The Industry Standard writes on Tulips: Planet Web The Bloom Economy By Matthew Yeomans "What made so many people, from so many different professions, so keen to try their luck in a trade of which almost all of them were completely ignorant? The lure of profit, certainly, and the prospect of making far more money than they had ever had before."
Those words describe one of the biggest boom manias to ever grip the economic world. But it's not referring to Internet stocks ? it's tulips.
Mike Dash's new book, "Tulipomania," tracks the tulip in 17th-century Dutch society from its rise as a new and prized flower from Asia Minor to the largest speculative commodity ever seen.
The tulip boom is often trotted out as a favorite precursor of today's Internet Economy ? in both, economists and analysts alike see telltale signs of a speculative bubble. As long as people consider the investment worthwhile, the more that investment is worth. But once doubt enters the picture, the flower bed withers away.
In the case of Dutch tulips, the bulbs were viewed as valuable because of the flower's beauty; a value that rose as Dutch horticulturists grew exquisite new varieties. Soon, people from all walks of life began to see tulips as a way to get rich quick. In 1637, at the height of tulip mania, a single tulip bulb was traded for 5,200 guilders ? over three times as much as Rembrandt received for his greatest work, "The Night Watch," and a figure that today would be estimated at nearly three-quarters of a million dollars.
For Eric Janszen, the analogy is too rich to resist. Janszen, the executive director of Osborn Capital, a Massachusetts-based venture capital firm, created itulip.com, a satirical site dedicated to tracking the runaway Internet Economy. Janszen started the site in 1998 in an attempt to understand how, as he puts it, "an entire industry grew out of a mania." Today, most of his VC friends and colleagues "finally realize they are in a mania," as do many startups' executives who come to him. "The psychology is that they'll get out before it crashes," he says.
But as often as tulips are used to describe today's net economy, it's worth noting just how deep the similarities run. One of the key factors that drove Dutch tulip mania was the enormous amount of new and liquid wealth in the Netherlands, created from trade with the East Indies and from the Spanish plundering of South American gold and silver. A fluid money supply, points out Janszen, along with a buoyant, optimistic (and often postwar) society, and a new discovery or technological invention, are the principle incubators of an economic mania.
So, too, did the ballooning Internet Economy rise at the end of the Cold War; it's since been fueled by optimism over the greatest technological and communication innovation since the railroads 150 years ago. And railroads, Janszen suggests, offer an even neater analogy to today's boom than 17th-century Amsterdam.
"Most of the railroad speculation took place before any track was ever laid," he says. Ultimately, and this is why it may provide a more succinct comparison to today, fortunes were made in the railroads and the new industry transformed the U.S. economy, but the rail boom took place over land rights, not service. "At the time," says Janszen, "no one could gauge how much money could be made from running it."
Tulipmania disintegrated once the market stopped believing a single bulb could make them a fortune. With that, a tulip reverted back to being just a tulip. (Today, however, the tulip growing industry is one of the Netherlands' most important industries. And, of course, it has its own Web site ? www.bulb.com.)
In Janszen's view, the tech stock boom has to cast its spell globally before it will really bust. After all, he says, "To have a truly world-class mania, the whole world has to be involved." And when will the bust occur? That will depend on when the first group of really powerful investors or market watchers decides Internet speculation is not for them. In Amsterdam, it was government intervention that burst the bubble, bankrupting thousands in the process. Within days, the tulip was no longer the measure of great fortune.
Not that Janszen has no faith in the Internet. He's staked his career on it, after all. For now, he's betting on the business-to-business sector, where, he says, he's already seeing a handsome return.
thestandard.com |