Monday, March 22, 2010

Sins of the capitalist


Of all the characters Sebastian Faulks introduces in
A Week in December ,his ambitious, entertaining and often scathingly angry new novel, two merit special attention: a young Muslim plotting to attack a London hospital, and a hedge fund manager betting that England’s staunchest bank is about to fail. Guess which one is the villain? If you said the billionaire, give yourself a gold star — assuming you can still afford one. It tells you everything you need to know about the politics of this book, and the reflexive populism of our time, that the capitalist is more reliably loathsome than the jihadist.

“Somehow, money had become the only thing that mattered,” a struggling lawyer thinks late in the novel, during the dinner party that brings most of the principal characters together. “When had this happened? When had educated people stopped looking down on money and its acquisition? When had the civilised man stopped viewing money as a means to various enjoyable ends and started to view it as the end itself? When had respectable people given themselves over full time to counting zeroes? And, when this defining moment came, why had nobody bloody well told him?” To which the reader might reply with a question of his own: Did educated people look down on money? I suppose it’s true that education is no guarantee of intelligence.

A Week in December is set in London in the days before Christmas 2007. As such, it’s something of a departure for Faulks, who made his reputation with a series of historical romances (including Birdsong and Charlotte Gray )before reviving the James Bond franchise a couple of years ago with the best-selling Devil May Care .Those books were comfortably retro, but his latest is as contemporary and jittery as a stock chart — a Tom Wolfe-style social satire that follows its characters through a range of modern pathologies. And why not? What with terrorism and financial panic, and the joyful stupidities of reality TV, the zeit has plenty of geist for a novelist to exploit.

Not that Faulks’ characters notice it: willful ignorance is a major theme of A Week in December .One character shuts out the world with drugs, another with an alternative-reality computer game and the third — the jihadist, Hassan —with religious devotion. But Faulks reserves his greatest contempt for John Veals, the “unsmiling” hedge fund manager who lives for money alone: “Beyond the thoughts of wife, children, daily living, carnal urges, beyond the scar tissue of experience and loss, there was a creature whose heart beat only to market movements.” “Veals”, with its hint of villainy and venality, is the perfect name for this cold slab of meat, who in his way is as much a fundamentalist as Hassan — a “breed of fanatic”, as his wife calls the new money men. Much of the novel is taken up with the intricacies of the huge trade Veals is setting up, and readers may learn more than they want about commodities futures and credit default swaps. But anyone who’s paid attention to newspapers will have no trouble following along; and by interrupting the business school lecture now and then to check on his other characters — among them a Tube driver, a soccer player and a dyspeptic book reviewer — Faulks manages to invest the financial arcana with more drama than you might expect. When a novelist tells multiple stories, it’s common to describe him as a weaver, knotting threads into a tapestry. Faulks, though, is more like a bomb-maker, twisting wires; we keep reading not so much because we want to see the big picture but because we’re pretty sure something is going to blow up.

All of this might have been good anti-bourgeois fun, along the lines of recent novels by Jonathan Dee ( The Privileges )and Adam Haslett ( Union Atlantic )that also feature criminal financiers, if Faulks hadn’t confused the moral calculus by introducing terrorism into the story. It’s hard to take Veals seriously as a supervillain — Dr Evil with an MBA — when Hassan is commuting to France to buy explosives. One man hopes to profit from a bank’s self-inflicted wounds, the other hopes to murder psychiatric patients, and the investor is the bad guy? Yet Faulks would have us understand that Hassan is just a confused kid eager to fit in. It’s as if he flinched, determined to show us the human side of a figure we would otherwise judge harshly. That’s a generous impulse, and an admirable one for most novelists. But it makes for an oddly muddled satire, and it’s not a courtesy he extends to the vile Veals.

“The misdemeanours of the bankers will be paid for by millions of people in the real economy losing their jobs,” a drunk announces with prosecutorial zeal at the climactic dinner party. “In paper money, the trillion will be repaid in higher tax on people who have no responsibility for its disappearance.

And the little tossers in the investment banks who’ve put away their two and three and four million in bonuses each year over 10 years, they of course will be the only ones who won’t pay back a coin. Which is bloody odd when you come to think of it. Because really they ought to be in prison.” It’s a rousing speech, worthy of Frank Capra. But it puts the lie to a claim earlier in the novel, that books are “the key to understanding. The key to reality”. This engaging novel is, like John Veals, finally too obsessed with money to serve as a dependable key to anything.

©The New York Times

BOOK REVIEW

GREGORY COWLES

A WEEK IN DECEMBER

Sebastian Faulks Doubleday 392 pages; $27.95

Friday, March 19, 2010

The Homer of the Ants By Margaret Atwood Anthill by E.O. Wilson

Norton, 378 pp., $24.95

1.

Anthill is E.O. Wilson's first work of fiction. It contains what its title promises it will contain: an anthill, embedded at its core. Not a metaphorical anthill, a real anthill, filled to the brim with—well, ants. And thereby hangs its tale.

People have long been fascinated by the similarities between ants and human societies. Though there are no ant symphony orchestras, secret police, or schools of philosophy, both ants and men conduct wars, divide into specialized castes of workers, build cities, maintain infant nurseries and cemeteries, take slaves, practice agriculture, and indulge in occasional cannibalism, though ant societies are more energetic, altruistic, and efficient than human ones.

The mirroring makes us nervous: Are we not enough like ants or are we too much like them? Our ambivalence shows: being compared to an ant can be either a compliment or an insult. "Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise," exhorts the Book of Proverbs, suggesting that we should emulate the ant's industry; to which the aesthete Max Beerbohm riposted, "The ant sets an example to us all, but it is not a good one." Many generations of children were fed Aesop's fable of the grasshopper and the ant—he feckless and fiddling, she drudging away at the storing of winter food; he begging for a handout when the chill arrives, she shutting the door Scroogily in his face. John Wyndham, in his 1956 novella, "Consider Her Ways," postulates an all-female society that forms when men are wiped out by disease. Huge, stupid "Mothers" produce large batches of cloned girl babies, small fretful nurses tend them, Amazonian workers do the manual labor, a caste of intellectuals act as planners. As the time-traveling heroine from our own age remarks, the system lacks romance: but it is a more peaceful one than anything we see around us.


Knopf / For the Soul of France

It is also a more peaceful one than anything the ants themselves come up with. In Greek myth, the Myrmidons were a valiant warrior tribe led by Achilles, the hero of the Iliad. Their name was cognate with the words for "ant" and "ant nest," and they were valued especially for their ferocity and loyalty, for an ant will defend her nest to the death. There is, however, something mindless and robotic about such behavior, and it's no coincidence that many of the warrior aliens and machines in science fiction films have lifted features from the ants. (The shininess, the blank eyes, the swarming, the sharp metallic-looking mandibles...) In T.H. White's 1938 Arthurian fantasy, The Sword in the Stone, ants are a metaphor for fascist dictatorships, repeating a monotonous bonding slogan —"Mammy-mammy-mammy"—and broadcasting religio-political agitprop when disturbed, under a sign that reads "EVERYTHING NOT FORBIDDEN IS COMPULSORY." More recently, the former French prime minister Édith Cresson's 1991 remark about the Japanese and their trade practices—"yellow ants trying to take over the world"—was not intended as praise.

On some level the ants frighten us, as well they might. We humans would die without their soil-tilling activities, so critical to the continued existence of plant life; but what if they get out of control? Too few ants would be a disaster, but so would too many. How can we ensure that we will always have just the right proportion of ants?

