{"id":109396,"date":"2023-08-09T07:50:00","date_gmt":"2023-08-09T11:50:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/?p=109396"},"modified":"2023-08-09T10:14:07","modified_gmt":"2023-08-09T14:14:07","slug":"liars-poker-book","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/liars-poker-book\/","title":{"rendered":"Liar&#8217;s Poker: Book Overview (Michael Lewis)"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>What is <em>Liar\u2019s Poker<\/em> by Michael Lewis about? How did the Salomon Brothers fall from grace on Wall Street?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The cynical view of the financial world says that Wall Street is run by a special breed of traders who exploit investors\u2019 collective fear and greed to enrich themselves. In <em>Liar\u2019s Poker<\/em>, Michael Lewis backs up this opinion with a first-hand account of the pursuit of ill-gotten riches at the Salomon Brothers investment firm during the 1980s.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Read below for a brief <em>Liar\u2019s Poker<\/em> book overview.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<!--more-->\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-liar-s-poker-by-michael-lewis\"><strong><em>Liar&#8217;s Poker<\/em> by Michael Lewis<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>Many business experts would have you believe that investing is a rational, thoughtful, and mathematical process. Others think the economics of high finance are much like the weather, subject to forces beyond anyone\u2019s control. There\u2019s a third view that\u2019s a little more cynical\u2014that much of the behavior of the investment marketplace is driven by a special breed of Wall Street traders who exploit investors\u2019 collective fear and greed to enrich themselves however they can, without any sense of ethics, moderation, or care for the potential havoc they might wreak.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the <a href=\"https:\/\/wwnorton.com\/books\/9780393338690\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Liar\u2019s Poker<\/em><\/a> book, published in 1989, Michael Lewis gives a first-hand account of the unchecked pursuit of ill-gotten riches on the trading floor of Salomon Brothers, which for a brief time was the world\u2019s most profitable investment banking firm. How it rose and fell from those heights is a story of financial swindles, high-stakes speculation, toxic machismo, and unfettered excess.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Before becoming a best-selling author, Lewis was a seller of bonds at Salomon Brothers\u2019 London office. As a member of the firm, he was subjected to Salomon Brothers\u2019 financial indoctrination, took part in its culture of chasing wealth at any cost, and witnessed the start of its downward spiral. After leaving Salomon Brothers to pursue a career in journalism, Lewis became known for his books on sports and finance, including <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/app\/book\/moneyball\/1-page-summary\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Moneyball<\/em><\/a> (2003), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/app\/book\/the-blind-side\/preview\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>The Blind Side<\/em><\/a> (2006), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/app\/book\/the-big-short\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>The Big Short<\/em><\/a> (2010), and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/app\/book\/flash-boys\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Flash Boys<\/em><\/a> (2014).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-wall-street-in-the-1980s\"><strong>Wall Street in the 1980s<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>The 1970s were a turbulent time of high unemployment and crippling inflation, and in the financial boom that followed, people dove into investing as a means to get rich quickly. This created a fertile hunting ground for unscrupulous traders looking to take advantage of investors. Lewis discusses the events that led to a boom in the bond market around 1980, how the Salomon Brothers investment firm was ideally poised to make the most of that market, and what the internal culture of Salomon was like.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis traces the roots of Wall Street\u2019s financial trading culture to the Glass-Steagall Act of 1934, which separated investing and commercial banking. A firm could do one or the other, but not both. This created investment banking as its own profession, and <strong>investment brokers became the superstars of finance<\/strong> and were often characterized by the scale of their ambitions. For a long time, their profits came from trading stocks, until the practice of charging fixed commissions for each trade was halted in 1975. Stock brokers dropped their rates to undercut each other, and profits bled out of the stock trading business. Traders had to find a new way to make money off of the investors in the market.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>An opportunity appeared in 1979 when the Federal Reserve announced that it would let interest rates fluctuate in an attempt to curb the dollar\u2019s inflation. Lewis says this had an unintended side effect\u2014if interest rates were no longer stable, then bonds would also go up and down in value. Bonds (loans made to governments or corporations) are normally considered a safe, boring, and timid investment compared to more volatile stocks. However, <strong>when unmoored from fixed interest rates, bonds suddenly became ripe tools for speculation.