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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Wednesday, 18 April 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)36. “Net Sober” By Eric Fry MUST READ
http://dailyreckoning.com/net-sober/
Derivatives are the meat and meat by-products of the financial markets. They look, smell and taste just like regular securities, but almost no one understands why we need them in the first place. After all, whats wrong with actual meat? Or to re-phrase the question: Is Spam really an advancement over ham? More importantly, can we trust the derivatives markets? Or might they be toxic? Might they subject the financial markets to devastating side effects? No one really knows and since lab rats refuse to eat them, we must assess the risks of derivatives by relying on suppositions, theories and conjecture. Therefore, as a public service, your California editor will offer a few suppositions, theories and conjectures about the rapidly expanding derivatives markets.
The worldwide marketplace of financial derivatives is enormous. No one disputes that fact. But the potential destructive impact of these arcane, opaque securities is very much in dispute. The apologists for financial derivatives usually say something like, Sure, the derivatives markets are huge on a gross basis, but relatively small on a net basis. According to this logic, a bank that purchased $1 trillion worth of Spanish interest rate swaps from one-party, but also sold $1 trillion worth of Spanish interest rate swaps to another party, has zero net exposure. Mathematically, that statement is correct. Realistically, it is a delusion. If the financial markets should hit a pothole or two, that zero net exposure has the potential to behave a lot more like the $2 trillion of gross exposure. How could that happen? Very simple. One or more of the parties to these enormous transactions would have to renege on its obligations, thereby triggering a domino effect. Very simple and not difficult to imagine. In fact, weve already seen the trailer for this horror film. The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008 was not only the demise of a prestigious investment bank, it was also the demise of a major counterparty to numerous derivatives contracts. Without Lehman, billions of dollars worth of zero net exposure suddenly became billions of dollars of plain, old exposure i.e., unhedged risk. But thats when the US Treasury stepped into the path of the falling dominoes with trillions of dollars of newly printed cash and government guarantees. As a result, the dominoes did not merely stop falling, but Wall Street banks were also able to take their fallen dominoes to the Fed and trade them for cash. Pretty nifty, no?
But what happens next time? Will the US governments power of credit and collusion be sufficient to prevent a disaster in the derivatives markets? No one knows least of all the folks who are sitting atop this big, steaming pile of risk exposure. Heres a bit of background In the derivatives markets, the term, net exposure, conveys a sense of certainty and reliability a sense of finely calibrated balance. In fact, net exposure more closely resembles the image of two drunks leaning against one another. The net balance between the two drunks is the only pertinent risk factor, the apologists argue. As long as the two drunks are leaning towards one another, the two of them can toss back as many tequila shots as they wish. On a net basis, they behave as if they are completely sober. But what if one of the drunks should keel over backwards, instead of merely leaning toward his fellow drunk? That wont happen, comes the practiced response from the derivatives industry. That wont happen. Dont worry about it. The four largest banks operating in the derivatives markets maintain very manageable levels of net exposure. Your California editor is not convinced. He suspects these levels of net exposure are only manageable until they arent. Furthermore, these exposures are growing rapidly. Since 2000, the notional value of US derivatives outstanding has multiplied ten times faster than world GDP. At last count, American banks had conjured more than $200 trillion of financial derivatives into existence, according to the Options Clearing Corporation a staggering sum that is equal to roughly three times world GDP! Even scarier, this mind-blowingly enormous pile of risk is highly concentrated inside the finance industry. A mere four banks hold 94% of all derivatives contracts outstanding. JP Morgans exposure, alone, is larger than the entire worlds GDP while the gross exposures of Bank of America, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs do not trail very far behind.

Gross Derivatives Exposure of 4 US Banks vs. GDP of Entire World
The story becomes even more frightening when you take a closer look at what these little derivatives are made of. Snakes and snails and puppy dog tails would be an improvement. In its 2011 annual report, reports James Grant, editor of Grants Interest Rate Observer, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. discloses that the great bulk of the banks [derivatives] are classified as level 2 assets, i.e., they are valued, in part, by analogy. JP Morgans derivatives book is not unique. A whopping 97% of all derivatives trade over-the-counter where illiquidity and opacity are the norm. In other words, they do not trade on a public exchange where buyers and sellers continuously exchange cash for securities, thereby establishing real-world, real-time values for the securities they trade.
Lets summarize:
1. Gross US derivatives exposure is more than three times world GDP.
2. Four banks hold nearly all of this risk. (And by the way, each of these four banks received billions of dollars from the Federal Reserve and Treasury four years ago to ensure their survival).
3. Almost none of these securities trade on a transparent, public exchange. Therefore, they are valued, as Jim Grant says, by analogy.
What could possibly go wrong?
