Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Central Bank Efforts to Stabilize Money Markets May Not Be Working

An update from Bloomberg tells us that commercial paper outstandings fell 4.2% in a week, which suggests the efforts of central bankers to restore confidence in that market, and particularly in asset backed commercial paper, may not be adequate. 4.2% may not sound like much of a drop until you do some quick and dirty […]

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Do-It-Yourself Dubious Accounting

Part of the hangover that followed the dot-com bubble was rampant accounting fraud. Before then, accounting chicanery was virtually unheard of in Fortune 500 companies. It instead cropped up at high fliers with loose controls and/or overly aggressive cultures (remember Zzzz Best? Miniscribe?). But in 2002, it seemed endemic, and for the first time, involved […]

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Update From the Man Who Popularized "Minsky Moment"

George Magnus, senior economics adviser at UBS and the person responsible for bringing economist Hyman Minsky to the public’s attention, invokes him again in a good piece in the Financial Times. In keeping with his affinity for the world view of the dour economist, Magnus depicts our current credit crunch as a Minsky moment and […]

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Chaos Continues in the Money Markets

The Fed’s move on Friday to lower discount rates and its policy shift towards addressing risks to growth has not brought relief to the sector that was in the most distress, the money markets. Panicked action continued Monday, begging the question of what, if anything, the authorities can do. Institutional are fleeing from counterparty risk […]

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On What the Fed Hath Wrought (So Far)

A gut-wrenching two weeks in the credit markets have been capped by unprecedented moves by central bankers. The ECB’s offer of an unlimited infusion to member banks the week before last was followed last Friday’ by the Fed’s discount rate cut, which included stern warnings that those who needed it better use it and a […]

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Fed Found, and Dismissed, Signs of High Correlation in Hedge Fund Strategies

It’s summer rerun time. By happenstance, I came across a May post, which referred to a Federal Reserve study that had found that risks of hedge funds pursuing highly correlated strategies appeared, by some measures, as high as before the LTCM crisis. We had thought the Fed might be making a mistake in dismissing its […]

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Paul Krugman Punts

Paul Krugman, in this morning’s New York Times, tells us (subscription required) that mortgage borrowers in the US are feeling a world of hurt. The pain is moving up the food chain beyond stressed subprime borrowers into the Alt-A pool (which truth be told, never was much better than subprime, so this development was widely […]

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Financial Times: Things Likely to Get Worse Before They Get Better

I am late to this good comment in the Financial Times, “Hold tight: a bumpy credit ride is only just beginning,” by Avinash Persaud. Between the bumpy markets of the day and arcane workings of Conde Nast’s blog entry system, I’ve been a bit distracted. Admittedly, one of the reasons I view Persaud’s piece favorably […]

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On Fragility of the Financial System

Fragility seems to be the word on everyone’s lips today. As reported in the Financial Times, UBS market strategist William O’Donnell said that the commercial paper markets had dried up and, “Now the buyers are only interested in Treasury bills.” Overnight, Rams, an Australian home lender that, while not exposed to US subprime, had been […]

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Why So Little Comment on Dr. Doom’s Latest?

I am more than a bit late to this item, namely, an op-ed piece, “Our Risky New Financial Markets,” by Henry Kaufman in the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday. I’m puzzled at the lack of commentary on this article in the blogsphere. Kaufman, as chief economist of Salomon Brothers during its heyday in the 1980s […]

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Martin Wolf on the Merit of Fear

Martin Wolf, the Financial Times’ economics editor, tells us in “In a world of overconfidence, fear makes a welcome return,” that it’s high time that people in the financial markets lost some money, particularly Jim Cramer. Actually, Wolf is characteristically statesmanlike, but the crux of his argument is very much in keeping with Andy Xie’s: […]

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Andy Xie Criticizes Central Bank Liquidity Infusion

Andy Xie, who until last year was Morgan Stanley’s chief Asia economist (he apparently made himself unpopular by being too candid about Singapore), gives a blunt critique of last week’s liquidity infusions by central bankers in “It’s time for central bankers to stop bailing out markets” in the Financial Times. Xie’s conclusion is that the […]

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