By the end of the night, strategies were already in motion across the financial world.
At JP Morgan, the mandate was simple: secure every record, harden the walls around his Family Office, and quietly broaden the services tethered to him. Liam Scott was no longer just another private client. He was to be regarded — and protected — as if he were a sovereign power in his own right.
At Goldman Sachs, frustration quickly turned to opportunity. If they couldn't win him in private banking, they would wedge themselves into his deals. Syndicates, IPO allocations, late-stage venture funding — wherever Liam put his capital, Goldman would circle, ready to insert itself.
