100 Minds That Made the Market - Kenneth L. Fisher - E-Book

100 Minds That Made the Market E-Book

Kenneth L. Fisher

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Beschreibung

Introducing the new Fisher Investment Series, comprised of engaging and informative titles written by renowned money manager and bestselling author Ken Fisher. This series offers essential insights into the worlds of investing and finance. Over the course of nearly two centuries, the innovations, mistakes, and scandals of different market participants have played an important role in shaping today's financial markets. Now, in 100 Minds That Made the Market, Ken Fisher delivers cameo biographies of these pioneers of American financial history. From Joe Kennedy's "sexcapades" to Jesse Livermore's suicide, this book details the drama, the dirt, and the financial principles of an amazingly inventive group of financial minds. Fisher digs deep to uncover the careers, personal lives, and contributions of these individuals, and leads you through the lessons that can be learned from each one. Here you have 100 of the best teachers -- some you already know, some you will feel you know, and some you may not have previously discovered -- whose experiences will undoubtedly enhance your understanding of the markets. With a few pages dedicated to each person, 100 Minds That Made the Market quickly captures the essence of the people and ideas that have influenced the evolution of the financial industry.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2010

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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
PREFACE
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
DON’T TAKE IT FOR GRANTED
HOW TO READ THIS BOOK
WHY 100 INSTEAD OF 103?
MADE IN AMERICA—AND OTHER EXCLUSIONS
TRYING TO BRING THE DEAD TO LIFE
AT THE CORE OF FREEDOM
CHAPTER ONE - THE DINOSAURS
MAYER AMSCHEL ROTHSCHILD - OUT OF THE GHETTO AND INTO THE LIMELIGHT
NATHAN ROTHSCHILD - WHEN CASH BECAME KING—AND CREDIT BECAME PRIME MINISTER
STEPHEN GIRARD - THE FIRST RICHEST MAN IN AMERICA FINANCED PRIVATEERS
JOHN JACOB ASTOR - A ONE-MAN CONGLOMERATION
CORNELIUS VANDERBILT - A MAN ABOVE THE LAW
GEORGE PEABODY - A FINDER OF FINANCING AND FINANCIERS
JUNIUS SPENCER MORGAN - THE LAST OF THE MODERN MANIPULATORS
DANIEL DREW - MUCH “TO DREW” ABOUT NOTHING
JAY COOKE - STICK TO YOUR KNITTING
CHAPTER TWO - JOURNALISTS AND AUTHORS
CHARLES DOW - HIS LAST NAME SAYS IT ALL
EDWARD JONES - YOU CAN’T SEPARATE RODGERS AND HAMMERSTEIN
THOMAS W. LAWSON - “STOCK EXCHANGE GAMBLING IS THE HELL OF IT ALL . . .”
B.C. FORBES - HE MADE FINANCIAL REPORTING HUMAN
EDWIN LEFEVRE - YOU COULDN’T SEPARATE HIS FACTS FROM HIS FICTION
CLARENCE W. BARRON - A HEAVYWEIGHT JOURNALIST
BENJAMIN GRAHAM - THE FATHER OF SECURITY ANALYSIS
ARNOLD BERNHARD - THE ELEGANCE OF OVERVIEW ON A SINGLE PAGE
LOUIS ENGEL - ONE MIND THAT HELPED MAKE MILLIONS MORE
CHAPTER THREE - INVESTMENT BANKERS AND BROKERS
AUGUST BELMONT - HE REPRESENTED EUROPE’S FINANCIAL STAKE IN AMERICA
EMANUEL LEHMAN AND HIS SON PHILIP - ROLE MODELS FOR SO MANY WALL STREET FIRMS
JOHN PIERPONT MORGAN - HISTORY’S MOST POWERFUL FINANCIER
JACOB H. SCHIFF - THE OTHER SIDE OF THE STREET
GEORGE W. PERKINS - HE LEFT THE COMFY HOUSE OF MORGAN TO RIDE A BULL MOOSE
JOHN PIERPONT “JACK” MORGAN, JR. - NO ONE EVER HAD BIGGER SHOES TO FILL
THOMAS LAMONT - THE BEACON FOR A WHOLE GENERATION
CLARENCE D. DILLON - HE CHALLENGED TRADITION AND SYMBOLIZED THE CHANGING WORLD
CHARLES E. MERRILL - THE THUNDERING HERD RUNS AMOK IN THE AISLES OF THE STOCK ...
GERALD M. LOEB - THE FATHER OF FROTH—HE KNEW THE LINGO, NOT THE LOGIC
SIDNEY WEINBERG - THE ROLE MODEL FOR MODERN INVESTMENT BANKERS
CHAPTER FOUR - THE INNOVATORS
ELIAS JACKSON “LUCKY” BALDWIN - WHEN YOU’RE LUCKY, YOU CAN GO YOUR OWN WAY
CHARLES T. YERKES - HE TURNED POLITICS INTO MONOPOLISTIC POWER
THOMAS FORTUNE RYAN - AMERICA’S FIRST HOLDING COMPANY
RUSSELL SAGE - A SAGE FOR ALL SEASONS
ROGER W. BABSON - INNOVATIVE STATISTICIAN AND NEWSLETTER WRITER
T. ROWE PRICE - WIDELY KNOWN AS THE FATHER OF GROWTH STOCKS
FLOYD B. ODLUM - THE ORIGINAL MODERN CORPORATE RAIDER
PAUL CABOT - THE FATHER OF MODERN INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
GEORGES DORIOT - THE FATHER OF VENTURE CAPITAL
ROYAL LITTLE - THE FATHER OF CONGLOMERATES
CHAPTER FIVE - BANKERS AND CENTRAL BANKERS
JOHN LAW - THE FATHER OF CENTRAL BANKING WASN’T VERY FATHERLY
ALEXANDER HAMILTON - THE GODFATHER OF AMERICAN FINANCE
NICHOLAS BIDDLE - A CIVILIZED MAN COULD NOT BEAT A BUCCANEER
JAMES STILLMAN - PSYCHIC HEADS AMERICA’S LARGEST BANK
FRANK A. VANDERLIP - A ROLE MODEL FOR ANY WALL STREET WANNA-BE
GEORGE F. BAKER - LOOKING BEFORE LEAPING PAYS OFF
AMADEO P. GIANNINI - TAKING THE PULSE OF WALL STREET OUT OF NEW YORK
PAUL M. WARBURG - FOUNDER AND CRITIC OF MODERN AMERICAN CENTRAL BANKING
BENJAMIN STRONG - HAD STRONG BEEN STRONG THE ECONOMY MIGHT HAVE BEEN, TOO
GEORGE L. HARRISON - NO, THIS ISN’T THE GUY FROM THE BEATLES
NATALIE SCHENK LAIMBEER - WALL STREET’S FIRST NOTABLE FEMALE PROFESSIONAL
CHARLES E. MITCHELL - THE PISTON OF THE ENGINE THAT DROVE THE ROARING 20S
ELISHA WALKER - AMERICA’S GREATEST BANK HEIST—ALMOST
ALBERT H. WIGGIN - INTO THE COOKIE JAR
CHAPTER SIX - NEW DEAL REFORMERS
E.H.H. SIMMONS - ONE OF THE SEEDS OF TOO MUCH GOVERNMENT
WINTHROP W. ALDRICH - A BLUE BLOOD WHO SAW RED
JOSEPH P. KENNEDY - FOUNDING CHAIRMAN OF THE SEC
JAMES M. LANDIS - THE COP WHO ENDED UP IN JAIL
WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS - THE SUPREME COURT JUDGE ON WALL STREET?
CHAPTER SEVEN - CROOKS, SCANDALS, AND SCALAWAGS
CHARLES PONZI - THE PONZI SCHEME
SAMUEL INSULL - HE “INSULLTED” WALL STREET AND PAID THE PRICE
IVAR KREUGER - HE PLAYED WITH MATCHES AND GOT BURNED
RICHARD WHITNEY - WALL STREET’S JUICIEST SCANDAL
MICHAEL J. MEEHAN - THE FIRST GUY NAILED BY THE SEC
LOWELL M. BIRRELL - THE LAST OF THE GREAT MODERN MANIPULATORS
WALTER F. TELLIER - THE KING OF THE PENNY STOCK SWINDLES
JERRY AND GERALD RE - A FEW BAD APPLES CAN RUIN THE WHOLE BARREL
CHAPTER EIGHT - TECHNICIANS, ECONOMISTS, AND OTHER COSTLY EXPERTS
WILLIAM P. HAMILTON - THE FIRST PRACTITIONER OF TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
EVANGELINE ADAMS - BY WATCHING THE HEAVENS SHE BECAME A STAR
ROBERT RHEA - HE TRANSFORMED THEORY INTO PRACTICE
IRVING FISHER - THE WORLD’S GREATEST ECONOMIST OF THE 1920S, OR WHY YOU ...
WILLIAM D. GANN - STARRY-EYED TRADERS “GANN” AN ANGLE VIA OFFBEAT GURU
WESLEY CLAIR MITCHELL - WALL STREET’S FATHER OF MEANINGFUL DATA
JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES - THE EXCEPTION PROVES THE RULE I
R.N. ELLIOTT - HOLY GRAIL OR QUACK?
EDSON GOULD - THE EXCEPTION PROVES THE RULE II
JOHN MAGEE - OFF THE TOP OF THE CHARTS
CHAPTER NINE - SUCCESSFUL SPECULATORS, WHEELER-DEALERS, AND OPERATORS
JAY GOULD - BLOOD DRAWN AND BLOOD SPIT—GOULD OR GHOUL-ED?
“DIAMOND” JIM BRADY - LADY LUCK WAS ON HIS SIDE—SOMETIMES
WILLIAM H. VANDERBILT - HE PROVED HIS FATHER WRONG
JOHN W. GATES - WHAT CAN YOU SAY ABOUT A MAN NICKNAMED “BET-A-MILLION”?
EDWARD HARRIMAN - WALK SOFTLY AND CARRY A BIG STICK
JAMES J. HILL - WHEN OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS
JAMES R. KEENE - NOT GOOD ENOUGH FOR GOULD, BUT TOO KEEN FOR ANYONE ELSE
HENRY H. ROGERS - WALL STREET’S BLUEBEARD: “HOIST THE JOLLY ROGER!”
FISHER BROTHERS - MOTORTOWN MOGULS
JOHN J. RASKOB - PIONEER OF CONSUMER FINANCE
ARTHUR W. CUTTEN - BULLY THE PRICE, THEN CUT’N RUN
BERNARD E. “SELL’ EM BEN” SMITH - THE RICH CHAMELEON
BERNARD BARUCH - HE WON AND LOST, BUT KNEW WHEN TO QUIT
CHAPTER TEN - UNSUCCESSFUL SPECULATORS, WHEELER-DEALERS, AND OPERATORS
