3 June 2026
“We’ve seen the end of times”: Tom Michaud on Market Extremes, IPO Red Flags, and 9/11
What separates a temporary market pullback from a systemic, catastrophic collapse? And how do the world’s greatest financial institutions build the resilience required to survive the absolute “end of times”?
"We've seen the end of times": Tom Michaud on Market Extremes, IPO Red Flags, and 9/11
In this episode of The Master Investor Podcast, Wilfred Frost sits down with Tom Michaud, the CEO of banking and finance specialists Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW). Tom has spent over 40 years at KBW studying the banking sector, leading KBW through its 2006 IPO and subsequent 2013 acquisition by Stifel Financial. As the head of the industry’s premier financial services investment bank, Tom brings unique insight into what’s happening under the surface of markets today and where the next major “torpedo in the ocean” is hiding.
Wilfred and Tom map out the critical warning signs of a banking crisis, tracing the common threads between the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 and the sudden collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic in 2023. Tom explains the danger of unbridled growth for a bank especially when driven by uninsured deposits and fuelled by leverage. The biggest indicator to watch is credit turning south and “we should all know a credit normalisation is coming because it’s just been too exceptional” – but he doesn’t expect it to derail the sector. He also reflects on the scale of the problems lying in the private credit sector.
Tom outlines the bull case for banks from the ongoing “regulatory reset”; why scale matters more than eve; why he expects more bank M&A; and why he thinks the best investment strategy is to buy best-in-class trophy companies. While the upcoming suite of mega-cap tech IPOs is good news for banks, he warns investors to be cautious – “there is risk in these offerings” – and outlines why he thinks individual stock selection is more important than ever and explains the reason why his firm is doubling down on expert research.
But the true heart of this episode lies in a deeply moving reflection on leadership under unimaginable pressure. KBW’s offices were located in the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. Tom shares his firsthand experience of that morning – missing his usual train by a twist of fate, watching the tragedy unfold from the sidewalk, and losing 67 of his colleagues, including the firm’s Co-CEO and an entire research department. He details the profound “reservoir of goodwill” and human kindness that allowed a shattered firm to pull together, push the rock up the hill every single day, and rebuild into the global powerhouse it is today with the underlying resilience that stems from emerging from an unimaginable crisis.
Disclaimer
Nothing in the Master Investor podcast constitutes financial advice. We're here to share ideas and opinions, but you should always seek external independent financial advice before making your own investment decisions.
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Watch the video on The Master Investor Podcast with Wilfred Frost YouTube channel.