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The Crisis of Credit Visualized - HD

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    The Crisis of Credit, Visualized.
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    What is the credit crisis?
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    It's a worldwide financial fiasco
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    involving terms you've probably heard,
    like
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    sub-prime mortgages, collateralized debt
    obligations, frozen
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    credit markets, and credit default swaps.
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    Who's affected?
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    Everyone.
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    How did it happen?
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    Here's how.
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    The credit crisis brings two groups of
    people together, homeowners and investors.
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    Homeowners represent their mortgages and
    investors represent their money.
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    These mortgages represent houses, and this
    money represents large institutions
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    like pension funds, insurance companies,
    sovereign funds, mutual funds, etc.
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    These groups are brought together through
    the financial system, a
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    bunch of banks and brokers commonly known
    as Wall Street.
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    While it may not seem like it, these banks
    on
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    Wall Street are closely connected to these
    houses on Main Street.
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    To understand how, let's start at the
    beginning.
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    Years ago, the investors are sitting on
    their pile of
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    money looking for a good investment to
    turn into more money.
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    Traditionally, they go to the US Federal
    Reserve, where
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    they buy treasury bills believed to be the
    safest investment.
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    But in the wake of the dot-com bust and
    September 11, Federal Reserve Chairman,
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    Alan Greenspan, lowers interest rates to
    only 1% to keep the economy strong.
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    1% is a very low return on investments, so
    the investors say, no thanks.
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    On the flip side, this means banks on Wall
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    Street can borrow from the Fed for only
    1%.
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    Add to that, general surpluses from Japan,
    China, and
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    the Middle East, and there's an abundance
    of cheap credit.
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    This makes borrowing money easy for banks
    and causes them to go crazy with leverage.
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    Leverage is borrowing money to amplify the
    outcome of a deal.
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    Here's how it works.
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    In a normal deal, someone with
    $10,000 buys a box for $10,000.
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    He then sells it to someone else for
    $11,000, for a $1,000 profit, a good deal.
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    But using leverage, someone with $10,000
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    would go borrow 990,000 more dollars,
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    giving him $1 million in hand.
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    Then he goes and buys 100 boxes with his
    $1 million
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    and sells them to someone else for
    $1.1 million.
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    Then he pays back his 990,000 plus
    10,000 in
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    interest, and after his initial 10,000,
    he's left with
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    a $90,000 profit versus the other guy's
    1,000.
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    Leverage turns good deals into great
    deals.
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    This is a major ways banks make their
    money.
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    So, Wall Street takes out a ton of
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    credit, makes great deals, and grows
    tremendously rich.
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    And then pays it back.
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    The investors see this and want a piece of
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    the action, and this gives Wall Street an
    idea.
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    They can connect the investors to the
    homeowners through mortgages.
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    Here's how it works.
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    A family wants a house, so they save
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    for a down payment and contact a mortgage
    broker.
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    The mortgage broker connects the family to
    a lender, who gives them a mortgage.
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    The broker makes a nice commission.
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    The family buys a house and becomes
    homeowners.
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    This is great for them because
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    housing prices have been rising
    practically forever.
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    Everything works out nicely.
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    One day, the lender gets a call from
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    an investment banker who wants to buy the
    mortgage.
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    The lender sells it to him for a very nice
    fee.
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    The investment banker then borrows
    millions of dollars and buys
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    thousands more mortgages and puts them
    into a nice little box.
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    This means that every month, he gets the
    payments
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    from the homeowners of all the mortgages
    in the box.
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    Then he sics his banker wizards on it to
    work their financial magic, which
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    is basically cutting it into three slices,
    safe, okay, and risky.
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    They pack the slices back up in the box
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    and call it a collateralized debt
    obligation, or CDO.
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    A CDO works like three cascading trays.
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    As money comes in, the top tray fills
    first, then spills
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    over into the middle, and whatever is left
    into the bottom.
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    The money comes from homeowners paying off
    their mortgages.
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    If some owners don't pay and default on
    their mortgage, less
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    money comes in and the bottom tray may not
    get filled.
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    This makes the bottom tray riskier and the
    top tray safer.
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    To compensate for the higher risk, the
    bottom tray receives a higher
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    rate of return, while the top receives a
    lower, but still nice return.
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    To make the top even safer, banks will