In case you think this is a merely academic question, take a look at daring eco-adventurer Mark Moffett's spectacular new ant book, Adventures Among Ants,[1] which covers many varieties of ants—the army ants of Africa, the canopy forest weavers, the Amazon slavemakers, the leafcutters with their fungus gardens. Most ominously, Moffett describes the enormous war now being waged by the Argentine ants against all other ants and every other mini-bioform. The Argentine ants are not a pest in Argentina itself, but thanks to their hitchhiking propensities, they've now spread to places like California, Hawaii, and South Africa where they have no serious competitors. They're forming huge supercolonies, while spreading their farmed aphids all over everything, including, very possibly, your rose bushes. This monoculture of ants is bad news.

Which brings us to Anthill. It's no great surprise to learn that Moffett's thesis supervisor was none other than Edward O. Wilson. Wilson is by now the grand old man of ants, having studied them intensively and written eloquently about them for over forty years. Anthill, though his first novel, is by no means his first book: at last count he'd logged over twenty-two of them, many of which have been groundbreaking.

Ants in themselves might not have raised many eyebrows outside the entomological world, but in the mid-Seventies Wilson lobbed what amounted to a stink bomb into the steam-heated gender wars of those times with his 1975 book, Sociobiology. Is saying that female hormones are different from male hormones a betrayal of the fight for equality in the workplace? Are we no more than our hormones? Should these hormones determine our social behavior, and our rate of pay? According to the World Economic Forum, women—as workers, buyers, and sellers—are now the largest emerging economy (bigger than India, bigger than China), so it's certain that these questions will continue to trouble our waking dreams.

They have certainly troubled Wilson's. He's written widely on human nature, on genes, on mind, on culture. Then, beginning in 1984 with Biophilia, he expanded his field of vision to position human beings within their own crucial ecosystem, the earth. It's no accident that small children are riveted by other life forms: we humans emerged to consciousness in necessary converse with them. It's only in the past fifty years or so that children have been brought up to think chickens come from the supermarket and Nature is a TV show. As with so many things, what we don't know may kill us, and what we seem not to know right now is that without a functioning biosphere (clean air, clean water, clean earth, a variety of plant and animal life) we will starve, shrivel, and choke to death.

In the 1990s Wilson (like many other naturalists) became increasingly troubled by what looked more and more like a human war against Nature—a war that was resulting in the disappearance of whole species and ecosystems. Over the past twenty years he has turned more forcefully toward advocacy. In Search of Nature appeared in 1996; Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge in 1998; the deeply troubling The Future of Life in 2002; and in 2006, The Creation: An Appeal to Save Life on Earth —this last a plea to the religious right, urging an attempt to find common ground in the interests of saving the world that fundamentalists claim to believe was created in an act of divine love. But Wilson had by no means given up on the ants: The Superorganism: The Beauty, Elegance, and Strangeness of Insect Societies appeared in 2009. [2]

2.

So, why has Wilson now turned to novel-writing? Those of us who've been at it for a while might have warned him off. Stick to what you know, we might have said. Rest on your considerable laurels. Don't risk having the literati point and jeer; don't give your opponents the opportunity to tear you down. What have you got to gain?

"A wider readership for urgent ecological messages" might be one answer. Many people have trouble grasping complex hypotheses and long strings of numbers, whereas narrative skills seem to be part of the basic human toolbox—an adaptation that gave those who could spin impressive yarns an evolutionary edge. Studies have shown that we identify with and remember stories, learning more easily from them than we do from more abstract presentations. (Hence the "stories" of such things as candles and pencils that we got in primary school. Are kids now being taught via Andy Atom and Ginny Gene? If not, maybe they should be.) Biologists—like doctors—are by their nature prone to storytelling: they study life forms, and a life form is nothing without its story, moving and changing as it does through time, through birth to growth to reproduction, then back into the ongoing food chain. Wilson may well have reasoned that he could get his warnings across more easily through a novel than through another "Nature" book.

However, the pedagogical motive is surely only one among many, for Anthill is a strange hybrid. As befits a saga with insect life at its core, it's divided into six parts—one for each leg—with a prologue at the front that might stand for the head. In this prologue, Wilson tells us three things of import: first, that his story takes place on three planes of life—human, insect, and the biosphere that contains both—and that all are connected; second, that ants are a metaphor for men, and men for ants; and third, that the wars among ants are like mini-epics, of which Homer might well have written, "Zeus has given us the fate of winding down our lives in painful wars, from youth until we perish, each of us."

Aha, I thought when I hit this quote. A clue—not so much to the contents of the book, perhaps, but to its structure, its patterning. Wilson knows his ants, but he also knows his classics, and, being a responsible fellow, he would not strew references to the Iliad around at the outset in an act of careless name-dropping. So I took him at his word and read his narrative with one eye on his venerable sourcebook.

The central figure in the book does not speak in the first person: instead, like Achilles, he is spoken about. (Heroes are always a little less heroic when portrayed too intimately: picture Heathcliff brushing his teeth.) The overall narrator of Anthill is one of the hero's teachers, Dr. Norville, who may be said to play the role of the Centaur Chiron, educator of Achilles. This device allows for just enough distance: any closer and our lad might seem a bit humorless, and at times even priggish. But as it is these qualities may be excused as emanating from narrator Norville.

The role of Achilles himself—or possibly Achilles/Odysseus, because Wilson's main man is a crafty little guy, not above a few lies and mind games—is played by young Raphael Semmes Cody. Like Wilson, "Raff" grows up in Alabama at a time not far from that in which Wilson himself grew up. Like Wilson again, young Raff takes a great interest in nature, focuses on ants, and goes on to study at Harvard. As you might expect in the work of a first-time novelist, some of these passages most likely contain boyhood reminiscences. The foods of that time and place are lovingly described, down to each sundae with chopped walnuts and each bowl of crab gumbo. So are the specific Yes Ma'm, No Sir manners of the era. So are the flora and fauna of the "Nokobee Tract," a piece of Alabama wilderness that features as the maiden-in-peril of the plot. But Raff Cody doesn't turn into a scientist like Wilson. His heroism takes another form.

Let's consider the importance of names, because, like the Greek authors before him, Wilson certainly does. Raff's mother is a Semmes, descended—we are told—from the real Raphael Semmes who was a famous admiral during the American Civil War. Like many aristocrats, Raff's mother is as addicted to genealogy as Homer was: in upper-level Alabama as in the Iliad, who is related to whom is very important. But she has tumbled out of her illustrious family by marrying a man beneath her. Raff's father, Ainsley Cody, is a rifle-cult, beer-drinking semi-redneck who lives by his own code of honor, which includes respecting others if they deserve it, defending yourself, and never backing down if you are right. Both the Semmes side of the family and the Cody side contribute to Raff's inheritance. (Needless to say, there is marital tension. Don't marry goddesses, the mortal Greeks were warned: such matches don't turn out well.)

But "Raphael" is not only the name of an admiral, it's also the name of an angel—an archangel, no less, and one associated with healing and the driving away of devils. As for "Cody," it would be impossible for an American of Wilson's generation to be ignorant of "Buffalo Bill" Cody, sharpshooter, fighter, and plainsman. Healer, charismatic wilderness-wise fighter, brave warrior who never quits: Wilson has given his hero some big shoes to fill.

After Wilson's prologue has been duly delivered in fine Shakespearean form, the action begins with a quest. Teenaged Raff and his cousin Junior set out to look for the "Chicobee serpent," a mythical Loch Ness creature said to haunt the Chicobee River. On the way they visit a local eccentric—and possibly lunatic and killer—called "Frogman," who lives by himself in a riverside cabin, sells frogs' legs to keep himself in sundries, and is the self-appointed guardian not only of the land but of an enormous alligator called Old Ben. (This Cyclopean Frogman creature—part man, part custodian of nature, part dangerous monster—has a key part later.)

