Iranian Futurist Foundation |
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Monday 8 February 2010
GLOBAL ECONOMY
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Child labour
Matthias Doepke Fabrizio Zilibotti
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On the measurability of offshorability
Alan S. Blinder
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A Phantom Recovery?
Nouriel Roubini
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Russia’s Economy Declines 10.9%, Worst on Record
ANDREW E. KRAMER
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Rescue, recovery, reform
Stephen Cecchetti
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Demystifying the collapse in trade
Caroline Freund
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Is the Bank Crisis Over?
Hans-Werner Sinn
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Can Asia Free Itself from the IMF?
by Barry Eichengreen
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America’s Socialism for the Rich
Joseph E. Stiglitz
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Obama to call for U.S. financial product watchdog
By Kevin Drawbaugh
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Stay the Course
paul krugman
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Why is Japan so heavily affected by the global economic crisis?
Kyoji Fukao
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Does climate change affect economic growth?
Melissa Dell Benjamin Jones Benjamin Olken
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The Geography of Recession
Peter Zeihan
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Reagan Did It
PAUL KRUGMAN
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Lost in the tropics: Sachs’ misguided African geography
William Easterly
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Labour markets on the verge of a regulation crisis
Giuseppe Bertola
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A recovery without credit
Stijn Claessens M. Ayhan Kose Marco E. Terrones
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Story Time for the World Economy
by Robert J. Shiller
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Crises in the banking sector and attempts to refinance
John Cotter
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Why did the bankers behave so badly?
Anne Sibert
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Can income transfers to poor families help children?
Kevin Milligan Mark Stabile
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The “New Normal” for Growth
by Kenneth Rogoff
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A simpler way to solve the “dollar problem”
Domingo Cavallo Joaquín Cottani
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Bank ownership and stability: Evidence from Germany
Thorsten Beck Heiko Hesse Thomas Kick Natalja von Westernhagen
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Barcelona and Madrid: A Tale of Two Cities (Part II)
Luis Francisco Martínez Montes
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Stressing the Positive
paul krugman
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From recession to recovery: A long and hard road
Prakash Kannan Alasdair Scott Marco E. Terrones
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Where’s Europe?
by Giles Merritt
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Reflections on the chronology of the financial crisis
Roger M. Kubarych
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Water Wars
Jaffrey D. Sachs
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Green shoot or dead twig:
Robert Gordon
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An Affordable Salvation
paul krugman
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Reserve Reform
by Jose Antonio Ocampo
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Green shoots: Grounds for cautious pessimism
Willem Buiter
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How libertarian dogma led the Fed astray
Henry Kaufman
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Fiscal policy again? A rebuttal to Mr Krugman
Keiichiro Kobayashi
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Developing countries and the global crisis
Joseph E. Stiglitz
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China’s Syndrome: The “dollar trap” in historical perspective
Olivier Accominotti
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10 Countries in Deep Trouble
Matthew Bandyk
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The Dead Cat Bounce
Nouriel Roubini
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Is the global food crisis over?
Ronald U. Mendoza
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Erin Go Broke
paul krugman
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The Axis powers of gas: Germany, Italy and Russia
Kostis Geropoulos
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Solving the financial crisis: competition fines
Editorial
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An IMF We Can Love?
Dani Rodrik
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China: ‘Worse’ in 1Q09, but Not as Bad as Expected
By Qing Wang, Denise Yam, Steven Zhang & Katherine Tai
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Beggar-Thy-Neighbor Exchange Rates?
