A lively, original, and challenging history of stock market
speculation from the 17th century to present day.
Is your investment in that new Internet stock a sign of stock market
savvy or an act of peculiarly American speculative folly? How has the
psychology of investing changed--and not changed--over the last five
hundred years?
In Devil Take the Hindmost, Edward Chancellor traces the origins of
the speculative spirit back to ancient Rome and chronicles its revival
in the modern world: from the tulip scandal of 1630s Holland, to
"stockjobbing" in London's Exchange Alley, to the infamous South Sea
Bubble of 1720, which prompted Sir Isaac Newton to comment, "I can
calculate the motion of heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people."
Here are brokers underwriting risks that included highway robbery and
the "assurance of female chastity"; credit notes and lottery tickets
circulating as money; wise and unwise investors from Alexander Pope and
Benjamin Disraeli to Ivan Boesky and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
From the Gilded Age to the Roaring Twenties, from the nineteenth century
railway mania to the crash of 1929, from junk bonds and the Japanese
bubble economy to the day-traders of the Information Era, Devil Take
the Hindmost tells a fascinating story of human dreams and folly
through the ages.