Subprime Meltdown
By: Steve • Research Paper • 2,762 Words • March 31, 2010 • 1,082 Views
Subprime Meltdown
Submission for
Crisil Young Thought Leader Series 2007
“Lessons from sub-prime meltdown”
Submitted by:
Neeraj Parashar
MBA Full Time Student 2006-07
Second Year
Institute of Management Studies, Indore
Email Address:
neeraj.parashar@hotmail.com
5th October, 2007
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank the following for sharing their views on the subject and providing support in giving this dissertation an organized look;
1. Ms. Mahak Jain, First Year, MBA, Institute of Management Studies, Indore
2. Ms. Ruhi Agrawal, First Year, MBA, Institute of Management Studies, Indore
3. Mrs. Neetika Khoda, First Year, MBA, Institute of Management Studies, Indore
Neeraj Parashar
Executive Summary
Wealth without Work, Pleasure without Conscience, Knowledge without Character, Commerce (Business) without Morality (Ethics), Science without Humanity, Religion without Sacrifice, Politics without Principle are the seven deadly sins that are quoted by Gandhiji along with the popular principle of sacred means for sacred goals. In the story of subprime meltdown the shortcomings of US government, their materialistic society and the prevailing practices of industry got exposed. Subprime meltdown is not an overnight story of financial shock but a prevailing tendency of American culture of achieving more beyond their affordability; creation of wealth (subprime mortgaged backed loans) without work (passing of buck of CDOs); irrational investments and financial planning on the part of individuals and organizations; technology facilitated credit history of borrowers being ignored; are only the few manifestations of Gandhian thoughts. A society built on human esteem, dignity and financially disciplined life actually shapes the society concretely on solid values.
The subprime meltdown is also a manifestation of changing world economic order, where the oil prices are rising and dollar is losing its value. The new engines of economic growth (BRIC) are gaining more crucial role in the trade and manufacturing scenario of the world economy. The long term implications of subprime meltdown essentially reveals the fundamental weaknesses in US economy i.e. $ 800bn fiscal deficit and its dependency on third worlds’ savings invested in US gilt edged securities($23 tn). As per the IMF Global Financial and Stability Report the worst effects of this crisis will be visible in 2008 when collateralized debt obligations holders will find the status of their investments.
Considering the integrity of global economy with US economy, this crisis would prove to be a big lesson for Indian banking sector before fully adopting BASEL II norms. Micro financing also seeks a special mention considering its role in addressing the housing requirements of those people who cannot offer any collateral. Regulation of NBFCs and hedge funds is also essential for maintaining financial discipline in the economy. Though, the affected banks are getting bailout packages from their central banks, in