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Tyler Cowen
Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real world problems. Learn more@mercatus.org for a full transcript of every conversation enhanced with helpful links, visit conversationswithtyler.com hello everyone and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm chatting with Andrew Ross Sorkin. He's an award winning journalist for the New York Times and a co anchor at Squawkbox, CNBC's signature morning program. He's also founder and editor at large of DealBook, published by the New York Times. He's the best selling author of Too Big to Fail, co producer of a film adaptation of the same, nominated for 11 Emmy awards and he is also co creator of the the drama series Billions on Showtime. But most importantly, he has a new book out, 1929 Inside the Greatest Crash in History and how it Shattered a Nation. Andrew, welcome.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Thank you so much for having me. It's a privilege.
Tyler Cowen
The 1929 stock prices right before the crash, were they really a bubble? Doesn't America have an amazing century to come? And arguably those prices were too low. And the so called speculators or the heroes of this story.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh goodness, what a place to start. You know, yes and no. In some ways so many of these companies clearly represented the future. You know, you think about an RCA and radio and the future of radio and what that represented. But you know, three years later I think RCA was sitting at $3 and on a split adjusted basis had been up in, you know, multi hundred dollars. So yes, that you could argue that they were betting on a future that truly was, you know, better than people thought. But you know, the chasm between 1929 and frankly, you know, the end of World War II was a long and tortured period. No, sure.
Tyler Cowen
But if we look at 30 year returns, we find in American history, like any 30 year period, the stocks do quite well, 6 to 7%. And most of the gains come just in a few of the years in the 30 year period that seems to be the case. Even if you bought at the peak in 1929, by 1959 you would have had a real return something like 6%. A lot of the gains coming later, but that's not unusual. And even then, like World War II, that it was so bad seems like a super unlucky event. So ex ante, you might have expected something even better.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
No, look, for sure it has paid to be a professional optimist, a professional speculator if you will, way more over the course of the last hundred years than it has ever paid to be a professional Cassandra, or professional skeptic, no doubt. The question is what the time horizon is always. And so if you are looking out 30 years, Tyler, you're 100% right. If you're looking at five years or 18 months or two years or even a decade, at least in the context of 1929, you'd look wrong. By the way, interestingly, in 1928, Charles Merrill, who had founded Merrill lynch, was telling people to get out of the stock market. Why? And by the way, some people thought he was brilliant in that he, you know, all of a sudden, the crash happens in 1929. But the truth is, between the beginning of 1928, when he said this, and September of 1929, the stock market was up like, 90%. So you would look at what he said and say what a mistake that was.
Tyler Cowen
But as you point out in the book, people like Irving Fisher, also Herbert Hoover, they said the lower later prices were the ones that were wrong. No one was denying prices had fallen. I call them the negative Nellies, the people who get upset. They're upset for reasons that aren't good enough. Why not say the speculators were basically right? They were the good guys. The negative Nellies were the problem. When Fisher and Hoover criticized them, said, we need more confidence that basically Fisher and Hoover were correct, even though nowadays it's just standard practice to dump on them.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, look, I actually have more sympathy and empathy for Herbert Hoover than I think most do. But I think if you were looking in that moment at some of the policy choices that he made, many of which I would argue were mistaken and actually hastened and made things worse. I mean, to me, the crash of 29 was really the first domino of then a series of dominoes that led to the Great Depression. It wasn't that the crash itself was somehow a straight line. It was a series of decisions that were made, in some cases that weren't made by Herbert Hoover, by the Federal Reserve, by a whole bunch of people in Washington and elsewhere, that that led to ultimately unemployment of, you know, 25% in 1932 and, you know, 9,000 banks, I think, by 1933, failing.
Tyler Cowen
Sure. But it's one thing to say Hoover made some policy mistakes. Clearly true. Big, big, bad ones. But it doesn't mean Hoover was wrong in saying that the low prices were caused by too much worry. It seems that the Great Depression was as bad and as international as it was, but was quite unusual and surprising that World War II was so catastrophic was quite unusual and surprising. And that ex ante Hoover on that particular point nonetheless, was mostly correct.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, but the question, and I think about this in terms of narrative and people talk about story stocks. You know, he, in the 19, 19, 30, 1931, 1932, had this view that he could almost jawbone the American public to believe that he thought that this was a psychological problem and that if he could just tell people to put a smile on their face, that somehow they would put a smile on their face and that they would become believers. And I think that's a very hard thing to persuade an entire country of in these kind of moments. And then when you marry that concept of trying to persuade people to be happy when they're not happy with some poor policy choices, it becomes very difficult. By the way, I think we're living with this in the last couple of years. There was a period of time where inflation was super high. And we had a president, President Biden, who used to tell people all the time, you know, don't worry about that. You shouldn't be thinking about that inflation. People would say, what are you talking about? I feel it. You can tell me all day long that things are better than it really, than they really are, but I'm the one living with these costs. And I think that's very similar in some ways to what people were feeling, at least back then.
Tyler Cowen
If we look back to 2007 or 2006, can't we now today say in most parts of the country there was not a housing bubble? Like the high prices were basically correct, maybe a smidgen ahead of their time, but they've come back. And then some. Most parts of America, maybe not every single part. And again, the people who said there was a housing bubble, they seemed so wise at the time, people. But now they're just wrong. And that's not even having to wait 30 years.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, yes and no, in that so much of those prices were being inflated with debt. I would argue to you, and I would say that that was, you know, if, if the 2008 financial crisis was a function of too much leverage and debt in the system, that effectively brought forward this remarkable growth. A somewhat similar story was taking place in the 1920s, both in terms of the euphoria around the technology, whether it was automobiles or telecommunications or radio, but all that was powered by leverage. And in particular back then, people buying stock on margin. Right. And it's the leverage that allows these prices to get ahead of themselves in some ways, even if they are accurate over the Longer term. And this gets to a liquidity story.
