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Jill on Money with Jill Schlesinger

The Financial Crisis Ten Years Later

Jill on Money with Jill Schlesinger

Audacy

Education, Investing, Business, Self-improvement

4.6 • 1.9K Ratings

🗓️ 13 September 2018

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Where has the time gone? It was ten years ago this week that the U.S. financial system was brought to its knees. To help us retrace the events of that period, we’re joined today by Gretchen Morgenson, investigative reporter at the Wall Street Journal. As the financial crisis was unfolding, Morgenson was working for the New York Times, and subsequently co-authored Reckless Endangerment: How Outsized Ambition, Greed, and Corruption Led to Economic Armageddon. There’s no one more qualified to walk us down memory lane and remind us of just how bad things actually were. In case you’ve forgotten, consider this timeline: 9/15/2008: Lehman Brothers files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. On the same day, Bank of America announced its intent to purchase Merrill Lynch for $50 billion.9/16/2008: The Federal Reserve Board authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to $85 billion to AIG under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act.9/16/2008: The net asset value of shares in the Reserve Primary Money Fund fell below $1 per share, primarily due to losses on Lehman Brothers commercial paper and medium-term notes. When the Reserve fund “broke the buck,” it caused panic among investors who considered money market accounts nearly the equivalent of bank savings accounts.9/19/2008: To guard against a run on money market funds, the Treasury Department announced that it would insure up to $50 billion in money-market fund investments at companies that paid a fee to participate in the program. The year long initiative guaranteed that the funds' values would not fall below the $1 a share.9/20/2008: The Treasury Department submitted draft legislation to Congress for authority to purchase troubled assets (the first version of TARP).9/21/2008: The Federal Reserve Board approved applications of investment banking companies Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become bank holding companies.All this in just one week!! An incredible moment in the history of this country, and it was only ten years ago. If you have a money question, just email me! “Better Off” is sponsored by Betterment. "Better Off" theme music is by Joel Goodman, www.joelgoodman.com. Connect with me at these places for all my content: http://www.jillonmoney.com/  https://twitter.com/jillonmoney  https://www.facebook.com/JillonMoney  https://www.instagram.com/jillonmoney/  https://www.youtube.com/c/JillSchlesinger  https://www.linkedin.com/in/jillonmoney/  http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/jill-on-money  https://apple.co/2pmVi50

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, it's Jill Schlesinger, host of the Better Off Podcast. On today's episode, we're celebrating

0:07.6

the 10-year anniversary of the financial crisis.

0:11.5

In the S&L crisis of the late 80s, early 90s, there were hundreds of people went to jail for a much

0:17.7

smaller problem that did not have an impact of the size of this crisis.

0:21.5

So it can be done, it was done, and it sent a message to people.

0:26.4

This time around, nobody went to jail of any high level and the message is clear. Do it again next time and do it in bigger size.

0:37.0

Welcome to the Better Off podcast. We are sponsored by Betterment, the largest independent online financial advisor.

0:45.1

Where were you 10 years ago this month?

0:48.2

Think about it.

0:49.4

All of a sudden, it seemed as if the United States economy was going to lead the rest of the world off a cliff

0:58.0

and go into what could have been a multi-year, maybe a multi-decade depression.

1:05.0

September 15th, Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy.

1:09.0

Now, while that is not the official beginning of the financial crisis, it probably started a year before that, it

1:15.1

is what was the accelerant to the crisis.

1:18.6

And so for the next few weeks we are going to talk to different experts about the financial crisis and its aftermath.

1:26.6

Today we are so fortunate to have Gretchen Morganson.

1:31.0

She's a senior special writer in the Investigations Unit at the Wall Street Journal.

1:36.2

She has won a Pulitzer Prize.

1:39.4

She's also won three Gerald Loeb awards, and she wrote a book after the financial crisis with a

1:45.8

co-author called Reckless Endangerment and so we thought it would make sense

1:50.3

to bring her on the program to talk to us about some of the issues you may have totally

1:56.8

forgotten about.

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