
On a snowy day in January, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink joined Andrew Ross Sorkin on CNBCโs Squawk Box for an interview in Davos, Switzerland, where corporate and political leaders gather for the annual World Economic Forum. While the segment mainly revolved around the BlackRock CEOโs plea for Donald Trumpโs SEC to make it harder for activist shareholders to take on corporations via proxy vote, Sorkin couldnโt resist asking for Finkโs take on the booming cryptocurrency ecosystem.
โAre you planning on issuing either a meme coin, ETFs, or anything like that, now that the animal spirits seem to be very much alive?โ he asked.
โI think the Sorkin coin,โ Fink replied. Two hours later, Sorkin was watching the brand-new cryptocurrency, minted by some enterprising meme coiner, soar by millions of dollars. โIt was wild,โ he recalls.
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At the time, Sorkin was finishing his latest book, 1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in HistoryโAnd How It Shattered a Nation, an extensive account of how Wall Street and the US government dragged the country into the Great Depression.
So whatโs the contemporary analog to the old stock pool? โI think Reddit,โ Sorkin says.
Several months later, over a late-ยญยญsummer coffee, Sorkin and I are discussing the history of the economic collapse and the book itself, in which the parallels to today exist almost down to the person, Fink includedโsort of (more on that below). I ask whether the popular 1920s-era stock-pooling practice among Wall Street insidersโwhere powerful investors combined their resources and artificially ran up the stock price of a given companyโbore any similarity to modern-day meme stocks, as online communities drive stock purchases, leading to rapid price oscillation. โCompletely,โ Sorkin replies, adding that itโs happening in both meme stock culture and the world of crypto. So whatโs the contemporary analog to the old stock pool? โI think Reddit,โ Sorkin says.
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After his own crypto coin hit the market in January, Sorkin was invited to direct-messaging groups of that nature on X and Signal. โTheyโre talking about, โIโm gonna buy in at this, and then youโre gonna do this. Iโm gonna put up $2 million, then youโre gonna put up a million.โ And itโs up and up and up and up,โ he tells me of the groupsโ members. โItโs totally crazy,โ he says.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Andrew Ross Sorkin Sees Parallels to 1929 Everywhere He Looks | Vanity Fair
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