The narrative then doubles back to fill us in on Raff's parentage, birth, childhood, and growth, using several well-chosen episodes. The elders in his story bestow gifts upon him: Dr. Norville gives him encouragement for his interest in natural history, and his father donates self-reliance and a code of honor, and eventually some rifle practice. But his biggest teacher is the Nokobee Tract, a stretch of pristine longleaf pine that is almost all that's left of this once widespread Alabama ecosystem.

Raff learns it inside out: he leaves, literally, no stones unturned, and is richly rewarded with the red-tailed skinks, pillbugs, centipedes, and—yes! —ants that he finds in and around them. Through these explorations and his boyish air-rifle hunting, Raff comes to realize the fragility of his beloved tract and his own power to destroy its creatures, but also its ultimate strength:

He constructed a broader context in which he drew a picture of humanity, and of himself.... In time he understood that Nature was not something outside the human world. The reverse is true. Nature is the real world, and humanity exists on islands within it.

Raff is now—as Norville calls him—a "citizen of Nokobee." This implies that—like every ancient Greek hoplite-citizen—he is pledged to defend his territory.

Thus equipped with essential wisdom, Raff is ready for the third section of the book, which is called "The Launch." Through the wealthy and established Semmes side of the family, he is given yet another gift: he's offered a higher education, provided he promises to go into law. He does so promise. Unlike wily Odysseus, he's a Boy Scout and also a Cody, so we know he's honor-bound to keep his promise, though he's not all that keen on being a lawyer. But off he goes to Florida State University in Tallahassee, where his childhood "Uncle" Norville is well placed to continue as mentor. Thus Raff can happily continue his study of biology even while en route to a law career.

A number of beetle identifications later, Raff completes a thesis for Norville that has as its subject an anthill colony located at Dead Owl Cove, near his hometown. This leads us to the fourth section of the book, which is a retelling of Raff's anthill thesis by Dr. Norville, leaving out the "measurements and tables" and rendered as closely as possible to "the way ants see such events themselves."

This section is called "The Anthill Chronicles." It's a sort of Iliad of the ants, being concerned with tragic ant martial conflicts. Why did Wilson choose the word "chronicles" instead of "histories" or even "wars"? Perhaps because the word lends a certain gravitas, or a feeling of mythic antiquity; one thinks of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, or of Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles, used by Shakespeare for many of his plots. There is also Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, a space-world set of stories involving encounters with aliens. "The Anthill Chronicles" lives up to all these flavors of its name, especially the last one: if its protagonists were Martians, it couldn't be stranger.

Following Homer, Wilson plunges into the anthill's history in medias res. The Queen has just died, and the Trailhead Colony's doom is upon it, because no anthill can survive the death of its Queen for long. If someone had told the ants of their Queen's death, they would have responded as Dorothy Parker did when informed of the death of Calvin Coolidge—"How could they tell?" Ants don't identify another ant as dead until it smells dead—they communicate almost entirely through chemical signals—and the deadness aroma takes a couple of days to develop.

The Trailhead Colony of ants is cast as Troy, with the neighboring colony of Streamside playing the invading Greeks. First the Streamsiders and Trailheaders puff themselves up and strut about like so many Hectors, boasting and testing their enemy's strength; but as the Trailhead colony weakens, deprived of its Queen and thus its ability to produce more heavily armored hoplite soldiers, the Streamsiders move to the attack. Soon it's an all-out fray. "Elders were among the most suicidally aggressive," we're told. "They were obedient to a simple truth that separates our two species: where humans send their young men to war, ants send their old ladies." (This reader paused to recall the floral-print-dressed Monty Pythoners reenacting the Battle of Waterloo by bashing one another with their purses, but she did not pause for long.)

When Troy falls, most of its inhabitants are slaughtered and the rest carried off as slaves, and—in a sizzling account of terror, murder, and cannibalism—so it goes with the ants. You'll never get closer than this to life inside an ant colony, nor find an account so riveting. Wilson knows his ants, and he's with them all the way, as they deal with every huge grain of sand, tasty caterpillar, and hostile ant-soldier they encounter.

Then Fate enters in the form of a dangerous mutation produced by some of the ants. Instead of one queen to a colony, with war at the peripheries, the colonies produce queenlets with the ability to coexist. A supercolony forms, with disastrous results for the outnumbered Streamsiders. Unfortunately for them, the oversuccessful supercolony not only annihilates almost everything in its area, thus destroying its own food base, but it annoys the gods, who in this case are human beings. Formerly they showered cookie crumbs upon the happy ant recipients, but too many ants spoil the picnic, and this is too many ants. Like H.G. Wells's Martians spreading havoc from above or like Zeus hurling thunderbolts, the godlike exterminators arrive, spraying insecticide. Not a moment too soon, for the supercolony was about to release a giant swarm of queens, who'd have spread their kind far and wide after mating with the hapless male ants—"complete with wings, large eyes, massive genitalia, rudimentary jaws, tiny brain, and the one big purpose...followed by quick death." (No wonder Max Beerbohm felt that the ant was not a good example.)

In time, a fourth group of ants emerges—like Rome from the ashes of Troy—and takes over the Trailhead territory, and all goes on as before among the longleaf pines.

3.

But fresh disaster threatens. The Nokobee Tract is owned by a family whose members will soon want to sell, and then the tract is likely to be developed, and Raff must now arm himself for his own coming war. In the section called "The Armentarium"—a term meaning the medicine collections of doctors, or else the things necessary to complete a given task—Raff chooses and polishes his weapons. They are verbal ones—his affinity with Odysseus comes to the fore—and he hones them at Harvard Law School, part of the "great brainy anthill" of Cambridge. He enters manhood through an affair with JoLane, an early-1970s ideologically driven fellow student who doubles as "Lilith, Aphrodite, a force of nature." (The description of this steamy encounter will probably raise hackles on any "radical feminists" who happened to be around at the time.) Like all such love goddesses from Inanna onward, JoLane throws her paramour over for a rival, and Raff leaves the pompous Gaia Force student movement through which he'd met her. He will not choose the violent extreme.

Fully armored now, Raphael returns to Alabama for the final section, called "The Nokobee Wars." The forces arrayed against him in his quest to save the tract include the moneymen and power brokers and developers, but even worse is a bunch of thuggish, murderous Alabama fundamentalists who believe that God wants Nature to be destroyed in order to hasten the Second Coming. Not being a dastardly ending-revealer, I won't say what happens next, except that it's nip and tuck for young Raff and it's a good thing he's a fast runner. But a hint: there are uses for the creepy Frogmen of this earth, and for their giant pet alligators, too.

What to make of Anthill ? Part epic-inspired adventure story, part philosophy-of-life, part many-layered mid-century Alabama viewed in finely observed detail, part ant life up close, part lyrical hymn to the wonders of earth, part contribution to the growing genre of eco-lit: yes, all these. But hidden within Anthill is also a sort of instruction manual. Here's an effective way of saving the planet, one anthill at a time, as it were—preserving this metaphorical Ithaca as an "island in a meaningless sea," a place of "infinite knowledge and mystery." The largeness of the task and the relative smallness of the accomplishment make Anthill a mournful elegy as well: this may be all that can be saved, we are led to understand. But we are also led to understand that it's worth saving.

