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  • Listen, open the darn Fed window. He has no idea how bad it is out there, he has no idea!

  • He has no idea!

  • -Cramer...

  • I have talked to the heads of almost every single one of these firms in the last 72 hours and he has no idea

  • what it's like out there, none!

  • And Bill Poole has no idea what it's like out there!

  • My people have been in this game for 25 years! And they are losing their jobs and these firms are gonna go out of business

  • And he's nuts, they're nuts! They know nothing!

  • You may be old enough to remember exactly how bad fiscal year 2008 was for America.

  • If so, you were probably one of eight million people that lost their jobs as a result.

  • But if you're like me and you were too young at the time to understand what was going on,

  • allow me to explain exactly what happened and why.

  • A little finance 101 to get us started. When an organization needs to raise money, one of the ways it does so is by issuing bonds to investors.

  • Bonds are a lot like their title infers,

  • they are a contract to pay a lump sum at a predetermined date, along with any and all

  • recurring interest or coupon payments over the life of the bond.

  • Unlike stocks, the value of your bond does not decrease based on the value of the company.

  • The bond is exactly that - a bond between two parties. Because of this, bonds are

  • generally seen as safer investments. So in the late nineteen seventies, Lewis Ranieri

  • came up with the idea of a mortgage-backed security.

  • But what is a mortgage-backed security? Well, let's dissect this quick. So the bank issues

  • mortgages but these mortgages have a perceived risk of the customers

  • defaulting on the payments. The bank doesn't want to take on the risk

  • involved in these mortgages, so it gathers up hundreds of mortgages and sells them to

  • a trenche. A tranche is essentially a pool of like-investments. So this tranche takes

  • in all of these mortgage loan payments and is in business. The tranche in turn issues bonds

  • leveraged against the income provided by the mortgage payments. So you and I and even

  • the banks can buy these bonds that are sold by the trenche. In fact, a lot of

  • pensions bought into these bonds because they have a high return with relatively low risk

  • because it's.. a mortgage.. who the hell doesn't pay their mortgage? However, the banks

  • doubled down on these bonds because they received a commission for not only

  • selling the mortgages to the trances, but they also received the benefit of buying

  • the bonds leveraged off of these same mortgages.

  • The banks won big time and took on none of the risk because if some of the mortgages

  • didn't get paid - the bond still got paid. But if the bond still gets paid, how did

  • these mortgage-backed securities cause the economy to go into a deep recession?

  • Well, because the company can go out of business and default on its creditors,

  • there is some risk involved. To measure the degree of risk involved in the

  • purchase of a certain bond, there are rating agencies such as the Standard and Poor's and

  • Moody's. Each of these agencies rate the amount of risk involved in each

  • investment based on an alphabetical system, where a AAA-rated bond is a

  • significantly safer investment than a C-rated bond - which is commonly known as a

  • junk bond. So, because these huge banks were incentivized issue more mortgages

  • to in turn sell to trenches and buy securities off of, they started unscrupulously

  • issuing more mortgages - mortgages that were issued in great numbers to

  • people with shitty to no credit scores. Mortgages that were unlikely to be paid.

  • At this point, anyone could get a mortgage. Even the high school dropout living off

  • of welfare. This availability caused housing prices to go up because the

  • house was virtually certain to be paid for by the bank issuing the mortgage.

  • And you might be thinking, "well, so what? Wouldn't the S&P or other rating agencies still give

  • those tranches a 'C' rating?" In a perfect world that's exactly how it would work.

  • But not in the world of investment banking. Initially, the bonds would be ascribed a

  • 'C' rating and wouldn't sell. So what do the banks do? They take the bonds that don't sell and they

  • pile them up in a portfolio that rating agencies deemed to be diversified

  • enough to receive a AAA-rated rating. See where the problem lied? In 2007 alone,

  • $500b in housing bonds were sold. As these mortgages

  • continued being issued to people who were unable to afford the premiums, the

  • default rates increased. In 2006, the default rate was 1%. In 2007, it

  • was 4%. The default rate only had to reach 8% for the entire housing

  • market in the United States to collapse in a chain reaction. And in 2008, that's

  • exactly what happened.

  • So what did our protagonists do? They shorted the bonds. A short position, or

  • short, is a sale of a borrowed security, commodity, or currency, with the

  • expectation of the asset falling in value. In the Big Short, Michael Burry does

  • this with mortgage-backed securities. Michael goes into a series of banks and

  • ask to borrow a billion dollars in mortgage bonds with a short position,

  • asserting that he believes that the bond is going to decline in value - meaning that

  • the housing market is going to stumble or collapse.

  • How a short position works, is that party a borrows a billion dollars worth of bonds

  • from party B and sells them immediately on the market. In the future,

  • Michael is expected to return the borrowed bonds by repurchasing them at the future

  • value which is expected to be lower. When this happens, Michael keeps the

  • difference. The common consensus is that the housing market has been the

  • strongest investment for the past 30 years, and it is beyond foolish to bet

  • against. However, Wall St is greedy and will take advantage of "foolishness"

  • when given the chance. To sweeten the deal, Michael requests a contract in

  • payment in the form of a credit default swap. A credit default swap is a

  • financial tool available for those who want to purchase insurance on an investment.

  • How it works is that party A buys a bond issued by party B. Party A, feeling

  • uncertain about whether party B will default on the payment of the bond or not,

  • can offer to buy a credit default swap from an insurance company, party C.

  • So Michael takes all of the investment pool he owns and puts it into purchasing

  • mortgage-backed securities and corresponding credit default swaps.

  • From 2006 to 2008, when millions upon millions of Americans defaulted on their

  • mortgages, this caused the tranches to subsequently default on their payments

  • of the bonds. As you remember from earlier, these were awesome investments

  • at the time. And trillions of dollars, trillions, went into the purchase of

  • these bonds and their derivatives. So in 2008, when the roof caved in,

  • Michael Burry walked away with a personal profit of $100m.

  • Well everyone, I hope you enjoyed this explanation of The Big Short and I hope

  • it makes a little bit more sense to you now. In closing, I'd like to share with

  • you one of my favorite scenes from the movie, which I think really hits home.

  • For the opposing view, Mr. Baum.

  • I gotta stand for this.

  • Okay, hi. My firm's thesis is pretty simple, Wall St. took a good idea, Lewis Renierie's

  • mortgage bond, and turned it into an atomic bomb

  • of fraud and stupidity that is on his way to decimating the world economy.

  • - How do you really feel? - I'm glad you still have a sense of humor. I wouldn't if I were you.

  • Now, anyone who knows me knows that I have no problem telling someone they're wrong.

  • But for the first time in my life, it's not so enjoyable.

  • We live in an era of fraud in America.

  • Not just in banking, but in government, education, religion, food, even baseball.

  • What bothers me isn't that fraud is not nice

  • or that fraud is mean. It's that, for

  • fifteen thousand years, fraud and short-sighting thinking have never ever worked.

  • Not once.

  • Eventually, people get caught. Things go south. When the hell did we forget all of that?

  • I thought we were better than this, I really did. And the fact that we're not doesn't make me feel alright and

  • superior. It makes me feel sad.

  • And as fun as it is to watch pompus, dumb Wall Streeters be wildly wrong - and you are wrong, sir - I just know that at the end of the day,

  • average people are going to be the ones that are gonna have to pay for all of this.

  • Because they always, always do. That's my two cents. Thank-you.

  • Does our bull have a response?

  • Only that in the entire history of Wall St, no investment bank has ever failed unless caught in criminal activities.

  • So, yes, I stand by my Bear Stearns optimism.

  • - Mr. Miller, I'm sorry, quick question. From the time you guys started talking, Bear Stearns' stock has fallen

  • more than 38%. Would you still buy more?

  • (Nervously) Yeah, sure, of course I'd buy more, why not?

  • - Boom.

Listen, open the darn Fed window. He has no idea how bad it is out there, he has no idea!

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