Showing posts with label 0%. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 0%. Show all posts
Thursday, September 26, 2019
I tweeted this to BIS in response to a speech by Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank and Chair of the European Systemic Risk Board, titled "Macroprudential policy in Europe" delivered September 26, 2019
Regulators have based their risk weighted bank capital requirements on that what’s perceived as risky is more dangerous to our bank systems than what is perceived, decreed or concocted as safe. That puts bank crises on steroids.
The risk weighted bank capital requirements are as procyclical it can get. Getting rid of these is the best countercyclical measure.
The 0% capital requirements assigned to all Eurozone sovereigns’ debts, even when these are not denominated in their own printable fiat currency. This WILL blow up the Euro and perhaps, sadly, the EU too.
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Basel I, II, and III are all examples of pure unabridged regulatory statism
In July 1988 the G10 approved the Basel Accord. For its risk weighted bank capital requirements it assigned the following risk weights:
0% to claims on central governments and central banks denominated in national currency and funded in that currency.
100% to claims on the private sector.
That means banks can leverage much more whatever net margin a sovereign borrower offers than what it can leverage loans like to entrepreneurs. That means banks will find it easier to earn high risk adjusted returns on their equity lending to the sovereign than for instance when lending to entrepreneurs. That means it will lend too much at too low rates to the sovereign and too little at too high rates to entrepreneurs.
In other words Basel I introduced pure and unabridged statism into our bank regulations.
Basel II of June 2004 in its Standardized Risk Weight, for the same credit ratings, also set lower risk weights for claims on sovereigns than for claims on corporates.
In a letter published by FT November 2004 I asked: “How many Basel propositions will it take before they start realizing the damage they are doing by favoring so much bank lending to the public sector. In some developing countries, access to credit for the private sector is all but gone, and the banks are up to the hilt in public credits.”
And the European Commission, I do not know when, to top it up, assigned a Sovereign Debt Privilege of a 0% risk weight to all Eurozone sovereigns, even when these de facto do not take on debt in a national printable currency.
And, to top it up, the ECB launched its Quantitative Easing programs, QEs, purchasing European sovereign debts.
At the end of the day, the difference between the interest rates on sovereign debt that would exist in the absence of regulatory subsidies and central bank purchases, and the current ultra low or even negative rates, is just a non-transparent tax, paid by those who save. Financial communism
Monday, August 19, 2019
J’Accuse[d] the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision (BCBS) a thousands times, but I am no Émile Zola and there’s no L’Aurore
J’Accuse the Basel Committee of setting up our bank systems to especially large crises, caused by especially large exposures to something perceived as especially safe, which later turns into being especially risky, while held against especially little capital.
J’Accuse the Basel Committee for distorting the allocation of bank credit to the real economy by favoring the sovereign and the safer present, AAA rated and residential mortgages, while discriminating against the riskier future, SMEs and entrepreneurs.
My letter to the International Monetary Fund
A question to the Fed: When in 1988 bank regulators assigned America’s public debt a 0.00% risk weight, its debt was about $2.6 trillion, now it is around $22 trillion and still has a 0.00% risk weight. When do you think it should increase to 0.01%?
Friday, August 9, 2019
“I am not sure about 'subsidised' sovereign. Since sovereign is ultimate safety net for entire financial system… the term is I'll suited.”
My answer:
Yes a sovereign, if we ignore inflation and the possibility of being repaid in worthless money, the sovereign represents no risk if it takes on debt denominated in a currency it can print. Which by the way is not the case with the sovereigns in the Eurozone.
But let us assume that in the open market the required risk/cost/inflation adjusted net return for a sovereign in .5% and for the risky SMEs 3%
Then if banks, as it used to be for almost 600 years, had to hold one single capital against the risks of its whole portfolio, and the authorities, or in their absence the markets, allowed banks to leverage 12 times then the risk/cost/inflation adjusted required expected return on equity would be 6% for sovereigns and 36% for SMEs.
BUT, since banks are now allowed to leverage immensely more with safe sovereigns, let us say 40 times and only 12 times with SMEs, the now distorted risk/cost/inflation adjusted expected ROEs are 20% for sovereigns and still 36% for SMEs. So now banks can offer to lower the interest rates to sovereigns and still obtain the risk/cost/inflation adjusted required expected return on equity of 6% for sovereigns, ergo the subsidized sovereign.
OR, since banks could now earn a risk/cost/inflation adjusted expected ROEs of 20% on sovereign debt, then in terms of comparable risk adjustments it would have to earn more than 36% on SMEs, or not lend to them at all, ergo that subsidy to the sovereign, is paid by others who find their access to bank credit made more difficult and expensive as a consequence of the risk weighted bank capital requirements.
PS. Is there no sovereign risk present when some current rates are negative and central banks work like crazy to produce 2% inflation?
PS. If you go back in time and start taking about risk-free sovereigns to bankers who sometimes had their head chopped off or were been burned when trying to collect from the sovereigns, they would think you were crazy.
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
What if taking down our bank systems was/is an evil masterful plan for winter to come?
Tweets on "What if taking down our bank systems was/is an evil masterful plan for winter to come?"
