The Big Short - Michael Lewis
The inside story of the sub-prime crisis, how greed and dishonesty set the whole financial system up for total meltdown, with Goldman Sachs at the centre. Also covers, briefly, the insanity of the govt bailout - the people who caused the collapse got paid, investors lost their shirts.
Well written (easy enough for me to follow) and interesting.
If you want to understand what happened read it, some contrarians predicted the collapse and made a ton of money out of it. Contrarians are sometimes right, just because lots of lemmings believe something doesn't mean its true.
Its interesting that the smartest people no longer want to be Doctors or physicists, but hedge fund and bond traders.
Also the quality of the available analysis is shockingly low - Moodys, Standard and Poors. It was similar in the tech industry (can't remember the names now) and apparently STRATFOR also pluck garbage out of the air and extrapolate into the stratosphere.
No real blame is attached to individual mortgage holders, the banks didn't care in the slightest who they loaned to or the level of risk, nor did the people who bought the bundled loans from the banks and sold them on - to people who had no clue what they were 'investing' in.
Its also a useful read to understand the BS the banks and US govt are continuing to spout.
The inside story of the sub-prime crisis, how greed and dishonesty set the whole financial system up for total meltdown, with Goldman Sachs at the centre. Also covers, briefly, the insanity of the govt bailout - the people who caused the collapse got paid, investors lost their shirts.
Well written (easy enough for me to follow) and interesting.
If you want to understand what happened read it, some contrarians predicted the collapse and made a ton of money out of it. Contrarians are sometimes right, just because lots of lemmings believe something doesn't mean its true.
Its interesting that the smartest people no longer want to be Doctors or physicists, but hedge fund and bond traders.
Also the quality of the available analysis is shockingly low - Moodys, Standard and Poors. It was similar in the tech industry (can't remember the names now) and apparently STRATFOR also pluck garbage out of the air and extrapolate into the stratosphere.
No real blame is attached to individual mortgage holders, the banks didn't care in the slightest who they loaned to or the level of risk, nor did the people who bought the bundled loans from the banks and sold them on - to people who had no clue what they were 'investing' in.
Its also a useful read to understand the BS the banks and US govt are continuing to spout.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2010-06-15 19:01:31)
Fuck Israel