"The Capitalist Threat" by George Soros
Atlantic Monthly, Volume 279, No. 2, February 1997

What kind of society do we want? "Let the free market decide!" is the 
often-heard response. That response, a prominent capitalist 
argues,undermines the very values on which open and democratic societies 
depend.

IN The Philosophy of History, Hegel discerned a disturbing historical 
pattern -- the crack and fall of civilizations owing to a morbid 
intensification of their own first principles. Although I have made a 
fortune in the financial markets, I now fear that the untrammeled 
intensification of laissez-faire capitalism and the spread of market 
values into all areas of life is endangering our open and democratic 
society. The main enemy of the open society, I believe, is no longer the 
communist but the capitalist threat.

full: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/soros.htm

---


http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/06/go-for-the-jugular/57696/

Atlantic Monthly June 4, 2010
'Go for the Jugular'
By Sebastian Mallaby

The collapse of Greece's economy, and its domino effect on Spain, 
Portugal, and other countries in the euro currency zone, is in many ways 
a replay of an earlier financial crisis--the break-up of the continent's 
Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992. Then, as now, Europe's policymakers 
showed little patience with--or understanding of--markets. Then, as now, 
Germany often seemed contemptuous of  the less competitive economies on 
the periphery of Europe.

The 1992 crisis came to a head on Friday September 9, when currency 
speculators forced the devaluation of the Italian lira. By the following 
Tuesday, Britain was facing the same fate. In this excerpt from More 
Money Than God, his new history of hedge funds, Sebastian Mallaby tells 
the story of the crisis from inside the cockpit of George Soros's 
Quantum Fund.

On Tuesday, September 15, the pound took another beating. Spain's 
finance minister telephoned Norman Lamont, his British counterpart, to 
ask him how things were. "Awful," Lamont answered.

That evening Lamont convened a meeting with Robin Leigh-Pemberton, the 
governor of the Bank of England. The two men agreed that the central 
bank should buy the pound aggressively the next morning. As the meeting 
wound down, Leigh-Pemberton read out a message from his press office. 
Helmut Schlesinger, the president of the German Bundesbank, had given an 
interview to the Wall Street Journal and a German financial newspaper, 
Handelsblatt. According to a news agency report on his remarks, 
Schlesinger believed there would have to be a broad realignment of 
Europe's currencies.

Lamont was stunned. Schlesinger's remark was tantamount to calling for 
the pound to devalue. Already his public statements had triggered an 
assault on Italy's lira. Now the German central banker  was attacking 
Britain. Lamont asked Leigh-Pemberton to call Schlesinger immediately, 
overruling Leigh-Pemberton's concern that the punctilious Bundesbanker 
did not like to have his dinner interrupted.

After several conversations, Leigh-Pemberton reported that Schlesinger 
believed there was no cause for alarm. His comments were not 
"authorized," and he would check the article and issue an appropriate 
statement when he reached his office in the morning. Lamont protested 
that this was a dangerously leisurely response. Schlesinger's purported 
comments were already on news wires; traders in New York and Asia would 
react overnight; Schlesinger needed to issue a denial quickly. But 
Germany's monetary master refused to be hurried. He was not going to 
adapt to a world of 24-hour trading.

That night, Lamont went to bed knowing that the next day would be 
difficult. But he could not imagine how difficult.

Stan Druckenmiller, the chief portfolio manager at George Soros's 
Quantum Fund, read Schlesinger's comments on Tuesday afternoon in New 
York. He didn't care whether they were "authorized;" he reacted 
immediately. Schlesinger had made it obvious that the Bundesbank was not 
going to help the pound cling onto its position inside the exchange-rate 
mechanism by cutting German interest rates. The devaluation of sterling 
was now all but inevitable.

Druckenmiller walked into Soros's office and told him it was time to 
move. He had held a $1.5 billion bet against the pound since August, but 
now the endgame was coming and he would build on the position steadily.

Soros listened and looked puzzled. "That doesn't make sense," he objected.

"What do you mean?" Druckenmiller asked.

Well, Soros responded, if the Schlesinger quotes were accurate, why just 
build steadily? "Go for the jugular," Soros advised him.

Druckenmiller could see that Soros was right: Indeed, this was the man's 
genius. Druckenmiller had done the analysis, understood the politics, 
and seen the trigger for the trade; but Soros was the one who sensed 
that this was the moment to go nuclear. When you knew you were right, 
there was no such thing as betting too much. You piled on as hard as 
possible.

For the rest of that Tuesday, Druckenmiller and Soros sold sterling to 
anyone prepared to buy from them. Normally they left it to their traders 
to execute orders, but this time they got on the phones themselves, 
searching for banks that would agree to take the other side of their 
orders. Under the rules of the exchange-rate mechanism, the Bank of 
England was obliged to accept offers to sell sterling, but this 
requirement only held during the trading day in London. With the Bank of 
England closed for business, it was a scramble to find buyers, 
particularly once word got around that Soros and Druckenmiller were 
selling crazily.Late that day, the hedge-fund trader Louis Bacon called 
Stan Druckenmiller. The two talked about how the drama might play out, 
and Bacon said he was still finding ways to dump sterling.

"Really?" Druckenmiller blurted out. He told Bacon to wait, and a few 
seconds later Soros joined the call.

"Where did you get the market?" Soros demanded furiously.

Around 2 the next morning, Druckenmiller returned to the office. He 
wanted to be at his desk when London trading reopened and the Bank of 
England would be forced to resume purchases of sterling. Before he had 
even taken his coat off, Soros checked in by telephone. Druckenmiller 
hit the speaker button, and his boss's disembodied East European accent 
filled the office, urging him to redouble sales of the British currency.