Charles Wyplosz
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Halfway to recovery
Nicholas Bloom
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Green Shoots and Glimmers
paul krugman
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China's economic growth slows further in 1Q
AP
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China's economy likely to show bottoming
Chris Oliver,
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The macroprudential approach to regulation and supervision
Claudio Borio
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Developing Countries and the Global Crisis
by Joseph E. Stiglitz
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Designing Economic Policy for a Second-Best World (Part II)
Karen Johnson
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Designing Economic Policy for a Second-Best World
Karen Johnson
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The US, the London summit and trade
Claude Barfield
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Making Banking Boring
paul krugman
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Prolonged Global Winter
By Martin Hutchinson
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Multinational banks and European financial integration: Lessons for supervision and regulation
Giorgio Barba Navaretti
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Ex-Treasury Chief Robert Rubin Speaks On Financial Crisis At Yale
Robert Rubin
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East Asia and the new world economic order
Peter Drysdale Hadi Soesastro
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Europe in the eye of a crisis
Lans Bovenberg
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The London Summit: International financial institutions
Mallika Ishwaran
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New Rules for Finance At Last
Christine Lagarde
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China’s Dollar Trap
PAUL KRUGMAN
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The London Summit and Development
L Alan Winters
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China is likely to be the first of the major economies to recover from the current global downturn. Its pace of expansion may not reach the double-digit rates of recent years
Martin Feldstein
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Keep it simple
Carmine Di Noia
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Obama’s Ersatz Capitalism
Joseph E. Stiglitz
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World Bank backs strong dollar, outlines trade boost
Lesley Wroughton
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A Time to Dare
George Soros
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1929 or 1989?
Dominique Moisi
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The Transition to Sustainability
Jeffrey D. Sachs
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The origin of bias in credit ratings
Vasiliki Skreta & Laura Veldkamp
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The Market Mystique
PAUL KRUGMAN
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The macroeconomics debate: A guided tour
Philip Lane
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Is the Floating Dollar Sunk?
RANDALL W. FORSYTH
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The Bourbons of Global Finance
Howard Stein and Claudia Kedar
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Lender of last resort: Put it on the agenda!
Guillermo Calvo
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Financial Policy Despair
PAUL KRUGMAN
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Asian challenge for western banks
Sundeep Tucker
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Resilient India
Shashi Tharoor
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In New Dilemma, Banks Cite Two Paths to Disaster
Binyamin Appelbaum
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Friedman's Influence Lives On at the Fed
RANDALL W. FORSYTH
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Innovation and institutional ownership
Philippe Aghion
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Blame the Economists, Not Economics
Dani Rodrik
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Sweden as a useful model of successful financial crisis resolution
Kent Cherny
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What Is Wrong With Shanghai? (Part I)
Yasheng Huang
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Insecuritization
Charlie McCreevy
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Transatlantic divergence in tackling the crisis
Charles Wyplosz
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A Continent Adrift
Paul Krugman
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A proposal to the members of the G20
Biagio Bossone
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What are Switzerland’s vulnerabilities?
Cédric Tille
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Building the Markets We Need
Alfred Gusenbauer
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Modelling financial turmoil through endogenous risk
Jon Danielsson
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Mr. Obama’s Trade Agenda
Editorial
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Regulating the new financial sector
Willem Buiter
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Mass privatisation and mortality: Is job loss the link?
John S. Earle
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Forget Inflation
Hans-Werner Sinn
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Ratings Agencies Greed and Fraud Magnified Credit Crisis
[19 Dec 2008]
[ Money_Morning]
Stock-Markets / Credit Crisis 2008 Dec 18, 2008 - 10:05 AM
By: Money_Morning
Shah Gilani writes: Underlying the credit crisis gripping the U.S. and world economies is a crisis of confidence. Blame has been laid at the feet of the U.S. Federal Reserve, and an investment bankers' brew of toxic financial products. Ultimately, however, it was the supposedly trustworthy rating agencies that got everyone to drink the poisoned Kool-Aid.
The sheer fraud and greed of rating agency analysts and executives is staggering. That no one has gone to jail, and none of the agencies have been shut down is a travesty of justice on an infinitely larger scale than Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme. Until depositors, bankers and investors regain confidence in the quality of ratings we rely upon to measure financial stability and creditworthiness, the tremors that underlie the credit crisis will drag on indefinitely.
Letter and number ratings – such as AAA, Aa1, BBB and Caa1 – are financial shorthand for the due diligence supposedly done by rating agencies after they've examined an issuer or a security's financial structure, and evaluated the likelihood of its being able to pay interest and principal at maturity. Investors rely on the objectivity and fiduciary responsibility of the rating agencies to publish fair, accurate and uncompromised assessments.
By law, certain investors must rely on the ratings of a handful of Securities and Exchange Commission designated “Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations” (NRSROs). For example, most state insurance regulators require that only assets rated in the top four ratings categories by NRSROs are eligible investments. Similarly, money market funds can only invest in securities with the highest NRSRO ratings. In fact, innumerable institutions – public and private, and domestic and international – mandate asset quality levels predicated on the major rating agencies' due diligence.
