The Fall of the House of Credit: What Went Wrong in Banking and What can be Done to Repair the Damage?
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Average customer review:Product Description
How was it possible for problems in one relatively small sector in the global financial system, the American sub-prime mortgage market to lead to the most serious economic crisis in living memory? Alistair Milne untangles the complex world of modern banking and examines solutions to the crisis. He shows how the banks misused their ability to securitize loans and, by borrowing short and lending long, exposed themselves to exceptional risks when asset prices started to fall. But it has been above all a collapse in trust and confidence, rather than poor lending decisions, which has fuelled the crisis. Despite all the talk of toxic assets, the book argues that most assets are sound and can be repaid. The imperative is to restore confidence through collective action involving asset purchases, guarantees and recapitalization. Failure to do so will mean that taxpayers will be carrying a crippling tax burden for generations to come.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #198153 in Books
- Published on: 2009-07-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 380 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'The Fall of the House of Credit is a horror story, worthy of Poe, about the origins and impact of our ongoing financial and economic nightmare. A very easy and highly insightful read, for both layman and professional, the House of Credit offers a way out of our deep financial pit that's novel and that may actually work!' Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Boston University
'This book is most welcome: among the crowd of Cassandras, it gives an optimistic, contrarian view of the crisis. Maybe after all the financial system is not so corrupt and dysfunctional. Alistair Milne gives very precise arguments to sustain his views that unreasonable pessimism has followed a long period of 'irrational exuberance'. One may disagree with some of the views defended in this excellent book, but the conclusion that public authorities have a fundamental role to play in restoring confidence should be unanimously accepted.' Jean-Charles Rochet, Toulouse School of Economics
'An important alternative perspective on the subject, and an excellent explanation of the issue too. Very good indeed.' Evan Davis, broadcaster and economics commentator
'This book explains in clear terms how and why the banking crisis that is dragging the World s economy happened. Milne s argument that psychology, culture and herd behaviour contributed first to the bubble, then to the bust is a powerful one, rooted in the tradition of Kindleberger and Minsky. The author proposes a return to the basics of credit rooted in the latin word credere which implies a restoration of trust in banks and confidence in credit instruments. The book is written for a general audience, and the straightforward language and reasoning are a refreshing change from the complexity in the design of structured credit instruments and the models upon which they were constructed, that proved so ill suited to identifying and managing systemic risk.' Professor Rosa María Lastra, Professor of International and Monetary Law, Centre for Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary University of London
'Alistair Milne s take on the US credit crunch is a haunting twenty-first century saga of silent bank runs on shadow banks. There may be no great villains or heroes in this tale, where securities markets go into deep freeze and a reluctant Lender of Last Resort has to carry the whole inter-bank market on its shoulders! But it offers a persuasive account of how innovative banking can go off the rails.' Marcus Miller, University of Warwick --book
Review
'The Fall of the House of Credit is a horror story, worthy of Poe, about the origins and impact of our ongoing financial and economic nightmare. A very easy and highly insightful read, for both layman and professional, the House of Credit offers a way out of our deep financial pit that's novel and that may actually work!' Laurence J. Kotlikoff, Boston University
'This book is most welcome: among the crowd of Cassandras, it gives an optimistic, contrarian view of the crisis. Maybe after all the financial system is not so corrupt and dysfunctional. Alistair Milne gives very precise arguments to sustain his views that unreasonable pessimism has followed a long period of 'irrational exuberance'. One may disagree with some of the views defended in this excellent book, but the conclusion that public authorities have a fundamental role to play in restoring confidence should be unanimously accepted.' Jean-Charles Rochet, Toulouse School of Economics
'An important alternative perspective on the subject, and an excellent explanation of the issue too. Very good indeed.' Evan Davis, broadcaster and economics commentator
'This book explains in clear terms how and why the banking crisis that is dragging the World’s economy happened. Milne’s argument that psychology, culture and herd behaviour contributed first to the bubble, then to the bust is a powerful one, rooted in the tradition of Kindleberger and Minsky. The author proposes a return to the basics of credit – rooted in the latin word ‘credere’ – which implies a restoration of trust in banks and confidence in credit instruments. The book is written for a general audience, and the straightforward language and reasoning are a refreshing change from the complexity in the design of structured credit instruments and the models upon which they were constructed, that proved so ill suited to identifying and managing systemic risk.' Professor Rosa María Lastra, Professor of International and Monetary Law, Centre for Commercial Law Studies, Queen Mary University of London
'Alistair Milne’s take on the US credit crunch is a haunting twenty-first century saga of silent bank runs on shadow banks. There may be no great villains or heroes in this tale, where securities markets go into deep freeze and a reluctant Lender of Last Resort has to carry the whole inter-bank market on its shoulders! But it offers a persuasive account of how innovative banking can go off the rails.' Marcus Miller, University of Warwick
'If you want a serious, clear and authoritative guide to the crisis, this book is as good as it gets. Milne writes extremely well, both in his prose style and in his clarity of exposition of complex issues … The author not only knows his CDO from his ABS but can ensure that you will too. He moves comfortably between macroeconomic issues of global imbalance and the microeconomics of securitisation, regulation and risk management within the financial system.' John Kay, Management Today
About the Author
Alistair Milne is Reader in Banking at the Cass Business School, City University, London. He has also worked for the Bank of England, HM Treasury, and the Government of Malawi.
Customer Reviews
Where economics and finance meet
Really excellent. I was looking for a book that provides both intuition and detail sufficient to allow me to understand the background and causes of the current financial crisis. This book gets the balance between detail and intuition just about spot on.
- Excellent grounding in the credit derivative products central to the crisis
- Some tremenduous insights. Global imbalances being the main drivers for the evolution of balance sheet and arbitrage tranched credit products
- Explains in detail background to concepts such as "printing money", "toxic assets", "sub-prime crisis", "banker bonuses" etc and why the media gets much of the detail wrong in its attempts to broadbrush causes and solutions to the crisis
- Great background read for anyone interested in a career in credit derivatives. Difficult to find info like this in technical credit deriv publications
I really liked this book. My only fault would be its lack of treatment of the issue of default correlation in any detail. Difficult otherwise to critisise it



