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All the Devils Are Here: The Hidden History of the Financial Crisis Paperback – August 30, 2011
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As soon as the financial crisis erupted, the finger-pointing began. Should the blame fall on Wall Street, Main Street, or Pennsylvania Avenue? On greedy traders, misguided regulators, sleazy subprime companies, cowardly legislators, or clueless home buyers?
According to Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera, two of America's most acclaimed business journalists, many devils helped bring hell to the economy. All the Devils Are Here goes back several decades to weave the hidden history of the financial crisis in a way no previous book has done. It explores the motivations of everyone from famous CEOs, cabinet secretaries, and politicians to anonymous lenders, borrowers, analysts, and Wall Street traders. It delves into the powerful American mythology of homeownership. And it proves that the crisis ultimately wasn't about finance at all; it was about human nature.
Just as McLean's The Smartest Guys in the Room was hailed as the best Enron book on a crowded shelf, so will All the Devils Are Here be remembered for finally making sense of the financial meltdown and its consequences.
- Print length432 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPortfolio
- Publication dateAugust 30, 2011
- Dimensions5.5 x 1.04 x 8.4 inches
- ISBN-10159184438X
- ISBN-13978-1591844389
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Hard-hitting reporting and fluent writing bring the utter devastation of the Great Recession to life—with John Cassidy's How Markets Fail (2009) an essential aid to understanding where all the money went, and who benefited. - Kirkus Reviews
Unlike many of the quickie books on the crisis, All the Devils Are Here is tightly written, methodical and unsensationalistic…it's very much worth reading for its damning conclusions and its craftsmanship. –Washington Post
About the Author
Joe Nocera is a columnist for The Free Press. His business journalism has appeared in numerous publications, including Esquire, Bloomberg, and The New York Times. He also wrote and produced the hit podcasts The Shrink Next Door and Agatha Christie and the Dandelion Poisoner. His books include All the Devils Are Here and Indentured. He lives in New York City.
Product details
- Publisher : Portfolio; Reprint edition (August 30, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 432 pages
- ISBN-10 : 159184438X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1591844389
- Item Weight : 14.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.04 x 8.4 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #41,561 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #16 in Banks & Banking (Books)
- #71 in Economic History (Books)
- #94 in Company Business Profiles (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Bethany McLean is a well-known journalist. Her March 2001 article in Fortune, "Is Enron Overpriced?," was the first in a national publication to openly question the company’s dealings.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book compelling and readable. They appreciate the history and details of the mortgage crisis. Readers describe the book as meticulously researched and informative. They say it's worth every penny and well worth the time invested. Opinions are mixed on the pace, with some finding it good and good, while others say it feels like a rush job and difficult to follow.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book thorough, compelling, and readable. They say it's captivating and well-researched. Readers also mention the authors are dispassionate and non-partisan.
"...It's the same deal, great story, written in a compelling manner. In this book there are 22 chapters of narrative written in 358 pages...." Read more
"..."All The Devils" is an incredibly good book!! It should've won a Pulitzer Prize!..." Read more
"...In the end I think the book was laid out well. Telling you a interesting story and in the end letting you decide for yourself...." Read more
"...The first half (or so) of "All The Devils Are Here" is very interesting...." Read more
Customers find the book excellent and balanced. They say it exposes many details and is the best book on the stories that led up to the collapse. Readers also mention the narrative is well-written and easy to follow.
"...It's the same deal, great story, written in a compelling manner. In this book there are 22 chapters of narrative written in 358 pages...." Read more
"...The book exposes so many details, I shouldn't ask for more. But I will...." Read more
"An amazing compilation of the major characters and their companies that not only started the seeds of the financial crisis through the creation of..." Read more
"...that in the second half of the book, the pace picks up and it reads like a thriller - well, it did to me, and I'm something of a macro-economics and..." Read more
Customers find the book meticulously researched and gripping. They say it provides an excellent explanation of the causes of the housing crises. Readers also mention the book is a complete source for answers and an excellent starting point for further research.
"...Devils" mostly covers events in the preceding years, and it provides lots of analysis. The book exposes so many details, I shouldn't ask for more...." Read more
"...towards the Great Recession of the late 2000s, and is a meticulously researched and surprisingly empathetic and non-judgmental book...." Read more
"...the sexiest book on the financial meltdown, but it probably is the most detailed, sober analysis of the lead-up to the crisis to come out so far...." Read more
"...Anyway I highly recommend it. It is exceptionally informative..." Read more
Customers say the book is worth every penny and well worth the time invested.
"...impregnable market position, coupled with steady, reliable, and huge cash flow...." Read more
"...would be well served to read, and the Kindle edition I read was worth every penny!" Read more
"...Though I prefer shorter, this is well worth the effort to get such a broader picture of where we let our financial sector..." Read more
"...can take a little work for those who are not experts, but it's well worth the effort...." Read more
Customers find the coverage of the book breadthful and comprehensive. They say it's the best coverage they've read of the financial crisis.