The poison used is that of basing bank capital requirements on ex ante perceived risks, more risk more capital, less risk much less capital.
That way banks were given incentives to build up the largest exposures to what is ex ante perceived by bankers as safe, something which, as we know, in the long run, when ex post some of it turns out very risky, is what always take bank systems down.
For that they made sure no one considered making the risks conditional on how bankers perceive the risks.
And that hurdle cleared, some very few human fallible credit rating agencies were given an enormous influence in determining what is risky and what is safe.
And taking advantage of some statists or that few noticed, sovereigns were assigned a 0% risk weight, while citizens 100%. That guaranteed government bureaucrats got too much of that credit they’re not personally responsible, and e.g. the entrepreneurs too little.
And to make the plan even more poisonous some European authorities were convinced to also assign to all Eurozone sovereigns a 0% risk weight, and this even though these all take up loans in a currency that is not their domestic printable one.
And because banks were allowed to leverage much more with “safe” residential mortgages than with loans to “risky” small and medium businesses, houses prices went up faster than availability of jobs, and houses morphed from homes into investment assets
And finally, by means of bailouts, Tarps, QE’s, fiscal deficit, ultra low interest rates and other concoctions, enormous amounts of financial stimuli was poured on that weak structure… and so the evil now just sit back and wait for winter to come
Thursday, July 4, 2019
My Fourth of July 2019’s tweets to the United States of America
This Fourth of July 2019, here below, are my tweets in which to the United States of America that I admire and am so grateful to, I express two very heartfelt concerns.
In 1988 America signed on to the Basel Accord’s risk weighted capital requirements for banks.
These gave banks huge incentives to finance what was perceived as safe, and to stay away from the “risky”.
It is so contrary to a Home of the Brave opening opportunities for all.
And bank regulators decreed risk weights: 0% sovereign, 100% citizens
That implies bureaucrats know better what to do with credit than entrepreneurs
That has nothing to do with the Land of the Free, much more with a Vladimir Putin’s crony statist Russia
PS. “grateful to”? Had my father, a polish soldier not been rescued by American’s from a German concentration camp April 1945, I would not be.
PS. As one of those millions Venezuelan in exile, I know my country’s future much depends on America’s will to support its freedom.
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
Reading, little by little, Adam Tooze’s “Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World” 2018
Chapter 14 “Greece 2010: Extend and pretend”
I read: “As recently as 2007 Greece’s bonds had traded at virtually the same yield as Gemany’s”
The credit rating of Greece in 2007 was A, and that of Germany AAA. According to Basel II’s risk weighted capital requirements Greece should have a risk weight of 20% while Germany 0%.
But, European authorities extended Sovereign Debt Privileges to all Eurozone nations, and assigned Greece also risk weight of 0%. All this even though these nations are all taking on debt in a currency that de facto is not their own printable one.
When Greece’s crisis breaks lose Greece has still a risk weight of 0%... meaning European banks could lend to Greece against no capital at all... and it is still 0% risk weighted.
How is Greece going to extract itself from that corner into which it has been painted is anybody's guess. And extract itself it must, as must all nations. A 0% risk weight for the sovereign and 100% for the citizens is an unsustainable statist proposition.
It all makes me wonder how Tooze would have written this chapter had he considered this. Perhaps he could have been closer to opine this?
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Anat Admati explains the financial crisis better than most, but does still not get to the real heart of it.
I refer to Promarket.org and Evonomics.com where Stanford professor Anat Admati discusses her paper“It Takes a Village of Media, Business, Policy, and Academic Experts to Maintain a Dangerous Financial System” May 2016.
In it she explains how a mix of distorted incentives, ignorance, confusion, and lack of accountability contributes to the persistence of a dangerous and poorly regulated financial system.
Here some quotes and comments:
1. “Admati draws a contrast with aviation. Although tens of thousands of airplanes take off and land, often in crowded skies, busy airports, and within short time spans, crashes are remarkably rare. Everyone involved in aviation collaborates to maintain high safety standards”
PK. The main explanation for that is that everything in aviation is considered risky… and there are no aviation regulators giving anyone the excuse of “at this point you can relax”.
2. “When they seek profits banks effectively compete to endanger their depositors and the public. An analogy would be subsidizing trucks to drive at reckless speed even as slower driving would cause fewer accidents.”
PK. Of course allowing reckless speeds, like no limit at all when lending to Greece, and 62.5 times when AAA to AA ratings are present, must cause serious crashes.
But, the worst part of it all is that banks are not allowed to drive all assets at the same speed. As a consequence, being paid on delivery, banks will not go to where they must go slower, like the leverage speed limits that apply when lending to entrepreneurs, and will therefore not perform their vital function of allocating credit efficiently to the economy. The words “the purpose of banks is” are sadly nowhere to be seen in bank regulations.
3. “Politicians, find implicit guarantees attractive because they are an ‘invisible form of subsidy’ that appear free because they do not show up on budgets, as the costs associated are ultimately paid for by the citizenry.”
