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When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management [NOOK Book]
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With a new Afterword addressing today’s financial crisis
A BUSINESS WEEK BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
In this business classic—now with a new Afterword in which the author draws parallels to the recent financial crisis—Roger Lowenstein captures the gripping roller-coaster ride of Long-Term Capital Management. Drawing on confidential internal memos and interviews with dozens of key players, Lowenstein explains not just how the fund made and lost its money but also how the personalities of Long-Term’s partners, the arrogance of their mathematical certainties, and the culture of Wall Street itself contributed to both their rise and their fall.
When it was founded in 1993, Long-Term was hailed as the most impressive hedge fund in history. But after four years in which the firm dazzled Wall Street as a $100 billion moneymaking juggernaut, it suddenly suffered catastrophic losses that jeopardized not only the biggest banks on Wall Street but the stability of the financial system itself. The dramatic story of Long-Term’s fall is now a chilling harbinger of the crisis that would strike all of Wall Street, from Lehman Brothers to AIG, a decade later. In his new Afterword, Lowenstein shows that LTCM’s implosion should be seen not as a one-off drama but as a template for market meltdowns in an age of instability—and as a wake-up call that Wall Street and government alike tragically ignored.
How did a financial institution that few Americans had heard of find itself suddenly facing its imminent demise -- and threatening, to boot, to undermine the stability of the world's financial markets? How did a company boasting legendary trading talent, two Nobel Prize-winning economists, and a former officer of the Federal Reserve come to such a predicament? Roger Lowenstein, formerly a financial journalist for The Wall Street Journal and today a columnist for SmartMoney, has written a riveting narrative and the most comprehensive account to date of the hedge fund's short and spectacular career, When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management.
In its first heady years, LTCM, a Greenwich, Connecticut, hedge fund employing fewer than 200, posted record gains. Its profits soared like a hot-air balloon carried aloft by the trade winds. The fund quickly quadrupled its initial investment stake (a record $1.25 billion). LTCM was the envy of Wall Street.
But in December of 1997, the Thai currency crashed and 56 of Thailand's top 58 finance houses were forced to close overnight. The crash triggered an economic recession that rippled across Asia. And when, months later, Russia announced it was defaulting on its foreign loan payments, fear in Washington and in the financial markets was palpable. Wealthy individual investors and institutional traders undertook increasingly frantic efforts to find safe havens for their funds, havens high enough to ride out the anticipated tidal backlash.
For six harrowing months in 1998 -- from April through September -- the hedge fund was in free fall, losing tens and even hundreds of millions of dollars daily. LTCM dropped like an elevator with snapped cables. In that improbably brief stretch, the fund lost $5 billion -- a sum representing more than 90 percent of its operating capital. But that was only part of the story, only part of the immediate danger: The hedge fund's leveraged derivative bets, it gradually emerged, exposed the fund and the financial houses that had so heedlessly lent LTCM the money to extend its financial bets to potential losses of $100 billion. There was hardly a bank that could hope to escape unscathed.
It took a controversial last-minute Fed-orchestrated bailout by a banking consortium to pull LTCM back from the brink of collapse. The banks ultimately allowed that they were wiser to swallow the bitter medicine of bailing out LTCM from bankruptcy than to brave the fallout that the fund's ruin might wreak on even the largest banks and investment houses.
Lowenstein relates this chapter of recent financial history with sure-handed skill and a keen eye for drama. And When Genius Failed tells us more than LTCM's story, for the hedge fund's partners were more knowledgeable about the new finance and more practiced at working with the new financial instruments than anyone else on Wall Street. The traders at the core of LTCM had, after all, ushered in that financial revolution with stunning success as arbitrage traders at Salomon Brothers in the 1980s. (Indeed, they were the very same characters Michael Lewis memorialized in Liar's Poker, the "Young Professors" hired and trained by John Meriwether, himself probably the best-known trader of his generation.) And Robert C. Merton and Myron Scholes, partners at LTCM who in 1997 won Nobels for their contributions to economics, had themselves authored the ideas forming the intellectual framework of contemporary financial thought and practice. As a unit, LTCM's partners were commonly regarded as the sharpest financial minds at work among the Wall Street powers.
When Genius Failed, then, offers a superb capsule history of the last generation's financial innovations. Lowenstein has written a bracing cautionary tale, too. For it isn't the least of the ironies attending the LTCM partners' fall from grace that, to a man, they were committed to (and had staked their personal fortunes on) realizing the ideals of managed risk in finance. But in their devotion to a hyper-rational faith in their mathematical models, they lost sight of the real, human, and unpredictable dangers in the markets they plied. Together, they unwittingly helped shape conditions of financial crisis on an almost unimaginable scale.