Despite the seriousness of the warning he means to convey, I believe Edmund O. Wilson had a fine time writing his first novel. It shows in the exuberance of the prose, and in the inventiveness of the plot. And—with the exception of small stretches of awkwardness and preachiness—the reader will have a great time reading it. Certainly I did. For now I must confess: I too was a child pillbug admirer and skink-hunter, and my first novel was about an ant. I wrote it at the age of seven. It was not nearly as good as this one.

Notes

[1]To be published by University of California Press in May.

[2]See Tim Flannery's review in these pages, February 26, 2009.

How They Killed the Economy By Roger E. Alcaly

Getting Off Track: How Government Actions and Interventions Caused, Prolonged, and Worsened the Financial Crisis
by John B. Taylor

Hoover Institution Press, 92 pp., $14.95

The Fundamental Principles of Financial Regulation
by Markus Brunnermeier, Andrew Crockett, Charles Goodhart, Avinash D. Persaud, and Hyun Shin

Geneva: International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies, 76 pp., available at voxeu.org/reports/Geneva11.pdf

The United States economy is slowly reviving: it grew by 2.2 percent in the third quarter of 2009 and by 5.7 percent in the fourth quarter, a trend that may signal an end to the worst recession we have had since the Great Depression. The country avoided a much more severe economic collapse only because government responses to this breakdown, both in the US and abroad, have been more effective than those of the 1930s were.

Nonetheless, housing is still depressed and nearly 10 percent of the labor force was unemployed in January. We have lost more than eight million jobs, over half of them permanently, since the recession began in December 2007; and long-term unemployment is at record highs. Even if the economy grows 5 percent a year over the next three years, which seems unlikely, the US will probably not return to full employment before 2013.[1]

That an even worse disaster has been averted, in part by people who studied the lessons of what happened in the past, underscores our need to understand what went wrong this time and what must still be done to restore the economy and avert another collapse. Almost everyone agrees that the crisis developed in part because of failures of regulation—principally of banks, mortgage brokers, and derivatives markets—and much effort is currently being devoted to revamping and shoring up the regulatory system.

Alan Greenspan's Federal Reserve bears responsibility for some of these supervisory failures; it also kept interest rates "too low too long," thereby exacerbating the dangers to the economy. The failures of the Fed's monetary policy are particularly significant—without them the need for effective regulation would have been much less urgent. This may help explain why the embattled Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who was confirmed on January 28 for a second four-year term in the most contested vote ever for a Fed chairman, tried to counter those who blame the Fed in a speech before the American Economic Association a few weeks before the vote. But like many of the Fed's critics, Bernanke focused only on whether the Fed should have started raising interest rates before it actually did in June 2004. He did not address a more critical issue: Did the slow and predictable pace at which it raised rates encourage the excessive risk-taking that brought down the financial system and the world economy?[2]

By any measure, the crisis was a consequence of extraordinarily reckless behavior—by banks and other financial institutions, by governments and their financial regulators, and by consumers—behavior that continued even in the face of a widely shared sense that serious trouble was brewing. Charles Bean, deputy governor for monetary policy of the Bank of England, was not the only central banker to admit, in November 2008, that major trends of the world economy had "vexed policymakers for some time. We knew they were unsustainable and worried that the unwinding might be disorderly.... However, nothing very much was done... " (emphasis added).

Even Chuck Prince, the former CEO of Citigroup, was aware of the risks when in July 2007 he boasted that the bank was not pulling back from its aggressive lending: "When the music stops...things will be complicated. But as long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance. We're still dancing... " (emphasis added) —a prime example of the kind of illusions that led to disaster. Consumers, too, were carried along on the wave of easy credit and by rising home prices; they borrowed to the hilt, often by refinancing their appreciating homes, and saved almost nothing.[3]

The failure of central bankers and regulators to rein in leverage—the practice of borrowing as much as thirty or more times one's equity capital to increase investment potential[4] —and excessive risk-taking owes much to complacency that had developed over the preceding twenty to twenty-five years. This was a period that many economists call the "great moderation," when economic growth was relatively steady, inflation was low, recessions were short and mild, and serious crises were weathered without severe downturns. Partly this was because the most serious economic crises are centered in the banking and financial system, the basic source of credit, and none of those that occurred during this period involved the banking system in a major way.

The list of crises that were contained is long and impressive, including the stock market crash of 1987, the junk bond collapse of 1989–1990, the Asian crisis of 1997, the Russian default in 1998, the failure of Long Term Capital Management—a large and hugely leveraged hedge fund—later that year, and the collapse of technology stocks in 2000–2001. Quick and effective responses to these and other dangers by Greenspan's Fed appear to have induced banks and investors to rely unduly on its ability to stave off collapses that threaten the system, and to ignore the serious malfunctioning of the financial markets. These same successes may have led Greenspan himself to believe that he actually was, in the words of the Financial Times, the "guardian angel of the financial markets."

The general pattern of those years was similar to earlier extended periods of growth and great optimism. The standards for issuing credit and for supervising those who do so tend to deteriorate markedly during such prolonged periods of prosperity (as the junk bond collapse also showed on a much smaller scale). This is one reason why financial crises typically follow booms. It also is why, as an economic expansion lengthens, regulators of financial institutions should be—but seldom are—especially vigilant; and regulations should be—but were not—adapted to automatically constrain risks as the expansion progresses. (Regulations should also function "countercyclically" in downturns, by encouraging lending and investment as conditions worsen.) Because the US regulatory system was deeply flawed, reflecting pressures from powerful commercial banks, investment banks, and insurance companies, and negligently implemented, it failed to counteract the prevailing optimism and cool the housing and credit markets. Instead it fostered the inflating bubbles.[5]

Along with hubris and complacency, ideology also explains some of the supervisory negligence. In October 2008, appearing before the Government Oversight Committee of the House of Representatives, Greenspan famously confessed to being in a "state of shocked disbelief" that the "self-interest" of banks and other market participants had not prevented the "once-in-a-century credit tsunami" that was devastating the world economy. Under questioning the former Fed chairman went further, admitting that the events of 2007–2008 had revealed a "flaw" in his own laissez-faire worldview. He reminded the committee that he had been concerned as early as 2005 that "the protracted period of underpricing of risk...would have dire consequences." Yet he had done little to contain that threat, and the consequences, he said, turned out to be "much broader than anything I could have imagined."[6]

Although he has confessed to some regulatory failure, Greenspan has fiercely resisted criticisms of his monetary policy itself—especially suggestions that his policy of keeping interest rates low for so long encouraged the housing bubble and the explosion of borrowing throughout the economy. It must sting more deeply that the most forceful attacks on his monetary policy have been leveled by Stanford Professor John Taylor, an esteemed monetary economist and Greenspan's "good friend and former colleague." Taylor served in the Ford, Bush I, and Bush II administrations, including as undersecretary of the Treasury for international affairs between 2001 and 2005. His first public criticism was made two years after leaving that position in a paper presented to the annual August gathering of central bankers and monetary economists in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, that is sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. The paper is the heart of Taylor's new book, Getting Off Track.

