1 hr 2 min

How Olev Rahn helped Bankers Trust survive the 1987 crash (and how he sees markets in 2024‪)‬ Success and More Interesting Stuff

    • Investing

In 1987, Olev Rahn was pounding the streets of New York's financial district, meeting with Wall Street's best strategists. Rahn, who was running BT Financial's institutional business Pendal, felt distinctly uneasy about the exuberance gripping financial markets. It felt like a giant bubble, and the deeper he dug, the more convinced he became that a reckoning was just around the corner.
Rahn's instincts proved spot on as markets cratered on what has since become known as Black Monday. Combining put options and futures selling saw BT breeze through the '87 crash while others crumbled. From that moment, BT was the main game in town. Billions flowed into the coffers, and it was the number one place to work in Australia. Rhan remained key until BT Australia was sold to the principal group for 2.1 billion in 1999.
In this episode of Success and More Interesting Stuff, Rahn discusses the growth of BT Financial in Australia, the key figures that were instrumental in building the firm, and how the firm navigated the 1987 crash. Rahn also shares his views on markets in 2024 and why he is happy to have some cash at hand.
 
Time stamps
0:00 - Introduction
3:10 - Early life and leaving Estonia
8:15 - Developing an interest in economics
9:49 - An opportunity with Ord Minett and the XYZ method of research
15:13 - A move to London on the back of booming markets
20:03 - A call with Chris Corrigan and bringing active management to Australia
25:05 - Good performance leads to rapid growth Keating
30:41 - Kerr Neilson and Jillian Broadbent join BT as it becomes a powerhouse
34:15 - 1987 and the era of corporate excess
38:54 - The strategies Olev Rahn used to protect BT from the crash of 1987
42:00 - The signs of exuberance prior to the 1987 crash
47:39 - A golden era for Bankers Trust
50:00 - Olev Rahn’s views on markets in 2024

In 1987, Olev Rahn was pounding the streets of New York's financial district, meeting with Wall Street's best strategists. Rahn, who was running BT Financial's institutional business Pendal, felt distinctly uneasy about the exuberance gripping financial markets. It felt like a giant bubble, and the deeper he dug, the more convinced he became that a reckoning was just around the corner.
Rahn's instincts proved spot on as markets cratered on what has since become known as Black Monday. Combining put options and futures selling saw BT breeze through the '87 crash while others crumbled. From that moment, BT was the main game in town. Billions flowed into the coffers, and it was the number one place to work in Australia. Rhan remained key until BT Australia was sold to the principal group for 2.1 billion in 1999.
In this episode of Success and More Interesting Stuff, Rahn discusses the growth of BT Financial in Australia, the key figures that were instrumental in building the firm, and how the firm navigated the 1987 crash. Rahn also shares his views on markets in 2024 and why he is happy to have some cash at hand.
 
Time stamps
0:00 - Introduction
3:10 - Early life and leaving Estonia
8:15 - Developing an interest in economics
9:49 - An opportunity with Ord Minett and the XYZ method of research
15:13 - A move to London on the back of booming markets
20:03 - A call with Chris Corrigan and bringing active management to Australia
25:05 - Good performance leads to rapid growth Keating
30:41 - Kerr Neilson and Jillian Broadbent join BT as it becomes a powerhouse
34:15 - 1987 and the era of corporate excess
38:54 - The strategies Olev Rahn used to protect BT from the crash of 1987
42:00 - The signs of exuberance prior to the 1987 crash
47:39 - A golden era for Bankers Trust
50:00 - Olev Rahn’s views on markets in 2024

1 hr 2 min