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services , Moody's Investors Service ( MCO ) and Fitch Ratings Inc . are all SEC-designated NRSROs. They are the largest, best-known and most-profitable ratings firms in the tiny, $5 billion-a-year universe of ratings firms. S&P is a part of The McGraw-Hill Cos. Inc. ( MHP ), while Fitch is a subsidiary of France's Fimalac SA .
Moody's was spun out of financial publisher Dun & Bradstreet Corp. ( DNB ) as a public company in 2000. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. ( BRK.A , BRK.B ), apparently having spotted a diamond in the rough, bought into D&B before the divestiture, and ended up with a hefty 19% stake in Moody's after the spin-off was completed.
The problem with the business of rating the issuers of securities, and rating the securities they issue – such as mortgage-bcked securities and collateralized mortgage-backed obligations – is that the rating agencies are paid by the issuers to rate them. Objectivity aside, ratings firms are in business not to rate but to make money for themselves by rating issuers and their securities. It's like all the contestants in the Miss World pageant paying the judges with country funds … who's not going to be judged beautiful?
What was even more problematic in the scheme of the ratings business model was that analysts didn't understand how to analyze and rate the very complex cash flow structures of these new collateralized mortgage-backed securities. Not wanting to lose business to their competitors, who were all in the same boat, they used the same rating model structures that they used to rate corporate bonds , though the two different securities had nothing in common.
It was like asking your local car mechanic to certify your Citation V jet – just before you take off for a transatlantic flight to London. God help you if there's a problem.
And there were problems. Lots of them. According to a Feb. 15 “Review & Outlook” piece in The Wall Street Journal , Joseph Mason, professor of finance at Drexel University, studied collateralized debt obligations rated “Baa” by Moody's and determined that they were 10 times more likely to default than equivalently rated corporate bonds. The article went on to say that an S&P spokesperson, when asked if they actually examined the underlying mortgages in the pools, answered: “We are not auditors; we are not accounting firms.”
While S&P – and to a lesser degree, Fitch – were just playing the game, Moody's actually ran away with the ball. An eye-popping and brilliant April 11 Journal article by Aaron Lucchetti exposed the unseemly underbelly of Moody's greed. What stood out the most in the article was Moody's willingness – under the direction of Brian Clarkson, who joined the firm in 1991 and became president and chief operating officer – to bend over backwards to accommodate issuers of mortgage-backed and structured finance paper. Clarkson was willing to switch analysts if clients complained, which several did, including Credit Suisse Group AG (ADR: CS ), UBS AG ( UBS ), and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. ( GS ).
Under Clarkson, Moody's expanded and grabbed a huge piece of the deal-ratings-market pie. By 2006, the company was rating $9 out of every $10 raised in mortgage securities. For all of that year, the firm's structured finance group generated more than $881 million in revenue, about 43% of Moody's revenue. And in 2007 it was estimated that the firm rated 94% of the approximately $190 billion in mortgage and structured-finance CDOs floated during the year.
But there was some concern, including some from insiders. Former Moody's analyst Mark Froeba told The Journal that “there was never an explicit directive to subordinate rating quality to market share. There was, rather, a palpable erosion of institutional support for rating analysis that threatened market share.” In the same article, former Moody's executive Paul Stevenson was quoted as saying that “the most recent problem is that the rating process became a negotiation.”
Clarkson, the Moody's president and COO, didn't do too badly negotiating his compensation, either. In 2006 he made $3.8 million, while the firm's chief executive officer, Raymond McDaniel, made $8.2 million. Clarkson “retired” under pressure this past May and McDaniel, the CEO, added the title of president to his mantle.
Eventually, the always-late-to-the-dance SEC awoke to the realization that it was supposed to be watching the watchers – the ratings agencies. While hundreds of billions of dollars around the world was invested in Wall Street's pay-to-play version of Illinois gubernatorial politics, many heartbroken and flat-out-broke investors discovered that what the rating agencies had determined to be “AAA” rated securities were not the princely investment-grade securities those three letters said they were, but were toxic Amazon frogs instead. Of course, that calls for an investigation. And so it was.
