Saturday, January 31, 2009

Similarly, protection sellers' risk is also limited to the notional amount insured.

From the Economics Of Contempt:

"Soros is wrong

Unless I'm misreading him, George Soros is just plain wrong about this:
Going short on bonds by buying a CDS contract carries limited risk but unlimited profit potential; by contrast, selling credit default swaps offers limited profits but practically unlimited risks.
Umm, no. Protection buyers' profit is limited to the notional amount insured. Similarly, protection sellers' risk is also limited to the notional amount insured. "

Me:

Don said...

The whole post is off. He claims the following:

"Putting these three considerations together leads to the conclusion that Lehman, AIG and other financial institutions were destroyed by bear raids in which the shorting of stocks and buying of CDS amplified and reinforced each other."

My understanding is that we are in Debt-Deflation. A Calling Run. The run started when there was a foreclosure tsunami based on fraudulent and poor loans. At that point, anyone who had the ability to call cash from the owner's of these loans started doing so, since it wasn't clear how many foreclosures there would be nor how low home prices would fall. CDSs and CDOs were only some of the investments effected. As for AIG, at the point of this tsunami, they were downgraded, and needed to get capital. The only way to do this would be to sell assets for huge losses, which they didn't want do. In essence, they came to the government for a bridge loan. That's what Liddy said in November.
I don't see shorting as the problem. It was an actual Calling Run based on the mortgages. What am I missing?

Don the libertarian Democrat

January 31, 2009 3:47 PM

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