JACOB LITTLE - THE FIRST TO DO SO MUCH
JAMES FISK - IF YOU KNEW JOSIE LIKE HE KNEW JOSIE, YOU’D BE DEAD TOO!
WILLIAM CRAPO DURANT - HALF VISIONARY BUILDER, HALF WILD GAMBLER
F. AUGUSTUS HEINZE - BURNED BY BURNING THE CANDLE AT BOTH ENDS
CHARLES W. MORSE - SLICK AND COLD AS ICE, EVERYTHING HE TOUCHED . . . MELTED
ORIS P. AND MANTIS J. VAN SWEARINGEN - HE WHO LIVES BY LEVERAGE, DIES BY LEVERAGE
JESSE L. LIVERMORE - THE BOY PLUNGER AND FAILED MAN
CHAPTER ELEVEN - MISCELLANEOUS, BUT NOT EXTRANEOUS
HETTY GREEN - THE WITCH’S BREW, OR... IT’S NOT EASY BEING GREEN
PATRICK BOLOGNA - THE EASY MONEY—ISN’T
ROBERT R. YOUNG - AND IT’S NEVER BEEN THE SAME SINCE
CYRUS S. EATON - QUIET, FLEXIBLE, AND RICH
CONCLUSION
APPENDIX - BIBLIOGRAPHIES
INDEX
The Fisher Investment Series
The Only Three Questions That Count
100 Minds That Made the Market
The Wall Street Waltz
Copyright © 1993, 1995, 2001, 2007 by Kenneth L. Fisher. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
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PREFACE
This book was first completed in 1993. The standard I used was to include only people who had somehow, in some way, had some material impact on finance—and who were dead—under the assumptions I could be completely critical and that dead folk don’t sue. Partly, as I said in the original introduction, that also helped me avoid writing about my own father, who I felt uncomfortable about discussing in his lifetime.
In the original introduction I cited interesting people who were living, including Warren Buffett, John Templeton, Ivan Boesky, and Michael Milken. They are still alive today. But, as I mentioned then, these more modern names have a great deal of media about them readily available, so I don’t feel their exclusion from this book, alive or deceased, is a major disadvantage to readers.
As for my father, who passed away in 2004, I covered him then at some length and detail in the Wiley Investment Classics edition of Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings. And you can certainly find all you need about him there. By comparison, most of the folks covered in this book are vastly harder to learn about without a great deal of effort. These cameo biographies allow you to learn a great deal of overview in a few minutes, and the appendix materials allow you to dig further if you want to really delve into these fascinating minds.
So, the list of 100 names is essentially as valid today as it was in 1993. While reviewing the book, I discovered that I would change little, if anything at all.
I have changed my mind materially about Gerald Loeb. I regret I was much too critical of him when I wrote his section. As I’ve aged I’ve come to appreciate him more and more. In my mind at the time I had been comparing him to influential shapers of market thought like Ben Graham, Harry Markowitz, or my father—and he came up short. What I didn’t appreciate about him at the time was how powerfully he motivated young and new investors to get involved with the markets for the first time. He brought, arguably, hundreds of thousands to the world of stock investing at a time when there were few others to encourage them—and over decades when they succeeded. I tried to make it up to him by recently writing a new, more laudatory introduction for his updated Wiley Investment Classic, The Battle for Investment Survival. In some ways, as I said there, he reminds me a little of the Jim Cramer of his day: Flamboyant, seen everywhere, endlessly energetic, for the little guy, quick with a word, and encouraging everyone that they could do it themselves. He had a tremendous amount to do with moving people toward stocks from 1935, when his book came out in a bleak world into and through the 1960s when common stock investing for the little guy had become much more common. I encourage you to read his book almost as a 35 year history of the evolution of American stock markets.
After writing this book, I met Ben “Sell ‘em” Smith’s son who impressed upon me that how despite his father’s tough and boisterous attitude in business, he was consistently a soft and gentle father. That made me realize how little I may actually have captured about any of these people’s real private lives. As a student of their lives, I wrote mostly about their reputations and legends, as had been captured in books and articles. It is impossible to know the secrets people chose to keep private—these matters are often never known. But Smith’s son made me realize that all these people, as exceptional as they were, were also probably more complex than I gave them credit for.
There is one point I didn’t cover in the book that is clear to me now as the years have rolled by: With very few exceptions like John Law and the Rothschilds, these 100 Minds were Americans. Finance and capitalism have been infinitely more impacted than the rest of the world. It may be a deficiency that I didn’t include that great Scotsman, Adam Smith, whose book from the year of our nation’s birth is still a beacon of influence, hope, and direction, and almost divinely inspired as if by his own infamous “invisible hand.” But like many of the living modern names, a quick internet search for this famous man will render a large collection of material. If you haven’t studied Smith, I encourage you to do so, as he is one of the most influential forces on the creation and evolution of capitalism.
Most of the people in this book are harder to learn about. And an overwhelming number are Americans. It is irrefutable that most of the big forces on capitalism and capital markets have been American. The more I think, the more I see that there just aren’t many from abroad. The people who had the impact and changed the way we thought came from America. That is still true today when we look at the living. The legends and the influencers come from America, few from elsewhere.
Why is this? Increasingly I’ve come to see it as a function of America being the “un-culture.” In most countries it has always been true they have a monolithic or dualistic culture. One dominant culture and maybe one or a few lesser ones! France, for example, was always based primarily on a single nationality and Catholicism. While in various countries the Catholics and the Protestants squabbled, the culture was narrow at best. But in America more than anywhere and from its more recent beginning, everyone came from different backgrounds, without a common culture, creating the un-culture that is America. And I submit that an un-culture is more fertile soil for capitalism and capital markets than any culture.
In America a product that may start out catering to a tiny minority can break out to the vast majority. The same goes for the bad as for the good. The Klu Klux Klan came from the Deep South and became long and strong regionally but didn’t sweep the nation. But Coca-Cola and the blues also came from there and swept over the world. Just so, today someone might start a product, financial or not, aimed at some small subset of America that comprises a large number of consumers, for example, Chinese Americans—and have the product take off and cross over to the rest of America. Sound far-fetched? It happens all the time. The burrito, for example, is not really Mexican food. It was created in California for Mexican-Americans and is now eaten everywhere. Examples are endless. But this book is about finance and in finance the new ideas come from America. Whether modern finance from the mind of Harry Markowitz à la mean variance optimization, or original commingled mutual funds, or, more recently, exchange traded funds, the discount broker, collateral derivative obligations—the list is endless. The new ideas come from America.