<\/strong> Combined with corporate America\u2019s newfound willingness to incur debt as a means to funnel growth, the market for bonds went through the roof, and the firm of Salomon Brothers was positioned to exploit it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-enter-salomon-brothers\"><strong>Enter: Salomon Brothers<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>Originally founded as a private partnership, Salomon Brothers became a publicly traded corporation in the \u201970s before being acquired by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.phibro.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Phibro<\/a> in 1981, with chairman John Gutfreund personally making $40 million on the deal. Lewis writes that Salomon Brothers\u2019 profits weren\u2019t as important to Gutfreund as the power and prestige he received as CEO. Under Gutfreund\u2019s leadership (or lack thereof) there was absolutely no oversight of what the company\u2019s traders were doing or how they did it. All that mattered was that they made the firm money. Neither was there any sense of moderation from Gutfreund or his fellow executives. According to Lewis, every action they took was either full-throttle or nothing at all.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the start of the \u201980s, the all-or-nothing approach paid dividends, because when the bond market began to take off, <strong>Salomon Brothers had already fought for a controlling monopoly of bond trades on Wall Street.<\/strong> They\u2019d been allowed to do so because other trading firms had always disparaged bonds as second-class investments. Once the tide turned, Salomon cornered the market, and its dealers encouraged all of their clients to leverage debt in the form of more bonds, which they\u2019d trade from investor to investor while charging a fee on every transaction. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/bond-trader\/\">Bond traders<\/a> used every sales trick in the book to hike up the number of transactions their clients made, always increasing Salomon\u2019s cut of the pie.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Salomon\u2019s bond traders saw themselves as financial entrepreneurs and viewed everyone else in the banking world as timid, cowardly sheep. The trading floor was very much a boys\u2019 club. Women were allowed to sell products to clients, but only men were allowed to join the upper echelons where trading took place. Lewis recounts that <strong>bond traders constantly fought to prove their alpha-male status<\/strong> by aggressive trading, excessive self-indulgence, and elaborate pranks that bordered on abuse. Their chief entertainment was a game called \u201cLiar\u2019s Poker\u201d\u2014a version of \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/bicyclecards.com\/how-to-play\/i-doubt-it\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">I Doubt It<\/a>\u201d played with dollar bills instead of cards. The point of the game was to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/how-to-read-other-people\/\">read other people<\/a>, call out bluffs, and learn how to lie\u2014all useful skills in the world of high finance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-lewis-s-front-row-seat\"><strong>Lewis\u2019s Front Row Seat<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>If Lewis\u2019s appraisal of Wall Street seems harsh, it can\u2019t be said that it\u2019s unearned. Lewis\u2019s knowledge of Salomon Brothers comes from firsthand experience. Fresh out of college in the mid-1980s, Lewis joined the Salomon team, was trained in their philosophy of investing, and then became part of its culture.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis writes that along with the stock market, the number of students pursuing economics boomed in the 1980s, despite the fact that\u2014as he would find out\u2014<strong>economic theory has nothing to do with the actual work done by investment firms<\/strong>, which focus more on spotting and exploiting opportunities that arise from brief market fluctuations or investor gullibility. His experience applying for jobs in investing also highlights the industry\u2019s hypocrisy, since he learned early on that in order to succeed, he had to pretend that making money didn\u2019t matter. Instead, he had to claim that he was in it for the challenge.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once Lewis was hired as a Salomon trainee, he was promised a salary twice as large as what his business professors made. The year was 1985, and Salomon Brothers was rapidly expanding to keep up with the increased demand for their services. Though none of their new hires were loyal to the firm, <strong>Salomon\u2019s training did everything it could to indoctrinate recruits into the firm\u2019s way of thinking<\/strong>\u2014that trading was a cutthroat business, the best investment traders were tantamount to sharks, and rank and seniority mattered far less than how much money you could bring in for the business.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis explains that the cutthroat trading culture was baked into Salomon Brothers\u2019 training process. <strong>Trainees were pitted against each other in competition for prime work assignments.