
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report - Sách nói Miễn phí
Tác giả: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Ngôn ngữ: English
Thể loại: Kinh doanh & Kinh tếPhi hư cấu
1 / 183Preface
- 1. Preface
- 2. Conclusions of the Commission
- 3. Conclusions of the Commission, concluded
- 4. Ch. 1. Before Our Very Eyes, part 1
- 5. Ch. 1. Before Our Very Eyes, part 2
- 6. Ch. 1. Before Our Very Eyes, part 3
- 7. Ch. 2. Shadow Banking: Commercial Paper and Repos
- 8. Ch. 2. Shadow Banking: The Savings and Loan Crisis
- 9. Ch. 3. Securitization and Derivatives: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
- 10. Ch. 3. Securitization and Derivatives: Structured Finance
- 11. Ch. 3. Securitization and Derivatives: The Growth of Derivatives
- 12. Ch. 4. Deregulation Redux: Expansion of Banking Activities
- 13. Ch. 4. Deregulation Redux: Long-Term Capital Management
- 14. Ch. 4. Deregulation Redux: Dot-Com Crash
- 15. Ch. 4. Deregulation Redux: The Wages of Finance
- 16. Ch. 4. Deregulation Redux: Financial Sector Growth
- 17. Ch. 5. Subprime Lending: Mortgage Securitization
- 18. Ch. 5. Subprime Lending: Greater Access to Lending
- 19. Ch. 5. Subprime Lending: Subprime Lenders in Turmoil
- 20. Ch. 5. Subprime Lending: The Regulators
- 21. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion: Housing, A Powerful Stabilizing Force
- 22. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion: Subprime Loans, Buyers Will Pay A Premium
- 23. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion. Citigroup: Invited Regulatory Scrutiny
- 24. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion. Federal Rules: Intended to Curb Unfair or Abusive Lending
- 25. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion. States: Long-Standing Position
- 26. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion. Community-Lending Pledges: What We Do Is Reaffirm Our Intention"
- 27. Ch. 6. Credit Expansion. Bank Capital Standards: "Arbitrage"
- 28. Ch. 6. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 6
- 29. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. An Irresistible Profit Opportunity
- 30. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Mortgages: A Good Loan
- 31. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Federal Regulators: Immunity from Many State Laws is a Significant Benefit
- 32. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Wall Street Was Very Hungry For Our Product
- 33. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Moody's: Given A Blank Check
- 34. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Less Competition in the Marketplace
- 35. Ch. 7. The Mortgage Machine. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 7
- 36. Ch. 8. The CDO Machine
- 37. Ch. 8. We Created the Investor
- 38. Ch. 8. Bear Stearns' Hedge Funds: It Functioned Fine Up Until One Day It Just Didn't Function
- 39. Ch. 8. Citigroup's Liquidity puts: A Potential Conflict of Interest
- 40. Ch. 8. AIG:Golden Goose for the Entire Street
- 41. Ch. 8. Goldman Sachs: Multiplied the Effects of the Collapse in Subprime
- 42. Ch. 8. Moody's: Achieved Through Some Alchemy
- 43. Ch. 8. SEC: It's Going to be an Awfully Big Mess
- 44. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 8
- 45. Chapter 9. The Bubble, "A Credit-induced Boom"
- 46. Mortgage Fraud: Crime-facilitative environments
- 47. Disclosure and due diligence: A Quality Control Issue in the Factory
- 48. Regulators: markets will always self-correct
- 49. Leveraged Loans and Commercial Real Estate: You've Got to Get Up and Dance
- 50. Lehman: From Moving to Storage
- 51. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Two Stark Choices
- 52. 2006: Increase Our Penetration into Subprime. 2007: Moving deeper into the credit pool
- 53. Affordable housing goals: "GSEs cried bloody murder forever." The impact of the goals
- 54. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 9
- 55. Ch. 10. CDO Managers: "We Are Not A Rent-A-Manager"
- 56. Ch. 10. Credit Default Swaps: "Dumb Question"
- 57. Citigroup: "I Do Not Believe We Were Powerless"
- 58. AIG: "I'm Not Getting Paid Enough to Stand on These Tracks"
- 59. Merrill Lynch: "Whatever It Takes"
- 60. Regulators: "Are Undue Concentrations of Risk Developing?"
