Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Movie Review: The China Hustle

The China Hustle *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Jed Rothstein.
Written by: Jed Rothstein.
 
It never ceases to surprise me the number of way people can came up with to legally scam the system – to find loopholes, and end run arounds to get by legislation and regulation, to allow people to make a lot of money on the stock market, knowingly selling crap, and then get to walk away with the money once everything is all over. The China Hustle is the latest documentary that shows one of these scams – something that happened AFTER the 2008 financial crisis. If you could no longer sell junk mortgages to consumers, then what can you sell? Apparently, junk Chinese companies.
 
The movie does a very good job of showing how – step-by-step – this process happened. Legally, Chinese companies should be able to be listed on the American Stock Exchange – but what they did was use what is called Reverse Mergers – basically, Chinese companies took over pretty much defunct American companies – that were listed on the stock exchange – and essentially, they got to be listed there as well – with almost no regulatory oversight. They then started talking up their businesses – China after all is a huge market, and there is a lot of money to be made. If you had questions, they had financial statements – audited by firms with names you know and trust (they don’t really tell you that those statements were audited by the Chinese branch of those firms, which operated independently). If American lawmakers or the SEC wanted to look deeper into those records – wanted to get the backup, good luck. They cannot force China to give them anything. Still, these companies ended up making a lot of money in the stock market, very quickly – and when they went to shit (as they were designed to), it wasn’t those who ran those companies that lost money – they kept what they made – but American investors.
 
Like The Big Short, the “heroes” of this story (and even they insist they are heroes – or even good guys) are people who ended up short selling the stock – essentially betting on them to fail. A few people decided that these companies looked too good to be true, and actually looked into them (sending Chinese people – at great risk to themselves) to monitor the companies, and realizing there was no way that they could be making the amount of money they were saying they were. When they realizing they were too good to be true, they started short selling – and that, along with the reports, made some of these companies collapse.
 
One of the producers of the film is Alex Gibney – who has specialized in these types of docs over the years – stretching back to Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, right up until his Netflix series Dirty Money. The director of the film, Jed Rothstein, has clearly been taking lessons from Gibney on how to structure, pace and present his documentary – and pretty much nails GIbney’s style. He doesn’t quite get the outrage that Gibney can sometimes show, or cross the line into preachiness that Gibney has a tendency to do at times – but that often is one of the weaker aspects of Gibney’s films. The counter argument to those in though is that without it, the film feels both more lightweight, and more hopeless (it shows one short seller try to get his message to congress – who uniformly, does not care).
 
The China Hustle is a quick moving doc – in and out in less than 90 minutes, and gives you a good overview of a scam, how it happened, and why they got away with it. It’s not as good as the best Gibney films – or come close to something like Charles Ferguson’s Inside Job – but it’s another doc in a long line showing how the system is gamed.

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