In a strong monolithic or dualistic culture it is very difficult to establish new ideas, challenge old ones, and change the status quo because the dominant culture can suppress socially with impunity. It is, for example, how and why it was so easy to excommunicate Galileo. But capitalism draws its success from change, creative destruction, renewal, the young upstart wiping out the old guard, then becoming the new old guard about to be wiped out. This occurs best where cultural impediments are fewest, in an un-culture. People from every country, national origin, religion, and race have succeeded here.
Look at the success of those of Jewish descent in American capital markets. Whereas Jews were discriminated against in most European nations, in the un-culture the Jews could have their most maximal impact and success in capital markets. As you go through the book notice how many Jewish Americans you see. To be clear and fully disclosed, I’m of Jewish descent so maybe my views are biased here. But my paternal family left the town of its origin, Buttenheim, Germany in the 1830s. By the 1880s all Jews had fled Buttenheim—all! And where did they flee to? America, of course! Why, because they faired better in the un-culture. But innovation by immigrants in America has been ubiquitous, and more so than in their native countries.
If I were writing this book over from scratch I’d put more emphasis on each participant’s pre-American origins because they come from all over. I’ve become firmly convinced in the last 15 years that only in America could the nature of capital markets innovation flourish as it has—that it isn’t just chance that the overwhelming bulk of those impacting thought, product, innovation, marketing, and the technology of capital markets came from America.
KEN FISHER Woodside, CAMay 2007
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The acknowledgments sections in my first two books were quite lengthy because those were serious books including a lot of work by a lot of people. This one isn’t and wasn’t. This was a fun book—fun to create and I hope fun to read—so I kept more of it to myself than before. But certain key thank-you’s are in order nonetheless.
First and foremost, this book never would have happened without Barbara DeLollis. I came up with the idea, the title, a list of names and a lot of my ever-eccentric views. Barbara then, under my guidance, set out to research each of these 100 fabulous financial figures, plus a good many we ended up deciding not to include in our final list of 100. She spent hours and hours on each one, and then, with my input, handed to me a first draft of each life story which I could massage into that which you now read. I’m too busy running a financial firm to do all that. I’d never be able to take the time. Was she a ghost writer? No. I’ve been writing for years—my books, my Forbes columns, and an occasional piece here and there—I love to write. So the writing is mine. The ideas are mine.
Barbara’s contributions were considerable, but any shortcomings in the book are obviously my responsibility. The conclusions and views on each of the 100 Minds and their roles in history were always mine. Where I felt uncomfortable from time to time with Barbara’s research, I checked up on it and always found her digging to be more than adequate. She was dealing and redealing in detail, and I used her as a resource. She also indexed the book, got the photographs, and just kept moving forward toward the book’s completion until it was basically a finished draft. Thank you and good luck with your future in New York.
As each story was finished, Sally Allen, Marguerite Barragan, and Martha Post (all regulars in varying capacities at Fisher Investments) put in considerable time editing. Their contributions ranged from simple grammatical niceties to curbing me in when I would wander too far on tangents, as I sometimes am prone to do. My father, Phil Fisher, racked his brain for me remembering some of the people from his youth who otherwise might not have been included, and so you have names I might not have otherwise seen.
David Mueller, formerly of my firm, prettied up the book’s appearance and format through computer graphics and guided its indexing. But it was really, and always is, my wife Sherri who took the bull by the horns, pulled in our first editor Barbara Noble, and drove the manuscript into book form so you now can read it. Without her push and guidance it would have died in a desk somewhere. To all of you I owe my thanks.
KEN FISHER
FOREWORD
The adventure of investing engages us intellectually and spiritually—often even more deeply than our obvious financial engagement—and through this engagement we almost inevitably become members of a community of similarly engaged colleagues.
At first, we may only recognize those we see and speak with daily as the other “players of the game,” but as we travel and meet more and more people in more and more organizations, over more and more years, we realize, with expanding interest and pleasure, that the investing “crowd” is very large.
We also learn how richly dynamic, creative, and powerful this, our crowd, truly is. It is a communications village and we are the better for being members of this very special community.
One dimension that enriches our own experiences is the challenge and the fulfillment of learning—partly by trial and error. (We err and err and err again. But less.)
Fortunately, we have many, many “instructors” with whom to learn. Our great teachers are often truly fascinating people whose lives and adventures enrich our own enjoyment and fascination with the adventure of investing. “The play’s the thing,” as Shakespeare put it. Or as ‘Adam Smith’ so aptly said, “It’s the money game!”
This easy reading introduction will enlighten and intrigue you—and introduce a splendid group of gamesmen who have played before us. Ken Fisher adds an important dimension by sharing his wise interpretations and perspectives on their experiences. As a result, he enables us to learn much from the experiences of others—so much easier, faster, and painless than learning only from our own experiences.
In his engaging book, Ken Fisher tells the stories—in a breezy, irreverent, friendly way—of 100 remarkable people. Some you already know, some you will feel you almost know, and some you have not yet come upon. They have “made the market” what it is today. Some have played their role as heroes; others have been villains. We can learn life’s lessons from them—particularly with the thoughtful and thought-provoking insights and commentary Ken Fisher provides us on this guided tour.
Charles D. Ellis Partner, Greenwich Associates
INTRODUCTION
Why should you read this book? To have fun. As its author, my highest hope is for it to be fun for you. The 100 subjects I’ve chosen are fascinating, wacky, wild, and often just weird—yet they are powerful and at times very funny. Their lives are as fun to read about as they were to write about. Depending on who you are and what you do, want, and like, you might also benefit from the professional and personal lessons of their lives and learning more about the American financial markets’ evolution. If you are a market practitioner in any form, these lives are role models of what works and what doesn’t, how far you can bend things and when they break down, and what human traits go with market success and failure. But, as I said, the main reason to read this book is to have fun.

