I have to admit, I really like reading EJ and EJ's friends, but I am having a hard time making the leap here to look down upon credit default swaps.
Maybe I just don't understand.
EJ makes the case that derivatives, tell me if I am wrong, are creating system risk by diluting it throughout the economic environment.
By holding all these derivatives, the risk of a particular company failing is no longer significant because we are insured against that risk.
However, we have these huge companies that have huge amounts of CDS and so a systemic shock will 'rattle' the pollution drum and all hell will break loose. Or, at least, this seems to be the theory.
EJ's guest writer seems to follow up on that idea, and says that we are at peak risk and that a lack of spread between Baa bonds and AAA bonds indicates that something really bad is about to happen. He quotes the number of October/2002, a time when the fed had gone manic in its loosening as a relevant data point.
I can see his point, somewhat, that people are paying far too much for Baa bonds. There should be a greater risk premium.
I completley agree with this. The central banks, I believe, are pumping too much liquidity into the system to prop up the US economy and dollar. That can only end badly.
However, don't CDS derivatives help us *deal* with that? Haven't we taken out all this insurance and spent all this capital in smoothing out the volatility of a inevitable bust that will occur as the world has to pay the piper?
I guess I just happen to feel that insurance is a good thing, it's stocking the nuts away for the winter. Admittedly, people may start feeling *too* safe because of CDS, but that's not the problem of the particular instrument but rather the attitude of the people.
Please note, I am only refering to credit default swaps here. Other derivatives which allow for kinky accounting, are obviously a Bad Thing.
But taking out insurance if a company defaults on its bonds doesn't seem a bad thing to me.
Maybe I just don't understand.
EJ makes the case that derivatives, tell me if I am wrong, are creating system risk by diluting it throughout the economic environment.
By holding all these derivatives, the risk of a particular company failing is no longer significant because we are insured against that risk.
However, we have these huge companies that have huge amounts of CDS and so a systemic shock will 'rattle' the pollution drum and all hell will break loose. Or, at least, this seems to be the theory.
EJ's guest writer seems to follow up on that idea, and says that we are at peak risk and that a lack of spread between Baa bonds and AAA bonds indicates that something really bad is about to happen. He quotes the number of October/2002, a time when the fed had gone manic in its loosening as a relevant data point.
I can see his point, somewhat, that people are paying far too much for Baa bonds. There should be a greater risk premium.
I completley agree with this. The central banks, I believe, are pumping too much liquidity into the system to prop up the US economy and dollar. That can only end badly.
However, don't CDS derivatives help us *deal* with that? Haven't we taken out all this insurance and spent all this capital in smoothing out the volatility of a inevitable bust that will occur as the world has to pay the piper?
I guess I just happen to feel that insurance is a good thing, it's stocking the nuts away for the winter. Admittedly, people may start feeling *too* safe because of CDS, but that's not the problem of the particular instrument but rather the attitude of the people.
Please note, I am only refering to credit default swaps here. Other derivatives which allow for kinky accounting, are obviously a Bad Thing.
But taking out insurance if a company defaults on its bonds doesn't seem a bad thing to me.
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