Wednesday, January 28, 2009

When Lehman failed, it did so with clear indications from its regulators that they wouldn't continue with Bear-style bailouts

From Felix Salmon:

"
More on Lehman Revisionism

I've been thinking a bit more about the Lehman Brothers revisionism coming from the likes of Bernanke, Paulson, and Geithner: the fact that although they were quite clear about letting Lehman fail at the time, they subsequently have backtracked on that, and said that although they tried very hard to rescue Lehman, they simply weren't allowed to do so.

I still think that's probably bullshit, and that in this crisis, as we've seen, where there's a will, in government, there's a way. Paulson, for one, was not the type of person to let a bunch of Federal Reserve lawyers stop him from doing what he thought needed to be done. But what if he's telling the truth, and rescuing Lehman really was illegal? How can that be squared with contemporaneous statements?

I think the answer might lie in market psychology. When Lehman failed, it did so with clear indications from its regulators that they wouldn't continue with Bear-style bailouts, and that there was no kind of Paulson Put, where failed banks automatically get rescued by Treasury.

If the sun rose the following morning and the world didn't come to an end, that would be an astonishingly strong signal about market resilience in the face of government inaction, and would help boost sentiment a very great deal.

On the other hand, if Lehman's failure really was going to have nasty systemic consequences, then a few statements from Treasury were unlikely to make things substantially worse: an apocalyptic meltdown is an apocalyptic meltdown either way.

So I can see why Paulson and Bernanke said what they did in the immediate wake of Lehman's collapse: there was substantial upside to saying it if markets went up, while if markets went down the downside was so big either way it made very little difference whether they said it or not."

Me:

From the Economics Of Contempt:

http://economicsofcontempt.blogspot.com/2009/01/merrill-and-basis-trade.html

"Any CDS contract with Lehman as counterparty needed to be replaced when Lehman collapsed. Remember the emergency "Risk Reduction Trading Session" the ISDA opened on the Sunday that Lehman was preparing to file for bankruptcy? That was so that the major dealers could start replacing their derivative contracts where Lehman was the counterparty with contracts with other counterparties. The emergency trading session was a disaster (about which more later), but it was especially disastrous for Merrill.

Remember the timing.

The emergency trading session ran from 2 pm to 6 pm on the Sunday that Lehman was preparing to file for bankruptcy. The news that BofA was in advanced talks to buy Merrill didn't break until around 5 pm. Before that announcement, everyone was looking for who would be the next to fall, and the consensus was that Merrill was next in line. So traders turned their guns on Merrill. In a standard CDS, no money is exchanged upfront. But when a firm looking to enter into a CDS contract might default before the contract matures, counterparties start to demand money upfront—known as "points upfront" or "initial margin." Since Merrill was expected to collapse if it couldn't find a buyer, and news of the BofA deal had not yet leaked, counterparties were demanding that Merrill make huge upfront payments in order to enter into a CDS contract. And because Merrill had huge exposure to Lehman as a counterparty, it had a lot of contracts it needed to replace."

Doesn't this show that a Calling Run, Fisher's Debt-Deflation, was a real possibility if Lehman collapsed?

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