"Friday, October 31, 2008
Investment Banks Hoist on 2005 Bankruptcy Law Changes Petard
Investment banks? What investment banks, says the alert reader. They are all gone, either bought by big banks, dead, or forced to become them so as to be able to pull funds from the Federal Reserve more readily.
The Financial Times report that the changes to the bankruptcy law in 2005 may have played a role in the undoing of these firms. The danger for an investment bank, as the Bear Stearns case illustrated, is that counterparties can become nervous about having credit exposure and can start curtailing certain types of activities and close accounts that would be frozen in bankruptcy. Worse, if a firm is downgraded beyond a certain point, counterparties will stop trading with the troubled firm because exposure to that firm would get them downgraded. And an inability to trade is a death knell for a securities firm.
The irony is that carveouts in the 2005 bankruptcy reform bill intended to help investment banks appear to have worked in the opposite fashion. From the Financial Times:"
Read the post. Well played!
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