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cover of episode Cautionary Tales Presents: Death Fraud and Other Risky Business

Cautionary Tales Presents: Death Fraud and Other Risky Business

2024/10/14
logo of podcast Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford

Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford

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Maria Konnikova
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Nate Silver
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Tim Harford
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Maria Konnikova: 本期节目探讨风险与历史警示故事的交集,重点关注Sam Israel III和John Law两个案例。Sam Israel III的Bayou Capital庞氏骗局以及John Law的密西西比泡沫,都体现了风险决策中过度自信、缺乏长远规划以及对概率的误判等问题。我与Sam Israel III在监狱中进行过访谈,他承认自己是个骗子,但其行为体现了典型的骗子特征:短视、缺乏周全的计划、过度自信以及试图通过伪造死亡来逃避责任。 John Law的案例则更为复杂,其行为既有赌博的成分,也有可能包含欺诈。他的密西西比泡沫最终导致了法国的经济危机,这说明了对金融体系缺乏监管的风险。John Law的故事也体现了人们对金融工具缺乏理解,以及市场投机的风险。 在对Sam Israel III和John Law的案例进行分析后,我们得出结论:成功的骗子往往不会被抓住,因为他们更善于隐藏自己的行为。人们在社会或个人转型时期最容易受到欺骗,因为他们寻求确定性,而骗子正是利用这一点来行骗。 Nate Silver: 风险承担者常常缺乏长远的眼光,只关注短期利益。即使是成功的企业,也可能因为过度自信和缺乏规划而走向失败。连续的成功可能会导致过度自信,从而忽视风险。人们很容易将随机事件中的成功归因于自身的技能,而忽略了运气因素。在做出风险决策时,量化概率是至关重要的,即使数据不完整。过度依赖量化概率可能会导致错误的判断,因为概率本身就是一种基于假设的估计。模型的构建需要考虑其背后的假设和背景,避免将主观意见伪装成客观概率。 在对Sam Israel III和John Law的案例进行分析后,我们得出结论:成功的骗子往往不会被抓住,因为他们更善于隐藏自己的行为。人们在社会或个人转型时期最容易受到欺骗,因为他们寻求确定性,而骗子正是利用这一点来行骗。 Tim Harford: 警示故事有很多不同的失败模式,包括组织问题、信息问题、工程问题、傲慢自大、短视、自我欺骗和一厢情愿的想法。扑克玩家在决策中可能缺乏实验精神,而这在日常生活中是十分重要的。在低风险情况下进行实验,可以测试不同的策略,并从中学习。扑克游戏可以作为心理学实验的平台,测试和验证各种心理学理论。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Who was Sam Israel III and what was his connection to Bayou Capital?

Sam Israel III was a Wall Street trader who founded Bayou Capital, a hedge fund that quickly turned into a Ponzi scheme. He came from a wealthy family of commodity traders in Louisiana and aimed to prove his success independently. Bayou Capital raised $300 million initially but transformed into a fraudulent operation when losses mounted, leading to a massive financial scandal.

Why did Sam Israel fake his own death and how did it backfire?

Sam Israel faked his own death after being sentenced to 20 years in prison for his Ponzi scheme. He jumped off a bridge under construction, believing he would land in a safety net and escape. However, he struggled to climb out of the net and was eventually caught after turning himself in when he saw his girlfriend and mother were being targeted by authorities. This added two more years to his sentence.

What role did Dan Marino play in the Bayou Capital fraud?

Dan Marino was the accountant for Bayou Capital who set up a fake auditing firm to cover up the Ponzi scheme. He created fraudulent accounts and audited them himself, making it appear legitimate. Marino’s involvement was crucial in prolonging the fraud, as he helped inflate fake profits and hide losses.

What was the Mississippi Company, and how did it relate to John Law?

The Mississippi Company was a financial scheme set up by John Law in the 1700s, tied to France’s banking system. It became a massive stock market bubble that eventually burst, bankrupting many investors. John Law, a gambler and financier, used the company to issue paper money and manage French government debt, but the lack of understanding and control led to its collapse.

What lesson can be learned from John Law’s financial schemes?

John Law’s story highlights the dangers of unchecked financial innovation and the importance of institutional controls. His creation of paper money and the Mississippi Company bubble demonstrated how greed and lack of oversight can lead to widespread economic disaster. It serves as a cautionary tale about the risks of speculative financial systems.

What are the key characteristics of a Ponzi scheme?

A Ponzi scheme involves attracting investors by promising high returns, using new investors’ money to pay off earlier investors. The scheme collapses when there aren’t enough new investors to sustain the payouts. Key characteristics include fraudulent reporting of profits, lack of legitimate investments, and reliance on continuous influxes of new capital.

How does overconfidence contribute to financial frauds like Sam Israel’s?

Overconfidence often leads individuals like Sam Israel to believe they can sustain fraudulent schemes indefinitely. This delusion, combined with a lack of long-term planning, results in increasingly risky decisions. Overconfidence also blinds individuals to the inevitable collapse of their schemes, as they underestimate the consequences of their actions.

What is the significance of quantifying probabilities in decision-making?

Quantifying probabilities helps in making informed decisions by providing a clear understanding of risks and outcomes. However, over-reliance on precise numbers can lead to false confidence, especially if the underlying assumptions are flawed. It’s crucial to balance quantification with awareness of the uncertainties and limitations of the data used.

