Editors Reads Verdict
The definitive account of LTCM — and a masterclass in the gap between financial theory and market reality. Lowenstein shows exactly how the smartest people in finance built a system that was correct in every detail and wrong in the one way that mattered: it could not survive the world behaving unexpectedly.
What We Loved
- The narrative is gripping — LTCM's collapse unfolds with genuine tension
- The financial explanations are accessible without being oversimplified
- The broader lesson — models work until they don't, and leverage amplifies every mistake — is clearly drawn
Minor Drawbacks
- Some of the bond arbitrage mechanics require financial background to fully appreciate
- The LTCM partners come across as unsympathetic, which may be accurate but makes the human drama thinner
Key Takeaways
- → Model risk: financial models describe how markets behave on average; in a crisis, correlations converge and everything falls together — the one scenario the model cannot handle
- → Leverage transforms small errors into catastrophes — LTCM was leveraged 25:1 at peak, meaning a 4% loss wiped out all equity
- → The Fed-coordinated bailout set a precedent that troubled subsequent regulators: 'too interconnected to fail' extended the implicit government guarantee far beyond banks
| Author | Roger Lowenstein |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Random House |
| Pages | 264 |
| Published | January 1, 2000 |
| Language | English |
| Genre | Non-Fiction, Finance, History |
| Difficulty | Intermediate |
| Best For | Anyone interested in finance, risk, and the 1998 financial crisis — the essential narrative of what happens when sophisticated models meet an irrational world. |
The Smartest Money
In 1994, John Meriwether — the Salomon Brothers bond trader immortalised in Liar’s Poker — founded Long-Term Capital Management with a team that included Myron Scholes and Robert Merton, who would win the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1997 for their options pricing model. The fund raised $1.25 billion and produced returns of 40% per year by exploiting tiny pricing differences between related securities.
The strategy was arbitrage — buying the cheaper of two related instruments and shorting the more expensive, collecting the spread as they converged. The mathematics predicted this convergence with high confidence. The leverage was enormous — because the spreads were small, the fund needed to be leveraged 25:1 to generate attractive returns.
The Failure
When Russia defaulted on its debt in August 1998, global markets entered a flight-to-quality mode that LTCM’s models had not adequately accounted for. The correlations the models assumed broke down: everything fell together. The spreads widened instead of converging. The leverage amplified every loss. In five weeks, LTCM lost $4 billion of the $4.7 billion it managed.
The Federal Reserve coordinated a $3.6 billion rescue by fourteen banks — not because it cared about LTCM’s partners but because LTCM’s portfolio was large enough and interconnected enough to threaten the entire financial system if unwound disorderly.
Our rating: 4.4/5 — The definitive LTCM account — the most instructive story in finance about the gap between models and reality.
Reading Guides
Frequently Asked Questions
What is "When Genius Failed" about?
Long-Term Capital Management was a hedge fund run by Nobel laureates and bond-trading legends that nearly collapsed the global financial system in 1998. Lowenstein reconstructs the fund's rise — based on sophisticated arbitrage models — and its catastrophic fall when Russia defaulted and the models stopped working.
Who should read "When Genius Failed"?
Anyone interested in finance, risk, and the 1998 financial crisis — the essential narrative of what happens when sophisticated models meet an irrational world.
What are the key takeaways from "When Genius Failed"?
Model risk: financial models describe how markets behave on average; in a crisis, correlations converge and everything falls together — the one scenario the model cannot handle Leverage transforms small errors into catastrophes — LTCM was leveraged 25:1 at peak, meaning a 4% loss wiped out all equity The Fed-coordinated bailout set a precedent that troubled subsequent regulators: 'too interconnected to fail' extended the implicit government guarantee far beyond banks
Is "When Genius Failed" worth reading?
The definitive account of LTCM — and a masterclass in the gap between financial theory and market reality. Lowenstein shows exactly how the smartest people in finance built a system that was correct in every detail and wrong in the one way that mattered: it could not survive the world behaving unexpectedly.
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