This statement is false. No Futterman amp ever had anything like 60dB of feedback!! The most any had was more like 20dB, and because the amp had very wide bandwidth, oscillation (caused by its phase margin being exceeded by the feedback) was sometimes an issue. So to your closing comment here- they are well-known to **not** be stable into complex loads.
@atmasphere Roger Modjeski based his OTLs (he built several, mostly as custom projects, I have two of them) on the Futterman circuit and in his last design prior to his death he was specifically referencing the H3 circuit. In an effort to solve the oscillation issue in his first prototype and which you noted, one thing Roger found is Futterman himself omitted some things from the H3 schematic, specifically the lack of notation for the ferrite beads which Roger eventually discovered because he had me source an H3 for him to study (the NYAL versions of this circuit certainly had their issues, perhaps due to the schematic omissions as well). One look underneath and there they all were. Now when Roger completed his design I asked him how much feedback he was using. The response was 60 dB which in addition to adding the beads to the circuit (although far fewer than Futterman used) solved the oscillation issue in the second prototype of his design.
Now I don't remember why he came up with 60 dB, but since jasonbourne52 also mentioned it, I'm inclined to think it was what Futterman used. Of course this could all be a coincidence and Roger could have come up with that amount of feedback on his own through testing.