Financial Crisis Reviewed Part I

By David Bahnsen | 07/22/09 | 11:45 AM EDT | 6 Comments

Latest national commentaries

more »

I am starting a series of book reviews on each and every major book hitting the market dealing with the financial crisis of 2008.  I not only am a student of this history, having lived through it and worked through it, but I also am of the opinion that the way history gets written about this crisis is going to have a profound effect on future policy.  Accurately recording what took place, and what the causes and reactions were, is going to be extremely important for both short-term and long-term response.  Whether it be serious historical interest motivating the authors (William Cohan), or rank headline opportunism (too many to count), no shortage of books have hit the market, and will continue to.  I promise to read each and every one that warrants a serious reading, and I further promise to keep my reviews as concise as possible.  My personal website is going live in less than a month, and I will be archiving the reviews there (http://www.davidbahnsen.com).  The first two books I have read are And then the Roof Caved in by CNBC’s David Faber, and House of Cards by William Cohan (a 450-page thriller about the fall of Bear Stearns).  The former is reviewed below; the latter will be reviewed by the end of the week.  I hope this series proves to be of interest, and I encourage you to share with those whom you want to have an accurate understanding of what took place.  

Revisionist history has put into the public consciousness that the New Deal ended the Depression, that conflicted research caused the dotcom bust, and that government spending can offset imbalances in the broad economy.  It is not even funny to think what revisionist history will do in the aftermath of this crisis.  I hope my reviews of the early attempts to chronicle this epidemic will be of use in the cause of truth and the cause of freedom.                                                                                                   

********

A Review of David Faber’s And then the Roof Caved in

The early narrative as to what events led to the massive global economic crisis of 2008 is this: Real estate prices begin to ascend in the late 1990’s led by favorable supply/demand conditions, tax policy that waived capital gain taxes and maintained a sizable mortgage interest deduction, and a healthy economy with low unemployment and tremendous advance in the technology space.  This increase in real estate prices was accelerated in the early 2000’s by low interest rates.  An exploding global economy demanded a place to put cash, yet interest rates were so low that they demanded high quality alternatives to the low yields easily available.  Wall Street met this demand by massively increasing their securitization of home mortgages, packaging products and selling them all over the world to a system flooding with liquidity.  This abundant access to capital (high supply) was greater than the demand for mortgages (constrained by nuisances like income verification, good credit requirements, and down payments), so to push demand into equilibrium with capital supply, banks abandoned all pretense of mortgage underwriting requirements.  This decision was made all the easier by the fact that the risk was immediately transferred to a third party, primarily the unknown investors around the world who were buying these mortgage securities.  Politically, a massive mandate existed to increase home ownership (particularly with minorities).  Low interest rates.  Ascending real estate values. Deteriorating underwriting requirements.  Abundant access to capital.  Oblivious rating agencies.  A global economy that soaked all this up.  The dominoes were perfectly lined up for the greatest bubble the world has ever seen.

David Faber’s new book does an admirable job at capturing this rough narrative, and sequentially breaking out what it meant to the financial crisis of 2008.  Faber is a 20+ year financial journalist at CNBC, and does not write with any clear political bias.  My impression of the book is that his biases are less ideological, and more personal (people who give him a scoop or an interview are given more favorable treatment; people who don’t, are not).  The book does not portend to be a heavyweight analysis or deep evaluation of the complex economic factors involved in this crisis.  It is written for laymen, and it does a good job putting into laymen’s terms the events that largely caused this mess.

My three minor criticisms of the book are:

(1)   It is far, far too easy on Alan Greenspan

(2)   It fails to connect the dots between the financial instruments causing the problem and the specific freeze-up of credit that took place last fall, AND

(3)   It is far, far, far, far too easy on an American public that lost its freaking mind

To be fair to Faber, he does not give Greenspan a pass, and does specifically lay some degree of responsibility with the former Fed chief.  However, any book that does not say this exact sentence is coming up short: “The lowering of the Federal Funds rate to 1% in early 2002 and subsequent maintaining of that rate at 1% for well over a year was the most irresponsible act by any central banker in history”.  Greenspan is in bounds to defend his not knowing how severe the subprime crisis had gotten.  What he can not defend is a monetary policy that screamed for – begged for – bubble-like behavior.  He poured gasoline all over the fire that was the 2000-2002 real estate bubble, causing the 2003-2005 bubble to blow up perversely.  Faber is far kinder to Greenspan than history will be, but he is at least not as kind to Greenspan as Greenspan is to Greenspan, who still to this day denies that the monetary policy of the Fed in 2002 and 2003 had anything to do with the crisis.

I do not envy Faber in trying to explain how CDO instruments work, let alone how Wall Street’s packaging of them and collateralizing of them led to the credit crisis we suffered last year.  It is not an easy task.  Still, I feel that he failed to help laymen understand just exactly what the connection was between the housing blow-up and the Wall Street/credit market blow-up.  More attention could have been focused here.

