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"If
It's Good Enough for Milton"
By Leo Melamed
The Milton Friedman Commemoration
University of Chicago
Rockefeller Chapel
January 29, 2007

Although I did not know it at the time, my first introduction
to Milton Friedman occurred in 1940 when I was but seven years
old. We were on the first leg of our escape from the Nazis at the
outset of World War II and arrived from Bialystok, the city of
my birth, to Vilna that's Vilnius, for those who don't know the
Yiddish name of this venerable Lithuanian city. My father, who
was first and foremost a mathematics teacher, sat me down to provide
my first lesson in economics. The circumstances made the moment
historic and memorable. Years later, I had the privilege of relating
this story to Milton and Rose.
In one hand
my father held up a Polish zloty, in the other a Lithuanian lit. "Do you know what these are?" he
asked?
"Money," I answered, proud to show off my deep understanding
of such matters.
"Yes," he agreed. "And
do you know how much each of them is worth?"
I shrugged
my shoulders, having exhausted my expertise in high finance.
My father then carefully explained that the value of those two
units of currency could only be determined by what they can buy
in the marketplace. What followed was my first exposure to the
logic of Milton Friedman. I learned that while the official rate
of exchange between the zloty and the lit was one for one, in
fact it would take two zlotys to buy a loaf of bread but only
one lit. "The government's official rate doesn't mean a thing," my
father admonished.
It was the start of our two-year odyssey, as my parents with me
at their side, miraculously outwitted the Gestapo and KGB in a
danger filled escapade that spanned three continents, six languages,
Japan, and happily concluded in the United States. The lessons
in Milton Friedman's free-market economics continued as we chased
around the world, and as the lit changed to a ruble, the ruble
to a yen, and finally a yen to a dollar. It left an indelible impression,
one that resonated some thirty years later when I became chairman
of the Chicago Mercantile exchange.
In 1970, the
world was still chained to the failing fixed exchange rate regime
agreed to in 1945 at Bretton Woods in the mountains of New Hampshire.
Thereafter, foreign exchange trading was allowed only at the
officially established rate of exchange. An individual, regardless
of his standing, wealth, or businesses was barred from participation.
In a well-publicized story, when Milton Friedman attempted to
go short the British pound, a bank refused him the right to do
so on the basis that "Friedman did not have the
necessary commercial interest to deal in foreign exchange."
As chairman
of the CME, I was acutely aware that the idea of a futures market
in currency, where everyone has sufficient commercial interest,
was sheer heresy, akin to suggesting monotheism to a pagan.
Knowledgeable people implored that the CME reject such a nonsensical
idea. Most of our board of directors warned futures markets were
suited for traditional agricultural products and little else. The
orthodox financial community was also vehemently opposed. At best
we were considered an "unwelcome" and very distant relative
of the main-line financial family. Futures markets, they predicted,
would never be utilized for the sophisticated needs of world banks
and commercial enterprises. Besides, Chicago was the wrong place.
That was the habitat of Al Capone. Matters of finance belonged
in the holy centers of finance London and New York.
It is nearly impossible today to understand or visualize the world
before Milton Friedman's ideas revolutionized the planet and became
orthodoxy. What is self evident today was heretical then.
Much of the world was still suffering the pains of command economics.
The iron curtain was still intact. The Berlin Wall had not yet
fallen. The dollar did not freely fluctuate. "Free to Choose" had
not yet become the roadmap for the international marketplace.
There was another
overriding issue which plagued me then. How could I, a lawyer-turned-trader
cum financial innovator really be certain that foreign currency
instruments could succeed within the strictures designed for
soybeans and eggs. Perhaps there was some fundamental economic
reason why no one had before successfully applied financial instruments
to futures? Indeed, on the eve of our currency launch, a prominent
New York banker stated: "It's
ludicrous to think that foreign exchange can be entrusted to a
bunch of pork belly crapshooters." Who could I turn to for
advice? Who could overcome the weighty objections by so many? Who
could give me courage to proceed?
For me there was but one person in the whole world capable of
settling the issue. By 1970, I had become a committed and ardent
disciple in the army that was forming around Milton Friedman's
ideas. He had become our hero, our teacher, our mentor. I even
had the temerity to sneak into his lectures at the U of C, although
I was not a student, to listen to the great man expound on the
free market. What I heard made my spirits soar. Here was the voice
of supreme economic authority saying that the system of fixed exchange
rates was wrong. That it was time for its demise. Here was the
fount of economic logic and vision saying that what I experienced
as a child was true: That real value could only determined by the
free flow of supply and demand in an open competitive marketplace
perhaps, I mused, a marketplace like a futures exchange.