Taylor argues that if the Fed had started raising interest rates in 2002, shortly after the end of the recession that followed the bursting of the technology stock bubble, the housing market would not have grown as wildly as it did. He bases his argument on his own "Taylor rule," a guide to monetary policy he developed in the early 1990s, that quantifies how forcefully the Fed should adjust interest rates in response to changes in inflation and GDP. Taylor rules are widely used by economists and policymakers and there are many different versions reflecting variations in the way they are applied, particularly in how inflation is measured. Taylor measures inflation by the average change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) over the preceding four quarters, a choice that has a big impact on his conclusions.[7]

By contrast, the Fed and many economists prefer using "core" inflation measures because they exclude the effects of food and energy prices, which can be very volatile. During the late 1980s and most of the 1990s the CPI and core measures of inflation largely moved in tandem and Fed policy was very close to that prescribed by the Taylor rule. In 2002 and 2003, however, the CPI and core inflation diverged sharply, the former rising rapidly and the latter falling, leading to conflicting implications for appropriate monetary policy. Both Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn in 2007 and Chairman Bernanke this January pointed to the importance of Taylor's choice of an inflation measure in convincingly criticizing his suggestion that the Fed should have begun raising interest rates in early 2002—when the recovery from the 2001 recession was still anemic and the risks of deflation were clear.[8]

But Taylor's general contention that low rates after 2003 encouraged the housing bubble is largely persuasive, although mostly for different reasons than he provides. In June 2004 the Fed finally began raising the federal funds rate—the rate banks charge one another for overnight loans[9] —as the recovery stabilized and employment and inflation began rising more rapidly. It probably should have started raising rates slightly earlier. Most important, the Fed raised rates only in increments of a quarter of a percentage point (twenty-five basis points); after seventeen such increases the federal funds rate peaked again in June 2006. Fourteen of these "measured" rate rises were attributable to Greenspan and three to Bernanke, who replaced him in February 2006.

Raising interest rates so slowly and steadily promoted excessive risk-taking, and should have concerned Greenspan, according to his stated views. The Fed's policies thus seem especially peculiar. They helped to create a false sense of security and stability that enticed financial institutions and investors to leverage their investments enormously, borrowing sums that dwarfed the capital they committed.

Such blindly optimistic short-term profit-seeking dominated the investment world for at least two reasons. First, all crises over the preceding quarter-century had apparently been contained by effective Fed actions, suggesting that any new problems would be dealt with as well. Second, by telegraphing its intentions to raise rates only at a "measured" pace, the Fed eliminated concerns about a sharp rise in interest rates, a principal worry for highly leveraged investors. And because these deliberate rate increases began when the federal funds rate was only one percent, attractive rates were guaranteed to persist for some time.[]

Getting the federal funds rate to near 3 percent much more quickly would have introduced a healthy dose of caution to investors in the years when the housing bubble inflated most rapidly. Moreover, the versions of the Taylor rule used by Federal Reserve policymakers not only suggest that rate increases should have started earlier in 2004, but also show that rates should have reached 3 percent before the end of that year.

Why didn't Greenspan act more aggressively to quickly raise interest rates to 3 percent or higher? He claims that it wouldn't have mattered, that he "could not have 'prevented' the housing bubble" through monetary policy because the Fed could not influence longer-term interest rates, such as mortgage rates, which are most relevant to housing markets. In his view, the Fed was hamstrung by rapidly growing excess savings in developing countries—mainly China and oil-exporting countries—which were invested in the bond markets of both the United States and other advanced economies. By infusing so much money into these markets, China and others pushed "global long-term interest rates progressively lower between early 2000 and 2005." These capital flows from emerging to developed economies not only financed government deficits. By pushing interest rates down, they funded the US housing boom and consumption binge as well.[10]

Such global imbalances did indeed make it more difficult for the Fed to influence longer-term interest rates, but they did not render it helpless to cool the housing bubble and offset the growing risks to the economy. At the very least, as both Taylor and Bernanke argue, higher federal funds rates would have limited the growth both of adjustable-rate subprime mortgages (which are based on shorter-term interest rates) and of the derivative securities linked to them. In fact after 2004 much of the most reckless behavior leading to the meltdown originated in irresponsible lending and trading in subprime mortgages and derivatives.[11]

We will never know how effective more forceful monetary policy would have been since it was never tried. The approach taken by the Fed failed, in part because of the way in which financial institutions and investors evaluate their risks. Most measures of risk are derived from the volatility of asset prices—basically how much they fluctuate—and the extent to which portfolios contain a diverse variety of securities. During booms these estimates of risk tend to fall because asset prices—the price not only of stocks and bonds but of real estate and other assets as well—rise and volatility tends to fall or rise only slowly. The resulting decline in estimated risk is taken by investors as a signal that it is safe to increase leverage and take on more risk; but it can be a seriously misleading signal.[12]

Greenspan's monetary policy reinforced these failings of existing methods of risk control. Without the threat of a sharp rise in interest rates, estimated risks fell and restraint evaporated, encouraging the foolishly optimistic behavior of banks and investors. In such a heady environment, competitive pressures are hard to resist and financial institutions tend to gloss over the well-known limitations of their own risk models in order to pursue opportunities for short-term profit. The false precision of these mathematical models—they are well defined and superficially exact even while frequently deceptive—gave their predictions far greater credibility than they deserved and made it easier for bank executives to ignore more impressionistic judgments based on historical comparisons, anecdotal evidence, or common sense. All these would have called into question the reliability of estimates that indicated low risk amid a rapidly inflating housing bubble.

In addition, compensation schemes for managers and traders generally were linked to short-term profits, giving them outsized incentives to take risks regardless of the longer-term consequences. From some of his statements Greenspan seemed fitfully aware of some of these problems; yet he adopted policies that made them worse.

The Fed's unwillingness to raise interest rates quickly would have been less serious if regulation had been more effective at curbing the emerging risks in the financial sector and the economy. But regulations were not well enforced. For example, Greenspan explicitly rejected Federal Reserve Governor Edward Gramlich's warnings about the need for the Fed to curtail widespread abuses in mortgage markets. Earlier he also rejected the strong warnings of Brooksley Born, the head of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, about the many dangers of unregulated derivatives. Existing regulations also were inadequate. Partly that was because bank regulations did not cover investment banks such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, major bundlers of subprime mortgages for worldwide sale that were at the heart of the crisis. (They were regulated—quite superficially—by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange.)

Nor did the regulations take full account of how much the "shadow" banking system added to potential losses for banks such as Citibank that sponsored "structured investment vehicles" (SIVs). These entities, which functioned much like investment funds, were established largely to circumvent regulatory limits on their sponsors. They didn't take deposits and acquired their portfolios of illiquid mortgage-related securities mainly through short-term borrowing. Hedge funds often provided equity capital for the SIVs, which were managed by their sponsors who charged a fee for their services. The sponsors sometimes provided emergency lines of credit as well. When the value of the SIVs' portfolios plunged and their funding sources dried up in the credit crunch, they had to be reabsorbed, adding to their parents' losses.

In addition to such problems of scope, the existing bank regulations—primarily capital requirements and limits on leverage—also failed to sufficiently constrain leverage and risk-taking during the buildup to the crisis. These closely related concepts are the key components of bank regulation, probably of all financial regulation, and their breakdown during the crisis was largely a consequence of the way both variables were measured. Capital, rather than being limited to a bank's tangible common equity—essentially the portion of its net assets due to its shareholders, which is subordinate to the interests of depositors and creditors—generally included intangible items such as goodwill as well as preferred shares and deferred tax credits, whose value depended on future profitability.

Similarly, capital requirements were based on different assets' supposed "riskiness," which tended to fall during the boom, and leverage ratios were calculated by comparing a bank's capital to its risk-adjusted assets. Measuring capital so generously and adjusting assets in this way made leverage appear lower and capital seem more adequate than they were.