Finally, and this is my biggest criticism, Faber felt no need in describing the affairs of his various “regular people examples” to ascribe any moral or financial culpability to them.  He described for us the cases of people who bought above their means, did not understand their mortgages, and subsequently defaulted.  He mentions the fact that some people walked away from their houses, not afraid of foreclosure, once they realized that they were upside down in value.  But he exerts virtually no energy in ostracizing these people as major accomplices in the crime of 2008.  Washington D.C. has fingerprints all over the scene of the crime.  Fannie and Freddie are blamed as they should be.  Banks and mortgage brokers are villainized where appropriate.  Wall Street is crucified for its complicity.  But the one participant in the events that led to this disaster, speculative people who blatantly lied on their mortgage applications, committed fraud, and defaulted on obligations (often when they had the absolute ability to continue meeting them), are never discussed as anything other than “victims”.  It is disingenuous, and dishonest.

History will record that the “roof caved in” in 2008, and my ongoing series of book reviews at this topic will explore much of this further.  Faber has done a good job here.  But let’s hope that the comprehensive analysis of this book does not fear populist rage as much as it fears condoning irresponsible behavior.  Excessive leverage and foolish impulsiveness caused this mess – in Washington D.C., on Wall Street, and especially, on Main Street.

 

Print | Email | Share
 

6 Comments | Related Topics »National

 

Comments

 
Question:  What is your guess

Question:  What is your guess on how bad things would've been(comparitively) had 1) CDO's never been developed or 2) atleast from the get-go they had been regulated in some way, from what I understand they are one area in this equaton that was an Anarcho-Capitalist dream(i.e. No Regs whatsoever)?

My understanding is that the Deriviatives turned a Multi-Billion dollar problem into a Multi-Trillion dollar problem, which is why Warren Buffet referred to them as "Weapons of Mass Economic Destruction" a couple years back. 

Also, was the Commnity Re-Investment Act at all discussed as it should be?

 

Submitted by Jonathan on Wed, 07/22/09 - 02:47 PM » | Print
 
 
Good questions

Jonathan -

The Community Reinvestment Act was discussed, but nowhere near in the detail it should have been.  He is mildly critical of the CRA, as well as Clinton's beefing up its mandate, and frankly Bush's continuation of the same.  More criticism is also given (very appropriately) to Barney Frank as well.  I do not think he gives proper attention to the role Fannie/Freddie played either in creating flawed risk/rewards in the marketplace due to the "implicit guarantee" (a policy mistake of colossal proportions).  From what I understand, Thomas Sowell's new book on the housing crisis (which I will be reviewing on this blog in the coming weeks) does a more comprehensive treatment of the CRA.

As for CDO's, I hate to be evasive, but I think it is more complicated than just wondering what would happen if they plain "never existed".  A can opener can be a really dangerous thing but a can opener that is used the right way and appropriately presented to the marketplace has a very pragmatic usefulness.  Likewise, the CDO issue to me is not at all one of their very existence but rather the merit of their credit ratings, and transparency of their usefulness.  But a CDO is not a derivative - the destruction took place from using derivatives whose underlying asset was a basket of CDO's (so-called CDO-squareds).  I believe that trading these over a regulated exchange is a very good idea.  All such discussion, though, about the do's and dont's of these CDO's, CDO-squareds, exchanges, derivatives, etc. misses the mark, in my estimation.  The bigger question is: why was the world so awash in liquidity that there even existed a need for these idiotic instruments to begin with?  I absolutely believe that some regulation is in order of financial instruments, but I am not sure that the real story here is primarily one of regulation.  So yes, I differ with the anarcho-capitalists that "all regulation is evil", and yes, I differ with the statists who believe that "more regulation would have solved it all".  As my series of reviews will propose, the error here was fundamentally one of bad policy.  The bad policy led to the bad instruments; not vice versa.  I hope this helps.  More to come.

Submitted by David L. Bahnsen on Wed, 07/22/09 - 09:28 PM » | Print
 
 
I think I follow, bad policy

I think I follow, bad policy led to Credit Default Swaps as a logical step in the process so to speak.

Another area that gets widely ignored by nearly everyone, except brilliant minds like Nail Ferguson, is the blame Global forces had in this mess.Such as China's own monetary policy as one example.  Concepts that will fly over most Paleo minded heads.

There were alot of Investor scam groups going around, similar to what was portrayed once on the Sopranos once, which drove up prices in certain areas to irrational levels.

 

 

Submitted by Jonathan on Thu, 07/23/09 - 12:25 AM » | Print
 
 
Meltdown...

Meltdown by Thomas Woods is excellent.

Submitted by Allan Bartlett on Wed, 07/22/09 - 11:49 PM » | Print
 
 
Meltdown

It is on the list as well. Looking forward to reading it.

Submitted by David Bahnsen on Thu, 07/23/09 - 12:00 AM » | Print
 
 
David,   Thanks for doing

David,

 

Thanks for doing this.

 

Does Faber discuss mark to market accounting and its impact on the crisis?

Submitted by The Drake on Thu, 07/23/09 - 10:54 AM » | Print
 

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image. Ignore spaces and be careful about upper and lower case.