- 61. Moody's: "It Was All About Revenue"
- 62. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 10
- 63. Ch. 11. The Bust. Delinquencies: "The Turn of the Housing Market"
- 64. Ch. 11. Rating Downgrades: "Never Before"
- 65. Ch. 11. CDOs: "Climbing the Wall of Subprime Lending"
- 66. Ch. 11. Legal Remedies: "On the Basis of the Information"
- 67. Ch. 11. Losses: "Who Owns Residential Credit Risk?"
- 68. Commission Conclusions on Ch. 11
- 69. Early 2007: Spreading Subprime Worries
- 70. Ch. 12. Goldman: Let's be Aggressive
- 71. Bear Stearns's Hedge Funds
- 72. Rating Agencies
- 73. AIG: Well Bigger
- 74. Commission Conclusions on Ch. 12
- 75. Chapter 13 Summer 2007: Disruptions in Funding Intro
- 76. Ch 13 IKB of Germany "Real Money Investors"
- 77. Ch 13 Countrywide: "That's our 9/11"
- 78. Ch 13 BNP Paribas: "The ringing of the bells"
- 79. Ch 13 SIVs: "An Oasis of Calm"
- 80. Ch 13 Money funds and other investors: "Drink[ing] from a fire hose"
- 81. Commission conclusions on Chapter 13
- 82. Chapter 14 Late 2007 to early 2008: Billions in subprime losses (Intro)
- 83. Ch 14 Merrill Lynch: "Dawining awareness over the course of the summer"
- 84. Ch 14 Citigroup: "That would not in any way have excited my attention"
- 85. Ch 14 AIG's dispute with Goldman: "There could never be losses"
- 86. Ch 14 Federal Reserve: "The discount window wasn't working"
- 87. Ch 14 Monoline Insurers: "We never expected losses"
- 88. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 14
- 89. Chapter 15 March 2008: The fall of Bear Stearns (Intro)
- 90. Ch 15 "I requested some forbearance"
- 91. Ch 15 "We were suitably skeptical"
- 92. Ch 15 "Turn into a death spiral"
- 93. Ch 15 "Duty to protect their investors"
- 94. Ch 15 "The Government would not permit a higher number"
- 95. Ch 15 "It was heading to a black hole"
- 96. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 15
- 97. Chapter 16 March to August 2008: Systemic Risk Concerns (Intro)
- 98. Ch 16 The Federal Reserve: "When people got scared"
- 99. Ch 16 JP Morgan: "Refusing to unwind...would be unforgiveable"
- 100. Ch 16 The Fed and the SEC: "Weak liquidity position"
- 101. Ch 16 Derivatives: "Early stages of assessing the potential systemic risk"
- 102. Ch 16 Banks: "The markets were really, really dicey"
- 103. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 16
- 104. Chapter 17 September 2008: The takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (Intro)
- 105. Ch 17 "A good time to buy"
- 106. Ch 17 "The only game in town"
- 107. Ch 17 "It's a time game...be cool"
- 108. Ch 17 "The idea strikes me as perverse"
- 109. Ch 17 "It will increase confidence"
- 110. Ch 17 "Critical unsafe and unsound practices"
- 111. Ch 17 "They went from zero to three with no warning in between"
- 112. Ch 17 "The worst-run financial institution"
- 113. Ch 17 "Wasn't done at my pay grade"
- 114. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 17
- 115. Chapter 18 September 2008: The bankruptcy of Lehman (Intro)
- 116. Ch 18 "Get more conservatively funded"
- 117. Ch 18 "This is not sounding good at all"
- 118. Ch 18 "Spook the market"
- 119. Ch 18 "Imagination hat"
- 120. Ch 18 "Heads of family"
- 121. Ch 18 "Tell those sons of bitches to unwind"
- 122. Ch 18 "This doesn't seem like it is going to end pretty"
- 123. Ch 18 "The only alternative was that Lehman had to fail"
- 124. Ch 18 "A calamity"
- 125. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 18
- 126. Chapter 19 September 2008: The bailout of AIG (Intro)
- 127. Ch 19 "Current liquidity position is precarious"
- 128. Ch 19 "Spillover effect"
- 129. Ch 19 "Like a gnat on an elephant"
- 130. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 19
- 131. Chapter 20 Crisis and Panic (Intro)
- 132. Ch 20 Money market funds: "Dealers weren't even picking up their phones"
- 133. Ch 20 Morgan Stanley: "Now we're the next in line"
- 134. Ch 20 Over-the-counter derivatives "A grinding halt"
- 135. Ch 20 Washington Mutual "It's yours"
- 136. Ch 20 Wachovia "At the front end of teh dominoes as other dominoes fell"
- 137. Ch 20 TARP "Comprehensive approach"
- 138. Ch 20 AIG "We needed to stop the sucking chest wound in this patient"
- 139. Ch 20 Citigroup "Let the world know we will not pull a Lehman"
- 140. Ch 20 Bank of America "A shotgun wedding"
- 141. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 20
- 142. Chapter 21 The Economic Fallout (Intro)
- 143. Ch 21 Households "I'm not eating, I'm not sleeping"
- 144. Ch 21 Businesses "Squirrels storing nuts"