In this respect the regulations were very much like the risk models that investors and financial firms used. Indeed, the highly influential Bank for International Settlements, an organization of central banks that seeks to coordinate bank regulations, proposed in 2004 that, in determining banks' capital requirements, regulators should rely in part on banks' own risk models as well as on data provided by credit-rating agencies such as Moody's or Standard and Poor's, agencies that were paid by the very financial institutions whose credit they were assessing.

These proposals were widely adopted—and turned out to be dangerously misleading. As a consequence of procedures like these, which justified extremely low capital requirements for AAA-rated mortgage derivatives—1.6 percent of the holdings, equivalent to leverage of more than 60 to 1 for these securities and less than half the capital required to hold individual mortgages—Lehman was thought to be well capitalized just a week before its bankruptcy. Absurdly low capital requirements also explain why banks retained such vast quantities of mortgage-related securities on their own books, setting themselves up for huge losses when the housing bubble burst.[13]

"When a regulatory mechanism has failed to mitigate boom/bust cycles," the authors of The Fundamental Principles of Financial Regulation (a "Geneva Report" by an international group of economists)[14] observe, tinkering around the edges is not likely to be sufficient. What is required is a new approach that concentrates on the need for financial regulation to moderate the business and credit cycles, acting as a "countervailing force" to the rising use of leverage and risk-taking during a boom and helping to offset the damage in a collapse. Moreover, the regulatory mechanism should be based as much as possible on clear, mandatory rules, since regulators often are loath to slow down a boom and have been susceptible to lobbying by financial firms, factors that may help to explain Greenspan's failures. The United States and most other developed countries have now endorsed the need for such new rules—although so far, it must be stressed, little has been done to implement them.

The Geneva economists propose a deceptively simple mechanism for linking capital requirements to the changing risks that major financial institutions pose to the entire banking system. They would multiply current or improved capital requirements—the Bank for International Settlements is now considering such a revamped set of requirements—by a series of factors, one based on how fast a bank's assets and leverage grow; a second geared to the extent to which a bank's assets are financed by shorter-term borrowing that might dry up in a crisis; and possibly a third based on the degree to which a bank's bonus and other compensation schemes encourage excessive risk-taking.

This approach, which could be applied incrementally to a nation's most important and interconnected financial institutions as an expansion grows, seems promising, and the elements it incorporates are critical. As the financial crises of the last two years have shown, the combination of high bank leverage, extensive reliance on short-term borrowing, and management compensation schemes that reward short-term results can be lethal.

The Geneva plan would apply to all financial institutions—commercial banks and bank holding companies, investment banks, insurance companies, and hedge funds—whose health might have a significant impact on the entire financial system. And the new capital requirements would take account of the companies' affiliates and their liabilities, even if these obligations don't appear explicitly on their balance sheets. The plan is comprehensive, straightforward, and clear—great virtues, especially in the world of opaque bank regulations. But how effective such a system would be will depend on how well the proposed new multiples are chosen.

In late January President Obama outlined several new elements that he believes should be added to the financial reform measures that are slowly working their way through Congress. The new proposals focus primarily on the problem of financial institutions that are thought to be "too big" or "too important" to fail because their failure might trigger an economic crisis like the one we're emerging from now. As a consequence, such institutions benefit from an implicit government guarantee against total collapse, one that became explicit during the crisis when many banks were rescued at great initial cost to taxpayers. As the President observed on January 21, in order to avert a worse calamity,

the American people—who were already struggling in their own right—were forced to rescue financial firms facing crises largely of their own creation. And that rescue...was deeply offensive but it was a necessary thing to do, and it succeeded in stabilizing the financial system and helping to avert that [threatened] depression.

Although a large chunk of these bail-out costs has` been repaid as the economic climate improved, Obama wants to impose a fee on the largest financial firms in order to repay the remaining cost of the rescues over the next ten years. This proposal, which has yet to come before Congress, is, if anything, too limited, since the government's need to protect major financial institutions from system-threatening disasters will not expire after ten years. A continuing fee levied on important financial firms would thus be warranted as a payment for the catastrophe insurance that the government will continue to provide. This insurance, whether implicit or explicit, allows these companies to raise capital more cheaply than they otherwise could; not surprisingly, it also has encouraged risk-taking and enhanced their profitability, a consequence of insurance that economists call "moral hazard," i.e., such insurance could work as an incentive for companies to take on risks that they may not have to pay for if they go bad. The fee would pay for some of these benefits and might constrain moral hazards.

The insurance fee could also be used to fund the operations of new "resolution authority," a critical part of most financial reform efforts, including the bill passed by the House of Representatives. Such authority would allow regulators to seize control of a shaky but important financial institution and dissolve or reorganize it without messy and lengthy bankruptcy proceedings, and do so in a way that minimizes the need for taxpayer funds. Before government funds were tapped, shareholders and creditors would have to be wiped out. The Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation have these powers to control bank holding companies and banks, respectively, and the House legislation would make them applicable to insurance companies and investment banks such as AIG or Lehman.

In addition to the fee, Obama also proposed limiting banks' size and banning activities such as proprietary trading—trading for their own accounts—and sponsoring or investing in hedge funds or private equity funds. The prohibitions are called the "Volcker Rule" after their principal advocate, former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker. These two initiatives are intended to limit further domination of the financial sector by a small number of firms and to limit the risks that financial firms can take, in particular banks that benefit from government-insured deposits. They complement other financial reform proposals, including the insurance fee, the imposition of beefed-up countercyclical capital requirements such as those proposed by the Geneva economists, and the establishment of resolution authorities.

Some people contend that the Volcker rule is unnecessary, that its goals could be accomplished more effectively through higher capital requirements, and that it would be very difficult to distinguish proprietary trading from what the trading banks do to hedge the potential losses they take on in serving their clients. In addition, such a rule may cause firms like Goldman Sachs to give up their banking licenses—which were acquired during the crisis so that they would be eligible for Fed support. They do a lot of proprietary trading and run large hedge funds and private equity funds, but don't raise much money through deposit-taking. Moreover, the critics point out, the activities affected by the Volcker rule were not major contributors to the crisis.

There's some truth in all these comments but hardly enough to rule out Volcker's proposals, especially if institutions like Goldman Sachs would be subject to stricter new capital, leverage, and liquidity requirements, and be covered by a strong resolution authority, even if they no longer are banks. For if there's one thing we should have learned from the crisis, it's that there are no magic bullets to protect our financial systems and economies forever and that new sources of dangerous behavior may well appear. The Bank for International Settlement's elaborate capital requirements have not worked well; nor have the judgments of bank executives, investors, regulators, or the Fed's monetary policymakers been sound. In fact, many of the rules and judgments have been harmful, not helpful. We can hope that lessons from this crisis, like those from the Great Depression, will be reflected both in better rules and in better judgments. But memories will fade, financial systems will evolve, and no matter how hard we try to put in place effective safeguards, there can be no assurances that it won't happen again.

February 25, 2010

Notes

[1]Two pairs of economists have compared the current crisis to the Great Depression and to eighteen postwar banking crises, including five in developed economies. Although the world economy began recovering much sooner than in the Great Depression, compared to postwar financial crises the current US version is considered "severe by any metric." See Barry Eichengreen and Kevin H. O'Rourke, "A Tale of Two Depressions," September 1, 2009, available at voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/3421 ; see also Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, "Is the 2007 US Sub-prime Financial Crisis So Different? An International Historical Comparison," American Economic Review, Vol. 98, No. 2 (May 2008), and "The Aftermath of Financial Crises," American Economic Review, Vol. 99, No. 2 (May 2009).

[2]Ben S. Bernanke, "Monetary Policy and the Housing Bubble," speech at the Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association, January 3, 2010, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20100103a.htm.

