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OUT OF ACES
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Picture this: On one side of the negotiating
table was Frederick Augustus Heinze, the illustrious American
copper magnate. The "Boy Wonder" was only 29,
but already a celebrity among the business barons of the
day. The Brooklyn-born entrepreneur was, by all accounts,
brilliant, uncompromising, dashing - and very rich.
On the other side of the table was Walter
Hull Aldridge, a bright metallurgist, representing the Canadian
Pacific Railroad. At issue between them was a copper smelter
Heinze owned in Trail, British Columbia, along with a short-line
railroad called the Columbia & Western.
The Canadian Pacific Railroad was feeling
its oats about this time - having generated a substantial
profit the year before - its trains laden with incoming
settlers and freight. Flush with cash to invest, the railroad
had visions of expanding across western Canada, hauling
coal, coke, wheat, machinery, lumber and metals across the
resource-rich region.
The Canadian Pacific was interested in Heinze's
rail because it fit nicely in their plans. Late in 1897,
they made an offer for it. Heinze, though, wouldn't sell
just the railroad. He would sell the whole shebang - smelter
and rail - or he wouldn't sell at all. His asking price
was $1.2 million. Heinze was running a bluff - his Canadian
operations were not doing so well, and his American interests
demanded his attention. The Trail operation's outlook was
not so bright, either, with the threat of competing smelters
being built in the area.
The railroad wanted the C&W badly enough,
however, and finally agreed to include the smelter in their
offer. Now they were struggling to meet Heinze's price.
The two negotiators worked late into the cold
night of Feb.11, 1898, and reached an impasse. Heinze offered
to play poker for the difference, which was about $300,000.
Aldridge - wisely, I think - declined. Heinze had a reputation
as a good poker player.
Eventually, the railroad swallowed hard and
met Heinze's price. Just like that, the Canadian Pacific
Railroad was in the smelter business. Aldridge stayed on
as managing director of the company that the railroad created
to house the smelter. Under Aldridge's direction, the smelter
not only supplied copper, but was also putting out pure
lead and fine gold and silver by 1902.
Flush with cash from the sale, Heinze moved
to New York and became involved in banks and trusts - a
move that would lead to his undoing. "Most men gamble
with her [Fortune]," Ralph Waldo Emerson once observed,
"and gain all, and lose all, as her wheel rolls."
Heinze, not content to live with his riches, made a bid
for more.
In the early 1900s, most banks were prohibited
from taking on trust accounts (wills, estates, etc.) by
their charters. Trust companies were specifically set up
to deal with this business. Though initially, trusts were
regarded as safe-haven investments, they eventually became
highly speculative - they were like the hedge funds of their
day. And like the hedge funds of today, trusts became heavily
invested in the stock market using extreme leverage, or
borrowed money. They didn't keep much in the way of reserves
and were susceptible to sudden adverse changes in stock
prices.
Also, trust company directors were often involved
in banks, and the banks, though they could not do trust
business, could own trusts. As a result, there was this
web of connected relationships between some of the large
speculators and the banks. This was not so different from
the way the now-infamous hedge fund Long Term Capital Management
was intertwined with many of the nation's financial institutions
when it failed in 1998 - threatening to take the whole financial
system with it before a bailout was arranged.
So when, on Oct. 16, 1907, the price of United
Copper closed at $15 - down 76% from its high only two days
earlier - the headlines the next day were grim. "Copper
Breaks Heinze," blared the Boston Post. Heinze was
heavily invested in United Copper. If Heinze were only a
copper speculator, history may be been quite different.
But Heinze owned a bank and was associated with a number
of other banks.
He was president of Mercantile National Bank, for example,
a position that he promptly relinquished as his plight became
public. But it didn't prevent a run by Mercantile's depositors
in the wake of the news, as depositors scrambled to get
their money for fear that the bank might be involved with
Heinze's losses. Other banks rallied around Mercantile and
supported it, however, which helped it weather the storm.
Heinze's bank, Butte Savings Bank, failed
the next day, as did the brokerage owned by his brother.
The real backbreaker was when the Knickerbocker Trust Co.,
in New York, experienced a run on its deposits. Its president,
Charles Barney, was an associate of Heinze. Knickerbocker
had 18,000 depositors, and in a matter of hours, worried
depositors had skinned the Knickerbocker for some $8 million.
No one came to Knickerbocker's aid - not even
the great J.P. Morgan, who would assist other troubled banks
during the crisis. Some historians believe that this was
part of a deliberate campaign by the banks to destroy the
credibility of the trusts. The banks felt threatened by
the growth of the trusts, and reasoned that if the Knickerbocker
failed, the public would lose faith in the trusts and the
banks would gain. Plus, a man like Heinze had many enemies
eager to capitalize on his plight. Or perhaps Morgan didn't
like what he saw in Knickerbocker and thought it beyond
help.
In any event, Barney, Knickerbocker's president,
shot himself dead that night, and the Knickerbocker Trust
did not open for business the next day. Runs began in earnest,
hitting banks and trusts all over New York. As one historian
put it, "The financial fires that were intended to
ruin Heinze and the trust companies quickly roared out of
control, and the Panic of 1907 became a nondiscriminatory
economic catastrophe for the entire nation." The spark
for the Panic of 1907 may have been a personal vendetta
gone awry. As Glasscock observes, "F. Augustus Heinze
was to the Panic of 1907 as the Archduke Franz Ferdinand
was to the World War."
Even so, the Panic of 1907 was like many of
the crises that went before it and would happen after it.
It was inevitable, because highly leveraged and overextended
lenders and speculators lead to eventual ruin.
The Panic of 1907 was not the worst financial
crisis in American finance, but it was critically important
because the forces in favor of creating a national bank
- the Federal Reserve Bank - would gain strength, and the
tide of public opinion increasingly supported the idea.
As a lender of last resort, the Federal Reserve Bank would
bail out failed banks and thereby stem future panics. The
Federal Reserve Bank was established in 1913.
The real problem was that the banks had been
allowed to renege on their obligations to redeem their deposits
in gold. This allowed them to inflate, to pyramid deposits
and loans on a smaller and smaller base of gold. The excess
funds created fueled speculation in the market. Failure
was unavoidable in such situations.
Today, with a Federal Reserve Bank and deposit
insurance, we seem to have done away with the quaint notion
of a bank run. Instead, we suffer near-continuous debasement
of our currency, a mostly gradual, but sure erosion in purchasing
power. We suffer from debts and deficits that would be impossible
under a strict gold standard. Who is the better for it?
The Panic of 1907 broke Heinze at the age
of 37. With former partnerships broken, millions lost, his
reputation in tatters, and nearly two years spent on legal
battles - Heinze was exonerated - the defeated Copper King
headed back to Butte, where he was welcomed as a hero, with
an automobile procession and a live band celebrating his
return. In Montana, he would live out his final years rehabilitating
some of his remaining mines. His health, though, was failing.
In 1914, only 44 years old, he suffered a hemorrhage of
the stomach caused by cirrhosis of the liver, and he died.
His biographer, Sarah McNelis, writes, "There
was discussion of establishing a scholarship or erecting
a monument to retain his name and contribution to the city
[of Butte]. After the initial shock of his death faded,
however, the talk must have ceased; no such memorial was
established." Today, Heinze is almost forgotten.
Stories such as that of Heinze are intriguing
to me because I see in these events so many parallels with
today's markets. I have long been fascinated by the timeless
qualities of finance, the constants of greed and speculation
and easy money, which forge the familiar patterns of boom
and bust. "Easy money makes a wild town," Glasscock
observes. It also makes for a wild stock market.
In the Knickerbocker Trust, you have what
may be a metaphor for Fannie Mae, a large, but troubled
financial institution, whose failure could also spark a
wider financial panic. Like the Knickerbocker Trust, Fannie
Mae is no favorite of the banks, which claim that Fannie's
special privileges give it an unfair advantage in the mortgage
business. Those who have been bullied by Fannie in the past
would shed no tears should it get stuck in a financial pickle.
In Heinze, you see any number of beleaguered
executives - men who tasted early success, rode it to create
brilliant fortunes, only to be forced to resign in disgrace,
with much of their empires disintegrated.
These tales are classic tragedies, told again
and again in the dusty tomes of financial history, with
new ones being written nearly every day.
Regards,
Chris Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning
Editor's Note: Chris Mayer predicts that the
scandal at Fannie Mae will have far greater economic implications
that anyone is ready for...and that's just one of the events
he sees unfolding in our near future. To find out all seven
of his forecasts for this year, see here:
7 Stunning Predictions for 2005
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/FST/WFSTEC15
Editor's Note : Christopher W. Mayer is a veteran
of the banking industry, specifically in the area of corporate
lending. A financial writer since 1998, Christopher's essays
have appeared in a wide variety of publications, from the
Mises.org Daily Article series to here in The Daily Reckoning.
He is also the editor of Fleet Street Letter.
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