Category Archives: Banking industry

ECB Provides Emergency Cash for Third Day

The Financial Times indicated today that European banks were willing to provide commercial paper only on an overnight basis to a relatively lengthy list of names they regarded as under stress. That is a dramatic departure from normal market operations. Accordingly, the European Central Bank has found it necessary to infuse funds for a third […]

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Explaining Last Week’s Credit Seize Up

If the Financial Times’ Gillian Tett were hit by a bus, I’d be in a lot of trouble. With all due respect to her colleagues, she is the best source of financial news. Today, in “Structured investment vehicles’ role in crisis,” Tett probes what went wrong in the credit markets last week. As others have […]

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Are Credit Default Swaps Next?

I am sticking my neck out in this post, so if any readers disagree, don’t hesitate to speak up. We have seen the following over the last few weeks: concern about whether banks that have exposure to subprime can be trusted as counterparties; reports and rumors of losses at hedge funds (at a minimum, stat […]

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Why the Panic?

As readers doubtless know, a nasty day in the markets yesterday was followed by distress overnight as the Japanese central bank injected funds into the marketplace and the European Central Bank added liquidity a second day, following an unprecedented, unlimited injection Thursday. The Dow opened down over 100 points, and due to a spike up […]

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ECB Makes Unprecedented Infusion in Effort to Stem Credit Market Panic

The ECB made an unprecedented offer of unlimited funds to member banks as the demand for cash soared as a result of Paribas freezing redemptions of three funds. Mind you, these funds only had $2.2 billion of assets, far less than the troubled Bear hedge funds. The reaction seems disproportionate, unless you factor in that […]

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The Financial Times on Subprime Fraud

The Financial Times has a thorough story today, “US seeks culprits for subprime,” on who is to blame for the subprime mess. Short answer: just about everybody involved. It isn’t until the fourth paragraph that the authors invoke the word “fraud” but that’s what it’s all about The piece recounts the sorry tale of the […]

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A Bank Run at Second Life

Santayana was right. Humans seem to be hard wired to make the same mistakes over and over again. Consider the financial turmoil afflicting Second Life. Mirroring our time, the online game/virtual community is commercially oriented. Property and services have a price. (If you think virtual worlds must operate that way, I suggest you read a […]

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Jim Rogers Still Negative on Housing and Investment Banks

Jim Rogers, who is by no means a card carrying bear, thinks the US housing market, and therefore homebuilder and investment bank stocks, still have further to fall. And the news of the last few days provides confirming data points. First, this morning’s Wall Street Journal has as a page one story a news item […]

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Some Semblance of Calm Returning to Credit Markets

If credit default swaps prices are a valid indicator, the fixed income markets are regrouping. Prices, which spiked up earlier this week on panic buying of risk protection, have eased off. However, while this decline is a good sign, note that it does not equate (yet) to an improvement of liquidity in the riskier sectors […]

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The Shellacking of Greenspan Begins

Ah, this is one of those days where there way too many good points for departure for commentary and here I am with a pricey and pokey Internet connection, and competing holiday activities. Finally, the reassessment of Greenspan’s tenure has begun. Not surprisingly, the Brits are more pointed in their critique. From “Greenspan has left […]

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Dr. Doom on the Dangers of the Liquidity Boom

Those of you who are long in tooth might remember the days when Dr. Doom, aka Henry Kaufman, chief economist of Salomon Brothers, could move the market. Kaufman was intellectual, articulate, and insightful. I remember as a summer associate listening to his section of the Monday morning meeting at Salomon. You could hear a pin […]

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Paper Points to Problems with CDO Models

A draft of a paper, “Innovations in Credit Risk Transfer: Implications for Financial Stability,” by Stanford’s Darrell Duffie, investigates ” the design, prevalence, and effectiveness of credit risk transfer,” with an eye to implications for the financial system. The paper is worth reading for those seriously interested in the CDO/CLO markets, and sets forth a […]

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Man Bites Dog (Federal Reserve Edition)

The New York Times’ Floyd Norris, in “In This Mess, Finger Pointing Is in Style,” discussed who might be responsible for the subprime woes and included this tidbit: Who’s to blame for the subprime mortgage mess? It’s the lenders, says William Poole, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. As he sees […]

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Credit Market Woes Weigh on Global Stock Markets

Today’s Financial Times has a good piece on the turmoil in the markets yesterday, which has continued into Asian markets today (although Europe appears to be staging a recovery). There were two noteworthy elements in this article, namely the divergence between the equity and credit market perspectives, the second on Bernanke’s posture. On the first […]

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Investors Dump Wall Street Firms’ Stocks and Bonds

We warned earlier that if conditions deteriorated in the financial markets, investment banks were particularly exposed by virtue of their taking on multiple exposures to the same underlying risk. For example, they lend to hedge funds via their prime brokerage operations, and also may be exposed to them by providing credit default swaps on assets […]

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