CAIRO BOOKS's Description
In 2007, a stranger-than-fiction multibillion-dollar bidding war for the
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) erupted between the Chicago Mercantile Exchange
(CME) and Atlanta’s IntercontinentalExchange (ICE). Zero-Sum Game: The Rise of
the World’s Largest Derivatives Exchange takes readers behind the scenes of
this battle to tell the gripping—and often comical—story of how the historic
merger between CME and CBOT almost didn’t happen.
Author Erika S. Olson, a managing director at CBOT during the bidding war,
delivers a blow-by-blow account of the fight for the world’s oldest futures
exchange, taking you inside CBOT’s landmark Chicago Loop headquarters, onto the
high-octane trading floor, and into executives’ offices.
Through the lens of the CME/CBOT deal, Zero-Sum Game : Introduces the
colorful and outspoken personalities who call the shots in this close-knit and
frequently misunderstood industry Details the reasons behind the recent,
spectacular growth of a market that’s existed for over 160 years Explains how
derivatives affect the lives of average consumers worldwide by influencing
everything from interest rates on credit cards to the cost of a cheeseburger to
the price of a gallon of gas Reveals the inner workings of futures exchanges,
and differentiates the various types of derivatives that are routinely lumped
together and vilified by the media
Erika S. Olson is a former managing director of the Chicago Board of Trade
and spent over ten years working in and consulting to the financial services
industry. She received her MBA from Harvard Business School and her BBA from
the University of Michigan Ross School of Business.
Amazon.com Exclusive: Q & A with Author Erika S. Olson
Author Erika S. Olson
When did you know that you wanted to write a book about your time at the
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)?
I remember the exact moment: just past noon on October 6, 2006. I’d only been
at CBOT for five weeks, and was called into a secret meeting by our CEO, Bernie
Dan, who went on to tell a subset of the management team that the company’s
biggest rival, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), had made an $8 billion
offer to buy CBOT.
I’d been through three other mergers prior to joining CBOT, and they were all
filled with drama. So as I sat there listening to Bernie I thought, “These two
exchanges have been fierce competitors for over 100 years… this has the makings
of a great story.” I started taking notes that same day. And then, five months
later, the much smaller IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) came out of nowhere with
a $1 billion higher bid for CBOT and all hell broke loose. I, of course, was
selfishly thrilled by this unexpected turn of events-- Zero- Sum Game suddenly
had a new second and third act.
A lot of books have come out recently that are set in the financial services
industry. How is yours different?
The vast majority of recent books about the financial services industry deal
with some aspect of the current economic crisis, and most were written by
journalists. Whereas I am not a journalist, and my book doesn’t have anything
to do with the financial crisis. I’d also like to believe that, overall,
Zero-Sum Game is trying to convey a positive message about futures exchanges in
this country and the people running them. Not everyone in the financial
services industry is evil and out to screw over the general public! Shocking, I
know. But seriously, I felt that I had an opportunity to give readers insight
into an industry that is very private and close-knit, and that wields enormous
power. And I thought I could do it in an entertaining way, through the story of
the bidding war for CBOT.
I wanted to help people understand what derivatives are and how exchanges
work at a very basic level, and I wanted to do it subtly, so that no one would
feel like he was reading a textbook. That’s why I’m especially pleased when
people tell me they found Zero-Sum Game to be surprisingly funny. I can’t
really take too much credit for that, though--the people I worked with were
hilarious, and in some cases, all I had to do was quote them.
Unlike many of the Wall Street banks, CME Group and ICE are not exactly
household names. Why should anyone outside of the financial services industry
care about them?
The great irony is that while a lot of people have never heard of CME Group
or ICE and their only familiarity with the futures world is probably the movie
Trading Places, the exchanges affect the daily lives of consumers around the
world much more directly than do any of the big-name investment banks. That’s
part of what I cover in Zero-Sum Game : how the futures contracts traded at
places like CME Group and ICE provide a critical function that helps prices of
items in grocery stores, for example, stay relatively stable day after day.
And although, as I said earlier, my book isn’t about the financial crisis,
the companies and people that Zero-Sum Game revolves around are now being
looked to by Washington to help prevent another crisis from happening. That was
something I certainly didn’t foresee back in 2006 and 2007. But it makes sense.
In the case of CME Group, it’s been around for over 100 years (150 if you count
the history of CBOT), and it’s never experienced a customer default in its
clearing house. So it’s obviously doing something right, and now the Dodd-Frank
legislation is trying to bring that same stability to the over-the-counter
derivatives market that caused problems for the likes of Lehman Brothers, Bear
Stearns, and AIG. The Dodd-Frank act will force certain over-the-counter
(meaning private and until now, unregulated) contracts through exchanges or
clearing houses. So all of a sudden there’s this spotlight on CME Group and
ICE—the very same companies who were fighting each other for CBOT back in early
2007. My book tells the fascinating histories of these companies and provides a
behind-the-curtain look at the men currently in power. I think it’s important
that people both inside and outside the banking world get a better
understanding of what futures exchanges do and who’s running the show in this
increasingly influential and important industry.