Longreads + Open Thread

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Longreads

Books

Investment Banking in America: A History: let's begin with a preamble and articulate the Diff theory of used bookstores. Algorithmic feeds and search results are incredibly good at finding things you'd want to interact with and pay for. They're subject to a ruthlessly Darwinian process that makes it so. But this also means that the more of your life that's managed by algorithms, the more you lock into path-dependence: it doesn't take long for big platforms to put you in some cluster of similar people, at which point some share fraction of your life is going to be an idealized version of the average of lots of people like you. But this is more optimized than optimal. You still want to inject some entropy into the system.

And a good way to do that is to go to a used bookstore. You can browse by category, but what you get is not what's been selected by some monstrously complex algorithm as the highest-probability bet. There's some randomization, which you need. But there's also some serious adverse selection. There are three reasons people sell books: they're de-cluttering, they're moving and are thinking of books in terms of pounds and cubic feet, or they died and their befuddled heirs are liquidating their possessions. Which means that you, as a used-bookstore shopper, are operating in an adversarial environment. If you're at Strand, where I picked up this book, there's a good chance you're buying a book from the collection of someone who couldn't hack it in NYC—a very bad omen if you're browsing the "Finance & Economics" section! So, if you see a book whose publication date is in the last five years or so, there's a very good chance that this is a book for posers. Those odds get even more punitive when you think about buyers, who are going to snap up bargains and leave the rest behind; a used bookstore is a store full of books that lots of people have glanced at and declined to buy. So, you want to optimize for books that made someone text their sibling and say "Can you believe dad had a book about..?" And a history of investment banking, published in 1970, probably qualifies. It feels like I'm shoving some heirs aside in order to commune with a book collector who would have been fun to hang out with.

So, the actual book. From the perspective of the book's time period, the history of investment banking in the US is that for a long time, they were a smaller piece of the economy than was typical for other countries with similar economies to the US (before the First World War, it was common for companies to underwrite their own offerings, because they were more trustworthy than the typical bank). They grew, reached a high point in the 1920s, and then declined thereafter, with small ebbs and flows. That thesis would have been creaky in 1980, and definitively disproven by 1990. But it's still a good summary of where the world stood then.

But with the benefit of more than a century of hindsight, we can see that the industry follows a cycle but tends to grow over time, and that given enough time between cycles, the exact same idea can repeat itself. For example, the book details a situation where financial institutions like life insurers were facing concerns about their creditworthiness after they'd extended illiquid loans to dubious borrowers. The ensuing crisis in confidence led to the selloff of 1907, but mirrors the situation in private credit today (albeit without the bank run-prone institutions). Rolling forward a few decades, the 1920s saw a spate of leveraged investments in electrical utilities, rather than in any particular company making electrical appliances or machinery, which maps to the neocloud boom today.

One notable point the book makes is that the US's equity culture was actually indirectly kickstarted by a government program: when the US sold war bonds, it was the first time many consumers had opened an account with any sort of brokerage, and that reduced the friction of participating in the postwar equity market excitement. Businesses that are dependent on network effects, like financial markets and the Internet, tend to get kickstarted by large, horizontal institutions that can capture the upside. And the government tends to be the biggest of these.

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