Tyler Cowen
But surely it's begging the question to say that the debt is inflating the prices if the homes really are going to be worth much more to borrow to buy a house is exactly the thing you ought to do, at least if you don't have to sell the next year. And the people who borrowed money were the right ones, the negative Nellies who panicked in 2008, 2009, they were the wrong ones, they got the prices wrong. Still seems true to me.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Let me try something out because I feel like I may be losing this debate with you, but I'm going to try. So if you go back to 1929 and the parallel to 2008 is actually, I think apartment it wasn't that the people were selling their stocks because out of panic or fear, that's not what was happening. They were selling the stocks because they had taken out too much money and were at too much leverage. And so when stocks fell by November 13th of 1929 by 50% from their high, it wasn't just that the equity value had dropped by 50, it was that they had, you know, they were levered 10 to 1 and the bank had called them and said, excuse me, you need to pay us. And therefore they had to liquidate not just their stocks, but oftentimes their homes. And a very similar kind of scenario played out in some ways in 2008 with the subprime mortgage and loans, because people's homes were underwater, they didn't have enough money to pay the mortgages. I mean, I think that again, leverage plays a very unique role in all this. So the prices may ultimately be right in sort of a long term way. But how you get to those prices and how people could afford to even pay them the first time around can undermine the value in these temporary moments.
Tyler Cowen
There's no doubt particular people were too levered, say in the 20s, but the US economy as a whole, it seems was less levered then than it was in most of the post war era. I've looked for different estimates of total debt as a percentage of gdp. I'm not sure any of these are reliable, but I came up with something like 165% government, private, corporate, everything, which is higher than average for that time, but not crazy high. But again, certainly particular people made big mistakes, as is true all the time, no question.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Look, I think today you look at the amount of debt that consumers have taken on, that the government's taken on. It's. I mean, it's just Wild on a relative basis to what was happening in 1929. But I think some of that individual basis drove so much of what was happening in the economy and the sort of Roaring twenties ethos that it really became almost a generational shock for those ordinary Americans that had played the stock market for the first time and lost. I mean, by the way, this is not a, this is one anecdote. It's not in the book, but it's a personal one. My grandfather happened to be a messenger boy down there in October of 1929, as it happens, with his brother, who was 16 years old. And they watched people, literally they watched a person, they used to tell us the story jump out of a window. I believe in. This is late October, early November of 29, and my grandfather lived 91 years and never bought a share of stock his entire life because of that. And now you could say that that's just one story and that all of these are individual stories. But I think there was a lot of people who were so scarred by that period of time that it actually did change the trajectory to some degree of even how investments were made, at least for some period of time at that point.
Tyler Cowen
Why do you think public utility shares played such a big role in both the run up and the crash? Is that a sign that it had to do with interest rates or it means something else or.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
It's a good question. And I. The truth is, I don't have a great answer for you. To some degree, I wonder whether they were pushed up in large part because people thought that they were reliable. Sort of, they were utilities. That's what people thought that they were at a time when everything else was sort of go, go, and therefore they were inflated at the same time.
Tyler Cowen
During the stock run up in the 20s, should the Fed have had a different interest rate policy? You know, should they have raised rates to supposedly dampen the speculative fervor or.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, so this to me is so interesting and I so want to hear what you think about this. I actually was thinking about you at one point when I was writing this book, because if you go back and read the diaries of some of the board members of the Fed during this period, two things became apparent. One is they were scarred by what they did in 1920, 21, because they had raised interest rates and they had been blamed for effectively upending the market and the economy briefly, of course, it came back actually quite quickly. But they were so new. The Fed had just been created in 1913. They used to sometimes call it a, quote, experiment it was still an experiment to some of them that I think that they were very anxious about the political ramifications. You know, Benjamin Strong, who was no longer alive by 1929, he passed away in 1928. He used to write back in 1925 about the possibility of them getting hauled up in front of Congress and what that would mean if they did something that effectively turned the economy over. So here we are in the spring of 1929. They know that speculation is getting out of control. They desperately want to tamp it down. And there's a battle going on about whether to raise interest rates and buy how much. But to the extent that they were talking about that, the view, I think, was that they would have to raise them so much that they were almost pretty much convinced themselves that to really tamp speculation down, you have to raise interest rates so much that you by default would tip the economy. And they didn't have the courage to do that.
Tyler Cowen
If I had been alive back then, I would have agreed with those people, correctly or not. But I think that's a pretty good argument. And the notion that 1920-21 saw such a quick recovery, again, one would have been wrong. But the rational thing to have expected would be once again the same. It's like, oh, let this crash, whatever, we'll come back in a year or two. Now, ex post, you can always say exactly how it should have gone, but ex ante, that would have been my reasoning.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
That may be, but I think there's always two issues in a crisis. It's can you prevent the crisis on the front end, and then what do you do once you're in a crisis on the back end? And so it's interesting that not only did they not choose to try to do something to prevent it demonstrably on the front end, and maybe you would have been very rational to have to chose not to do anything. But on the back end, when there was a debate about, you know, could you lower interest rates, flood the system with money, obviously the gold standard comes into play there and becomes very complicated. But there was obviously discussions about moving off of that. And that would have ultimately been the right thing to do and probably would have been the right thing to do earlier than they did. And for the most part, they sat on their hands. The good news is Ben Bernanke, I think, learned a lot of these lessons when he was doing his PhD at Princeton and took some of those lessons into the 2008 financial crisis, where then he did decide to flood the system with money and While politically it might have been a problem insofar as I think there's a lot of questions about bailouts and what the Fed did in that context, I think on a practical economic basis, it worked.
