"It is clear that the major culprit in the recent sharp deterioration of the real economy has been the collapse of the private banking sector in the UK and much of the rest of the north Atlantic region, and the associated virtual disappearance of access to external finance for many households and non-financial enterprises. The lucky ones that can still access banks and capital markets do so at much higher interest rates and against much more stringent collateral and other non-price conditions.
The collapse of private banking affects the US (but not (yet) Canada) and continental Europe much as it affects the UK. The market liquidity and funding liquidity crisis has also hammered most emerging markets, including the BRICs. In addition, many of the key emerging markets turned out to have big domestic financial skeletons in their closets, acquired during the earlier decade of excess."
You need to read the whole thing, but here's my first comment. I might comment on this post more later:
There is so much sense in your post, so many excellent points, that I’m going to spend the day taking it in. However, one point I want to comment on is here:
“We also got worse risk management (including reliance on banks’ internal risk models) and less market discipline during the boom years. Market discipline is inversely proportional to the degree of euphoria in the market. We got none during the boom. We get far too much of it during the bust.”
It seems to me that we should view regulation and supervision as a value investor views stock prices, and be worried the most and be most vigilant when things are going very well.
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | October 26th, 2008 at 4:14 pm
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