Showing posts with label Alan Greenspan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Greenspan. Show all posts

Friday, August 26, 2011

America's Chief and Most Deadly Export Has Been The Credit Bubble

Few have wanted to talk about it, but it is one of the chief consequences of decade-long Federal Reserve policy mistakes as mediated through the world's reserve currency, the dollar:


When the financial system collapsed in 2008, the eurodollar market was its epicenter. Banks in Germany and Holland failed because of overpriced real estate in Florida and California, yet hardly anyone questions the link between these incongruent geographical realities. For the most part, there was no housing bubble in Bavaria or Amsterdam, yet long established banking concerns were stricken, and then failed by one a world away.

For the most part, bank risk managers will prudently match their asset structure to their liability structure to the best of their abilities. In addition to managing overall durations and interest rate spreads, this also means a sensible policy of matching asset and liability denominations. So large funding exposures denominated in dollars leads to pointed acquisitions of dollar-denominated credit assets.

. . . [T]his explains the global spread of a dollar-based credit bubble . . .

Jeffrey Snider goes on to explain, here, how once stalwart Switzerland has become our latest victim.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

A Libertarian Defends Local Bankers

An analyst of the banks and an increasingly visible commentator on the foreclosure mess, R. Christopher Whalen puts in a good word for local bankers on his blog at Reuters.com:

The bad guys in the housing bust are not the banks who must foreclose on homes, but the politicians in both political parties who used reckless housing policies to further their personal interests. This is a bipartisan national scandal. Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Phil Graham, Alan Greenspan and their contemporaries are the authors of our collective misery, not the local banker who must clean up the mess created by government intervention in the housing market.

Read the rest here.