<\/strong> They were all expected to find mentors in the company\u2014who would either abuse them or else ignore them\u2014and to find ways to make themselves attractive to any departmental managers who might hire them. Humiliation was the point of the process, as was teaching new recruits to be aggressive and conniving in how they landed plum positions in the business. Lewis points out that not all the traders were as awful as the overall culture would suggest\u2014just that concepts such as right and wrong were irrelevant on the trading floor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After training, Lewis was assigned to the London office where the focus was more on customer relationships and less on the dog-eat-dog tactics of New York. Nevertheless, European investors had their own brand of fiscal gullibility that Lewis was expected to exploit\u2014in particular, the belief that the future of individual stocks and bonds could be predicted by mapping their past. By the end of the \u201980s, <strong>Lewis became disabused of the notion that how much money you make reflects your personal worth.<\/strong> He would leave the business of investing entirely, but only after witnessing some of its most dramatic ups and downs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-the-mortgage-bond-era\"><strong>The Mortgage Bond Era<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>The trends that led to Salomon Brothers\u2019 meteoric rise in the \u201980s began long before Lewis joined the firm. Salomon\u2019s embarrassment of riches didn\u2019t come from traditional government or corporate bonds but from its willingness to experiment in the fledgling <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/mortgage-bond-market\/\">mortgage bond market<\/a>. Lewis explains how mortgage bonds work, how Salomon Brothers capitalized on the market, and how they turned the mortgage lenders\u2014the savings and loan industry\u2014into the primary customers of the mortgage bonds they created.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis writes that in the 1970s, the largest and most rapidly expanding group of borrowers were homebuyers, not investors. What\u2019s more, since home loans were insured by the government, they were safe bets for lenders to make since the risk was deferred to the American taxpayer. <strong>By 1980, the mortgage industry was handling over $1 trillion in loans,<\/strong> more money than in the entire US stock market, but from Wall Street\u2019s perspective home loans were viewed as worthless. They were tiny compared to the huge transactions Wall Street banks dealt in, and on an individual basis, they were logistically difficult to trade. Instead, home loans were the bailiwick of small, local bankers whom Wall Street institutions thought of as ignorant country bumpkins.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To make home loans worth Wall Street\u2019s time and energy, bankers had to find a way to trade and profit from them in bulk. The solution is to bundle large groups of mortgages into pools. Within each pool, only a fraction of the loans should default while the pool as a whole remains a net positive investment. That pool can then be converted into a bond through which dealers can buy and sell mortgages in bulk. The bondholder receives the interest payments homeowners make on their loans while he\u2019s also able to shop the bond around like any other financial equity. Lewis points out that all through this process, the bondholder and the homeowners are completely blind to each other&#8217;s existence\u2014all that matters is the financial product.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The main problem with mortgage bonds (as compared to corporate or government bonds) is that they don\u2019t have a fixed maturity date. Homeowners have the option to pay off their loans early, which they usually do via refinancing when interest rates are low. When homeowners pay out, the bond turns to cash at what is generally the worst time (because of low interest rates) for the bondholder to reinvest his money. Despite this, Lewis recounts that <strong>Salomon Brothers believed the mortgage bond market would be hot in the 1980s.<\/strong> The housing business was expanding too quickly, and local banks didn\u2019t have enough money to finance all the loans they wanted to make. Mortgage bonds would act as a tool for Wall Street to provide that funding.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-target-savings-and-loans\"><strong>Target: Savings and Loans<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>Right on the cusp of the 1980s, the savings and loan industry suffered a shock that threatened to stop the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/current-housing-market\/\">housing market<\/a> in its tracks. Lewis says that instead of backing out of the mortgage bond business, Salomon Brothers dove head-first into the market, turning the US government\u2019s plan to bail out local banks into a way to funnel money to itself. According to Lewis, Salomon\u2019s strategy revolved around exploiting the fears of small-town bankers, taking advantage of a crucial tax break meant to help those struggling banks, and turning those banks into the buyers of the bonds created by other banks\u2019 loans.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The \u201970s were a time of great inflation. To slow it, the Federal Reserve Bank announced in 1979 that instead of controlling interest rates, it would allow them to fluctuate according to the dictates of the market. The result was that interest rates went up. <strong>The housing market faltered since no one wanted to take out home loans at high rates of interest.