Tuesday, February 17, 2009

there is no economic or political mechanism or entity to impose a solution

From Across The Curve:

"Money Market
February 17th, 2009 1:25 pm | by John Jansen |

Money markets are the foundational market which provide lubrication and financing for all others. Long time readers know that during the heady days of the crisis I often turned to a friend and former who colleague who trades money markets and has done so for several decades.

I turned to him today for insight. The good news is that spreads are not blowing out as they were in previous iterations of this rolling crisis. Spreads are steady.

He does note that the level of activity has dropped off dramatically and customers have taken to the sidelines. He noted that there has been a steady bleed and constant stream of statements and news that has turned participants extra cautious. As a for instance, he noted the Lloyds statement last week that their HBOS related loss would be 10 billion pounds. That was 2 billion more than estimates earlier but it has caused a bit of a stir. Similarly, he noted the large loss at Credit Suisse and the instability which could ensue if that continues.

The basic problem which the market confronts currently is that there are many institutions which potentially have substantial problems and there is no economic or political mechanism or entity to impose a solution.

Credit Suisse and UBS are gigantic institutions. Hypothetically, if there problems mushroom those problems would dwarf the resources which the Swiss government has available to solve them. There are other financial institutions which, if they experienced problems, would call into question the ability or capacity of Belgium and Luxemburg to resolve them

So while the money markets are functioning and spreads are stable, the level of activity has dropped and the level of fear extant among participants is on the rise."


One Response to “Money Market”

  1. By Don the libertarian Democrat on Feb 17, 2009 | Reply

    “The basic problem which the market confronts currently is that there are many institutions which potentially have substantial problems and there is no economic or political mechanism or entity to impose a solution.”

    Only governments can, because only they have the resources to be believable in stopping a Debt-Deflation Spiral. Sadly, now, only drastic action will work. There’s still too much uncertainty about what governments are actually willing to do, and still too much jockeying among countries. We’re currently losing the battle.

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