PK. At this moment the statist regulators and politicians find those “implicit guarantees” especially attractive because of its quid-pro-quo component. “We scratch your back with implicit guarantees and you scratch ours something for which we in 1988, with the Basel Accord assigned to the sovereign a 0% risk weight, and one of 100% to the citizen” And ever since the “good and friendly” sovereigns have had access to subsidized credit… and the regulators have now painted themselves into a corner.
4. “Credit rating agencies, “private watchdogs,” have conflicted interests because they derive revenues from regulated companies as well as sometimes from regulators.”
PK. Yes but notwithstanding that, even if the credit rating agencies have behaved totally independent, there can be little doubt that assigning so much decision power to some few human fallible credit rating agencies would introduce the mother of all systemic risks.
And besides, since bankers already consider risks perceived when deciding on size of exposures and risk premiums to charge, to have perceived risks also reflected in the capital requirements, violates the “Kurowski dixit” rule: “Risks, even when perfectly perceived, leads to the wrong actions, if excessively considered.”
5. “I had expected academics and policy makers to engage and care about whether what they were saying and doing was appropriate, particularly since they often know more than the public about the issues and are entrusted to protect the public”
PK. So had I. They, Anat Admati included, are still not able to explain to regulators about conditional probabilities. And so regulators keep on regulating based on the perceived risk of assets and not based on the risk of assets based on how these are perceived.
In terms of airplanes they regulate based on how the pilots perceive the risks and not based on that the pilots could perceive the wrong risks or act incorrectly when facing the correct risks.
6. “Lawmakers are rarely held accountable for the harmful effect of implicit guarantees combined with poor regulations.”
PK. Yes not one single regulators have been forced to parade down 5thAvenue wearing a dunce cap. On the contrary many of them have been promoted and are still regulating without even considering the possibility they have been mistaken all the time.
PS. Even though Daniel Moynihan is supposed to have opined: “There are some mistakes it takes a Ph.D. to make”, the challenges still remain for the PhDs about what to do with the opinions of the lowlier graduates, like with just an MBA. Do we dare to quote him?
And here my soon 2.800 letters to the Financial Times on this. Am I obsessed? Sure, but so are they ignoring my arguments.
And finally here a humble home-made youtube https://youtu.be/TUdKhm6_a8Y
Sunday, May 20, 2018
If the Basel Committee had only been asked these four simple questions about its risk weighted capital requirements for banks?
1. What? Do you really know what the real risks for banks are? If you do, why are you not bankers?
2. What? Don’t you see that allowing banks to leverage differently with different assets will lead to a new not market set of risk adjusted returns on equity. Are you not at all concerned this could dangerously distort the allocation of credit to the real economy?
3. What? Do you think that what’s perceived risky by bankers that which they adjust by means of lower exposures and higher risk premiums, is more dangerous to the bank system than what they perceive as safe?
4. What? A 0% risk weight of sovereigns? That could only be explained by their capacity to print currency in order to get out of debt. But is that not also one of their worst possible misbehaviors?
How much sufferings and how many unrealized dreams would not have been avoided?
And now, 30 years after that faulty regulation was introduced with the Basel Accord in 1988, these questions are still waiting for an answer.
PS. Here a list of some of the horrendous mistakes of the risk weighted capital requirements
How much sufferings and how many unrealized dreams would not have been avoided?
And now, 30 years after that faulty regulation was introduced with the Basel Accord in 1988, these questions are still waiting for an answer.
PS. Here a list of some of the horrendous mistakes of the risk weighted capital requirements
Sunday, May 13, 2018
Current risk weighted capital requirements are de facto regressive regulatory taxes imposed on the access to bank credit.
“When you tax all income earning activities the same, then the relative prices of different types of labor services stay the same. With progressive taxes you create greater distortion in the economy and that makes us all a bit less wealthy than we would otherwise be”
Why is never a flat capital requirement for banks defended with the same impetus as a flat tax on income?
As is the risk weighted capital requirements for banks, which even though some leverage ratio has been imposed still operate on the margin, impose de facto different taxes on the access to bank credit.
To make it worse though in the case of taxes on income these are currently progressive, in the sense that they most affect those who are already by being perceived as risky have less and more expensive access to bank credit, these regulatory taxes are regressive.
PS. Why did Classical Liberals or Libertarians not speak up when, in 1988, with the Basel Accord, Basel I, the regulators risk weighted the sovereign with 0% and the citizens with 100%?
Thursday, November 9, 2017
When government bureaucrats are favored more than entrepreneurs in the access to bank credit, the game is soon over
In 1988, with Basel I, out of some Pandora box, for the purpose of setting the capital requirements for banks,the regulators came up with a risk weight of 0% for sovereigns and of 100% for citizens. As a result banks need to hold much less equity when lending to sovereigns than when lending to citizens.
That 0% risk weight was premised on that sovereigns were in possession of the money-printing machines and could therefore always repay. I am sure the Medici’s would have shivered hearing such a generous risk assessment.
So, since then, banks have been allowed to leverage much more with loans to sovereigns than with loans to citizens; and therefore obtain much higher risk adjusted returns on equity when lending to sovereigns than when for instance lending to entrepreneurs.
