by MrBill » Fri 25 Apr 2008, 05:14:20
1. financial markets are very good at not making the same mistake twice in a row, but that does not make them immune from making new mistakes or forgeting about previous mistakes later on.
2. financial regulators as you point out are very good at closing the barndoor after the horses have bolted, but this does not perpare them for the next crisis over the horizon either.
3. we are in a very serious period of deleveraging. That is an ongoing process and will have profound implications on asset prices over years. It may be complicated or exacerbated by post peak oil resource depletion.
4. there is currently a shift from financial assets into physical assets that are perceived by the market as being better stores of value, and a flight to simplicity away from hard to understand and even more difficult to price structured products. The pendulum swings.
5. however, physical assets will become too expensive as too many investors crowd into this sphere. This just sets up the next price bubble and subsequent collapse. Nothing new there.
If I may just use the example of the rice market it is one part scarcity driven; one part speculation driven; one part hoarding driven; and not least of all export restrictions are having the perverse effect of 'balkanizing' the international rice market, so that importing nations are no longer assured of steady supply.
Anecdotal evidence is that less wheat may be planted in some countries this year because export restrictions are holding down domestic prices, while the costs of fertilizer and other inputs like energy are still rising. That is a public policy failure and not a market failure, but guess who will get blamed?
6. and some of those structured products were actually very useful at lowering the cost of capital and spreading risk. I am already working on a large exchangable bond issue and the investor demand is strong. That is to reduce my concentration risk to one market, while giving investors something they cannot get elsewhere. A willing buyer and a willing seller.
7. so the lesson is not this or that asset is good or bad, but their price relative to one another. A house that is both a physical asset and a place to live should be an excellent long-term investment and a store of wealth. But the price of a house should not be totally divorced from local wages and inflation adjusted incomes or rents for that matter. Nor should lenders advance 110% of the purchase price.
We should not confuse poor lending and borrowing decisions with prudent financial intermediation between savers and investors.
8. Long Term Capital was not just a domestic US issue, but took place against the backdrop of the Russian default that in turn took place on the heels of the Tequila and then Asian financial crises. There was a systemic risk of further contagion. The correct policy response was to add liquidity until the market could correctly price and digest the securities at risk from default. And it worked.
9. whereas Bear Stearns is both a liquidity and a solvency issue. It required a different solution. I am sure that JP Morgan was quite happy to be able to offset 'some' of their derivative positions against 'some' of BS' positions thereby reducing their overall exposure (long - short = zero) without seeing those positions dumped on the open market into a dearth of investor interest. Securities that had value would have been priced at less than distressed debt levels (essentially worthless) simply due to an over-supply and an unwillingness (or ability) of investors (banks and hedge funds) to digest that new supply at higher risk premia amid tigher credit conditions.
10. there is no point moralizing about it. There was a significant risk of systemic contagion that could have lead to financial collapse. It was dealt with.
11. however, in its wake regulators, law makers and central banks will demand and get tighter control over non-bank financial institutions (or the so-called shadow banking system). That in turn is driving some of the deleveraging that is undermining support for many asset prices. It is bitter medicine for everyone.
12. I was in London this week and many traders felt like they dodged a bullet. The risk managers and credit officers are calling the shots again. There will still be lots of job losses. But the areas most effected were those esoteric derivative products. Quite rightly so.
So one does get the impression that the wider financial system is safer now than a year ago even though it may not feel like it at the moment. That does not mean that housing or equity prices are all of a sudden going back up. It means a lot of risk has been identified and reduced, while banks and regulators have provisioned for larger losses going forward.
Banking is going to be a lot less profitable in the next ten years than it has been for the past five. The finance industry in general needs to get back to servicing the real economy instead of trading with itself to generate profits.
Using the pendulum analogy this is the counter-reaction to the the Big Bang of financial deregulation that took place in the 90s. Back to basics, but not the end of financial innovation by any stretch of the imagination.
Is that good? I do not know, but I know that regulators, law makers and central banks have created as many problems as they set-out to solve, so that process is ongoing and likely inevitable.
Despite the outcry about 'bailing-out bankers' there is very little public appetite to truly let financial markets free to regulate themselves through greed and fear alone. And once they start to regulate the market they have to make sure their policies and rules are consistant as well as have the resources and the expertise to effectively supervise those markets and financial players.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.