Tyler Cowen
I think two things I would have done is have something like deposit insurance to begin with and then do what Sweden did and get off the gold standard as quickly as is necessary. And then I think it would have been quite a mild downturn had one done those two things. And the Fed shouldn't have to be worrying about what's the right interest rate, because they don't know, just like they don't know now. Right. They cut rates again, as we're speaking, what it was yesterday. Some people think there's speculative fervor in the stock market. This is debatable, but it might be true. And they're cutting rates. I don't think they know.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
But what about. I'll just go back to 1929 for a second. In terms of, you know, had there been bank capital requirements, for example, that would have changed some of this dynamic. Had there been, you know, restrictions on margin loans and maybe the amount of leverage people could capture. I mean, people were walking into brokerage houses all over the country, you know, which had sprung up like Starbucks on the corners, and. And you'd give them a dollar and they'd give you $10. And I always wondered to myself, had somebody just stood up and said, we're not doing that anymore. Two to one, three to one, we're good with that. After that, this is not allowed. There are things, you know, by the way, Carter Glass, you know, in this book, he's trying to impose a tax on trades. I'm not saying any or all of these things would have prevented it, but possibly there were measures you could have taken, and for lots of reasons, obviously they weren't.
Tyler Cowen
But it's hard to know how much to restrict credit, especially in a time when people are realizing the future will be much wealthier, because then borrowing makes sense. I've had plenty of mortgages on houses where, you know, the value of the debt was relatively high compared to my academic income. But I thought, well, my career will get better. It did. It worked out. I might have been wrong, but simply with deposit insurance or something like that, the money supply doesn't collapse in the sense that, you know, Friedman pointed his finger at and you probably have a recession, but I just think you get through it and the exchange rate floats. You have no international transmission of deflationary pressures. And again, things are fine. And you Leave the credit market alone. I'm not opposed to bank capital requirements, but I don't know how much capital these small, often non branched banks could have raised in that environment. So I don't think that's the best answer.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
So interestingly, you know, Carter, Glass and Hoover, interestingly, and by the way, even Roosevelt did not want to implement the fdic. This idea of deposit insurance was super unpopular, both Republican and Democrats, because they believed that it was going to effectively allow banks to almost become too big to fail in the context that you would basically be supporting everybody. And those that were weaker were going to have the same kind of support that the strong banks had. The other thing I was going to mention is we all live with debt today as if it's like it's water. It's part of our system. You know, prior to 1920, 1919, it was a moral sin for many Americans to take on debt. People didn't do that. You were sort of the dregs of the universe if you were a debt holder. And that really shifted, I think in 1919 when John Rascob, who was running General Motors at the time, wanted more people to buy cars. And he said, how are we going to get people to buy more cars? We're going to lend them the money to buy the cars. And that really sort of shifted the mindset around debt. That's why I think this whole period in the 1920s is such a remarkable decade, because it really was a shift in the way we did everything that in so many ways actually represents how we live today.
Tyler Cowen
And keep in mind, when I say something like deposit insurance, I mean that quite literally. So quite late into the 20th century, a lot of European nations, they don't have formal deposit insurance. They have the equivalent of it through different kinds of bank bailouts. They make sure depositors are made whole. But the kind of explicit numerical commitment that the FDIC made, say even Germany thought was a bad idea until, you know, relatively recently. So Roosevelt was not as crazy as he sounded. But if you simply have some kind of bank lending and recapitalization programs so the money supply doesn't go bust, that would have been good enough, whether or not it's exactly the fdic, at least in my opinion. How is it that you were influenced by Alex Tabarrok on Glass Steagall? I saw that in the notes to your book. Alex and I are co bloggers, of course. But I'm curious what the exact transmission is.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
The transmission was that as I was really trying to get underneath the construction of The Glass Steagall Bill. This is the bill that was passed in 1933 to effectively break up the banks, right, the casino side of the bank from the commercial side of the bank. This is what ultimately leads, for example, JP Morgan to spin off one of its units to become what turns out to be Morgan Stanley in 1935. I wanted to really understand how that bill was constructed. And, you know, you would often hear from people like Elizabeth Warren and others about this bill in 2008, which of course was sort of upended in the Clinton administration being responsible for the fact that we even had a crisis. And so I was trying to really get under the covers of that story and the story of Carter Glass. And as I was doing that, I was fascinated to learn that the Glass Steagall Bill was not as pure as I think most people in the public thought it really was. It was not that he, unto himself had decided against that this bill was going to look very much like the bill that was put in place in 1933. In fact, to some degree, the bill was as corrupted as ever. Parts of the bill were ultimately written by effectively a member of the Rockefeller family who owned Chase. And it was done, in large part to shiv, if you will, J.P. morgan, its competitor. And he, your fellow blogger, did some remarkable work and wrote a paper about a bit of this. And it turned out to be a fabulous treasure map for me. As I went back to try to excavate some of the archival material, letters and other things to really get underneath this, it actually led me to find some fascinating stories about the fact that Carter Glass was not really interested in breaking up banks like JP Morgan at all. And in fact had sided so dearly with JP Morgan and some people thought that he was in the pocket of the bankers. In fact, the whole Glass Steagall act
Tyler Cowen
just seems like a big mistake to me. You know, there's that paper by Raghu Rajan. I think it's 1994 with Krosner where they show the whole conflict of interest story was never supported by the data. It was basically imagined. They ran this with controls. There's another later paper by Krosner and, and Raghu that show the same. I mean, shouldn't we just say that was a bad idea based on mistakes?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, look, I have never been convinced by the argument that Glass Steagall somehow saved us. Either saved the banking system or would have saved the banking system in 2008 either. I mean, when you go back and look at the banks that failed first in 2008, Lehman Brothers, bear Stearns, none of them would have come under the Glass Steagall bill to begin with. Now, maybe later down the domino line, when you start to think of Citigroup and Bank of America and some of the others that ran into trouble, you could argue that Glass Steagall might have made things marginally better. But I never took the position as a reporter writing this and analyzing this at that time. I remember actually getting into a great debate with Elizabeth Warren about this very topic.