That de facto implies believing in that a government bureaucrat can use bank credit that he himself has not to repay, better than an entrepreneur.
That alone should suffice to make clear how loony and statist the current bank regulations are.
But the world keeps mum on this. As I see it this is a regulatory crime against humanity that should be punishable.
Here is a more extensive explanation of the mistakes of risk weighted capital requirements for banks.
Thursday, October 5, 2017
The litmus test any aspiring central banker or bank regulator should have to pass
Fact: Banks are allowed to leverage more with assets considered safe, like loans to sovereigns, the AAArisktocracy and mortgages, than with assets considered risky, like loans to SMEs and entrepreneurs.
So ask the candidates:
Does that mean “the safe” have even more and easier access to bank credit than usual; and “the risky” have even less and on more expensive terms access to bank credit than usual?
Does that mean “the safe” have even more and easier access to bank credit than usual; and “the risky” have even less and on more expensive terms access to bank credit than usual?
If the answer is no, disqualify the candidate.
If the answer is yes, then ask:
Do you think that might dangerously distort the allocation of bank credit to the real economy? Or impede QE stimulus flow to where it could be most productive?
If the answer is no, disqualify the candidate.
If the answer is yes, then ask:
In terms of what can pose the greatest risk to the bank system, would you agree with Basel II’s risk weights of 20% for what is rated AAA to AA and 150% for what is rated below BB-?
If the answer is yes, disqualify the candidate.
If the answer is no, then ask:
Do you agree with a 0% risk weighting of sovereigns?
If the answer is yes, the candidate should be classified as an incurable statist, not independent at all, and accordingly dismissed.
If the answer is no, then one could proceed applying any other criteria considered relevant.
As a relevant criteria, the way the world looks, being a lucky person seems a quite valid one.
PS. How many of those currently in central banks, or in the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, or in the Financial Stability Board would pass this test?
@PerKurowski
Sunday, October 1, 2017
Paul Krugman there's huge Excel type data mistake that is bringing the Western economies down into deep depression
Ref: http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2013/04/paul-krugman-the-excel-depression.html
The regulators of the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, when designing their risk weighted capital requirements for banks made the outrageous mistake of looking at the specific risks of banks assets, and not at the risk of those assets to the banks, or to the bank system.
The regulators of the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, when designing their risk weighted capital requirements for banks made the outrageous mistake of looking at the specific risks of banks assets, and not at the risk of those assets to the banks, or to the bank system.
That is why they came to assign a whopping 150% risk weight to what is rated below BB-, something so risky that bankers wont even touch it with a ten feet pole; while only a minuscule risk weight of 20% to what is rated AAA and that because of its perceived safety, could cause banks to create such exposures that if ex post the asset turn out riskier, these could bring the whole system down.
That makes banks dangerously lend too much to what is perceived safe and for the economy equally dangerous too little to what is perceived as risky, like SMEs and entrepreneurs.
That makes banks dangerously lend too much to what is perceived safe and for the economy equally dangerous too little to what is perceived as risky, like SMEs and entrepreneurs.
The Western world has thrived on risk-taking not risk aversion.
PS. The 0% risk weighing of sovereigns is just as mind-boggling.
Friday, December 30, 2016
Mercatus Center, in order to reframe financial regulations, you must dig in much deeper into the current mistakes.
I refer to “Reframing Financial Regulation: Enhancing Stability and Protecting Consumers” 2016, by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, and edited by Hester Peirce & Benjamin Klutskey.
The book includes many wise suggestions but, since it does not seem to capture how incredibly faulty current regulations really are, it has gaps that make it more difficult to understand how sensitive the financial system, primarily banks, and the real economy as such, is to the process of implementing a “reframing”.
For brevity and because my main reservations with current financial regulations have to do with the issue therein discussed, I will limit my comments to Chapter 1: Risk-Based Capital Rules by Arnold Kling.
The author writes: “Risk-based capital rules dramatically affect the rate of return banks earn from holding different type of assets. Regardless of the intent of these rules they strongly influence capital allocation in the economy.”
That is correct, although referring to the ex-ante expected risk adjusted returns on equity would be more precise.
Then the author states: “They substitute even crude regulatory judgment for individual bank discretion and market mechanism”.
That is not entirely correct. The real problem is that since banks already clear for ex ante perceived risks, when setting interest rates and the amount of their exposures, that regulators also use basically the same ex ante risk perceptions for determining the capital requirements, means that “ex-ante perceived risks”, will be doubly considered. What regulators missed entirely, is that any risk, even if perfectly perceived, will cause the wrong actions, if excessively considered.
The book identifies partly what the distortion in the allocation of bank credit could do to the safety of banks, but what it most misses to comment on, is what the risk weights actually calculated and used, really meant and mean to the allocation of bank credit to the real economy.
For instance Basel I, 1988, applied to the United States, set the risk weight of 0 percent for US Treasuries; 20 percent for claims to for instance local governments; 50 percent when financing residential properties and revenue bonds; and 100 percent all other claims on private obligors.