<\/strong> Lewis explains that savings and loans were suddenly in trouble, since the interest they were paying to savings accounts was greater than the interest they were making on their mortgages that had been written on previous, lower interest rates. These banks needed to sell their mortgages in a hurry, and since it had cornered the mortgage bond market, Salomon was the only buyer.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-enter-ranieri\">Enter: Ranieri<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Enter Lewis Ranieri, head of Salomon Brothers\u2019 mortgage bond trading desk, whom Lewis depicts as the sharkiest shark on Wall Street. Ranieri and his traders took advantage of the fact that most owners of savings and loans had shockingly little understanding of their financial positions or the value of their holdings. Another wrinkle that turned into a pot of gold for Salomon was a tax break passed by Congress in 1981 that would refund savings and loans for their losses. The catch was that those losses had to be on paper, so <strong>to prove the amount of their losses, banks had to sell their loans and buy someone else\u2019s.<\/strong> At the time, mortgage bonds were the only way to do this quickly, so Ranieri and his cohorts swooped in like hawks.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis describes a typical mortgage bond trade like this: A Salomon trader would call Kansas Bank A and offer to buy $1 million in loans for the price of 70 cents on the dollar ($700,000 total). After making the buy, he\u2019d call Georgia Bank B and offer to sell that bundle of loans for 75 cents per dollar ($750,000 total, with a profit of $50,000). Since neither bank knew about the other bank\u2019s transaction, Salomon Brothers\u2019 profits from facilitating the deal were invisible. <strong>Salomon traders were schooled in the art of tricking sellers to undervalue their assets<\/strong> while convincing buyers to rate the same products higher. Thanks to the tax break, banks valued their losses and Salomon Brothers reaped the reward.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As savings and loans got a taste of trading bonds, Ranieri started convincing banks to trade their bonds more frequently, giving them a way to gamble on the market and turn their losses into even greater profits. Whether the banks made money or not wasn\u2019t of any concern to Ranieri, since Salomon skimmed profits off of every transaction. Lewis implies that in essence, mortgage bond traders were like carnival hucksters, convincing every gullible passerby to bet one more dollar on a rigged ring toss game. And it worked\u2014by the middle of the \u201980s, Ranieri\u2019s traders were raking in higher profits than anyone else on Wall Street.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-mortgage-bonds-decline\"><strong>Mortgage Bonds Decline<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite Salomon Brothers\u2019 roaring success with the mortgage bond market in the first half of the \u201980s, no gravy train runs forever. Beginning in 1986, Salomon\u2019s Wall Street dominance declined. Lewis recounts three separate ways that Salomon Brothers eroded their standing in the mortgage bond market\u2014they allowed other banks to snatch away their best traders, they developed a new financial product that undercut the value of traditional mortgage bonds, and the leaders of Salomon\u2019s mortgage bond department indulged in so much personal excess that Salomon\u2019s executives had to take a stand against them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Lewis stated earlier, Salomon Brothers recruited many new traders from the legions of economics students in the 1980s, none of whom had any loyalty to the business. More than that, Salomon restricted their pay for the first two years of employment, regardless of how much money they brought in. This allowed other Wall Street banks to lure them away with higher salaries and bonuses. For young traders, Salomon simply became the place where they went to receive on-the-job training before sailing off to more lucrative positions. Not only did this drain Salomon\u2019s talent, but it also gave away the firm&#8217;s advantage by transferring its trading strategies and techniques\u2014along with its monopoly in the bond market\u2014into the hands of its rivals.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis writes that besides the steady loss of talent at Salomon, new financial products called <strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/collateralized-mortgage-obligations\/\">Collateralized Mortgage Obligations<\/a> (CMOs) defused the mortgage bond market by removing the bonds\u2019 volatility that had made them ripe for speculation.<\/strong> Salomon had actually devised these tools themselves to make mortgage bonds attractive to traditional investors. A CMO divided a bundle of mortgages into three or more \u201ctranches\u201d that matured at different rates. Money from homeowners who paid their loans early would go to the holders of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/what-is-a-tranche-finance-definition\/\">tranche<\/a> #1 until their investment was paid back in full, before rolling payments to tranches #2 and #3. Therefore, tranche #1 was a short-term investment, and tranche #3 was long-term.