One thing I've been wondering. Since it seems that a lot of "liquidity" is based upon assets upon assets, leveraging from 100-1000x the principle, wouldn't that liquidity (and therefore, the amount of dollars in the system) decrease when banks write down their assets and increase their loan-loss provisions? And wouldn't this ultimately be deflationary?
Some specific examples:
Ambac marks down $743m
M&T Bank doubles loan-loss provisions
Citi announces $3.3b in writedowns along with warnings earnings
Quote from the last link:
I could provide at least a dozen links to homebuilders writing down asset values of property, looking at billions in that arena too...
Here are my questions:
Forgive me if I'm taking this as an oversimplistic view, but isn't that 3.3 billion that is removed from the "global liquidity"? And also wouldn't that mean that that 3.3b would have to be deleveraged - so possibly from 33-330b if it was levered up 10-100x?
And forgive further ignorance - isn't this what would be happening in a "credit crisis?" Shrinking asset base decreases amount they can loan, and indeed they would have to cull back their loans?
Some specific examples:
Ambac marks down $743m
M&T Bank doubles loan-loss provisions
Citi announces $3.3b in writedowns along with warnings earnings
Quote from the last link:
The financial services company said it would record $3.3 billion in writedowns for loans related to buyouts, mortgage-backed securities, and fixed-income trading losses.
Here are my questions:
Forgive me if I'm taking this as an oversimplistic view, but isn't that 3.3 billion that is removed from the "global liquidity"? And also wouldn't that mean that that 3.3b would have to be deleveraged - so possibly from 33-330b if it was levered up 10-100x?
And forgive further ignorance - isn't this what would be happening in a "credit crisis?" Shrinking asset base decreases amount they can loan, and indeed they would have to cull back their loans?
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