"...5 stars for the breadth and comprehensiveness, and no points off for leaving some details less explored, when that could have exponentially..." Read more
"This book has way more breadth than anything else I have read on the financial crisis...." Read more
"...far as the book itself is concerned, this is absolutely the best comprehensive coverage I've read of the financial crisis...." Read more
"...The breadth of this book is impressive...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pace of the book. Some mention it's well-written and has a good flow, while others say it feels like a rush job and is difficult to follow.
"...financial sector trades operate in an opaque manner, far too fast for proper regulation by those oversight agencies that are responsible...." Read more
"...mitigated by the fact that in the second half of the book, the pace picks up and it reads like a thriller - well, it did to me, and I'm something of..." Read more
"...It's a difficult read and difficult to follow, i think that the author assumes that we understand the Wall Street jargon, for my self i wouldn't..." Read more
"...brimming with both financial and personal details, the book is an incredibly fast and informative read...." Read more
Customers find the content depressing and not as interesting as they expected.
"...It is also quite depressing." Read more
"...Not as interesting or “action-packed” as I expected with an overall uninteresting cast of characters." Read more
"...It is not exactly uplifting but well written and will keep you interest." Read more
"I really tried and wanted to enjoy this book but, oh my God is is boring and dry...." Read more
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I knew Bethany McLean's work previously from reading "The Smartest Guy in the Room". It's the same deal, great story, written in a compelling manner. In this book there are 22 chapters of narrative written in 358 pages. Here are just a handful of the colorful characters you will meet and learn considerably about.
* Stan O'Neal - CEO of Merrill Lynch
He's aloof, suspicious, completely envious of competitor Goldman Sachs, and personally is very insecure. He could not stand having people of superior intellect around him, and in a corporation that is precisely what you need.
* Franklin Raines - Head of Fannie Mae
You talk about screwing up, the American taxpayer may have to lend Fannie Mae a hundred billion dollars before it's over, and somehow Raines still got a severance package.
* Brian Clarkson - CEO of Moody's the rating service
Only in America could Clarkson have come up with the concept that you could take third tier bonds, and if you put enough of them together, they could be triple AAA rated. The concept would plow the country deep into the financial crisis.
* Hank Greenberg- The modern founder of AIG
In the end, Greenberg developed a company with so many layers of intertwining intrigue, that only he knew how all the pieces fit together. It was a house of cards.
* Angelo Mozilo - CEO of Countrywide, the loan people
He wanted homeownership for everyone, and in the process of actualizing the myth, helped to bring on the financial crisis which would also destroy his career, and independence of his company.
There are many more players and their stories. The above are just the key players, but you will also get to know Alan Greenspan, Jimmy Cayne (Bear Stearns), Alan Greenspan, Lloyd Blankfein (Goldman Sachs), and more. If you think you understand Wall Street, think again. Reading the newspapers won't help you. You need to hear it from a master storyteller, and that's what you get with McLean and Nocera. In page after page, they put it all together for you. They take the disparate parts, and weave a mosaic that allows you to finally understand how did we allow ourselves into this mess? Who did it? Could it have been avoided? Finally, are we out of the hole yet, or are we digging further in?
You will learn about how Stan O'Neal schemed, and plotted his way to the top of Merrill Lynch, forcing previous CEO David Komansky out of his job earlier than expected. O'Neal proceeds to gut the firm of its enormous talent base, and brings in a bunch of yes men, to assuage his ego. He fires the head of risk management, only to have to rehire him later on. O'Neal practically collapses when he's told that the firm owns tens of billions of dollars of unsalable bonds. O'Neal was ultimately fired. I had the pleasure of seeing him on a Jet Blue flight to Florida recently. Gone is the Gulfstream jet he used for a play toy. I must admit to taking pleasure by yelling, "Hey O'Neal, how do you like Jet Blue." I'm a taxpayer too.
You'll learn how Goldman Sachs went from putting the client first to a firm now better known for its proprietary trading desk, and private equity group. O'Neal may have envied Goldman, but Goldman knew how to manage risk. They would elevate their risk management group to the same level as other groups in the firm; giving them independence to sniff around and tell the CEO what they really thought was happening. Only Goldman managed to survive the financial crisis unscathed, while everyone else was writing off tens of billions of dollars.
The story of Moody's was especially interesting. Warren Buffett bought 15% of the company because of its impregnable market position, coupled with steady, reliable, and huge cash flow. In one year, Moody's went from 35% of the mortgage backed securities market to a 59% market share. How did they do it? They blew up their standards, shifted their analysts around in order to make them ask fewer questions, and started charging millions every time an investment bank wanted to do a 100 million dollar collateralized bond obligation.
