Thomas Adams and Yves Smith
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Thomas Adams and Yves Smith are bloggers for NakedCapitalism.com.

Blog Entries by Thomas Adams and Yves Smith

FCIC Report Misses Central Issue: Why Was There Demand for Bad Mortgage Loans?

Posted January 31, 2011 | 13:01:18 (EST)

In common with other accounts of the financial crisis, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission report notes that mortgage underwriting standards were abandoned, allowing many more loans to be made. It blames the regulators for not standing pat while this occurred. However, the report fails to ask, let alone answer, why...

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New York Times Muffs Merrill/Magnetar Piece (Corrected and Updated)

Posted August 10, 2010 | 07:00:49 (EST)

Louise Story has penned what presents itself as an important story at the New York Times, one that charges Merrill Lynch with misrepresenting the size of its subprime, specifically, collateralized debt obligation exposures, in the runup to the global financial crisis. The ruse the article depicts is a CDO...

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CDO Market -- Rife With Collusion and Manipulation?

Posted April 23, 2010 | 10:03:25 (EST)

Despite extensive credit crisis postmortems, many of the widely accepted explanations of what happened are at odds with facts on the ground. These superficial explanations are hard to dislodge because they tally with widely held beliefs about how the real estate and securitization market operate. The waters have been muddied...

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Who is Next in the SEC's Crosshairs? Some Possible (and Heretofore Overlooked) Suspects

Posted April 19, 2010 | 07:09:21 (EST)

Both the traditional media and the blogosphere have taken an almost obsessive interest in the suit the SEC filed against Goldman last week with regard to one of its synthetic real estate related CDOs, Abacus 2007 AC1. Goldman's shares and the stock market in general traded down, presumably seeing this...

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Much of Fed's Secrecy Dissipates with a Little Digging

Posted January 22, 2010 | 15:56:11 (EST)

In September 2008, the Federal Reserve bailed out AIG, and ever since then, controversy has swirled around the motivation and terms of the bailout. A major part of the bailout funds went directly to three banks: Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, and the French bank Société Générale (SocGen). These banks were...

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