DON’T TAKE IT FOR GRANTED

Wall Street is an institution that some, especially today, seem to take for granted. It didn’t appear one day from some biblical fairy tale. Instead, Wall Street exists as it does because of nearly two centuries of pioneering, innovation, perspiration, mistakes, and scandals. Throughout Wall Street’s evolution, survival of the fittest dictated which innovations would be incorporated and which mistakes would be corrected—and it was these improvements that made the market the wonderful institution so many now take for granted.
But it was the individuals behind the improvements who drove the making of the market. This book presents 100 such people, each of whom contributed something—a lesson, an innovation, or a scam. Their minds made the innovations and their impact made the market what it is, so ultimately and simply, it was their minds that made the market—hence the book’s title.
Looking back on their lives is invaluable for anyone who never stopped to think how the market came about and essential for everyone connected with today’s market and tomorrow’s future. As the saying goes, “Those who do not learn the lessons of the past are doomed to repeat them.” Here you have 100 of the best teachers available to save you from learning the hard way the lessons their lives so vividly portray. In reading 100 Minds That Made The Market, you will find the story behind Wall Street’s gradual formation as fascinating and engrossing as the market itself.

HOW TO READ THIS BOOK

100 Minds is presented in a form that chronicles Wall Street’s evolution. Eleven categories (chapters) describe people who laid the basis for the institution; those who chronicled its growth and the deal-makers who financed it; those who innovated it; and those who assimilated it into the American economy. Then came those who reformed it, systematized it, scandalized it, and those who made and lost money in it; plus a few miscellaneous others. Within each category, the stories are presented in chronological order so you can follow the flow of time.
It’s important to remember that the categories aren’t as important as the people themselves. In writing the book, the people were chosen first and categorized later. The descriptions of each of them needed to stand on their own as cameo biographies before being fitted into any particular framework. Only after the 100 were written were they placed into groups that logically flowed from the stories themselves; then chapter summaries were written to bring the 100 together with overarching themes and lessons.
As important, I wanted you to be able to choose between reading the book cover-to-cover and just picking it up from time to time for a quickie on a single person whenever someone becomes of interest to you. As a writer of two previous books, a columnist in Forbes for eight years, and an author of a lot of other material, I hope 100 Minds is entertaining and educating enough to be worthwhile to many of you in a cover-to-cover format. But I am also mindful of how many more things I would like to do than I ever have time for and presume the same is true for you. By putting it in a format where you need not read it cover-to-cover, I am freeing you to use whatever bits of the book benefit you most. If one day someone mentions Lucky Baldwin and you haven’t the foggiest as to who he was, you can save yourself the embarrassment of asking or doing a lot of library legwork by simply flipping to the index and reading a four-minute cameo story. If you want to read further about Baldwin, just flip to the appendix where there’s a bibliography for each story that shows you where to go next. And if you want to find more subjects like Baldwin, just browse around his chapter.
Many of these fascinating folks can actually be placed into several different categories. How can you put J.P. Morgan into one box? And Ben Graham was an author, but he was much more, as were so many of these great pioneers. Yet I had to categorize them somewhere and did so where they made most sense to me. If you see it differently, I beg for your patience. Also note that many of these lives are interrelated, so when one subject is mentioned in another’s story, he or she is cross-referenced by boldfacing their name upon first reference, so you can quickly flip to that story for more.