0% risk weight for the sovereign? If that’s not in runaway statism what is? De facto it implies that regulators consider government bureaucrats will give better use to bank credit than the private sector.
In 2001 the Federal Reserve Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the FDIC set the following risk weight depending on credit rating; AAA to AA 20 percent; A 50%; BBB (the lowest investment grade) 100 percent; and BB (below investment grade) 200%.
If that’s not runaway stupidity what is? The regulators really seem to have thought (and think) that assets perceived as extremely risky, are more dangerous to the bank system than assets perceived as safe. As if they never heard of Mark Twain’s “A banker lends you the umbrella when the sun shines and wants it back when it looks it could rain”; as if they never heard of Voltaire’s “May God defend me from my friends, I can defend myself from my enemies”.
Worse though, they never gave any consideration to the possibility that millions of “risky” 100% weighted SMEs and entrepreneurs, so vital to the sturdy growth of the real economy, would see their credit applications negated only because of this.
Mercatus Center, any reframing of current financial regulations that is not based on a full understanding of how statists and stupid current regulations are, will not be able to adequately deliver what we, especially the young, so urgently need.
For instance all those propositions of increasing the capital requirements for banks with higher leverage ratios but that would keep of the risk weighting in place fail to understand that the bigger the capital squeeze the more will the risk weighing distort the allocation of bank credit to the real economy. (Think of “The Drowning Pool”)
For instance to avoid imposing on the real economy the bank credit austerity that would result in the initial stages of capital increases the grandfathering of old capital requirements for existing assets until these are disposed would be a must.
Mercatus Center, you have clout that I as a citizen have not! Do all us a favor and request straight answers from the regulators on some very basic questions.
Friday, December 9, 2016
Stefan Ingves, years after Basel Committee’s failure, you all have still no idea about how to regulate banks.
On December 2, 2016 Stefan Ingves, the Chairman of the Basel Committee gave a Keynote speech at the second Conference on Banking Development, Stability and Sustainability, titled “Finalising Basel III: Coherence, calibration and complexity”
In it Ingves stated: “an area of further research which would be welcome relates to how we should think about the capital benefits of allowing banks to use internally modelled approaches, and therefore the appropriate calibration of capital floors to such models. What are the pre-conditions for such models to produce better outcomes than, say, simpler standardised approaches? And to whom do the benefits of improved modelling accrue? If a bank using a model can lower its capital requirements by, say, 30%, what are the financial stability and real economy benefits of such an approach? To what extent do the benefits of modelling accrue to lower-risk borrowers as opposed to the parties being compensated for developing and using the models?”
That is clear evidence that the Basel Committee still, soon ten years after the crisis, their failure, has no idea about what it is doing. It should concern us all.
Here’s one example on of how the Basel Committee’s has totally confused ex ante risks with ex post risks. In their Basel II standardized risk weights the weight assigned to AAA assets is 20% while the weight of a highly speculative below BB- rated assets was set at 150%.
I ask: What has much greater chance of taking the banking system down, excessive exposures to something ex ante believed very safe or excessive exposures to something believed very risky? The answer should be clear. Never ever have bank crises resulted from excessive exposures to something believe risky when placed on the balance sheet; these have always resulted from unexpected events (like devaluations), criminal behavior or excessive exposures to something perceived ex ante as very safe but that ex post turned out to be very risky.
The truth is that the Basel Committee told banks: “Go out and leverage your capital more than with assets that are safe”. And so when disaster happens, like with AAA rated securities, banks stand there more naked than ever.
Of course, the other side of that coin is, “Do not go and lend to what is risky”. So banks dangerously for the real economy stopped lending to SMEs and entrepreneurs… something that is never considered when stress testing.
To top it up, like vulgar statist activists, they set a risk weight of 0% for the Sovereign and one of 100% for We the People; which translates into a belief that government bureaucrats can use bank credit more efficiently than the private sector… something which of course created the excessive indebtedness of Greece and other.
One final comment, the regulators naivety is boundless: “to whom do the benefits of improved modeling accrue? asks Ingves” Clearly there is no understanding of that bankers will, as is almost their duty, always look to minimize capital if so allowed, in order to obtain the highest expected risk adjusted returns on equity.
When fake regulators supervise banks; totally unsupervised banks is much better.
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Since bank regulators in 1988 decreed sovereign debt to be risk free, the market has not set the risk-free rates
In the discussion by Lawrence Summers and Adair Turner on secular stagnation in the Institute of New Economic Thinking INET, on October 28, I extract the following:
15:25 Lord Adair Turner
“The longer we have the slow growth and sub-target inflation, the more you have to think that there is something secular is at work. And the thing that makes me pretty sure that Larry is right in his hypothesis that something secular is at work, is to look at the 30, not the 10 year trend, but the 30 year trend, in real risk-free interest rates.
Take UK’s 10 year yields on real index linked gilts.
Take an average for each five year period, from 86-90, 91 to 95 and so six of those 5 year periods until the last
And the sequence is 3.8%; 3.6; 2.5%; 1.9%; 1.2%; minus 0.6%, and the value is now minus 1.5%.
When you see a trend like that you begin to think that there may be something secular, petty strong, about that; with a dramatic fall even before the 2008 crisis, so you can’t put all this down to central bank intervention, quantitative easing.
So we seem to have entered a world where savings and investments only balance at very low or negative real interest rates. And of course those very low interests rates themselves, played a role in stimulating the excessive private credit growth which landed us with the debt overhang.
But despite this those low interest we have low growth and below target inflation, and so it is vital we try work why is this…
17:58 Well logically, the long term decline in real interest rates must mean that we have faced over the last 30 year either:
an increase in the ex ante desired aggregate global saving rate
or a decline in the ex ante desired or intended global investment rate
or a mix of both.”
Lord Adair Turner, the former chairman of the Financial Service Authority, FSA (2008-2013), and therefore supposedly a technocrat well versed in bank regulations, had not a word to say about:
That extraordinary moment when, after about 600 years of “one for all and all for one” capital in banking, in 1988, with the Basel Accord, Basel I, regulators introduced risk weighted capital requirements for banks and, to that purpose, set the risk weight for the sovereign at 0%, while the risk weight for We the People was set at 100%.
That of course signified an extraordinary regulatory subsidy of sovereign debt, that had to set the UK’s 10 year yields on real index linked gilts, on a negative path.
From that moment on, since the regulators had decreed sovereign debt to be risk free, we can no longer really hold the market, using public debt as a proxy, can provide a reliable risk free rate estimate.
For now those artificially decreed risk-free rates can only go down and down and down… until BOOM!
The low “real” public debt interests might be the highest real rates ever, in that these regulations also make banks finance less the riskier, like SMEs and entrepreneurs, those who could provide us with our future incomes, and therefore governments with its future tax revenues.
For now those artificially decreed risk-free rates can only go down and down and down… until BOOM!
The low “real” public debt interests might be the highest real rates ever, in that these regulations also make banks finance less the riskier, like SMEs and entrepreneurs, those who could provide us with our future incomes, and therefore governments with its future tax revenues.
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Just before the Berlin Wall felt, communists, statists, dictators and those who benefit from crony statism, gave the liberal capitalistic free-market world the finger.
In 1988, just before the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, some communists/statists hacked into the free market capitalist world’s bank regulations. By means of Basel I, and for the purpose of determining the capital requirements for banks, they arranged so that the risk weight for lending to OECD sovereigns was zero percent, the risk weight for lending secured with houses 50 percent, while the risk weight for lending to the private sector was set at 100 percent.
Since the basic capital requirement was set at 8 percent that meant that banks could leverage their capital unlimited times when lending to sovereigns, 25 times (100/4) when financing the purchase of houses and 12.5 times to 1 (100/8) when lending to the private sector... citizens.
That doomed bank to lend too much to the governments and too much to the housing sector, and basically to abandon the traditional role of banks, namely to provide credit for the private sector, like to SMEs and entrepreneurs. Of course those from the private sector that were exploiting crony statism, they just loved it.
That de facto reflected the belief that government bureaucrats know better what to do with bank credit they are not personally liable for, than for instance entrepreneurs.
And that in turn doomed the liberal free-market and capitalistic economies of the western world.
That the world suffers under the thumb of neo-liberalism? That's a sad fake-news cover up the statists invented.
Please, for the good of our grandchildren, it might already be too late for our children, help me tear down that wall the Basel Committee built… urgently … Greece was just the tip of the iceberg!
PS. On that day, financial communism was decreed
PS. November 2019, there will be 30 years since the world went from “Tear Down that Wall” to the “Build Up that Wall” for 30 years.
PS. Here is an aide memoire on the mistakes in the risk weighted capital requirements for bank made so much worse with the introduction of Basel II in 2004.
A letter to the IMF titled: "The risk weights are to access to credit, what tariffs are to trade, only more pernicious."
Sunday, December 2, 2012
One of the greatest myths is that if Greece had collected all taxes, Greece would not have been in trouble.
Greece is not in trouble because of the taxes it did not collect. Greece is in trouble because its government squandered away funds it borrowed. And because the Greek government was able to borrow so much, thanks to the loony bank regulations.
For instance, if a German bank wanted to lend to a German entrepreneur, according to Basel II it needed to hold 8 percent in capital, which meant it could leverage its capital 12.5 to 1 times, but, if it lent to Greece, the way Greece was rated at the time, it only had to hold 1.6 percent in capital, which meant it could leverage its capital a mind-boggling 62.5 times to 1. No unregulated or shadow bank would ever manage to do that.
And that meant, sort of, that if the bank could earn a risk and transaction cost adjusted margin of 1 percent when lending to a German small entrepreneur, it could expect to earn 12.5 percent on its capital, but, if it expected to earn the same margin lending to Greece, it could earn a whopping 62.5 percent on its equity per year. And that is of course a temptation that not even the most disciplined Prussian would be able to resist. And of course what Greek (and many not Greek) politician can resist the temptation of abundant and cheap loans?
And so had all Greeks paid all their taxes that would have made no difference, in fact, since the Greek government could then have been able to show greater fiscal income, it could have justified keeping credit ratings great for a longer time, which meant having taken on even bigger debts.