Why do financial frauds often occur during periods of transition?

Financial frauds thrive during periods of transition because uncertainty and rapid change create opportunities for exploitation. In times of economic upswing or downturn, individuals are more vulnerable to promises of quick gains or solutions to their problems, making them easy targets for con artists.

What is the role of incentives in financial modeling and risk assessment?

Incentives play a critical role in financial modeling and risk assessment. If the incentives of those creating models are misaligned—such as prioritizing short-term profits over accuracy—the models can produce misleading results. Ensuring that incentives align with accurate risk assessment is essential to prevent catastrophic financial failures.

Chapters
This chapter dives into the story of Sam Israel III, his Bayou Capital Ponzi scheme, and his audacious attempt to fake his own death to evade a 20-year prison sentence. The narrative details his background, the mechanics of the fraud, and the ultimately unsuccessful escape attempt.
  • Sam Israel III ran a massive Ponzi scheme called Bayou Capital.
  • He faked his own death after being sentenced to 20 years in prison.
  • His escape plan involved jumping off a bridge with a net below, but he got stuck and was caught after turning himself in.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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Over the years, Cautionary Tales has warned you about Ponzi schemes, dodgy Christmas savings clubs and promotions that are too good to be true. So it may come as a surprise when I urge you to get into Risky Business. Don't worry, I'm not trying to pull a fast one. I just want you to try out a podcast I think you'll enjoy. Risky Business is a weekly show about making better decisions. The hosts, Maria Konnikova and Nate Silver, are both writers,

and high stakes poker players. Maria and Nate cover everything from politics to poker to personal decisions. So when they asked me to join them for an episode, I was eager to try. I even got the chance to talk to Maria about one of the fraudsters featured in Cautionary Tales. She has met him and he assured her, yes, he was a liar.

You can listen to Risky Business wherever you get your podcasts. But for now, here's the episode featuring me. I hope you like it. There are duels, prison breaks, banking bubbles, poetry, and Nate reveals he has a relative who faked his own death.

Hey everyone, welcome back to Risky Business, our show about making better decisions. I'm Maria Konnikova. And I'm Nate Silver. So today we have a slightly different and fun show for you. We're going to be bringing on a very special guest, Tim Harford, who hosts another Pushkin podcast, Cautionary Tales, and we'll be talking about the intersection of risk and cautionary tales from history.

Tim, welcome to the show. I'm thrilled to be on the show. Thank you. So for listeners of Pushkin, you're probably familiar with Tim as the host of Cautionary Tales. I've been lucky enough to be on the show and to have been a listener of the show. I think it's wonderful. My episodes are obviously the best, but it's all pretty good. Tim is an economist.

economist, a journalist. He has a column in the Financial Times. He's written multiple amazing books. You know, longtime friend of the two of us. Nate, I don't know if you want to add anything else, but we're so happy to be here and to do kind of an episode where cautionary tales and risky business intersect.

where we talk about cautionary tales that are about risky business, that are about risk, about taking risks, about how risk-taking can go wrong, and how sometimes, you know, the lines between legitimate risks and cons and deceptions are

might get blurred a little bit and cross over into territory that goes from legitimate to illegitimate very quickly. Do you mean to say that gambling doesn't always work out, Maria? It's weird. It's so weird. The chance of loss is in fact 100%, which I guess we'll get to that, but yes. That is absolutely true. So when we were kind of thinking about

ways to make this episode work. Tim, you thought about one particular story where you and I have actually intersected on this because we've both thought about this person. And he's someone who I actually had on my previous podcast, The Grift. And he is a

Well, let's have you lay him out. Let us meet Sam Israel, our first subject for today. Sam Israel III, I think is his full name. Oh, the third. Absolutely remarkable gentleman, if gentleman is the right word.

term and it probably isn't. So we did a Cautionary Tales episode live on stage about pyramid schemes and Ponzi schemes and why people fall for them, but also why people set them up and this kind of strange snowball of disaster where the Ponzi scheme becomes increasingly difficult to cover. And

And the most amazing example I've ever come across is Bayou Capital, which was set up by Sam Israel. I saw one writer described Sam Israel and Bayou Capital. It's like somebody took the Bernie Madoff story but was told to write a Hollywood script and to punch it up a bit, you know, make it sing a bit more. And everything that made Madoff's Ponzi scheme notorious,

applies to Sam Israel, but it just all gets crazier. So Sam came from a wealthy family. I think of commodity traders in Louisiana, but he wanted to show he could make it himself. And he got into Wall Street at an early age and

absorb that Wall Street culture, all that kind of bro-ish culture of Wall Street in the 1980s. And so he takes all this in. He keeps his mouth shut. He watches various dubious activities and not just the kind of the sex work and the excess, but also illegality, financial illegality, observes people kind of insider trading, for example. And then he sets up his own firm, Bayou Capital, which is a hedge fund. And

Very quickly, Bayou Capital turns from being a hedge fund into being a Ponzi scheme. And just to remind people what a Ponzi scheme is, it's very simple. Investors give you money and then you announce you've made massive profits and then more investors give you money and you announce you've made even more massive profits and then more investors give you money. And you keep saying you've made massive profits. And if anybody ever says, that's great, I'd like my money back.

Well, that's easy. You can give them the money back with the profits because more people keep giving you their money. And the insight that Sam Israel had was with a hedge fund, it's kind of open-ended. The money keeps growing. And why would anybody ever want their money back if you keep telling them they made another 20% this year, they made another 25% this year? Like no one ever asks for their money back. They just leave the money with you.

And so the fraud went on for a very long time and then things started to unravel. But Maria, you met Sam. So, and you met Sam in prison. So, spoiler. So tell us, what did you make of him as a person? How did he get into this? Why did he get into this? Well, it's funny because my interview with him was from a while back, you know, 2017, something like that. I honestly don't remember. We should say that he was...

arrested, I think, in about 2007, 2008, something like that. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. But so I was trying to refresh my memory and, you know, just looked at some of the transcripts and then also looked at an interview that he did with Andrew Ross Sorkin. And he told us the exact same thing at the beginning, which is like, don't believe me, I'm a liar. And it's so funny because I think that

He thinks that that absolves him, right? If he puts that disclaimer up top, then he can sort of...

charm his way out and say but actually I'm a good guy right I'm not like that bad guy made off so I should say there's there's one amazing scene and Guy Lawson wrote this book The Octopus which is like the quintessential account of Sam Israel but there's a scene in in that book where his wife walks in and catches him bent over his desk snorting cocaine through a $50 bill and

and says why are you taking cocaine and he goes how dare you accuse me of taking drugs so yeah sorry I interrupted but that's the kind of guy he is it is the kind of guy he is and you know he was incredibly charismatic and he said I

I was doing really, really well on Wall Street, right? He kind of got in. He didn't want to compete with his siblings, so he wanted to do it on his own. So he didn't want to go into the family business. Instead, he had this opportunity to go into Wall Street, worked at a very successful hedge fund, and was actually making money. By the way, this is all according to Sam Israel, right? I haven't actually looked at his returns. I did not look at his balance sheets. I don't know how he did as a trader. He assures me that he was making money.

you know, millions for people and for himself in his prior Wall Street days. So let's just, we'll take that on faith. But what I've learned working with con artists is you can't take anything on faith. So asterisk. But he was very successful on Wall Street. And I assume he must have been to a certain degree because he started his own hedge fund. Yeah.

And he was able to raise, I think, about $300 million to begin with of outside money, which back then, this was 1996, I want to say, something around somewhere around there, 90s. So that was a lot of money. And he went in with a partner who was a close friend of his who was a disgraced fund manager whose fund had just gone under. But Sam believed in him and thought that, you know, that he was a good guy and that this would work. So the way Sam told it

to me was that when they started Bayou in 1996,

he kind of relied on this guy, you know, to be an equal partner and that this guy was lose, started losing a lot of money. And Sam said, well, I'm a good trader. I'm good at this. I'll be able to kind of work my way out of the hole. Um, but he couldn't and the hole kept getting bigger. Um, and so at some point he realized, you know, shit, we've lost 12% in our first year. You know, it's even worse in our second year. This is looking bad. And we're

Our ability to raise money is going down because our returns are shit. They're absolutely horrible. And so that's when it became a Ponzi scheme. And his accountant, who was a guy called Dan Marino, hilarious footnote. Football player?

Well, if anybody, so think about it, this is 1996. If anybody Googles, it's pre-Google, right? If anybody tries to search on the internet for Dan Marino, they get the football player. So he's working with this accountant who is completely invisible to internet searches and the accountant... Oh, that's smart. Yeah, it's really smart. That's very smart. The accountant's completely crooked and basically sets up his own fake account

Dan Marino sounds like a cricket. I don't mean to stereotype based on last, but Dan Marino sounds like a cricket accountant or an NFL quarterback. One of the two. So he sets up his own fake auditing firm. So he's basically auditing his own accounts. And if anybody sort of were to really go and check the code, the guy who says that Dan Marino's accounts are genuine is an auditor called Dan Marino.

And they're the same guy. So that was kind of an important part of this fraud. But yeah, Dan Marino told the author Guy Laussen that one of the problems was there's this idea, oh, we're going to have a really good year. We're going to make a lot of money for real. And when we make a lot of money for real, then it will no longer be a Ponzi scheme. It's all genuine. It'll all come out good in the end. Dan Marino said the problem is

Sometimes they did have good years, but whenever they had a good year, they would claim it was an even better year. And whenever they had a bad year, they would never admit that they had a bad year. So there was a, you know, whatever it was, vanity, fear of the consequences, whatever it was, he just made it completely impossible for him ever to catch up with his own life.

And I think that that's very typical of con artists, right? Where they say, I'll fix it. I'll make it better. This is just temporary, but it never is. But the most incredible thing about Sam Israel is that...

once the scheme kind of comes undone, right, which happens at some point, just like with SBF night, right? At some point, people are going to ask for their money and people are going to get spooked. And when they get spooked, like there's going to be a day of reckoning. And he had a moment where he said, oh shit, you know, I'm going to jail. And he thought he would get seven or eight years, which was pretty typical for white collar criminals. And then

They switched judges and the judge gave him 240 months.

So 20 years, right, instead. And he was like, oh, shit, you know, I can't do 20 years. I'm going to be an old man. This is not cool. I was ready for seven. I can't do 20. And so instead of, you know, figuring out how do I deal with this, he decides to fake his own death. Which is obviously going to work out really well. Oh, it's going to work out great. We'll be back in a minute.