WHY 100 INSTEAD OF 103?

I had to stop somewhere! And 100 Minds sounded good to me. Admittedly, this isn’t the perfect list of 100 Minds That Made The Market; that would be impossible to compile—no one could ever track every single contributor. It is almost certain that many material but quiet contributors were simply lost to history because, while their contributions may have been significant, they as people weren’t noted by society.
These 100 are my 100—based on what I’ve learned from 20 years as an investment professional and prior schooling in finance and history. They were chosen as my interpretation of the big contributors as opposed to finding people somewhere to fill certain slots (“Oh, I’d better find five more chartists and two more bankers!”). Yes, this is my list of 100 Minds. If you shuffled history you might come out with a few different names, but I’d bet most would be the same. We might disagree on a few, but it would be fun debating why some folks deserved to be included while others didn’t. So hopefully you will enjoy reading about my choices even if you disagree.

MADE IN AMERICA—AND OTHER EXCLUSIONS

Most of these 100 Minds are Americans. There were only a few foreigners I could envision whose contributions to the evolution of American financial markets were so great that they couldn’t be excluded. This isn’t an attempt to chronicle those who made hay in the evolution of European markets or markets as a whole. This simply details who made our market “the” market, for despite all the current fascination with global investing and overseas diversification, the American stock market is still the bellwether market of the world; the one on which everyone around the world focuses.
Some notable American financiers didn’t make it on the list for reasons such as being too industry-oriented or being too obscure in the history books. Automobile empire builder E.L. Cord, railroaders Collis P. Huntington and Leland Stanford, and investment banker August Belmont, Jr., were among those too industry-oriented to have made any significant contribution to our market system. This doesn’t discount their own unique contributions in their respective industries, but it puts them behind others who significantly affected our markets in a direct way.
Those who were too obscure in history were sadly left out because adequate biographical material was not available. Kuhn, Loeb partner Otto Kahn, technical analyst (and John Magee’s inspiration) Richard Schabacker, and even E.F. Hutton were all quite famous on Wall Street, yet surprisingly little was written about them, so I couldn’t really penetrate their lives or their minds. In Kahn’s case, there was plenty written about his wardrobe and love of opera, but the heart of the matter—his deal-making—was too inadequately described to get a good enough handle on him. I really wanted to cover him because I’ve always sensed his importance, but he seems beyond my grasp.
Richard Wyckoff, who pioneered ticker tape reading with his book Studies in Tape Reading, also falls into the too-obscure category, as does Addison Cammack and the Claflin sisters. Cammack was credited with coining the warning, “Don’t sell stocks when the sap is running up the trees!” He was described as the consummate trader in Edwin Lefevre’s Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, but I’ve never found anything in-depth on him . . . If you ever do, I’d love to hear from you.
The Claflin sisters—possibly the first female stockbrokers—rate mention in this introduction, if only because their story is so sensational. Outlined in Dana L. Thomas’ The Plungers and the Peacocks, the flighty, calculating pair—Victoria and Tennessee—went to New York in 1869 to court one of my 100 Minds, Cornie Vanderbilt, a genuine dirty old man. In 1870, he set them up in their own brokerage firm, feeding them lucrative tips and loving the commotion they stirred! While Tennessee presumably minded the mysterious business, Vicky advocated free love, women’s freedom, and a host of other then-radical ideas, and became the first woman to be nominated for the U.S. Presidency! After Vanderbilt died, his son and main heir, William H. Vanderbilt (who you can also read about here), bought the Claflins’ silence regarding their escapades with the old man. Both sisters eventually left New York and married British aristocrats. While interesting, the Claflins didn’t really make the market; a true contribution is hard to define. But they are a nice complement to Vanderbilt, who actually was a major contributor, which leads to another point.
This book is primarily about men, and in this day and age women may take offense at that. I beg your pardon, but Wall Street’s early years were almost exclusively a man’s world. The role of women in this book is almost totally confined to aspects that today would be thought of as stereotypically sexist: housewives, bimbo-mistresses and supportive seconds to the men who are featured. In terms of women who independently affected the market, I am sadly able to feature only three: Evangeline Adams, Natalie Laimbeer, and Hetty Green. But even among them there is some taint of oddballism that modern woman may find offensive. Adams was too astrology-oriented to be taken seriously, and Green was fabulously chintzy. If women are poorly represented in this book, I apologize and defer to the simple fact that the book is an accurate portrayal of the historical information available. Despite modern day desires for coverage of women in history, you can’t do that in this case and be historically accurate.

TRYING TO BRING THE DEAD TO LIFE

Note that everybody in the book is dead: This is not a scorecard of today’s players. (Four of the 100 Minds I can’t actually say are dead, but they have dropped from public view long enough to be presumed dead. When out of public view, it is virtually impossible to find obituaries.) Why dead heads instead of current market moguls? Clearly some of the living have made huge contributions—measurably bigger contributions, for good or for bad, than some of my 100 Minds. But, with no disrespect to folks like Warren Buffett, John Templeton, Ivan Boesky, and Michael Milken who have had great impact, they and others like them have already been heavily covered by the press; so today, anyone who has the slightest interest in financial types already holds his own views about them. No value added by covering that turf, so I don’t.
Furthermore, I can be openly critical of my subjects when appropriate, simply because dead people don’t sue. Among these stories you will see men I praise and others I damn. But with the dead I can’t be accused of ruining a career no longer in existence. Then, too, there was my father, Phil Fisher. In some ways he made me realize the beauty of limiting my book to the dead. When I first contemplated the book I envisioned including about a dozen living legends—and that would be impossible without covering my father, due to his vast formative and seminal contributions to the school of growth stock investing.
But I felt too emotionally uncomfortable writing about him: it was too easy to lose the forest for the trees . . . too easy to be too laudatory, or to compensate for that by putting up artificial walls to distance myself from him. In many ways I would rather have someone who is more naturally distanced than I write about my father. Of course, John Train did that when he wrote his classic book, The Money Masters, which chronicled nine great modern-era investors. Warren Buffett also wrote of him, and he has been covered at some length in the press over the years: In time, others will write more. Then it dawned on me: The living get covered and it is the dead who fall from sight and whom I can bring to life for you.
Most of the names in this book are fairly obscure—perhaps only a quarter of them are easy to learn about in the library. But the rest provided slim pickin’s and required digging; in many instances, this is the most complete and condensed account of their lives. If you decide you want more on a subject, just look up his or her bibliography. But what you won’t find in any biography is meaningful analysis of these lives regarding their impact on the market—and that is what I think my other contribution in this book is. As in my second book. The Wall Street Waltz, which operated in a short-story format, and as with my Forbes columns which operate in a single-page format, I’m used to condensing an entire saga into a few paragraphs. Because I’ve done a lot of that, I hope my experience makes me better able to do so for you with these 100 wonderfully interesting people. In each case, I have tried to put their contributions into perspective, give you overview, and show you a key lesson or two.

AT THE CORE OF FREEDOM

None of these characters are ordinary. You see extremes, from the most flamboyant to the most introverted, to the most brilliant, to the most crooked: None are run-of-the-mill. Before there was ever a thought of People Magazine or The National Enquirer, many of these market leaders were folks about whom gossip flowed. Many of their lives read like novels, but in many instances, fact is stranger than fiction! Above all else, these were people who did not feel constrained by those around them. They allowed themselves the freedom to do what others hadn’t or couldn’t do; and they wouldn’t be ruled by convention, history, society or, in many instances, the law. They gave themselves permission to bend, push, stretch, and at times simply break the rules that others all around them obeyed.
Allowing for innovation is the fundamental determinant of success or failure of economic systems. As Milton Friedman wrote so well, capitalism and freedom are truly impossible to separate. Democracy without capitalism is far from freedom because all the decisions are cast in a mode where some 50 percent win and 50 percent lose—which is a hell of a way to run a railroad. Too many lose. Only in the marketplace is everyone acting on decisions when it is in his best interest. And obviously, as recent history shows, non-selfinterested central control, as in communism, fails because, basically, if people can’t do what they want, they won’t do very much of anything. Likewise, self-interested business in a totalitarian state is destined to failure. Without the regulator of competition—what Adam Smith referred to so well in The Wealth Of Nations as the almost divine “invisible hand”—capitalism is destined to go astray. Consider what occurs in all fascist countries eventually.
And everywhere capitalism and freedom reside in a modern economy, there must also be capital formation, and thereby the financial markets. And it is in the financial markets where capitalism has its most potent effect for good or bad. It is here where innovation is the most fluid—the very nerve center of capitalism. Here where fear and greed are so easily stampeded into action. Here where the wealth of nations burns like gas on a fire, at times exploding in our faces. Here where unique individuals expose themselves at their best and worst and most bizarre. It is because Wall Street is so potent and important to the functioning of capitalism that the 100 Minds That Made The Market are so important to our past and future.
All these 100 Minds were innovators. And because innovation is what makes Wall Street and capitalism great, fluid, and ever current, the 100 are in many ways the very personification of what made and makes America great. If you love the market, remember that it is made up of people, and you will love these 100 fascinating people. Their lives are telling—telling the story of Wall Street.
CHAPTER ONE
THE DINOSAURS
BIG AND RUTHLESS WHEN THAT WAS ALL THAT COUNTED
Before civilization, dinosaurs roamed the earth, doing as they pleased. They could do whatever they wanted back then; there were no rules to follow, no structure to live or work within and nothing bigger than they were. The only thing governing them was their environment, and because of their intimidating size, they were able to dominate that with unquestioned power.
The Rothschilds, Stephen Girard, John Jacob Astor, Cornelius Vanderbilt, George Peabody, Junius Morgan, Daniel Drew, and Jay Cooke are our financial Dinosaurs. They operated prior to order and organized structure within the capital markets. They too dominated their society through their magnitude and ability to simply surpass the rest of the population.
In creating the basis for our capital market system, they were viewed as ruthless, lawless and merciless. With a single, foreboding footstep, they were able to crush lesser creatures sometimes without really intending to. Like dinosaurs, they were big and awkward and not really civilized—at times completely unaware of their strength and the effects it had on others—whether for better or worse.
Astor, Vanderbilt, and Drew were perhaps the most notorious Dinosaurs, infamous for their foul treatment and manipulation of others. Regardless, during his lifetime, Astor became the “landlord of New York” and amassed a fortune. Vanderbilt pioneered transportation, building up the shipping industry and a railroad empire to accommodate the country’s growth. Drew was the father and most rigorous practitioner of stock “watering.”
You might view these three men as carnivorous dinosaurs. Each relied on another bite of flesh to build his immense fortune (and then lose it, in Drew’s case). But another group of Dinosaurs created and built an economic society without directly harming anyone in particular. The Rothschilds, Girard, Peabody, Morgan, and Cooke might be considered the vegetarians. They were much more gentle and docile in their way of promoting progress—but certainly no less effective.
The Rothschilds, father Mayer and son Nathan, were workhounds who emerged from the German Jewish ghetto to become the first power in world banking. They financed kings, princes, foreign countries, European industry and, when the time was right, America’s gradual transformation from an agricultural society to an industrialized nation.
Girard, who really was a vegetarian, financed America’s earliest trade endeavors, becoming America’s first richest man. He was a mercantile trader who financed import-export voyages and was among the first to support central banking in America (long before its time). Cooke financed the Civil War, becoming the first American to make large underwritings—and their sale—possible.
Peabody and Morgan, both based in London, took up what the Rothschilds started, becoming links between an economically advanced Europe and a cash-needy, emerging America. Peabody was the first to funnel European capital to things like state governments and early forms of industry; Morgan financed our railroad boom starting in the 1860s.
Morgan was perhaps our most important link to modern capital markets in America. His railroad financing sparked a flurry of economic progress, and he funneled much of that progress to his son and American business contact, J.P. Morgan. Young Morgan, whom you can read about in Chapter Three in his role as an investment banker, emerged as a Dinosaur-like power in his own right. Back when Wall Street was little more than a dirt path, young Morgan ruled the road with an iron fist. He was bigger than society and larger than the law, creating structure with each new idea he initiated. Instead of being described in the investment banking section, J.P. Morgan could as easily have been included in this section, as the last of the Dinosaurs, and perhaps the greatest and most powerful of them all.
Despite their larger-than-life personifications, the Dinosaurs didn’t live forever. They couldn’t. The very structure they created dated them, made them obsolete; the social response to their very existence outlawed them and eventually destroyed them. The progressive era, for example, coming at the height of Morgan’s power, was a direct reaction against decades of Dinosaurs and aspiring Dinosaurs who thought they could do as they saw fit in society. The Dinosaurs could. With the rise of the Progressive movement, Roosevelt, Wilson and the income tax. and all the rest of the evolution that ran through the eventual creation of the SEC, no one would ever again have so much total financial autonomy.
It’s hard to truly get a feel for the Dinosaurs today, while viewing them from our world—one that evolved through decades of innovation and Dinosaur-bashing and still more innovation and decades where Dinosaurs have since become nothing but memories. Yet, through their existence they provided us with the very beginnings of financial order—when there had been none. With their mass they tromped down the vegetation to make the first crude paths through the financial wilderness. They fought financial battles of a magnitude that could only be viewed as we now would view prehistoric dinosaurs in battle. And from the backlash of those battles came trends to follow and to buck just as early mammals learned to get out of the way of prehistoric dinosaurs and to scavenge their left-behinds. Finally, Dinosaurs gave us the beginnings of a loose set of ethics (both by positive and negative role models). For decades, good and bad would be defined in terms of the Dinosaurs’ actions. Men would aspire to emulate their successful market actions, and the outraged would create social foment aimed at early governmental control.
The Dinosaurs will never return. Occasionally a mutation occurs that attempts to be a Dinosaur. But that wanna-be can’t survive for the same reason prehistoric dinosaurs can’t survive now—regardless of climatic conditions. Simply put, human society wouldn’t allow it. Today we have a well defined civilization oriented toward protecting our social order, including the weak and unfortunate. And our social order won’t allow Dinosaur-like action. To wit, we have Michael Milken, who came as close to a Dinosaur as anything we’ve seen in decades. Note how easily the government put Milken in jail on violations which were miniscule relative to the overwhelming mass of his overall junk bond financing activity.
If somehow the Loch Ness monster were to come out of the lake and start strolling in toward town, our authorities would find immediate justification to take action and control it long before it ever got close to population centers. A big wild thing just can’t be totally free now, and what is a Dinosaur but a big wild thing? It’s actually been a fairly long time since you could be a little, wild thing. Think back to 1911, when Ishi, the last of the wild native American Indians, came in from the woods to give himself up. We took him captive and put him on display in a museum, and in a few years he died of diseases he had never been exposed to in the wild. Our modern societal need to control freedom—lest something damaging occur—will never again allow the evolution of men like the Dinosaurs depicted in this section.
So enjoy these big and wild Dinosaurs. They were among the very first minds that set the market on the path to what it has become.

