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Years ago, before I started my current job, there were a ton of ads for programmers who had a grasp of CDOs and CMOs. These are the same instruments that underlay the collapse of the mortgage market and much of the woe that currently underlies our financial market.

This had led me to the question: Could programmers have seen this coming and, having done so, helped prevent or ameliorate it? After all, nobody knew these models better than the people who implemented them into code. Nobody knew how they were priced better than the people who codified the pricing models.

Was there ever a time when a unit test should have picked up that tranches of CCC-rated mortgages can't magically become AAA-rated derivatives? And, if so, what could we have done about it?

I know that it's an uphill battle to convince management to sacrifice short-term gains in favor of long-term stability, but it's a battle we fight every day against "write once, fix forever." And, if it's too much to think that the coders who worked for the issuers would be able to pick up on this and do something about it, isn't it at least likely that a programmer who said, "We're going to lose our shirts buying these" could get himself taken seriously?

I'm not interested in laying blame here. There are plenty of greedy, stupid people who propagated this crisis. The question is if we could have stopped it. More importantly, if we find ourselves coding flawed models in the future, will we be able to stop the next train wreck?

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if you're going to worry about policy, worry about policies on privacy, security and safety. – Jason S Jan 20 at 20:27
My previous company sold a product to optimize spread against rating for CDOs and CDO**2. I have quite a lot to say about this, that won't fit into a comment. – jamesh Jan 21 at 0:55
Nominated for reopening. While it's certainly subjective, I don't see what's argumentative about it. And if we get one or two quant developers chipping-in, this thread could be quite interesting and insightful. – RoadWarrior Feb 13 at 1:50

closed as subjective and argumentative by Oscar Reyes, Dan Dyer, Jon B, EvilTeach Jan 21 at 0:03

9 Answers

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What makes you think that no one saw this coming? Bush made a big push to save Fannie and Freddie several years before they collapsed but as with everything in Washington. If it ain't on fire, it ain't a priority. Greenspan spent the early 2000's unsuccessfully trying to pop the real estate bubble precisely because he saw this disaster looming.

The problem wasn't prescience, it was the dilligence to do something painful to head off disaster when everything is still going smoothly and no one cares yet.

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Andrew Lahde predicted this too. – BBetances Jan 20 at 19:48
The statements you made concerning Bush regarding the Frannies and Greenspan regarding popping the real estate bubble are demonstrably false. In federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/testimony/…, for example, Greenspan dismissed the idea bubbles can even form in housing. – Jason Jan 20 at 19:57
Okay. I'll concede the point on Greenspan after I did a little more of more research. However, he did smell disaster on the horizon despite thinking housing bubbles were a localized phenomenon, as noted in his 2005 comment: "It's pretty clear that it's an unsustainable underlying pattern" – JohnFx Jan 21 at 15:54
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Unfortunately, no matter how many people may speak up and identify an impending problem (and there were many warning about the mortgage crisis), if the people in a position of power to actually do something about it have their fingers in their ears and their blinders on, nothing will likely get done.

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My understanding is that faulty financial instruments are to blame for the current problems. These securities were fundamentally unsound, and should never have been legal.

This was a flaw with the security regulators and government.

Also

"There are plenty of greedy, stupid people who propagated this crisis"

Greedy? yes

Stupid? ... on the contrary, these people are probably brilliant

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I figured the ones who sold the bonds were greedy and the ones who bought them greedy and stupid. But, there's no succinct way to say that. – Jekke Jan 20 at 19:16
The fault here was the colletive assumption that home prices would never go down, and even if they did, it would not happen across the entire country at the same time. – Jason Jan 20 at 20:05
@Jason-Agreed, that thinking is flawed. Anybody who has studied market history knew better. It's one of the myths about Real Estate that has always bothered me ... real estate always goes up. But as soon as real estate recovers (in 5 years or 100) the same myth will propagate again. C'est le Vie – John MacIntyre Jan 20 at 20:14
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My understanding is that, during the Clinton administration, many mortgage companies (ie banks) were forced to offer/allow mortgages to low income earners who likely would have no way to consistently pay off said mortgage.

Not that there probably aren't many more factors at play here, but that one alone negates the likelihood that programmers could have prevented the mortgage crisis...

unless the president was a programmer. Love to see that. Refactoring government policies and practices? Giddy up.

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Would have been better off with a programmer. Logic rules all. – BBetances Jan 20 at 18:52
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Your understanding is wrong. You are thinking of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) and blaming the bubble on the CRA is a meme with great traction in conservative circles but has no basis in reality. cf. prospect.org/cs/… – Jason Jan 20 at 20:02
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It is not the programmer's responsibility to create the requirements. Yes, we should try to avoid building a bad program, but if your users tell you to build X, even if that will create a problem later on, you build X. So perhaps it's the fault of those who wrote the requirements, but it is not the fault of those who implemented them.

That's not to say you are completely innocent, of course, but depending on the scope of what you are being asked to do, if you really think it's so wrong, maybe you should look elsewhere for a job.

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I didn't actually take a job coding CDOs or CMOs. I wound up in a firm that trades equity options. – Jekke Jan 20 at 18:42
Not saying you did, just making a comment about the ethics of writing code you know is wrong. – Elie Jan 20 at 18:55
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Can programmers fix people? The answer to that question is your answer...

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[EDIT] Yes, we can. Look up BCIs. – BBetances Jan 20 at 18:44
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Credit Default Options were not the reason the housing market collapsed. People buying mortgages they couldnt afford was. Why would you buy something, if you know nothing about it? Hire someone to help you. The banks loaned out money because the gov't wouldn't give it to them then. They needed to bet on your mortgage payment, so they could make more money to loan out. It's a deeper problem than programmers.

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The CDOs I meant were "collateralized debt obligations." I believe that options on credit default swaps are commonly called CDSs. – Jekke Jan 20 at 18:40
Basically the same thing. Betting on someone paying debt. – BBetances Jan 20 at 18:43
Well, OK, they are not the same thing. CDS bets on mortgages, CDOs bet on any type of debt. – BBetances Jan 20 at 18:48
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Hindsight is 20/20. Anyone could have prevented it had they known for sure that it was coming.

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Not necessarily. Plenty of economists saw this coming, but that doesn't mean they had the power to prevent it (assuming one of them wanted to, the fact that it happened is proof). Just because you know something is going to happen does not mean you are capable of stopping it. – Elie Jan 20 at 18:41
What I mean is that once you know something happened (as well as the how, the why, and a ton of other details), then the answer becomes obvious. That doesn't mean that it could have been prevented at the time. – Grant Jan 20 at 19:27
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Programs are tools. No amount of fancy code will solve management and business flaws. Garbage in, garbage out.

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On two occasions I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. --Charles Babbage – maayank Jan 20 at 18:41

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