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He only has a few months to plan, right? It's not like he has been thinking, oh, I'm going to fake my own death. This is my exit strategy. Because a lot of con artists, they don't think that far ahead, right? They don't think of the exit strategy. They think it's always going to work out. So he says, I'm going to fake my own death. I've watched this really cool movie. It's called RV. And I'm going to buy an RV and I'm going to just go around the country and maybe...

Oh, by the way, one of the things he told me was that after his sentencing, as he was walking out, an FBI agent, one of the ones he'd gotten friendly with, looked at him and said, I have two words for you, Costa Rica. I find it very difficult to believe that that actually happened. Yes, I also doubt. Gratias, Tamarino, Tamarino, two words for you, Costa Rica. Yeah.

I don't know. Nate, I think you've got a career at this. But I'm curious. So Maria, you said that this is short-term thinking. He wasn't really thinking through the consequences of his actions. And that's true. Any Ponzi scheme inevitably becomes completely unsustainable. You cannot possibly...

keep it going. It will come to an end. So what is the way out? And then the faking the suicide again, like, of course he's going to get caught. Of course that's not going to work. Yeah, he decided he was going to jump off a bridge. Well, not jump off. He decided he was going to pretend that he had jumped off a bridge, right? He actually jumped off a bridge. Oh, because he... Yeah, because when you...

Because then he did actually claim he committed... No, no, no. He actually jumped off a bridge. He did... So this is the research he was doing. When you're trying to fake your own death, and I interviewed this woman, Elizabeth Greenwood, who wrote about faking your own death, you have to think very far ahead. You have to figure out money. You know, how am I going to be off the grid, right, these days? Like, how am I going to survive? How am I going to get out of the country? And, you know, where's my cash going to come from? All of these things. Right.

Instead, what he spends his time thinking is researching all of the bridges in New York to try to figure out which one he could conceivably jump off of and not die. So he finds a bridge that's under construction, so there are nets underneath. And he's like, oh, perfect. Like, I'm going to jump and I'm going to land in the net, and then I'll use the net to scramble up and get out. So he does this, not realizing that,

Those nets are pretty damn hard to climb out of. So he manages to make the net. By the way, thinking about risk, right, risk-reward, if you miss the net, the risk-reward equation there is not great. Also, is the net designed to catch people or just like...

a spanner that somebody drops. I mean, that's the... Right. No, it's... I think it was... We're going to find out the hard way. I think it was designed to catch bricks and, you know, falling debris from construction. So when a person goes into it, it just like...

you know, goes all the way down. So then he's stuck in it. And at this point, he's like, I think I'm going to die anyway, except it's going to be much worse because I'm going to have spent my last minutes trying to scramble up this net. But he actually does manage to get out. And he has a driver waiting for him to take him to his RV. And

he thinks he's going to drive off into the sunset. Oh, by the way, another really, really important thing. If you're trying to fake your own death, do not tell your mother, your girlfriend, your son, and the driver that you're going to be faking your own death. Don't worry, mom. I'm not actually dead. Just call an Uber. Just call an Uber. Call an Uber. Yeah, call an Uber. Uber Black. Do it in style. But this is what happened. So, you know,

And he's fucked from the beginning because he has not thought any of this through. But he does manage to make it out of the net. He's met by a driver, makes it to his RV. And for the first few weeks, it actually seems like everything is kind of okay. Because even though he's living in an RV, living in RV parks, you know, he's kind of getting away with it. And then he...

walks into a bar one day and he sees himself on TV on America's Most Wanted. And he goes and reads about himself on the internet, which is a big, big no-no if you're faking your own death to start Googling yourself. But he does that. And he sees that his girlfriend has been arrested as an accomplice and that they're looking to arrest his mother. He doesn't realize that this is a trap, that the police do this kind of thing to try to get

people kind of out of hiding. He thinks this is real. And so he gets on a motorcycle, goes to the police department to turn himself in, walks in. He says, hey, I'm here to turn myself in. And the police officer is like, what, in for what you need to use the bathroom? It's over there. Anyway, there's all of this miscommunication. He says, no, I'm turning myself in. I'm

I'm wanted and I just don't want any press here. And at this point, the police officer actually looks at him, realizes who he is. And that is when he gets caught and gets an additional two years added onto his sentence for faking his own death and running away. It's astonishing. One thing you said, Maria, you said that the craziest thing about him or the most amazing thing about him, I'm not even sure that is the craziest thing about him, but we haven't got all day, so...

There are other stories you could tell about, Sam. But I wanted to ask Nate, given that, Nate, you've been thinking about the habits of risk-taking individuals, these people you call Rivarians, is short-termism important?

part of the or a kind of a side effect or a glitch in the riverian thinking system so on the one hand you need that ability to think probabilistically you need that ability to to take calculated risks um but i mean sam israel just seems to have never been able to see past the it was had no problem taking risks but just couldn't see past the end of his nose yeah no look i think the better investors and gamblers have a longer time horizon that's kind of one of