Tyler Cowen
I have a few general questions about the 1920s. Obviously you did an enormous amount of work for this book, putting aside the Great Crash and the focus of your book, but what is it you Learned about the 1920s more generally that most surprised you? Because you learn all this collateral information when you write a book like this, right?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
So many things. The book turned into a bit of a love letter to New York in terms of the architecture of New York. I don't think I appreciated just how many buildings went up in New York and how they were constructed and what happened that fascinated me. I think the story of John Raskob actually, who is to me the Elon Musk of his time. Somebody who ran General Motors, became a super influential investor. He was a philosopher king that everybody listened to at every given moment. He ultimately constructs the Empire State Building, which is probably the equivalent of SpaceX at that time. He had written a paper about creating a five day workweek back in 1929, in November, as all of this is happening, not because he wanted to people to work less and be nice to them, because he thought there was an economic argument that if people didn't have to work on Saturdays, more people would buy cars and gardening equipment and do all sorts of things on the weekends and buy different outfits and clothing. And then I would argue actually his role in taking his fortune. He got involved in politics. He was a Republican turned Democrat. He spent an extraordinary amount of money, just secretly tried to undermine the reputation of Hoover. And I would say to you today, I actually think that part of the reason that Hoover's reputation is so dim even today is a result of this very influential wealthy individual in America who spent two years paying off journalists and running this sort of secret campaign to do such a thing. And when you go back and really read the press and try to understand why some of these views were espoused, some of these, by the way, this was before the crisis, before the crash. He started this campaign effectively In May of 1929, just three months after Hoover took office.
Tyler Cowen
It's striking to Me how forgotten Raskob is today. There's a lesson in there about people who think they're doing something today that will be remembered in 100 years time. It probably won't be even if you're a big, big deal.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
It's remarkable. I mean he was a very big deal. He famously used to tell everybody everyone ought to be rich. And he was trying to develop back then what would have been been something akin to one of the first mutual funds. Levered mutual funds in fact, because he also wanted to democratize finance.
Tyler Cowen
So let's say you're back in New York, it's the 1920s, you're you. Other than walking around and looking at buildings, what else would you do back then? Like I would go to jazz concerts. What would you do?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh my goodness, you know what I would do because. But I'm a journalista so you'll appreciate this. Yeah, I would have been obsessed with magazines. This was really the era of the first real era of magazines and newspapers and the transmission of media, the sort of mass media in this way. I would have been fascinated by radio. I think those things for me would have been super exciting. And the truth is I imagine I would have gotten caught up in the pastime of stock trading. I mean it is true that all these brokerage houses are just emerging everywhere and people are going to play them as if it's a pastime. And, and remember, I always wonder whether prohibition played a role in why so many people were speculating. Because instead of drinking, what did they do? They traded.
Tyler Cowen
Sir, how were business leaders different back then from the current crop? I mean, clearly, in many, many ways. But what stands out to you as someone who knows a lot of top business leaders now and who has studied very intensively top business leaders back then.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh goodness. I actually think they're very similar. I actually think they're shockingly similar. I mean, here I am saying that John Raskob feels like Elon Musk. I think that so many of these individuals feel like modern day characters. Charlie Mitchell who ran National City, who becomes Citigroup, you know, Charlie was the equivalent of a Jamie Dimon of his time, but maybe looks more akin to a Jensen Huang in terms of just his sort of sunny disposition towards, towards everything all the time. I think they're still driven by the same things, which is, you know, at some level I've always thought that people are driven by an insecurity, a fomo, a YOLO kind of hole that they're all trying to fill. Money is just sort of One example of how they measure it all. I don't think that they're all that different.
Tyler Cowen
In fact, do you think they're even more woke today?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Are they even more woke today or
Tyler Cowen
is that also the same? That there's maybe the appearance of being more woke, but ultimately attitudes on gender, race are, you know, more similar than one might think or not.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, goodness. You know, I can't even. I'm struggling to relate the word wokeness to the 1920s. You know, interestingly, Carter Glass, who I think I told you before, was sort of akin to an Elizabeth Warren. The truth is, he would have been a racist Elizabeth Warren, because he was from Virginia. He was trying to bring segregation back to America. In fact, I'm not sure how woke these CEOs were at the time. I mean, the sort of upstairs, downstairs situation among the elites and the wealth in terms of where they lived and how they lived and who worked for them and the various servants and others, I don't think you'd think that they were that woke back then.
Tyler Cowen
So that's one difference. Did they do philanthropy better? So you have the Morgan Library in New York, everything Carnegie did, which seems quite remarkable. Are today's wealthy business leaders living up to that track record or somehow they're, they're failing to.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
That's a fascinating question too. You know, I think first of all, a number of those people in the 1920s actually were not that philanthropic yet. And then of course lost so much of their fortune that they were really never in a position to be that philanthropic. I remember coming across an article as I was working on this book with the headline was in 1929, our second billionaire. That was the title, and it was Henry Ford. Our first billionaire was Rockefeller. These are of course not inflation adjusted figures. These were real. And I'm not sure that the actual sort of leaders, whether it was a John Roskob or a Mitchell or any of those characters, frankly, were that philanthropic in part because they were new money in the 1920s. It was sort of a new thing and they were not philanthropic yet. Maybe they had ambitions at some point to become such. But then the crash happened and most of them frankly lost it all. So I don't know, I mean, you look at obviously a Bill Gates, very philanthropic, and then you have people like, you know, Jeff Bezos, who's engaged in some philanthropy, and Elon Musk, but, but both of those, you know, an Elon and, and Jeff Bezos, I think, think that they're using their fortune to go to space. And while they that may turn out to be fabulous business in the end. We'll see. I think they thought of it first, at least as their own version of, you know, helping humanity. I know there's lots of people who have lots of different views of both Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, but without speaking for them, I think if you actually talk to them, I remember talking to them years ago. That was the, at least the initial conceit that they were helping humanity if they could do this.
