Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Everything You Wanted to Know about Credit Default Swaps--but Were Never Told: A long overdue piece.

From Felix Salmon:

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Extra Credit, Monday Edition

Everything You Wanted to Know about Credit Default Swaps--but Were Never Told: A long overdue piece.

Aid Watch: Bill Easterly's new blog.

Another View: A More Radical Plan for Bank Stability: Peter Solomon's plan sounds like nationalization, even if he doesn't use the word.

CIFG terminates $12 bln in CDS on risky assets: And gets a new set of owners in doing so.

How economists analyze the stimulus: Kling on Murphy and DeLong.

Just Plane Despicable: The NY Post's understandable headline on a story about Citigroup paying $50 million for a new corporate jet -- from France, no less!

Discontinued: Brooks Brothers Folds Fifth Ave Store

Ken Lewis in Black and White: How his dot portrait has evolved this month.

Senate Confirms Geithner as Treasury Secretary: By 60 to 34.

Stock-Surfing the Tsunami: New York magazine rediscovers day-traders. Now with added ETFs!

Get Ready To Block 'N Roll: On the floor of the NYSE. The perfect place to "rock to live music"!"

Here's...well...you know:

The causes of this crisis have nothing to do with CDOs, which are NOT complex. Only the math used to compute default rates is, and it's more of limited use than complex. Can I compute these rates? No. But I can see how the quants do.
The causes are as follows:
1) Government guarantees. These allowed major players to invest in risky investments, which they knew were risky. I showed that you could have found, on the internet, in 2005, how risky all these investments were. Are you telling me that experts couldn't do what I did in 2 hours at home on my PC? Yes, the guarantees were implicit. But does anyone seriously doubt that they were there now?
2) Fraud, negligence, fiduciary mismanagement, and collusion. Rampant. Actual people selling Subprime Loans and other risky assets as safe. Blaming interest rates and pools of foreign money is silly. At most, they enabled fraud, etc.
3) The Bush administration. Many people believed that if anyone could turn a recession into a depression, it was the Bush administration.
4) The debt. We approached this crisis in terrible fiscal shape at the government level, limiting our options dramatically.
Finally, since Lehman, I've been saying that this is a consequence of the S & L Crisis, and the way it was handled. Now, were hearing that we need an RTC, and RTC alumni are giving advice to people on how to get out of this. Although we did close small banks, does anyone else remember where the phrase "Too big to fail" was used previously. Also, we had the same excuses in the S & L Crisis. We couldn't prosecute more people for crimes, even though we suspected as much, because the fraudulent actions mimicked sheer stupidity. Forget the fact that experts, drawing enormous salaries, then claimed to be imbeciles. That's what's happening here. Expect more of these farces in the near future, unless we start focusing on the people involved.

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