Quantcast

Call for Feature Essays About Any Aspect of Popular Culture, Present or Past

The Sucker King

Friday, May 29, 2009
cover art

The Match King: Ivar Kreuger, The Financial Genius Behind a Century of Wall Street Scandals

Frank Partnoy

(PublicAffairs)

There’s always another sucker. It’s a truth that was just as real back in the Great Depression as it is today in the post-Bernie Madoff present. Frank Partnoy’s The Match King—which should be required reading for every financial whiz or businessman who claims to be performing due diligence on a too-good-to-be-true investment opportunity—is not just a proof of that truism but a painfully captivating account of just how easily those suckers are found and fleeced by the Madoffs of the world.


The Roaring Twenties Madoff whom Partnoy profiles here is Ivar Kreuger. Although his contemporary scammer, Charles Ponzi, would lend his name to history, the comparatively forgotten Kreuger had an audacity and vulpine cunning that made Ponzi look like a piker. The so-called “Match King” was a charming and erudite Swede who had parlayed his father’s small match factory into a formidable international presence (by 1929 his factories made two-thirds of the world’s matches). Before the Great Crash, Kreuger had made himself into a kind of Wall Street Renaissance man, dazzling the society pages and investors with his wit and acumen. That his success in the markets was based on a tissue-thin skein of dodges, bogus reporting, and shell companies, would all come out later, after the crash.


Kreuger paid the kind of high and steady dividends (25 percent, regular as clockwork) that made investors salivate, as did his rapier smarts and Byzantine investment schemes. Much like those who clamored for entry into Madoff’s magical mystery funds, or threw their pension dollars at baffling derivative instruments hawked by too-big-to-fail banks (some of which have now, of course, failed), Kreuger’s suckers seemed actually reassured by how little they understood of what their fairy financier was doing.


Partnoy, a wise student of human weakness, writes about the reactions to one of Kreuger’s more inscrutable fiscal concoctions:


The convertible debenture derivative looked too good to be true, and that was exactly what investors wanted…. Americans gobbled up these new instruments, whether they understood the details or not.”


Eventually, Kreuger would fall, as they all do. Unlike Madoff, whose legacy will be counted mostly in countless (and frequently nameless) ruined lives, Kreuger would put his own stamp on history, even if his name didn’t quite survive. According to Partnoy, the securities regulations put into action by a chastened government during the 1930s were created almost entirely as a result of the Match King’s sleight-of-hand. “Simply put, without Ivar Kreuger, modern securities regulation and litigation would not exist.”


Of course, those regulations couldn’t stop the current crisis. Nothing apparently can stand between a sucker and a guy offering them easy money whose only condition is not asking any questions.


Rating:

Comments
Now on PopMatters
A Painting Come to Life: 'The Mill & the Cross' (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 4:00 pm]
A Far Too Safe... and Strained... 'House' (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 9:00 am]
'Safe House' Is Ersatz Edgy (Reviews) [Fri, 8:06 am]
The 10 Greatest Shakespeare Film Adaptations of All Time (Short Ends and Leader) [Fri, 7:50 am]
  1. 'Nebraska': Bruce Springsteen's 'Heart of Darkness' (Columns)
  2. The 10 Greatest Shakespeare Film Adaptations of All Time (Short Ends and Leader)
  3. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 1: From 13Ghosts to Friendly Fires (Features)
  4. The Best Games of 2011 (Features)
  5. Not-So-Central Casting: Kevin Smith and the Birth of the Reality Podcast (Features)
  6. The 10 Greatest Movie Spies Ever (Short Ends and Leader)
  7. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 2: From the Go! Team to the Phoenix Foundation (Features)
  8. Slipped Discs 2011 - Part 3: From Real Estate to Youth Lagoon (Features)
  9. Lana Del Rey: Born to Die (Reviews)
  10. The Top 15 Madonna Singles of All Time (Sound Affects)
  11. Get Off of My Cloud!: 'Collecting' Music in the Digital Age (Features)
  12. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas (Reviews)
  13. Google and the Production of Curiosity (Marginal Utility)
  14. Carole E. Barrowman’s Authorial Journey to Hollow Earth (Features)
  15. “Don’t Let Me Fall”: Hip-Hop in the Age of Austerity (Features)
  16. Tower Songs: Townes Van Zandt (Columns)
  17. Black Bananas: Rad Times Xpress IV (Reviews)
  18. The Gay Ole Countryside (Columns)
  19. Paul McCartney: Kisses on the Bottom (Reviews)
  20. Of Montreal: Paralytic Stalks (Reviews)
  21. Counterbalance No. 67: John Coltrane’s 'A Love Supreme' (Sound Affects)
  22. The 10 Best John Coltrane Solos (Sound Affects)
  23. A Look to the Past, An Insight Into the Present: The Use of Gender in 'Mad Men' (Features)
  24. A Tale of How Great Journalism Became Revisionist History: Grambling State U Football (Columns)
  25. Chairlift: Something (Reviews)
  26. Nick Cave’s The Death of Bunny Munro: A Rock Star’s Midlife Crisis or Valid Literature? (Features)
  27. The Asteroids Galaxy Tour - "Heart Attack" (Cosmic Kids Remix) (PopMatters Premiere) (Mixed Media)
  28. Mark Lanegan Band: Blues Funeral (Reviews)
  29. The Barbaric (and Poetic) Yawp of Shelby Lynne (Notes from the Road)
  30. After Cease to Exist: The Far-from-Final Report of Throbbing Gristle (Features)
PM Picks
Books Archive
Announcements
Ratings

10 - The Best of the Best

9 - Very Nearly Perfect

8 - Excellent

7 - Damn Good

6 - Good

5 - Average

4 - Unexceptional

3 - Weak

2 - Seriously Flawed

1 - Terrible

© 1999-2012 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks
of PopMatters Media, Inc.

PopMatters is wholly independently owned and operated.
PopMatters is a member of BUZZMEDIA Music, MOG and Guardian Select.