articles tagged with: risk
finance & economics, financial crisis, in other words »
Scientists and market commentators have long been aware of the susceptibility of the markets to any single investment philosophy. The rise of early program trading contributed to the historic one-day loss of nearly 23% on Black Monday in 1987. Recent experiments with risk securitization may cost trillions of borrowed dollars to unwind and decades to fully digest.
finance & economics, financial crisis, in other words »
Few people will escape from this crisis with enough reputability to scream “I told you so” at the top of their lungs like hedge fund neophyte Andrew Lahde. In this epilogue to his one year experiment in asset management – during which time his fund returned 866% betting on the subprime collapse – he rails on the industry, its myopic leadership, the vice of greed, and even the virtues of a little green plant…
in other words »
As finance ministers from around the world congregate in Washington D.C. this weekend, various “solutions” will be floated that either compliment, contradict, or completely ignore America’s best efforts to fix its broken banking system. Coordination will be critical to preventing a protracted global recession, and Paulson and Bernanke’s ambitious plan – as examined below by a pair of Senior Fellows from the Brookings Institution – will either be the first step toward rational intrabank lending, or the final nail in the coffin of deregulated financial services…
finance & economics, financial crisis, in other words »
Words of cautious wisdom from the celebrated biographer of risk, back in November of 2007…
Crazy Little Thing Called Risk
By PETER L. BERNSTEIN
BACK when I was managing other people’s money, I had a client, a doctor, who enjoyed giving away money to his daughters. He was lucky, because an extended bull market was under way with only minor interruptions. The more he gave away, the more the market replaced what he had parted with. As generosity appeared to be a cost-free form of recreation, he considered the whole thing a riskless enterprise.
finance & economics, financial crisis, in other words »
As financial institutions continue to navel gaze in the aftermath of the credit crisis, confidence in their ability to self-regulate continues to decline. With little trust in their assets, their markets, or even their peers, these global banking titans have sworn off their independence and, like disenchanted teens, are returning home to be cared for by risk-averse, populist policy-makers and their never-ending pool of taxpayers’ dough. The danger here is that both sides are still reacting to deeds already done, and nobody has yet proposed a solution to avoid similar financial chaos going forward. With threats to global income in the order of nearly a trillion dollars, whoever ultimately grabs this hot potato better have pretty thick skin…
finance & economics, financial crisis, in other words, world affairs »
With international markets still reeling from the “sub-prime meltdown” and investors already bracing for the next financial quake, it’s good to know that some of the world’s economic shepherds are well aware of the wolves on the horizon, however unprepared they might be to fight back. Unlike their more political and rhetorical peers, enlightened stewardship from the IMF and its sister organizations may be the global macro-economy’s only hope against the coming valuation storm, as risk quietly shifts from sophisticated financial institutions into the hands of the unsuspecting Everyman…