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis explains that by bringing predictability to mortgage bond payouts, CMOs attracted new investors such as pension funds who wouldn\u2019t have touched unpredictable mortgage bonds in the past. CMOs made mortgage bonds as respectable as corporate and government bonds, but they also normalized the value of those bonds. <strong>Because of CMOs, investors now had a better understanding of what mortgage bonds were worth,<\/strong> making it harder for Salomon Brothers\u2019 bond traders to bamboozle their clients as they had in the past. To stay on top of the market, Salomon\u2019s traders kept inventing even more complex and mystifying products that they could hawk to buyers as their next \u201cget rich quick\u201d scheme.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-exit-ranieri\">Exit: Ranieri<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite their efforts, Salomon\u2019s mortgage bond profits steadily dropped from 1986 to 1987. Lewis writes that because of this, Salomon\u2019s board took a harder, closer look at the behavior of Ranieri\u2019s bond traders. A faction within Salomon\u2019s upper management had a growing distaste for the drunken schoolboy antics of Ranieri\u2019s inner circle and would no longer ignore the way Ranieri and his friends misused company resources. In July 1987, Gutfreund fired Ranieri for reasons that have never been specifically disclosed, and Ranieri\u2019s closest colleagues were also let go over the next several months.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even with Ranieri gone, his legacy remained. Lewis asserts that <strong>because of Ranieri, mortgage bonds had risen from obscurity to become a major source of business on Wall Street.<\/strong> Because of the way Ranieri\u2019s mortgage department had reshaped the culture of Salomon Brothers, and because the firm had let its talent slip away to every other major bank on Wall Street, the cutthroat tactics and backhanded dealings that epitomized Salomon Brothers\u2019 trading floor were now the norm for investment banking in general. Salomon Brothers\u2019 Wall Street dominance continued in spirit, if not in financial fact.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-the-rise-of-the-junk-bond\"><strong>The Rise of the Junk Bond<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n<p>The next investment trend to sweep Wall Street wouldn\u2019t arise from Salomon Brothers but would instead be used against it. These were so-called \u201cjunk bonds\u201d that had existed for decades but would be pushed to new heights by Michael Milken, head of the bond department at rival firm Drexel Burnham. Lewis describes how Milken fostered the junk bond craze of the late 1980s and how he used it to fund a wave of hostile corporate takeovers, including one directed at Salomon Brothers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/junk-rated-bonds\/\">Junk bonds<\/a> are issued by companies in poor financial standing as a means to raise capital and keep themselves afloat. These bonds are \u201cjunk\u201d because of their high default risk\u2014if the issuing company goes bankrupt, the bondholders are left with nothing. Nevertheless, <strong>junk bonds can be attractive because of the high interest rates they offer.<\/strong> Investors who place a lot of money in junk bonds are betting that the profits from the bonds that pay off will be greater than the losses from the bonds that go bust.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to Lewis, mortgage bonds and junk bonds were alike in that Wall Street looked down on them as second-rate investments. Like Ranieri with mortgage bonds, Milken ignored Wall Street convention and grabbed as much of the junk bond market as he could. However, unlike Ranieri, <strong>Milken saw corporations as businesses, not just customers to be swindled.<\/strong> Using a team of financial researchers, Milken would calculate whether a struggling company was undervalued. If its assets were worth more than its stock price suggested, Milken could argue that its junk bonds weren\u2019t risky and trade them to investors who often made a killing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By 1987, the junk bond market soared to over $12 billion in transactions as the mortgage bond market continued to falter. Lewis says that <strong>Milken needed more junk bonds to sell, so he partnered with a new breed of investor\u2014the hostile takeover king.<\/strong> By identifying businesses whose stock was undervalued, Milken marked targets for potential takeover. He\u2019d finance the purchase of a controlling stake in the company by selling junk bonds to pay for the stock, then when the target company was bought and its leadership ousted, its stock would plummet and its bonds became junk that Milken would trade to finance the next takeover.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-takeover-target-salomon-brothers\"><strong>Takeover Target: Salomon Brothers<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>As its profits teetered, Salomon Brothers came within a hair of falling victim to a hostile takeover bid. In September 1987, takeover magnate Ron Perelman (with funding from Milken) moved to grab control of Salomon. Lewis explains why Salomon was vulnerable, the threat Perelman posed to Salomon\u2019s management, and how Warren Buffett came to their rescue.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When junk bonds took off in the latter 1980s, Salomon Brothers kept out of the market, but not for any well-thought-out reason. Lewis says it was mostly because <strong>Ranieri sabotaged any attempt by Salomon Brothers to join the junk bond business.<\/strong> Ranieri felt that bonds were his kingdom and that his power would be threatened by any attempt to steer the company away from his mortgage bond turf. As a result, Salomon missed out on participating in the takeover business, and after Ranieri\u2019s firing, the firm was blindsided by Perelman and Milken turning the market against them.