When the markets opened in London, the Bank of England did its best to 
boost sterling, acting on the plan that Lamont had authorized the 
previous evening. It intervened twice before 8:30 AM, each time buying 
£300 million. But the buying had absolutely no effect. Druckenmiller was 
manning his cockpit on the other side of the Atlantic, clamoring to sell 
sterling by the billion. The Bank of England carried on intervening, not 
realizing how completely it was outgunned. By 8:40 AM it had purchased a 
total of £1 billion, but sterling still refused to budge. Ten minutes 
later, Lamont told Prime Minister John Major that intervention was 
failing. Britain would have to raise interest rates in order to protect 
sterling.

To Lamont's frustration, Major refused to authorize a rate hike. He had 
been responsible for taking Britain into the exchange-rate mechanism. He 
feared that his credibility would collapse if the policy was seen to be 
failing; he might face a leadership challenge from a member of his own 
cabinet. Major pleaded that new economic data would come out later that 
day. He told Lamont to hang tough in the hope that the markets would 
subside eventually.

Every hour that went by, hedge funds and banks sold more sterling to the 
Bank of England, which was being forced to load up on a currency that 
seemed sure to be devalued. Britain was presiding over a vast financial 
transfer from its long-suffering taxpayers to a global army of traders. 
At 10:30 AM Lamont called John Major again to urge a rise in interest rates.

While Lamont was calling the prime minister, British officials did their 
best to project confidence. Eddie George, the number two at the Bank of 
England, went ahead with a long scheduled meeting with David Smick, a 
financial consultant who fed political intelligence to Druckenmiller and 
Soros. Smick showed up at the Bank of England's exquisite building on 
Threadneedle Street to find George in apparently fine form, decked out 
in a checkered shirt and striped tie in the manner of a London banker. 
"We have it all under control," George said cheerily; in the extreme 
case, which was unlikely, to be sure, the Bank of England would raise 
interest rates by a full percentage point to see off the speculators. 
Smick wondered whether George understood the weight of the hedge-fund 
selling that was forcing down the value of the British currency. The 
avalanche had begun. It might be too late to stop it.

Smick summoned up his nerve and asked George straight out: "Aren't you 
worried that you may have slipped too far behind the curve on this thing?"

George betrayed a look of mild annoyance. He was about to respond when 
the telephone rang. After a minute of intense conversation, he hung up.

"I've learned we've just raised interest rates by two hundred basis 
points," he said softly--a full two percentage points. Then he rose and 
shook Smick's hand and left the room running.Lamont's plea to the prime 
minister had succeeded this time, and the announcement of the dramatic 
rate hike had been set for 11 AM. A few minutes before the appointed 
hour, Lamont walked over to his outer office at the Treasury to watch 
the Reuters screen. But when the announcement came, the pound did not 
respond at all. The line on the screen remained totally flat. Lamont 
felt like a surgeon who looks at a heart monitor and realizes that his 
patient has expired. All that remained was to unplug the system.

Lamont knew he had to take Britain out of the exchange-rate mechanism. 
But this would require the prime minister's approval, and Major was not 
immediately available. Lamont had his staff call Major's office 
repeatedly to stress the urgency of a meeting, but no audience was 
granted. Eventually Lamont led a team of advisers over to Admiralty 
House, the fine Georgian building that was serving temporarily as the 
prime ministerial residence; there they waited for at least another 
quarter of an hour before Major would see them. Lamont calculated that 
the nation was losing hundreds of millions of pounds every few minutes, 
but his boss looked annoyingly relaxed. He began the meeting by 
wondering aloud whether there was room for further financial diplomacy 
with Germany, then added that several other government ministers would 
shortly be joining the meeting. A meandering discussion ensued. Could 
Britain withdraw from the exchange-rate mechanism without offending its 
European partners? If it did withdraw, would there be calls for 
ministers' resignations? It became clear that Major's objective was to 
share responsibility for the crisis with the other people in the 
room--"we were there to put our hands in the blood," one minister later 
commented. It was a shrewd maneuver, and from Major's perspective, it 
served to neutralize potential rivals to his throne. Meanwhile, 
Druckenmiller and Soros were adding to their positions.

The Admiralty House meeting broke up without the decision to quit the 
exchange-rate mechanism that Lamont had wanted. Instead, Major insisted 
on another interest rate hike--this time of three additional percentage 
points, effective the next day--as a last ditch effort to save sterling. 
Again, Lamont watched the news break on the Reuters screen. Again, there 
was no effect on sterling's value. At their desks on the other side of 
the Atlantic, Druckenmiller and Soros saw the rate hikes as an act of 
desperation by a dying man. They were a signal that the end was 
nigh--and that it was time for one last push to sell the life out of the 
British currency.

Lamont proceeded to warn his fellow finance ministers in Europe of 
sterling's plight. His Italian counterpart, Piero Barucci, suggested 
that, rather than quitting the exchange-rate mechanism unilaterally, 
Lamont suspend markets to give himself time to negotiate a realignment 
with other European governments. Lamont had to point out that it is not 
in the power of a modern finance minister to suspend currency markets 
that trade continuously and globally.

That evening, Lamont called a press conference in the Treasury's central 
courtyard. At 7:30 p.m., facing a massive battery of TV cameras from all 
over the world, he announced Britain's exit from the exchange-rate 
mechanism.

The markets had won, and the government had at last recognized it.

Adapted from More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New 
Elite, to be published by the Penguin Press on June 14.
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