What is CDS?Things not looking great for Deutsche Bank at the moment.
Seems to be following a similar path to Credit Suisse recently (poor reputation, CDS up, share price down), although I am sure there are differences.
Tell someone you've never seen The Big Short - without telling them.What is CDS?
Credit Default Swap.What is CDS?
so then, what was your original point?Yep ..I said a well known capitalist country
Tell someone you've never seen The Big Short - without telling them.
Credit Default Swaps - dogshit - and at that point I'm out!
A theory I've been loosely following is that the whole banking system is on a precipice.Things not looking great for Deutsche Bank at the moment.
Seems to be following a similar path to Credit Suisse recently (poor reputation, CDS up, share price down), although I am sure there are differences.
A theory I've been loosely following is that the whole banking system is on a precipice.
In short, I think the theory is this: With interest rates so low, many banks put lots of their cash into long-term (ie 10 year) bonds paying low rates of interest, as short-term bonds were essentially paying no interest.
Unfortunately with the interest rate rises we've seen, these bonds have lost a fair bit of money should they need to be sold on now.
Banks will only need to sell them on now if depositors want a lot of cash back at the same time, ie a bank run. If they do, they'll get less back than they put into the bonds - also less than they'll get back if they are allowed to mature for the full term.
This is what triggered the SVB collapse and, apparently, many other banks are susceptible to the same.
Lots more on Balaji's twitter account - https://twitter.com/balajis - his pinned tweet is a good place to start
This is way out of my area of expertise and understanding, but aren't low-yield long-term bonds a low-risk activity?@Bozza Absolutely correct. In theory, there’s nothing wrong with the banking system providing lots of people don’t pile in asking for their money back at the same time (the very definition of a bank run) - unfortunately there’s money to be made in causing mischief, by shorting a potentially vulnerable institution and then proclaiming loudly “Oh dear, bank X’s underlying figures don’t look very healthy.”
Banks with sensible leadership will be currently trying to shore up their balance sheet without alerting/alarming the markets. While the underlying cause is different (subprime mortgages vs long-dated bonds) it suggests we haven’t learnt enough from 2008, and that we haven’t separated retail banking (the glue that holds the real economy together) from the risk-taking investment side.
Retail banking should be a low-profit but incredibly stable business. Investment banking needs to be able to take risk. They’re two separate types of business that mix like oil and water.
If this does hit the fan, I fully expect strong regulation to be announced, which will then somehow be incredibly watered down before it actually becomes law. Private profit, socialised (taxpayer) losses. Again.
Where I’m not with your man on Twitter, is that Bitcoin is the answer. Not scaleable to the real world economy, and technological barriers to entry for those who don’t use tech.
(a surprisingly large and persistent percentage of the population)
This is way out of my area of expertise and understanding, but aren't low-yield long-term bonds a low-risk activity?
Until, such time, anyway, as...
- Interest rates surge, and
- People get spooked and want their cash back
And, presumably, technological advancements have increased the risk on this because people don't need to wait for the bank to open in the morning and join a big queue as large amounts can be withdrawn any time by anyone with a phone in their hand. Again, this is what I understand happened with SVB.
And, whilst some may be advocating that bitcoin is the answer to life, the universe and everything, I think that others are currently advocating it as a store of value to protect against the risk of widespread financial institution failure and hyper-inflation of the US dollar.
long dated bonds is not risk taking though. in fact it's part of the regulations in some cases, they have to hold more bonds than other investments to keep their balance sheet more stable (and create more demand for gov bonds...).@BozzaBanks with sensible leadership will be currently trying to shore up their balance sheet without alerting/alarming the markets. While the underlying cause is different (subprime mortgages vs long-dated bonds) it suggests we haven’t learnt enough from 2008, and that we haven’t separated retail banking (the glue that holds the real economy together) from the risk-taking investment side.
Retail banking should be a low-profit but incredibly stable business. Investment banking needs to be able to take risk. They’re two separate types of business that mix like oil and water.
Don't want to turn this into a Bitcoin thread, but bitcoin is really not the same as other digital currencies, and certainly not web3 ones; a different kettle of fish entirely. Also, Bitcoin doesn't want to do anything, its just a code/protocol.Bitcoin wants to replace gold, the new “safe store of value” in difficult economic times. I remain to be convinced by any of the digital currencies, even the ones that scale better than Bitcoin. Just a quick read of the “web3 is going great” site suggests that putting your money into these unregulated exchanges is likely to enrich someone, but probably not you.
long dated bonds is not risk taking though. in fact it's part of the regulations in some cases, they have to hold more bonds than other investments to keep their balance sheet more stable (and create more demand for gov bonds...).
the particular case of SVB and to some extent CS show you cant seperate retail and investment banking. there are depositors larger than the guranteed and there are investments that need depositing. for example a new business, they have got 5m in funding for a couple of years, need to meet payroll. they deposit in SVB, who compete with over banks and need to offer them a returns on savings. it all went wrong simply because its in the interest of the depositor to move money from the savings at 1% to gov bonds at 3%. CS is taking high value individuals and putting their money in to business investments. the lines seperating JP Morgan and Halifax aren't so clear in the middle.
Fair points, should have stated “Bitcoin is being marketed as a safe store of value by those who would profit from it being perceived as such.”Don't want to turn this into a Bitcoin thread, but bitcoin is really not the same as other digital currencies, and certainly not web3 ones; a different kettle of fish entirely. Also, Bitcoin doesn't want to do anything, its just a code/protocol.
Well, either Bitcoin will be perceived to be a safe store of value (or similar) or it wont be. But really there is no perception required, well at least not more than anything else. Certainly some are 'marketing' and shilling it, always some scammers about.Fair points, should have stated “Bitcoin is being marketed as a safe store of value by those who would profit from it being perceived as such.”
Also agree that Bitcoin predates web3, but appears to me (as someone who has tried digging through multiple layers of hype only to find more hype) that it is the blueprint for many of web3’s most dubious projects. SVB wasn’t a crypto bank, but Silvergate and Signature were. A digital currency that only an ever-shrinking pool of institutions will convert back into one you can actually use, seems of limited use to me.