Category Archives: Doomsday scenarios

Bear Death Watch: Update and Nightmare Scenarios

Given the weekend, there was not much in the way of news on the Bear Stearns front, save further clarification of how perilous its state is. From CNBC: Department heads at Bear Stearns met with officials at J.C. Flowers and JPMorgan Chase Saturday afternoon to give an overview of their business divisions, including headcount and […]

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"A world addicted to easy credit must go cold turkey "

This article by Jeff Randall in the Telegraph does a nice job of looking at the causes of our credit mess and articulating implications. And he quotes my hero Paul Volcker (do you know that he stayed at the Fed fixing the economy even though his wife was very sick and he was having trouble […]

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Self-Inflicted Wounds and Mutual Assured Destruction

Oooh, the week has barely started and we’ve already had an overdose of adrenaline-generating news. Thornburg Mortgage and Carlyle Capital, both twisting in the wind, battered by margin calls, look unlikely to escape bankruptcy (Thornburg has already defaulted on financing agreements; Carlyle is seeking a standstill). Freddie and Fannie took a further beating thanks to […]

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Did Increased Income Disparity Help Cause the Depression?

I’ve been meaning to discuss how increased income disparity is bad for economic growth, because in the end you wind up with insufficient labor income to fund consumption (note that America’s high consumption rate has been achieved by lowering its already low savings rate to zero) and too much capital chasing too few investment opportunities […]

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Martin Wolf: "The government can rescue the economy"

Martin Wolf, in “Why Washington’s rescue cannot end crisis story,” tells us, push come to shove, the government can bail us out of our economic mess, but it would be unwise to stop there. Wolf argues that substantial steps need to be taken to rein in a financial sector that is beyond the understanding of […]

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"America’s Economy Risks the Mother of All Meltdowns"

Martin Wolf of the Financial Times turns over today’s comment to uberbear Nouriel Roubini, who looks more and more prescient with every passing day. Wolf summarizes two recent Roubini offerings, one on the twelves steps of a financial meltdown, the second on why the powers that be are unlikely to pull themselves out of it. […]

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Credit Default Swap Worries Go Mainstream

Those of us who have an eye for trouble have been nattering about the credit default swaps market from time to time. This $46 trillion unregulated market has suddenly captured the imagination after AIG reported in an 8-K filing that it had certain weaknesses in its internal controls and that the value of its credit […]

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"The Breakdown of Wall Street Alchemy"

Doug Noland at Prudent Bear provides a weekly Credit Bubble Bulletin which includes commentary after his extensive news digest. This week’s report was comprehensive and sobering. While his writing style tends toward the apocalyptic, his message is clear and persuasive: the credit market crisis is worsening, damaging more and more institutions and crippling more and […]

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Warning: Anger at Financiers Rising

While one data point does not constitute a trend, a first page article in today’s New York Times, “Creators of Credit Crisis Revel in Las Vegas,” may signal a shift in popular sentiment. Normally, “how the mighty are fallen” stories are exercises in shadenfreude. But this one, on the annual convention of the American Securitization […]

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Nouriel Roubini’s Doomsday Scenario

In today’s post, “The Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown: The Twelve Steps to Financial Disaster,” the bearish and prescient professor Nouriel Roubini sets forth how a systemic financial crisis could play out. The most troubling thing about this piece is that it is quite plausible. Of Roubini’s twelve steps, the first eight are […]

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What Happened to the Promised S&P and Moody’s Review of MBIA and Ambac?

Why have the rating agencies failed to deliver on actions they promised to take? Remember the announcements that helped feed into the overseas market rout last Monday? This story ran January 16 on Bloomberg: Standard & Poor’s will start a new examination of bond insurers, one month after affirming the companies’ AAA ratings, because losses […]

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"America’s inflated asset prices must fall"

I wish I had written this piece by Stephen Roach, formerly one of Morgan Stanley’s economists (and noted bear), now head of Morgan Stanley Asia. Roach does an elegant job of drawing connections between some issues that other commentators have treated separately. Roach sees the oft-decried global imbalances (shorthand for countries like China, Japan and […]

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Home Equity Loans: Source of Systemic Risk?

Minyanville has a post on three potential sources of systemic risk that have been largely overlooked by the media and in the markets. Numbers two and three on the list – downgrades to monoline insurers damaging municipal credit and counterparty risk in derivatives markets – have been covered in this blog. But the first, the impact […]

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