See also on LTCM: Wall Street's Changing
Culture II...
Wall Street's Changing Culture
By John Brimelow
When Genius Failed: The Rise and
Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by
Roger Lowenstein, Random House [Order from Amazon.com]When the financial madness of the late 20th
century America fades into history, the saga of
Long-Term Capital Management could well emerge
as the quintessential story. Roger Lowenstein's When
Genius Failed is likely to be a classical
primary authority.
Lowenstein is a deeply professional writer,
who reduces the arcane complexities of
derivative dealings to lucid prose, and focuses
on the crucial components in a confusing complex
story. He brings the icy precision of the
battlefield surgeon to the deafening chaos of
Wall Street conflict. His chilling assessments
of such phenomena as the appalling Larry
Hillibrand, perhaps the key force at LTCM, a
strangely-diminished Alan Greenspan, and the
sinister force of Goldman Sachs, are likely to
prove definitive.
As a member of the Frank Veneroso/Le Métropole Café circle,
and consequently feeling in possession of some
first-hand knowledge of the LTCM smash, I found
this book stimulating and informative. So also
would others with professional involvement. This
is not a book to be ignored.
LTCM was set up to profit from irrational
disparities in valuation between similar
financial assets, primarily bonds. The
assumption that these occurred randomly in a
normal distribution pattern had become an
article of religious faith at U.S. Business
Schools in the previous 20 years. Two of the
progenitors of the view, Robert Merton of
Harvard, and Myron Scholes of Stanford (and of
the Black/Scholes option valuation model) were
LTCM partners. (Fischer Black had had the
judgment to die an untimely death previously.)
Careful reading of their work reveals that they
assumed continuous markets and stable volatility
ranges (neither always present in reality) and
they acknowledged but ignored the fact that
probability distributions in financial markets
often show "fat tails" -- in other
words that extreme events occur far more
frequently than a normal curve would predict.
But they nonetheless built a "school"
of like-minded thinkers and disciples. This
group had become very influential on Wall Street
by the late 90s.
Wall Street, in a sense, became a victim of
the principal vice of the U.S. academic
profession: the eagerness to set up
introspective communities, dedicated to a dogma,
which insulate themselves from fact-based
criticism by exclusion and intimidation rather
than argument. This behavior pattern, more
redolent of Eastern European despotisms than of
the English-speaking empirical tradition, turned
out to be inimical to financial as well as
intellectual health.
The life cycle of LTCM was quite simple.
Profitability in the transactions the fund
sought out was quite thin, if reasonably
predictable. Therefore, from the start, the
partners sought to maximize size and leverage.
Central to this strategy was relentless, brutal
pressure on credit sources, seeking the cheapest
rates and least encumbering terms.
Founded in March 1994, with equity of $1.25
billion, the fund was able to pay out $2.7
billion at the end of 1997 to selected
shareholders. This sharply increased the active
partners' share of the pool at the expense of
the investors, some of whom were in effect sent
a check and told they were no longer involved.
As LTCM did not reduce its enormous positions,
this move also hugely increased LTCM's leverage.
By then, however, numerous other operators
had entered the same field and opportunities
were growing scarce.
It was widely thought LTCM was working on
advanced and refined versions of Merton &
Scholes' theories: this was not the case.
Shortage of opportunity was dealt with simply by
astonishing geographical diversification -
Lowenstein cites 24 countries - and by an
expansion into equity risk arbitrage. Up to 30
positions were carried, some in huge size. LTCM'
s expertise had little to contribute in this
area. In retrospect, this was a major strategic
error by management.
Consequently, it is not surprising that the
Russian default of August '98 triggered the
demise of the firm. As Lowenstein says, "In
seventy years, Russia's communists had not
succeeded in dealing markets such a telling blow
as did its deadbeat capitalists."
However, there is much more of importance in
the LTCM saga than the rise and fall of
hubristic, if well-funded, intellectuals. In my
view, the most important document that appeared
in the aftermath of the rescue was published in The
Financial Times weekend edition Oct 10/11
1998. (Lowenstein does not mention it.) This was
a leaked credit memorandum from Union Bank of
Switzerland, one of the main losers in the
smash, concerning the reasons the bank chose to
do business with an entity leveraged far beyond
the bank's normally tolerated limits. LTCM was a
good credit, UBS hoped, because "eight
strategic investors" including
"generally government-owned banks in major
markets" owned 30.9% of its capital, giving
LTCM "a window to see the structural
changes occurring in those markets to which the
strategic investors belong."
This appears to be a bald statement that LTCM
had access to inside information (which in the
bond market, as Lowenstein points out, is not
illegal) on particular national credit markets -
because of its involvement with government
institutions.
Who were these "generally
government-owned banks"? Why would they
want to give a foreign institution such
privileges? In the case of the Italians, the
only known Central Bank participant prior to
this book, there was a reason, as Lowenstein
reveals. Italian Government bonds were
unpopular. "The bond market was rating the
Italian government as a poorer risk than private
banks." Investing $100Mn and lending $150Mn
more, the Italians obtained the sympathy of a
market player willing to operate on a staggering
scale - quite enough to move the Italian market.
LTCM made 38% of the $1.6 billion it earned
1994-95, its best years, from the Italian
relative value/convergence trade. The Italian
authorities got a bond market that appeared to
be applauding their efforts to reach Germanic
standards of financial probity. Who knows what
other tasks LTCM was performing for its
"generally government-owned"
investors?
So who were the other "strategic
partners"? World media displayed a peculiar
lack of interest in this question. (I can vouch
for this - I myself tried to get two major wire
services to follow up.) Indeed, as Lowenstein
remarks, the general press was also
"stunningly silent" during the period
when LTCM's death throes were starting to
disturb markets.
But the author does have some answers: the
Bank of Taiwan, the Government of Singapore
Investment Corporation, The Hong Kong Land
Authority and the Kuwait Pension Fund were names
not publicized at the time. Some large private
sector entities were: Sumitomo and Dresdner
Banks, Paine Webber, the Liechtenstein Global
Trust and of course UBS.
Still, several names are still needed to
fulfill the UBS credit memorandum. Given LTCM's
Latin American interests, one must suspect one
or two of that region's notoriously free
wheeling Central Banks were involved. Similarly,
I have always thought the Dutch Central Bank,
perhaps the Austrian, and one of the French
para-statal banks, likely candidates.
The perspective clarifies an obvious puzzle:
Why was the LTCM affair such a crisis?
Lowenstein reports that the ubiquitous Peter
Fisher of the New York Fed, when called in to
evaluate the LTCM situation in mid-September
1998, guessed 17 counterparties might lose $3-$5
billion combined. While annoying and bonus-
(even department-) threatening, this amount, or
several times this amount, simply was not big
enough to create systemic risk. The S&L, 3rd
World debt and Russian crises were all far
larger.
True, the exposure was all in, or related to,
public markets, which might indeed have had a
dramatic few days. But these were generally not
outright risks where losses might never be
recovered. LTCM was quite right to plead that
their convergence or relative value trades would
most likely work out, given time and enough
carrying strength. This is in fact what
happened, enabling the rescuers to recover their
$3.65 billion injected in less than two years.
However, if members of the Central Bank
fraternity stood to be embarrassed, and even
surreptitious market manipulation revealed, the
eagerness of the Federal Reserve to orchestrate
a bailout (or coverup) becomes comprehensible.
It must also be said that, although the likely
losses might have been limited, some of the
bonuses and jobs threatened by LTCM exposure and
by involvement in similar trades were located at
politically well-connected private institutions,
notably Goldman Sachs. (Happily, the Treasury
official working with Fisher on the rescue, Gary
Gensler, was an ex-Goldman partner.)
