Hedge Funds and the Making of the New Elite
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Wealthy, powerful, and potentially dangerous, hedge-find managers have emerged as the stars of twenty-first century capitalism. Based on unprecedented access to the industry, More Money Than God provides the first authoritative history of hedge funds. This is the inside story of their origins in the 1960s and 1970s, their explosive battles with central banks in the 1980s and 1990s, and finally their role in the financial crisis of 2007-9. Hedge funds reward risk takers, so they tend to attract larger-than-life personalities. Jim Simons began life as a code-breaker and mathematician, co-authoring a paper on theoretical geometry that led to breakthroughs in string theory. Ken Griffin started out trading convertible bonds from his Harvard dorm room. Paul Tudor Jones happily declared that a 1929-style crash would be 'total rock-and-roll' for him. Michael Steinhardt was capable of reducing underlings to sobs. 'All I want to do is kill myself,' one said. 'Can I watch?' Steinhardt responded. A saga of riches and rich egos, this is also a history of discovery. Drawing on insights from mathematics, economics and psychology to crack the mysteries of the market, hedge funds have transformed the world, spawning new markets in exotic financial instruments and rewriting the rules of capitalism. And while major banks, brokers, home lenders, insurers and money market funds failed or were bailed out during the crisis of 2007-9, the hedge-fund industry survived the test, proving that money can be successfully managed without taxpayer safety nets. Anybody pondering fixes to the financial system could usefully start here: the future of finance lies in the history of hedge funds.
Reviews with the most likes.
I wanted to dislike this book the moment the author insists in the first chapter that hedge funds have been unfairly maligned and are kind of good actually. But what follows is a fairly unbiased retelling of the history of the industry in a way that is both clear and engaging.
The author concludes that hedge funds are 'just big enough to fail' as opposed to the behemoth investment banks and therefore should be encouraged. I find this take both convincing and remarkably narrow minded. Hedge funds are indeed the ultimate form of capitalism but that doesn't make them good, they still inherit all of the perverse incentives and rot of their big brothers minus the ability to bully others as easily.
The author also has a convenient 'get-out-of-jail-free' card whereby he ceases to classify a hedge fund as such if it gets too big. When your lesser evil is predisposed to lead to your greater one then the distinction is moot.