Note directly on topic, but may be of interest to some. Putting things in perspective. ================================== New York Times July 12, 1999 When Today's Market Is History By EDWARD CHANCELLOR ELLFLEET, Mass. -- "You've got five minutes -- fire away," the editor said as she cast aside a copy of the newly published memoirs of former President Giuliani. The young economics professor had come to pitch a book on the great bull market at the turn of the 21st century. Now, a quarter-century into the new millennium, he believed it was possible to gain sufficient objectivity on that strange period in American history. Besides, the subject seemed topical: the Dow had recently regained its 1999 peak. "Well, as you must know, the 1990's were a time when Americans surrendered their sanity and went crazy for stocks," the professor started somewhat diffidently. "Refresh my memory -- I was in diapers at the time," the editor replied tartly. "It all started with what were then called the boomers. Tens of millions of middle-aged Americans were all saving for retirement, and the Government had changed the pension regulations to allow them to pick their own investments. "So naturally they looked for the largest gains and put all their money into stocks. Well, this sent the price of stocks soaring, so that a share you could buy for a multiple of eight times earnings in the early 80's cost 35 times earnings by the end of the century. "As prices rose," the professor went on, "they bought more and more. It seems extraordinary now, but none of them considered who would buy the stocks from them when they retired. As it turned out, when the boomers reached their 60's, stocks were once again trading at eight times earnings, and many boomers had to postpone retirement. The editor sucked on her pen. This all seemed a bit dry. "Can you be more specific; what sort of stocks were they interested in?" she asked. "Well, the Internet became wildly popular from the mid-90's onward. It was changing the way people lived and did business, like the railroads in the 19th century. The boomers loved technology and started to trade stocks over the Internet, and they loved nothing more than buying Internet stocks. "Some Internet stocks sold for a thousand times earnings, and many start-ups had market values of tens of billions of dollars even though they had no profits. We know that most of them never did show a profit." "Didn't anyone point out the absurdity of this?" the editor asked impatiently. "There were a few Cassandras -- older financial journalists, those with a historical bent who claimed they'd seen it all before. But economists actually supported the mass delusion. They said their research proved that stocks could be relied on to outperform bonds. "Then brokers on Wall Street came out with the idea that America had entered into a 'new era' -- actually, they called it the 'new paradigm,' to distinguish it from the new era of the 1920's. They claimed that the business cycle was over, that inflation had been vanquished and that new technology was increasing productivity -- and that therefore it was reasonable to pay more for stocks. It seems fabulous now that after some 400 years of capitalism people really believed things had changed for good, but that's really how it was. "The brokers sold the idea of the new era to their customers," the professor continued, "but I don't know if they ever really believed it in their hearts. They just wanted turnover, and they got it. When brokers started selling shares through the Internet, they took out wild ads to attract the money bees. The line for one broker went something like 'The Slow Die First' -- which I suppose meant that everyone knew it was a crazy game, but if you could get out in time, everything would be O.K." "And the Government -- what did it do about this?" the editor interjected. "Well, the authorities appeared to encourage it because the booming stock market made them look good. It brought prosperity, people spent more -- although much of what they spent was borrowed money -- and they were happy. They made a cult of the chairman of the Federal Reserve -- a 'national treasure,' someone called him. "And it was the Federal Government that decided to invest the Social Security fund in stock. In those days, people had given up saving and began to believe they could gamble their way to wealth." S o we know that the boomers lost out, but who were the winners?" the editor asked. "In the end the only ones who made real money were the businessmen. They all paid themselves with stock options that didn't show up as an expense in their accounts. This was called 'shareholder value,' and whenever stocks declined, the businessmen just gave themselves new options at lower prices. "A pretty obvious scam, you might think, but with the market going up, few seemed to care. When the Great Slump came, the S.E.C. outlawed stock options, but by then the businessmen had already cashed them out." "It all sounds dramatic enough," the editor said, rising from her chair to signify that the interview was over. "But I must warn you it would be a hard sell. People just don't want to read about the stock market anymore." Edward Chancellor is the author of ``Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation.'' ============================================