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Albert
Wiggin
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
6
? years ago I did a piece on one of the banking industry's
true scumbags, Albert Wiggin, as back then corporate
fraud investigations, such as the one enveloping Enron,
dominated the headlines. Today it's all about the
banking sector and, in some instances, traders and
speculators perhaps crossing the line in terms of
spreading rumors in an attempt to sink various institutions
such as Bear Stearns. Thus it's a good time to revisit
Wiggin's story.
Albert
Henry Wiggin was born in 1868 in Medfield, Massachusetts.
The son of a Unitarian minister, Albert was a bank
clerk at the age of 17. By 1904 he had become a vice
president (the youngest ever) at Chase National Bank
in New York, after which he rocketed up the ladder,
becoming chairman of Chase in 1917. Wiggin then embarked
on an acquisition spree that saw Chase swallow up
six New York institutions by 1929, thus making the
bank the 2nd-largest in the world next to National
City.
Wiggin
expanded Chase's traditional businesses, opening up
branches all over New York City, as well as overseas.
He also took advantage of his connections, serving
on 59 corporate boards, which helped him gain support
far and wide for his own ventures. Of course it was
I'll scratch your back, you scratch mine.
But
unbeknownst to but a precious few executives at Chase,
by the time the fall of 1929 rolled around, Wiggin
had established six private corporations, 3 in America
and 3 in Canada. Through this setup, which wasn't
discovered until a 1933 Senate investigation looking
into the causes of the Crash, Wiggin organized investment
pools that bet on shares of Chase Securities and Chase
National Bank, profiting handsomely during the bull
run during the first half of 1929. Wiggin cut some
of his fellow executives in on the action (sound familiar?)
and all parties borrowed from the bank to pay for
their holdings. Wiggin and his family even took out
loans of $8 million from Chase, even though their
own net worth clearly didn't require it.
Back
then, the quiet, reserved Wiggin was known as "the
most popular man on Wall Street." [Charles Kindleberger]
Little did folks know though that as the market topped
on September 3, 1929, with the Dow Jones peaking at
381, Albert Wiggin was preparing his next big move.
Beginning on September 23, with the Dow still at 359,
he began to short stock in his own bank, both the
shares of Chase Securities and Chase National. Here
was a man, being paid a handsome salary of $275,000
a year to not only enhance the prospects of his companies,
but also to protect the common shareholders, and he
was betting that the very same stock would go down.
Of
course it proved to be a smart bet as the market reached
a temporary bottom of 230 on October 29. By the time
he wrapped up his most aggressive short-selling on
December 11, he had profits in excess of $4 million.
As
if that wasn't bad enough, Wiggin had been part of
a banking group that had gotten together on Black
Thursday, October 24, in an attempt to save a market
that appeared to be in freefall. All the players agreed
to fund a pool with the intent of stabilizing the
market (it worked for a few days), but here was Wiggin
selling short his own company.
And
just like some of the names in the news today, Wiggin
used his 'offshore' (Canada) shell companies to hide
his profits and thus avoid paying taxes. [Again this
wasn't discovered until he was required to testify
in 1933.]
Market
historian Charles Geisst says of Wiggin's activities,
"(They) gave banking and the stock market a bad name
for at least 2 generations after the Crash." Author
Charles Morris adds, in commenting on the Wiggins'
of the world, "(Even if) they had done nothing actually
criminal, (they) had treated their own stockholders
and the investing public as so many sheep to be fleeced
by whatever means the ingenuity of accountants and
lawyers could devise."
When
the Pecora Commission (named after Senate counsel
Ferdinand Pecora) finally got to the truth, Wiggin
still didn't admit any wrongdoing. "I think it is
highly desirable that the officers of the bank should
be interested in the stock of the bank." [Maury Klein]
Wiggin
retired from Chase in 1932, at which point he was
awarded with a $100,000 pension by the board, only
to have to renounce it when the new chairman questioned
the validity. Wiggin was also sued by a group of Chase
shareholders, a suit he ended up settling for $2 million.
He died in relative obscurity in 1951. Today we can
call him just another dirtball.
[As
for Chase National Bank, it merged in the early 1950s
with Bank of Manhattan to create Chase Manhattan Bank.]
Sources:
"Money,
Greed, and Risk," Charles R. Morris
"Wall Street: A History," Charles Geisst
"Rainbow's End," Maury Klein
"The Great Bull Market," Robert Sobel
"The Great Game," John Steele Gordon
"Manias, Panics, and Crashes," Charles P. Kindleberger
"Eyewitness to Wall Street," David Colbert
Wall
Street History returns next week.
Brian
Trumbore
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