Showing posts with label bank credit austerity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bank credit austerity. Show all posts
May 18, 2016
Sir, I agree with everything John Plender argues in “Why governments are caught in a double bind over public debt” of May 18.
That said I am amazed he leaves out the fact that, on top of it all, courtesy of the Basel Committee, banks currently need to hold especially little capital against that public debt... for which “the issue of solvency would resurface”
And all that because unilaterally the regulators, in 1988, with the Basel Accord suddenly decided that sovereigns posed no credit risk, and no one protested the statism that was thereby de facto introduced.
To workout our banks out of such bind, will take huge amounts of fresh bank capital and very specialized knowledge, or intuition on how to go about it, without disastrously affecting the bank lending to the rest of the economy.
@PerKurowski ©
October 16, 2015
After banks have placed assets on their balance sheets, they are de-facto “after the curve”
Sir, Gillian Tett with respect to the difficulties posed by a possible drop in the oil price write that “now [regulators] are keen to show they have learnt the right lessons from last decade’s crisis — by getting ahead of the curve and forcing banks to be tough”, “The tangle of loose lending to tight oil” October 16.
Getting ahead of what curve? In the case of bankers after they have placed the asset on their book they are already de facto after any curve that is going to be thrown at them.
What is it with these statists? They abhor fiscal austerity and they love lots of QEs and minimal interest rates, but they do instruct banks to be austere… and regulators have many adoring fans cheering them on.
Why do regulators require banks to act be pro-cyclical and not counter-cyclical? If when oil were over $100 per barrel, banks would have stopped putting oil related loans on their balance sheets… that would have meant, quite correctly, “getting ahead of the curve”.
When will regulators learn… or it is just so that they just refuse to learn?
PS. How long will we have to live with dumb regulators who make banks clear for ex ante perceived credit risk in their capital... when that is about the only risk banks have already cleared for, with interest rates and amounts of exposures?
@PerKurowski ©
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