Friday, October 17, 2008

"financial innovation involves risk that cannot be ignored"

Emilio Botin in the FT with some sage advice. On banking:

"The causes are the same as in any previous financial crisis: excesses and losing the plot in an extraordinarily favourable environment. Indeed, some fundamental realities of banking were forgotten: cycles exist; lending cannot grow indefinitely; liquidity is not always abundant and cheap; financial innovation involves risk that cannot be ignored.

I believe banks can contribute to a stronger system by returning to fundamentals. They must focus on customers, focus on recurrent business based on long-term customer relationships and be cautious in managing risk. This last point is especially important. You do not need to innovate to do this well. You do not need to invent anything. You need to dedicate time and attention at the highest level."

See, the back to fundamentals appeals to me.

And:

"We must avoid generating moral hazard: we cannot transmit the message that it is possible to act without assuming responsibility for your errors.

We must also encourage transparency. The magnitude of this crisis is directly linked to the uncertainty about who was affected and to what degree. To restore confidence, the market must provide maximum transparency about the risk profile of all the actors in the financial system.

In general, we have to reinforce supervision."

So, in summary:
1) Back to fundamentals.
2) No outside guarantees.
3) Transparency.
4) Supervision.

It seems so simple and obvious when written out.

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