Or did the Greek politicians think the loans Greece took on would be repaid by them being able to make of the Greeks exemplary tax–paying-citizens in just some few years? If they did, then they are more stupid than any ordinary politicians.
And now what? Yes Greeks, pay your taxes! But of course only after Greece creditors have accepted a reasonable deal based on a very substantial haircut, and only after you are sure your government will not keep squandering away your taxes.
It is of course very understandable that many Greeks are mad at those who have not paid their taxes but, let’s face it, on the other hand, the way things have turned out, those taxes that were not paid in earlier, might come in very handy now, and will, hopefully, we pray, be put to a much better use.
PS. This post was made before I realized that reality was much worse. Instead of applying to Greece the risk weights dependent on credit ratings that Basel II ordered, EU authorities assigned to all Eurozone sovereigns' debts, including Greece's a 0% risk weight, this even when none of theses nations can print the euro. So European banks, when lending to Greece, did/do not have to hold any capital at all. Now how crazy is that?
PS. At the end of the day the EU authorities kept total silence about their mistake and blamed Greece for it all. What a sad European Union L
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Who did the eurozone in?
There are of course many suspicious characters to blame for the eurozone’s pains, not the least the fact that it was created without any strong fiscal root system.
In November 1998, in an Op-Ed titled “Burning the bridges in Europe”, which title had to do with the fact there no escape-route from the euro had been considered. I also wrote there: “That the European countries will subordinate their political desires to the whims of a common Central Bank that may be theirs but really isn’t, is not a certainty. Exchange rates, while not perfect, are escape valves. By eliminating this valve, European countries must make their economic adjustments in real terms. This makes these adjustments much more explosive.”
But, there is one huge piece of evidence that is ignored by most of those trying to explain the current troubles. That evidence is the “risk-weights”, the smoking-gun which we find in the hands of the butlers in charge of regulating the banks, and who have their quarters in the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision. Yes, it was some butlers who did the eurozone in!
In November 1998, in an Op-Ed titled “Burning the bridges in Europe”, which title had to do with the fact there no escape-route from the euro had been considered. I also wrote there: “That the European countries will subordinate their political desires to the whims of a common Central Bank that may be theirs but really isn’t, is not a certainty. Exchange rates, while not perfect, are escape valves. By eliminating this valve, European countries must make their economic adjustments in real terms. This makes these adjustments much more explosive.”
But, there is one huge piece of evidence that is ignored by most of those trying to explain the current troubles. That evidence is the “risk-weights”, the smoking-gun which we find in the hands of the butlers in charge of regulating the banks, and who have their quarters in the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision. Yes, it was some butlers who did the eurozone in!
The bank butlers, naturally concerned about the safety of the banks, imposed a basic bank capital requirement of 8 percent; applicable for instance when banks lent to European small unrated businesses. In this case that limited the leverage of bank equity to a reasonable 12.5 times to one.
But, when banks lent to a sovereign, with credit ratings such as those Greece-Portugal-Italy-Spain had during the buildup of their huge mountains of debt, the bank butlers, because this lending seemed so safe to them, and perhaps because they also wanted to be extra friendly with the governments who appointed them, they applied a “risk-weight” of only 20 percent. And that translated into an amazingly meager capital requirement of 1.6 percent; and which allowed the banks to leverage their capital when lending to the infallible a mind-blowing 62.5 times.
The result was that if a bank lent to a small business and made a risk-and-cost-adjusted-margin of 1 percent, it could earn 12.5 percent a year, not much to write home about. But, if instead it earned that same risk-and-cost-adjusted-margin lending to a Greece, it could then earn 62.5 percent on your bank equity… and that, as you can understand, is really the stuff of which huge bank bonuses are made of, and also the hormones that cause banks to grow into too-big-to-fail.
And, as should have been expected, the banks went bananas lending to “safe” sovereigns. With such incentives, who wouldn’t? Just the same way they went bananas buying those AAA rated securities that were collateralized with lousily awarded mortgages to the subprime sector, and to which the bank-regulating-butlers also applied the risk-weight of 20 percent. And of course the governments also went the way of the banana-republics, and borrowed excessively. What politicians could have resisted such temptations?
And it was these generous financing conditions, and all the ensuing loans, which helped to hide all the misalignments and disequilibrium within the eurozone… until it was too late.
Now how could these bank-regulating-butlers do a criminally stupid thing like that? The main reasons were: the bank butlers only concerned themselves trying to make the banks safe, and did not care one iota about who the banks were lending to and for what purpose; they ignored that banks were already discriminating based on perceived risks so what they were doing was to impose an additional layer of risk-perception-discrimination; they completely forgot that no bank crisis in history has ever resulted from an excessive exposure to what was considered as “risky”, but that these have always been the consequence of excessive exposures to what, at the moment when the loans were placed on the banks balance sheet, was considered to be absolutely “not-risky”.
Also, when the bank-regulating-butlers decided to outsource much of the risk-perception function to some few credit-risk-rating-butlers, two additional mistakes were made. First, they completely forgot that what they needed to concern themselves with was not with the credit ratings being right, but with the possibility of these being wrong; and second, that what they needed most needed to look at was not so much the significance of the credit ratings meant, but how the bankers would act and react to these.
