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Treeamigo's avatar

Excellent piece, thanks

The regulators not only “missed” the interest rate risk, they encouraged the banks to take it - first by applying lower risk-based capital charges on government and agency bonds and second by the Fed engaging in ZIRP and QE, effectively requiring the banks to extend maturities to pick up any spread while Fed forecasts reassured the banks that rates were going to stay low forever.

A huge failing by equity analysts as well- Silicon Valley was getting rewarded by the street for rapid deposit growth even though their business model was to put those deposits into long-dated agency MBS to earn 150 or 200 bp. How could the stock market apply a generous multiple to that sort of risky and plain vanilla strategy (oldest game in the book- borrow short to lend long)

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Paul OBrien's avatar

I agree with the diagnosis but question the remedy. Show me a system with risky assets financed by equity and long term debt, and I'll show you an opportunity to repackage that equity and debt into "safe" short-term claims (CDOs, CLOs, whatever). Don't expect the regulators to win the game of whack-a-mole against the financial engineers. So here's a better idea: (1) Commit to saving only the fourth and later failed institutions in a systematic run. That will make everyone more careful. (2) If your institution needs a bailout, al board members and senior management resign immediately and forfeit any deferred compensation.

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