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Money | 09/16/2008 1:15 pm

Liz Peek: Wall Street Blowup - What's Behind It?

By Liz Peek
© Shutterstock

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist and author of wOw’s Wall Street Weekly. 

It may be too early to reflect on the blowup on Wall Street. After all, there’s every indication of more calamity ahead. In case we were uncertain on that point, Standard & Poor’s, with the timeliness characteristic of the ratings agencies, pushed AIG to the brink yesterday by downgrading the insurance giant several notches.

Still, there are several things that we can learn from the disappearance of Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch — two of Wall Street’s most prestigious firms. The first is that downturns are typically as deep and treacherous as the preceding boom was giddy and extended. The rise in real-estate prices went on for more than a decade, beginning to outpace inflation in 1997. In fact, in each of the 36 years 1968 through 2006, home prices rose; for the entire period the gains averaged over 6% annually. That was quite a run.

Whether it was house buyers who had no income or private-equity types that had no talent, far too many people were lent too much money.

Those of us who have lived through several severe investment cycles have a tendency to see opportunity when share prices — or real-estate values — plummet. We have seen brilliant investors like Warren Buffett or David Swenson (who so ably manages Yale’s endowment) leap on beaten-up assets and enjoy heady returns as a result. So, we are trained to move in early.

Sometimes that works out well; sometimes it does not. In the current cycle, even very smart fellows like Dick Fuld, CEO of Lehman Brothers, simply didn’t understand how bloody the downturn was going to get. As the real-estate bloom was distinctly fading last October, Mr. Fuld joined Tishman Speyer to buy for $15 billion the nation’s second-largest owner of apartment units, Archstone-Smith. The exposure to that company, and to a developer named SunCal Companies, contributed a good portion of the $60 billion or more in toxic assets held by Lehman at the end.

Another thing that has become apparent is that when things start to go bad, they do so in a hurry. Fuld seems to have dawdled, in trying to sell assets and in making other moves necessary to buttressing the company’s balance sheet. For months the company considered selling Neuberger Berman, a top-notch money management firm worth at least $8 billion. They should have done so. Up until the very end the company was in discussions with Korea Development Bank. The two firms could not arrive at a price; Fuld should have folded. He simply could not accept that he might have to sell assets — or indeed the entire company — at a big discount to book value.

Of course, the real trap in this forest was the availability of easy credit. Whether it was house buyers who had no income or private-equity types that had no talent, far too many people were lent too much money. The ease with which investors could borrow made them careless. They assumed the lenders knew more than they did. They were wrong.

I also think that, once again, it has become clear that Wall Street can trip itself (and everyone else) up by developing financial instruments that are simply too complex. Remember Long Term Capital Management? That team of Nobel mathematicians that nearly dragged down the entire financial system? No one had any idea what they were up to. This time around, in building the towering SIV/CDO structures on a foundation of weak subprime credits, the financial engineers made a lot of money, but it must have been painfully obvious that the buyers really had no idea what they were adding to their portfolios. As the drama unfolded, that lack of understanding created its own problems.

At the end of the day, if anyone promises you “outsized returns” or “easy money,” take two aspirins and go to bed. Such inflated promises — and prospects — are most definitely too good to be true.