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-buffett-to-the-rescue\">Buffett to the Rescue<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>When one of Salomon\u2019s chief investors wanted to sell their shares, Perelman swooped in and made an offer to buy them with funding provided by Milken. Perelman usually fired the managers of the companies he took over, so Gutfreund scrambled to find another buyer to keep his position in the firm. The buyer he found was investor Warren Buffett, but Buffett saved Salomon to make a profit for himself, and he didn\u2019t want shares in the business. Instead, Lewis writes that <strong>Buffett loaned Salomon Brothers $800 million so it could buy back its stock,<\/strong> a loan that Salomon would have to repay at 9% interest. Gutfreund\u2019s job as CEO was secure, but the price would be paid by the firm\u2019s shareholders until their debt to Buffett was cleared.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perelman\u2019s takeover attempt may have been motivated by more than simple greed. Lewis suggests that <strong>Milken may have urged the takeover because of his animosity toward Salomon\u2019s CEO Gutfreund,<\/strong> a dislike that Gutfreund reciprocated. Milken\u2019s Drexel Burnham had lured away many of Gutfreund\u2019s former employees, and the rivalry between their two firms was one of the biggest on Wall Street.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-the-1987-black-monday-crash\"><strong>The 1987 \u201cBlack Monday\u201d Crash<\/strong><\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>No sooner had Salomon Brothers evaded one catastrophe when it and the rest of the financial world felt a shock unmatched since the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.shortform.com\/blog\/great-depression-and-the-new-deal\/\">Great Depression<\/a>. <strong>On Monday, October 19, 1987, the global stock market crashed, wiping out trillions of dollars in investments.<\/strong> Lewis explains that the crash occurred at a particularly bad time for Salomon Brothers, how the firm missed its chance to turn losses into gains because of some questionable business decisions, and how some individuals did well in the misfortune.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lewis writes that in the week before what would become known as the \u201cBlack Monday\u201d stock market crash, <strong>Salomon chose to leap into junk bonds while simultaneously laying off 1,000 employees.<\/strong> Some entire departments were let go, including those in charge of money markets and municipal bonds, with no apparent rhyme or reason. Distrust within the company was at an all-time high, especially since the rank-and-file workers knew that the executives sitting on the board wouldn\u2019t feel any negative effects from the layoffs.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Before Salomon had a chance to find its new footing, the stock market crash hit like a tsunami. Here, Lewis mentions a curious fact about stocks\u2014<strong>when the stock market goes down, the bond market goes up.<\/strong> By firing so many of its bond trading experts, Salomon was left with very few people in a position to take advantage of this flip. One Salomon trader had happened to short the S&amp;P index just before the crash, which luckily recovered a big chunk of wealth, but otherwise Salomon and most of its clients lost entire fortunes in the debacle.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There was one silver lining as Salomon Brothers\u2019 stock dropped. Gutfreund, Lewis, and many other staff recognized that their stock was deeply undervalued (just as Milken had known the month before) and took the opportunity to buy their own company\u2019s stock when it was selling at an all-time low. Lewis says that for him, his investment didn\u2019t represent any faith or goodwill toward Salomon Brothers. It was simply a cold calculation toward wealth, which would surely follow when the stock price rebounded. In his heart, Lewis was ready to leave, and though he\u2019d wonder if quitting was a wise decision, he had faith (as of his writing) that the business would do well and continue to make money for years to come.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What is Liar\u2019s Poker by Michael Lewis about? How did the Salomon Brothers fall from grace on Wall Street? The cynical view of the financial world says that Wall Street is run by a special breed of traders who exploit investors\u2019 collective fear and greed to enrich themselves. In Liar\u2019s Poker, Michael Lewis backs up this opinion with a first-hand account of the pursuit of ill-gotten riches at the Salomon Brothers investment firm during the 1980s. Read below for a brief Liar\u2019s Poker book overview.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14,"featured_media":36212,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[40,81,39],"tags":[1115],"class_list":["post-109396","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-books","category-economics","category-history","tag-liars-poker","","tg-column-two"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v24.3 (Yoast SEO v24.3) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Liar&#039;s Poker: Book Overview (Michael Lewis) - Shortform Books<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"In his book Liar&#039;s Poker, Michael Lewis breaks down the rise and fall of the Salomon Brothers, an investment banking firm. 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