Monday, November 3, 2008

"Now the fallout impacts the most vulnerable"

Free Exchange with an interesting post about the Wisconsin School Board story in the NY Times:

"THIS STORY of financial disaster involves some sinister, complicated financial products. The good guys, a Wisconsin school board, got swindled into unknowingly providing $200 million in collateral for corporate debt contracts, synthetic CDOs. They were encouraged to do so by a local banker, who got a little greedy and big for his britches, but did not really understand the investment products he sold. Now the fallout impacts the most vulnerable:

“I am really worried,” said Becky Velvikis, a first-grade teacher at Grewenow Elementary in Kenosha, Wis., one of the districts that invested in Mr. Noack’s deal. “If millions of dollars are gone, what happens to my retirement? Or the construction paper and pencils and supplies we need to teach?”

Cast as the villain, the head of the foreign bank that lent the school board the money that got it into trouble. Naturally he sold his interest in the bank just in time, retreated to orange groves on his vast Spanish estate, and left the German government with a massive bailout.

I do feel for the Wisconsin school board, completely ignorant to the risk they were taking on."

I'm sorry, this constitutes negligence or fraud on the part of the banker. There is no reason that the complexity and risk of these investments couldn't have been explained to the school board.

"The story suggests the school board, composed of naive investors, was misled. The deception was possible because the products were so complicated. The passage below describes board member Mr Yde as things unravel."

Look, there are explanations right now that can explain the factors and risks involved in even the most complex investments. I'm sorry, I hate to be harsh, but fraud and negligence and fiduciary misconduct are more and more seeming to be the culprit besides unwarranted government guarantees. The explanations provided by the lenders and dealers:

I didn't understand it
I couldn't value it
I forgot to measure it

Are simply beginning to seem beyond belief.

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