Donor proves one in a million
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Fifteen years ago, after I had interviewed Edward Thorp for a profile
in the Los Angeles Times, I asked him -- since he was making all this
investment money for other people -- if he would consider taking me
on as a client. He said he would be glad to put me on his year-end
waiting list, but there was one pre-condition I must meet. I’d need
to deliver at least a million dollars in seed money to him -- and
he’d really prefer $2 million.
I told him I’d save up and let him know. I just checked, and I’m
$986,234 short, but when I read in the Pilot last week that Thorp and
his wife, Vivian, had contributed $1 million to the math department
at UC Irvine, I called him to see if I could still get in on the
action.
Typically, Thorp -- who lives in Newport Beach -- didn’t just give
his old department a million bucks. He put the money to work so that
-- like the Dogpatch ham, which you have to be at least 60 to
understand -- it will feed the UCI math department in perpetuity
while attracting exceptional mathematical talent to the campus.
Thorp is one of the reasons people like me work in journalism for
much too little money when we could be making a killing in the oil
business. Or at the blackjack table. We get to meet -- and know,
briefly -- people like Ed Thorp. Actually, I might have been able to
make my million by just following the directions in his book “Beat
the Dealer,” which -- the last I heard -- was just behind the Bible
in sales. God knows I tried. But I had neither the focus nor the
patience to follow his blackjack directions. Las Vegas is still in
business because most other gamblers suffer the same shortcomings.
As Thorp explained to me, “To make it work, you have to be
disciplined, intelligent and organized.” I don’t care to speculate on
which of these qualities I lack.
Thorp’s mind is in constant motion, seeking challenges, examining
them, discarding those that seem pedestrian (difficulty is a virtue)
and exploring those that don’t. It has been ever thus. Born in
Chicago and raised in Los Angeles, he tap-danced through school,
created his own laboratory at home, earned his B.A. in physics and a
Ph.D. in mathematics at UCLA (where he married an English major named
Vivian Sinetar) and went to work teaching at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Like a lot of graduate students in his field I’ve known, he amused
himself by creating a system to turn gambling odds in his favor.
Although the most common target is horse racing, Thorp set his sights
on Las Vegas. After several years of researching blackjack
possibilities and probabilities, he created a system that, properly
managed, he was certain couldn’t lose. He proved it out while
changing his teaching base to UCI. Then, evidence in hand and
published in the National Academy of Science Journal, he found
several angels willing to back him with the heavy money he needed to
score big.
Consistent winners attract quick attention in Las Vegas, where Big
Brother is watching from overhead. When Thorp was barred from the
casinos, he took to playing in various disguises. When his style of
play exposed him, no matter the disguise, the muscle turned
dangerous.
He was drugged one night, and began to bring a companion to
witness anything hostile that might take place. He avoided drinking,
but when his coffee was drugged to the point that he couldn’t walk
straight, and then he got an even stronger dose in a glass of water,
he decided it was time to explore some other line of moonlighting.
But he got in the last shot. Boy, did he ever. He wrote a book
describing his system in such detail that anyone who can count to 50
and keep his mind on business could win at blackjack.
“When they made it impossible for me to play,” he said, “I went
after them with other people through my book. They’ve had to change
the game repeatedly to try to keep their edge.”
Thorp turned his full attention to teaching such esoteric subjects
as probability and functional analysis, but he needed a new
challenge. He found it in the stock market, where he applied the same
sophisticated skills to a basic investment strategy called hedging
and came up with a mathematical formula that computerizes short-term
deviations in the market. It requires a lot of investment money to
profit from a small but sure edge, which -- he says matter-of-factly
-- virtually guarantees at least two-thirds of 1% gain and actually
averages 15% to 20% per year. From the beginning, his system
performed so well that he formed an investment company in Newport
Beach that has been the focus of his work ever since.
“When we set up a hedge,” he explains, “we just break out in our
computers the few things that make the prices of securities different
and look at them. Computers are simply tools, levers for our minds.
Levers can move things. Archimedes said, ‘Give me a long enough
lever, and I can move the world.’ These machines enlarge our
abilities. But people still have to write the programs.”
They write the programs in Thorp’s life, too. He and Vivian have
three children and six grandchildren, including a set of triplets and
a pair of twins. Thorp shut down his investment business a year ago
so he could better enjoy his family. He says he’s going to restart
his company in a year or two, but with a wistful note that suggests
he’s still thinking it over.
Meanwhile, he challenges his mind wherever and however he can.
Structuring the grant to UCI was one of those challenges. In his
donor’s comments, he calls the gift “A Million Dollars for
Mathematics -- and an Exercise in Finance” because it will “support
the research of an individual mathematician of exceptional talent”
while “using the power of compound growth” to create “one of the most
richly endowed” departmental chairs in the world.
Now, Ed Thorp will be looking for new challenges. At 71, he has
long played the odds in life and managed to identify and avoid most
of those that aren’t favorable.
If he decides to go back in the investment business, I plan to
retrieve my copy of “Beat the Dealer.” I see it as my last shot at
making that million bucks to get on his waiting list.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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