One of Silicon Valley's secrets, despite their many flaws, that they do kind of think 10 years ahead. But yeah, some of this sounds very familiar. Maria, I know from talking to you, the notion of like a good business gone bad. I mean, even FTX was a pretty good business, right? It was like the leading brand for crypto trading. They made legitimate profits, etc. But like, you know, it turned sour. Or I think, you know, Sam Beckenfried couldn't resist the temptation to

to take all this money, stay on the sideline. He couldn't like resist the temptation to go and gamble with it. Um, but yeah, the lack of advanced planning coupled with the kind of miscalculating consequences, um, you know, if you're very charming, which I think Sam Israel is more so than SBF, it's a different story. Uh,

You can kind of weasel your way out of things, right? You can think you can like dance your way out of anything. And you can up the con a level or two or three. And then you may on some level know it's not going to work, but I don't know. I mean, at some point there's a point of no return, right? There is a point of no return. Yeah, I think that's absolutely right. Nate, I think one of the, this is a characteristic that you have both in the

both with reverence and non-reverence and, and Tim, I'm sure you you've come across this in other cautionary tales, but I think a lot of it is this overconfidence and hubris, right. That comes with a certain level of success and people. And I think to be an entrepreneur and to be a risk taker, you need to be overconfident to a certain extent. You know,

As we all know, if you actually know your odds of success, you're not going to start the damn company. You're not going to try it because it's the risk of failure and the chances of failure are so high. So it's this fine balance. And I think overconfidence, though, turns into delusion and turns into this thinking that –

actually, you know, I can keep doing this forever. And because you've gotten away with it for so long, it seems like probabilistically speaking, you know, your base rates change. I've gotten, you know, okay, you know, one year, two years, three years, four years, everything's good. This is all going good. Yeah, if the coin comes up heads...

five times in a row, I mean, you see it in poker all the time, right? You know, winner's tilt is something which is maybe under-discussed. Loser's tilt we all have experienced. Maybe not you, Maria. But winner's tilt where you're on a hot streak and you're like, ah, maybe I have some gift from God to play poker really well or something is also a big deal.

It absolutely is. One of my favorite psych studies is from Ellen Langer, and I think the name of the paper is something like, Heads I Win, Tails It's Chance, something like that. And she had people...

bet, not bet, but guess the results of a coin toss. And it was actually not a fair coin. It was rigged. And there were different, basically, it came up heads and tails the exact same number of times in all of the different conditions. But in some of them, it was pretty random. In others, it was clustered near the end. And in the most important condition, the correct guesses were clustered near the beginning, right? So basically, you would say, you know,

heads, you'd guess, and then they'd make sure it landed on heads. It was a rig toss so that you were right. It was, yeah. And the people who were correct clustered at the beginning were

And these were Harvard students, by the way. Then they got all sorts of questions like, I'm good at predicting the outcomes of coin tosses. And they would rate themselves as actually quite good at it. They would say, if I had more time to practice and to guess, I'd get even better. So things that made it

very clear that they thought that this was a skill and not actually completely random. And it was so easy to get people to believe that they were skilled at something where it was just complete randomness when they had those experiences

those things happen at the beginning. So, Tim, I think this goes back to the beginning of your question. This is how you get into Ponzi schemes. Think about Bernie Madoff, right? He was successful for far longer than Sam Israel. And Sam Israel, by the way, was the single biggest Ponzi scheme before Bernie Madoff. Now, I'm curious. We've been talking about people who have an appetite for risk and who it all came apart for. Maria, I know you've been doing a little bit of research into what are the most important factors

gamblers in economic history? Yeah, John Law. He was someone who I wrote about for The Confidence Game, and I've come back to. So my next book is about cheating. So I've kind of been thinking about him. But one of the reasons I am interested in John Law, so when we're talking about someone like Sam Israel, right, it's pretty clear, con artist, right, Ponzi scheme.

When you're talking about someone like John Law, it becomes much less clear because he's someone who was a huge gambler. And we know that sometimes he was successful, but he also ran his father's business into the ground, if I remember correctly, through gambling. But I guess he got better with time. And killed a man. And killed a man. Yeah.

Wait, literal gambling or like? Literal gambling. So, yeah. So he was someone who came from money, whose parents had a financial business. And we should say this is the 1700s, just to situate people. For those small number of listeners who don't know who John Law is or that

Everybody should. We're in the 1700s, and he's going to be making friends with the Duke of Orléans, or the Duke of Orleans, who was then regent of France. And he's going to be basically setting up France's banking system. So the reason why I was fascinated by him is that

It's actually unclear if he was a con artist or not. Like, did he believe that? Because it was the kind of the end of his time at the height of finance was with the establishment of this thing called the Mississippi Company, which was a huge bubble and basically bankrupted a ton of people. And the question is, you know,

Did he know what he was doing and get unlucky? Or did he, like, basically, did he do this as a kind of Ponzi scheme, as a kind of con or not? And the fact that we still don't really agree on that, I think is fascinating. I mean, we should say, so he was originally a Scot. He killed a guy in a duel, was sentenced to death for murder, escaped from prison, traveled Europe, wound up in Paris, went

made a few friends with some influential nobles, made a huge amount of money gambling because he would set himself up as the house and he understood the probability enough that he knew he had an edge. So he's gambling with all these nobles, he's making a huge amount of money. And then he sets up his own bank and he starts issuing paper money. Now, this is not the first paper money in the history of the world.

It's not even the first paper money in the history of France, but it's pretty new and people are still trying to figure out kind of how it works. And of course, this is revolutionary. He's ahead of his time. Like paper money is how we do things, right? It's kind of amazing. And then the whole thing just gets wrapped up with French government debt and gets wrapped up with the Mississippi bubble.