Tyler Cowen
Should we have allowed interstate branch banking back then? So the US essentially bans it. Canada has it right? No. Canadian banks fail in the Great Depression. Couldn't we have been in that position?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, so I sacrilegious to say in America, if it was left to me, if I was king for the day, I would consolidate most of the banks and make the country look much more like the Canadian banking system. I think it is slightly insane that we have allowed local banking to happen at the sort of scale that we do because I do think it presents a risk to the system that's likely unnecessary. And I've never fully, you know, jumped on board with the argument that, you know, these local banks can serve their communities so much better than the larger banks. But I also recognize, know as you do get banking consolidation and the like, that there will be communities that probably will be underserved. And so is there a way to, to thread that needle to do both?
Tyler Cowen
Let's say we make you king for 10 years today. How would you change U.S. banking regulation?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, goodness. I probably actually would do just what I said. I think that I would probably have more consolidation in the banking space. But as a result of that, I would probably also force some of those banks to effectively serve communities and provide loans and other things that they would otherwise not provide. And then of course, I'm sure that you and others would say, but Andrew, if you put together these types of policies to do things that would otherwise be economically irrational, economically irrational things or things that we can't conceive of will happen. So I would probably struggle in that regard. What would you do?
Tyler Cowen
Well, I'm not sure, but let me first point out. There's been a lot of consolidation since 2009. Right. There's hardly any new banks. One of them is like an Amish bank, right? Very small number of new banks. The too big to fail doctrine has crowded a lot of deposits into the four biggest banks. Given where we ended up, maybe that's inevitable. But you want even more consolidation than that.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
I don't think I need huge amounts of consolidation to that. But I think that you look at Silicon Valley bank as a good example, or Signature bank is a good example of what happens in an environment where you have sort of smaller banks doing things that aren't necessarily the right things without the sort of backstop that you'd prefer. Now, you could argue that the government turned out to be the backstop, the FDIC turned out to be the backstop, and it worked. So maybe we're in a good position. The other thing though, that I do worry about, and I also be very curious about where you land is we now are living in a very bifurcated world as it relates to the loan market and credit market in America, which is really Post Financial Crisis 2008, the private credit business has just exploded. And so if you're a company seeking credit, you're oftentimes not getting it from the bank. You're getting it from effectively the shadow banking system. Some of that shadow banking system is attached to the insurance industry in certain ways, potentially presents all sorts of risks that I'm not sure we all understand.
Tyler Cowen
Yeah, I agree with that. This is my biggest worry. I don't think I know how to solve it. So formal banks are about 20% of lending. So 80% is other stuff. It's not really. It's regulated in other ways, but it's not protected by what we would consider our core regulatory structures. And the more you impose capital requirements on banks, fdic, premia, other regulations, you just make that smaller. It's already trending downwards. That's why I'm reluctant to induce these banks to do more local community lending. Ideally, you'd like maybe the banking system to shrink more slowly than what it's doing. And the stuff you have left, I don't think you can insure it, really. You hope it's well enough capitalized. You can't bail out everything. I don't think we have any idea what to do about it. But what's your thought on that dilemma?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
This is probably my biggest concern and I just don't know what the inflection point would be that could turn it into a problem in a demonstrable way. I don't fully appreciate or understand how connected we think the private credit funds are to the banks themselves. Some of these funds are effectively leveraged by dint of the banks. Some of them have liquidity lines back to the banks. You could argue that the private credit funds should be less risky insofar as there should be. There's a better duration match around Those loans, they're not going to be called by the day. You know when they're going to be called in. Hopefully, you know, five or 10 years or whatever the length of the fund and the loans are. But if it all comes undone at one moment, what happens? That's like a horror movie to me. But I don't know. I don't know the script of that movie or what that book would read like at the moment.
Tyler Cowen
John Cochran wants more narrow banks. Do you agree or disagree with him?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Depends how you. How would you define more narrow banks?
Tyler Cowen
Something like near 100% backing with either T bills or very high quality commercial paper.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, here's a different question. If you do that, what happens to credit in America?
Tyler Cowen
It dries up at some local points. Right?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Right. And I think you and I would both agree that credit is the lifeblood of the system. And you do want, by the way, you want some speculation in the system going back to where we started this conversation. You need speculation in the system to create that innovation. I'm not here to tell you that you don't want that. The question is, how do you prevent it from becoming euphoria and crazy and too much?
Tyler Cowen
Now, as you know, through the genius act, we're going to run stablecoins through what are in essence, narrow banks. Good idea, bad idea, or should we just let them hold all sorts of other assets and be riskier?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
This is a great question. I do worry that because the stablecoins are going to require the backing of these treasury bills that effectively you're taking that out of the market, which means less credit to the system ultimately. But the alternative also feels risky. I don't know. It seems like two choices. It's not a Hobson's choice, it's just a difficult choice. I imagine over time that we will loosen those standards. That's what I imagine. I imagine this is sort of the first baby step so that people can say these stablecoins are safe. And then over time we will maybe shift gears slightly. What do you think?
Tyler Cowen
I think I agree with that. And it will be necessary. And even with high debt and deficits, you know, there's only so many T bills to go around and we want to use them for everything, and so does the rest of the world. You don't want to get into T bills paying a rate of zero. The real economy is intrinsically risky for obvious reasons. And financial engineering can only make it so much safer. I mean, that's the ultimate dilemma. And it seems to me New Deal banking regulation is finally, truly obsolete and we just don't know what to replace it with.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Okay, I got one for you.
Tyler Cowen
Yeah.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Talking about the genius act, what do you think of the idea that we're going to have private credit and venture capital and private equity funds effectively in either retirement counts or available to retail investors without the sort of commensurate or similar disclosures that we've typically had for publicly traded companies. So these are going to be funds that are going to have private assets in them. They'll have a nav A valuation, ostensibly at least in my mind, unfortunately being measured by the manager of these funds. So I would like to see more disclosure personally and auditing and the like. But they're also going to be these interesting semi liquid funds, which is to say it's going to look like a stock. You could buy it on any day, but it's not clear you could sell it on any day.
Tyler Cowen
I think it's inevitable. And if I invest, which I do only at very modest, diversified, non stock picking levels, I don't consider the disclosures to be worth very much at all. I have some faith in diversifying and I think markets are not entirely efficient. But to throw darts and diversify, you'll do almost as well as you can do any other way. And we let people bet on football games, right. A lot of people now are going broke with sports gambling. So to tell people, well, you can bet on football games or you can buy Bitcoin, which at least used to be super volatile, but you can't own shares in these funds because they don't meet some. What is obscure to the voter SEC requirement about disclosure and liquidity? People think you're crazy, right. Over time I think that distinction goes away.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Yeah. But I'll tell you something interesting that happened to me and maybe, I don't know if you've had similar experience. In 2020 there was a real phenomenon around SPACs. You remember these blank check companies.
Tyler Cowen
Yeah.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Everybody was excited about SPACs. They were the new lottery ticket. And I would go on television or write articles almost in a paternalistic way and say, folks, be careful, you may not understand, you know, what the sponsors are really getting, the fee structure, how you know, what the alignment or frankly lack of alignment was between the promoters of these things and actually the duration which they have to hold them relative to how long you'll have to hold them and some of the projections that they're making and all these things. And people would say to me, andrew, stop trying to protect me. I want to buy the lottery ticket. And by the way, you're not protecting me, you're protecting the man by saying these things. And the truth is that they were like lottery tickets in that most lottery players lose. And so I recognize that people should have access to the lottery ticket. I get that, by the way. I often buy lottery tickets, as crazy as that sounds, especially when it's like super Powerball and it's a billion dollars or something. And I feel like an idiot that I'm doing it, but I do it anyway because it's, it's a dollar to dream. But I don't know what the right answer is in this regard. You're making the argument we don't need the disclosures or the disclosures sort of unimportant, at least on the margin. And I'm concerned that if people don't understand what's going on inside these things, they're going to buy the lottery ticket and they're going to lose.
Tyler Cowen
I think we need stronger social norms that any new thing, whether it's sports gambling or something in crypto or whatever it is gambling of some sort. And people just have to realize that and that we're going to let people twist in the wind, so to speak. I don't know any other way to do it.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
You're like Andrew Mellon, Tyler. You're like Andrew Mellon, but there's so
Tyler Cowen
many risky things, you can't stop them. They'll go overseas if they have to. Crypto has done that, would do that, could do that. I don't see what the alternative is. I'm not opposed to these disclosure laws. I just don't think that extending them to more parts of the economy is gonna make us safer.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
How do you feel about prediction markets? I mean, people are not just gambling on who's gonna be the next mayor of New York City. They're gambling on where Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey are gonna get married. And I can't figure out whether that's a good thing or a bad thing.
Tyler Cowen
It's one way to spread the norm that anything new in finance is like gambling treated as gambling. Assume that it is money you are willing to lose. That's what I would do just as a matter of stated policy. And you need the private sector to cooperate more, but government can take some role in simply spreading this message.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
But Tyler, I will tell you one of the great lessons for me, and this is true of 1929, covering the financial crisis and the like. We, we humanity, us, people, we're not great at self regulating ourselves. We're not Great at control. That's what greed is. There's a great line. I don't know if you saw the movie Wall Street 2. Not nearly as good as Wall Street 1. And there's a scene in the movie where Shia LaBeouf looks at, I think it's Josh Brolin and says, what's your number? As in, what's your number to, you know, feel independent or financial freedom or when would you stop? When would you feel like you got to the top of the mountain kind of thing?
Tyler Cowen
I remember that, yes.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
And he looks back at him and he doesn't give him a number. He. He says more.
Tyler Cowen
But those are the people we don't have to worry about. Right. If there's something like a public option, a series of safe assets T bills, FDI insured checking accounts, or some equivalent thereof, I think that's the most we can do for people. You know, people can take risky decisions with their careers, with how they drink, with the drugs they use. They do all the time. And in a way, the financial risks are often the least important of the ones they take. And these people don't become rational just by electing them to office and putting a hat on them that says government. Right. So if you think people are bad at risk, our government is terrible at risk.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, I completely agree with that assessment. But, you know, you go back and look at what happened, frankly, in 1929, and actually you could look at it in the context of what happened in 2008 too. Interestingly to me, in 1929, when people lost money, for the most part, at least initially, they blamed themselves. There actually was personal accountability. If you go look at what Groucho. Groucho Marx famously lost his home during this. He actually had to mortgage his home because of mortgage loans. And while he blamed the broker, if you will, to some degree for suggesting he buy some of these stocks, he ultimately blamed himself, which I think is a very different approach to life than we have today, where there's always finger pointing. It's never our own fault, it's everybody else's fault. Now, is that a human condition? What is that?
Tyler Cowen
The Fed? Has the United States Fed ever been independent as a central bank?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
I think the lesson of what was happening in the 1920s and reading all those diaries suggests that they never were. That they were always concerned about the politics in some regard back then. It wasn't that Hoover was, you know, manhandling them per se, but they were conscious of what the political implications were would be. Obviously, we've had a whole number of situations over the past 100 years now, or nearly a hundred years, where actually we have had presidents manhandle, in fact, physically manhandle the head of the Fed, and now we have President Trump doing the same. My preference would be that we don't have those things. And my preference would be we don't have those things for a different reason, though, which is that oftentimes you have to make super politically unpopular decisions. And. And if the politics in the moment are gonna influence you, you can't do it. And this was why I actually give great credit to Ben Bernanke, because Ben Bernanke did things in that moment, and frankly, Hank Paulson too, that were very politically unpopular. They were against everything that any conservative Republican would be doing at that time, and yet they did them anyway. And by the way, give credit to President Bush for not pushing them otherwise. But think about what would happen if we had a crisis and either a president or somebody else who had a very different view of how to handle it.
