by MrBill » Mon 24 Dec 2007, 10:59:16
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('uNkNowN ElEmEnt', 'N')o way! Holy shit! so like the 1930's crash it could wind up being people pensions etc holding this bundled crap. What other kinds of institutions might take the hit? What about public corporations? or will it mostly be Joe investor who gets screwed?
So if the economy takes a 300 billion hit might this not start a cascade effect? and when does recovery start (if possible) will these banks etc have to pro-rate the hit over several years before they feel comofotable lending again? what starts the upward movement again?
Do you personally think this is going to be the beginning of the end with in the next year or two?
Threadbear I think that Canada is as exposed as everyone else. I cannot speak about Canadian banking sheets because I have not spent anytime there, but Canadian banks do have operations in the USA, and invest in the same type of products. Their year-end was at the end of October, so we should see their financial results sooner. Then we will know what kind of subprime or CDO exposure they had on their books.
But it is important to realize that deposit insurance does not cover investments, only deposits. So the pension companies are not insured. Only individual investors. There are not many 'Canadian only' pension or mutual funds. Most are cross-border investors. Therefore, I would expect the same type of investment strategies as we have also seen in European banks in response to low volatility, low interest rates and a flat-yield curve.
That is what I mean by the structure of the balance sheet through a corporate finance lens. Banks, mutual funds and pension funds all have to take risk to earn above average returns. Those risks are interest rate risks, currency risks and in some cases credit risks. No risk, no reward. The truth is that since the meltdown in the dotcom bubble that these funds were taking on more risks to cover the gaps between their current assets and their forward liabilities (i.e. when you retire).
Secondly, as everyone knows, through NAFTA Canada has become more dependent on exports, and therefore growth in the USA than ever. That is good. But one a stronger Canadian dollar hurts manufacturing exports from central Canada, and secondly weak US growth has a knock-on effect on exports of softwood lumber and other cyclical exports. True, oil & gas as well as commodities might be high at the moment due to strong prices, but that effects western Canada and NFL disproportionately at the expense of central and eastern Canada. Something we euphemistically call 'the Dutch Disease'.
In a global economy the links are strong. However, it is more like a matrix, so when you tug on one end it effects direct links more strongly than others farther away. However, the whole net does move.
The recovery, if there is one, starts crucially with the policy response. I won't be bothered going into those. Let us just say there is pain and there are short-term remedies that lead to more pain later. Take your pick?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.