And the Mississippi bubble was, it was a stock market bubble. One stock was involved, the stock of the Mississippi company and John Law controlled the Mississippi company. But it was clear that nobody really understood what was going on, except that number go up. And if number go up, everyone gets very excited. It's very intoxicating when the number goes up, right? I do wonder too, there is some survivorship bias in which kind of scams and schemes are

we discover, you know, the best frauds in history probably nobody knows about. Yeah, yeah. That's a good point. Absolutely. SPF was convinced that he could somehow navigate his way through bankruptcy, or not through bankruptcy, navigate his way through this downfall in Bitcoin and come out on the other side of it, and maybe people wouldn't really notice, right? Maybe it's like a page...

A16 story, not an A1 story, if there's a spontaneous rise in Bitcoin prices and they recover these losses that they have, although they were $10 billion in a hole, which is pretty hard to overcome. It's funny, Nate. I think that's a really important point that the best con artists are never caught. When we talk about con artists and people ask me, you know, why aren't there as many female con artists? I...

I say a few things, but one of them is kind of a joke, but kind of not, which is that they're just better at it. So we don't know them because they haven't been caught. They don't have as much ego and they know when to disappear and how to disappear much better than the Sam Israels of the world. Or like cheating and poker. A lot of these famous...

Cheating scandals, like online cheating scandals, people are very greedy where they win at like, you know, 13 standard deviations above some random rate. Whereas if you won at two standard deviations above random, it would be almost impossible to detect and you'd have a great life. Although we don't find those people, though, right? We don't find the people that are actually good at cheating a lot of the time.

Yeah. But so, so as we, you know, wrap up the story of John Law, I do think that it's interesting that, I mean, economists don't agree, historians don't agree whether, whether or not he was, you know, greedy. He was obviously greedy. I think everyone agrees on that. But whether he thought that this could actually all worked out. I found a rhyme that I would love to share if you guys are in poetry mode, which

from the time about what happened with the Mississippi bubble. And it goes like this. My shares, which on Monday I bought, were worth millions on Tuesday, I thought. So on Wednesday I chose my abode. In my carriage on Thursday I rode. To the ballroom on Friday I went. To the workhouse next day I was sent. First poetry reading on the Risky Business podcast, I believe. It is. It is. I think that should start a tradition. That's very good. Yeah.

And one nobleman of the time said, thus ends the system of paper money, which has enriched a thousand beggars and impoverished a hundred thousand men. And obviously that's not true, which is why we, you know, that was not the end of the system of paper money. It was just...

It just happened to be the end of John Law. He had to escape France, by the way, because he was convicted and was going to be sent to prison there. So he dressed up as a beggar, ran away to Italy and died in Venice, totally impoverished. And I guess the... Cautionary tale, Tim, cautionary tale. It is a cautionary tale. And I guess the lesson, or maybe the lesson is that, or the economics lesson is if you're going to have paper money, if you're going to have somebody who has the right...

to just create money with a printing press, you've got to make sure you have the right controls over that person or over that institution. It can't just be some guy who killed a guy in a duel and came over, won a lot of money in gambling, and then he's the guy who can do it. You need this institutional scaffolding, which, you know, when we have it, it seems to work just fine. We'll be back right after this.

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Tim, I mean, are there like two or three or one big takeaways, like common patterns and when you know something is becoming a cautionary tale or a con? At the risk of quoting that classic opening line of Anna Karenina, all happy families are alike and every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. I think one of the striking things about cautionary tales is that

there are a lot of different ways for things to go wrong. There are organizational problems, informational problems, engineering problems, hubris and arrogance, short-sightedness, lots and lots of self-delusion, lots of wishful thinking. I mean, it's a miracle that human civilization survives, actually, given how many different ways there are to go wrong. I mean, that is part of the...

slightly perverse joy of researching and writing these cautionary tales is there is always a new disaster and always a new way for disaster to happen. You make that sound almost gleeful. Yeah, I mean, sometimes I have to remind myself that like, I'm not supposed to be enjoying this because some of them are very, very sad. Some of them are straightforwardly hilarious and no great harm is done, but a lot of them are pretty painful.

Yeah, Maria, I remember you telling me that cons are most likely to occur...

When you're in an up cycle or a down cycle, right? Not in the steady state, but when there's something new and novel and people are panicking. Yeah, moments of transition. So whether those are societal transitions or whether they're personal transitions is when you're most vulnerable to get conned. So it's not a personality trait. It's not intelligence. It's not anything like that. It is this kind of moment of either up or down euphoria or, you know,

despondency. But when things are uncertain and your worldview gets challenged, gets shattered, gets displaced, you look for certainty. And that's when con artists swoop in and give that certainty to you. So as long as nothing ever changes, we're all safe from cons. Yeah, we're good. You know, my great-grandfather faked his death.

and got away with it. Okay, Nate, can we just, can we, we need this story? I'm sorry. We're pausing everything. Nate, please. I mean, his name was Ferdinand Thrun, which is a great name. It's an amazing name. He was written up in the Chicago Tribune and the New York Times and places like that. Yeah, he was like an insurance fraudster. We should do this as a separate segment sometime. Yeah. But basically his,

technique was to commit crimes so devious that there was no law to charge them with because they hadn't figured out like this particular type of fraud. But we should do proper research and do an episode on this, Maria. Yeah, absolutely. So, Maria, Nate, I