And the consequences of these regulatory failure in the eurozone, are worsening by the day, or by the nanosecond… because these bank capital requirements have the banks jumping from the last ex-ante-officially-perceived-no-risk-sovereign now turned risky, to the next ex-ante-officially-perceived-no-risk-sovereign about-to-turn risky … all while bank equity is going more and more into the red… and becoming more and more scarce.
What could be done? One solution could be that of declaring a ten year new capital requirement moratorium on all current bank exposures; allowing the banks to run new lending with whatever new capital they can raise, while imposing an equal 8 percent capital requirement on any bank business, no risk-weighting. If there’s an exception, that should be on lending to small businesses and entrepreneurs, in which case they could require, for instance, only 6 percent of capital, because these borrowers do not pose any systemic risk, and also because of: when the going gets to be risky, all of us risk-adverse need the “risky” risk-takers to get going.
But that requires of course a complete new set of bank-regulating-butlers… as the current should not even be issued any letters of recommendations. Let’s face it, after such a horrendous flop as Basel II, neither Hollywood nor Bollywood, would ever dream of allowing the same producers and directors to do a Basel III, and much less with only small script changes and the same actors.
The saddest part is that many of those in charge of helping Europe to get out of the current mess that they helped to create, might be busying themselves more with dusting off their own fingerprints.
If there is any place that deserves an occupation... that is Basel!
PS. Years later I learned that all this was just so much worse. EU authorities had assigned all eurozone sovereigns’ debts a 0% risk weight, even Greece’s, even if they were all taking on debt denominated in a currency that was not denominated in their own domestic/printable fiat currency. Unbelievable! And then EU authorities put the whole blame for Greece's troubles on Greece and did not even consider paying for the cost of their own mistake. Is that a way to build a union? No way Jose!
If there is any place that deserves an occupation... that is Basel!
PS. Years later I learned that all this was just so much worse. EU authorities had assigned all eurozone sovereigns’ debts a 0% risk weight, even Greece’s, even if they were all taking on debt denominated in a currency that was not denominated in their own domestic/printable fiat currency. Unbelievable! And then EU authorities put the whole blame for Greece's troubles on Greece and did not even consider paying for the cost of their own mistake. Is that a way to build a union? No way Jose!
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
The Joker on the Basel Committee
I can hear now the free market answering a confounded citizen by describing the bank regulators with the same words the Joker used in the movie The Dark Knight, 2008:
"You know, they're schemers. Schemers trying to control their worlds. I'm not a schemer. I try to show the schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are. So, when I say that … it was nothing personal, you know that I'm telling the truth. It's the schemers that put you where you are. I just did what I do best. I took your little plan and I turned it on itself. Look what I did to this city with a few…" of some AAA rated collateralized debt obligations, and some of their 0% risk weighted sovereigns
When I think of a small group of bureaucratic finance nerd technocrats in Basel, thinking themselves capable of exorcizing risks out of banking, for ever, by just cooking up a formula of minimum capital requirements for banks, based on some vaguely defined risks of default; and thereafter creating a risk information oligopoly empowering the credit rating agencies; and which all doomed, sooner or later, to take the world over a precipice of systemic risks; like what happened with the lousily awarded mortgages to the subprime sector, or to Greece when regulations assigned it only a 20% risk weight and doomed it to excessive public debt... I cannot but feel deep concern when I hear about giving even more advanced powers to the schemers.
PS. Years later I found out that even if Basel II would initially have risk weighted Greece 20%, European authorities assigned it a 0% risk weight, which meant European banks could lend to Greece's government without having to hold any capital against that exposure. Unbelievable! What champion schemers!
"You know, they're schemers. Schemers trying to control their worlds. I'm not a schemer. I try to show the schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are. So, when I say that … it was nothing personal, you know that I'm telling the truth. It's the schemers that put you where you are. I just did what I do best. I took your little plan and I turned it on itself. Look what I did to this city with a few…" of some AAA rated collateralized debt obligations, and some of their 0% risk weighted sovereigns
When I think of a small group of bureaucratic finance nerd technocrats in Basel, thinking themselves capable of exorcizing risks out of banking, for ever, by just cooking up a formula of minimum capital requirements for banks, based on some vaguely defined risks of default; and thereafter creating a risk information oligopoly empowering the credit rating agencies; and which all doomed, sooner or later, to take the world over a precipice of systemic risks; like what happened with the lousily awarded mortgages to the subprime sector, or to Greece when regulations assigned it only a 20% risk weight and doomed it to excessive public debt... I cannot but feel deep concern when I hear about giving even more advanced powers to the schemers.
PS. Years later I found out that even if Basel II would initially have risk weighted Greece 20%, European authorities assigned it a 0% risk weight, which meant European banks could lend to Greece's government without having to hold any capital against that exposure. Unbelievable! What champion schemers!
PS. Here is an updated aide-mémoire on some of the many mistakes with the risk weighted capital requirements for banks.
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