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Wednesday, February 25, 2009 An overview of the events that forever changed the financial system
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October 2007 Housing bubble “bursts” Problems originate with subprime mortgages “Subprime” = loans to those who are considered VERY risky. Low/no income Have defaulted on loans before Wall St – banks begin writing down assets from CDOs & MBSs
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Sub Prime Mortgages A mortgage is a loan to buy a home Typically were for a fixed interest rate, over 30 years, with 20% paid at the beginning SUB PRIME – a way to sell mortgages to those who otherwise could not get one. “no money down” Interest Only loan Poor Credit Scores
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Credit Score - Three companies keep track of all your credit transactions - credit cards, loans, rentals, paying bills on time - They generate a numerical score - This score is used in all lending to determine if you qualify and your interest rate
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Credit Default Swaps Subprime mortgages are very risky High chance borrower will default (fail to repay the loan) Lenders buy 'insurance' against bad loans Investors bundle these insurance plans and sell them VERY profitable when housing was going well VERY bad when things go bad Called 'Toxic Assets'
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Bear Stearns March 2007 Too many 'Toxic Assets' First Investment Bank to go under JPMorgan buys Bear Stearns for $1B in government arranged sale – Fed funnels JPM the other $29B Question: Did speculators “murder” Bear? Result: Credit crisis accelerates as investors begin to worry
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Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac The government seizes the two largest mortgage companies No exact price tag on the deal – commits up to $100B to each Fannie & Freddie own ~1/2 of $12 trillion US mortgage market Implications: new mortgages grind to a near stand still, investor confidence hurt
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Lehman Brothers 9/11 – states they are actively looking for a buyer BofA expresses interest and walks away 9/15 – files for bankruptcy (largest bankruptcy filing in US history) 9/17 – Barclays buys NA investment banking division Implications: market panic ensues, Lehman’s creditors hurt, insurance protection (swaps) market goes crazy
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Merrill Lynch Merrill has experienced second highest losses of any financial institution in 2008 and to avoid Lehman’s fate, looks for buyer Sold to BofA for $29/share ($50B deal) Government encouraged deal Result: BofA still dealing with souring Countrywide acquisition now faces speculation that B/S is too big and filled with too many toxic assets
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American International Group (AIG) Speculation on inability to honor swap insurance contracts cause downward spiral in a matter of days Fed afraid that insurance giant failure will cripple US & international markets Receive $85B initial emergency loan – this amount goes up to $150B in later months Government now has 70% equity stake in largest global insurance company
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Goldman Sachs & Morgan Stanley 9/21 - announce they will convert to bank holding companies Ends the traditional investment banking model that held strong for nearly the last century The last 2 of the “Big 5” investment banks Now subject to increased Fed oversight and have to deleverage
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Washington Mutual Nation’s largest savings and loan seized Government organizes fire sale to JPM Biggest bank failure in American history Puts bailout plan talks on hold
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Bush Bailout 9/29: Initial plan rejected – Dow plunges 777.68 points – the largest one-day plunge in history S&P suffers largest point drop ever and 2 nd biggest in history 10/1: After heated debate and much opposition, Congress approves $700B bailout plan TARP (Toxic Asset Relief Program) provision
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Obama Administered TARP bank bailouts started by Bush to combat the credit crisis Bailed out the auto industry Saved a 1-3 million jobs throughout the auto industry supply chain Prevented a $1 trillion loss in the credit default swap market Passed $787 billion stimulus (Feb. 2009) 1/3 to states to prevent the layoff of police officers, teachers, etc. at risk of losing their jobs because of state budget shortfalls ($300 Billion) 1/3 in tax cuts for working-class families (over $200 Billion) 1/3 to states for infrastructure projects ($300 Billion)
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Obama Extended unemployment benefits Payroll tax cut Middle class tax cuts affecting 95% of taxpayers Small business tax cuts Small business loans Passed banking regulation (Dodd-Frank)
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Global Markets Plummet UK banks reeling from losses: Govt forced to intervene Spain, China, Germany, France – only a few of countries that are forced to step in and assist failing financial institutions Central banks coordinate rate cuts Iceland financial crisis: hit hardest by crisis, entire country goes into bankruptcy
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Bailout Plans Financial crisis stems to overall economy – affecting consumers, homeowners, auto industry Global leaders are struggling with jumpstarting economies and thawing credit markets Lending grinds to virtual standstill
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