Monday, November 24, 2008

Sec. Rubin At Least Knew There Was Risk

Robert Rubin is coming under a lot of fire today for pushing risk at Citi based on this quote:

“Chuck Prince going down to the corporate investment bank in late 2002 was the start of that process,” a former Citigroup executive said of the bank’s big C.D.O. push. “Chuck was totally new to the job. He didn’t know a C.D.O. from a grocery list, so he looked for someone for advice and support. That person was Rubin. And Rubin had always been an advocate of being more aggressive in the capital markets arena. He would say, ‘You have to take more risk if you want to earn more."

Now, I want to make my position perfectly clear. Sec. Rubin should be held accountable for that advice and those decisions. Brad DeLong's comments seem to want to exonerate Sec. Rubin, but he needs to justify those decisions himself. It is a truism to say that Sec. Rubin's job was to make money by taking risks. Good point. It adds nothing to the discussion. The discussion is about how well he did that job. There's no worry about him being assessed, he'll have lots of company.

However, from my point of view, Sec. Rubin is the hero of the whole article. He seems to be one of the few people involved who admits that CDOs were riskier investments, intended to make more money by extending risk. How many times have I read the following:

These CDSs and CDOs, we were assured that, even though they were chosen because of their lower capital requirements, we were assured that they were less risky by models created by physicists, phrenologists, cosmologists,cosmetologists, all sorts of really brainy chaps,with all sorts of really obscure mathematics only they could decipher. So, we were totally unprepared for risk. We'd been told that there wasn't any. That was the beauty of these investments. Lots of money with no risk.

So, I'm exaggerating, but Sec. Rubin deserves a medal for understanding and owning up to the risky nature of CDSs and CDOs, which, although complicated, can be explained to average investors using simple phrases like "riskier", "less tested", "complicated", etc.

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