The picture of Goldman Sachs painted by
Lowenstein is perhaps the most significant
aspect of the book. After reading it, and
remembering the stories emerging from the
Ashanti disaster of a year later, it is
difficult to understand why any public company
would want involvement with this firm. As
Lowenstein portrays it, Goldman under Robert
Rubin and Stephen Friedman in the 1980s dropped
the old firm's previous inhibitions against, for
instance, proprietary trading that might damage
client's interests. The sheepdog in effect
turned into a wolf. The dimwitted sheep in
Corporate America have only just begun to
realize this. In the LTCM case, hordes of
Goldman people flooded into LTCM's offices in
the guise of evaluating the portfolio for the
purpose of raising capital: "Goldman's
sleuths ... had the run of the office. According
to witnesses, [one] appeared to be downloading
Long-Term's positions... Meanwhile, Goldman's
traders in New York sold some of the very same
positions. Brazenly playing both sides of the
street, Goldman represented investment banking
at its mercenary ugliest."
Lowenstein dutifully records Goldman's
denials, and their counter-arguments that they
did own some of these trades anyway and were
merely being prudent. He also notes that others
appeared to be doing the same thing. But he
seems to accept that LTCM's trades were singled
out, makes clear that the partners - and some
outsiders in the final rescue discussions -
believed Goldman guilty and piles on such detail
as to make it clear they were.
Goldman's behavior might be considered
irresponsible, since it, along with others, was
also having a bad time. It lost $1.5 billion in
August and September 1998, and was obliged to
put off its own IPO. A market meltdown must
surely threaten all investment banks. But there
were cards up its sleeve. Goldman's Jon Corzine,
having eventually indicated an inability to
raise funds for LTCM, held up the meeting of
banks subsequently summoned by the New York Fed
to announce a vulture bid by Warren Buffet, AIG
and Goldman, at less than half LTCM's hugely
eroded net worth. Since LTCM's assets, once
again, were convergence or relative value
trades, virtually certain to recover handsomely
once panic receded, this transaction could have
been extremely lucrative. It died essentially
because Buffet's determination to humiliate the
partners caused the proposal to be
poorly-structured. (No doubt coincidentally,
LTCM had aggressively shorted Berkshire-Hathaway
stock.) Goldman's specially privileged legal
representative spent the rest of the rescue
meetings repeatedly jeopardizing the proceedings
seeking (fairly successfully) improved terms for
his client and more pain for the partnership.
One has to wonder at Goldman's behavior,
especially after the Buffet bid failed. After
all, it was still a partnership. The partners'
own money, not that of anonymous shareholders,
would be lost if the financial system had really
crumbled. Morgan and Chase, in contrast, were
quite cooperative. Was it just reckless
selfishness - or was Goldman confident a bailout
would indeed occur?
This brings us to the interesting question of
gold, a market in which Goldman became
peculiarly influential in the '90s. Eighteen
months before LTCM's demise, Frank Veneroso was
told by a prominent hedge fund manager
(unmentioned in this book) that LTCM was short
four hundred tonnes of gold. This seemed
plausible, because we were aware of a more rapid
expansion of Central Bank bullion lending than
could be accounted for by known borrowers, and
it was obvious that a heavy seller had been
active in the market.
Moreover, it was becoming clear that large
hedge funds and bank proprietary desks, having
profited enormously from the "Yen
carry" trade (borrowing cheap Yen to fund
higher yielding positions in other markets) were
hunting around for similar situations. Since
gold interest costs ("lease rates")
were even lower than Yen, and bearishness was
rampant, such a strategy had logic. I was told
by a sophisticated derivatives man that he
doubted LTCM would take the "basis
risk" (e.g. borrow or short gold with no
hedge). But Lowenstein reveals that the fund
took substantial basis risk right from
inception: much of the Italian sovereign risk
was unhedged (merely very closely watched).
We were never able to confirm this story. But
given the manic secretiveness Lowenstein reports
was characteristic at LTCM, this was hardly
surprising. Anecdotal evidence continued to
accumulate.
