“Prior to Lehman, there was an almost unshakable faith that the senior creditors and counterparties of large, systemically important financial institutions would not face the risk of outright default,” notes Neil McLeish, analyst at Morgan Stanley.”
Much of the infrastructure of modern finance in effect rested on an expectation of a government backstop for the creditors of large financial institutions – a backstop that allowed a broad set of institutions to borrow short-term at low rates despite holding large quantities opaque and hard to value assets on their balance sheets.
That observation has a number of implications, not the least that the leverage – and resulting capacity for outsized profits — of some parts of the financial sector was made possible by the expectation that the government would protect the key creditors of the financial system from losses.
Lehman’s default shattered this implicit guarantee. The end result likely will be a series of explicit guarantees – and a rather significant government recapitalization of the financial sector.
The G-7 didn’t agree on a detailed action plan, only general principles. But by tomorrow morning, national governments will likely have extended guarantees to an enormous share of the liabilities of the world’s “private” financial system. And other parts of the “private” financial system will no longer be in private hands.
Stunning."
Again, I've been saying this all along.
No comments:
Post a Comment