Tyler Cowen
I agree with much of what was done, but keep in mind, they're always sitting down with the Treasury Secretary. Right. And these decisions are made jointly, which I would say is inevitable. Not a complaint I have, but once you see that, you see the same during COVID Right. Treasury, Fed, they work together. So all the hand wringing over central bank independence, I don't want Trump being the one who pushes it around, but I find a lot of the hand wringing a little out of place or not contextualized properly.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Well, look, the thing that I think is more concerning now, which is slightly different, is that President Trump has talked about the Federal Reserve having a, quote, majority on the Federal Reserve as if it's the Supreme Court. And by the way, even a couple years ago, we never talked about that in such a sort of political context. And maybe he's just speaking the quiet part out loud. I mean, maybe that's what's really happening here. But, you know, if you have a political majority on something like the Fed, and then you use that political majority to effectively, by the way, you could potentially even replace all of the presidents of the regional Feds as well, leveraging that quote, unquote majority, it could create, you know, a lasting, you know, decades long generational shift based on politics in terms of what our economic policies are to some degree.
Tyler Cowen
But if someone says, look, we have what, 37, $38 trillion in debt, some of that will be inflated away. None of us like that fact, but it's inevitable. It probably partly should be inflated away, given that it's there and that's what matters. And Trump having the majority, whatever. To me, it's objectionable, but I just think the fiscal position, which ultimately, at least in theory is the responsibility of Congress, is the actual villain here.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
You and I. If I could high five you over the, over our link here, I would high five you because I completely agree that we need to get our house in order and I have no great optimism that we have any intent to do that anytime soon.
Tyler Cowen
For our last segment, a few questions about you. Do the Knicks have any real chance of winning an NBA title this season?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
I have been a long suffering Knick fan back from the age, I don't know how old I was back when Patrick Ewing was still playing. And I still have great hope, but I have been, you know, disappointed too many times to make a prediction at this point. We got so close. Got so close.
Tyler Cowen
Last year when you were in high school, you started submitting articles, including to the New York Times.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Yes.
Tyler Cowen
How did you know to do that? What led you to that point? Because a lot of people would have told the high schooler, that's silly, don't do it. But in fact, you succeeded with it, right?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Because I didn't know any better. That's why a little bit of naivete when you're young, I think actually can go very, very far. I had started a sports magazine when I was 15 years old and that actually led the New York Times, interestingly, to write a little tiny article about me when I was, I think, 16. And I thought, I thought anything was possible back then. And so I started writing these letters to this particular reporter at the New York Times who I desperately wanted to work for when I was 18 years old. And I would call him up on the telephone and leave voicemails and all sorts of things. There were people who told me that I was crazy and it would never work, but that somehow magically they let me in the building.
Tyler Cowen
And he Knew you were 18?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
He knew I was 18. But the truth is that the person who assigned me my first article to write, I had gone there planning to Xerox staple and get this gentleman a lot of coffee. That was what I thought the job was. I had no intention of putting two words together, let alone a sentence. And there was a woman there, an editor, who had no idea how old I was. I had my suit on, I had my tie on. She overheard me talking about this thing called the Internet back in 1995. This is Back when we would write the word modem comma, A device that transmits data over a telephone line. And she thought I was a, you know, real person in the building. And she assigned me a steroid. Right. And I somehow convinced Stuart Elliott, who was my sort of sponsor and mentor at the time, that I wasn't going to tell her how old I was and why I was there, that I would just write the article and we would see where the chips fell and the chips broke my way.
Tyler Cowen
Now, obviously, you're a very busy person and also you need to imbibe a lot of financial news about many different topics. Do you have any tip or advice on how it is you manage to do this? What would seem to be much better than how other people manage?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
No, I, I'm just, I mean, look, I'm very. I was born curious. I am addicted, probably to my great detriment, to X, formerly Twitter. I have, I follow all sorts of people. I read the Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times and Business Insider, and I go to the Drudge Report and I go here and there and I mean, I, I, it's, I'm just constantly trying to absorb things. I'm reading academic papers and, and the truth is I do benefit. I started this thing called dealbook back in 2001, and we have a great team and we live in a Slack channel all day, I think, playing with different stories all day, meaning we're constantly giving each other new ideas, new things to read. And so that's sort of how I take in the news. And then we have a team of producers at Squawkbox, so I'm sort of a beneficiary of whole bunch of systems.
Tyler Cowen
How much do you rely on chat groups?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Not as much as I should. I know you have a bunch of chat groups and I, I wish I, I wish I lived more inside the, you know, WhatsApp than I do. And I've been invited into a couple of interesting ones, but I've never really engaged as much as I should. And that's maybe because I've been trying to finish this book for too long.
Tyler Cowen
How much do you rely on travel? Like, oh, I want to learn about Japan. I'm gonna get on a plane. I'll spend a week there, meet with people. Or do you do it more at a distance?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Yes and no. So I have. The one real conundrum of my existence is that I am not as spontaneous as I wish I could be because of the TV show and really feeling like I need to be in New York on the set most days. It's hard for Me just to say, you know what, I'm going to go to Japan for a week. But I do try to travel around the world throughout the year. And I sort of do make these sort of pilgrimages, but I have to plan them out, you know, months and months in advance.
Tyler Cowen
In terms of the question, like, how many people recognize you in airports, do you feel you're more than optimally famous? Like Fareed Zakaria tells me in half an hour, ten people might recognize him. That to me seems like more than optimally famous. Are you at that level? You're optimally famous? You're not quite yet famous enough, or how do you view this?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
I'm not sure what the great benefit of fame is yet. I find that there's great joy when people come up to me in the street or on the subway or in the airport and tell me they've read a book or they watched Billions or they read an article or something that they loved. I love that joy that I get. I get from them having that joy. I find it more awkward when I'm having dinner with my family and somebody comes up and wants to take a selfie or if you're ever at the gym and people, you know, walk over to you, or it's a little awkward. And so I don't know, I'm not sure if I'm optimally set up or not. You know, I love it's a high five and it's a great moment and I'm by myself or whatever. Great. But then there's other times where it can be a little, you know, a little awkward. But the truth is that I always think about myself in these instances. There are people that I admired for whatever reason over time. And, you know, I see them in a restaurant myself or I see them at the airport and I look at them or want to go over to them. And I always don't want that experience to be awkward for the other person, even if it's awkward for me. So I feel like I then have to try to make sure that they have a great moment if they can.
