Floyd Odlum was an opportunist. He took advantage of a bad situation to become one of the richest people in America shortly after the crash of 1929.
Odlum saw an opportunity amid the rubble of investment trusts. Investment trusts were like the first iteration of today’s closed-end mutual funds. They were first introduced in the U.S. around 1926, in the form of trading corporations, with the sole purpose of investing pooled capital into stocks.
And like many new investment vehicles, it didn’t take long for investment trusts to become wildly popular with investors. By 1929, roughly 640 trusts existed with about $4 billion in assets. In ’29, trusts accounted for one-third of the $6 billion in new offerings — about $1 billion of that was estimated just in August and September alone. Continue Reading…

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