Wednesday, November 5, 2008

"It's worth emphasizing that the CDS demonization meme, at least in this form, is a dangerous one "

Felix Salmon on the scourge of CDS's:

"For "personal bankruptcies", here, read "foreclosures", which are much the same thing, and you've got yourself an almost perfectly wrong-headed argument. Did a wave of foreclosures help to bring down highly-leveraged institutions with significant real-estate exposure, among them Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers? Yes. Did "haywire derivatives contracts" in general, and CDS in particular, play a much bigger role? No."

Here's my comment:

Posted: Nov 05 2008 3:30pm ET
"It's worth emphasizing that the CDS demonization meme, at least in this form, is a dangerous one -- because it implies that it wasn't really the banks' own fault that they went bust, and that the implementation of a CDS exchange could in and of itself bring the amount of systemic risk down substantially. Neither is true. By all means fiddle around with the CDS market; it might well do some good. But don't try and pretend that if we'd only done so sooner, Bear and Lehman might now be thriving."

Absolutely. There seems to be a concerted effort to extract human agency from this crisis. It's a mechanistic explanation, faulting the investments, money flows, etc. Anything but people.

I enjoyed this story in the NY Times, because, well, it confirms my own biases.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/05/business/05risk.html?ref=business

I also afraid that actual fraud, negligence, and fiduciary incompetence will be neglected as long as we can blame various non-human things like CDS's.

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