Chicago, late evening, October 19,1987. Leo
Melamed leaves a dinner meeting in the Metropolitan Club on the sixty-seventh
floor of the Sears Tower. He walks along Wacker Drive to the twin skyscrapers
of the Mercantile Exchange, where his office is on the nineteenth floor, high
above the exchange's now-silent trading pits. His assistant greets him with a
stack of pink message slips from those who have telephoned in his absence. As
midnight approaches, "with sweating hands" he makes his first return
call, to the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas.. It is to Alan Greenspan, who two months
earlier had been appointed to chair the Federal Reserve System's Board of
Governors.1
Leo Melamed's
life is a quintessential twentieth-century story. He was born in Bialystok,
Poland. In 1939, at the age of seven, he watched, peeking through a crack in
the shutters of his parents' home, as German troops entered the city. He
witnessed the macabre ceremony in which Bialystok was handed over, under the
temporary pact between Hitler and Stalin, to the Soviet Union. He and his
family took the last train from Bialystok across the closing border into
Lithuania. Almost certainly, they owed their lives to one of the good people of
a bad time: Chiune Sugihara, who headed Imperial Japan's consulate in Kovno,
Lithuania.
Against his
government's instructions, Sugihara was issuing letters of transit to
Lithuania's Jewish refugees—hundreds every day. One of Sugihara's visas took
Melamed's family to Moscow, to Vladivostok, and to Kobe. The American embassy
in Tokyo (Japan and the United States were not yet at war) provided them with a
visa, and in 1941 they reached Chicago, where Melamed eventually became a
"runner" and then a trader at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.2
The
"Merc" had been Chicago's junior exchange. The Board of Trade, with
its glorious art deco skyscraper towering over LaSalle Street, dominated
futures on grain, the Midwest's primary commodity. The Merc traded futures on
humbler products—when Melamed joined it, eggs and onions. As Melamed's
2 Chapter 1
influence grew, he took the exchange in a
new direction. Trading futures on currencies, on Treasury bills, on
"Eurodollar" interest rates, and on stock indices, it was the first
modern financial derivatives exchange. By the mid 1980s, it was central to
global finance.
That October
night in 1987, however, all Melamed had built—indeed much of the U.S. financial
system—was close to ruin. During the day, America's financial markets had
crashed. The Dow Jones industrial average had plummeted 22.6 percent. The
Standard and Poor's (S&P) 500 index had lost about 20 percent. Futures on
the S&P 500 were traded on the Mercantile Exchange, and they should have
moved in tandem with the index. Instead, they had "disconnected,"
falling 29 percent (Jackwerth and Rubinstein 1996, p. 1611).
What Greenspan
wanted to know from Melamed was whether the Mercantile Exchange would be able
to open the following morning. Melamed was not able to promise that it would.
Every evening, after a futures exchange such as the Merc closes, the process of
clearing is undertaken. Those whose trading positions have lost money must
transfer cash or collateral to die exchange's clearinghouse for deposit into
the accounts of those whose positions have gained. After a normal day on the
Merc in the late 1980s, $120 million would change hands. On the evening of
October 19, however, those who had bought S&P futures contracts owed those
who had sold such contracts twenty times that amount (Melamed and Tamarkin
1996, p. 359).
Across the
United States, unknown numbers of securities-trading firms were close to
failure, carrying heavy losses. Their banks, fearing that the firms would go
bankrupt, were refusing to extend credit to see them through the crisis. That
might leave those firms with no alternative other than "fire sales"
of the stocks they owned, which would worsen the price falls that had generated
the crisis. It was the classic phenomenon of a run on a bank as analyzed by the
sociologist Robert K. Merton3 (1948)—fears of bankruptcy were
threatening to produce bankruptcy—but at stake was not an individual
institution but the system itself.
For example, by
the end of trading on Monday October 19, the New York Stock Exchange's
"specialists," the firms that keep stock trading going by matching
buy and sell orders and using their own money if there is an imbalance, had in
aggregate exhausted two-thirds of their capital. One such firm was rescued only
by an emergency takeover by Merrill Lynch, the nation's leading stockbroker,
sealed with a handshake in the middle of that Monday night (Stewart and
Hertzberg 1987, p. 1).
If clearing
failed, the Mercantile Exchange could not open. That would fuel the spreading
panic that threatened to engulf America's financial institutions in a cascade
of bankruptcies. Melamed knew, that Monday night, just how
Performing Theory? 3
important it was that clearing be
completed. Frantic activity by Melamed and his colleagues throughout the night
(including a 3 a.m. call to the
home of the president of Morgan Stanley to tell him that his bank owed them $1
billion) achieved the transfer of $2.1 billion, but as morning approached |400
million was still owed to Continental Illinois Bank, which acted as the Merc's
agent.
"We hadn't
received all the pays," says Barry Lind, who had chaired the Mercantile
Exchange's Clearing House Committee and who was called upon in 1987 to advise
the Merc's board. "We were missing one huge pay." Some members of the
board, which was meeting in emergency session, felt that the Merc should not
open. Lind told them to think of the bigger picture, especially the Federal
Reserve's efforts to shore up the financial system: "The Fed just spent
all these billions of dollars that you are about to demolish. If we don't open,
we may never open again. You will have ruined everything they did. Closing the
Merc will not help. If you're broke, you're broke."4
Around 7 a.m., with 20 minutes to go before the
scheduled opening of the Merc's currency futures, Melamed called Wilma Smelcer,
the executive of the Continental Illinois Bank who oversaw its dealings with
the exchange. This is how he recalls the conversation:
"Wilma ... You're not going to let a
stinking couple of hundred million dollars cause the Merc to go down the tubes,
are you?"
"Leo, my hands are tied."
"Please listen, Wilma; you have to
take it upon yourself to guarantee the balance because if you don't, I've got
to call Alan Greenspan, and we're going to cause the next depression."
There was silence on the other end of the
phone.... Suddenly, fate intervened. "Hold it a minute, Leo," she
shouted into my earpiece, "Tom Theobald just walked in." Theobald was
then the chairman of Continental Bank. A couple of minutes later, but what
seemed to me like an eternity, Smelcer was back on the phone. "Leo, we're
okay. Tom said to go ahead. You've got your money." I looked at the time,
it was 7:17 a.m. We had three full
minutes to spare. (Melamed and Tamarkin 1996, pp. 362-363)
The crisis was
not over. By lunchtime on Tuesday, the New York Stock Exchange was on the brink
of closing, as trading in even the most "blue chip" of corporations
could not be begun or continued. But the NYSE, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
and the U.S. financial system survived. Because the wider economic effects of
the October 1987 crash were remarkably limited (it did not spark the prolonged
depression Melamed and others feared), the threat it posed to the financial
system has largely been forgotten by those who did not experience it firsthand.
The resolution
of the crisis shows something of the litde-understood network of personal
interconnections that often underpins even the most
4 Chapter 1
global and apparendy impersonal of markets.
The Merc's salvation was, as we have seen, a verbal agreement among three people
who knew and trusted each other. What eased Tuesday's panic was likewise often
quite personal. Senior officials from the Federal Reserve telephoned top
bankers and stockbrokers, pressuring them to keep extending credit and not to
hold back from setding transactions with firms that might be about to fail.
Those to whom they spoke generally did what was asked of them. Bankers
telephoned their corporate clients to persuade them to announce programs to buy
back stock (First Boston, for example, called some 200 clients on Tuesday
morning), and enough of their clients responded to help halt the plunge in
stock prices.5
The crisis of
October 1987 is also the pivot of the twin stories told in this book. One story
is of the changes in the financial markets in the United States since 1970, in
particular the emergence of organized exchanges that trade not stocks but
"derivatives" of stocks and of other financial assets. (The S&P
500 futures traded on Melamed's Mercantile Exchange, for example, are contracts
that "derive" their value from the level of the index and thus permit
what might be called "virtual ownership" of large blocks of stock.6)
In 1970, the
market in financial derivatives in the United States and elsewhere was very
small by today's standards (there are no reliable figures for its total size),
and to trade many of today's derivatives, such as the Merc's S&P 500
futures, would have been illegal. By 1987, derivatives played a central role in
the U.S. financial system, which is why the fate of the Mercantile Exchange was
so critical to that system. Derivatives markets were also beginning to emerge
around the world.
By June 2004,
derivatives contracts totaling $273 trillion (roughly $43,000 for every human
being on earth) were outstanding worldwide.7 The overall sum of such
contracts exaggerates the economic significance of derivatives (for example, it
is common for a derivatives contract to be entered into to "cancel
out" an earlier contract, but both will appear in the overall figure), and
the total must be deflated by a factor of about 100 to reach a realistic
estimate of the aggregate market value of derivatives. Even after this
correction, derivatives remain a major economic activity. The Bank for
International Setdements estimated the total gross credit exposure8
in respect to derivatives of the sixty or so largest participants in the
over-the-counter (direct, institution-to-institution) market at the end of June
2004 as $ 1.48 trillion, roughly equivalent to the annual output of the French
economy. If the dense web of interconnected derivatives contracts represented
by that exposure figure were to unravel, as began to happen in the 1998 crisis
surrounding the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, the global financial
system could experience extensive paralysis.
Performing Theory? 5
This book's
other story is the emergence of modern economic theories of financial markets.
Finance was a mainstream subject of study in the business schools of U.S.
universities, but until the 1960s it was treated largely descriptively. There
was little or nothing in the way of sophisticated mathematical theory of
financial markets. However, a distinctive academic specialty of "financial
economics," which had begun to emerge in the 1950s, gathered pace in the
1960s and the 1970s. At its core were elegant mathematical models of markets.
To traditional
finance scholars, the new finance theory could seem far too abstract. Nor was
it universally welcomed in economics. Many economists did not see financial
economics as central to their discipline, viewing it as specialized and
relatively unimportant in almost the same way as the economics of ketchup,
studied in isolation, would be trivial. ("Ketchup economics" was how
the economist Lawrence Summers once memorably depicted how work on finance
could appear to the discipline's mainstream.9)
The academic
base of financial economics was not in economics departments; it remained
primarily in business schools. This often brought higher salaries,10
but it also meant an institutional separation from the wider discipline and a
culture that differed from it in some respects. Nevertheless, by the 1990s
finance had moved from the margins of economics to become one of the discipline's
central topics. Five of the finance theorists discussed in this book— Harry
Markowitz, Merton Miller, William Sharpe, Robert C. Merton, and Myron
Scholes—became Nobel laureates as a result of their work in finance theory, and
other economists who won Nobel Prizes for their wider research also contributed
to finance theory.
The central
questions addressed by this book concern the relationship between its two
stories: that of changing financial markets and that of the emergence of modern
finance theory. The markets provided financial economists with their subject
matter, with data against which to test their models, and with some of at least
the more elementary concepts they employed. Part of the explanation of why
financial economics grew in its perceived importance is the gradual recovery
of the stock market's prestige—badly damaged by the Great Crash of 1929 and the
malpractices it brought to light—and its growing centrality, along with other
financial markets, to the U.S. and world economies. But how significant was the
other direction of influence? What were the effects on financial markets of the
emergence of an authoritative theory of those markets?
Consider, for
example, one of the most important categories of financial derivative: options.
(A "call option" is a contract that gives its holder the right
6 Chapter 1
but does not oblige the holder to buy a
particular asset at a set price on or up to a given future date. A "put
option" conveys the right to sell the asset at a set price.) The study of
the prices of options is a central topic of financial economics, and the
canonical work (Black and Scholes 1973; Merton 1973a) won Scholes and Merton
their 1997 Nobel Prizes. (Their colleague Fischer Black had died in 1995, and
the prize is never awarded posthumously.)
In 1973, the
year of the publication of the landmark papers on option theory, the world's
first modern options market opened: the Chicago Board Options Exchange, an
offshoot of Melamed's rivals at the Board of Trade. How did the existence of a
well-regarded theoretical model of options affect the fortunes of the Options
Exchange and the pattern of prices in it? More generally, what consequences did
the emergence of option theory have for financial markets?
The question of option theory's practical
consequences will be answered, at least tentatively, in the chapters that
follow. However, before I turn to the effect of finance theory on markets I
must say more about the nature of the models the theorists developed.
"Models" are now a major topic of the history, philosophy, and sociology
of science, but the term covers a wide range of phenomena, from physical
analogies to complex sets of equations, running on supercomputers, that
simulate the earth's climate."
The models
discussed in this book are verbal and mathematical representations of markets
or of economic processes. These representations are deliberately simplified so
that economic reasoning about those markets or processes can take a precise,
mathematical form. (Appendix E contains a very simple example of such a model,
although to keep that appendix accessible I have expressed the model
numerically rather than algebraically.)
The models
described in the chapters that follow are the outcomes of analytical thinking,
of the manipulation of equations, and sometimes of geometric reasoning. They
are underpinned by sophisticated economic thinking, and sometimes by advanced
mathematics, but computationally they are not overwhelmingly complex. The
Black-Scholes-Merton model of option pricing, for example, yields as its
central result a differential equation (the "Black-Scholes
equation"—equation I in appendix D) that has no immediately obvious solution
but is nevertheless a version of the "heat" or "diffusion"
equation, which is well known to physicists. After some tinkering, Black and
Scholes found that in the case of options of the most basic kind the solution
of their equation is a relatively simple mathematical expression (equation 2 in
appendix D). The
Performing Theory? 7
numerical values of the solution can be
calculated by hand using standard mathematical tables.
The theoretical
work discussed in this book was conducted primarily with pen or pencil and
paper, with the computer in the background. The computer's presence is
nevertheless important, as would be expected by readers of Philip Mirowski's
(2002) account of the encounter between modern economics and the "cyborg
sciences." Two major contributors to finance theory, Harry Markowitz and
Jack Treynor, worked in operations research (a field whose interweaving with
computing and whose influence on economics have been investigated by Mirowski),
and the exigencies of computerization were important to William Sharpe's
development of Markowitz's model.
Computers were
needed to apply finance theory's models to trading. They also were needed to
test the models against market data. As will be discussed in chapter 4, the
results of those tests were by no means always positive, but as in analogous
cases in the natural sciences (Harvey 1981) the very fact of finance theory's
testability added to its credibility. It also helped the field to grow by
creating roles in financial economics for those whose skills were primarily
empirical rather than theoretical. Without computers, testing would have been
very laborious if not impossible.
The
"mathematicization" of the academic study of finance that began in
the 1950s paralleled changes in the wider discipline of economics. Economics
had developed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries predominantly as what
the historian of economics Mary Morgan calls a "verbal tradition."
Even as late as 1900, "there was relatively little mathematics,
statistics, or modeling contained in any economic work" (Morgan 2003, p.
277). Although the use of mathematics and statistics increased in the first
half of the twentieth century, economics remained pluralistic.12
However, from
World War II on, "neoclassical" economics, which had been one
approach among several in the interwar period, became increasingly dominant,
especially in the United States and the United Kingdom. The "full- fledged
neoclassical economics of the third quarter of the [twentieth] century"
gave pride of place to "formal treatments of rational, or optimizing,
economic agents joined together in an abstractly conceived free-market, general
equilibrium13 world" (Morgan 2003, p. 279). This approach's
mathematical peak was for many years the sophisticated set-theoretical and
topological reasoning that in the early 1950s allowed the economists Kenneth
Arrow and Gerard Debreu to conclude that a competitive economy, with its myriad
firms, consumers, and sectors, could find equilibrium.14 In 1951,
just over 2 percent of the pages of the flagship journal, the American Economic
Review, contained an equation. In 1978, the percentage was 44 (Grubel and Boland
1986, p. 425).
8 Chapter 1
The
mathematicization of economics was accompanied, especially in the United
States, by a phenomenon that is harder to measure but real nonetheless: the
recovery of confidence, in the economics profession and in the surrounding
culture, in markets. The Great Depression of the interwar years had shaken
faith in the capacity of markets to avoid mass unemployment. In response,
economists following in the footsteps of John Maynard Keynes emphasized the
possibility of far-from-optimal market outcomes and the consequent need for
government action to manage overall levels of demand. Their analyses were
influential both within the economics profession and among policy makers in
many countries.15
As Melamed's
telephone call to Smelcer shows, even in 1987 the fear of a repetition of the
interwar catastrophe was still alive. Gradually, however, disenchantment with
Keynesian economics and with government intervention grew. The experience of
the 1970s—when the tools of such intervention often seemed powerless in the
face of escalating inflation combined with faltering growth—was a factor in the
growing influence of free-market economists such as Milton Friedman of the
University of Chicago, with his "monetarist" theory that the cause of
inflation lay in over-expansion of the money supply.
Within
economics, the rational-expectations approach became increasingly prominent. In
this approach, economic actors are modeled as having expectations consistent
with the economic processes posited by the model being developed: the actor
"knows as much" as the economist does. From such a viewpoint, much
government intervention will be undercut by actors anticipating its likely
effects.16
No simple
mechanical link can be drawn between the way economics as a whole was changing
and the way financial markets were theorized. The unity of orthodox,
neoclassical economics in the postwar United States is easy to overstate, as
Mirowski and Hands (1998) have pointed out, and, as was noted above, even in
the 1960s and the 1970s the financial markets did not seem to many economists
to be a central topic for their discipline. The mainstream economists who did
take finance seriously—notably Franco Modigliani, Paul Samuelson, and James
Tobin—often had Keynesian sympathies, while Milton Friedman was among the
economists who doubted that some of finance theory counted as proper economics
(see chapter 2). Nevertheless, the mathematicization of scholarship on finance
paralleled developments in the wider discipline of economics, and finance
theorists largely shared their colleagues' renewed faith in free markets and in
the reasoning capacities of economic agents. There is, for example, an affinity
between rational- expectations economics and the "efficient-market"
theory to be discussed in chapter 2.17
Performing Theory? 9
Like their
"orthodox" colleagues in the wider profession, financial economists
saw systematic knowledge about markets as flowing from precisely formulated
models. As was noted above, finance theory's models are often computationally
quite simple. The solutions they yield are often single equations, not large
and elaborate sets of equations to be fitted painstakingly to huge amounts of
data. To social scientists in disciplines other than economics, to many
practitioners in and commentators on financial markets, and perhaps to some of
the financial economists' colleagues in the wider discipline, this immediately
raises the suspicion that finance theory is too simple in its models of
markets.
The suspicion of
over-simplicity can often be heightened when one examines the
"assumptions" of finance theory's models—in other words, the market
conditions they posit for the purposes of economic analysis. Typically, those
assumptions involve matters such as the following: that stocks and other financial
assets can be bought and sold at prevailing market prices without affecting
those prices, that no commissions or other "transaction costs" are
incurred in so doing, that stocks can be "sold short" (e.g., borrowed
and sold, and later repurchased and returned) freely and without penalty, and
that money can be borrowed and can be lent at the same "riskless"
rate of interest. (The model in appendix E is an example of those assumptions.)
Surely such assumptions are hopeless idealizations, markedly at odds with the
empirical realities of markets?
For half a
century, economists have had a canonical reply to the contention that their
models are based on unrealistic assumptions: Milton Friedman's 1953 essay
"The Methodology of Positive Economics," which was to become
"the central document of modernism in economics" (McCloskey 1985, p.
9). Friedman was already prominent within the discipline by the 1950s, and in
later decades his advocacy of free markets and of monetarism was to make him
probably the living economist best known to the general public.
In his 1953
essay, Friedman distinguished "positive" economics (the study of
"what is") from "normative" economics (the study of
"what ought to be"). The goal of positive economics, he wrote,
"is to provide a system of generalizations that can be used to make
correct predictions about the consequences of any change in circumstances. Its
performance is to be judged by the precision, scope, and conformity with
experience of the predictions it yields. In short, positive economics is, or
can be, an 'objective' science, in precisely the same sense as any of the
physical sciences." (1953a, p. 4)
To assess
theories by whether their assumptions were empirically accurate was, Friedman
argued, fundamentally mistaken: "Truly important and significant
hypotheses will be found to have 'assumptions' that are wildly inaccurate
descriptive representations of reality. ... A hypothesis is important if it
10 Chapter 1
'explains' much by little ... if it
abstracts the common and crucial elements from the mass of complex and detailed
circumstances ... and permits valid predictions on the basis of them alone. To
be important, therefore, a hypothesis must be descriptively false in its
assumptions." (p. 14) The test of a theory was not whether its assumptions
were "descriptively 'realistic,' for they never are, but... whether the
theory works, which means whether it yields sufficiently accurate
predictions" (p. 15).
To a reader
versed in the philosophy of science, aspects of Friedman's position—especially
his insistence that "factual evidence can never 'prove' a hypothesis; it
can only fail to disprove it" (p. 9)—are immediately reminiscent of the
writings of Karl Popper. Economic methodologists question, however, just how
close Friedman's views are to Popper's, and indeed have found the former hard
to classify philosophically.18
Popper and
Friedman were founding members of the Mont Pelerin Society, a meeting place of
opponents of postwar statist collectivism set up in April 1947 by the
free-market economist Friedrich von Hayek. (The society was named after the
site of the society's ten-day inaugural meeting, a gathering that Friedman
later said "marked the beginning of my involvement in the political
process."19) Friedman himself certainly sees a similarity
between his and Popper's stances. "My position is, essentially, the same
as Popper's," he says, "though it was developed independendy.... I
met Popper in 1947, at the first meeting of the Mont Pelerin Society, but I had
already developed all of these ideas before then." (Friedman interview20)
Ultimately,
though, Friedman's "Methodology of Positive Economics" was oriented
not to the philosophy of science but to economics,21 and his stance
provoked sharp debate within the profession. The best-known opponent of
Friedman's position was Paul Samuelson, an economist at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. With Foundations of Economic Analysis (1947) and other
works, Samuelson played a big part in the mathematicization of economics in the
postwar United States. He wrote the discipline's definitive postwar textbook
(Economics, which sold some 4 million copies22), and in 1970 he was
the third recipient of the Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.
Samuelson ended his Nobel Prize lecture by quoting the economist H. J.
Davenport: "There is no reason why theoretical economics should be a
monopoly of the reactionaries." (Samuelson 1971, p. 287)
Samuelson seemed
to share, at least in part, the suspicion of some of Friedman's critics that
Friedman's methodological views were also political, a way of defending what
Samuelson called "the perfecdy competitive laissez faire model of
economics." It was "fundamentally wrong," wrote Samuelson, to
think "that unrealism in the sense of factual inaccuracy even to a
tolerable
Performing Theory? 11
degree of approximation is anything but a
demerit for a theory or hypothesis. . . . Some inaccuracies are worse than
others, but that is only to say that some sins against empirical science are
worse than others, not that a sin is a merit. . .. The fact that nothing is
perfecdy accurate should not be an excuse to relax our standards of scrutiny of
the empirical validity that the propositions of economics do or do not possess."
(1963, pp. 233, 236)
Just as there is
no unitary "scientific method," faithful following of which
guarantees scientific advances,23 there is not likely to be a
productive, rule-like economic methodology. For example, Friedman noted that
the "rules for using [a] model.. . cannot possibly be abstract and
complete." How the "entities in [a] model" are to be connected
to "observable phenomena... can be learned only by experience and exposure
in the 'right' scientific atmosphere, not by rote" (1953a, p. 25). And on
page 9 of the 1953 essay he inserted a crucial parenthetical phrase into the
passage putting forward falsificationism, writing that a hypothesis should be
"rejected if its predictions are contradicted ('frequently' or more often
than predictions from an alternative hypothesis)"— a formulation that left
room for the exercise of professional judgment.
By the standards
of a strict falsificationism, for example, virtually all the models discussed
in this book should have been discarded immediately on the grounds that some of
their predictions were empirically false. Yet financial economists did not
discard them, and they were right not to. For instance, the Capital Asset
Pricing Model (discussed in chapter 2) led to the conclusion that all
investors' portfolios of risky assets are identical in their relative composition.
That was plainly not so, and it was known not to be so, but the model was still
highly prized.
Friedman's
methodological views were, therefore, not a precise prescription for how economics
should be done. His view that economic theory was "an 'engine' to analyze
[the world], not a photographic reproduction of it" (1953a, p. 35) was in
a sense a truism: a theory that incorporates all detail, as if photographically,
is clearly as much an impossibility as a map that reproduces exactly every
aspect and feature of terrain and landscape. Nevertheless, the view that
economic theory was an "engine" of inquiry, not an (infeasible)
camera faithfully reproducing all empirical facts, was important to the developments
discussed in this book.
When, in the
1950s and the 1960s, an older generation of more descriptively oriented
scholars of finance encountered the work of the new finance theorists, their
reaction was, as has already been noted, often a species of "the perennial
criticism of 'orthodox' economic theory as 'unrealistic'" (Friedman 1953a,
p. 30) that Friedman's essay was designed to rebut. Friedman made explicit a
vital aspect of what, borrowing a term from Knorr Cetina (1999),
12 Chapter 1
we might call the "epistemic
culture" of modern orthodox economics. In so doing, he gave finance
theorists a defense against the most common criticism of them, despite his
doubts as to whether some parts of finance theory were genuine contributions to
economics.24
"Around
here," the prominent finance theorist Merton Miller told me, "we just
sort of take [Friedman's viewpoint] for granted. Of course you don't worry
about the assumptions." (Miller interview) By "here" Miller
meant the University of Chicago, but he could as easily have been describing
much of finance theory. Attitudes to the verisimilitude of assumptions did
differ, with Samuelson and (to a lesser extent) his student Robert C. Merton
distancing themselves somewhat from the more Friedmanesque attitudes of some of
their colleagues. However, that a model's assumptions were
"unrealistic" did not generally count, in the epistemic culture of
financial economics, as a valid argument against the model.
The "machineries of knowing"
(Knorr Cetina 1999, p. 5) that make up finance theory's engines of inquiry are
among this book's topics. More central to the book, however, is another issue.
Financial economics, I argue, did more than analyze markets; it altered them.
It was an "engine" in a sense not intended by Friedman: an active
force transforming its environment, not a camera passively recording it.25
Economists
themselves have had interesting things to say about how their subject affects
its objects of study,26 and there is a variety of philosophical,
sociological, and anthropological work that bears on the topic.27
However, the existing writing that best helps place this theme in a wider
context is that of the economic sociologist and sociologist of science Michel
Callon. Callon rightly refuses to confine economic sociology to the role
economists often seem to expect it to take—as an effort to demonstrate
irrational "social" elements intruding into market processes—and sees
it instead as what might be called an "anthropology of calculation"
which inquires into the processes that make calculative economic action and
markets possible:
... if
calculations are to be performed and completed, the agents and goods involved
in these calculations must be disentangled and framed. In short, a clear and
precise boundary must be drawn between the relations which the agents will take
into account and which will serve in their calculations and those which will be
thrown out of the calculation (Callon
1998, p. 16)
Callon contrasts
modern market transactions with the "entangled objects" described by
ethnographers such as Thomas (1991). An object linked to spe
Performing Theory? 13
cific places and to particular people by
unseverable cultural and religious ties cannot be the subject of market transactions
in the same way that, for example, today's consumer durables can. The contrast
should not be overdrawn (Callon emphasizes the new entanglements without which
markets could not function, and also the way in which market transactions
"overflow" their frames28), but it helpfully focuses
attention on the infrastructures of markets: the social, cultural, and
technical conditions that make them possible.
Markets'
infrastructures matter. Consider, for example, the market in
"futures" on agricultural products such as grain, which is relevant
to this book because it was from agricultural futures markets—the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange and Board of Trade—that the first of today's financial
derivatives exchanges emerged. A "future" is a standardized, exchange-traded
contract in which one party undertakes to sell, and the other to buy, a set
quantity of a given type of asset at a set price at a set future time. Futures
markets did not originate in the United States. What seem to have been in
effect rice futures were traded in eighteenth-century Osaka (Schaede 1989), and
some European markets also predated those of the United States (Cronon 1991, p.
418). But futures trading developed in Chicago on an unprecedented scale in the
second half of the nineteenth century, and it is the subject of a justly
celebrated analysis by the historian William Cronon (1991).29
A futures market
brings together "hedgers" (for example, producers or large consumers
of the grain or other commodity being traded), who benefit from being certain
of the price at which they will be able to sell or to buy the grain, and
"speculators," who are prepared to take on risk in the hope of
profiting from price fluctuations. However, successful futures trading requires
more than the existence of economic actors who may benefit from it.
For futures
trading to be possible, the underlying asset has to be standardized, and that
involves a version of Callon's "disentanglement" and
"framing." The grain to which a futures contract makes reference may
not even have been harvested yet, so a buyer cannot pick out a representative
sack, slit it open, and judge the quality of the grain by letting it run
through his or her fingers. "Five thousand bushels of Chicago No. 2 white
winter wheat" has to be definable, even if it does not yet physically
exist.
As Cronon shows,
the processes that made Chicago's trading in grain futures possible were based
on the disentanglement of grain from its grower that took place when transport
in railroad cars and storage in steam-powered grain elevators replaced
transport and storage in sacks. Sacks kept grain and grower tied together, the
sacks remaining the latter's property, identified as such by a bill of lading
in each sack, until they reached the final purchaser. In contrast, grain from
different growers was mixed irreversibly in the elevators' giant bins,
14 Chapter 1
and the trace of ownership was now a paper
receipt, redeemable for an equivalent quantity of similar grain but not for
the original physical substance.
The standardization
of grain was both a technical and a social process. In Chicago the bushel,
originally a unit of volume, became a unit of weight in order to permit
measurement on scales on top of each elevator. A team of inspectors—employed
first by the Chicago Board of Trade and then by the state of Illinois—checked
that the scales were fair and made the inevitably contestable judgments that
the contents of this bin were good enough to be classed as "No. 1 white
winter wheat," which had to "be plump, well cleaned and free from
other grains," while that bin contained only "No. 2," which was
defined as "sound, but not clean enough for No. 1" (Cronon 1991, p.
118).
With grains thus
turned into "homogeneous abstractions" (Cronon 1991, p. 132),
disentangled at least partially from their heterogeneous physical reality, it
was possible to enter into a contract to buy or to sell 5,000 bushels (the standard
contract size) of, for example, "Chicago No. 2 white winter wheat" at
a set price at a given future time. Such a contract had no link to any
particular physical entity, and because its terms were standardized it was not
connected permanently to those who had initially entered into it.30
If, for example,
one of the parties to a futures contract wished to be free of the obligation it
imposed, he or she did not have to negotiate with the original counterparty
for a cancellation of the contract, but could simply enter into an
equal-but-opposite futures contract with a third party. Although when the
specified delivery month arrived a futures contract could in principle be
settled by handing over elevator receipts, which could be exchanged for actual
grain, in practice delivery was seldom demanded. Contracts were normally setded
by payment of the difference between the price stated in the contract and the
current market price of the corresponding grade of grain. A future was thus
"an abstract claim on the golden stream flowing through [Chicago's] elevators"
(Cronon 1991, p. 120).
The
disentanglement of the abstract claim from grain's physical reality and the
framing of the latter into standardized grades were never entirely complete.
The standardization of grain depended on a "social" matter, the
probity of the grain inspectors, and in nineteenth-century Chicago that was seldom
entirely beyond question. The possibility of setdement by physical delivery and
the role played by the current market price of grain in determining cash set-
dement sums kept the futures market and the "spot" (immediate
delivery) market tied together.
However
infrequently the physical delivery of grain was demanded, its possibility was
essential to the legal feasibility of futures trading in the United States. If
physical delivery was impossible, a futures contract could be settled
Performing Theory? 15
only in cash, and that would have made it a
wager in U.S. law. There was widespread hostility toward gambling, which was
illegal in Illinois and in most other states. The consequent need for Chicago's
futures exchanges to preserve the possibility of physical delivery—the chief
criterion demarcating their activities from gambling—cast a long historical
shadow. As chapter 6 will show, even in the 1970s this shaped the development
of financial derivatives.
A further,
particularly dramatic way in which futures trading was sometimes tied to the
underlying physical substance was a "corner," in which a speculator
or group of speculators purchased large amounts of grain futures and also
sought to buy up most or all of the available physical grain. If a corner succeeded,
those who had engineered it had at their mercy those who had sold futures short
(that is, without owning corresponding amounts of grain). The success of a
corner could depend on far-from-abstract matters, such as whether ice-free
channels could be kept open in Duluth Harbor or in Thunder Bay long enough to
allow sufficient grain to be shipped to Chicago to circumvent the corner. One
such attempted corner, the failed "Leiter corner" of 1897—98, was the
basis for Frank Norris's classic 1903 Chicago novel The Pit.3[
Another aspect
of the infrastructure of agricultural futures trading in the United States was
a specific architectural feature of the physical space in which trading took
place: the "pit" that gave Norris's novel its tide. Overcrowding on
the floor of the Board of Trade—which had 2,187 members by 1869 (Falloon 1998,
p. 72)—led to the introduction of stepped "amphitheaters," traditionally
octagonal in shape.
Despite the
name, pits are generally raised above the floor of an exchange, not sunk into
it. Standing on the steps of a pit, rather than crowded at one level, futures
traders can more easily see each other, which is critical to facilitating
Chicago's "open outcry" trading, in which deals are struck by voice
or (when it gets too noisy, as it often does) by an elaborate system of hand
signals and by eye contact. Where one stands in a pit is important both
socially and economically: one's physical position can, quite literally, be
worth fighting for, even though throwing a punch can bring a $25,000 fine from
an exchange.32
The infrastructures of markets are thus
diverse. As we have just seen, the infrastructure of grain futures trading
included steam-powered elevators, grain inspectors who were hard to bribe,
crowded pits, and contracts that reflected the need to keep futures trading
separate from gambling. One important aspect of Callon's work is his insistence
that economics itself is a part of the infrastructure of modern markets:
". . . economics, in the broad sense of the term,
16 Chapter 1
performs, shapes and formats the economy,
rather than observing how it functions" (1998, p. 2).
By
"economics, in the broad sense of the term" Callon means "all
the activities, whether academic or not. . . aimed at understanding, analyzing
and equipping markets" (2005, p. 9)—a definition that obviously goes well
beyond the academic discipline. However, it is at least sometimes the case that
economics in the narrower, academic sense "performs, shapes and formats the
economy." Consider, for example, the "Chicago Boys," economists
from the Universidad Catolica de Chile trained by Milton Friedman and his
University of Chicago colleagues between 1955 and 1964 as part of a Cold War
U.S. program "to combat a perceived leftist bias in Chilean
economics" (Valdes 1995; Fourcade-Gourinchas and Babb 2002, p. 547).
Especially under the government of General Pinochet, the "Chicago
Boys" did not simply analyze the Chilean economy; they sought to
reconstruct it along the free-market, monetarist lines whose advantages they
had been taught to appreciate.
The Chicago Boys
are a well-known and politically controversial example, unusual in diat it
involves particularly direct access by economists to the levers of political
power, but this example is a vivid manifestation of a general phenomenon. The
academic discipline of economics does not always stand outside the economy,
analyzing it as an external thing; sometimes it is an intrinsic part of
economic processes. Let us call the claim that economics plays the latter role
the performativity of economics.
The coiner of
the term "performative" was the philosopher J. L. Austin. He admitted
that it was "rather an ugly word," but it was one that he thought necessary
to distinguish utterances that do something (performative utterances) from
those that report on an already-existing state of affairs. If I say "I
apologize," or "I name this ship the Queen Elizabeth," or
"I bet you sixpence it will rain tomorrow," then "in saying what
I do, I actually perform the action" (Austin 1970, p. 235).33
Many everyday
utterances in financial markets are performative in Austin's sense. If someone
offers to buy from me, or to sell to me, a particular asset for a particular
price, and I say "done" or "agreed," then the deal is
agreed—at least if I am in a market, such as the Chicago futures exchanges, in
which a verbal agreement is treated as binding. But what might it mean for
economics, or a particular subset of it such as financial economics, to be
performative? Plainly, that is a far more complex matter than the analysis of
specific, individual utterances.
At least three
levels of the performativity of economics seem to me to be possible (figure
l.l).34 The first, weakest level is what might be called "generic
performativity." For an aspect of economics to be performative in this
sense
Performing Theory? 17
"generic" performativity: An
aspect of economics (a theory, model, concept, procedure, data set, etc.) is
used by participants in economic processes, regulators, etc.
"effective" performativity: The
practical use of an aspect of economics has an effect on economic processes.
"Barnesian" performativity:
Practical use of an aspect of economics makes economic processes more like
their depiction by economics.
counterperformativity: Practical use of an
aspect of economics makes economic processes less like their depiction by
economics.
Figure 1.1
The performativity of economics: a possible
classification. The depicted sizes of the subsets are arbitrary; I have not
attempted to estimate the prevalence of the different forms of performativity.
18 Chapter 1
means that it is used, not just by academic
economists, but in the "real world": by market participants, policy
makers, regulators, and so on. Instead of being external to economic processes,
the aspect of economics in question is "performed" in the generic
sense of being used in those processes. Whether this is so is, in principle, a
straightforward empirical matter: one simply observes whether economics is drawn
on in the processes in question. (In practice, of course, the available
sources—historical or current—may not be sufficient to allow one to be certain
how matters stand in this respect, and one must remember to look not just at
what participants say and write but also at whether the processes in question
involve procedures and material devices that incorporate economics.)
What is less
straightforward conceptually, and more complicated empirically, is to determine
what effect, if any, the use of economics has on the economic process in
question. The presence of such an effect is what is required for a stronger
meaning of "performativity": the subset of generic performativity
that one might call "effective performativity." For the use of a
theory, a model, a concept, a procedure, a data set, or some other aspect of
economics to count as effective performativity, the use must make a difference.
Perhaps it makes possible an economic process that would otherwise be
impossible, or perhaps a process involving use of the aspect of economics in
question differs in some significant way (has different features, different
outcomes, and so on) from what would take place if economics was not used.
Except in the
simplest cases, one cannot expect observation alone to reveal the effect of the
use of an aspect of economics. One cannot assume, just because one can observe
economics being used in an economic process, that the process is thereby
altered significantly. It might be that the use of economics is epiphenomenal—an
empty gloss on a process that would have had essentially the same outcomes
without it, as Mirowski and Nik-Khah (2004) in effect suggest was the case for
the celebrated use of "game theory" from economics in the auctions
of the communications spectrum in the United States.
Ideally, one
would like to be able directly to compare processes with and without use of the
aspect of economics in question. Such comparisons, however, are seldom entirely
straightforward: the relevant situations will typically differ not just in the
extent of the usage of economics but in other respects too. There will thus
often be an element of conjecture and an element of judgment in attributing
differences in outcome to the use of economics rather than to some other
factor.
Most intriguing
of all the varieties of the performativity of economics depicted in figure 1.1
are the two innermost subsets. There the use of economics is not simply having
effects on economic processes: those processes are
Performing Theory? 19
being altered in ways that bear on their
conformity to the aspect of economics in question. In the case of the use of
an economic model, for example, one possibility is that economic processes or
their outcomes are altered so that they better correspond to the model. Let me
call this possibility "Barnesian performativity," because the
sociologist Barry Barnes has emphasized (especially in a 1983 article and a
1988 book) the central role in social life of self-validating feedback loops.
(In earlier work, I called this type of performativity "Austin- ian."
That had the disadvantage of being read as invoking not sociology, which is
what I wanted to invoke, but linguistic philosophy.)35
As Barnes notes,
if an absolute monarch designates Robin Hood an "oudaw," then Robin is
an outlaw. Someone is a "leader" if "followers" regard him
or her as such. A metal disk, a piece of paper, or an electronic record is
"money" if, collectively, we treat it as a medium of exchange and a
store of value.36
The strong,
Barnesian sense of "performativity," in which the use of a model (or
some other aspect of economics) makes it "more true," raises the
possibility of its converse: that the effect of the practical use of a theory
or model may be to alter economic processes so that they conform less well to
the theory or model. Let me call this possibility—which is not explicit in
Callon's work— "counterperformativity."37 An aspect of
economics is being used in "real- world" processes, and the use is
having effects, but among those effects is that economic processes are being
altered in such a way that the empirical accuracy of the aspect of economics
in question is undermined.
"Barnesian
performativity" could be read as simply another term for Robert K.
Merton's famous notion of the "self-fulfilling prophecy" (1948), and
"counterperformativity" as another word for its less-well-known
converse, the self- negating prophecy. I have three reasons for preferring the
terminology I use here.
First, I want
the terminology to reflect the way in which the strongest senses of
"performativity" are subsets of a more general phenomenon: the
incorporation of economics into the infrastructures of markets.
Second, the
notion of "prophecy," whether self-fulfilling or self-negating, can
suggest that we are dealing only with beliefs and world views. While beliefs
about markets are clearly important, an aspect of economics that is incorporated
only into beliefs "in the heads" of economic actors may have a precarious
status. A form of incorporation that is in some senses deeper is incorporation
into algorithms, procedures, routines, and material devices.38 An
economic model that is incorporated into these can have effects even if those
who use them are skeptical of the model's virtues, unaware of its details, or
even ignorant of its very existence.
20 Chapter 1
Third, in Robert
K. Merton's original article on "the self-fulfilling prophecy," as in
much subsequent discussion, the notion carries the connotation of pathology:
an incorrect belief, or at least an arbitrary one, is made true by the effects
of its dissemination. It is emphatically not my intention to imply that in
respect to finance theory. For example, to say of Black-Scholes-Merton
option-pricing theory that it was "performative" in the Barnesian
sense is not to make the crude claim that any arbitrary formula for option
prices, if proposed by sufficiendy authoritative people, could have "made
itself true" by being adopted. Most such formulas could not do so, at
least other than temporarily.
Even if a
formula for option pricing had initially been adopted widely, it would soon
have ceased to hold sway if it led those using it systematically to lose money,
or if it gave rise to unconstrained opportunities for others to conduct
arbitrage. (Arbitrage is trading that exploits price discrepancies to make
riskless or low-risk profits.) Imagine, for example, that as a result of a
mistake in their algebra Black and Scholes had produced a formula for the value
of a call option that was half or double their actual formula (expression 2 in
appendix D), that no one noticed, and that the formula was then used widely to
price options. It would not have been a stable outcome: the sellers or buyers
of options would have incurred systematic losses, and attractive arbitrage
opportunities would have been created.
There was,
furthermore, much more to the Black-Scholes-Merton model than an equation that
could be solved to yield theoretical option prices. The model was an exemplar
(in the sense of Kuhn 1970) of a general methodology for pricing a derivative:
try to find a continuously adjusted portfolio of more basic assets that has the
same payoffs as the derivative. (Such a portfolio is called a "replicating
portfolio.") If one can do that, then one can argue that the price of the
derivative must equal the cost of the replicating portfolio, for otherwise
there is an arbitrage opportunity. Today it would be unusual to find the
Black-Scholes-Merton model being used directly as a guide to trading options:
in options exchanges, banks' trading rooms, and hedge funds, the model has been
adapted and altered in many ways. However, the model's "replicating
portfolio" methodology remains fundamental.
The methodology
offers not just "theoretical" prices but also a clear and systematic
account of the economic process determining those prices. This account altered
how economists conceived of a broad range of issues: the pricing not just of
derivatives but also of more "basic" securities, such as bonds, and
even the analysis of decisions outside of the sphere of finance that can be
seen as involving implicit options. It affected how market participants and
regulators thought about options, and it still does so, even if the phase of
the Barnesian performativity of the original Black-Scholes-Merton model has
passed.
Performing Theory? 21
One way of detecting the Barnesian
performativity of an aspect of economics such as a theory or a model is by
comparing market conditions and patterns of prices before and after its widespread
adoption. (By "market conditions" I mean matters such as the typical
level of transaction costs or the feasibility and expense of short sales.) If
those conditions or prices have changed toward greater conformity to the theory
or model, that is evidence consistent with Barnesian performativity. It does
not prove performativity, because the change could have taken place for reasons
other than the effects of the use of the theory or model. Unfortunately,
certainty in this respect tends to be elusive, but that is no reason to abandon
the inquiry. All it means is that, as with "effective"
performativity, we are dealing with a question of historical or social-science
causation on which evidence can throw light but which it would be naive to
expect to be resolved unambiguously.
Inquiring into
Barnesian performativity thus involves more than an examination of the extent,
the manner, and the general effects of the use of economics in economic
practice. In investigating market conditions and prices and in judging whether
they have moved toward (or away from) conformity to an aspect of economics, one
is not just examining economics and those who develop and use it; inevitably
one is also studying the "objects" that economics analyzes. That is
something that the field to which much of my work has belonged—the sociology of
scientific knowledge—has sometimes been reluctant to do.39
Certainly one
should not underestimate the complexity of judging whether patterns of market
prices, for example, have moved toward greater conformity with a model such as
Black-Scholes-Merton. One way of formulating the question is to examine the
extent to which the model's predictions are borne out. However, what a model
predicts is often not straightforward. The Black- Scholes-Merton model, for
example, yields an option price only after the characteristics of the option
and the values of the parameters of the Black-Scholes equation have been set.
One parameter, the volatility of the stock, is acknowledged not to be directly
observable, so there is no unique theoretical price to compare with
"actual" prices.
Furthermore,
"actual" or "real-world" market prices are complex
entities. As Koray Caliskan (2003, 2004) points out in a delightful
ethnographic discussion of cotton trading, markets abound with prices and
price quotations of many kinds. What gets reported as cotton's "world
price," for instance, is a complicated construction involving not only
averaging but also subjective adjustments.
22 Chapter 1
Difficulties
remain even if one restricts oneself to the prices at which transactions are
actually concluded. For example, the most thorough early empirical tests of
option-pricing models were conducted by the financial economist Mark Rubinstein
(see chapter 6). He obtained the Chicago Board Options Exchange's own
electronic records of transactions, so he did not have to rely on price
quotations or on closing prices, but he still faced problems. For instance, it
was common for options to trade at different prices when the price of the
underlying stock did not alter at all. In a typical case, "while the stock
price [of the Polaroid Corporation] apparently remained constant at 37-j
[$37.50], one July/40 call [option] contract was traded at 3\ [$3.25], eight at
3| [$3,375], and, one at 3i [$3.50], Will the true equilibrium option price
please stand up?" (Rubinstein 1985, p. 46540)
Thus, Rubinstein
had to analyze not "raw" prices of options, but weighted averages. He
also filtered out large numbers of price records that he regarded as problematic.
For example, he excluded any record that referred to either the first or the
last 1,000 seconds of the options exchange's trading day. He removed
transactions close to the start of the day because they often reflected the
"execution of limit orders41 held over from the previous
day." He eliminated those in the final minutes before the close of
trading because prices then were influenced by "trades to influence market
maker margin" (1985, p. 463)— in other words, the level of deposit that
had to be maintained in order to be allowed to continue holding a position.
Transactions
close to the start or the end of the day involved what Rubinstein called
"artificial pricing" (p. 463). Filtering them out from the analysis
was a perfecdy sensible procedure (Rubinstein had been a trader on an options
exchange and so had an insider's understanding of trading-floor behavior), but
embedded in the exclusion of what were often the periods of most frantic
trading activity was a view of the "natural" operations of markets.
The potentially
problematic nature of "real-world" prices is only an example of the
complexities of econometric testing: many of the points that historians and
sociologists of science have made about scientific experiment can also be made
about the testing of finance theory's models. As Callon's colleague Bruno
Latour (among many others) has pointed out, detailed attention to the active,
transformative processes by which scientific knowledge is constructed breaks
down the canonical view in which there is a "world" entirely distinct
from "language" and thus undermines standard notions of reference in
which "words" have discrete, observable "things" to which
they refer.42
Replication and
the reproducibility of results are at least as problematic in econometrics as
the sociologist Harry Collins has shown them to be in the natural sciences.43
A later test will often contradict an earlier one—see the
Performing Theory? 23
extensive lists of examples in Goldfarb's
1995 and 1997 papers. In that situation, there may be no a priori way of
knowing whether the original test was at fault, whether the new one is
incompetent, or whether the discrepancy is to be explained by historical and
geographical variation or other differences in the economic processes being
studied.
It is also the
case that, as was noted above in respect to volatility, what a finance-theory
model implies for a specific situation depends not on the model alone but also
on auxiliary assumptions about that situation. What is being tested, therefore,
is not the model in isolation but the model plus auxiliary assumptions, just as
is always the situation in scientific experiment. (This is the
"Duhem-Quine" thesis of the philosophy and sociology of science. See,
for example, Barnes 1982, pp. 73-76.) An empirical result that apparendy
falsifies a model can therefore be blamed on a fault in one of the auxiliary
assumptions.
For example,
many efforts were made empirically to test two developments in finance theory:
the Capital Asset Pricing Model and the efficient-market hypothesis. Normally
it was not possible to disentangle these entirely so that only one was being
tested at a time; typically the tests were of both the model and the hypothesis
simultaneously. Tests of market efficiency usually involved examining whether
investment strategies were available that systematically generated
"excess" risk-adjusted returns. A criterion for what constitutes an
"excess" return was thus needed, and in the early years of such
testing the Capital Asset Pricing Model was usually invoked as the criterion.44
When "anomalies" were found in the results of the tests, how to
interpret them was therefore debatable: were they cases of market inefficiency,
or evidence against the Capital Asset Pricing Model?
Conversely, central
to the Capital Asset Pricing Model was what the model posited about the returns
expected by investors on assets with different sensitivities to market
fluctuations, but typically no attempt was made to measure these expected
returns directiy—for example, by surveying investors. (The results of any such
survey would have been regarded as unreliable by most financial economists.)
Instead, in empirical tests of the Capital Asset Pricing Model, more easily
measurable after-the-fact realized returns were used as a proxy for expected
returns—a substitution that rested on an efficient-market,
rational-expectations view of the latter.45
Even something
as basic as the "cleaning" of price data to remove errors in data
entry can, in a sense, involve theory. The main original data source against
which finance theory's models were tested was the tapes of monthly stock
returns produced by the Center for Research in Security Prices at the University
of Chicago. An already-known (and in one sense a theoretical) feature
24 Chapter 1
of stock-price changes was used as the
basis for the computerized algorithm for detecting data-entry errors:
Rather than coding and punching all prices
twice and then resolving discrepancies manually, we found a better procedure.
We know that the change in the price of a stock during one month is very nearly
independent of its change during the next month. Therefore, if a price changes
a large amount from one date to a second date, and by a similar amount in the
opposite direction from the second date to a third, there is a reason to
believe that at the second date the price was misrecorded. A "large
change" was rather arbitrarily taken to mean a change in magnitude of more
than 10 per cent of the previous price plus a dollar. (Lorie 1965, p. 7)
Because of the
complexities of econometric testing, the extent of the "fit" between
a theoretical model and patterns of prices cannot be determined by simple
inspection. "There just isn't any easy way to test a theory," said
Fischer Black (1982, p. 32). Knowledge of whether patterns of prices have moved
toward greater conformity with a theory is the outcome of a difficult, and
often a contested, process. It is therefore tempting to set the issue aside,
and to abandon the strongest meanings of performativity (Barnesian
performativity and counterperformativity). However, to do that would involve
also abandoning a central question: Has finance theory helped to create the
world it posited—for example, a world that has been altered to conform better
to the theory's initially unrealistic assumptions?
Has the
practical use of finance theory (for example, as a guide to trading, or in the
design of the regulatory and other frameworks within which trading takes place)
altered market processes toward greater conformity to theory? If the answer to
that question is at least partially in the affirmative, we have identified a
process shaping the financial markets—and via those markets perhaps even the
wider economies and societies of high modernity—that has not received anything
like sufficient attention. If, on the other hand, the practical use of finance
theory sometimes undermines the market conditions, processes, and patterns of
prices that are posited by the theory, we may have found a source of danger
that it is easy to ignore or to underestimate if "reality" is conceived
of as existing entirely independently of its theoretical depiction.
As the economist
and economic policy maker Alan Blinder has pointed out, in many respects global
economies have in recent decades moved closer to the standard way in which
economists model them, with, for example, its assumption of
"single-minded concentration on profit maximization." Blinder suspects
that "economists.. . have bent reality (at least somewhat) to fit their
models" (2000, pp. 16, 18). The anthropologist Daniel Miller likewise
asserts that "economics has the authority to transform the world into its
own image" (1998, p. 196).
Performing Theory? 25
Whether Blinder
and Miller are right is a question this book seeks to answer, at least for one
area of economics. The question requires us to examine the strongest level of
performativity, despite the methodological difficulties it poses. The reader is
warned, however, that there are complexities in the judgment of the correspondence
of patterns of prices to models that are only touched on here. This is a study
of finance theory and of its relations to markets, not a study of financial
econometrics. I have done littie more than distinguish those issues about which
econometricians seem to agree (for example, the existence after 1987 of the
"volatility skew") from those on which there is no clear consensus.
If academic pursuits are not to be narrow,
they ought to seek to contribute to what Donald (now Deirdre) McGloskey called
the conversations of humankind. One such set of conversations, a very old one,46
is about markets. Those conversations are not always as free-flowing or as
civilized as they should be. This is pardy because of inequalities of wealth or
power and the desire for outcomes economically beneficial to particular sets of
participants, but it is also because those who come to those conversations
often bring strong, deeply felt preconceptions. Some are convinced that markets
are sources of human freedom and prosperity; others believe markets to be
damaging generators of alienation, exploitation, and impoverishment. Currently,
that divide tends to map onto a disciplinary one, with mainstream economists
approving profoundly of markets and with sociologists and anthropologists
frequendy manifesting deep, albeit often unexplicated, reservations about them.47
This book
plainly is not economics, although some of it is history of what eventually
became one of the most important branches of modern economics. Nor is it
economic sociology, at least as traditionally conceived, although it touches on
some of that field's concerns. Instead, it is intended in the first instance as
a contribution to "social studies of finance."48 The term
has a variety of possible meanings, but one way of describing the underlying
enterprise is as drawing on, and developing, the intellectual resources of the
social studies of science and technology in order to embark on a conversation
about the technicality of financial markets. Economic sociology, for example,
has been strong in its emphases on matters such as the embedding of markets in
cultures, in politics, and in networks of personal interconnections.49
It has traditionally been less concerned with the systematic forms of knowledge
deployed in markets or with their technological infrastructures,50
yet, if the social studies
26 Chapter 1
of science and the history and sociology of
technology are right, those too are social matters, and consequential ones.
"We have
taken science for realist painting," writes Bruno Latour, "imagining
that it made an exact copy of the world. The sciences do something else
entirely—paintings too, for that matter. Through successive stages they link us
to an aligned, transformed, constructed world." (1999, pp. 78-79) If
finance theory is one of Latour's sciences—and this book's conjecture is that
it is— then simply to praise it is not to add much to humanity's conversations
about markets, and simply to denounce it is to coarsen those conversations. To
try to understand how finance theory has "aligned, transformed [and] constructed"
its world—which is also everyone's world, the world of investment, savings,
pensions, growth, development, wealth, and poverty—may, in contrast,
contribute a little to conversations about markets.
Humanity's
conversations about markets are not just intellectual; they bear on the
question of the appropriate role for markets in our societies. Debates about
that role sometimes remind me of debates about technology in the 1960s and the
1970s. Technology was then often taken as either to be adulated or to be
condemned, and each of the apparent options frequendy involved an implicit view
of technological change as following an autonomous logic. The surrounding
culture could choose to conform to that logic or to reject its products, but
could not modify it fundamentally.
If the history
and sociology of technology of the last 25 years have had a single dominant
theme, it is that the view of technological change as following an autonomous
logic is wrong, and the stark choice between conformity and refusal that it
poses is an impoverished one. Technologies can develop in different ways
according to circumstances, the design of technical systems can reflect a
variety of priorities, and "users" frequendy reshape technical
systems in important ways. Ultimately, the development and the design of
technologies are political matters.51
A nuanced and
imaginative politics of technology is thus a better option than either
uncritical acceptance or downright rejection of technical change. An equivalent
approach to markets—one that is more nuanced and more specific than most
current ways of thinking about them and of acting in relation to them—is badly
needed. I do not claim to provide such an approach (that is a task beyond one
book and one author), but my hope for this book is that it helps to begin a
conversation with that aim in mind.
This book takes the form of a series of
historical narratives of the development of finance theory and of its
interaction with the modern financial
Performing Theory? 27
markets. Although I touch on what I think
would widely be agreed to be the theory's most salient achievements, I have not
attempted a comprehensive account of its history. I am even more selective in
my discussion of markets, focusing on developments that seem to me to be of
particular relevance from the viewpoint of the issues, especially those to do
with the performativity of economics, sketched in this chapter. Indeed, the
core of the book—chapters 5, 6, and 7—is in a sense a single, extended case
study of the development of option theory, of its impact on markets, and of the
empirical history of option pricing.
