Monday, October 20, 2008

"the non-event of the year"?

Felix Salmon with a provocative and, I have to say,for the the time being, convincing analysis of why AIG will be the largest disaster in the CDS world, and it will not turn out to be the looming disaster it was predicted to be:

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Why the CDS Market Didn't Fail

Jane Baird has the latest on what Alea calls "the non-event of the year": the Lehman Brothers CDS settlement on Tuesday. The upshot is that there's very little to worry about: the worst-case scenario is limited to the failure of a small hedge fund or two, and even that seems improbable.

Read his post, which argues that CDS's were better capitalized ( and so able to pay out in the event of a foreclosure, say. In other words, pay the insurance it is supposed to in the event of a foreclosure) than many people believed because the were constantly valued and known to be risky. On the other hand, other investments were time bombs waiting to explode because they were thought to be well capitalized and valued but weren't.

That then led me to this simple question ( I try to ask clear and simple questions that even I, an ordinary citizen, can understand:

Posted: Oct 19 2008 11:38pm ET
Am I right in assuming that you're arguing that ratings agencies caused the problems, because they over-rated certain investments and lulled the investors to sleep, while the unrated, at least, CDS market, was more proactive, because it didn't have a third party providing the analysis for them, and so was more vigilant?

Here's his response:

Posted: Oct 20 2008 08:54am ET

"While the ratings agencies made an enormous number of mistakes, they weren't responsible for the "quadruple-A" ratings that banks unilaterally decided to put on their own super-senior CDO tranches, or similar idiocies."

It's important to understand that he's not claiming that CDS's aren't risky, he agrees that they are. Only that might well not turn out to be the largest problem.

Again, since they are valued everyday, and so, for example, tradeable based on that value, and known to be risky, they will not turn out to be as poorly invested in as thought, although there was a lot of poor investing.

Bottom line, he agrees with moving CDS trading on to an exchange, which makes sense to me. And, if they are valued and collateralized ( capitalized ), daily as he says they are, there might not have to be a third party holding this capital, I suppose, but I would still like to see it.

I don't like CDS's. They don't pass my smell test for meaningful and sensible investments, but that doesn't mean that I believe that should be illegal, but certainly regulated. If it doesn't pass the smell test, regulate it, especially if the taxpayers are expected to bail the market out in a crisis.

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