A 10-month “examination” by the SEC, concluded in July, uncovered, believe it or not, “poor disclosure practices and procedures guiding the analysis of mortgage-related debt and insufficient attention paid to managing conflicts of interest.” Brilliant!
According to the report, which included as exhibits several e-mail exchanges between analysts at unnamed ratings firms, there was an obvious degree of knowledge and complicity in playing the ratings game. In one exchange, an analyst said that their ratings model didn't capture “half” of the deal's risk but that “it could be structured by cows and we would rate it.” And in another even more famous exchange dated Dec. 15, 2006, a manager wrote that the firms continued to create an “even bigger monster – the CDO market. Let's hope we are all wealthy and retired by the time this house of cards falters.”
Have any heads rolled? No. Have any fines been levied or any firms closed down? No. The SEC apparently went back to sleep, having since been intermittently aroused by the failure of The Bear Stearns Cos., the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc . (OTC: LEHMQ ), the nationalization of American International Group Inc .( AIG ), and a few other minor nap-interrupting events, including the bailout of Citigroup Inc . ( C ). I'm only sorry that the Commission's disjointed hibernation should once again be interrupted by the petty crime of a simple Ponzi scheme artist . Well, maybe now they can finally get some rest. For the sake of our future, someone please disband this band of sleeping fools.
Shortly after the July examination was made public, in an acknowledgement that it might be under unwarranted attack, S&P announced that it was considering ways to take volatility and stability into account in its ratings. But, in a simultaneous burst of clarity, S&P suggested that it feared that a more disciplined and functional ratings model would make it harder for issuers to raise capital. Only days later, in fact, S&P went on the offensive, calling SEC proposals to boost disclosure and mitigate internal conflicts of interest too costly for the ratings businesses. Among the proposals that were pushed back was one to require a separate ratings structure and ranking system for structured products.
Fast-forward to Dec. 3, and the unveiling of the SEC's latest proposed rules changes. While the toothless wonder folded up like a pup tent once again on all substantive changes that would have created a more transparent and honest playing field, it did manage to sneak in some suggestions, including those that said:
• The rating agencies can't rate debt they help structure.
• Analysts can't participate in fee negotiations.
• Analysts can't be given gifts worth more than $25.
• Analysts must disclose a random 10% sampling of their ratings within six months.
• The ratings agencies must maintain a history of complaints against analysts.
• And that the agencies must record when an analyst's rating for structured debt differs from a quantitative model.
Calling these proposed rules changes baby steps is like calling the Grand Canyon a ditch.
Because Wall Street didn't like the idea, what got dropped from the proposed changes were rules to create different structures for rating different products. And the most egregious of the dropped rules was a proposal that ratings firms make public all underlying information they use in making their ratings. Which is exactly the transparency needed.
There is an overwhelming heaviness to the credit crisis that bears on our economic future. It is the inordinate weight of established, self-serving power brokers driving dump trucks full of ill-gotten gains over any clarion call for transparency. The underlying currency of capital markets must be clearly and objectively rated instruments, whose value is determined by free markets. Until confidence is restored in the producers, products and the purveyors of financial services, thirsty investors are unlikely to partake of any new punch.
[ Editor's Note : Uncertainty will continue to be the watchword for at least the first part of the New Year. Little wonder, as the global financial crisis continues to whipsaw the U.S. financial markets in a manner that hasn't been seen since the Great Depression. It's almost enough to make you surrender. But what if you knew, ahead of time, what marketplace changes to expect? Then you'd be in the driver's seat – right? You'd know what to anticipate, could craft a profit strategy to follow, and could then just sit back, watching and waiting – and finally profiting from – the very marketplace events you anticipated.
R. Shah Gilani – a retired hedge fund manager and a nationally known expert on the U.S. credit crisis – has predicted five key financial crisis “aftershocks” that he says will create substantial profit opportunities for investors who know just what these aftershocks are, and how to play them. In the Trigger Event Strategist , trigger events,” as gateways to massive profits. To find out all about these five financial-crisis aftershocks, and about the trigger-event profit strategy they feed into, check out our latest report .]
By, Shah Gilani
Contributing Editor
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