MAYER AMSCHEL ROTHSCHILD

OUT OF THE GHETTO AND INTO THE LIMELIGHT

Deep in the dank, damp and cramped Jewish ghetto of Frankfurt on the Main in the late 18th century, a nondescript, dark-eyed pawnbroker named Mayer Rothschild created a financial dynasty that grew to finance the development of western civilization. Because of Rothschild and the banking house he built with his five sons, money flowed throughout Europe with ease, enabling the industrial revolution to take place and lift Europe from the dark ages. As a direct result, America—then practically a Third World country compared to prospering Europe—received the financing it needed to transform itself from a provincial, largely agricultural country into a great industrial nation.
Mayer had begun his career by age 10, discovering the ins and outs of money at his father’s pawnshop and money bureau. Currency during the 1740s was quite complex, as each of the hundreds of states comprising Germany (still the Holy Roman Empire) minted its own coins. Being astute, he caught on quickly and soon could translate gold and silver into coin and calculate exchange rates with lightning speed.
Orphaned at age 11 in 1755, Mayer followed the sound of clinking coins rather than his parents’ idea that he become a rabbi. Over the next decade, he ran a small trade business and pawnshop, selling tobacco, wine, and cloth in exchange for coins. And knowing what a royal connection could do for his career, Mayer courted the business of a numismatic prince—not just any prince, but one of Europe’s mightiest and richest, the billionaire Prince William. Mayer sold him his antique coins at ridiculously low prices for years—foregoing immediate profits for long-term favor. He had no intention of staying a small time pawnbroker the rest of his life!
Back then, being a pawnbroker-merchant was one of the only career options available to Jews. Thanks to a papal decree centuries earlier, usury laws forbade Christians from lending for profit. So Jews took over the money-lending trades, becoming pawnbrokers, small trade merchants, and wizards of finance. By the 18th century, it was tradition to trek over to the Jewish ghetto when you needed to pawn a possession for cash or to buy trinkets or second-hand goods. Had Mayer been content with his common role, it’s unlikely the Rothschild name would mean what it does today in the financial world.
Tall, black-bearded, with an odd, quizzical smile and a ghetto dialect of Yiddish-Deutsch—Mayer produced 20 children with his wife, Gutle, between 1770 and 1790, with only five girls and five boys surviving. Despite Gutle’s harsh life, she was tough, and lived to age 96—which was exceptionally old back then. Seeing the future in his boys, Mayer taught them to buy cheaply and sell dearly before they could walk, and when they reached age 12, he put them to work in the family business. Ultimately, it was through his sons that Mayer realized his ambitions.
Operating from his house, Mayer and sons Amschel, Salomon, Nathan, Carl, and James built the business into a strong importing house. This was at the turn of the century, when dry goods were hard to get in Germany unless someone imported them—and that someone was Mayer. Foreseeing the demand for cotton—and perhaps the expanse of his later empire, Mayer sent Nathan to London to make sure cotton shipments reached Frankfurt.
As a big wartime supplier, the Rothschilds piled up the profits. Mayer, still not content with the excess, next began operating a money exchange bureau in their yard. What’s considered the very first Rothschild bank appeared to be a nine-square-foot hut—but things weren’t quite what they appeared to be. Mayer installed a large iron chest that, when opened from the back, revealed a stairway leading to a secret storage cellar.
Mayer’s scheming finally paid off when Prince William of Germany, the man to whom he’d been selling coins, gave him the business he’d been hoping for all along. It started with Mayer acting as the prince’s independent agent in an anonymous loan to Denmark. He was the prince’s chief banker in 1806 when the prince was forced to flee in exile, leaving his fortune in the Rothschilds’ hands.
In the following years Mayer had his sons fan out across the European continent: James went to Paris, Salomon to Vienna, Carl to Naples, Amschel remained in Frankfurt, and of course, Mayer’s successor Nathan stayed in London. Each son followed in Mayer’s footsteps, courting profitable royal connections, and later each made his own mark by financing kings, wars, and Europe’s first railroads. Ultimately, the Rothschilds united to form a sturdy, efficient moneychain across Europe that financed its industrial revolution, creating a common money market for the first time.
By Mayer’s death in 1812, his ghetto hopes and ambitions had been realized through his sons, who were well on their way to becoming the world’s largest private bank. Without his sons, Mayer might have wound up wealthy, but never world renowned. Why is it that in a book of American financial biographies and American markets there is mention of this European? Simply put, at a time before America had developed its financial markets, the financing of American commodities and government bonds would have been impossible without the flow of funds from Europe. The House of Rothschild, derived through Mayer, was the center of Europe’s money markets. Without Mayer and his generational empire, it is unclear that America would ever have developed its own industrial revolution or financial markets. His genes were the seeds through which America’s industry got its original lifeblood. In that respect, the seminal tinkling of this German pawnbroker’s coins and the thinking that went on behind it are every bit as important to the evolution of American financial history as the life of any American.