Suddenly, the inevitable came to pass the stresses resulting from
the dysfunctional fixed exchange rate system was more than the
U.S. could bear. On August 15, 1971, President Nixon cancelled
the Bretton Woods Agreement and dropped the U.S. dollar convertibility
to gold. It was what Milton Friedman had advised Nixon to do from
the beginning. For the world it unleashed a financial tsunami whose
reverberations would be felt a decade later. For me it represented
the moment of truth.
We met for breakfast on Saturday, November 13, 1971, at the New
York Waldorf Astoria. I began by asking that he promise not to
laugh. (At the time I had no understanding of what Alan Greenspan
has described as Milton Friedman's utter disregard to status.)
I held my breath as I put forth the idea of a futures market in
foreign currency. The great man did not hesitate.
"It's a wonderful idea," he said emphatically. "You
must do it!"
Elated, I pursued, "Is there any reason foreign currency
might not work in futures markets?"
"None, I can think of," he
replied.
For a moment
his words hung in the air. When my voice returned, I said, "No
one will believe you said that."
Milton chuckled, "Sure they will."
"No, I
boldly said. I need it in writing."
He smiled, "Are
you suggesting that I write a paper on the need for a futures
currency market?"
I nodded.
"You know I am a capitalist?" Milton
ventured.
We shook hands
and settled on the amount of $7,500 for a feasibility study on "The Need for a Futures Market in Currencies." A
friendship and bond was formed that lasted a lifetime.
Within a month, I held in my hand the Holy Grail for the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange. The most influential economic mind of the
20th century provided the CME with the intellectualfoundation upon
which to build its financial futures super-structure. He said all
he needed to in eleven pages.
The rest, as they say, is history. On May 16, 1972, the IMM,
the financial division established by the CME, ushered in the
modern era of financial derivatives. Coincidentally, the following
year, the Black-Scholes model provided the foundation for exchange-traded
equity options. Both events occurred in Chicago. During the first
decade of its existence, the IMM, initiated a series of innovations
in foreign exchange, interest rates, and equity indices. In 1986,
precisely fourteen years after its inception, Nobel Laureate in
economics, Merton H. Miller, declared financialfutures as "the
most significant financial innovation of the last twenty years."
Sure we were lucky. Sure our timing was great. Sure the idea was
invincible. But the major difference was the paper written by Milton
Friedman. It was the equivalent to an unvanquishable secret weapon.
With it in hand, we crisscrossed the nation innumerable times,
visited every nation on the planet, addressed audiences large and
small, faced government officials, bank presidents, corporate treasurers,
and the brokerage community and convinced them that a market in
currency futures a market in financial instruments was an idea
whose time had come.
It was magical. For when we said the IMM was a great idea, the
world yawned or laughed. When we told them Milton Friedman said
so, the world took notice. When we were told, fixed exchange rates
were coming back, we responded, Friedman said they are not! When
we were told, Chicago is the wrong place, we responded Friedman
is a Chicagoan! When we were told that we were crazy, we responded,
Friedman is one of us! And each and every time his name made the
difference!
Throughout
the years, this magic escalated. As his "Capitalism
and Freedom" became the watchword for economic philosophy,
as his logic on behalf of individual choice, free markets, and
personal responsibility gained adherents, as his beliefs in individual
liberty infused freedom around the globe, his name assumed near
mystical proportions.
Presidents, finance ministers, central bankers, businessmen who
would otherwise not have given us the time of day, or allowed us
near their door, because of his name, opened the door for us. In
the winter of 1975, Alan Greenspan instantly embraced our next
iteration, Treasury-bill futures. He had read Friedman's currency
paper. When the CFTC required U.S. Treasury approval for the T-bill
contract, at my behest, Milton Friedman telephoned William Simon,
the Secretary of Treasury. Our contract was approved the same day.
Milton Friedman rang the opening bell in January of 1976.
But perhaps
the reaction of George P. Shultz is emblematic of the value of
Milton Friedman's paper and tells the whole story. Shultz was
the first American government official I visited after the launch
of the IMM's currency market. He had just been appointed Secretary
of Treasury. Secretary Shultz had no way of knowing that this
was my first visit to Washington DC or that my knees were shaking
as I entered his imposing office. Wisely, I had sent Milton's
feasibility paper to the Secretary before I arrived. There was
very little conversation between us. Shultz listened to my explanation,
smiled, and with a wave of the hand said, "Listen, Mr. Melamed.
If it's good
enough for Milton, it is good enough for me."
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