- 145. Ch 21 Commercial real estate: "Nothing's moving"
- 146. Ch 21 Government: "State struggled to close shortfalls"
- 147. Ch 21 The financial sector: "Almost triple the level of three years earlier"
- 148. Ch 22 Foreclosures on the rise: "Hard to talk about any recovery"
- 149. Ch 22 Initiatives to stem foreclosures "Persistently disregard"
- 150. Ch 22 Flaws in the process: "Speculation and worst-case scenarios"
- 151. Ch 22 Neighborhood effects: "I'm not leaving"
- 152. Commission Conclusions on Chapter 22
- 153. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - Intro
- 154. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - How our approach differs from others?
- 155. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - Stages of the crisis
- 156. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - The ten essential causes of the financial and economic crisis
- 157. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - The credit bubble: global capita flows, underpriced risk, and Federal Reserve policy
- 158. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - The housing bubble
- 159. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - Turning bad mortgages into toxic financial assets
- 160. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - Big bank bets and why banks failed
- 161. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - Two types of systemic failure
- 162. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - The shock and panic
- 163. Dissenting Statement - Causes of the financial and economic crisis - The system freezing
- 164. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - Intro
- 165. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - Summary
- 166. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 1. Government policies resulted in an unprecedented number of risky mortgages
- 167. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 2. The great housing bubble and its effects
- 168. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 3. Delinquency rates on nontraditional mortgages
- 169. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 4. The origin and growth of subprime PMBS
- 170. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 5. What was known about NTMs prior to the crisis?
- 171. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - 6. Conclusion
- 172. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - II. How 27 million NTMS precipitated a financial crisis - Intro
- 173. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - II. How 27 million NTMS precipitated a financial crisis - How failures among NTMs were transmitted to the financial system
- 174. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - II. How 27 million NTMS precipitated a financial crisis - The defaults begin
- 175. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - Intro
- 176. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 1. HUD's central role
- 177. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 2. The decline of mortgage underwriting standards
- 178. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 3. The affordable housing goals were the sole reason that the GSEs' acquired so many NTMs, part 1
- 179. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 3. The affordable housing goals were the sole reason that the GSEs' acquired so many NTMs, part 2
- 180. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 4. Competition between the GSEs and FHA for subprime and alt-a mortgages
- 181. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 5. Enlisting mortgage bankers and subprime lenders in affordable housing
- 182. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - III. The US government's role in fostering the growth of the NTM market - 6. The community reinvestment act
- 183. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission - Dissenting Statement - IV. Conclusion
Giới thiệu
Here is the final report of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission into the causes of the global financial crisis of 2007-2009. Two thorough Dissenting Statements accompany the final report. The report is a chronological compendium of the review of millions of pages of documents, the interviews of hundreds of leaders, CxOs, financial experts and academics, as well as common people, home- and business-owners who were also significantly affected by the financial meltdown. - Summary by Mario Pineda
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