Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Dizard: "Put the credit default swaps market out of its misery"

As credit default swaps have come in and out of focus over the last year, I have been struck by the assumption that this product would of course continue to exist. I have trouble seeing their legitimate uses. In theory, they could allow banks to diversify and hedge credit risks better, but once risks rise […]

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Why is "Nationalization" A Dirty Word in America?

One of the most pervasive findings in social science, although it is seldom codified this way, is how suggestible people are. Numerous studies in behavioral economics have found that the same underlying bet elicits very different take-up rates when framed as a wager versus as insurance. Even worse, humans are susceptible to obviously exogenous influence. […]

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California to Repudiate Treasury on Treatment of Net Operating Losses?

In the geeky but important category, the California legislature attempted but failed to pass a budget that included a provision that effectively repudiated the recent Treasury directive to eliminate the limitation on acquiring banks’ ability to use the net operating losses of acquired banks. That rule change was widely described as instrumental in the catfight […]

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Bill Gross Says Stocks May Not Be So Cheap

One of the arguments made by bottom-fishers is that not only are stocks “oversold” (a technical notion that reflects recent trading activity, such as trading volumes, price in relationship to various moving day averages) but are also cheap based on fundamental notions of value. We have been somewhat leery of any long-term valuation notions given […]

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So Do CDS Counterparties Post Collateral or Not?

I hate it when I get contradictory information from supposedly reliable sources, which happens upon occasion when the topic is CDS. The latest Institutional Risk Analytics newsletter is again after one of its favorite objects of ire, credit default swaps. One of its beefs is that the collateral posting rules are a joke. Key excerpts: […]

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Mirabile Dictu! TARP Oversight Chief Dares Point Out the Obvious on the Paulson Non-Plans

To call Paulson response to the credit crisis improvised does a disservice to artists. Improvisation still requires a sense of direction and purpose, the thrust of a musical piece or the likely frictions between two characters. By contrast, the Treasury/Fed program looks completely reactive, an attempt to stabilize a system when they lack a good […]

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Credit Card Crunch Casualty: Small Businesses

Readers no doubt recall that the Fed announced the creation of the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which will lend as much as $200 billion against new or recent vintage asset backed securities collateralized by “student loans, auto loans, credit card loans, and loans guaranteed by the Small Business Administration.” One wonders if the order […]

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Mirabile Dictu! Rubin Takedown by the Wall Street Journal!

This ought to be a celebratory event, the scrutiny of a powerful player in the financial system who heretofore seemed immune to criticism. And what is interesting about the spotlight on Citigroup consigliere and board member Robert Rubin is that, unlike Greenspan, the reassessment is starting while he would still appear to have his hands […]

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AIG Plans to Pay Retention Bonuses to Executives

How can you give cash compensation to an executive, yet claim it is not a salary or bonus? You call it a “retention bonus,” No, I am not making this up. Note that AIG chose to make this disclosure the day before Thanksgiving, clearly choosing a time when it would attract the least notice. Not […]

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Why Should We Be Surprised? (Treasury Conduct Edition)

The New York Times reports that the General Accounting Office is readying to issue a report that will criticize how Treasury has handled its spending under the $700 billion TARP program. The main shortcomings are failure to track how the money is actually being used and inadequate controls to prevent conflicts of interest. Gee, I […]

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"The western financial system we knew has collapsed"

Willem Buiter is never one to mince words, and today his message is that the financial system is not operating: In a decentralised market economy, financial intermediation between economic agents with financial surpluses and those with financial deficits (or, more accurately, between economic agents who would like to run financial surpluses and those who would […]

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