Here's the link to the NPR "Fresh Air" interview with the "The Blind Side" 
author, whose newest book "The Big Short" tells how some people anticipated and 
profited from the financial meltdown. I'm amazed at this guy's writing 
diversity, but the story here is shocking, for all that we've been in this mess 
for a couple of years now. To hear how some relative amateurs figured out how 
badly the system was going to fail is bad enough. To understand that 
institutions were actually buying and selling insurance against that 
failure--for as cheaply as 1/10 of one percent on the dollar--is amazing. To 
hear how these crap bond packages were falsely rated as AAA loans is maddening. 
And to try to understand again, how none of the people leading these deals 
anticipated or cared about the absolutely inevitable catastrophe 
is...impossible. 
I highly recommend taking the 45 minutes to listen to this interview just to be 
amazed and disgusted all over again.... 

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http://www.npr.org/templates/rundowns/rundown.php?prgId=13&prgDate=03-16-2010 

and here's a written excerpt from the interview: 

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124690424 



Writer Michael Lewis is the author of Moneyball, Liar's Poker, and The Blind 
Side, books with vastly different subjects but a common theme: outsiders with 
innovative ideas who find astonishing success. Lewis' newest book continues 
that narrative. The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine chronicles the 2008 
financial collapse through stories of the people who realized what was 
happening to the U.S. economy while it was happening — and then made vast 
fortunes by betting against the markets. 




"Everybody [on Wall Street] was working with the same set of facts about 
subprime mortgage lending — about how subprime mortgage loans were turned into 
bonds and repackaged and turned into CDOs and so on and so forth," Lewis tells 
Terry Gross. "[And] the vast majority of the people in the markets took those 
facts and painted one kind of picture with it; it was a very pleasant picture. 
And a very small handful of people took the same facts and painted a completely 
different kind of picture with it. [I wanted to find out] 'What is it that 
enables [the people who bet against the market] to paint that picture?' and 
'Why do these people look at the world differently?' " 






Dr. Michael Burry 

One of the most compelling stories Lewis tells in The Big Short follows a 
doctor, Michael Burry, who decided to leave his neurology residency after his 
investment blog attracted attention from money managers across the country. 
Burry started a hedge fund named Scion Capital, which, Lewis writes, was 
"madly, almost comically successful" — even when the Standard & Poors index 
fell. 

While investigating stocks to invest for his customers, Burry discovered that 
the bond market was absorbing subprime mortgage loans in incredible volumes. 
Soon he realized that the millions of dollars of credit swirling around the 
market were artificially inflated and almost worthless. 

Burry figured that he could bet against pools of these subprime mortgage loans 
using an instrument called a "credit default swap," essentially insurance on a 
corporate loan. Burry persuaded the investment banks to create credit default 
swaps for the subprime mortgage market. 

"As the pools of loans that are underneath these bonds start to default," Lewis 
says, the investment banks that gambled on the subprime mortgage loans were 
forced to send Burry money daily as the bonds went bad. "Wall Street firms, 
they were on the other side of the bets." 





Charles Ledley and Jaime Mai 

Ledley and Mai were two guys in their early 30s who decided to start their own 
hedge fund with just over $100,000. They quickly made more than $15 million by 
betting on financial events that are extremely unlikely to occur — and 
therefore didn't cost much to bet against. 

"They thought that Wall Street underestimated the likelihood of really unlikely 
events," Lewis says. "So they would buy options to buy stocks at prices far, 
far away from where the stocks were currently trading. They did this with 
currencies, they did it with commodities. They scoured the world, essentially 
looking to make bets on extreme things happening." 



Soon, Ledley and Mai stumbled into the subprime mortgage market and realized 
that they could bet against not only the loans but also the financial 
institutions themselves. 

"They're able to piece together a clear picture of what's going on in a matter 
of months," Lewis says. "They become less interested in the bet than the social 
implications of what they're learning. They go to the SEC. They go to The Wall 
Street Journal. They're screaming at the top of their lungs, 'My God, there's 
fraud in the system.' " 

By betting against subprime mortgages, Ledley and Mai's $15 million investment 
ballooned to $120 million. Soon, Ledley began to experience migraines and 
anxiety attacks. 





"They were stressed about being right," Lewis says. "I think they were so 
stressed that they realized that this wasn't a bet against a company, this was 
a bet against an entire system. And it was a bet that arose from their insight 
that the system had become rigged — that, essentially, Wall Street had become a 
giant Ponzi scheme." 

Lewis says the two men — like Dr. Burry — were able to see the failures of the 
market before the rest of the world did because they viewed the world 
differently. 




"This is the story of human perception as much as it is anything else. And 
their attitude toward the financial markets was peculiar," Lewis says. "It was 
peculiar to be running around the world looking for unlikely things that might 
happen. ... And it told you something about Wall Street and ... the way the 
markets were functioning when they were dysfunctional. There weren't enough 
people thinking this way. There weren't enough people taking into account the 
real likelihood of extreme change in the world."

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