the-subprime

At the recent Federal Open Market Committee meeting, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke signalled that he plans to keep interest rates effectively at zero for as long as possible, and that he’s ready to stand by with more quantitative easing (i.e. printing money) if necessary. But if the Fed’s blaming the last recession on the financial meltdown from the subprime mortgage market, why is it so committed to recreating those same credit conditions that spawned Wall Street’s worst-ever post-Depression crash? There is no shortage of people to blame for the subprime mortgage fiasco: wayward rating agencies that ranked the risk of mortgage default as comparable to the risk of a US Treasury default; unscrupulous lenders who eagerly approved mortgages and then quickly resold them to financial institutions; over-leveraged banks that used depositors’ money to play Russian roulette in the financial derivatives market; and asleep-at-the-wheel regulators (like the Securities Exchange Commission ), who were either blind or indifferent to Wall Street’s systemic risk to the subprime mortgage market. However, the real culprits behind the subprime mortgage crisis were the incredibly low interest rates that sustained the bubble. All the greed in the world could not have done what the Fed’s easy-money policy made so simple. Was it not the desperate search for yield that threw many an otherwise cautious pension fund into the arms of seemingly safe CDOs (collateralized debt obligations)? Beneath the AAA-rated vanilla wrapping paper were pools of subprime mortgages just waiting to go bust. The measly extra basis points they offered over government-funded AAA bonds may not seem like much when Treasury yields are 5 to 6 per cent, but they meant a lot more to return-starved pension plans when government bond yields fell to near-record lows. Similarly, was it not the ridiculously low cost of credit that allowed banks to become so leveraged–hence exposed–to the subprime mortgage market? And of course, it was the same low cost of capital that allowed interest-free mortgages (negative amortization types) to be given out to anyone who would take them in the first place. Neither the demand for financial products like CDOs that were funded by subprime mortgages, nor the supply of subprime mortgages themselves would have been possible in a world of normal interest rates. When the federal funds rate rose to 5 per cent, an historically average setting, the subprime mortgage market collapsed, creating an insolvency crisis for financial institutions whose vaults were filled with reeking CDOs. Of course it won’t be subprime mortgages and CDOs next time, but if the Fed keeps rates at zero for long enough, you can count on financial markets’ insatiable desire for yield to invent something just as toxic.

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Jeffrey Rubin: Will the Fed’s Zero Rate Policy Bring Another Speculative Bubble?

Outwardly, Fannie and Freddie wrapped themselves in the American flag and the dream of homeownership. But internally, they were relentless in their pursuit of profits from partners in the mortgage boom. One of their biggest and most steadfast collaborators was Countrywide, the subprime lending machine run by Angelo R. Mozilo.

See more here:
Fannie’s & Freddie’s Roles In The Financial Crisis And Their Pursuit Of Countrywide

Video: Morgan Stanley Shorted Doomed Baldwin CDOs: Video

May 14, 2010

May 14 (Bloomberg) — In June 2006, a year before the subprime mortgage market collapsed, Morgan Stanley created a cluster of investments known as the Baldwin deals that were doomed to fail even if default rates stayed low — then bet against its concoction. Rather than curtailing their bets on mortgage bonds as the underlying home loans paid down, the $167 million of synthetic collateralized debt obligations kept wagering as if the risk hadn’t changed, according to sales documents. Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker and Deirdre Bolton report. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Greenspan Says His ‘Friends’ Got The Financial Crisis Right – And Trades Barbs With Michael Burry (VIDEO)

April 5, 2010

In a New York Times op-ed yesterday, Michael Burry , the reclusive hedge-fund manager profiled in Michael Lewis’s best-selling “The Big Short,” lambasted former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan and his colleagues, claiming that they “either willfully or ignorantly aided and abetted the bubble.” Burry, who was trained as a medical doctor and suffers from Aspberger’s syndrome, placed huge bets that the subprime market would collapse and helped make his investors many millions. Greenspan responded to Burry’s op-ed in an interview on ABC News’s “This Week,” where he told Jake Tapper that while almost everyone failed to predict the implosion of the subprime market and while some people predicted it by chance, there was a “very small group, most of whom are my friends, who got it right, for the right reasons.” Burry, he said, may well have been one of those people: “I don’t know whether or not he is in that extremely small group… . I know four or five people who are really good. I don’t know six, seven, eight or nine.” In an appearance on Bloomberg Television last week, Greenspan insisted that Burry’s successful prediction of the subprime crisis was a “statistical illusion.” Burry, for his part, says that Greenspan “should have seen what was coming and offered a sober, apolitical warning.” But that’s not what happened. And, peculiarly, in the years since the subprime market imploded, Burry says policymakers have shown little interest in understanding how or why he was able anticipate the timing of the crisis with such accuracy. Rather than a simple dismissal of those who got it right, Burry argues: “Mr. Greenspan should use his substantial intellect and unsurpassed knowledge of government to ascertain and explain exactly how he and other officials missed the boat. If the mistakes were properly outlined, that might both inform Congress’s efforts to improve financial regulation and help keep future Fed chairmen from making the same errors again.” Watch Greenspan discuss Burry in this clip from his appearance on “This Week” yesterday:

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Greenspan Says His ‘Friends’ Got The Financial Crisis Right – And Trades Barbs With Michael Burry (VIDEO)

April 5, 2010

In a New York Times op-ed yesterday, Michael Burry , the reclusive hedge-fund manager profiled in Michael Lewis’s best-selling “The Big Short,” lambasted former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan and his colleagues, claiming that they “either willfully or ignorantly aided and abetted the bubble.” Burry, who was trained as a medical doctor and suffers from Aspberger’s syndrome, placed huge bets that the subprime market would collapse and helped make his investors many millions. Greenspan responded to Burry’s op-ed in an interview on ABC News’s “This Week,” where he told Jake Tapper that while almost everyone failed to predict the implosion of the subprime market and while some people predicted it by chance, there was a “very small group, most of whom are my friends, who got it right, for the right reasons.” Burry, he said, may well have been one of those people: “I don’t know whether or not he is in that extremely small group… . I know four or five people who are really good. I don’t know six, seven, eight or nine.” In an appearance on Bloomberg Television last week, Greenspan insisted that Burry’s successful prediction of the subprime crisis was a “statistical illusion.” Burry, for his part, says that Greenspan “should have seen what was coming and offered a sober, apolitical warning.” But that’s not what happened. And, peculiarly, in the years since the subprime market imploded, Burry says policymakers have shown little interest in understanding how or why he was able anticipate the timing of the crisis with such accuracy. Rather than a simple dismissal of those who got it right, Burry argues: “Mr. Greenspan should use his substantial intellect and unsurpassed knowledge of government to ascertain and explain exactly how he and other officials missed the boat. If the mistakes were properly outlined, that might both inform Congress’s efforts to improve financial regulation and help keep future Fed chairmen from making the same errors again.” Watch Greenspan discuss Burry in this clip from his appearance on “This Week” yesterday:

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Goldman Sachs Under Investigation For Its Role In Subprime Mortgage Meltdown

January 22, 2010

WASHINGTON — One of Congress’ premier watchdog panels is investigating Goldman Sachs’ role in the subprime mortgage meltdown, including how the firm sold securities backed by risky home loans while it simultaneously bet that those bonds would lose value, people familiar with the inquiry said Friday.

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AIG Internal Emails: Insurers Correspondence Details Confusion During Crisis

December 30, 2009

The Cassano-Habayeb correspondence, along with thousands of other e-mails obtained by The Washington Post, as well as supporting interviews, reveal a company wracked by more division, doubt and turmoil than anyone on the outside realized during those tense months in 2007, a full year before the federal government undertook one of the largest corporate bailouts in U.S. history to prevent AIG’s collapse. The Financial Products unit had made AIG billions of dollars in the largely unregulated world of financial derivatives, operating primarily from Wilton, Conn., and London. But as the subprime mortgage boom began to deflate in 2007, some e-mails from New York took on an unfamiliar tone of concern.

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The Real News Network – Goldman left investors holding its …

November 3, 2009

McClatchy also learned of a second private Goldman deal, in which it sought in May 2007 via another Cayman company to sell $44.6 million in bonds related to subprime loans written by New Century Financial , a mortgage lender that weeks earlier had careened into … Goldman was a latecomer to the subprime game on Wall Street, and it was the first to get out and the only one to get out safely. But in the middle of the height of all this, Goldman was doing a lot of deals. …

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Newsweek: Credit Rating Agencies Are Getting Off Easy

October 1, 2009

Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s, the two giants of the industry, are still around despite causing the loss of hundreds of billions of dollars by badly rating subprime-mortgage-backed securities. Not only that, they are basically doing business the same way, taking fat fees from the investment banks whose securities they rate. In testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on Wednesday, a former Moody’s managing director, Eric Kolchinsky, alleged that the firm was criminally deceiving investors by purportedly inflating ratings on securities even into the current year, long after the subprime scam had been exposed and the market crash had occurred.

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