This was shocking to me. When Wall Street begs to regulated, beware. People in New York kept using the term “uncharted territory” when discussing CDOs. It made me think of an ancient map with the inscription on the edge, “Here be the monsters.”
Author: admin
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 55)
“These people gang up academically on naysayers,” he told me. “If it’s not in their models, they shut it out.” Any challenge from outside was rejected.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 49)
The big surprise: in his dissertation Greenspan addressed housing bubbles. “There is no perpetual motion machine which generated an ever-rising path for the prices of homes,” he wrote. It’s too bad he didn’t believe his own words.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 46)
Their absurd collective blunder prompted Geoffrey Howe, chancellor of the exchequer, to observe that an economist was like a “man who knows 364 ways of making love, but doesn’t know any women.”
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 44)
When a District Bank president has overstayed his or her welcome, he or she will not be fired but will perhaps receive an employment offer from a university or corporation too enticing to be refused. Wink, wink. A different kind of politics.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 35)
It’s a myth that the Federal Reserve is nonprofit. It earns billions of dollars per year through various financial functions; after expenses, most of the profits go straight to the Treasury.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 27)
Few buyers realized that the agencies had also helped create the MBS or CDO and stood to gain from its sale. The fine print said “these ratings are just opinions and investors shouldn’t rely on them.” People figured the disclaimers were there to make lawyers happy. After all, it was S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch; they sold trust.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 27)
The collateral backing mortgages was stretched precariously thin; one in ten households had zero to negative home equity.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 17)
By 2008, the derivatives market had quintupled to $531 trillion, up from $106 trillion in 2002.
Fed Up by Danielle DiMartino Booth (pg. 13)
Words like “slightly” and “moderately” in Fedspeak did not mean the same thing. Every nuance mattered.