Since relevant,
accessible archival material for a book such as this is still sparse, the
book's main unpublished source is a set of more than 60 oral-history interviews
of the finance theorists and market participants listed in appendix H, and of a
number of others who do not wish their names to be disclosed. In the case of
the theorists, these interviews complement what can be gleaned from the
published literature of their field, and the interviews with practitioners
were crucial in helping me to disentangle complex matters such as the impact on
markets of option theory or the celebrated debacle of Long-Term Capital
Management. I was, however, also fortunate enough to be allowed access to
finance theory's most important archive: the papers of Fischer Black, held in
the Institute Archives at MIT.
Reasonably
comprehensive interview coverage of the most influential finance theorists was
possible.52 Plainly, no such comprehensive coverage is possible in
the case of the much larger and more heterogeneous body of people who have
played important roles in the development of modern financial markets, even in
a limited segment of those markets such as financial derivatives exchanges. My
interviewing of market participants was therefore much more ad hoc, and was
focused on episodes of specific interest like the emergence of modern
derivatives trading in Chicago. These interviews were supplemented by the use
of sources such as the trade press and by examination of econometric analyses.
In particular, I had the good fortune that the analysis of the prices of
options in the Chicago markets has become a locus classi- cus of modern
financial econometrics.
Oral-history
interviews have well-known disadvantages. In particular, interviewees'
memories of events, especially of specific events long in the past, may be
fallible, and they may wish a particular version of events to be accepted. In
consequence, I have tried to "triangulate" as much I can, checking
one interviewee's testimony against that of others and (where possible)
against the published record or econometric analyses of the markets they were
describing. In the case of Long-Term Capital Management, for example, I checked
for any "exculpatory" bias in insiders' views of the fund's 1998
crisis by interviewing others who had been active in the same markets at the
same time. The account
28 Chapter 1
of LTCM's crisis presented in chapter 8 was
also checked for its consistency with price movements in the relevant markets
in 1998 (see MacKenzie 2003b).
I have also had
the advantage of having previous historical and sociological work on finance theory
and financial markets to build on. Particularly worth singling out is Peter
Bernstein's history of finance theory, Capital Ideas (1992).53 Bernstein's
emphases differ from mine; for example, he does not address what I call
Barnesian performativity, and in regard to the theory's applications he is
concerned more with stock-portfolio management than with derivatives markets.
However, I owe a great debt to Bernstein, as will future historians of finance
theory.
Effectively the
only existing sociological analyses of the rise of modern finance theory are
those by Richard Wliidey (1986a,b). Although I disagree with him in some
respects (for example, I think he understates the tension between finance
theorists and practitioners), I have been influenced heavily, particularly in
chapter 3, by his analysis of the role of changes in the business schools of
American universities in creating a favorable environment for the development
of the new financial economics.
Although finance theory is a mathematical
domain, I have kept the book as non-mathematical as possible, banishing
equations to endnotes or appendixes. Finance theory's technical terminology
cannot be avoided entirely, but I have used it as sparingly as I can,
explaining it in the chapters and in a glossary. (The glossary also contains
explanations of relevant financial-market terms.) I hope the resultant account
will be accessible to readers with no background in economics or in the
financial markets, yet not too tediously simplistic for those with such
backgrounds.
Chapter 2
describes the shift in the United States in the 1950s and the 1960s from
descriptive scholarship in finance to the new analytical, mathematical,
economics-based approach. The first of the three strands in my discussion is
the work of Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller, whose "irrelevance"
propositions were the most explicit challenge to the older approach. The
second strand is Harry Markowitz's work on the selection of optimal investment
portfolios and its development by William Sharpe into the Capital Asset
Pricing Model, finance theory's canonical account of the way stock prices
reflect a tradeoff between expected return and risk (in the sense of
sensitivity to overall market fluctuations). The third strand is random-walk
models of stock-price changes and the eventual culmination of those models in
the efficient-market hypothesis. It is easy to imagine that by diligent study
one can find patterns in
Performing Theory? 29
stock-price changes that permit profitable
prediction, but random-walk models denied the existence of such patterns. The
efficient-market hypothesis generalized this denial into the assertion that
prices in mature capital markets always, and effectively instantaneously, take
into account all available price-relevant information, including not only the
record of previous price changes but also economic information about
corporations of the kind that stock analysts pore over. Since all available
information is already incorporated into prices, Eugene Fama and other
efficient-market theorists argued, it is not possible to make systematic,
risk-adjusted, excess profits on the basis of it. Stock prices are moved by new
information, but by virtue of being new such information is unpredictable and
thus "random."
Chapter 3
broadens the discussion from the specific ideas of finance theory discussed in
chapter 2. It discusses how the new finance scholarship developed into the
distinct academic subfield of financial economics. (I use the term
"financial economics" to include not only finance theory but also
efforts to test theories and more general empirical and econometric work on
finance.) The chapter also describes the ambivalent and frequendy hostile
reaction by market practitioners to finance theory. The theory could be drawn
on to subject the performance of investment managers to a disconcerting
mathematical gaze, and its central tenet-—the efficient-market
hypothesis—suggested that practitioners' beliefs about markets were often
mistaken, that many of their activities were pointless, and that often their
advice was of no real benefit to their clients.
Amidst the
general hostility, however, there were pockets of practitioners who saw merits
in finance theory. Indeed, some found in it ideas with which they could make
money—for example, by calculating and selling values of the Capital Asset
Pricing Model's most important parameter, beta, which indicates the extent to
which the returns on a stock or some other financial asset are sensitive to
fluctuations in the market as a whole.
The most
significant early practical innovation to emerge from financial economics was
the index fund. If, as financial economics suggested, managers' stock
selections failed systematically to outperform broad market indices such as the
S&P 500, then why not simply invest in the stocks that made up the index in
such a way that the performance of one's portfolio would automatically track
the level of the index? Such an index fund, its proponents suggested, would
perform as well as the portfolios chosen by traditional managers, and it would
not be hampered by the high fees those managers charged.
Index funds,
first launched in the early 1970s, have become a major feature of modern stock
markets. Rooted in financial economics, they can be seen as one way in which
that field has been performed in the markets. There is even
30 Chapter 1
a Barnesian strand to this performance: the
popularity of indexing has made a prediction of the Capital Asset Pricing Model
that troubled Sharpe (the prediction that all investors would hold the same
portfolio of risky assets, the market itself) less untrue.
Chapter 4
discusses the empirical testing of the strands of finance theory described in
chapter 2 and begins to broaden the discussion of performativity. Given the
difficulties of econometric testing discussed above, it is not surprising that
it proving or disproving die empirical validity of finance theory's models
turned out to be difficult. It was hard to construct empirically testable
versions of the Modigliani-Miller propositions, and even the apparently direcdy
testable Capital Asset Pricing Model was argued not to be testable at all.
Central to the model was the "market portfolio" of all risky assets,
but this, the financial economist Richard Roll argued, is not the same as the
S&P 500 index or even the entire stock market; its true composition is
unknown.
Tests of the
efficient-market hypothesis by those who generally supported it led to the
identification of "anomalies"—phenomena apparendy at variance with
the hypothesis—but the "failed" tests frequendy led to practical
action that had performative effects. The identification of anomalies gave rise
to investment strategies to exploit them, and the pursuit of those strategies
seems often to have reduced or eliminated the anomalies.
Chapter 4 also
describes a path not taken by mainstream finance theory. In what became the
standard model of changes in stocks' prices, the statistical distribution of
changes in the natural logarithms of stock prices is the normal
distribution—the canonical "bell-shaped" curve of statistical theory.
This "log- normal" model is an example of what the mathematician and
chaos theorist Benoit Mandelbrot calls "mild" randomness: the tails
of the normal distribution, representing the probabilities of extreme events,
are "thin." In the 1960s, Mandelbrot put forward a different model:
one in which the tails are so "fat" that the standard statistical
measure of a distribution's spread (the standard deviation or its square, the variance)
is infinite.
Mandelbrot's
model was of "wild" randomness: periods of limited price fluctuation
can be interrupted unpredictably by huge changes. The model initially
attracted considerable interest within financial economics (Eugene Fama, in
whose work the efficient-market hypothesis crystallized, was the most prominent
enthusiast for it), but, as chapter 4 describes, it also met fierce opposition
because it undermined standard statistical procedures. In the words of one
critic quoted in chapter 4, adopting Mandelbrot's model meant "consigning
centuries of work to the ash pile."
Chapter 5 deals
with how much options ought to cost, an apparently minor and esoteric problem
in finance theory that nevertheless gave rise to a model
Performing Theory? 31
that some see as "the biggest idea in
economics of the century" (Fama interview). In the period in which much
of option theory was developed, options were "specialized and relatively
unimportant financial securities" (Merton 1973a, p. 141) and were stigmatized
by being associated widely with gambling and with market manipulation. However,
option pricing seemed a tantalizingly straightforward "normal
science" problem, in the terminology of Kuhn (1970). With an established
model (the log-normal model) of how stock prices fluctuate, it did not seem
too difficult to work out how much an option on that stock should cost.
Options—and a particular form of option called a "warrant"— also
offered opportunities to perform arbitrage (that is, to make low-risk profits
from price discrepancies), and that was another reason for interest in the
problem.
Finding a
satisfactory solution to the problem of option pricing turned out to be harder
than it looked. In chapter 5 the development of the eventually successful
solution by Fischer Black and Myron Scholes is contrasted with the work of
Edward Thorp, a mathematician famous for showing how to beat the house at
blackjack by "card counting" (that is, keeping a careful, systematic
mental record of the cards that have been played). Black and Scholes were
trying to solve a theoretical problem by applying the Capital Asset Pricing
Model; Thorp was working on option pricing without use of the CAPM, and his
chief goal was identifying arbitrage opportunities.
