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The Devil's Derivatives: The Untold Story of the Slick Traders and Hapless Regulators Who Almost Blew Up Wall Street . . . an PDF

304 Pages·2011·1.5 MB·English
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Copyright Copyright 2011 Nicholas Dunbar All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior permission of the publisher. Requests for permission should be directed to [email protected], or mailed to Permissions, Harvard Business School Publishing, 60 Harvard Way, Boston, Massachusetts 02163. First eBook Edition: July 2011 ISBN: 978-1-4221-7781-5 For T Contents Copyright Foreword Introduction: The Siren Song of the Men Who Love to Win ONEThe Bets That Made Banking Sexy Introduction to derivatives. Long-term actuarial approach versus the market approach to credit. Goldman Sachs sees opportunity in default swaps. The market approach vindicated by Enron’s bankruptcy. TWOGoing to the Mattresses The advent of VAR and OTC derivatives. The collapse of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM). A fatal flaw is exposed. The wrong lesson is learned. THREEA Free Lunch . . . with Processed Food A new market for collaterized debt obligations (CDOs). Risky investments, diversification, and the role of the ratings agencies. Barclays finds investors for its CDOs, only to fall out with them. FOURThe Broken Heart Syndrome J.P. Morgan and Deutsche Bank dominate the European CDO market. Innovation outpaces the ratings agencies. Traders make millions with the help of correlation models. Reasons for concern. FIVERegulatory Capture The Fed lessens the restraints on big banks. Regulators are unable to keep pace. Banks abuse the system. Government agencies miss the chance to rein in the abuses. SIXBurning Down the Housing Market A boom in the demand for CDOs. Subprime bonds and a new kind of default swap help feed the demand. Housing bubble begins to burst. Dealers bet against their own deals. SEVENThe Eyes of Satan The secret history of shadow banking. Cash gets subverted by subprime. Ratings agencies jump on the structured investment vehicle (SIV) bandwagon. Skittish investors flee the market. EIGHTMassive Collateral Damage A flood of toxic assets undermines confidence in the market-based system. Goldman Sachs takes advantage. Investors bet on the collapse of the banks. Disaster is imminent. Governments prop up the system. Epilogue Appendix Notes Acknowledgments About the Author Foreword What follows represents my interpretation of and commentary on events based on my long experience in the field of financial journalism. The views that I have reached and set out in this book are my own, and I have come to them based on my impressions from the people whom I have spoken to and the documents that I have reviewed. Introduction: The Siren Song of the Men Who Love to Win It is safer to be a speculator than an investor. . . a speculator is one who runs risks of which he is aware and an investor is one who runs risks of which he is unaware. —John Maynard Keynes On a chilly winter’s evening in 2003, I went out to an exclusive nightclub in London’s Knightsbridge district favored by bankers and hedge fund managers. My senses were assaulted by thumping dance music as I followed my friend who was weaving across a dance floor thronged with leggy Russian blondes and the men who love them. There were acquaintances under the strobe lights: I spotted the global head of interest rate trading at a big German bank shimmying up against a pair of microskirted brunettes who towered over him. We then went up some steps and came to the closed door of the VIP lounge—which had its own doorman. The door swung open and we continued our way to a low-ceilinged room, the VIP lounge within the VIP lounge. There, sprawled across low sofas and thick cushions were bankers celebrating their annual bacchanal, which is also known as “bonus season.” There were a few Brits and Americans there, but most of the revelers were continental Europeans wearing well-cut Italian suits and well-pressed dress shirts, with their Hermes ties long ago cast to the winds. They either sipped £30 whisky sours or topped off their glasses from £400 bottles of Belvedere vodka. This was London before the smoking ban, and the glowing tips of cigarettes could be seen tracing formulas in the air as bankers sketched out the key details of their wildly successful deals for one another. I knew about some of them: there was the head of financial institutions derivatives marketing who forgot which of his Italian supercars had been towed off to the car pound. There was the head of credit structuring notorious for preying on female staff and having his corporate credit cards stolen by prostitutes. These young men—and almost all of them were young, some shockingly so—were the avant-garde of the credit derivatives boom, enjoying their first, fifth, or tenth million; outside the door of the VIP lounge, the Eastern European blondes were waiting to pounce on them. There are many sobriquets for these young lions, but I like to think of them as the men who love to win.

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A compelling narrative on what went wrong with our financial system—and who’s to blame.From an award-winning journalist who has been covering the industry for more than a decade, The Devil’s Derivatives charts the untold story of modern financial innovation—how investment banks invented new fi
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