Thursday, October 30, 2008

"Wall Street firm doesn’t feel compelled to lower its leverage or pull back in any of its business lines."

From the NY Times, some clever investing:

"Those statements would seem to run counter to the widely held view that Goldman will need to make big changes as a result of its new designation.

Ever since Goldman and Morgan Stanley changed to bank holding companies in September, executives at both firms have said they are already in compliance with capital requirements imposed on bank holding companies.

Nevertheless, there has been relentless speculation that, because of the conversion, the two firms would be forced to sharply lower their leverage ratios and cut back on certain riskier areas of their business.

A week ago, an analyst from the Tabb Group, a financial market research and advisory firm, echoed this view. Speaking specifically of Goldman, he told Bloomberg News: “The government is going to want to ensure that there isn’t a meltdown like this again. They’re going to have to use less leverage.”

Here's my comment:

“If Goldman did have to lower its leverage ratio to placate the government, Goldman indicated that it would probably decrease its exposure to its high-leverage and low-return businesses like U.S. Treasury and agency securities traded in its matched book, he wrote.

In essence, then, Goldman thinks it could lower its overall leverage without having to significantly reduce risk (and the prospects of high returns) from its investments. That’s because the government’s gross leverage calculation does not discriminate between low-risk and high-risk leverage.

Mr. Freeman said he thinks that outcome “would be the exact opposite of the Fed’s intentions (of healing the capital markets and restoring robust liquidity.).”

This is the real problem with regulation. These investors can be very clever people, and are adept at shifting the terrain. That’s why regulation always seems to be correcting the last problem.

The solution is either to regulate or supervise risk, especially any investment that shifts risk to a third party or magnifies risk. In other words, broad principles.

Their strategy falls into the latter.

— Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat

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