NATHAN ROTHSCHILD

WHEN CASH BECAME KING—AND CREDIT BECAME PRIME MINISTER

Money became king when Nathan Rothschild rose to power over Europe in the 19th century, forcing people to recognize finance over divine right. More powerful than monarchs, Nathan masterminded the Rothschild money-factory by sparking Europe’s industrial awakening. He financed governments, wars, railroads—anything that stood for progress. At his death in 1836, he left an undisclosed fortune (secrecy was a Rothschild trademark), a legacy of Rothschild bankers, and most importantly, the earliest and most abundant source of credit for a burgeoning America via his American agent August Belmont.
Although banking was then still in its rudimentary state, Nathan fully understood the interplay between finance and economics, the effects of political news on the stock exchange, the quickest way to bull or bear a market, and how gold reserves affected the exchange rate. Born in Frankfurt, he founded London’s N.M. Rothschild and Sons. He spent half his day at the bank and the other half at the Royal Exchange leaning against the same pillar, knowing he was the center of attention. While brokers watched his short, stout figure, hopeful for a sign or a gesture that might foretell his next move, Nathan kept an utterly blank expression—his hands thrust inside his pockets and his hat pulled over his eyes.
Round-faced, red-headed with pouty lips, a sour personality, and arrogant manner, at age 33 Nathan built the family fortune in a single move at the Royal Exchange—with a prince’s royal booty! His father, Mayer Rothschild, had advised a German prince to buy British consols (English government bonds) and to use Nathan to do so, since Nathan was in London and would only charge a tiny brokerage fee of one-eighth of 1 percent. The prince agreed and sent Nathan the equivalent of $5 million—which was a lot of money back then—all earmarked for oodles of consols, priced at 72.
Quick-thinking Nathan eventually bought the prince his consols, but he first used the money to successfully speculate in gold bullion, making a killing and a reputation for himself in the London exchange. That would be considered highly unethical today because using a client’s money for your own benefit is dishonest and generally slimy. But in those days, notions of highly unethical behavior didn’t exist. Had Nathan’s gold speculation failed, we wouldn’t be reading about him now.
When the prince grew impatient for his securities, Nathan simply bought the consols at 62, making another killing by charging the prince the expected 72 and pocketing the difference! Amazingly, it was three years from the time the prince first advanced the money that Nathan actually got the consols for him—1809 to 1812. For three years Nathan used the money, interest free, and from it made two fortunes. If a broker did that today, he would be banned from the industry for life. Nathan just might have been the first of the big-time brokerage scoundrels. Yet five years, later, at 38, he was banker-in-chief to the British Government.
By the 1820s, Nathan and his four brothers were operating from five capitals, creating a financial network that sprawled throughout Europe like never before. Cultivating Europe’s wealthiest as clients, Nathan masterminded the family’s coups while his brothers successfully carried them out. For instance, Nathan concocted a loan—carried out by brother James in Paris—to finance the return of Bourbon Prince Louis XVIII to the French throne. When Naples was overcome by a revolution, Nathan dreamed up the loan that financed a military occupation by the Austrian army—and brother Carl saw it through.
With communication systems practically nonexistent except for word of mouth, the Rothschild brothers stayed in touch via their famously efficient private courier system that consisted of a network of men, ships that sailed regardless of weather, and, most importantly, carrier pigeons. Even folks unfamiliar with Nathan Rothschild knew about the famous carrier pigeons. Their fame is based to a large extent on how the pigeons enabled Nathan to know before anyone else outside the battle zone of Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo. While others feared England might lose, Rothschild knew otherwise, and by knowing before others on the floor of the London Stock Exchange, Rothschild bought and made another fortune. Rothschild truly brought a different meaning to the phrase, “a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.”
While today money can be transferred almost anywhere with the blink of an eye and a phone call, Nathan lived when the actual, physical currency—often, heavy gold bullion—was physically moved to show proof of deposit. Knowing how inconvenient this was, Nathan replaced this old credit structure with a worldwide system of paper credit. In this way, Nathan enabled the British Government, in its fight against Napoleon, to pay out some 15 million pounds to the continent between 1812 and 1814. He handled the transaction so deftly that the exchange rate was left intact. Until then, a government advancing money was faced with the prospect of losing much of it. In this respect Nathan pioneered international credit.
The Rothschild brothers—Nathan, James, Amschel, Carl, and Salomon—comprised the world’s largest private bank. No one else even came close. The House of Rothschild was sort of an international central bank at a time when America barely had a grip on central banking, and couldn’t hold on to its grip for long. The Rothschilds were not only capable of financing industries, governments and wars, but they were also able to stabilize panics, pioneer the western world, and outlive the many unstable governments with which they did business.
The Rothschilds were capable of affecting history to their liking. For example, when there was cause to worry about war between two German states, the Rothschilds’ mother, Gutle, laughed and said, “Nonsense! My boys won’t give them any money!” But perhaps the best example of their power was when Nathan, in all his glory, managed to save one of England’s greatest institutions, at a time when England was by far the most powerful economic and military force in the world.