Login

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

May 23, 2025, 06:02:52 pm

Author Topic: Crisis on Wall Street: Lehman to file for bankruptcy protection, Merrill Is Sold  (Read 9979 times)  Share 

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

brendan

  • Guest
0
From Awful to Merely Bad: Reviewing the Bank Rescue Options
Mr. Hubbard, dean of Columbia Business School, was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush. Mr. Scott is professor of international financial systems at Harvard Law School. Mr. Zingales is professor of finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123396703401759083.html

brendan

  • Guest
0
How Government Created the Financial Crisis
Mr. Taylor, a professor of economics at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123414310280561945.html

brendan

  • Guest
0
The Credit Ratings Game
http://papers.nber.org/papers/w14712

The spectacular failure of top-rated structured finance products has brought renewed attention to the conflicts of interest of Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs). We model both the CRA conflict of understating credit risk to attract more business, and the issuer conflict of purchasing only the most favorable ratings (issuer shopping), and examine the effectiveness of a number of proposed regulatory solutions of CRAs. We find that CRAs are more prone to inflate ratings when there is a larger fraction of naive investors in the market who take ratings at face value, or when CRA expected reputation costs are lower. To the extent that in booms the fraction of naive investors is higher, and the reputation risk for CRAs of getting caught understating credit risk is lower, our model predicts that CRAs are more likely to understate credit risk in booms than in recessions. We also show that, due to issuer shopping, competition among CRAs in a duopoly is less efficient (conditional on the same equilibrium CRA rating policy) than having a monopoly CRA, in terms of both total ex-ante surplus and investor surplus. Allowing tranching decreases total surplus further. We argue that regulatory intervention requiring upfront payments for rating services (before CRAs propose a rating to the issuer) combined with mandatory disclosure of any rating produced by CRAs can substantially mitigate the conflicts of interest of both CRAs and issuers.

brendan

  • Guest
0
What Caused the Recession of 2008? Hints from Labor Productivity
http://www.nber.org/papers/w14729

brendan

  • Guest