There is no mention of gold in any form in
this book. In response to repeated assertions by
Bill Murphy on Le Métropole Café, LTCM's
counsel took the extraordinary step in June 1999
of sending an affidavit from LTCM partner Eric
Rosenfeld (who seems to have been charged with
being fund spokesman - he also answered written
questions for Lowenstein) asserting LTCM had
never had any dealings in gold "in any ...
form whatsoever." Why it was necessary to
respond in such a way to a obscure dissident
website then only 9 months old, when no
litigation was in process, is an interesting
question.
Since those early days, Le Métropole Café
has greatly extended its network of "Deep
Throats" supplying information from all
over the world. One of these has reported a
conversation between Myron Scholes and a boyhood
friend in Hamilton, Ontario to the effect that
LTCM was indeed massively short gold, that the
position was relieved by the authorities who
swore the partners to secrecy for which they
were indemnified. This conforms interestingly
with otherwise curious behavior by LTCM partners
towards Lowenstein. Davis Mullins and Eric
Rosenfeld initially gave him formal interviews
"but such formal co-operation quickly
ceased. Subsequent attempts to resume the
interviews and to gain formal access to …
others of the partners, proved fruitless."
Since the passage of time has vindicated the
partners' view that their portfolio was capable
of full recovery, and some of them are
re-entering the business, this is precisely the
reverse of the behavior one would have
predicted. It must be said that Lowenstein's
omitting dealing with the widespread rumors of
an LTCM gold position is itself somewhat
surprising.
Gold declined almost continuously over the
life of LTCM. An unhedged borrowing of
cheaply-priced gold credit would have been a
bonanza. The reason for gold's decline was a
substantial shift in the propensity of Central
Banks to sell and lend - "mobilize" -
their bullion. This development was accurately
heralded by certain observers throughout. It was
precisely the sort of "structural
change" that LTCM "generally
government-owned" "strategic
investors" would have been able to
identify.
The LTCM partners were well aware that their
competitive advantage lay at least as much in
developing cheap funding sources as in asset
management. They were constantly, aggressively,
searching for lower rates and more liberal
terms, and their tight fistedness with their
brokers was notorious throughout Wall Street.
That a fund running over 60,000 positions in at
least 24 countries, which had required
considerable ingenuity and inventiveness to
identify, should have overlooked gold borrowing,
is simply incredible.
The Long-Term debacle reflects poorly on
their creditor counterparties, and raises
serious questions as to the sagacity with which
these major financial entities are managed.
Lowenstein is justifiably stern: "Through
their carelessness, their reckless financing,
their vain attempts to ingratiate themselves
with a self important client, the Wall Street
banks had created this fiasco together... They,
too, were awed by ... the partners' reputation,
degrees, and celebrity."
Interestingly, When Genius Failed confirms
what Le Métropole Café alleged at the time:
the Bankers Trust sale to Deutsche Bank was a
distressed merger. What kind of grooming was
necessary to achieve the appearance of a premium
over Bankers Trust's preceding market price
remains a question.
Union Bank of Switzerland, of course, was in
the process of ruining itself with various types
of derivative exposure: their writeoff of $700Mn
on Long-Term was the largest announced loss. In
large part this was due to an absurdly-priced
warrant on LTCM's equity that the Bank sold the
partners, hoping to improve their business
relationship. (An ex-UBS man told me the
delicious story that having closed the
transaction, LTCM promptly shorted Union Bank's
stock.) Credit Suisse First Boston sold a
similar warrant. Another transaction which seems
odd involved Merrill Lynch. In April 1998, with
LTCM still appearing to be walking on water,
Merrill's senior executives personally purchased
most of the firm's stake in LTCM. This turned
out to have the happy effect of getting Merrill
out close to the top: But what would it have
looked like if LTCM had continued to prosper?