    insure
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    it for a small fee, called a credit
    default swap.
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    The banks do all of this work so that
    credit rating agencies will stamp the top
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    slice as a safe, AAA-rated investment, the
    highest, safest rating there is.
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    The okay slice is BBB, still pretty good,
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    and they don't bother to rate the risky
    slice.
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    Because of the AAA rating, the investment
    banker can sell
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    the safe slice to the investors who only
    want safe investments.
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    He sells the okay slice to other bankers,
    and
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    the risky slices to hedge funds and other
    risk takers.
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    The investment banker makes millions.
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    He then repays his loans.
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    Finally, the investors have found a good
    investment for their money.
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    Much better than the 1% treasury bills.
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    They're so pleased, they want more CDO
    slices.
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    So, the investment banker calls up the
    lender, wanting more mortgages.
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    The lender calls up the broker for
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    more homeowners, but the broker can't find
    anyone.
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    Everyone that qualifies for a mortgage
    already has one.
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    But they have an idea.
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    When homeowners default on their mortgage,
    the lender gets
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    the house, and houses are always
    increasing in value.
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    Since they're covered if the homeowners
    default, lenders can start adding risk to
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    new mortgages, not requiring down
    payments, no
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    proof of income, no documents at all.
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    And that's exactly what they did.
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    So, instead of lending to responsible
    homeowners, called prime mortgages,
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    they started to get some that were, well,
    less responsible.
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    These are sub-prime mortgages.
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    This is the turning point.
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    So, just like always, the mortgage broker
    connects the
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    family with the lender and a mortgage,
    making his commission.
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    The family buys a big house.
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    The lender sells the mortgage to the
    investment banker,
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    who turns it into a CDO and sell
    slices to the investors and others.
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    This actually works out nicely for
    everyone and makes them all rich.
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    No one was worried because as soon as they
    sold
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    the mortgage to the next guy, it was his
    problem.
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    If the homeowners where to
    default,
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    they didn't care, they were selling off
    their
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    risk to the next guy and making millions,
    like playing hot potato with a time bomb.
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    Not surprisingly, the homeowners default
    on their mortgage,
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    which at this moment, is owned by the
    banker.
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    This means, he forecloses, and one of his
    monthly payments turns into a house.
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    No big deal.
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    He puts it up for sale.
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    But more and more of his monthly payments
    turn into houses.
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    Now, there are so many houses for sale on
    the market, creating
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    more supply than there is demand, and
    housing prices aren't rising anymore.
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    In fact, they plummet.
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    This creates an interesting problem for
    homeowners still paying their mortgages.
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    As all the houses in their neighborhood go
    up
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    for sale, the value of their house goes
    down, and
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    they start to wonder why they're paying
    back their
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    $300,000 mortgage when the house is now
    worth only $90,000.
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    They decide that it doesn't make sense to
    continue paying, even
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    though they can afford to, and they walk
    away from their house.
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    Default breaks sweep the country, and
    prices plummet.
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    Now, the investment banker is basically
    holding a box full of worthless houses.
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    He calls up his buddy, the investor, to
    sell his
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    CDO, but the investor isn't stupid and
    says, no thanks.
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    He knows that the stream of money isn't
    even a dribble anymore.
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    The banker tries to sell to everyone, but
    nobody wants to buy his bomb.
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    He's freaking out because he borrowed
    millions, sometimes billions of
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    dollars to buy this bomb, and he can't pay
    it back.
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    Whatever he tries, he can't get rid of it.
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    But he's not the only one.
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    The investors have already bought
    thousands of these bombs.
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    The lender calls up trying to sell his
    mortgage, but the banker won't buy it.
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    And the broker is out of work.
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    The whole financial system is frozen and
    things get dark.
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    Everybody starts going bankrupt.
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    But that's not all.
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    The investor calls up the homeowner and
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    tells him that his investments are
    worthless.
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    And you can begin to see how the crisis
    flows in a cycle.
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    Welcome to the Crisis of Credit.
Title:
The Crisis of Credit Visualized - HD
Description:

The Short and Simple Story of the Credit Crisis -- The Full Version

By Jonathan Jarvis.

Crisisofcredit.com

The goal of giving form to a complex situation like the credit crisis is to quickly supply the essence of the situation to those unfamiliar and uninitiated.

This is the original, full version.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Duration:
11:10

English, British subtitles

Revisions