Review: When Genius Failed by Roger Lowenstein

by prakash

When Genius Failed covers the fascinating story of the rise and fall of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM).

LTCM’s partners and traders including John Meriwether, David Mullins, Eric Rosenfeld, Gregory Hawkins, Larry Hilibrand, Victor Haghani, Myron Scholes, Robert C. Merton and the Wall Street banks form the crux of the story.

The value of $1000 invested in the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, of $1,000 invested in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and of $1,000 invested monthly in U.S. Treasuries at constant maturity.

The first half of the book covers the rise including John Meriwether’s early days at Salomon, the genesis of trading strategy (J.F.Eckstein & Co.), the formation of the arbitrage group, the formation of LTCM, raising capital, first year in operation, first few years of success, the shift from bond trading to equities, Merton & Scholes winning the Nobel Memorial Prize, etc.

The second half delves into the beginning of the losses, the various crisis in the markets and their impact on LTCM’s trades, the attempt to raise additional capital, Warren Buffett’s offer to invest with Goldman Sachs & AIG, and finishes with the fourteen Wall street banks getting together at the Fed to take over the LTCM fund.

 

Eric Rosenfeld, one of the partners at LTCM, gave at MIT in February of 2009 analyzing their story, including the myths & misconceptions. (Thanks to Charles Krohn for recommending the video.)

Also, on Quora, What are the former employees of LTCM/JWM doing now?

If you liked this post, you might like my review of The Big Short by Michael Lewis.

You should follow me on Twitter or subscribe to this blog’s feed.