FierceFinanceFierceFinanceITFierceSarbox   FierceCIO

How Goldman envy felled Merrill Lynch

Merrill Lynch had its eyes on Goldman Sach's savvy use of its balance sheet when the firm plunged disastrously into the CDO and subprime markets, according to an in-depth look by Fortune. Goldman's game was more risky, and Merrill followed suit. The story behind the story was that it was having trouble selling the top-rated, senior-most tranches of CDOs that its was creating. Yields had fallen to the point that hedge funds and other investors were no longer buying. So to keep the CDO profits humming, Merrill decided to buy the bonds themselves. And that came back to bite the firm hard. In hindsight, it seems so reckless. But you have to think that when you decide to make your money via risk management, this is bound to happen at some point.  

For more:
- here's the Fortune article

Related articles:
- The future of Merrill Lynch
- What's next for Merrill Lynch?
- More on passive hedge fund strategies

More stories about Hedge Funds   Merrill Lynch   Goldman Sachs   cdo   bonds   subprime  

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

What is 38 + 7?
To combat spam, please solve the math question above.