top | item 17326802

(no title)

Trundle | 7 years ago

As far as I remember the big short doesn't though.

discuss

order

bitcharmer|7 years ago

Part of the premise behind writing the book was to explain to the public what happened and why.

There are several good analogies in both the book and the movie (ie. the chef and the fish) that greatly helped me understand the mechanics of it.

wgerard|7 years ago

The book and movie do a pretty solid job about explaining what CDOs, derivatives, etc. are.

What the book and movie don't do (unless I'm forgetting something) is explain how anything involved with the 2008 crisis was illegal - the sole exception being that CDSs are very arguably insurance contracts and should be regulated by insurance laws.

jjoonathan|7 years ago

The Big Short made it sound like credit rating agencies engaged in intentional negligence, which doesn't strike me as something "too abstract to prosecute" (or whatever the excuse is supposed to be here).

PeterisP|7 years ago

Negligence in general isn't a crime - it does become a crime if gross negligence directly causes death or major injury, but as far as I know, you can't prosecute someone if their negligence merely costs someone some amount of money, no matter how much. It may cause liability for that amount of money, but that's not a crime that the government can prosecute and threaten with jail time, that's a civil case between them and whoever suffered and may sue them for some money.