Moody's believed and promised the unthinkable. You could take poor bonds, but by putting them together and bundling them, you could make them triple AAA rated. As a rule, institutional buyers do not look beyond the triple AAA rating. They simply rely on the integrity of the rating agency. Moody's thought the laws of economics had been repealed. What is amazing is that to this day, Moody's has never been punished for their actions.
If you want exciting, if you want compelling, then you must get your hands on this book. It will make you angry, even furious at how the regulators looked the other way. You will never trust Wall Street again and why should you? It becomes apparent that many people in financial services are paid four, five, six times what people make for the same function in other professions, and industries, and yet they required an $800 billion bailout from mom and pop America.
There have been upwards of 50 books written about the financial crisis. As of this date, "All The Devils Are here", is the best of them. It is the most interesting, and it is laid out in easy to read language with no axes to grind, no hidden agendas. It will give you clarity, as to the interplay between government, Wall Street, and the banks. I give this book five stars, and thank you for reading this review.
Richard C. Stoyeck
(1) Buried in Ch. 8 is, "A rating had become mandatory for issuers." What? Who mandated that? The "mandate" should've been to use the Consumer Reports rating rules - producers and sellers cannot pay for ratings and cannot even use ratings in their advertisements.
(2) Ch. 8 continues, "To prevent a proliferation of fly-by-night bond raters, the SEC decreed that Moody's, S&P and Fitch were Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations, or NRSROs." Oh, please! What an addle-brained decree. The whole runaway crisis was fueled in part by the subsequent unwarranted AAA ratings.
(3) Pressure from Washington to quickly increase homeownership and crush local efforts to halt the mania was covered pretty well in places like Chapters 1, 10 & 12. The description in Ch. 22 of a June 2007 dinner meeting was particularly interesting. Hank Paulson had dinner "with a handful of Wall Street chieftains, including Jamie Dimon of J.P. Morgan, Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, and Chuck Prince the CEO of Citigroup." Their concern was excessive risk-taking and erosion of underwriting standards, and one gently asked if the runaway risk-taking could be prohibited. No indication how Paulson replied, but I can only imagine the desire to increase homeownership was on their minds. And, how many informal discussions with the CEO's to increase homeownership happened in earlier years? Could that have been a factor in the removal of the risk whistle-blowers all over Wall Street described throughout the book?
(4) In Ch. 3 there is one tiny mention of the Community Reinvestment Act. Too tiny. In 2005 I refi'ed a rental condo at BofA, and besides being pleasantly surprised at how few documentation requirements I had to do, and getting a $50K cash-out, I noticed a "CRA" block on the forms. The lending officer told me it related to loans to minorities, and I presumed she would've preferred that I was a "CRA". Did BofA grease the skids even better for "CRA" people?
I was glad to see the book covered "moral hazard" in a few places in the book, although the bailouts mentioned in Ch. 22 & Epilogue indicate that the "hazard" is no longer merely a "hazard" - the bailouts expanded the general U.S. policy to deal with financial problems affecting society: Take from the successful and productive and give to the unsuccessful and unproductive (isn't that a wonderful incentive to be self-sufficient?).
Another topic that would've been good to discuss was the role of housing supply & demand in the housing bubble. If the ramping up of mortgages had been a lot slower, like waiting till way after a lot of the teaser rates expired, things like housing construction and foreclosure rates might have been kept more in balance to avoid runaway appraisals.
I hope there will be a "2nd Edition" to cover topics like that, including more so-far-untouched devils.
Top reviews from other countries
Additionally, I found the description of the individuals involved not just interesting from the perspective of understanding their motivations (which often went beyond greed) but more importantly in the devastating impact that strong individuals can have on seemingly invincible companies in changing their cultural practices. For me this expose of the impact of different management styles on previously stable and conservative companies was as interesting as the actual technicalities of the causation of the crisis (they are of course inextrable) and is something which other books in my experience have not addressed with this level of detail.
The only mild criticism I would have of the book would be that because it is so important to understand the cultural practices and histroy of each of the institutions and parties involved in the crash, each chapter has to almost begin again with a historical discussion going back to cover in some cases 20 years of corporate history. This had the effect I feel of making some of the chapters almost feel standalone which by the time you reach 300+ pages into the text when the crisis breaks, made it challenging to remember the details of some of the individual players from the first chapter. This is of course as much of a compliment about the level of detail included in this text as it is a criticism and I have no idea how this structuring could have been addressed differently without losing the incredibly important discussion about the individuals involved and the change in culture in each organisation.
All in all a brilliant book and a must buy for those with any curiosity about what happened and is happening.







