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This Week’s Book: The Men Who Made the 1980s Junk Bond Mania

I’ve been curious about the “Great Inflation” period of the 1970s. Reading about decisions in the 1960s and 1970s that led to it was eye-opening. A few months ago, I came across a biographical anthology that caught my eye because it talked about what happened after that period—specifically, how the Great Inflation contributed to the craziness of the 1980s: the junk-bond boom, the leveraged buyout wave, the birth of private equity, and the eventual S&L turmoil.

Dangerous Dreams was interesting because it wasn’t just a biographical anthology that talked about several people in isolation. Rather, it discussed each person’s story and the role they played in the creation and evolution of the junk-bond mania of the 1980s. It was the story of how each person contributed to the broader story and how these players influenced each another.

Louis “The Junkman” Wolfson, Charles Merrill, conglomerate builder James Ling, Michael Milken, Ivan Boesky, T. Boone Pickens, Carl Icahn, Rudy Giuliani, and others were profiled.

The main character, the man who helped birth the junk-bond market, was Michael Milken. The book details his rise and spectacular fall. It does a great job of explaining how an unheard-of book-on-bond analysis sparked Milken’s ideas that led him to build and control the junk-bond market throughout the 1980s.

I learned a lot from this book, especially about how the 1970s created an environment in which the stock market valued blue-chip companies at significantly less than their value and high-growth companies were pretty much shut out of the bond market—all of which led to craziness on Wall Street in the 1980s.

Anyone interested in Michael Milken, T. Boone Pickens, the origins of the junk-bond market, the savings and loans crisis, or how private equity got started should consider reading Dangerous Dreamers. You’ll come away with insights into all the above and more.

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Connected Books
Dangerous Dreamers

1993

Biography

by

Robert Sobel

1993

November 2025

A historical narrative about the people and events that set the stage for the junk-bond boom, LBO wave, and eventual S&L turmoil of the 1980s. It traces how early innovators like Louis “The Junkman” Wolfson, Charles Merrill, and conglomerate builder James Ling introduced concepts that later figures—Michael Milken, T. Boone Pickens, Carl Icahn, and others—would scale dramatically. The book explains how an obscure book on bond analysis sparked Milken’s insight into high-yield bonds, laying the groundwork for the junk-bond market, modern private equity, and the LBO era. It also highlights how the Great Inflation of the 1970s depressed stock prices, creating fertile conditions for takeover artists and financial engineers to use leverage to acquire companies trading below intrinsic value.