Lowenstein allows, however, that there is plenty of blame to be shared. The failures of accountability were systemic. John Meriwether, as always unwaveringly loyal to his traders, failed to rein in his partners' most extravagant gambles. The banks, made greedy by LTCM's gaudy profits, recklessly threw their money at the hedge fund traders, no questions asked. And even Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Fed, comes in for a share of criticism for turning a blind eye to the need for regulating the derivative markets and hedge fund operators. When Genius Failed provides a shrewd, skeptical take on high finance today. It is a gripping, satisfying read.
--Gregory Tietjen
Anonymous
Posted October 13, 2000
There's an old saying to the effect that every army prepares to fight the last war, rather than the next one. In financial circles, the equivalent is to create models that optimize decisions in light of the history of financial markets. That is great, as long as the future is like the past. As soon as the future becomes different, this 'rear-view mirror' vision of the future can create terrible crashes. That's what happened with Long Term Capital Management (LTCM). The cost was almost a meltdown in the financial markets around the world. This cautionary tale should stand as a warning to regulators, investors, academicians, and traders about avoiding the same mistakes in the future. One particular reason to be so concerned is that John Meriwether and his crew of geniuses were back in business as of 1999, as reported by the book (apparently with some of the same investors as in LTCM). You may recall that Mr. Meriwether appeared in the book, Liar's Poker, by challenging John Gutfreund, CEO of Salomon Brothers, to one hand of liar's poker for ten million dollars. Mr. Gutfreund correctly declined, but lost face. Mr. Meriwether later had to leave Salomon Brothers after the firm was found to have failed to notify the Federal Reserve promptly after discovering that it had been violating rules on bidding for government securities. In this book, you will learn more about Mr. Meriwether and his love of brilliant people, betting on everything in sight, and taking outside bets when the odds seemed to be in his favor. This approach can work well when the odds can be known, but that is not the case in the financial markets. Mr. Meriwether did not make himself available to the author. Roger Lowenstein is our most talented financial writer (you may remember him from his days at The Wall Street Journal and for his wonderful biography on Warren Buffett), and he has produced an outstanding work that will be a cautionary tale for future generations about the financial myopia of the 1990s. Long Term Capital Management was built around consensus in the financial markets. The firm attracted the thinkers in the financial markets with the greatest reputations (including future Nobel Prize laureates, Robert Merton and Myron Scholes -- of Black-Scholes option pricing fame, and the top talent from the arbitrage area at Salomon Brothers), a top regulator (the vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve Board), famous investors from the top investment banks and consulting firms, and lines of credit from every major financial institution in these markets. The firm planned to invest by finding small mispricings of one security versus another (such as the interest rate on one bond maturity versus another compared to history, an option versus the underlying stock for the time remaining on the option, a bond yield in a foreign currency versus the currency futures, and the price of a stock versus a hostile takeover bid price for the company). Here, it hoped to proverbally make lots of nickels by borrowing lots of money to make these trades. Although other firms took similar risks (and many also took enormous losses in 1998), LTCM stood out for two things: It had no independent evaluation of its risk to control what it was doing (the traders monitored themselves -- a little like letting the fox guard the hen house) and it took on vastly more debt than others did compared to its equity base. At the firm's peak, it had borrowed over $100 billion against a base of $4 billion in equity and had derivative (option) positions for an exposure of another $1 trillion. This enormous finanical leverage magnified the size of any gains or losses it took. Part of what had been deceptive is that the firm had been regularly and spectacularly profitably for most of its initial four years. What the firm had neglected was to consider what might happen to historical price differentials in a market crisis (particularly a 'stress-loss liquidation'). In 1998, an unprece
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Posted September 18, 2000
Lowenstein has captured the factors that led to the failure of a major brain trust. More importantly, he provides a lucid guide to classic models in psychology, logic, and risk management that can be applied to our own investing activities. All that - and a great read, too.
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Posted December 26, 2000
The history of LTCM teach a lesson of how far can any fund manager can go between the no risk arbitrage and the plain one directionally bets without any hedge.
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Overview
With a new Afterword addressing today’s financial crisis
A BUSINESS WEEK BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
In this business classic—now with a new Afterword in which the author draws parallels to the recent financial crisis—Roger Lowenstein captures the gripping roller-coaster ride of Long-Term Capital Management. Drawing on confidential internal memos and interviews with dozens of key players, Lowenstein explains not just how the fund made and lost its money but also how the ...