[3]Charles Bean, "Some Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Recent Financial Turmoil," remarks at the Conference on Globalization, Inflation and Monetary Policy, Istanbul, November 22, 2008, www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2008/speech368.pdf . Prince is quoted in Michiyo Nakamoto and David Wighton, "Citigroup Chief Stays Bullish on Buy-outs," Financial Times, July 9, 2007, www.ft.com/cms/s/0/80e2987a-2e50-11dc-821c-0000779fd2ac.html .

[4]Leverage is borrowing used to finance an investment and is measured as the total value of the investment relative to the equity (nonborrowed) portion. Leverage amplifies both gains and losses and, as Robert Solow explained in these pages, played a "central role" in creating the crisis. See "How to Understand the Disaster," The New York Review, May 14, 2009.

[5]The economist Hyman Minsky has long emphasized the importance of the relationship between credit standards and the business cycle, and it is not surprising that his work has gained much attention in the last few years. See, for example, his John Maynard Keynes ( Columbia University Press, 1975) and "The Financial Instability Hypothesis," May 1992, levy.org/pubs/wp74.pdf; and Janet Yellen, "A Minsky Meltdown: Lessons for Central Bankers," FRBSF Economic Letter, May 1, 2009, frbsf.org/publications/economics/letter/2009/el2009-15.html.

[6]Testimony of Alan Greenspan, House Committee of Government Oversight and Reform, October 23, 2008, clipsandcomment.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/greenspan-testimony-20081023.pdf.

[7]Taylor writes that the federal funds rate, which the Fed controls, should be 1.5 times the inflation rate, plus 0.5 times the "output gap" (the difference between actual GDP and potential GDP) plus one. The output gap can also be measured as the difference between the current unemployment rate and the "full employment" rate, generally thought to be between 4 and 5 percent, making the current gap 5–6 percent.

[8]Donald L. Kohn, "John Taylor Rules," paper presented to the Conference on John Taylor's Contributions to Monetary Theory and Policy, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, October 12, 2007, federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/kohn20071012a.htm.

[9]Monetary policy typically operates through the federal funds rate. By providing money to the banking system, or by withdrawing it, the Fed can control this oversight rate and generally influence longer-term rates as well. During the crisis, however, the federal funds rate has been lowered to near zero, forcing the Fed to use more unconventional measures such as buying longer-term Treasury securities and mortgages to push the rates down.

[10]Alan Greenspan, "The Fed Didn't Cause the Housing Bubble," The Wall Street Journal, March 11, 2009, online.wsj.com/article/SB123672965066989281.html. On global imbalances, see Brad Setser, "The Savings Glut: Controversy Guaranteed," blogs.cfr.org/setser/2009/06/30/, and Ben S. Bernanke, "The Global Savings Glut and the US Current Account Deficit," March 10, 2005, federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2005/200503102/default.htm.

[11]In his January 3 defense of Fed policy, Bernanke speculated that low interest rates may have encouraged the proliferation of exotic subprime mortgages, which drove house prices higher; but he does not consider the likelihood that the measured pace with which the Fed raised interest rates was a more fundamental element in the process.

[12]The modern approach to risk analysis evolved from work done by Harry Markowitz in the early 1950s when he was a graduate student at the University of Chicago. Markowitz won the 1990 Nobel Prize in Economics for his theory of portfolio analysis, which argued that investment portfolios could be evaluated by analyzing the tradeoff between their returns and risks, with risk measured by the variability, or variance, of returns. His analysis showed that diversification could reduce overall risk without sacrificing returns provided the elements of the portfolio truly were diverse, i.e., not closely correlated. Applying Markowitz's approach requires several important qualifications, particularly that the data used are representative of the range of possibilities. These requirements are rarely satisfied fully, which is why the models cannot substitute for judgment, especially during booms when real risks may be masked by misleading measures.

[13]"Base Camp Basel," The Economist, January 21, 2010, and John Carney, "Why Banks Bought So Many Toxic Mortgage Bonds," Business Insider, August 7, 2009, www.businessinsider.com/why-banks-bought-so-many-toxic-mortgage-bonds-2009-8.

[14]Begun in 1999, the Geneva Reports on the World Economy are produced through a collaboration between the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies, which is affiliated with the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, and the Center for Economic Policy Research, a network of researchers based mainly in European universities. The reports focus on reform of the international financial and economic systems and are written by groups of well-known economists.

Blogging, Now and Then Robert Darnton

Nouvellistes gossiping and reading in a café of the Palais-Royal (Bibliothèque Nationale de France)

Blogging brings out the hit-and-run element in communication. Bloggers tend to be punchy. They often hit below the belt; and when they land a blow, they dash off to another target. Pow! The idea is to provoke, to score points, to vent opinions, and frequently to gossip.

The most gossipy blogs take aim at public figures, combining two basic ingredients, scurrility and celebrity, and they deal in short jabs, usually nothing longer than a paragraph. They often appeal to particular constituencies such as Hollywood buffs (Perez Hilton), political junkies (Wonkette), college kids (Ivy Gate), and lawyers (Underneath Their Robes). Politically they may lean to the right (Michelle Malkin) or to the left (Daily Kos). But all of them conform to a formula derived from old-fashioned tabloid journalism: names make news.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

BOOK REVIEW - Lewis casts shortsellers as paragons of courage and virtue

Twenty years ago, when I worked at Salomon Brothers, every person on Wall Street had read two books: Frank J.
Fabozzi's Fixed Income Analysis and Michael Lewis' Liars' Poker.

The latter was Lewis' debut, a devastating account of his four- year career as a bond trader at Salomon, which culminated in the crash of 1988. He has gone on to write bestsellers on politics (Trail Fever), Silicon Valley (The New New Thing), sports (Money- ball, The Blind Side) and father- hood (Home Game). The man, as they say, has range.

Still, Lewis is best known for writing about money and the people who will do anything to make it, so it's not surprising that two decades after leaving Wall Street he has returned to survey the scene of the latest crash.

The Big Short is a chronicle of four sets of players in the sub- prime mortgage market who had the foresight and gumption to short the diciest mortgage deals: Steve Eisman of FrontPoint, Greg Lippmann at Deutsche Bank, the three part- ners at Cornwall Capital, and most indelibly, Michael Burry of Scion Capital. They all walked away from the rubble with pock- ets full of gold and reputations as geniuses.

Short-sellers are usually cast as villains, but by pitting them against the deluded complacen- cy of most in the finance indus- try, Lewis turns them into para- gons of courage and virtue. Like all great storytellers, he loads the dice. We hear from the good guys' wives and learn plenty about the personal traumas they've overcome. The bad guys wear their hair slicked back and say stupid, venal things. Their wives were not interviewed.

If subtlety is scarce in The Big Short, the story is nevertheless told with a brisk and riveting style. Lewis does an extraordi- nary job elucidating the perils of shorting the very bonds that bu- oyed the American economy af- ter 11 September 2001, and made a fortune for every firm on the Street.

He also explains the arcane details of these securities with surprising fluidity. Lewis shows how the risky, subordinate bonds in structures of subprime mortgages (or towers as he calls them) were shuffled together to make the misunderstood and extremely unstable collateral- ized debt obligations (CDOs) and--hang in there folks, almost done--how insurance policies called credit default swaps (CDS) were created to short, or bet against, the CDOs and sub- prime structures.

Strong as he is on exotic secu- rities, Lewis is at his best work- ing with characters. Burry is ren- dered most vividly. A loner from a young age, in part because he had a glass eye that made it diffi- cult to look people in the face, Burry excelled at topics that re- quired intense and isolated con- centration.

