this was as close as i got. it's not comprehensive and thorough.
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I think one of the things to understand about the credit crisis/ unwinding of the mortgage-backed security scam/whatever you want to call it is that - it is very difficult to understand.
I have asked a few "financial professionals" (a stockbroker at the gym, a brother with an MBA and 20 years in commercial real estate) to explain it. The stockbroker said, "I leave it to the experts"; the brother doesn't want to talk about it & tends to be a 'bull' who doesn't like to talk about anything 'bearish'.
one person who does understand it, to the extent that it can be understood (to understand it completely, you need financial transparency, and we don't have that; there's a lot of sleight of hand involved) is Satyajit Das, who has written a few textbooks on credit derivatives.
http://www.amazon.com/Credit-Derivative ... 0470821590
I listened to a video of him talking about it. It elicited the emotional response of "Oh ... My ... God - Scary". I could only partially keep up with him.
It reminds me a little of 2 things -
1/ in college, learning how transistors work. I must have asked one professor 10 times. He was very patient & finally managed to explain it. I later found out that my mother dated him when she was in college.
2/ in yoga, when you can't 'get' a position, you stop fidgeting around and do what you can, and breathe, and relax.*
The credit derivative products that led to the credit crisis that emerged as a 'crisis' starting the summer of 2007, are intentionally complex.
Average salaries of the top 30 hedge fund managers - $500 Million per year (some huge ridiculous number).
So these semi-clever people designed a way to get rich, & sold their financial 'products' (whose worth was based on an ever-rising housing prices) around the world (e.g. town above the Arctic Circle in Norway, an interview with a mayor whose town is coping with the loss of what they thought were sound investments.)
It's a lot like a pyramid scheme, in other words.
If it was just a bunch of wealthy people losing money, it wouldn't bother me. What makes it a crisis is a 'domino effect', for example if Bear Stearns had been allowed to go bankrupt (since they financed a lot of their machinations with debt), their mortgage-backed securities would have been sold on the 'open market' - where there are very few buyers, even for the top-rated of 10 grades (tranches) of mortgage-backed securities.
This is one of the big fears of the Fed - to have those products evaluated by the 'free market' (in the land that supposedly worships free markets). bundles of mortgages that were sold as 'good investments' (as long as real estate prices rise) ... the top rated grades would be selling for approx. 50 cents on the dollar, the lowest rated grades would be selling for approx. zero (this is related to the mortgage foreclosures we're reading more about). And every financial institution holding those 'financial products' would then have to 'mark-to-market' (they've been estimating the value of their credit-backed securities).
Regarding the numbers of outstanding credit derivatives, I see numbers in the range of $50 to $150 Trillion.
Part of the situation is that a lot of US dollars were created. And their value is falling, has been falling since about 2002.
Now the US government is buying the mortgage-backed securities.
I've asked a number of bank managers about their bank's exposure to losses from mortgage-backed securities. Boy do they squirm. They don't like talking about it - and they don't seem to understand it.
Colloquial English will suffice - it's a real f*cked up situation.
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* i went off on a tangent using the comparison of engineering training & yoga.
i still can't figure out what learning about transistors has to do with mortgage backed securities. but they're both interesting.
i think the yoga does have offer a metaphor. if you've ever taken a yoga class, you might know what i mean by accepting your level of stretchiness & stopping fidgeting around.
i think it's similar with people trying to understand the 'credit crisis'. mortgage backed securities, credit derivatives, all complex stuff. having trouble understanding it ? - that's a sign that you understand it.