The work by
Black and Scholes, published in 1973, unleashed a torrent of further
theoretical innovation. As they suggested, many other securities that on the
surface did not look like options nevertheless had option-like features and so
could be valued following the same approach, and, as noted above, the approach
was also extended to the analysis of decisions as well as of securities. Among
other contributors to option theory were Robert C. Merton and his mentor Paul
Samuelson. They believed that the original version of the Capital Asset Pricing
Model rested on objectionable assumptions.
Merton developed
an approach to option pricing that led to the same equation that Black and
Scholes had derived but which rested on different foundations. Merton's
derivation did not invoke the Capital Asset Pricing Model, although it too
involved assumptions about markets that were markedly at odds with the actual
conditions of the early 1970s. Other contributions to option theory quickly
followed, and their level of mathematical sophistication rapidly grew. Merton
had introduced the use of rigorous stochastic calculus, and by the end of the
1970s the problem of derivatives pricing was reformulated in terms of
martingale theory, an advanced area of "pure mathematics." The
mathematical repertoire of Wall Street's quantitative finance specialists
(first called "rocket scientists," then "quants") was being
assembled.54
32 Chapter 1
Chapter 6 turns
to the Chicago derivatives markets, the most important early site in which
option theory was performed. It was above all in Chicago that the apparently
quite unrealistic Black-Scholes-Merton model began to gain verisimilitude.
(Black and Scholes took on board enough of Merton's derivation to justify the
joint attachment all three names to the form eventually taken by the model.)
The chapter traces how the Chicago financial derivatives exchanges emerged,
how economics was deployed to provide the proposals for these exchanges with
legitimacy in the face of suspicion that derivatives were dangerous wagers on
price movements, and how the establishment of the new markets required
collective action on the part of the memberships of the parent agricultural
futures exchanges, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Board of Trade. The
chapter emphasizes the intensely bodily experience of trading in Chicago's
apparently chaotic open-outcry pits, yet also notes how closely patterns of
derivatives prices in those pits came to resemble those posited by the theory.
Was the theory's
empirical success performative, and if so in what sense? Did "theory"
and "reality" mesh because the former discovered preexisting
pattern's in the latter, or was "reality" transformed by the
performance of theory? What made the Black-Scholes-Merton model, apparently an
abstract, unrealistic professors' product, attractive to hard-bitten Chicago
floor traders? When first formulated, the Black-Scholes equation was only an
approximate fit to patterns of options prices. During the 1970s, however, the
fit improved rapidly. Two processes seem to have been involved: market
conditions began to change (albeit in many respects slowly) in ways that made
the Black-Scholes- Merton model's assumptions more realistic; and, crucially,
the model was employed in arbitrage, in particular in an arbitrage called "spreading,"
in which it was used to identify options that were cheap, or expensive,
relative to each other.
Given the above
discussion of econometric testing, it is worth remarking that a trader using
spreading would have been exploiting—and thus reducing—precisely the
discrepancies in options prices that were the focus of the most sophisticated
econometric testing of the Black-Scholes-Merton model in this period. (As has
been noted, this testing was conducted by the financial economist Mark
Rubinstein.) It therefore seems plausible that the use of the model in
spreading did more than add generally to its verisimilitude; spreading may
have had a direct effect on specific features of price patterns examined in
the model's econometric tests.
"Truth"
did emerge—the fit between the Black-Scholes-Merton model and the Chicago
option prices of 1976-1978 was good, by social-science standards,
Performing Theory? 33
on Rubinstein's tests—but it inhered in the
process as a whole; it was not simply a case of correspondence between the
model and an unaltered external reality. Knowledge, according to Latour,
"does not reside in the face-to-face confrontation of a mind with an
object. .. . The word 'reference' designates the quality of the chain in its
entirety. ... Truth-value circulates." (1999, p. 69, emphases removed) The
Black-Scholes-Merton model itself became a part of the chain by which its fit
to "reality" was secured, or so chapter 6 conjectures.
"I have
conceived of a society," writes Barnes, "as a distribution of self-
referring knowledge substantially confirmed by the practice it sustains"
(1988, p. 166). The Black-Scholes-Merton model informed practices such as
spreading, and those practices in their turn helped to create patterns of
prices of which the model was a good empirical description. In that sense, the
performativity of the model was indeed Barnesian.
The already
reasonably close fit between the Black-Scholes-Merton model and Chicago
stock-option prices became even better for index options, once such options,
and also futures on stock-market indices, were introduced in the early 1980s.
However, perhaps the Black-Scholes-Merton model succeeded because it was simply
the right way to price options, but market participants learned that only
slowly, with their markets only gradually becoming efficient? If that were so,
"Barnesian performativity" would be an empty gloss on a process that
could better be described in simpler, more conventional terms.
In chapter 7,
however, I draw on the econometric literature on option pricing to note that
after the 1987 crash the fit between the Black-Scholes- Merton model and
patterns of market prices deteriorated markedly. A "volatility skew"
or "smile" at odds with Black-Scholes emerged, and it seems to be
durable; it has not subsequendy diminished or vanished. Option theory has left
its permanent imprint on the options markets: the theory is embedded in how
participants talk and in technical devices that are essential to their markets.
But what is performed in patterns of prices in those markets is no longer
classic option-pricing theory.
The volatility
skew thus reveals the historicity of economics, at least of the particular form
of economics examined here. The U.S. markets priced options one way before 1987
and have priced them differendy since, and the change was driven by a
historical event: the 1987 crash. Chapter 7 also inquires into the mechanisms
of that crash, focusing on the possible role in it of "portfolio
insurance," a technique for setting a "floor" below which the
value of an investment portfolio will not fall. Since portfolio insurance was
an application of option theory, this raises the issue of
counterperformativity: perhaps the fit between option theory and reality was
ended by an event in which one of its
34 Chapter 1
own applications was implicated?
Unfortunately from the viewpoint of analytical neatness, however, it seems
impossible to determine how large a role portfolio insurance played in
exacerbating the crash.
Chapter 8 turns
to an episode with echoes of 1987: the 1998 crisis surrounding the hedge fund
Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM). Because the partners who ran the fund
included the finance-theory Nobel laureates Robert C. Merton and Myron Scholes,
its near-failure (it was re-capitalized by a group of the world's leading
banks) has often been blamed on blind faith in finance theory's models and has
been seen as suggesting fatal flaws in those models. Much of the commentary on
LTCM has been dismissive, and some of it has included personal attacks on those
who were involved. Indeed, the tone of much of the commentary is an example of
the coarsening of the "conversations" about markets referred to
above.
Merton, Scholes,
and the other partners in LTCM were well aware of the status of finance theory's
models as engines of inquiry rather than exact reproductions of markets, and
the details of the models used by LTCM were often far less critical to its
activities than is commonly imagined. The episode is interesting from the
viewpoint of the relationship between models and "reality," but not
by way of the banal observation that the former are imperfect approximations
to the latter.
What is crucial
is that LTCM conducted arbitrage, the central mechanism invoked by finance
theory. To be sure, there are differences between the "arbitrage"
that theory posits and arbitrage as market practice. However, some of what LTCM
did was quite close to the paradigmatic arbitrages of finance theory. Aspects
of its trading were similar to the arbitrage invoked in Modigliani and Miller's
classic proof, and LTCM's option-market activities resembled the arbitrage that
imposes Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing.
One way to
pursue a better understanding of the relationship between financial models and
"reality" is by means of empirical research on arbitrage as market
practice, and the case of LTCM is of interest from that viewpoint. A social
process—imitation—was at the heart of LTCM's crisis. The hedge fund and its
predecessor group of bond-market arbitrageurs, led by LTCM's founder John
Meriwether at the investment bank Salomon Brothers, were extremely successful.
That success led others to begin similar trading, to devote more capital to it,
or (in the case of mortgage-backed securities) even to adjust the models they
were using in order to bring them into harmony with the features that they
inferred the model being used by Meriwether's group must possess.
The eventual
result was what chapter 8 calls a "superportfolio": a large, unstable
structure of partially overlapping arbitrage positions. An event that
Performing Theory? 35
was in itself less than cataclysmic—the
Russian government's default on its ruble-denominated bonds on August 17,
1998—caused that superportfolio to begin to unravel. Arbitrageurs who suffered
losses in Russia had to begin selling other assets in the superportfolio; in an
increasingly illiquid market, those sales caused prices to move sharply against
the holders of the superportfolio, forcing further sales; and so on. Finally,
in September 1998, LTCM itself became the subject of a self-fulfilling prophecy
of failure strikingly similar to the classic example of such a process given in
1948 by Robert K. Merton.
Chapter 9, the
book's conclusion, discusses the model-building epistemic culture of finance
theory, noting in particular the field's ambivalent attitude to the empirical
adequacy of its models, an ambivalence that can be seen not only in what
theorists say on the topic but also in the practical actions they take in
markets. The chapter draws together the threads of the book's investigation of
performativity, focusing especially on the extent to which finance theory
brought into being that of which it spoke. A number of broader issues are then
discussed, including "behavioral finance," which draws on work in
psychology on biases in human decision making to contest orthodox finance's
claims of market efficiency. This chapter pays particular attention to
arbitrage, which is pivotal both in market practice and in the relations among
orthodox finance, behavioral finance, and social studies of finance. The book
ends by returning to the analogy between markets and technologies, and to the
need for an informed politics of market design analogous to the politics of
technology.