Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Fed Provides $540 Billion Prop to Money Funds After a Week of Record Inflows

The Fed is throwing a massive lifeline to money market funds AFTER the crisis has passed and investors are entering the pool again on their own. Consider today’s story from the Financial Times: The US Federal Reserve on Tuesday said it would finance up to $540bn (€410bn) in purchases of short-term debt from money market […]

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Willem Buiter: "We are laying the foundations of the next systemic crisis"

One of the reasons I am a fan of Willem Buiter is that he is bracingly candid about his likes and dislikes. And we happen to share a major dislike, namely, the conduct and policies of Henry Paulson. Buiter lambasts Paulson’s gift capital provided to nine large US banks. What is striking is that Buiter […]

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Executives Selling Shares to Meet Margin Calls

Another symptom of equity-market distress. And the New York Times also provides an interesting discussion of the behavioral implications of corporate officers borrowing against their holdings: When executives own big stakes in the companies they run, investors can rest a little more easily at night, knowing those managers have the shareholders’ best interests at heart. […]

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How Lehman Blew Up the City of London

Now that the horse has left the barn and is in the next county as far as the damage of overly lax financial industry regulations is concerned, a lot of people are in favor of having tougher rules. Even Tyler Cowen, who hews to the conservative side of the political spectrum, cites lax supervision as […]

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"Some Curious Parallels with the 1930s"

This comes from Adam Levitin at Credit Slips: There are lots and lots of differences in the financial institutions situation of the Depression and today. And yet there are some remarkable parallels in the problems and government responses. We shouldn’t overread parallels as predictive matters. But some of them are pretty astounding: Banks in the […]

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UBS Transferring $60 Billion in Dud Assets to Swiss National Bank, Raises $5.3 Billion

One of the biggest focuses of worry has been UBS, which is highly levered even by investment banking standards, a major derivatives player, and widely seen as too big for the Swiss government to rescue. The measures announced before the opening of the market in Europe are clearly hopes to put doubts about the Swiss […]

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Now It’s Official: Treasury Can’t Influence How Banks Use Cash Infusion

Per Bloomberg, Treasury operatives have admitted, despite Henry Paulson’s protestations to the contrary, that the government can only hope for the best in how the nine banks given a collective $125 billion cash infusion early in the week make use of the loot: Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson persuaded nine major U.S. banks to accept $125 […]

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Paulson vs. Bank Execs: Who is Telling the Truth?

These statements occur within a mere six paragraphs of each other in a Wall Street Journal story, “Devil Is in Bailout’s Details‘: Upending the government’s relationship with the financial sector, the Bush administration outlined a plan Tuesday to prop up banks by injecting $250 billion into U.S. financial institutions…. The government is making clear it […]

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Bloomberg: Treasury Forces Nine Banks to Sell Perpetual Preferred to TARP

Lordie, do we have any rule of law in this country? Presumably, the twisted logic of forcing money on to bank in return for taking perpetual preferred was that making the banks ask for it would create a taint. But even with the Treasury’s sweeping new powers under the $700 billion rescue package, one wonders […]

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WSJ Provides Sneak Preview of Treasury Bank Salvage Operations

The Treasury Department is expected to announce its bank rescue program, which entails making use of its authority under the $700 billion Trouble Assets Repurchase Program to buy pretty much anything it wants to. The Wall Street Journal provides the latest reading on what the plan might entail:The initiatives will likely supersede many of the […]

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Rush to Put OTC Commodity Derivatives on Exchanges

In yet another sign reluctance to suffer counterparty risk, banks that only recently were aggressive in booking lucrative over the counter derivative trades are now tripping head over heels to shift them on to exchanges (note that the exchange, rather than the bank, would then monitor counterparty performance and be responsible for making margin calls […]

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