Originally, investing was just a hobby while he pursued a career in medicine. As a resident neurosurgeon at Stanford Hospital in the late 1990s, he often stayed up half the night typing his ideas onto a message board. Unbe- knownst to him, professional money managers began to read and profit from his freely dis- pensed insight.

Burry's obsession with finding undervalued companies eventu- ally led him to realize that his own home in San Jose, Californ- ia, was grossly overpriced, along with houses all over the country.
He wrote to a friend: A large por- tion of the current (housing) de- mand at current prices would disappear if only people became convinced that prices weren't rising. The collateral damage is likely to be orders of magnitude worse than anyone now consid- ers. This was in 2003.

Through exhaustive research, Burry understood that subprime mortgages would be the fuse and that the bonds based on these mortgages would start to blow up within as little as two years, when the original teaser rates expired. But Burry did something that separated him from all the other housing bears--he found an efficient way to short the market by per- suading Goldman Sachs to sell him a CDS against subprime deals he saw as doomed. A unique feature of these swaps was that he did not have to own the asset to insure it, and over time, the trade in these contracts overwhelmed the actual market in the underlying bonds.

Lewis does not let the me- chanics of the process cloud the drama, and his renowned eye for colour is as sharp as ever. He explores the trade shows in Orlando and Las Vegas where thousands of industry insiders gathered to pat themselves on the back, talk shop, and shoot Uzis.

It wasn't entirely smooth sail- ing for Lewis's heroes, though.
Burry, for one, saw the crisis forming so early that, as the reckoning kept getting pushed into the future, he struggled to hold on to his investors. After he ran up losses in consecutive years, he had to resort to ques- tionable methods to retain his investors' money. If his assets under management dropped below a certain threshold, Gold- man and American Interna- tional Group could walk away from their swaps. Some of Bur- ry's investors started entertain- ing litigation.

Even when default rates ini- tially started rising, bond prices held firm. It wasn't until 31, Jan- uary 2007, that the index of sub- prime bonds suffered its first ever one-point drop. According to Lewis, that was the day the market cracked.

What Lewis fails to note is that the day prior, Lewis himself had filed a column for Bloomberg News from Davos mocking Nou- riel Roubini's warning that the risk of a crisis happening is ris- ing. Such forecasts of doom came from people with no talent for risk-taking gather(ed) to imagine what actual risk takers might do, Lewis wrote. The headline described them as Wimps, Ninnies, Pointless Skep- tics.

In The Big Short, Lewis recog- nizes he was wrong. The ninnies have inherited the earth.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Steven Pearlstein reviews 'The Big Short' by Michael Lewis

By Steven Pearlstein
Sunday, March 14, 2010; B01

THE BIG SHORT

Inside the Doomsday Machine

By Michael Lewis

Norton. 266 pp. $27.95

If you read only one book about the causes of the recent financial crisis, let it be Michael Lewis's, "The Big Short."

That's not because Lewis has put together the most comprehensive or authoritative analysis of all the misdeeds and misjudgments and missed signals that led to the biggest credit bubble the world has known. What makes his account so accessible is that he tells it through the eyes of the managers of three small hedge funds and a Deutsche Bank bond salesman, none of whom you've ever heard of. All, however, were among the first to see the folly and fraud behind the subprime fiasco, and to find ways to bet against it when everyone else thought them crazy.

Nor would anyone -- including Lewis, I'm sure -- claim this is an even-handed history that reflects the differing views of investment bankers, rating-agency analysts and industry analysts, all of whom he holds up to ridicule for their arrogance, their cynicism and their relentless incompetence.

In many ways, this is the same smart-alecky Michael Lewis who brilliantly exposed and skewered the ways of Wall Street 20 years ago in "Liar's Poker," written when he was fresh out of the training program at the once-mighty but now forgotten Salomon Brothers. But as he says in his introduction, those days of $3 million salaries and $250 million trading losses look almost quaint compared with the sums made and lost by the most recent generation of Wall Street fraudsters and buffoons.

What's so delightful about Lewis's writing is how deftly he explains and demystifies how things really work on Wall Street, even while creating a compelling narrative and introducing us to a cast of fascinating, all-too-human characters.

In "The Big Short," which publishes Monday, we meet Steve Eisman, a second-generation Wall Streeter whose foul mouth and total lack of social graces made it easy for others to dismiss his relentless criticisms of the subprime mortgage industry as far back as the 1990s, when he first characterized it as nothing more than a Ponzi scheme.

There's Michael Burry, a physician turned stock picker with an antisocial personality (later diagnosed as Asperger's) who becomes the first money manager to buy a credit default swap on subprime mortgage bonds.

There's Greg Lippmann, a prototypical bonus-grubbing Wall Street bond salesman who early on sees the potential of the subprime swaps market and becomes the leading evangelist for betting on the housing market's collapse.

And there's Charlie Ledley, Jamie Mai and Ben Hockett, three young financial hustlers from Berkeley, Calif., who set up a hedge fund in a Greenwich Village art studio, go looking for a long shot and find it in supposedly AAA-rated securities cobbled together from BBB subprime junk.

From their tales, we learn that Wall Street banks think nothing of stealing the trading strategies of their clients and peddling them to other customers. We learn that the investment bankers knew as early as 2006 about the rising default rate on subprime mortgages but engaged in elaborate ruses to hide that reality from ratings agencies and investors. We learn that when investor demand for subprime mortgages outstripped the supply, Wall Street filled the gap by creating "synthetic" mortgage-backed securities whose performance would mirror that of the real thing.

We learn that Goldman Sachs and other banks conspired to inflate the price of mortgage-backed securities well into 2007, even when they knew the true value was falling, only marking them down in value after their own hedging strategies were in place. And we learn that top executives were largely clueless about the risks their organizations were taking.

For me, the most memorable chapter in Lewis's tale involves Burry's struggle to keep his fund alive in 2007 and early 2008 as longtime investors lost faith in his strategy to "short" the housing market and began demanding their money back. Although home prices had begun to fall and mortgage defaults were rising quickly, Wall Street's securitization machine had managed to prop up the price of mortgage securities while forcing down the value of the bets Burry had placed against them. And even after the market crashed and Burry's strategy was vindicated with a $720 million profit, not a single investor called to say thanks.

"What had happened was that he had been right, the world had been wrong and the world hated him for it," Lewis writes. "And so Michael Burry ended where he began -- alone, comforted by his solitude."

There is nothing subtle about the dark portrait Lewis creates of the financial community. Through his lens, all bond salesmen are out to cheat their customers, all top executives are clueless and all ratings analysts are second-raters who could not get jobs in investment banks.

Even footnotes drip with sarcasm, such as this one regarding a less-than-forthright statement by Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack to his investors on how his firm managed to lose $9 billion on subprime securities: "It's too much to expect the people who run big Wall Street firms to speak in plain English, since so much of their livelihood depends on people believing that what they do cannot be translated into plain English."

Even discounting for its generalizations and exaggeration and limited frame of reference, however, "The Big Short" manages to give us the truest picture yet of what went wrong on Wall Street -- and why. At times, it reads like a morality play, at other times like a modern-day farce. But as with any good play, its value lies in the way it reveals character and motive and explores the cultural context in which the plot unfolds.

What Lewis writes of two of his characters, young Ledley and Mai, might just as well apply to Lewis himself, or to us:

They "had always sort of assumed that there was some grown-up in charge of the financial system whom they had never met; now they saw there was not."

Steven Pearlstein writes a business and economics column for The Washington Post.