Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"Why didn’t policymakers think to look at these, instead of relearning everything again? "

Interesting post by Felix Salmon. He interviews Citibank chairman Bill Rhodes:

"A Citibanker since 1957, few bankers have racked up more air miles than Bill Rhodes over the course of their careers, and probably none have done so in the cause of resolving so many crises, from Jamaica to Nicaragua to Korea to Uruguay, with many in between. His name is especially associated with the resolution of massive Third World debt problems in the early Eighties.

But Rhodes freely admits that he’s never seen a crisis as big or as dangerous as the one we’re in now.

FS How did we get to this place?
WR Confidence disappeared and was replaced by fear, all of which was exacerbated by the policymakers’ incremental approach to problem resolution – we’re letting one company go, but not letting the next one. The decrease in market confidence was seen in the interbank lending market. When liquidity started to become scarce, the lack of confidence grew worse. Liquidity, capital, and then deposits have become king, all in that order. First you need to have liquidity. Then you need capital. Investment banks suddenly realised that they needed to have a deposit base and that they couldn’t go to the markets easily and cost-efficiently to raise funds.

FS You say that policymakers exacerbated the problems. Were they too complacent?
WR We’ve had two false dawns here. The first one was the period around November, because the initial hit to the system in August was assuaged by the tremendous amount of liquidity that the Fed, the European Central Bank and others put in the system. But in spite of those actions, we never got the confidence back in the interbank market and among counterparties. We got into December and January, and the problems started to become more apparent. The cost of LIBOR and the monoline insurance company problems were indicators that the problems in the markets hadn’t been resolved.

Then we suddenly had Bear Stearns in March. People thought once that bail-out was complete, the worst was over. I remember attending meetings where some of the seniors of major investment banks were saying, ‘The worst is over in the credit markets because the investment banks and brokerage houses were given access to the Fed window.’ And that’s what you also heard in Washington. I was hearing all sorts of comments of reaching the ninth inning of a nine-inning baseball game. And all this was being said in spite of the credit markets still being unsettled and the housing markets continuing their decline into what amounts to the worst housing crisis since the Great Depression."

Read the whole interview. Here's my comment:

Posted: Nov 04 2008 01:51am ET
First of all, thanks for the Rhodes interview. That's just what I was looking for when asking for asking people involved.
Second, here:
"Confidence disappeared and was replaced by fear, all of which was exacerbated by the policymakers’ incremental approach to problem resolution – we’re letting one company go, but not letting the next one.'
This is what I believe was the main cause of the crisis. The uncertainty over the implicit and explicit assumptions about government involvement, and the belief that it would intervene.
Third,here:
"Financial institutions need to do a much better job of risk management and corporate governance. The regulators have to do a better job on the regulatory oversight. You’ve got to look at both the buy-side and the sell-side of the market. In many cases the sell-side was pushing paper that they probably shouldn’t have, but at the same time, the buy-side wasn’t properly analysing the investments being taken on to their balance sheet. So it cuts both ways.

On the regulatory side, what we don’t need is a lot of over-regulation which is what we may be headed for – what we need is smart regulation that is properly enforced.

Where the ratings agencies are going to come out of all of this is not clear. I think there was an over-reliance by individual institutions on rating agencies. I also think in some cases there was an over-reliance by the regulators on ratings agencies."
I believe that some investments were fraud or negligence,and this was the second big cause,but there was some lack of knowledge by investors.
Third, I agree about regulation.
Fourth, I've already said that I thought that ratings agencies were another real problem,but you reminded me that these banks, etc., had done some of their own rating.
Great article from my point of view.

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