Chris:
Also an object lesson for anyone who thinks markets are
rational optimizing paragons of virtue.
 
Markets are many things, some of them virtuous, but some of
them utterly rapacious.
 
Billy
 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
10/27/2011 12:06:06 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  writes:

 
Good article  Billy.  We know that a collapses of derivatives can bring 
down the  economy like a house of cards.  An invisible and unknown risk in  
Greece/Europe is, indeed, cause for concern. 
Chris 
 
  
____________________________________
 
From:  [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]]  On Behalf Of  [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, October 27, 2011 11:49  AM
To:  [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Europe Crisis averted ?  Maybe, but maybe not
 

 

 
Washington  Post
 

 
Europe’s debt crisis and  
the danger  we can’t see
By  _Matt  Miller_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/matt-miller/2011/02/24/ABBcOYN_page.html) , 
Published: October 26,  2011
There are plenty of reasons to be  freaked out by the banking and sovereign 
debt crisis _now  reaching a crescendo in Europe_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/europe-struggles-toward-rescue-plan/2011/10/25/gIQAoGZ
FGM_story.html?hpid=z3) . But one factor that’s gotten little  attention 
could turn this Very Bad Situation into a True  Calamity. 
It’s this: Regulators here and in  Europe have no idea — repeat, no idea — 
of  the full extent of the derivatives exposure that could be triggered by 
an  “official” Greek default, or by the failure of a major French bank. And 
if the  people in charge have no clue as to the fallout from what may be 
trillions of  dollars in side bets waiting to be triggered in a catastrophic 
cascade,  they’re basically flying blind.  
If it strikes you as insane that  officials don’t know the exposure of 
these derivatives, given the havoc these  “financial weapons of mass 
destruction”
 wreaked last time, you’re thinking  clearly. The idea that we could be 
back on the edge of a Lehman/AIG-style  implosion, just three years after the 
near-death experience of 2008, defies  all presumptions about the human 
species’ capacity for learning. But then,  Darwinian optimism leaves little 
room 
for the greed and myopia driving the  global banking lobby today — or for 
the industry’s destructive power to kill  or defer common-sense reform. 
Remember, it was always odd that  problems in the relatively small market 
for subprime mortgages could have  brought the global economy low. The reason 
they did was because these subprime  woes were massively amplified by 
trillions in side bets placed on these  mortgages via exotic derivatives. 
“Naked 
credit default swaps” allowed parties  with no interest in the underlying 
mortgages to place huge bets on whether  borrowers would or would not perform. 
Fear of the explosive power of this  casino — and its hidden concentration 
in a reckless,  “too-interconnected-to-fail” giant like AIG — led U.S. 
officials to cough up  no less than $180 billion in taxpayer money to pay off 
these bets in full.  These officials, fearing a meltdown, treated 
sophisticated derivatives traders  exactly as they would treat innocent 
consumer 
depositors in a failing bank, as  people to be protected at 100 cents on the 
dollar.   
It was, and is,  grotesque. 
Today, Greece’s economy is roughly the size of the  economy of 
Massachusetts. The notion that its debt  problems could bring down the global 
financial 
system seems  absurd. 
Except for two things. First, many  European banks holding Greek debt are 
so thinly capitalized (another way of  saying “so imprudently managed”) that 
even tiny Greece’s default could wipe  them out. Yet Europe’s emerging 
plan to cover  this capital shortfall is tragically inadequate.  
As Douglas Elliott, a former investment  banker now at the Brookings 
Institution, _points  out_ 
(http://www.brookings.edu/testimony/2011/1025_euro_crisis_elliott.aspx) , the 
plan to _add  100 billion euros in capital_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-10-20/austria-says-europe-banks-need-100-billio
n-euros-of-capital.html)  represents a 10 percent capital boost for the  
top 90 banks, which have about a trillion euros in capital today. But since  
they also have around 27 trillion euros in assets, this new capital would  
protect them against a further decline of less than half a percentage point in 
 the value of their assets.  
In other words, this is not a serious  plan. 
Yet the derivatives black hole makes  matters worse. Exactly how much 
worse? We don’t know, because the big banks don’t have to disclose this  
information. The derivatives markets’ opacity is precisely what  lets banks 
make a 
killing. If such trading becomes transparent and  standardized, bank profits 
from derivatives will plummet. So they  resist. 
Even more outrageous, the chief  negotiator for the banks being asked to 
take a deeper loss on their reckless  loans to Greece uses this unknown  
derivatives exposure as a negotiating ploy. “Nice little global economy you’ve  
got here,” he’s basically saying. “Be a shame if something bad were to 
happen  to it, if you make us say there’s been a  ‘default.’ ” 
To be sure, in the United States,  once the Dodd-Frank implementing rules 
are written, traders will have to  disclose a good chunk of their derivatives 
activity sometime in . . . 2013. A  bit late for today’s crisis, but there’
s always the next one.   
In the meantime, U.S. officials  obviously talk to the banks they 
supervise. I’m told they have a better sense  of U.S. banks’ derivatives 
exposure  
than was the case in 2008, and that they’re not frightened by what they see.  
But taking comfort here requires one to believe that banks are telling  
regulators the truth today, and that they actually know their own risk  
positions (which even their CEOs didn’t understand in  2008). 
Even then, you can take comfort only if  you think U.S. banks are the major 
holders of  the relevant derivatives, when it’s almost certain that 
European firms are.  And analysts tell me the Euro-banks’ books are monuments 
of 
deceit that make  our own banks’ faulty financial statements look like models 
of truth in  accounting. 
Where does that leave us? There are more  than $22 of derivatives for every 
dollar of goods and services produced in the  U.S. economy. Some of these 
are  harmless hedges; others, bombs waiting to detonate. Nobody knows. As one 
hedge  fund manager told me: “All the bad lending is like a keg of 
dynamite, and all  of the derivatives are like little fuses running from one 
house 
to another to  another, and in each house is another keg of  dynamite.” 
One thing is certain. If it all goes  kaboom, the banking elites who’ve 
sniffed dismissively at Occupy Wall Street  ain’t seen nothing yet.




-- 
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