by MrBill » Tue 14 Aug 2007, 04:23:57
Here is a good example of a financial journalist that does not appear to know what he is talking about. He gets the technical details wrong in any case.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')o some extent, the bank’s central role was dictated by the clock. The crisis in confidence reached a critical stage in Europe on Thursday morning, hours before the markets opened in the United States.
The first players to feel the credit squeeze were European banks, seeking to borrow in dollars. The lack of liquidity drove the overnight borrowing rate to 4.6 percent, well above the bank’s benchmark rate of 4 percent.
For days, European investors had been unnerved by disclosures that banks and investment funds faced losses because of exposure to mortgage-related investments. Then, the announcement by BNP Paribas on Thursday that it would suspend operations of three funds tipped the market into chaos.
“The problem is, these funds looked like normal euro money market funds,” said Thomas Mayer, the chief European economist at Deutsche Bank. “That led to a loss of trust in the market.”
Source:
Credit Squeeze Puts Europe’s Bank in SpotlightOf course, what he means is that the ECBs target rate for euros is 4%, but the European banks need to borrow US dollars. The ECB naturally does not have a target rate for USD, and if it did, it would be 5.25% not 4%.
Then there is no line drawn as to how the ECB can lend euros to close the gap for USD?
If it adds euro deposits through the money market, then banks would still have to do a cross currency swap to sell euros, buy USD, and then later sell USD to buy euros.
If there was a 'crisis' in confidence between US and European banks then the FX lines as well as MM lines would have been severed, making FX swaps harder to execute as well.
It was a shortage of USD caused by US banks having USD not be willing to lend those USD to European banks. So the ECB would have to do a cross currency swap with the Fed, and then lend USD directly to European banks.
The details are important. The headlines sometimes misleading.
This written by another fund manager.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hile financial markets reacted in a fashion familiar to anyone who has worked with young horses, i.e. panic first - think later! the extent of the broader market disruption has thus far been fairly limited. The EMBI widened out by a thumping 60 bp, the dollar whipped around between 1.36 - 1.38/Euro, while the yen strengthened modestly on the back of some position squaring.
Treasury yields dropped back into their accustomed range as the market began to price in the point that the next move by the Fed would be a cut, not a hike (this has long struck us as obvious). Oil and the commodities came off rather moderately. Even the equity markets merely gave up some share of their YTD gains;
nothing to write home about really. Where there was some truly dramatic damage was in the alphabet-soup of credit-derivative indices, swaps, and structured products. Some of the pseudo-AAA structures were hit with eight-notch downgrades, and currently have no price - not because their senior tranches are worthless (the certainly are not) but because no one wishes to try to catch this particular falling knife - nor should they. Similarly, the VIX index is pricing an impending apocalypse. Having been too cheap (we recommended buying VIX for protection) it is now probably a bit too expensive - though it would be a brave man who shorted it today!