Change Player Size
Watch this video in a new window

Crisis explainer

Marketplace Senior Editor Paddy Hirsch gives a bubbly explanation of the intricacies of collateralized debt obligations those financial instruments that got us into this financial mess.  
 
Customize
Donate to this organization

More From: AmericanPublicMedia

Don't Burn the Mortgage2:17
2,040 views
The federal backstop2:50
1,474 views
A Prairie Home Companion 35th Anniversary/Fourth of July Celebration: A Free Show in Avon, Minnesota1:16
18,281 views
Safe at the Bank3:04
631 views
Marketplace - Underwater Gadgets 8/27/20080:46
3,902 views
Marketplace -- Water gadgets0:15
1,425 views
Untangling credit default swaps10:47
36,156 views
A Prairie Home Companion Fourth of July / 35th Anniversary Show, live from Avon, Minnesota1:15
514 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion May 30, 20091:43
4,699 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion May 23, 20091:09
4,837 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion, May 9, 20092:20
6,363 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion May 2, 20093:23
7,102 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion April 25, 20091:47
5,644 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion April 11, 20098:29
10,442 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion March 28, 20090:30
6,449 views
A Prairie Home Companion: SFX/Rhubarb script, March 21, 20094:13
2,916 views
A Prairie Home Companion: The News from Lake Wobegon, March 21, 200913:18
7,680 views
A Prairie Home Companion: "Tishomingo Blues" March 21, 20092:44
4,285 views
A Prairie Home Companion: ELCA script, March 21, 20092:15
2,159 views
Coming up on A Prairie Home Companion March 21, 20091:52
5,194 views

QuickList(0)

Upgrade to Flash Player 10 for improved playback performance. Upgrade Now or get more info.
231 ratings
Sign in to rate
88,188 views
Want to add to Favorites? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to add to Playlists? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to flag a video? Sign In or Sign Up now!

Statistics & Data

Loading...

Video Responses (1)

Sign in to post a Comment

Text Comments (59)   Options

Loading...
D4Shawn (1 month ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
I like this guy a lot, and would like to find more of him/his work. What is "Marketplace"? Is it a magazine... a blog/website? Does this guy do videos elsewhere?
Piolivers (4 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
Outstanding presentation. Really enlightening and simple. Congratulations!
AFRIKTODAY (5 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
It all began when the Fed prevented the harsh recession that should have occurred after the internet bubble. Lowering interest rate to a 46 years low created an incentive for all sorts of people to borrow and invest in then lucrative activities. People were drunk on the easy money and thought they were creating wealth when in fact they were just building a pyramid of sand. Those who foresaw this bubble bet against it and made billions ( John Paulson comes to mind). Remember the Say's Law.
silverjunky999 (5 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
thats nice, wonder how long it took to think up this wonderful system.. im sure they are alot smarter than i. but i dont think it looks right to me oh well good luck peoples
jgposner (7 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
That was awesome. I heard so much of about this stuff and now I finally understand it. So is this related to derivatives? How about leveraging. I heard of we need to unwind derivatives and deleverage? I also heard that once the unwinding of derivatives and the deleveraging is done, the dollar will collapse, is that true?
Comment(s) marked as spam Show
1ChocletDrop (8 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
in other words a cdo is a group of potentially worthless group of/ homes,credit cards,or any other over priced ,high intrest crap that they paid too much 4 .now there crying 4 a bailout
Lot3ch (8 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
CDO's in themselves aren't that dangerous and can be "good" investments (e.g. a bond backed by a mortgage). But if you split a CDO into traunches and let's say start rating them AAA, AA, etc. while they all came from a BBB bond then the stuff gets messy.
lettysef (2 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
How is it possible to split BBB bond into groups containing AAA and AA ratings if they're inherently high-risk?
Lot3ch (2 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
That's what is so confounding. These CDO derivatives (i.e. CDO's of CDO's) are divided into sections reflecting risk. So even though the BBB bonds have inherent risk, once divided they were allowed to be chopped up into different traunches (so that the least risky of the BBB bonds get rated AAA, AA and so on - these would be the last traunches in the original BBB bonds to default). You're right that this makes no sense and ratings agencies are to blame for allowing this practice.

Would you like to comment?

Join YouTube for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.