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Transcript for complete interview. - Voices of September 11th

Transcript for complete interview. - Voices of September 11th

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Interview with John Duffy, chairman & CEO <strong>of</strong> KBW<br />

Conducted by Mary Fetchet<br />

survivor in the American way – this might have seemed to be a very daunting challenged to<br />

someone who’s not in our business, or even if you are in our business, how do you lose about a<br />

third <strong>of</strong> your staff, your headquarters, a quarter <strong>of</strong> your capital, and get back to where you<br />

were. It’s that indomitable, maybe American spirit that says, We can get this done. We didn’t<br />

have a game plan, we didn’t have a time table, we just kind <strong>of</strong> took it one day at a time. Andy<br />

Senchak said, This is what we knew best, so we came back to work. This is kind <strong>of</strong> what we<br />

knew how to do. Perseverance, again we felt rebuilding the firm was important on multiple<br />

angles, it’s what we knew best, kind <strong>of</strong> felt that’s what the people we lost would want us to do,<br />

and we also felt it’d be beneficial if we got the place built that we’d be better able equipped to<br />

help the families. I think from a pr<strong>of</strong>essional standpoint that kind <strong>of</strong> can-do spirit, that Hey, the<br />

bad guys aren’t going to win this one. They may have given us what they thought was a knockout<br />

blow, but we’re back up on our feet, and you know one <strong>of</strong> the happy chapters in the firm’s<br />

history was five years later we had grown bigger than we had been be<strong>for</strong>e and we were able to<br />

go public, which was kind <strong>of</strong> a big event in our corporate history. We’d almost gone public in<br />

1999 and didn’t, so we at a minimum had rebuilt the firm back to what it was prior to 9/11. In<br />

fact, we’re bigger in 2006. We got to ring the opening bell that morning down at the stock<br />

exchange which was pretty cool, and a lot <strong>of</strong> the floor traders down there were waving the<br />

American flag. So people that were down there that day will remember that event; I know I’ll<br />

never <strong>for</strong>get it, and we hope we keep – if we’ve been any kind <strong>of</strong> a motivating story <strong>for</strong> people,<br />

that’s great. That’s not the reason we did it, but we’re glad we did it. We’re glad we are where<br />

we are today.<br />

[Mary]: So in a way, your success is a result <strong>of</strong> your determination and your… In a way,<br />

memorializing names that were lost, and doing it in their name –<br />

[John]: Absolutely. We’ve got the American flag out in the lobby with all 67 <strong>of</strong> the names <strong>of</strong> the<br />

people that we lost that day, it was something that was made by one <strong>of</strong> the employees’ wives<br />

in the months after 9/11. I don’t think that will ever come down. That’s there <strong>for</strong>ever, because<br />

we wouldn’t be where we are today without the folks that worked <strong>for</strong> us at the time <strong>of</strong> 9/11.<br />

We were able to replace them with other pr<strong>of</strong>essionals, but they were all responsible <strong>for</strong><br />

getting us to the point where we stood at 9/11, and if we weren’t as strong as we were on<br />

9/11, we probably wouldn’t have been able to rebuild the firm. So it was the fact that we had<br />

such a solid foundation and a fine firm at that point in time and those folks we lost were a large<br />

part <strong>of</strong> what we were at the time <strong>of</strong> 9/11 and the fact that we were as strong as we were<br />

enabled us to be able to rebuild. A weaker firm would not have been able to do that.<br />

[Mary]: You have so many beautiful memorials, but this sculpture, what – <br />

[John]: Yeah, the sculpture, it’s actually made from iron that was retrieved from the World<br />

Trade Center site. It was done largely without our knowledge. It was done up in Greenwich,<br />

Connecticut. A firm up there that was involved in the salvage mission <strong>of</strong> the Trade Center took<br />

some <strong>of</strong> that steel and brought it back to their operation, I think the name <strong>of</strong> the firm was<br />

called Post Road Ironworks, and there was a workman up there who I believe was a Polish<br />

immigrant. I don’t know or remember his name. He was I think only in the country less than ten<br />

years, and when he saw the steel, he asked the owners <strong>of</strong> the Post Road Ironworks whether he<br />

could craft something, and he’s got the American flag on one side <strong>of</strong> the sculpture. The other

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