Andrew Ross Sorkin Sees Parallels to 1929 Everywhere He Looks | Vanity Fair

PAST IS PROLOGUE They didnt have DMs or cryptocurrency but 1920s investors often pooled resources to manipulate share...

On a snowy day in January, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink joined Andrew Ross Sorkin on CNBCโ€™s 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 CEOโ€™s plea for Donald Trumpโ€™s SEC to make it harder for activist shareholders to take on corporations via proxy vote, Sorkin couldnโ€™t resist asking for Finkโ€™s take on the booming cryptocurrency ecosystem.

โ€œAre 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.

โ€œI 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. โ€œIt was wild,โ€ he recalls.

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At the time, Sorkin was finishing his latest book, 1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in Historyโ€”And How It Shattered a Nation, an extensive account of how Wall Street and the US government dragged the country into the Great Depression.

So whatโ€™s the contemporary analog to the old stock pool? โ€œI 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 includedโ€”sort of (more on that below). I ask whether the popular 1920s-era stock-pooling practice among Wall Street insidersโ€”where powerful investors combined their resources and artificially ran up the stock price of a given companyโ€”bore any similarity to modern-day meme stocks, as online communities drive stock purchases, leading to rapid price oscillation. โ€œCompletely,โ€ Sorkin replies, adding that itโ€™s happening in both meme stock culture and the world of crypto. So whatโ€™s the contemporary analog to the old stock pool? โ€œI 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. โ€œTheyโ€™re talking about, โ€˜Iโ€™m gonna buy in at this, and then youโ€™re gonna do this. Iโ€™m gonna put up $2 million, then youโ€™re gonna put up a million.โ€™ And itโ€™s up and up and up and up,โ€ he tells me of the groupsโ€™ members. โ€œItโ€™s totally crazy,โ€ he says.

 

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