SORRY, YOU'LL HAVE TO CLICK ON THE LINK TO FIND OUT!
Derivatives are the meat and meat by-products of the financial markets. They look, smell and taste just like regular securities, but almost no one understands why we need them in the first place. After all, whats wrong with actual meat? Or to re-phrase the question: Is Spam really an advancement over ham? More importantly, can we trust the derivatives markets? Or might they be toxic? Might they subject the financial markets to devastating side effects? No one really knows and since lab rats refuse to eat them, we must assess the risks of derivatives by relying on suppositions, theories and conjecture. Therefore, as a public service, your California editor will offer a few suppositions, theories and conjectures about the rapidly expanding derivatives markets.
The worldwide marketplace of financial derivatives is enormous. No one disputes that fact. But the potential destructive impact of these arcane, opaque securities is very much in dispute. The apologists for financial derivatives usually say something like, Sure, the derivatives markets are huge on a gross basis, but relatively small on a net basis. According to this logic, a bank that purchased $1 trillion worth of Spanish interest rate swaps from one-party, but also sold $1 trillion worth of Spanish interest rate swaps to another party, has zero net exposure. Mathematically, that statement is correct. Realistically, it is a delusion. If the financial markets should hit a pothole or two, that zero net exposure has the potential to behave a lot more like the $2 trillion of gross exposure. How could that happen? Very simple. One or more of the parties to these enormous transactions would have to renege on its obligations, thereby triggering a domino effect. Very simple and not difficult to imagine. In fact, weve already seen the trailer for this horror film. The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008 was not only the demise of a prestigious investment bank, it was also the demise of a major counterparty to numerous derivatives contracts. Without Lehman, billions of dollars worth of zero net exposure suddenly became billions of dollars of plain, old exposure i.e., unhedged risk. But thats when the US Treasury stepped into the path of the falling dominoes with trillions of dollars of newly printed cash and government guarantees. As a result, the dominoes did not merely stop falling, but Wall Street banks were also able to take their fallen dominoes to the Fed and trade them for cash. Pretty nifty, no?
But what happens next time? Will the US governments power of credit and collusion be sufficient to prevent a disaster in the derivatives markets? No one knows least of all the folks who are sitting atop this big, steaming pile of risk exposure. Heres a bit of background In the derivatives markets, the term, net exposure, conveys a sense of certainty and reliability a sense of finely calibrated balance. In fact, net exposure more closely resembles the image of two drunks leaning against one another. The net balance between the two drunks is the only pertinent risk factor, the apologists argue. As long as the two drunks are leaning towards one another, the two of them can toss back as many tequila shots as they wish. On a net basis, they behave as if they are completely sober. But what if one of the drunks should keel over backwards, instead of merely leaning toward his fellow drunk? That wont happen, comes the practiced response from the derivatives industry. That wont happen. Dont worry about it. The four largest banks operating in the derivatives markets maintain very manageable levels of net exposure. Your California editor is not convinced. He suspects these levels of net exposure are only manageable until they arent. Furthermore, these exposures are growing rapidly. Since 2000, the notional value of US derivatives outstanding has multiplied ten times faster than world GDP. At last count, American banks had conjured more than $200 trillion of financial derivatives into existence, according to the Options Clearing Corporation a staggering sum that is equal to roughly three times world GDP! Even scarier, this mind-blowingly enormous pile of risk is highly concentrated inside the finance industry. A mere four banks hold 94% of all derivatives contracts outstanding. JP Morgans exposure, alone, is larger than the entire worlds GDP while the gross exposures of Bank of America, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs do not trail very far behind.

Gross Derivatives Exposure of 4 US Banks vs. GDP of Entire World
The story becomes even more frightening when you take a closer look at what these little derivatives are made of. Snakes and snails and puppy dog tails would be an improvement. In its 2011 annual report, reports James Grant, editor of Grants Interest Rate Observer, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. discloses that the great bulk of the banks [derivatives] are classified as level 2 assets, i.e., they are valued, in part, by analogy. JP Morgans derivatives book is not unique. A whopping 97% of all derivatives trade over-the-counter where illiquidity and opacity are the norm. In other words, they do not trade on a public exchange where buyers and sellers continuously exchange cash for securities, thereby establishing real-world, real-time values for the securities they trade.
Lets summarize:
1. Gross US derivatives exposure is more than three times world GDP.
2. Four banks hold nearly all of this risk. (And by the way, each of these four banks received billions of dollars from the Federal Reserve and Treasury four years ago to ensure their survival).
3. Almost none of these securities trade on a transparent, public exchange. Therefore, they are valued, as Jim Grant says, by analogy.
What could possibly go wrong?
SORRY, YOU'LL HAVE TO CLICK ON THE LINK TO FIND OUT!
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