Closing Thoughts: Structured Finance and Insurance 20 Years Later
Book: Structured Finance and Insurance: The ART of Managing Capital and Risk Author: Christopher L. Culp Publisher: Wiley Finance, 2006 ISBN: 978-0-471-70631-1
Book: Structured Finance and Insurance: The ART of Managing Capital and Risk Author: Christopher L. Culp Publisher: Wiley Finance, 2006 ISBN: 978-0-471-70631-1
So we made it through the whole book. Every chapter, every character, every messed up financial instrument. And now I want to step back and share some thoughts on what this book really means. Not just as a finance story, but as a story about people, systems, and how badly things can go wrong when nobody’s paying attention.
The epilogue of The Big Short is called “Everything Is Correlated.” And that title carries more weight than it first appears. The financial system, the government response, the bailouts, the lack of accountability, the people who got rich from causing the disaster, and the ordinary people who lost everything - it was all connected. And not in the way Wall Street’s risk models assumed.
This is the chapter where everything falls apart. Not slowly. Not gracefully. Like a building that has been rotting from the inside for years and one Tuesday morning just folds in on itself while people are still walking past it on the sidewalk.
This chapter is where it all starts to unravel. And it opens not with the heroes of this story, but with the guy who made the single biggest trading loss in Wall Street history. His name is Howie Hubler.
There is an old saying in science: being right too early is indistinguishable from being wrong. Chapter 8 of The Big Short is basically that saying stretched into the most painful period of Michael Burry’s life. And honestly, reading it felt personal. Because anyone who has ever been the only person in the room who sees a problem - and then gets punished for pointing it out - will recognize every single page of this chapter.
Chapter 7 of The Big Short is called “The Great Treasure Hunt,” and I think it is the most frustrating chapter in the whole book. Not because it is boring. Because it shows you that every institution that was supposed to protect the system - the rating agencies, the regulators, the big banks - was either clueless, corrupt, or both.
There is something almost too perfect about the setting. The biggest annual conference for the subprime mortgage bond industry takes place in Las Vegas. In a fake Italian palace. Inside a casino specifically designed to make you lose track of time, money, and your grip on reality.
Every chapter of this book introduces a different kind of weirdo who saw the crisis coming. Michael Burry was the data obsessive. Steve Eisman was the loud angry truth-teller. And now we meet Charlie Ledley and Jamie Mai, two guys who started a hedge fund in a friend’s garage in Berkeley, California, with $110,000 in a Schwab account. They called it Cornwall Capital Management. Nobody asked them to do this. Nobody told them they should. They just kind of… did it.
This is the chapter that made me put the book down and stare at the wall for a while. Not because it’s complicated. Because it’s cruel. Chapter 4 is where Michael Lewis shows you the actual human beings getting chewed up by the machine. And the chapter title - “How to Harvest a Migrant Worker” - is not a metaphor. It is literally what happened.
This chapter introduces one of the most entertaining characters in the whole book. His name is Greg Lippmann, he is a bond trader at Deutsche Bank, and he is exactly the kind of person you would never trust with your money. Which is exactly why his story is so good.
The chapter title is “In the Land of the Blind.” There is a proverb: “In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.” Michael Burry literally had one eye. He lost his left eye to cancer when he was two years old. Lewis is not being subtle here, and I love him for it.
Chapter 1 of The Big Short is called “A Secret Origin Story.” And it really is one. Michael Lewis introduces us to Steve Eisman, a guy who stumbled into the subprime mortgage world almost by accident, got a front row seat to the ugliest corner of American finance, and slowly turned from a believer into the angriest skeptic on Wall Street.
Michael Lewis opens The Big Short with a confession. And it is one of the most honest things I have ever read from someone who worked on Wall Street.
I just finished re-reading The Big Short by Michael Lewis, and honestly, it hits different every time. So I’m going to do something I’ve wanted to do for a while. I’m going to retell this book, chapter by chapter, in a way that makes sense even if you’ve never touched a finance textbook.