| You're a pension fund manager. Your job isn't very exciting because you're rather limited in the assets you're allowed to invest in. Each month you get to wake up and decide whether you want to buy more US securities or more GE bonds. Not a lot of room to distinguish yourself in this environment. One day Mr. Lehman knocks on your door and announces he has a new "AAA" security for sale that pays twice the market rate. Hot diggity! You're god damned right I'm interested, I'll take everything you've got. Now, as any fund manager who's been on the job even a week knows, you also know that if the rate goes up, so does the risk. There's no possible way that these "AAA" securities are as safe as the AAA securities you're used to dealing with. Not your problem, though. You're knocking it out of the park and your fund still has the exact AAA/AA/A asset ratio that your promised your pensioners. Same story at AIG. As long as they were collecting premiums, nobody thought to ask why people were buying up all this insurance on "default-proof" securities. Oh, wait, somebody did, but they were told to shut up because free money. Of course, after the music stops, out come the crocodile tears. "Oh, woe is me, I never could have guessed there was anything unusual happening here." But yes, let's blame the MBS packagers for making exactly the product the buyers wanted. If anybody was defrauded, it was the pensioners whose manager shut his eyes as tightly as possible and the AIG stockholders who were not informed of the risk AIG was carrying. |
Could they not be prosecuted along those lines?