by Homesteader » Sun 23 Mar 2008, 20:13:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shortonoil', '[')b]mkwin said:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')aybe I am missing something, but I just cannot see where the capital would go?
If you get a promissory note for $100 from your neighbor then you find out that he moved to Australia before he paid you, your money went poof.
A derivative is an insurance claim for a term to pay if something happens. It gives you an income stream. You calculate the PV of the instrument (the income stream) and then put it on your books. If the counterparty, the agent that bought it from you, goes broke and can no longer make his monthly payments it becomes worthless. You have to write that off your books, which should go against your capital, since you put it there to begin with as an asset.
Trillions$ have been created this way, if the counterparty can’t pay (they go broke), trillions$ will have to be written off. What makes it worse is the agent that sold the derivative then went to a bank and borrowed money against it. When the first party can’t pay the originator of the instrument, the originator can’t pay the bank which put the loan on their books as an asset.
The bank then turned around, sterilizes it, and goes to the FED and borrows against the loan it gave the originator. Now many, many trillions goes poof.
Money, debt based fiat currency, is just a promise to pay a debt sometime in the future (the money in your pocket is a zero pass coupon). It has no intrinsic value, except the paper it is written on. It is worth no more than the integrity of and ability to pay by the issuer.
Not to discount what you said, but does it ultimately matter? No actual value went anywhere. Just a bunch of numbers in somebody's book. You can't eat a derivative. You can't put it in your gas tank and drive to work. You can't live in it. Why should I care that it disappeared?
The money men are up to the same slight of hand chicanery they've always been. What's new?