What to do when you don’t have $233.95 to pay your bill. From Geekologie.
Day: November 16, 2008
Systemic Risk, Hedge Funds, and Financial Regulation
One of our readers recommended the Congressional testimony by Andrew Lo during last Thursday’s session on hedge funds. Lo is not only a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, but the Chief Scientific Officer of an asset management firm that manages, among other things, several hedge funds. He discusses a topic – systemic risk – that has been thrown around loosely by many people, including me, and tries to define it and suggest ways of measuring it. He recommends, among other things, that
- large hedge funds should provided data to regulators so that they can measure systemic risk
- the largest hedge funds (and other institutions engaged in similar activities) should be directly overseen by the Federal Reserve
- financial regulation should function on functions, such as providing liquidity, rather than institutions, which tend to change in ways that make regulatory structures obsolete
- a Capital Markets Safety Board should be established to investigate failures in the financial system and devise appropriate responses
- minimum requirements for disclosure, “truth-in-labeling,” and financial expertise be established for sales of financial instruments (such as exist, for example, for pharmaceuticals)
Lo also has a talent for explaining seemingly arcane topics in language that should be accessible to the readers of this site. The testimony is over 30 pages long, but it’s a good read. Here are a couple of examples to whet your appetite.
Continue reading “Systemic Risk, Hedge Funds, and Financial Regulation”
G20 Summit: Just Disappointing or Potentially Dangerous?
Initial reactions to the G20 summit are fairly positive, in the sense that the communique and associated press conferences conveyed (a) there was no open acrimony, (b) the body language was broadly supportive of countercyclical policies, and (c) there may now be a serious international regulatory agenda.
None of this is really new and it could all have been arranged by finance ministers (probably over the telephone), but I agree there is some useful symbolism in having heads of industrialized and emerging market governments convene for the first time (ever?) on these kind of issues.
I will admit to disappointment that no more explicit commitments were made to fiscal stimulus. I thought the British and the French were heading in this direction, and that they could create some momentum in the right direction. If Europeans (or anyone else) would like to compete for a “special relationship” with the US after January 20th, they might consider coming to the next summit with substantial fiscal package in hand (as will President Obama).
If the latest rounds of global economic diplomacy were the Olympics, then China gets gold in the fiscal stimulus category, Germany gets silver, and the UK (so far) is the distant bronze – but the UK does get one more throw next week. Not the ordering of world economic leadership that one would ordinarily expect, but perhaps that’s a good thing.
In the category of “largest cash contribution designed to save the world from serious disruption”, Japan easily finishes first – their $100bn pledge to the IMF this week was timely, targeted and hopefully not temporary. Sadly, there were no other entrants in this category. Perhaps the chemistry and cooking at the White House dinner on Friday will prompt further contributions in the near future?
But there is, unfortunately, another way to read the communique – as a government or international official, for whom this text really is a set of instructions to be implemented. The whole first part of the document is generic and definitely not new, so – as an official – one’s eye skips through that quickly. The real issue is the deliverables in the plan of action, with a pressing deadline at the end of March (this is pretty much like saying “do it tomorrow” to an official). This is where we – an official reader is thinking – must concentrate our immediate attention and efforts. And most of these specific actions are about tightening regulation on and around credit, or beginning processes that definitely point towards many dimensions for this kind of tightening – accounting standards, hedge funds, risk disclosures, financial sector assessments, credit rating agencies, risk management and stress testing models, international standard setters, sanctions for misconduct, reporting to supervisors in different countries, and more.
There is, of course, nothing wrong with making regulation more effective. This is surely needed – in both the US and Europe, and probably elsewhere – to help lower the odds of another global financial crisis developing in the future.
But we are still not out of this crisis. And tightening regulations quickly in the midst of a worldwide credit crunch is one good way to make sure that credit contracts further and faster. Lending standards naturally tighten in a crisis; the issue to address going forward is how to prevent standards from loosening too much in the next boom – but this is at least several years down the road. I’m in favor of starting early, but I do not like precipitate action just because you want to look busy and you could not agree on the more pressing issues, such as fiscal policy, support for the IMF, shoring up the eurozone, and so on.
It is true that one (among many) of the stated principles is: “Mitigating against pro-cyclicality in regulatory policy.” But that is a general statement that is not mapped into operational requirements – except that the IMF and FSF should work together on this, which is a good way to make sure it doesn’t happen. What officials have to deliver on, by the end of March, is substantive progress with regards to tougher and tighter regulation of credit. There is a real danger that this action plan – within such a short time frame – can actually make the global downturn dramatically worse.
Root Causes of the Current Crisis
We’ve gotten a fair amount of criticism over on our latest Baseline Scenario post for not correctly identifying the causes of the financial crisis. I understand the criticism that we don’t identify the one single, crucial cause, because historical events like this are always overdetermined: there are always multiple plausible explanations, and with a sample size of one there’s no way to know which explanation is correct. (It reminds me a key issue in torts, where you distinguish between cause-in-fact and proximate cause … well, never mind. It’s a fascinating subject, but a bit off-topic here.)
Anyway, luckily for all of us, today’s G20 communique reveals the “Root Causes of the Current Crisis.” In case you missed it: