“Chain of Blame is one of the first books to delve deeply into the central role that big banks played in the mess…for a juicy, name-dropping read, Muolo and Padilla’s book is hard to beat.”–BusinessWeek
“Muolo and Padilla examine just who was to blame for the crisis and find that it is not just cowboy operators.” (CEO Middle East, September 2008)
“…a level-headed book…the anecdotal style is easy-going…much the best book on the mortgage industry”. Fund Strategy 1 September 2008
“…a ripping piece of reporting… The authors know their stuff.”Bloomberg News Monday 28 July 2008
Americans are losing their homes at a rate not seen since the Great Depression. Prices continue to fall sharply despite the reassurances of just a few years ago that all was rosy on the housing front. Many factors have been blamed for this crisis, but who is really responsible? And perhaps more importantly, why was everyone so taken by surprise?
In Chain of Blame, acclaimed financial reporters Paul Muolo and Mathew Padilla go behind the headlines to tell the inside story of why Wall Street’s established investment banks bear much of the blame for the events that have cost millions of Americans their homes. They show in detail how, from 2000 to 2007, executives from Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and others financed non-bank mortgage lenders that eagerly sold their mortgages to consumers through loan brokers. Wall Street then sold bonds backed by subprime mortgages to overseas investors in Europe and Asia which led to financial difficulties there as well.
The authors build their compelling story around the key players in this tragedy, first and foremost being Angelo Mozilo, founder and CEO of Countrywide Financial, America’s largest home mortgage lender. From Mozilo’s July 2007 conference call with a group of top Wall Street equities analysts which marks the true beginning of this fiasco to his congressional rebuke in 2008, Chain of Blame chronicles the crisis in detail, showingreaders what happened, who is responsible, and what lies ahead.
As the dust settles around these life-shattering events, the blame game has begun. But as Muolo and Padilla show with stunning clarity, there is really no single entity or individual to point the finger at. It was a mix of factors and participants the world’s largest investment banks, homeowners, lenders, credit rating agencies and underwriters, and investors that precipitated the current subprime mess.
Chain of Blame ultimately reveals how human behavior and greed drove the demand, supply, and the investor appetite for these types of loans and how Wall Street was all too willing to satisfy the desires of those who should have known better.
From the Back Cover
Americans are losing their homes at a rate not seen since the Great Depression. Prices continue to fall sharply despite the reassurances of just a few years ago that all was rosy on the housing front. Many factors have been blamed for this crisis, but who is really responsible? And perhaps more importantly, why was everyone so taken by surprise?
In Chain of Blame, acclaimed financial reporters Paul Muolo and Mathew Padilla go behind the headlines to tell the inside story of why Wall Street’s established investment banks bear much of the blame for the events that have cost millions of Americans their homes. They show in detail how, from 2000 to 2007, executives from Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and others financed non-bank mortgage lenders that eagerly sold their mortgages to consumers through loan brokers. Wall Street then sold bonds backed by subprime mortgages to overseas investors in Europe and Asia―which led to financial difficulties there as well.
The authors build their compelling story around the key players in this tragedy, first and foremost being Angelo Mozilo, founder and CEO of Countrywide Financial, America’s largest home mortgage lender. From Mozilo’s July 2007 conference call with a group of top Wall Street equities analysts―which marks the true beginning of this fiasco―to his congressional rebuke in 2008, Chain of Blame chronicles the crisis in detail, showing readers what happened, who is responsible, and what lies ahead.
As the dust settles around these life-shattering events, the blame game has begun. But as Muolo and Padilla show with stunning clarity, there is really no single entity or individual to point the finger at. It was a mix of factors and participants―the world’s largest investment banks, homeowners, lenders, credit rating agencies and underwriters, and investors―that precipitated the current subprime mess.
Chain of Blame ultimately reveals how human behavior and greed drove the demand, supply, and the investor appetite for these types of loans―and how Wall Street was all too willing to satisfy the desires of those who should have known better.
About the Author
PAUL MUOLO is Executive Editor of National Mortgage News―which won a Polk Award in 1990 for its reporting on the S&L crisis―and is also coauthor of Inside Job: The Looting of America’s Savings and Loans, which spent five weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. His freelance work has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Barron’s. Muolo has been a guest financial expert on numerous media outlets, including CNN, CNBC, ABC, and Fox Business Network.
MATHEW PADILLA is a business reporter for the Orange County Register. His work, and that of two other colleagues, on the implosion of the Southern California subprime industry was selected by the paper’s editors as a submission for the Pulitzer Prize and recognized by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers.