How the Public Misses Out on How Fights Over Bank Regulations Affect Them
The public keeps losing and losing and losing to big finance because
financiers have made an art form of using complexity, opacity, and
leverage to cover their tracks.
The last example comes in an anodyne-seeming article in the Financial
Times about collateralized loan obligations, or CLOs. CLOs are a
structured credit product, in this case, made from leveraged (as in
risky) corporate loans. Think of it as the corporate lending analogy to
subprime bonds. The major differences between CLOs and RMBS are that
CLOs are not secured by collateral (houses) and that CLOs turned out to
be much better diversified than RMBS (the mortgage bond designers
thought that a geographic mix would provide adequate diversification,
since the modern US had never suffered a nation-wide housing market
price decline. Whoops!)
Friday, December 23, 2011
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