If you knew your broker called a stock “toxic waste”
and nicknamed it as “Subprime Meltdown”, “Hitman” “Nuclear Holocaust” and “Mike
Tyson’s Punchout” (a reference to a bag of human waste), would you buy it?
According to an article by Jesse Eisinger of
ProPublica, on March 16, 2007, team members of Morgan Stanley suggested these nicknames
for a financial derivative known as a collateralized debt obligation (CDO), the
very products that were at the center of the systemic collapse in 2008. Then they renamed it and sold it as gold to
their investors. Human waste into
gold. That’s some alchemy.
Not one Too Big To Fail (TBTF) bank has been held accountable for
torpedoing the economy back in 2008. The
Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission are seemingly unable to
find any wrongdoing despite reams of evidence.
The banks were bankrupt and had to be bailed out by the taxpayer. Unsuspecting investors bought mortgage-backed
securities and other fancy financial mechanisms that the banks knew were
worthless. But it took a Taiwanese bank,
one of those unsuspecting investors, to overcome the high hurdle of document
discovery to give us a glimpse of TBTF criminality.
The lawsuit concerned a $500 million collateralized
debt obligation created by Morgan Stanley and named Stack 2006-1. To understand what a CDO is, first you have
to understand the mortgage-backed securities market. Financial firms would buy mortgages from
lenders (aka originators), pool them, and then slice and dice them into
categories of risk known as tranches.
Each slice was a mortgage-backed security (MBS) which a firm could hold,
trade and sell.
To make a CDO, they
pooled the mortgage-backed securities and sliced and diced them. Both the MBSs and the CDOs inevitably
received a triple-A gold plated rating from one of the three credit rating
agencies: Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s or Fitch’s, who were being paid by the
actual issuers of these derivatives so there may have been a conflict of
interest in their analysis (you think)?
According to the documents revealed in court,
Morgan Stanley knew the subprime mortgage market would collapse. They then put together the worst MBSs they
could to create Stack 2006-1 and short them (bet that they would default), and
then sell them to unsuspecting investors who had no idea the bank’s first
loyalty was to itself, not its clients.
According to the disclosures, Morgan Stanley had
private knowledge which led it to short Stack 2006-1 while they were extolling
its value to its investors. Does the
definition of being a “sophisticated buyer” include being unaware that your bank
is going to screw you by trading for itself and dumping its losses on you?
In an internal presentation to Morgan Stanley
employees, the Stack 2006-1 was praised as displaying “attractive business
opportunities for Morgan,” and “the ability to short up to $325 million of
credits into the CDO.”
In the end, of the $500 million of assets backing the deal, $415 million ended up worthless.
For its part, Morgan Stanley didn’t have to be very
sophisticated to find out about the tanking of the subprime market. They just walked down the hall to their
colleagues who were conducting private assessments of the quality of the mortgages
used in the CDOs. These reports weren’t
available publicly, another example of asymmetrical balance. Morgan Stanley was holding all the cards and
getting true information straight from the horse’s mouth:
In one email from Oct. 21, 2005, a Morgan Stanley employee warned a banker that the mortgages Morgan Stanley was buying from loan originators were troubled. “The real issue is that the loan requests do not make sense,” he wrote.As an example, he cited “a borrower that makes $12,000 a month as a operations manager of an unknown company—after research on my part I reveal it is a tarot reading house. Compound these issues with the fact that we are seeing what I call a lot of this type of profile.”
What did the bankers know and when did they know
it?
TIMELINE
Fall 2005:
Bank employees shared private
assessments about the future tanking of the subprime mortgage market.
February
2006: Morgan Stanley created
Stack 2006-1 with the very same mortgages it knew would deteriorate expressly
for the purpose of shorting it.
April
2006: Morgan Stanley created an
internal hedge fund consisting of employees who could assess which mortgages
were more likely to fail and employees with access to private due diligence
reports.
Early
2007: Morgan Stanley realized
that the subprime market was deteriorating even more rapidly than they
thought. They then went out to sell
Stack 2006-1 CDOs touting them as safe and value-creating investments even
though their proprietary bets went in the opposite direction.
To this day no financial firm has been held
accountable for their bad (some say criminal) behavior. As far as the future goes, we the people can
look forward to mountains of toxic waste ready to bury us.
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