Saturday, January 12, 2019
Monday, January 7, 2019
The Chavez/Maduro Bolivarian Revolution, has confessed its need of keeping the poor poor
Though in Spanish, below is a short YouTube in which three important members of the Chavez/Maduro Bolivarian Revolution, confess their need of keeping the poor poor:
Tareck El Aissami, former Vice President and current Minister of Industries and National Production: “The poorer people are, the more loyal to the revolutionary project they are, and the more love for Chávez they have"
Héctor Rodríguez, a former Minister of Education and currently the Governor of Miranda: "It is not that we are going to lift people out of poverty into the middle class so that they later aspire to be scrawny (a derogatory term used for the opposition)"
Jorge Giordani, four times Minister of Planning, “Our political strength is given to us by the poor, they are the one who votes for us and that’s why our discourse of defending the poor. The poor will have to remain poor; we need them so.”
Sunday, December 30, 2018
A letter in Washington Post: Affordable homes or investment assets?
My letters in the Washington Post on bank regulations:
June 20, 2008: An Aspect of the Bubble
December 27, 2009: Another 'worst': Faulty bank regulation
January 6, 2012: Handcuffed by a triple-A rating
May 1, 2013: An American approach to banking
December 23, 2014: Let the market rule on risky trades
November 11, 2015: Reverse-mortgaging the future
August 9, 2016: Banks, regulators and risk
April 16, 2017: When banks play it too safe
July 11, 2018: There is another tariff war that is being dangerously ignored.
Sunday, December 9, 2018
What goes up too much must come down too much. The best countercyclical policy there is, is the elimination of the pro-cyclical ones.
Friday, December 7, 2018
September 2, 1986 was the tragic night when Paul A. Volcker, in London, gave in to (insane) European bank regulators.
September 2? From here
And so in 1988, with Basel I, the regulators assigned the sovereigns a 0% risk weight and citizens 100%, as if bureaucrats know better what to do with credit for which repayment they're not personally responsible for than entrepreneurs.
I ask: Insane? I answer: Absolutely!
Friday, October 12, 2018
If only I could tweet like Stephen Colbert perhaps I could be more effective warning about dangerously faulty bank regulations.
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Mario Draghi, President of the ECB and Chair of the European Systemic Risk Board shows, again, he has dangerous little understanding about the true nature of systemic risks.
Sunday, September 2, 2018
Had there been a Basel Committee on Tennis Supervision, Roger Federer would be history by now.
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Anat Admati explains the financial crisis better than most, but does still not get to the real heart of it.
Sunday, August 26, 2018
Thursday, August 16, 2018
The risk weighted capital requirements for banks should have had to consider the conditional probability... it did not!
What is the conditional probability of assets being dangerous to bank systems when conditioned to that bankers have perceived these assets as safe?
Here is an aide-mémoire on some of the many mistakes with the risk weighted capital requirements for banks.
PS. Here’s the opinion of #AI ChatGPT on this issue.
PS. Here’s the opinion of #AI Grok4 SuperGrok on this issue
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Trade wars will mean new tariffs
The risk-weighted capital requirements for banks also translate de facto into subsidies and tariffs, which have resulted in a too much-ignored allocation of bank credit war.
One consequence is that those perceived as risky, such as entrepreneurs, have their access to bank credit made more difficult than usual, and our economy suffers. Another is that by promoting excessive exposures to what is especially dangerous, because it is perceived as safe, against especially little capital, guarantees that when a bank crisis results, it will be especially bad.
In terms of Mark Twain's supposed saying, these regulations have bankers lending out the umbrella faster than usual when the sun shines and wanting it back faster than usual when it looks like it is going to rain.
My letters in the Washington Post on bank regulations:
September 6, 2007: Factors in the Financial StormJune 20, 2008: An Aspect of the Bubble
December 27, 2009: Another 'worst': Faulty bank regulation
January 6, 2012: Handcuffed by a triple-A rating
May 1, 2013: An American approach to banking
December 23, 2014: Let the market rule on risky trades
November 11, 2015: Reverse-mortgaging the future
August 9, 2016: Banks, regulators and risk
April 16, 2017: When banks play it too safe
July 11, 2018: There is another tariff war that is being dangerously ignored.
December 30, 2018: Affordable homes or investment assets?
April 19, 2020: The capacity to borrow is a valuable sovereign asset.
November 28, 2022: Before the debt ceiling is lifted
August 22, 2023: The economic revolution
Tuesday, June 19, 2018
Should we not expect the Fed to do something if they hear they are distorting the allocation of bank credit?
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
The Bank of England’s Museum’ explanation of “credit risk” keeps mum on how BoE, as a regulator, helped to mess it all up
Sunday, May 20, 2018
If the Basel Committee had only been asked these four simple questions about its risk weighted capital requirements for banks?
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


