Reviews

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine by Michael Lewis

jonlewis's review

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5.0

If this book doesn't make you homicidal then nothing will. Lewis covers how disparate groups of (and some individual) investors were able to see the 2007 financial meltdown. He does an excellent job explaining the dry, technical jargon that is necessary to understand all of the mess and breaks everything down to expose the root cause of the crisis. The truly infruiating part about the whole damn thing is how everyone, the people that saw it coming and the morons responsible for it, came out of the situation disgustingly rich.

martmann47's review against another edition

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dark funny informative fast-paced

4.0

george_odera's review against another edition

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4.0

"I'm not making a bet against a bond", said Mike Burry, one of the prominent characters in the book, "I'm making a bet against a system".
The Big Short is a lucid explanation of the vicious cycle of mortgages originated by lenders, bought by Wall Street, given a cachet by the rating agencies, and conveyed to investors. Each party in this cycle has varying degrees of complicity, but the commonality among them is that they were all willfully blind to the consequences of their actions; the Mexican strawberry picker, and the Jamaican stripper should have nown better than to fall for the "teaser rates" in their mortgages; Joe Cassano's AIG FP insured debt with a high likelihood of delinquency not out of brazen stupidity, but owing to AIG's eagerness to feed its golden goose; Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and co. underwrote triple B-rated mortgages because the acknowledgement of the danger this boded would be uncomfortable; Moody's, Standard & Poor, and Fitch overrated mortgage bonds not because they had no ability to vet a mortgage with with a poor rating score, but because Wall Street paid them for quantity, not quality; and ultimately, Wall Street's credo, "Greed is Good", fosters a competitive cult of culture yet bred the Frankenstein monster.
The conspiracy of these and many other circumstances yielded a situation in which banks used depositors' money in the Russian roulette of the subprime mortgage industry. On the other side of this bet were the "Big Shorters" such as Greg Lippman, Mike Burry,Charlie Ledlie, Jamie Mai, and others. When the music stopped, so did the dance, and thus came the 2008 financial crisis. The Big Short is a story of human folly, willful blindness, myopia, and general fallibility.
I'd give the book a five-star rating, except for the fact that the it only gave the background to the crisis in its postscript. The author shied away from explaining the political influences in deregulation of the financial markets between the 80s and 90s that culminated in the crisis. As such, the book was too politically correct to make appreciable mention of Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke, Larry Summers, Robert Rubin, Timothy Geithner, Brooksley Born, Hank Paulson, and other key political figures in the events that preceded and succeded the crisis. Nonetheless, a worthy read to understanding the crisis, and by extension, human nature.

mastersal's review

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5.0

4.5 stars. Half star docked only because this is difficult for those who didn’t follow the financial crisis and the CDO and mortgage market issues. I lived it so this one really hit Home so it was good to see people who didn’t drink the entire jug of kool-aid

shelshey's review

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3.0

3.5 stars. I really enjoyed this and gave insight into just how many moving pieces and people knew what was happened. Sometimes I didn’t understand the random stories or transitions. Would read again

juliana2's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

4.0

huckabees222's review against another edition

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4.0

I never thought I could have so much fun reading about things like sub-prime mortgages, CDOs, and credit swaps (let alone understand them).

madden1706's review against another edition

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dark funny informative reflective fast-paced

4.0

realkenzaburo's review against another edition

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challenging informative fast-paced

4.75

qoodeng's review

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informative reflective sad medium-paced

4.0