Now we've discussed Sam Israel, we've discussed John Law. I actually had a couple of questions, given that you guys are absolutely experts on this sort of thing. I had a couple of questions for you that I hope you won't mind me asking. And the first one is, I have your two most recent books in front of me. I have Nate's On the Edge. I have Maria's The Biggest Bluff. Stone Cold Classic. Amazing. I looked in the index.

uh the word experiments does not appear in the index of either of your books uh expected value of course does appear but experiments does not and and i just wondered whether you two are brilliant risk takers uh analysts poker players but i thought a poker player can't really experiment like if you want to if you want to find out

you need to make the bet. You need to put down the money. There's no cheap way to find out what the other person's cards are.

And maybe that is a blind spot in poker playing relative to decision-making advice in everyday life. Because what I've always been saying to people is, okay, if you're facing an uncertain situation, you know, you don't know what the right thing to do is, maybe there's an experiment. Maybe that you can run a little pilot. Maybe you can run a little, you know, A-B test. Maybe there's a cheap way.

to find out without betting all your chips, metaphorically speaking. So I just wanted to ask why did neither of you talk about experiments? And is this in fact a blind spot in the poker player's view of the world? It's a great point, Tim. I have a home game I play maybe every third week. That's a $1, $2 game, which for me is, you know, on the lower side of the stakes I play. And I probably am doing some

experimenting in that game, right? You know, last night I made, I had a nut flush draw, which some of our audience will know what that means. I had the ace high flush draw on a board that was king, queen, XX. I made like a 3X flush,

overbet shove on the turn. I'm just going to experiment. I bet probably there's some frequency at which you're supposed to do this in game theory, but if I lose this pot, then I'll win sometimes and catch my flush, and it'll be a fun hand to show down and whatever. But I think we do probably...

experiment a little bit and that kind of like naughty feeling you have of like having an experiment and getting away with it like you're kind of taking the piss to use a is that the British term yeah yeah you're taking the piss you kind of get away with it like it's a very satisfying feeling and I think encourages kind artistry sometimes yeah

Yeah, I think that there are two things. One, yes, I think that you can experiment this way. And to me, I do it when I move down in stakes as well, right? When the money is not as meaningful and you get to test certain theories out, right? So if I'm studying and I'm kind of

figuring out different possibilities for playing similar spots. I might test those out and feel comfortable testing them out when I don't care as much about the stakes, when it's not kind of as important. Now that said, we can't experiment as in the traditional. So I'm

you know, I'm a trained psychologist, right? So when I was doing studies for my PhD, you have to have a very strict experimental design where you have your control group and you have your test groups and, you know, you have all of these things where you're trying to

subtly change the conditions and see if the outcome changes. That obviously you can't do because in some ways, you know, my whole book was an experiment. So experiments not in the index, but the biggest bluff, all of it was experiment. And I saw poker as kind of a psychology laboratory of testing out a lot of the psychological theories that I had kind of known in theory and putting them into practice at the table and being able to see, oh, you know, this is how this plays out. This is how that plays out.

And I do think that poker is great for that. But of course, you can't, when you're playing in a tournament, when you're playing in a game, you can't have the exact same conditions where you say, okay,

On this exact same board, I'm going to do this. Let's see what happens. All right, pretend I didn't do that. Let's go back. Now I'm going to do something else and we'll see what happens there. Because even if Nate and I were thinking, oh, okay, let's see what it feels like to overbet three times the pot in this particular spot. And Nate says, okay, I'm going to do this. And then Maria, you do Y. Okay.

people, that's not, in poker, that experiment is actually not a valid control group because Nate and I are so different. People respond to us differently and all of a sudden you can't control the environment because it's a different environment the moment you switch out the players, right? All of a sudden the experimental conditions change, even if you've changed literally nothing except who's sitting in that chair. And

I think that's actually fascinating and a really, that's how life works. That's why sometimes psych studies from the laboratory don't generalize well to the real world because the real world does get messier and it's much more difficult to control all of your variables. As someone who's self-reflectively kind of seen his social status rise and fall different times, if you're charming...

and privileged and are seen as being on a winning streak, you can get away with a lot. People really are afraid to call you on your bullshit. Yeah. Okay. Second quick question. Second quick question because I have to take advantage of the opportunity to tap into your wisdom. Okay. So...

I think it's fair to say that both of you would advocate putting a probability on something. If you're going to make a risky decision, you have to have an idea. Is this like a 5 to 1? Is it a 3 to 1? Is there a 20% chance this is going to happen? Is there a 70% chance this is going to happen? And there's a difference between, say, a 53% chance and a 48% chance, even though they're both close to 50-50.

So it's important to quantify as much as you can, even though you don't always have the data. Okay, so two very little stories to get you to reflect on. The case in favor of quantification. Apparently when the US government was pondering the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Joint Chiefs of Staff thought that the chance of success was 30%. And a report was prepared for President Kennedy saying,

And Kennedy and 30% was presumably they thought, oh, the president won't understand percentages. So he was told there is a fair chance of success. And by fair chance of success, they meant, well, 30%.

