When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long Term Capital Management
By (Author) Roger Lowenstein
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
27th February 2002
2nd January 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: business and industry
332.660973
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
190g
Picking up where Liars Poker left off (literally, in the bond dealers desks of Salomon Brothers) the story of Long-Term Capital Management is of a group of elite investors who believed they could beat the market and, like alchemists, create limitless wealth for themselves and their partners.
Founded by John Meriweather, a notoriously confident bond dealer, along with two Nobel prize winners and a floor of Wall Streets brightest and best, Long-Term Captial Management was from the beginning hailed as a new gold standard in investing. It was to be the hedge fund to end all other hedge funds: a discreet private investment club limited to those rich enough to pony up millions.
It became the banks own favourite fund and from its inception achieved a run of dizzyingly spectacular returns. New investors barged each other aside to get their investment money into LTCMs hands. But as competitors began to mimic Meriweathers fund, he altered strategy to maintain the funds performance, leveraging capital with credit on a scale not fully understood and never seen before.
When the markets in Indonesia, South America and Russia crashed in 1998 LCTMs investments crashed with them and mountainous debts accumulated. The fund was in melt-down, and threatening to bring down into its trillion-dollar black hole a host of financial instiutions from New York to Switzerland. Its a tale of vivid characters, overwheening ambition, and perilous drama told, in Roger Lowensteins hands, with brilliant style and panache.
'A must-read thriller for anyone who works, or invests in markets. It is a story of how arrogance can drive greed and fear to extremes.' Scotsman 'Richly textured and lucidA riveting account that reaches beyond the market landscape to say something universal about risk and triumph, about hubris and failure.' New York Times 'Lowenstein has written a squalid and fascinating tale of world-class greed and, above all, hubris.' Business Week 'This book is story-telling journalism at its best' The Economist
Roger Lowenstein reported for the Wall Street Journal for over a decade and also wrote columns for the paper, Heard on the Street and Intrinsic Value. His first book, Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist (1996), was a bestseller, and he has gone on to publish When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long Term Capital Management (2002) and Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing (2004), as well as co-authoring numerous titles. Besides the Journal, Mr Lowensteins work has appeared in the New York Times and the New Republic. He also writes a column for SmartMoney Magazine. He lives in Westfield, New Jersey and has three children.