58 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Diana T
Sherrie, Did you happen to see Charlie Rose last night? If not, I wish you would go to his website and watch the re-broadcast. It was quite an education for me. There has been so much hanky panky for the past 2 or 3 years that it simply got out of hand. Apparently, these companies have not been investing their own capital when leverageing the buyouts. This is a brief little article by Robert Reich: http://www.rgemonitor.com/emergingmarkets-monitor/253607/why_wall_street… And tonight, Charlie Rose is going to have Maurice Greenburg of AIG on for the whole hour, I think.
By Diana T on 09/16/2008 9:17 pm
Chips AHoey
I feel like I’m in a time warp and we’re back in the late 80’s, dealing with the aftermath of the 80’s financial disaster, and oh wait, wasn’t that right when Ronnie was finishing up - is history repeating? didn’t we learn from the 80’s?
By Chips AHoey on 09/16/2008 3:04 pm
Chips AHoey
…and did Sarah Palin really say that government needs more oversight in this - I thought I read that on the ticker watching CNN during my workout - if she did say something to that effect, wth, in one speech, there’s too much government in people’s lives but in another breath, we need to watch Wall Street greed?
By Chips AHoey on 09/16/2008 3:09 pm
Sherrie Crews
Oops, I got busy and didn’t have a chance to check my post, I meant thanks Diana and Patty. Not that I don’t also appreciate Liz’s input, it’s just that people who live in the Wall Street world lose their perspective on reality within the numbers.
By Sherrie Crews on 09/16/2008 3:07 pm
sanders c
A little historical perspective: Tulipmania
By sanders c on 09/16/2008 4:37 pm
sanders c
Sorry. Forgot the link. A little historical perspective: Tulipmania http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulip_mania
By sanders c on 09/16/2008 4:39 pm
K O
Hi Liz, To couple your comments with those giving a synopsis of Charlie Rose’s show featuring Lawrence Summers, Josh Rosner (Graham Fisher & Co.), Nouriel Roubini (NYU), Andrew Ross Sorkin (NY Times) and Charles Gasparino (CNBC), the common theme is leverage (or in this case deleveraging) and transparency. As with your example of LTCM, the monetization of mortgages has had extraordinary and far reaching effects that make Dr. Summers’ analogy with Japan’s crisis in the ‘90’s and his prediction of the demise of FNMA and FHLMAC more relevant than ever. Yet, his colleague, Robert Rubin, supported a highly leveraged Citibank model. With the amount of leverage in all sectors of the economy, I am now concerned about the effect resulting severely limited credit will have on the now fairly certain economic recession.
By K O on 09/16/2008 5:08 pm
beverly linens
Kitty, I spoke on another thread to this. In my own life this whole mess has affected me over the last 11 years. I bought my tri-plex with one of these loans. But I put 47% down. The bank was protected if I defaulted because the loan was 53% LTV. I was protected because I had room for deflated value when I refinanced at the end of 2 years. My rents took a hit about 4 years ago when the bottom fell out of the rental market because of the easy home loans for my potential renters. My asset value went up because of pressure on real estate from those purchasers and therefore my taxes and insurance costs rose. Now my young rentors jobs are at risk, because they were the last hired and are usually the first laid off when hard times hit. Right now I’m glad I didn’t rent to a Horizon new hire last month, they just announced a huge cut back. My son bought out his partner in a fire control company last year and is still paying for it. His customers, commercial builders and public entities who build public buildings all depend on credit to do their projects. He could find it difficult to borrow his operating money. So many people who don’t own stock think this some how won’t affect them but it will. I remember in 1985 when I had a chunk of change and wanted to buy a duplex or tri-plex or a four-plex. I couldn’t touch one then because of the tax laws. Owners were so leveraged they couldn’t sell to me. They had taken tax deductions to the point they owed more in taxes then they had in equity. I don’t know what happened to all those doctors and air line pilots that owned those when the tax laws changed in 86. I’d moved on and wasn’t paying attention. I did get caught in the mess that Carter caused when he put an embargo on the shipments of grain to Russia because they invaded Afganistan. We were raising cows and hay. The bottom fell out of the market because all that grain was fed to beef and pigs and the price of those went down as well as the value of the ranches they were raised on. That took out ranchers here in Oregon that had been in the business for 50 years. I remember My father in law, a rancher, coming home in 1959 after being refused his operating loan. He was so angry he sold his ranch the next day without even telling his sons. I have no idea what was going on but I’ll be credit had tightened. We can be affected without seeing it coming. I still find it amazing they [the bankers] were able to bundle loans of 100% and 110% LTV and sell them as AAA. I still think that was fraud! These are all those unexpected conseqences.
By beverly linens on 09/17/2008 12:37 am
K O
Hi Beverly, I did read your post previously, and hope others did as well. I think you have, not only first hand knowledge of the effects of some of the worst financial decisions made US policy makers, but also a very clear, understandable way of explaining the cause and effect. Your assessments are spot on, in my view, and if someone like you were mandated to stand next to Alan Greenspan during his tenure at the Fed to “translate” what the heck he was saying, people may have understood a lot more about what was going on. Thanks for sharing your experience. It’s valuable and well stated.
By K O on 09/17/2008 10:14 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Kitty–responded to you, but comment didn’t get under your post. Scroll down and you’ll find it.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 09/17/2008 10:20 am
beverly linens
Kitty, Thank you! People, not just women so often pass by the details of times like these not understanding the many unexpected ways they will be affected. I made decisions in my divorce in 1985 that were impacted by the tax changes made in 1986. Those were retroactive and cut into the results my financial decisions. It was too late for me to change them. I went into the last half of my life poorer. My own senator was the one of the sponsors of that bill. What made it so hard I agreed with the long term effect of that bill, it was just rough on me because I was counting on the old laws when I structured the financial parts of agreement. In my case it was the income averaging that had been allowed and was no longer possible. We had received the payout of large real estate contract in 85. I arranged for my ex and I to file separately so I could take some of that income into the next year when I would be starting over without any income. Good plan but didn’t work out too well in my case. Proof that being smart doesn’t always help.
By beverly linens on 09/17/2008 3:14 pm
K O
Hi Beverly, Listen, the tax code is enough to make anybody crazy - especially when you’re negotiating a contract in the midst of a retroactive tax law change. Those were the good old days - income averaging. That last line was funny. But, as Lorraine said, she’d rather be a smartypants than a dummypants.
By K O on 09/17/2008 3:21 pm
beverly linens
Yeah!
By beverly linens on 09/17/2008 3:49 pm
Linda P
Liz Peek: Wall Street Blowup - What’s Behind It? Absolute greed.
By Linda P on 09/16/2008 6:53 pm