Monday, May 19, 2008

Paul Erdman's - The Panic of 89

Last week I was reading through Paul Erdman’s “The panic of 89” a novel about a fictional systemic financial crash in 1988. Though the book is more than 20 years old, it is amazingly close to the current situation. The setting is an America with a Republican president who in his 8 years rule has loaded the country with a lot of debt and the international community has lost faith and dollar is having massive depreciation, while the economy is flirting with recession. The economy is slowly clawing into a recession while a Democrat President is to take control in a few weeks. In the meanwhile the commodity markets are menacing, house prices are falling, people are walking away from mortgages, Mortgage Backed Securities markets and Swap markets are crashing (he talks about colossally the derivatives market has grown in 80s) and a rogue leader from Venezuala is trying to screw US by grouping Latin America. The Fed chairman is as confused as Mr. Bernake and is trying to lower interest rates. All this is causing Bank of America to go the brink of a solvency crisis, and the plot involves a former IMF chief and the Fed Chairman in bringing back America to Normalcy. And then there are terrorists, murders and other stuff. The characters are not like the normal ones you see in other popular novels, but if you like Erdman’s novels you would appreciate the depth of characters. It is not just an interesting action packed novel, but this author who is a former Swiss Bank chief packs with loads of finance stuff that look as good as new. The author has always been ahead of his time and generally respected in Wall Street for foreseeing things – his novel “A Billion Dollar sure thing” that came in early 70s was talking about Oil and Gold crisis and another one of his old novels was talking about the trouble with Hedge Funds and stuff.

If you like action packed novels and want a different perspective of the current financial crisis and understand the behind the scenes politics in Fed, then I would recommend this book. Here is an old review of it in NY times.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE0DC1039F932A25752C0A961948260

Writing fiction frees an author to use imagination, though the higher standard for non-fiction doesn’t seem to be there anymore. This author who was a Chief of Swiss Bank in a previous life was jailed for fraud and spent some time in Basel jail. There he got an acquaintance of a professional bank robber from whom he learnt a lot of tricks. He wanted to originally write a non-fiction about global finance, but the Swiss jail didn’t have a good library and so he converted his ideas and personal experiences into a novel and that became a runaway hit. Unlike his other novels this particular novel is often criticized by his fans for not being too fiction-like and too much of real life finance. Many of the characters are real – Reagan, Kissinger, Carlos, Volker whose names are used directly instead of building characters based on them, as done by other novelists. And a lot of the ideas were outrageous at that time – he speaks a lot about Derivatives, Credit Default Swaps, Mortgage Backed Securities and stuff at a time when hardly more than a couple knew mortgages could be securitized. I was reading through the reviews in Washington Post of the 80s and they were wondering how these could collapse the world financial system. But, looking from 2008, we know how. Though, this novel fell out of favor from his other books with more fiction contents, I consider this to be among his best.

He died last year and you can find more about him here: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article1722875.ece

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow, you realized this back in May. I am an Erdman fan and forgot to qoute him until this week, when I was addressing a group of high level home health advocates. They were not aware that Access,Cost and Quality were the goals of health reform. Doesn't anyone read anymore? Thanks for the informative review.

Anonymous said...

I really miss Paul. His books were so far ahead of time. He really had amazing foresight. Today as I opened up to a story occurring probably around the world about an Australian council in major trouble over CDOs I remembered Zero Coupon. What a great read- if only it had been made compulsory reading for all councils 10 years ago. I would love to have seen an interview with him now on the global financial crisis. I hope someone else picks up the baton!