, a doctor of internal medicine in
private practice in Manhattan. “She understands what my needs are, has my
interests at heart, and is not primarily interested in making a lot of money
off of me. I have a great deal of trust in her.”
Bergman has Falk, 75, invested
100 percent in U.S. Treasuries.
Her family’s post-war
experience informs her advice today. Because it took a decade after coming to
New York for Bergman to recover her family’s wealth, which was frozen by U.S.
and Dutch authorities, she emphasizes the importance of safeguarding funds.
One bright spot for today’s
investor is the ability to sell large blocks of stock quickly, Bergman said.
Years ago, it would have taken Stralem weeks to execute a large order. Now it
takes hours or days.
At the same time, speed has
“great disadvantages,” she said. “People trade who shouldn’t be, or they do
something too fast.”
Her caution has translated
into loyal clients, according to Philippe Labaune, head of trading at Stralem,
who said that in almost 20 years at the firm, he’s never seen her lose an
account. Though some did close when their owners died.
Missed
Opportunity
“In this business, you have to
get the confidence of your clients,” Bergman said. “You don’t have your clients
for three weeks, you have them for at least three years. It takes that long to
know if you’re doing a good job.”
Customers appreciate that she
has her own wealth. “They had the feeling that I didn’t need to churn their
accounts because I had money myself,” she said.
Bergman does recall one
investment she let slip away: Apple Inc.
“I missed Apple totally,” she
said. “Apple was too much for me.”
That brings her to another
tip: Make your own decisions.
“I always like to do what I
want to do, then it’s my fault,” she said. “I can’t blame anyone else.”
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