If you look at the issue on a more dispassionate basis, which is hard for me, you look at what happened. The originators typically get all the cash flows from the transaction and they securitize them They were originating loans at 101 and selling loans at 103, and making good money, so they could care less what happens . . . Same thing with bankers: they're getting their transaction fees. Same thing with rating agencies: they're getting their rating fees . . . So who's the guy left behind? The investor is the guy left behind holding the bag on the performance of the loans for the next 30 years or 40 years.Although he prefaces this statement claiming to be looking at this issue from a dispassionate basis, I'm not convinced he really is. It sounds pretty obvious to me that he's talking from the investor's point-of-view. If he wasn't, then he'd take a little responsibility and concede that some blame also should fall on the shoulders of investors, who voluntarily bought this stuff without understanding what they were getting. They were left "holding the bag" because they wanted it. Indeed, there's something rich about BlackRock, of all people, complaining they got taken advantage of by tricky bankers and issuers. BlackRock is arguably the most sophisticated investor out there. If anyone should have known better than to purchase bonds that they didn't understand, it's BlackRock. And if anyone had the infrastructure and expertise to actually do enough analysis to better evaluate the bonds, it's BlackRock. Again, no one crammed these securities down investors' throats: they all purchased them willingly, even happily. While issuers certainly should have originated safer loans, investment banks could have pushed them to provide more information for disclosures and rating agencies could have used more accurate models and assumptions, none of that matters if investors refused to purchase what they didn't fully understand. The reason that mortgage-backed securities flourished wasn't because issuers wanted to write millions of bad loans, investment banks were willing to sell anything or rating agencies were too easy with their grades -- it was because investors strongly demanded these bonds. If they hadn't, there would have been no market for bad MBS. And maybe that's part of the answer to aligning incentives. Investors need to be more prudent going forward. If investors will only buy what they understand, then that's the banks and issuers' incentive: they'll be forced to originate better loans if they want to securitize them. In fact, this is what we're seeing now in the market, and why securitization has been essentially lifeless other than the Federal Reserve's support for the past two years. Investors have realized their mistake. Let's just hope they don't forget the need for to understand what they're buying now that the rest of Wall Street is feeling better.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/02/blackrock-supports-skin-in-the-game-to-avoid-blame/35251/