Tyler Cowen
With Billions, you had a significant foray into non news tv. And while it involves finance, it's not financial in the sense that most of your work is. What surprised you most about that experience? Learning like a TV show and how it works.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, goodness. First of all, enormous credit goes to Brian Koppelman and Dave Levine, who co created the show with me, and they were our showrunners. You know, I think I just marveled at the fact that it is it's like a remarkable circus that gets sort of built for, you know, six or nine months, you know, hundreds of people who are engaged in this, you know, enterprise, creative enterprise, both in terms of writing of the scripts, to the acting, to the crews, to the various different directors that direct each episode. I mean, I think actually that was an interesting surprise for me early on, actually, that typically in television, virtually every episode is directed by a different director. So the whole experience was actually a great sort of learning experience for me just in terms of how all of this can be done. And I will say, I'll give you one other how much a story can be changed for the better in an editing room after it's shot. It's not just what's shot that day. It's what can be done and crafted later on in terms of creating that narrative. Actually, I think I learned that actually when Too Big to Fail was made into a film. I had an opportunity to sit in the editing room out in LA for a while, and I was just mesmerized by how extraordinary things could happen.
Tyler Cowen
Two final questions, a bit of a pair. Your book is out. You've done plenty of interviews. First, what do you want to learn about next? And second, what will you do next?
Andrew Ross Sorkin
Oh, my goodness. So I've become kind of obsessed actually with tulips because of this experience. No joke. I kind of actually do want to go back to understand exactly what happened. I don't know if you could recreate a kind of 1929 or too big to fail book about the tulip craze, because I don't know if the archives exist. But what I will do next My wife has told me I have three children, and my wife has told me that I am not allowed to write another book until they go to college. So I'm going to hopefully spend a lot more time with them. And maybe I'll be plotting my tulip story.
Tyler Cowen
The Peter Garber paper on tulip mania has a lot of data. You might want to look at that.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
I'll start there.
Tyler Cowen
Your book again, 1929 Inside the Greatest Crash in History and How It Shattered a Nation. Andrew Ross Sorkin, thank you very much.
Andrew Ross Sorkin
This was so much fun. Thank you, Tyler.
Tyler Cowen
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. If you like this podcast, please consider giving us a rating and leaving a review. This helps other listeners find the show on Twitter. I'm TylerCowen and the show is OwenConvos. Until next time, Please keep listening and learning.
Conversations with Tyler
Andrew Ross Sorkin on Market Bubbles, Banking Rules, and the Real Lessons of 1929
Recorded: February 4, 2026
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Main Theme & Purpose
In this episode, Tyler Cowen interviews Andrew Ross Sorkin—journalist, author of Too Big to Fail, and co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawkbox—on his new book, 1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in History and How it Shattered a Nation. Their conversation explores the lessons of the 1929 crash, the nature of bubbles and speculation, the evolution of U.S. banking policy, and parallels between past and present financial crises. Sorkin brings both historical research and modern perspective, sparring with Cowen on the interpretations of bubbles, regulation, and human nature in markets.
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Key Discussion Points & Insights
[01:12] Debating Stock Valuations:
[03:52] Speculators vs. 'Negative Nellies':
“To me, the crash of ’29 was really the first domino of then a series of dominoes that led to the Great Depression.”
— Andrew Ross Sorkin (04:25)
[05:39] The Power and Limits of Optimism:
[06:51] 2000s Housing Market Bubble?
“It wasn’t that people were selling their stocks out of panic... it was that they had taken out too much money and were at too much leverage.”
— Andrew Ross Sorkin (08:29)
[10:21] Personal Accounts of Trauma:
[11:37] Utility Stocks and Rate Policy:
[14:13] Prevention vs. Cure, and the Gold Standard:
[15:53] Regulatory Alternatives:
[17:40] Cultural Shift on Debt and Banking:
[19:49] Origins and Myths of Glass-Steagall:
“The Glass Steagall Bill was not as pure as... the public thought it was. Parts... were written by a Rockefeller representative to shiv JP Morgan.”
— Andrew Ross Sorkin (21:05)
[21:55] Did Glass-Steagall Do Any Good?:
[23:19] Learning from the Decade:
[25:28] Cultural Life:
[26:41] Modern Parallels:
[27:45] Wokeness and Philanthropy:
[30:29] Branch Banking and Canadian Lessons:
[33:30] Rise of Shadow Banking:
[35:21] Narrow Banking, Stablecoins & Regulation:
[37:29] Should Retail Investors Access Private Credit/Venture?
“Stop trying to protect me. I want to buy the lottery ticket.”
— Sorkin recounting pushback to his warnings on SPACs (39:17)
[40:36] Norms vs. Protection:
[41:48] Limits of Self-Regulation:
“We... are not great at self regulating ourselves. That's what greed is.”
(41:48)
[44:04] Has the Fed Ever Been Truly Independent?
[45:52] Political Majorities at the Fed:
[46:43] Fiscal Irresponsibility as the True Culprit:
“The fiscal position... is the actual villain here.”
(46:43)
[47:25] On Being a Knicks Fan:
“I have been, you know, disappointed too many times to make a prediction at this point.”
(47:33)
[47:56] How Sorkin Started:
[49:49] Staying Informed:
[51:12] On Travel, Recognition, and Fame:
[53:28] Learning from TV Land:
[54:53] What’s Next for Sorkin:
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Notable Quotes
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Timestamps for Important Segments
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Flow & Tone
The conversation is fast-paced and incisive, mixing friendly debate with deep dives into financial history, policy, and cultural analysis. Both Sorkin and Cowen are candid, occasionally humorous, and probe each other’s assumptions, resulting in a rich, multidimensional exploration of financial bubbles, risk, and regulation—across past, present, and potential futures.