When Genius Failed by Roger Lowenstein

Economics · 2000

When Genius Failed review

by Roger Lowenstein

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The verdict

When Genius Failed is Roger Lowenstein's account of Long-Term Capital Management, the hedge fund that almost took down the global financial system in 1998.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 5h 45m.

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What it argues

When Genius Failed is Roger Lowenstein's account of Long-Term Capital Management, the hedge fund that almost took down the global financial system in 1998. LTCM was founded by John Meriwether, a Salomon Brothers bond trader, and staffed with two Nobel Prize-winning economists — Myron Scholes and Robert Merton — whose options-pricing work underpinned modern derivatives theory. The fund used enormous leverage to exploit tiny pricing inefficiencies in bond markets, earned spectacular returns in its early years, and then lost nearly $4 billion in a matter of weeks when Russia defaulted on its debt and the trades that were supposed to be uncorrelated all moved against them simultaneously.

Lowenstein tells the story chronologically, beginning with Meriwether's career at Salomon and the intellectual culture that produced LTCM's models. The fund's models were built on historical data and assumed that markets would behave as they normally do. They did not account well for the possibility that correlations break down in a crisis, that liquidity dries up, or that being right about a trade matters nothing if you are forced to liquidate before the trade converges. LTCM was not wrong about the trades in a theoretical sense; it was wrong about how much leverage a strategy could sustain when everything went against it at once.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    Models built on historical data cannot account for events outside that history. LTCM's models were calibrated to normal markets, and 1998 was not a normal market.

  2. 2.

    Leverage amplifies both gains and losses. LTCM was leveraged 25:1 at its peak; this turned a modest loss rate into a catastrophic capital wipeout in weeks.

  3. 3.

    Correlations that look stable in normal markets often collapse in crises. LTCM's supposedly uncorrelated trades all moved against the fund simultaneously when Russia defaulted.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Roger Lowenstein is an American financial journalist and author who spent a decade writing for The Wall Street Journal before turning to books. His subjects include Warren Buffett, the Federal Reserve, and American corporate history. In addition to When Genius Failed, he wrote Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist (1995) and The End of Wall Street (2010), a history of the 2008 financial crisis. He writes with the narrative clarity of a journalist and the financial sophistication of a reporter who has spent decades covering markets.

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