Lowenstein judges the derivatives revolution
harshly. He asks penetrating questions about the
role of the authorities. Given that LTCM's
"stunning losses betrayed the flaw at the
very heart - the very brain - of modern
finance" and that the concept it used
"prevails at virtually every investment
bank and trading desk," it is very strange
to find Greenspan and Rubin (when Secretary of
the Treasury) blocking all efforts to improve
transparency and improve regulation even to the
extent of forcing out the former CFTC head,
Brooksley Born. A ridiculous situation has been
allowed to arise where the balance sheets of
major financial institutions have no reliable
relationship to the actual economic situation of
the firm, because of derivatives. Who benefits
from this?
There are few appealing personalities in this
drama. James Cayne, chief executive of Bear
Stearns, LTCM's clearing broker, appears
impressive. It was his inflexible determination
to hold the fund to its promise to keep a $500Mn
pool of liquidity with his firm which triggered
the final crisis. According to Lowenstein, he
precipitated a near-riot when he told the
assembled rescuing banks that Bear Stearns would
not be contributing to help its formerly
lucrative client. "When did we become
partners?" he asked. "They have a
different view of the world" said a
participant, "they're completely
self-interested." Cayne personally was an
investor with LTCM who had been allowed to stay
in after the capital reduction.
In fact the figure who emerges with the most
moral stature could be the lead perpetrator,
John Meriwether, Long-Term's founding partner.
Somehow managing to command the loyalty of a
group of spectacularly arrogant, selfish and
volatile men, and shepherding them from Solomon
to the new vehicle he designed, Meriwether
repeatedly displays in the book an eerie
emotional self-control and discipline which in
another era might perhaps have made him a great
fighting general. A practicing Roman Catholic
leading a mainly Jewish group (everyone
compromised - he professed to be a liberal
Democrat and they played a lot of golf), an
intensely private man who with his wife has
apparently endured the agony of infertility,
Meriwether now appears to be engineering a third
Wall Street career. The reader is left with the
feeling that he probably deserves one.
The implications of the LTCM crisis are
ominous for everybody. That the derivative vogue
has undermined and weakened the world's major
financial institutions - and to an unpredictable
extent, courtesy inadequate reporting procedures
mysteriously tolerated by the authorities - has
been obvious to any sensible observer for some
time. Having an example so skillfully explicated
is nonetheless disquieting.
What is really alarming, however, is the
insight into the modern Wall Street mindset. The
Fed despaired of getting a private sector banker
to lead the rescue. "Wall Street had many
bankers but no J.P. Morgan." The reason for
this is that proportionately more activity is
now in the hands of entities with "a
different view of the world" - like Bear
Stearns. While Morgan in the 1907 Panic was able
to dragoon virtually all significant financial
actors, it is notable that no participation by
the other great hedge funds is reported in
LTCM's case - even though they stood to be
seriously effected by any disruption.
On an operational level, LTCM was notorious
for the atomistic view it took of business. It
"analyzed every deal in terms of the profit
and loss on discrete trades rather than in terms
of the overall relationship." Minor
technicalities were ruthlessly exploited -
Merrill, which raised the initial capital, was
stuck with a $7 million loss arising from a
drafting error in a transaction document. The
fact that Paine Webber's Chairman invested $10Mn
personally, and the firm $100 Mn, did not
prevent the firm being cut out of LTCM's trading
because it wanted collateral. Complaints by
counter-parties about the poor profitability of
the relationship were ignored.
There is obviously a question as to the
prudence of this, since LTCM was such a huge
borrower. LTCM's staff below the partner level -
many highly educated and skilled professionals -
were treated with similar brutality. No social
activity took place between partners and the
rest, unusual for an American firm. Partners
"treated the staff with cool formality.
They were polite but interested only in one
another and their work." Although the
associates were encouraged to invest their
substantial pay back into the firm, they were
kept totally in the dark when things turned bad,
despite their being as exposed personally.
"Explain to us why we should be ...
here" demanded an employee after the
rescue. "That's a valid question. We'll get
back to you" was the answer. There is no
J.P. Morgan to rally Wall Street not because
there are not men of similar financial stature -
Morgan was not especially wealthy - but because
the current beneficiaries of the American
capitalist system lack a sense of community. One
day we may all regret this very much.
October 18, 2000