8 Sept 2009

Blueprint for Global Derivatives Market

Derivatives are in essence a bet on the price of the underlying asset. Economically they are a zero-sum game where the losing side funds the gains of the successful side. Like all bets the derivative markets serve to redistribute wealth minus the costs of running the market. As a consequence of the credit crisis reform of the derivative markets has moved to the top of the political agenda. This is not the place to discuss the role that derivatives have played in the financial crisis. But if more players are active in a market it can only be expected that moves above (and below) underlying value are exacerbated - despite the fact that derivative instruments are often claimed to help move prices back to their underlying trend. I do not agree that moving all derivative trading to exchanges is necessary to avoid bubbles and excessive risks associated with derivative positions as advocated by many commentators. For an new example see the paper just published by Deutsche Boerse. Instead, I think that higher capital requirements to support open positions will be sufficient to reduce the danger (real or imagined) attributed to derivative markets.

7 Sept 2009

Seven dwarfs - interesting comment from a Reader

Your post (Seven Dwarfs in Stockholm) is interesting in that it confirms the tendency to first blame others, the system etc when being held to account for behaviour. That type of self-righteous response never convinces anybody else outside the own group. The politicians' thrust may be crude and may have negative side-effects, but it is triggered by an apparent unwillingness of bankers to appreciate how others, society at large perceives their behaviour and its crippling effects on the financial system and the economy and to take responsibility for that. Your type of response will only make politicians more determined to ensure bankers will not be able to go the same path again and you will become more convinced of the stupidity of politicians. It takes us nowhere. A meaningful step forward would be made if bankers could say they appreciate the concerns of society and are willing to come with new responsible remuneration systems that also pay justice to the inherent risks ultimately born by society. If bankers could be transparent on how they go about this, engage in a serious dialogue with society on remaining concerns, then the need for blunt politically driven regulatory measures would evaporate.

Equal pay for Women - comparing Apples and Oranges

The unelected chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission has decided that the current debate about compensation in the (investment) banking industry is too good an opportunity to miss. He offers his five cents of wisdom in an article headlined 'Her City bonus is a fifth the size of his' leaving the reader in no doubt what the likely conclusion of this piece of reasoned argument will be. The sub header gives the game away: it carries the subtle threat inherent in all socio-babble propagated by socialists and assorted hangers on of the nanny state: 'We'll help the City to treat women fairly - or we'll force them'. (Does Mr. Phillips now use the royal 'we'?). It is too tiresome to discuss the details of this so-called 'study' as it is perfectly clear from the outset that an extremely detailed comparison between workers at exactly the same employment situation is required if one wants to isolate the gender impact on basic and variable compensation. It is ironic that the department regularly involved with recruitment and compensation is ofther predominantly staffed by members of the fair sex. So there is already a slender bias in favour of women candidates and employees in many organisations.

6 Sept 2009

Animal Spirits still alive in City

Anyone who doubted that the credit and market crisis of the past two years has put a lasting dampener on the animal spirits in the City of London will have received a great surprise when he opened today's papers. A respected analyst is reported to plan the launch of a new bank and a senior corporate banker is offering to buy loans off his previous employer at a substantial discount. The really interesting thing is that the analyst stuck to his negative view on some bank shares while theses shares experienced a stratospheric recovery and the lending officer was one of the main drivers behind the loans that are now causing major headaches for his former employer. That is chutzpah!

4 Sept 2009

Seven dwarfs in Stockholm

The seven finance ministers calling for strict limits on banker's bonuses in an open-ed article today (we spotted it first in a reference to Dagens Nyheter) do their intellectual standing no favours. If their collective wisdom only leads them to express crude judgements about the size of bonuses paid in financial services it is a sign of intellectual poverty. Rather than calling bonuses 'indecent' the ministers should concentrate on the causes of high bonuses. Otherwise their posturing lacks any credibility. Of course, we would agree that bonus payments in many cases are too high but that is due to lack of regulation, distortion in the competition and similar structural deficiencies in financial markets. Name-calling alone will not do as the same argument could be applied to compensation of sports stars, media stars and footloose international business men. Just remember that a certain Mr. Mittal is always listed as 'Briton's richest man' but it is unclear how much tax he pays in the country.

3 Sept 2009

Publish all details of stress-tests!

The news that the UK Treasury may ask the FSA to conduct a detailed stress-test on Lloyds-TSB before agreeing that the bank does not participate in the asset protection scheme and launches a share issue instead should serve as a reminder that the stress tests performed so far in the US and the UK have not really helped to improve confidence in the banking sector. Of course, the fact that the authorities claimed that the recent stress tests were satisfactory did help shares of banks to rebound but this was more due to the fact that markets simply realised that the governments would stand behind the institutions deemed to big to fail and not because investors really could see behind the official smoke-screen. If all numbers would be in the open investors could really draw their own conclusions and would probably have much more confidence in the viability of the banking sector rather than rely on the say-so of the regulators. The same argument can be made with respect to the rating process that would be to a large extent supplanted by due diligence conducted by the investing public.

2 Sept 2009

Less debt, more equity

Willem Buiter argues that the financial sector in most countries is too large partly because of the implicit government guarantee the sector, and in particular depositors, enjoy. This subsidy (in conjunction with the fact that interest expenses can be deducted for tax purposes) makes debt finance and saving in the form of deposits more attractive than investment and financing conducted in the equity markets. We think that a reduction of this subsidy would have the additional benefit of putting more companies on a more stable financial footing and stimulate the growth of business in general as start-ups and smaller companies in particular would benefit from the reduced attraction of parking money in supposedly safe investments.

A poisoned chalice?

Congratulations to Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, on being ranked Number One on Vanity Fair's Power List. But maybe this is not the most opportune time to receive such a nomination, - however well deserved it may be.

Reading list for Insomniacs

The most recent Bundesbank circular about the regulation of market risk is a hefty 34 pages long, 4 pages more than a similar circular issued 2 years earlier. While some readers who are used to study regulations issued by the FSA or the Basel Committee may consider these publications the equivalent of a short story we still challenge all market professionals subject to these detailed bureaucratic prescriptions to go through the publication with a fine tooth comb. What a paradise for lawyers and nitpickers alike! Every sentence is in effect a rubber paragraph without any specific meaning. Time and again the word 'sufficient' is (ab)used to cover up a meaningless generalisation. As economic thinkers have predicted decades ago, any effort to subject the economy to planning makes it necessary to issue ever more detailed regulations and the final destination of the journey into the paradise dreamt up by socialists from right and left can be seen on a short trip to Cuba. (It MUST be paradise for the as there are no banks worth the description to be found there!).

1 Sept 2009

Caps on Banker's bonuses - Devil is in the Detail

When Gordon Brown tries to garner support for a limit on banker's bonuses one is reminded that talk is cheap. But the devil is in the detail: who decides? what is the right amount of bonus? what will be the side-effects? (certainly an increase in base pay, if not in other fringe benefits)What is a bank? If payment is regulated at banks, will people and business not migrate to other areas of financial markets like brokers, investment banks and hedge funds? (not to mention the likely migration to emerging financial centres that are outside the global G2/G7/G10/G20/OECD cartel?