Now, we don't know what Kennedy understood by a fair chance of success, but he seems to have thought it was a good chance of success. And he approved this total fiasco. So it might seem more user-friendly to express things as, well, this is common or uncommon or likely or unlikely, but actually none of those words really mean the same thing to the person who's uttering the word as to the person who's receiving it. So you should always put probabilities on things.

Here's the counter example. Counter example. Think back to the financial crisis, 2007, 2008. You had quants putting probabilities on things. This is the probability that such and such a thing will default based on what we know about history, based on what we know about other things that are correlated with it.

But actually all of those probabilities were spuriously precise. People had too much confidence in the probabilities. And it's fine to say, oh, we think there's like a 0.5% chance that this will default. That's fine. Then the problem is you feed the 0.5% into a model which gets fed into another model, which gets fed into another model. And in the end you're like, oh, well, we've repackaged this thing and now there's like only a one in a trillion chance that this will default. And it turns out that that's all dependent on the quality of your original model.

assumption, and you shouldn't be betting the existence of Western civilization on that calculation and people got it wrong. So the case against quantification is once you have a number, then you are tempted to rely on that number too much and to analyze or to manipulate or to remodel or to reanalyze that number too much and to forget that actually the number was always basically just an educated guess.

Well, I think that when you're talking about quantification and when you're talking about probabilities, it's the exact same logic that you have to apply to algorithms and to kind of building algorithms, which is something that Nate and I have talked about on the pod with AI, which is

Garbage in, garbage out, right? If your assumptions are garbage, then your probabilistic assessment is going to be garbage. So I actually think that both of these things, they're not counterexamples. The 30% chance of the Bay of Pigs, I just think that these were people who had...

a lot of qualifications had done the research, had done rigorous analysis, and that was not garbage in, right? They had assumptions that were there for a good reason. They had good historical data. I

I have no idea how they came upon the 30%. I'm just... Seems quite high to me, but maybe that's hindsight bias. Yeah, hindsight bias, exactly. And so you get 30%. And by the way, you should absolutely have told Kennedy 30% and not fair chance. There are so many psych studies about this that trying to put words with percentages backslides.

backfires because people do not understand. It's like if you have a weatherman and says a fair chance of rain, right? Let's talk about not a fair chance that the Bay of Pigs is a success. Fair chance of rain. Do you bring an umbrella? You want to know what the percentage chance is. You want to know that actual number because otherwise the quantification gets all out of whack. Financial crisis. When you have those numbers in the models, you're

Those were people whose incentives were not aligned with giving you a correct probabilistic assessment. Their incentives were to make money. That's also a question that you have to make. You always have to ask, and this is something that Nate and I talk about as well. When you're making these assumptions, do the incentives align? Where are the assumptions coming from? And do you have an incentive to be correct?

Right. And in this particular case, their incentive was to make money for them today and to make their company think that this was going to be a great bet and OK, that it was going to work out. And so those percentages are not something that you want to rely on. Now, if my incentive is if my percentage is wrong, I'm getting fired. Right.

If my percentage is wrong, then I'm making zero dollars. Then all of a sudden, I come up with different percentages. I use different inputs. My model looks very, very different. But Wall Street didn't work that way. It still doesn't work that way. That's not how you're incentivized. Yeah, look, I think there's a risk of laundering money.

subjective opinions through probabilities and forgetting they're subjective, right? If I'm running late to the airport, there's traffic on the Van Wick or whatever, right? I might say to myself, oh, it's a 5% chance I'm going to miss my flight, right? That's not coming out of any regression analysis or anything. You know, I've probably used the phrase on this show, like quoting Vice President Harris,

A model does not fall out of a coconut tree. It exists in the context of that which became before it or whatever else. You're trying to get at the truth with a model. And I think mediocre modelers in particular will publish a number and then forget how many assumptions are driven into that, right? Look, I still think it's worth quantifying things. I mean, at the end of the day...

Probability is defined as a number between 0.0 and 1. And you have to make decisions even in conditions of uncertainty. But to Tim's point, yeah, I think there are cases where people don't forget how provisional a guess is when you put a number on it.

Yeah. And I think it is always important to not have a false sense of certainty. And there's also a lot of data that shows that when you have numbers and when you have a lot of these things, it does give you a false sense of certainty, right? That you often do become a little bit overconfident when you're like, well, I have this model and this model. So it must be. And there you have the bias that we've talked about a lot where it goes from being probabilistic to seeming much more certain, like this will not default to this.

this will not happen because you forget that it ain't zero.

Thank you so much, guys. Fantastic. Tim, thank you so much for coming on the pod today. It's been such a pleasure having you. It's been really, really fun. Thank you for sharing your wisdom. And if people want to hear more about Sam Israel or any other stories of things going disastrously wrong and me trying to investigate the social science behind why they went wrong, Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford is one of Risky Business's sister podcasts on Pushkin.

It is. And there are lots of tales of risk-taking assessments that do not turn out quite the way the risk taker thought they would.

Risky Business is hosted by me, Maria Konnikova. And me, Nate Silver. The show is a co-production of Pushkin Industries and iHeart Media. This episode was produced by Isabel Carter. Our associate producer is Gabriel Hunter-Chang. Our executive producer is Jacob Goldstein. And if you want to listen to an ad-free version, sign up for Pushkin Plus. For $6.99 a month, you get access to ad-free listening. Thanks for tuning in. ♪

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