Thursday, December 18, 2008

"The Libor-OIS spread is getting within striking distance of its pre-Lehman levels"

An interesting chart from Zubin Jelveh:

"
Chart of the Day: Money Market Stress Easing

The Libor-OIS spread is getting within striking distance of its pre-Lehman levels:

libor_ous_dec.jpg

The big moves down in October were related to the bank recapitlization plan and the announcement of the Fed's programs to buy assets from the non-financial sector. It's harder to pin-down the exact reasons for the current southward trend. But it's worth noting that it coincided with the first junk-bond sale in six weeks.

Stanford's John Taylor has some more to say about the behavior of the Libor-OIS spread post-Lehman and argues that its collapse wasn't the primary cause of the heightened crisis. Highlights here."

Thanks to Zubin Jelveh, since this is the chart from the Taylor paper I blogged about, which I could not reproduce. I generally agree with Taylor's point. However, I disagree with him on the importance of Lehman. If you look at the chart, Taylor takes that first little dip as evidence that Lehman had been factored in. I say that his point doesn't follow. A few days a trend does not make. The obvious trend is an upward climb from Lehman, interrupted for a few days while the horrible possibilities of the failure to bail out Lehman are being digested. Taylor does even give us time to chew our food.

The current correction follows from a slowly developing feeling that from here on in, everybody is going to get some kind of deal. The main hesitancy going forward, shown by the inability to solve the automaker's bailout, is how much of a guarantee this will turn out to be. People are holding out for better deals. At some point, they will panic, and things will ease substantially, confounding all but a few of us. Or, the existence of this blog will show how silly I was to even discuss these issues.

At some point, I might attack this graph myself.

No comments: