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SVB and the case for chaos Paranoid bankers will never be able to control risk

Control is just an illusion (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Control is just an illusion (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)


March 14, 2023   5 mins

Vladimir Lenin was wrong about many things, but his maxim about the Soviet Union’s bureaucratic state apparatus — “better fewer, but better” — was undoubtedly right. Perhaps more than anything, the USSR demonstrated the flaws of rigid central planning. And yet, at the very heart of Western free markets, it not only survives — it flourishes.

Today’s financial rules often seem designed to maximise inconvenience for individuals carrying out small transactions. Despite the stupendous number of business regulations, however, the big events often seem to be missed. The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), the bank of choice for large numbers of tech companies, is just the latest to surprise us.

On Saturday, more than 200 UK tech companies, worth £3.5 billion in venture funding, riled themselves up into a state of panic. They wrote an open letter to the Chancellor warning that they now face an “existential threat”, and suggested that the Bank of England’s attempts to downplay its impact showed “a dangerous lack of understanding of the sector and the role it plays in the broader economy”.

The truth, however, is that shocks like this are inherently difficult to predict. Indeed, it is more or less impossible, unless the central regulator is omniscient. The losses which have caused SVB’s collapse, for instance, seem to have arisen from the bank making complicated bets on interest rates and getting them wrong. It’s easy enough to explain after the event — but it’s very hard to anticipate.

And so Lenin’s maxim springs to mind: it’s better to have a few bright minds capable of thinking outside the box about the resilience of a system than legions of box tickers designing myriad rules which purportedly eliminate risk.

A similar issue confronts Rishi Sunak ahead of his first Budget tomorrow. Apart from the SVB crisis, two financial developments haunt his financial programme. They are both bad — and they both stem from a misguided attempt by regulators to control risk.

The first is contained in the sudden rush of UK companies deciding to quit the London Stock Exchange for Wall Street. ARM, for example, which is based in Cambridge and describes itself as the R&D department for the global semiconductor industry, has decided to place its forthcoming IPO, expected to be valued at some $40 billion, in New York. CRH, the world’s largest building material supplier, is also moving its listing from the UK to the US.

The second concerns recent warnings by pension funds that they face massive losses. Despite the surge in equity values in the stock market, drops of more than 20% are being recorded in funds managed by top outfits such as Aviva. The Retirement Protection Pension Fund of Clerical Medical (part of Lloyds Banking Group) has managed to lose 38.7% of its money in the past 12 months.

The culprit, particularly in the second case, is the burdensome Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID2). The directive requires investment firms, which includes pension providers, to collect a huge amount of information from their clients, ranging from their preferences on sustainability to their “risk tolerance”. There are many boxes to tick and many forms to fill in; according to Forbes, the MiFID2 regulations contain 1.5 million paragraphs. This sums up the approach of our regulators, who appear to believe that the solution to everything is to write yet more paragraphs. Such behaviour fosters the illusion of control. But it is just that: an illusion. And the outcome has been disastrous for many pensioners.

As individuals move into their 50s, their pension providers are encouraged by the regulations to implement a so-called “lifestyle” investment approach. Their funds are gradually moved from what the regulator deemed to be risky investments, namely equities, to government bonds, designated as safe assets. These bonds are indeed safe in one sense of the word: since the Bank of England was created well over 300 years ago, British governments have never defaulted on their loans.

But their market value is highly sensitive to changes in interest rates. Rates were held artificially low by central banks throughout the 2010s following the financial crisis, but they started to rise last year, even before the turmoil of the short-lived Truss government pushed them up to 4%. And if there is one fundamental principle behind the pricing of bonds, it’s that if interest rates rise, the value of bonds goes down. As a result, pensioners have been left with big capital losses on their portfolios — and all because of a collapse in the values of an asset class which regulators deemed to be “safe”.

The problems of the London Stock Exchange arise from several factors, but the MiFID2 regulations are at their centre. As a result of their risk-averse approach, pension funds have been allocating far less of their assets to shares in companies (equities). According to recent estimates, just 27% of UK pension fund allocation is in equities, compared to more than 50% in the US. And it is equities which are the real lifeblood of any stock exchange; little wonder that firms are defecting to what is now a much bigger market.

Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt will have to contend with this core problem of overregulation if they are to fulfil their desire of Britain becoming “the next Silicon Valley”. Sunak has placed investment and innovation at the centre of his government’s policies. But despite a proliferation of schemes designed to encourage corporate investment over the years, UK levels remain persistently low. According to the OECD in 2021, for example, capital spending in Britain was only 17% of GDP, compared to a developed country average of 22%. In Europe, only Greece was lower among OECD members. And by all accounts, the Chancellor is very likely to persist with the planned increase in corporation tax.

Yet the causal connection between taxation and investment is very well established, as Phillipe Aghion’s 2021 book by The Power of Creative Destruction makes clear. Aghion and colleagues cite a paper in the top-ranked American Economic Review which finds that a 1% increase in the top rate of corporation tax leads to a 6% drop in the number of patents and a 5% fall in the number of inventors. The point here is not a case for finely tuning the exact detail of a taxation regime: it simply has to offer suitable incentives to innovators and inventors.

To be fair to Sunak, he has backed up his words with deeds. Last week, along with the Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan, he launched the first major piece of work from the newly created Department for Science, Innovation and Technology. While some of it does seem to be a re-hash of existing policies, the document recognises that different methods of funding science and innovation need to be tested. After all, a major problem with research councils is that it is very hard to get “left-field” projects financed. These are ones with a very high risk of failure, but which really push the frontiers of knowledge when they succeed. It is much less risky, however, to finance “safe” proposals, which simply add incrementally to knowledge and whose results are essentially known in advance.

Sunak and Donelan propose that institutions known as Focused Research Organisations are tested. Essentially, these are not-for-profit start-ups which are too big for a single academic lab to do and which are too complex for a loose, multi-lab collaboration. The crucial feature of the document is not any particular detail or policy, but Sunak’s apparent understanding of the importance of “try and test”. This holds that, rather than specify in great detail a structure which is predicted to give good results, it is better in an evolutionary environment to try something in practice. If it works, you can then reinforce it. If it doesn’t, you can drop it and try something else.

As for the SVB crisis, the UK’s flexible and speedy response has been equally encouraging. A crisis broke — and rather than form a committee to try and work out the perfect response, the Government acted. A wide range of options was reportedly considered, and the problem was swiftly solved over the weekend by HSBC taking over SVB’s UK arm for just £1.

Sunak, then, unlike his immediate predecessors, appears to understand the complex, inherently unpredictable nature of the modern world. It is a world where agility, flexibility and swift decision-making are the necessary qualities; where a “better fewer” approach is crucial; and where documents with 1.5 million paragraphs are at least 1.49 million paragraphs too long.


Paul Ormerod is an economist, and the author of Why Most Things Fail.

OrmerodPaul

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Brian Villanueva
Brian Villanueva
1 year ago

SVB’s collapse presents a dilemma for the US Federal Reserve.
The Fed has 2 jobs: stabilize the banking system via regulation; and stabilize prices by using interest rates to control inflation.
However, banks have been parking huge amounts of depositors’ money in US Treasuries. They’re useful: immediately liquid and generate a small return. The Fed encourages this practice, effectively treating Treasuries as cash-on-hand.
Here’s the dilemma though. Every time the Fed raises interest rates, it raises current treasury yields, which tanks the resale value of prior T-bills. Why? If I can loan my money to Uncle Sam today for 1 month and get 2%, if you have a older T-bill that is yielding only 1%, I’m not going to buy it for full price from you. This is what brought down SVB. Their on-demand deposits were parked in multi-month T-bills which had declined in value, rendering them technically insolvent. The bank run was just the straw that broke the camel’s back.
SVP isn’t the only bank in the position though. So now, the Fed has a problem. The goal of price stability requires further raising interest rates to squash inflation, but each increase lowers the price of existing 0-3mo T-bills (that are held by lots of banks), thus raising the risk bank insolvencies. If they instead prioritize bank stability, they will have to at least take their foot off the interest rate gas pedal, thus risking higher inflation. It’s a serious dilemma that has no easy solution.
Personally, I believe the Fed will opt for the latter course. SVP should have scared them. My money is on minimal interest rate increases (1/2bp by the end of the year, maybe). They will do this for two reasons: 1) it’s easier to recover from an inflation surge than from a major bank collapse; and 2) these are bankers, who do you think they will protect first?

J Bryant
J Bryant
1 year ago

Great analysis. And since a Silicon Bank type of event was predictable for the reasons you describe, I assume the Fed has been waiting to see how far it can push interest rate hikes and will now ease off. My concern is with the mortgage market. So far, US housing prices have held up reasonably well, but a lot of people, at least in major urban areas, took out big, variable rate mortgages. When their rate increases we might see significant defaults and there’s no easy solution for that.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
1 year ago

“The Fed has 2 jobs: stabilize the banking system via regulation; and stabilize prices by using interest rates to control inflation.” And there’s yer problem. A much better ‘job’ would be simply to provide sound money. And I doubt that the Fed knows what ‘inflation’ actually is.

Russ W
Russ W
1 year ago
Reply to  Steven Farrall

Historically, they have failed at both.

Russ W
Russ W
1 year ago
Reply to  Steven Farrall

Historically, they have failed at both.

Robert Cannon
Robert Cannon
1 year ago

Seems to me raising rates was inflationary and has had dire consequences such as SVB. We had low rates so long with minimal inflation, then Covid hit as well as Ukraine, and supply iissues drove up prices, and the labor shortage drove up wages. Inflationary but entirely due to supply issues, not demand. And raising rates only increases business costs, which get passed down. So, I think the real reason for the rate hikes is exactly what is happening, an opportunity to consolidate banks, pick up assets cheap, and create another crisis, which they won’t let go to waste.

J Bryant
J Bryant
1 year ago

Great analysis. And since a Silicon Bank type of event was predictable for the reasons you describe, I assume the Fed has been waiting to see how far it can push interest rate hikes and will now ease off. My concern is with the mortgage market. So far, US housing prices have held up reasonably well, but a lot of people, at least in major urban areas, took out big, variable rate mortgages. When their rate increases we might see significant defaults and there’s no easy solution for that.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
1 year ago

“The Fed has 2 jobs: stabilize the banking system via regulation; and stabilize prices by using interest rates to control inflation.” And there’s yer problem. A much better ‘job’ would be simply to provide sound money. And I doubt that the Fed knows what ‘inflation’ actually is.

Robert Cannon
Robert Cannon
1 year ago

Seems to me raising rates was inflationary and has had dire consequences such as SVB. We had low rates so long with minimal inflation, then Covid hit as well as Ukraine, and supply iissues drove up prices, and the labor shortage drove up wages. Inflationary but entirely due to supply issues, not demand. And raising rates only increases business costs, which get passed down. So, I think the real reason for the rate hikes is exactly what is happening, an opportunity to consolidate banks, pick up assets cheap, and create another crisis, which they won’t let go to waste.

Brian Villanueva
Brian Villanueva
1 year ago

SVB’s collapse presents a dilemma for the US Federal Reserve.
The Fed has 2 jobs: stabilize the banking system via regulation; and stabilize prices by using interest rates to control inflation.
However, banks have been parking huge amounts of depositors’ money in US Treasuries. They’re useful: immediately liquid and generate a small return. The Fed encourages this practice, effectively treating Treasuries as cash-on-hand.
Here’s the dilemma though. Every time the Fed raises interest rates, it raises current treasury yields, which tanks the resale value of prior T-bills. Why? If I can loan my money to Uncle Sam today for 1 month and get 2%, if you have a older T-bill that is yielding only 1%, I’m not going to buy it for full price from you. This is what brought down SVB. Their on-demand deposits were parked in multi-month T-bills which had declined in value, rendering them technically insolvent. The bank run was just the straw that broke the camel’s back.
SVP isn’t the only bank in the position though. So now, the Fed has a problem. The goal of price stability requires further raising interest rates to squash inflation, but each increase lowers the price of existing 0-3mo T-bills (that are held by lots of banks), thus raising the risk bank insolvencies. If they instead prioritize bank stability, they will have to at least take their foot off the interest rate gas pedal, thus risking higher inflation. It’s a serious dilemma that has no easy solution.
Personally, I believe the Fed will opt for the latter course. SVP should have scared them. My money is on minimal interest rate increases (1/2bp by the end of the year, maybe). They will do this for two reasons: 1) it’s easier to recover from an inflation surge than from a major bank collapse; and 2) these are bankers, who do you think they will protect first?

Nell Clover
Nell Clover
1 year ago

Let me suggest some edits to help all the jigsaw pieces fit into place…

On Saturday, more than 200 UK tech executives wrote an open threat to the Chancellor warning the Bank of England’s attempts to downplay its impact showed a dangerous lack of understanding of where their wealth comes from and the role he needs to play to protect it for them if he wants a slice.

As individuals move into their 50s, their pensions are pushed by the regulator into a “lifestyle” investment approach. Their funds are unnecessarily sold and fat commissions generated and their wealth used to create buyers for government bonds so the government can continue spending like a drunken sailor and the BoE can avoid the public realisation its QE schemes were a giant money printing exercise.

Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt’s overregulation and over taxation fulfils their backers desire of stopping Britain competing with the current Silicon Valley.

Sunak has kept to form and has backed up his spoken words with written words. Last week, along with the Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan, he launched another document from the newly created Department for Science, Innovation and Technology in lieu of actually governing.

The UK’s flexible and speedy response has been equally encouraging. A crisis broke — and rather than form a committee to try and work out the perfect response like they do for the prols, the Government acted because this time some very wealthy people were affected and they were threatening Rishi and Jeremy’s next careers.

Last edited 1 year ago by Nell Clover
Nell Clover
Nell Clover
1 year ago

Let me suggest some edits to help all the jigsaw pieces fit into place…

On Saturday, more than 200 UK tech executives wrote an open threat to the Chancellor warning the Bank of England’s attempts to downplay its impact showed a dangerous lack of understanding of where their wealth comes from and the role he needs to play to protect it for them if he wants a slice.

As individuals move into their 50s, their pensions are pushed by the regulator into a “lifestyle” investment approach. Their funds are unnecessarily sold and fat commissions generated and their wealth used to create buyers for government bonds so the government can continue spending like a drunken sailor and the BoE can avoid the public realisation its QE schemes were a giant money printing exercise.

Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt’s overregulation and over taxation fulfils their backers desire of stopping Britain competing with the current Silicon Valley.

Sunak has kept to form and has backed up his spoken words with written words. Last week, along with the Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan, he launched another document from the newly created Department for Science, Innovation and Technology in lieu of actually governing.

The UK’s flexible and speedy response has been equally encouraging. A crisis broke — and rather than form a committee to try and work out the perfect response like they do for the prols, the Government acted because this time some very wealthy people were affected and they were threatening Rishi and Jeremy’s next careers.

Last edited 1 year ago by Nell Clover
David McKee
David McKee
1 year ago

“And so Lenin’s maxim springs to mind: it’s better to have a few bright minds capable of thinking outside the box about the resilience of a system than legions of box tickers designing myriad rules which purportedly eliminate risk.”
Those bright minds would have to be very bright indeed to cope with today’s financial sector. It is huge and horribly complicated. It is peopled by very intelligent market players, who are highly motivated by money. The prospect of making more money is a powerful incentive to come up with innovative ideas.
The result is a system which is evolves like Darwin on acid. The regulators are in a bind: do they slow things down, and risk losing competitiveness to other financial centres, or do they take a hands off attitude and cross their fingers?
Even more pertinently, the regulators are civil servants, and think like civil servants. They love committees, interim reports and knocking off at 5pm. The market players run rings round them.
Mr. Ormerod’s idea is attractive, but is it within the realms of the practical?

David McKee
David McKee
1 year ago

“And so Lenin’s maxim springs to mind: it’s better to have a few bright minds capable of thinking outside the box about the resilience of a system than legions of box tickers designing myriad rules which purportedly eliminate risk.”
Those bright minds would have to be very bright indeed to cope with today’s financial sector. It is huge and horribly complicated. It is peopled by very intelligent market players, who are highly motivated by money. The prospect of making more money is a powerful incentive to come up with innovative ideas.
The result is a system which is evolves like Darwin on acid. The regulators are in a bind: do they slow things down, and risk losing competitiveness to other financial centres, or do they take a hands off attitude and cross their fingers?
Even more pertinently, the regulators are civil servants, and think like civil servants. They love committees, interim reports and knocking off at 5pm. The market players run rings round them.
Mr. Ormerod’s idea is attractive, but is it within the realms of the practical?

SIMON WOLF
SIMON WOLF
1 year ago

Good article.The SVB collapse came from a level of stupidity one would not expect from Bank executives.Instead of investing their liquid funds with entrepreneurs they put them into long dated bonds never seeming to ask themselves what would happen if interest rates rose and the price of the long dated gilts fell .
As a layperson i have been punished for investing in index linked inflation gilts as i did not understand the product I was investing in and had assumed i was protecting myself against inflation but it has not worked out like yet for complicated reasons similiar to SVB’s collapse .The price of UK listed Inflation Linked Gilts funds fell in 2022 from 40% to 60% when inflation was rising due to interest rates rising as well
The moral of this is make sure you understand the investment vehicle you are investing in.I did not with gilt funds but i do not claim to be a professional unlike the SVB executives would have done.

Rocky Martiano
Rocky Martiano
1 year ago
Reply to  SIMON WOLF

Good point. I’m not sure why Mr Ormerod thinks it was hard to anticipate the failure of SVB. Holding low interest yielding treasuries through the fastest rate hiking cycle in history seems like a disaster waiting to happen. They even disclosed $15bn of unrealised losses in their last audited accounts. Hard to anticipate – really?

Paul M
Paul M
1 year ago
Reply to  SIMON WOLF

Indeed, a baffling level of basic mismangement of bonds by SVB that the average retail “investor”/layperson has been successfully managing without problems for the last few years.

Rocky Martiano
Rocky Martiano
1 year ago
Reply to  SIMON WOLF

Good point. I’m not sure why Mr Ormerod thinks it was hard to anticipate the failure of SVB. Holding low interest yielding treasuries through the fastest rate hiking cycle in history seems like a disaster waiting to happen. They even disclosed $15bn of unrealised losses in their last audited accounts. Hard to anticipate – really?

Paul M
Paul M
1 year ago
Reply to  SIMON WOLF

Indeed, a baffling level of basic mismangement of bonds by SVB that the average retail “investor”/layperson has been successfully managing without problems for the last few years.

SIMON WOLF
SIMON WOLF
1 year ago

Good article.The SVB collapse came from a level of stupidity one would not expect from Bank executives.Instead of investing their liquid funds with entrepreneurs they put them into long dated bonds never seeming to ask themselves what would happen if interest rates rose and the price of the long dated gilts fell .
As a layperson i have been punished for investing in index linked inflation gilts as i did not understand the product I was investing in and had assumed i was protecting myself against inflation but it has not worked out like yet for complicated reasons similiar to SVB’s collapse .The price of UK listed Inflation Linked Gilts funds fell in 2022 from 40% to 60% when inflation was rising due to interest rates rising as well
The moral of this is make sure you understand the investment vehicle you are investing in.I did not with gilt funds but i do not claim to be a professional unlike the SVB executives would have done.

Bryan Dale
Bryan Dale
1 year ago

The current inflation, which has driven interest rates higher is the single most predictable economic event of my lifetime caused by massive deficit spending by governments combined with supply suppression through lockdowns and misguided energy policy. Yet many banks apparently missed the signs and governments remain in denial continuing their massive deficits. If inflation is to be contained by interest rates alone they will have to go much higher but we’re seeing banks, the one industry that should have been best prepared, are heavily exposed to interest rate hikes. Far from a few bright people, the world is being run by box ticking mediocrities. If rates can’t go higher without crashing banks and the governments refuse to change their policies then we can expect ever higher inflation for the foreseeable future.

david brady
david brady
1 year ago
Reply to  Bryan Dale

I would ask you all to watch John Titus latest video on best evidence. He walks you through the fact that most banks are underwater due to unrealised bond losses

david brady
david brady
1 year ago
Reply to  Bryan Dale

I would ask you all to watch John Titus latest video on best evidence. He walks you through the fact that most banks are underwater due to unrealised bond losses

Bryan Dale
Bryan Dale
1 year ago

The current inflation, which has driven interest rates higher is the single most predictable economic event of my lifetime caused by massive deficit spending by governments combined with supply suppression through lockdowns and misguided energy policy. Yet many banks apparently missed the signs and governments remain in denial continuing their massive deficits. If inflation is to be contained by interest rates alone they will have to go much higher but we’re seeing banks, the one industry that should have been best prepared, are heavily exposed to interest rate hikes. Far from a few bright people, the world is being run by box ticking mediocrities. If rates can’t go higher without crashing banks and the governments refuse to change their policies then we can expect ever higher inflation for the foreseeable future.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
1 year ago

The regulators are, of course, resisting change and neither Sunak nor Hunt show any signs of putting the necessary rocket under Bailey. I’m afraid Rishi is all talk.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
1 year ago

The regulators are, of course, resisting change and neither Sunak nor Hunt show any signs of putting the necessary rocket under Bailey. I’m afraid Rishi is all talk.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
1 year ago

It’s not just the MiFiD2’s 1.5 million paragraphs. There are also the One million plus paragraphs of the Financial Catastrophe Authorities rule book. And all the similar stuff from the Patently Ridiculous Authority and so on.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
1 year ago

It’s not just the MiFiD2’s 1.5 million paragraphs. There are also the One million plus paragraphs of the Financial Catastrophe Authorities rule book. And all the similar stuff from the Patently Ridiculous Authority and so on.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

Just wait for the CDS, credit default swaps… who will be landed on? Credit Suisse is looking a sound ante- post favourite?…. but watch the non- life reinsurance sector, propped up by Warren Buffett. this stone age industry, run and staffed by people who cannot get jobs elsewhere in the FIG sector is the next Lehman….

David McKee
David McKee
1 year ago

Alas, Mr. Samengo-Turner, non-life will not be the next Lehman, it was the last Lehman. It was because AIG was in big trouble (big as in potentially terminal), that Lehman’s was allowed to fail. Even the American government could not bail both out simultaneously.
(https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/what-went-wrong-at-aig)
Alas again, it probably won’t be the insurance industry that blows up next. In Britain, we had a small problem last autumn, when our pension funds got themselves into a negative-feedback loop from which they could not escape. The Bank of England had to intervene to steady things. This (https://capx.co/did-liz-truss-really-cause-the-bond-market-rout/) is the most coherent explanation of that event I have come across.
So the next blowup could be… cryptocurrencies? Trade finance? Loss of confidence in the Italian government? Panic in the Chinese shadow-banking world? Take your pick. As a rough guide, look for parts of the financial world which are under stress. That’s where you will find corners being cut and (eventually) birds coming home to roost.

Rick Frazier
Rick Frazier
1 year ago
Reply to  David McKee

I think it’s interesting that the SVB team consisted of former Lehman managers. It would seem they had not shed their yield chasing ways. Perhaps the US Federal Reserve should have told all US banks they were very serious about raising rates. Therefore any long duration investments that would be adversely effected by higher rates should be avoided, or at least kept to a minimum. It’s really not that complicated. It’s banking 101.

I don’t think cryptocurrencies will be the next to fall. In fact, they are on the rise during this chaos. Bitcoin in particular is an alternative form of custody for cash when people lose faith in their institutions. It’s like a bank with a branch on every street corner in every country in the world. It also has the potential to act as a sort of decentralized central bank since it possesses the same characteristics of a central bank. I suspect governments are beginning to realize this and why they seem intent on killing it. A good example is the recent government imposed death of Signature Bank in New York.

Rick Frazier
Rick Frazier
1 year ago
Reply to  David McKee

I think it’s interesting that the SVB team consisted of former Lehman managers. It would seem they had not shed their yield chasing ways. Perhaps the US Federal Reserve should have told all US banks they were very serious about raising rates. Therefore any long duration investments that would be adversely effected by higher rates should be avoided, or at least kept to a minimum. It’s really not that complicated. It’s banking 101.

I don’t think cryptocurrencies will be the next to fall. In fact, they are on the rise during this chaos. Bitcoin in particular is an alternative form of custody for cash when people lose faith in their institutions. It’s like a bank with a branch on every street corner in every country in the world. It also has the potential to act as a sort of decentralized central bank since it possesses the same characteristics of a central bank. I suspect governments are beginning to realize this and why they seem intent on killing it. A good example is the recent government imposed death of Signature Bank in New York.

David McKee
David McKee
1 year ago

Alas, Mr. Samengo-Turner, non-life will not be the next Lehman, it was the last Lehman. It was because AIG was in big trouble (big as in potentially terminal), that Lehman’s was allowed to fail. Even the American government could not bail both out simultaneously.
(https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/what-went-wrong-at-aig)
Alas again, it probably won’t be the insurance industry that blows up next. In Britain, we had a small problem last autumn, when our pension funds got themselves into a negative-feedback loop from which they could not escape. The Bank of England had to intervene to steady things. This (https://capx.co/did-liz-truss-really-cause-the-bond-market-rout/) is the most coherent explanation of that event I have come across.
So the next blowup could be… cryptocurrencies? Trade finance? Loss of confidence in the Italian government? Panic in the Chinese shadow-banking world? Take your pick. As a rough guide, look for parts of the financial world which are under stress. That’s where you will find corners being cut and (eventually) birds coming home to roost.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

Just wait for the CDS, credit default swaps… who will be landed on? Credit Suisse is looking a sound ante- post favourite?…. but watch the non- life reinsurance sector, propped up by Warren Buffett. this stone age industry, run and staffed by people who cannot get jobs elsewhere in the FIG sector is the next Lehman….

Mr. Swemb
Mr. Swemb
1 year ago

With the State getting inexorably bigger, the client state (bureaucrats, public-sector workers and welfare recipients) getting more numerous and voting in their own interests for more government, more regulations, and higher taxes, the big beneficiaries in future will be the client state and lawyers, whilst the rest of us drown in red-tape and taxes. It’s what happens when universal suffrage meets the Pareto principle.

Mr. Swemb
Mr. Swemb
1 year ago

With the State getting inexorably bigger, the client state (bureaucrats, public-sector workers and welfare recipients) getting more numerous and voting in their own interests for more government, more regulations, and higher taxes, the big beneficiaries in future will be the client state and lawyers, whilst the rest of us drown in red-tape and taxes. It’s what happens when universal suffrage meets the Pareto principle.

B Emery
B Emery
1 year ago

Is this the soft landing?

B Emery
B Emery
1 year ago

Is this the soft landing?

Paul Walsh
Paul Walsh
1 year ago

I agree with a lot of the comments on Central Bank interest rates being the source of the problem. I also have to agree with Paul Ormerod on regulation. In my experience over complicated procedures are put in place by people that don’t understand things, or that are just trying to put a shield between themselves and blame. Whilst I am trying to find proof of my identity for some obscure purpose, I often wonder how any criminal organisations can possibly still exist. Could they possibly have found a way around these regulations?

Paul Walsh
Paul Walsh
1 year ago

I agree with a lot of the comments on Central Bank interest rates being the source of the problem. I also have to agree with Paul Ormerod on regulation. In my experience over complicated procedures are put in place by people that don’t understand things, or that are just trying to put a shield between themselves and blame. Whilst I am trying to find proof of my identity for some obscure purpose, I often wonder how any criminal organisations can possibly still exist. Could they possibly have found a way around these regulations?

Gordon Hughes
Gordon Hughes
1 year ago

During the 2007-09 there were many comments about the foolishness of strategies characterised as picking up pennies in front of steamrollers (with the inevitable result of getting squashed sooner or later). But that is exactly what SVB were doing – with the predictable outcome. Remember that it was no surprise that interest rates were going to rise. The point was that SVB was transparently undercapitalised and following the steamroller penny strategy to get away with this. Thus, the real question is whether central bankers should bail out all depositors at institutions run by fools. The current practical response – though not the theory of deposit insurance – is yes.
In that case the only way to deal with moral hazard is to treat all of the wealth and past income paid to managers – or all staff – at all financial institutions as unpaid equity that can be tapped in the event of a bailout being required – i.e. a combination of joint and several liability with no limits. That is the old 19th century way of dealing with bank failures. However, its effects can be modified by allowing staff to buy reinsurance against the potential liability, because then the market in reinsurance will clearly signal an external assessment of the risks being taken by company strategies such as the steamroller penny one.
None of this either new or unexplored by financial economists. The problem is that politicians, bureaucrats and regulators are unwilling to jeopardise their cosy future incomes from the financial sector. The effusions of people like Senator Elizabeth Warren are merely a distraction from the issue of getting real incentives right. Populist demands to send fools to jail are pointless because laws and regulation are procedural rather than substantive so being a well-advised fool is protection against conviction. On other hand, bankruptcy is considerably easier to enforce, especially under a regime of strict liability.

Gordon Hughes
Gordon Hughes
1 year ago

During the 2007-09 there were many comments about the foolishness of strategies characterised as picking up pennies in front of steamrollers (with the inevitable result of getting squashed sooner or later). But that is exactly what SVB were doing – with the predictable outcome. Remember that it was no surprise that interest rates were going to rise. The point was that SVB was transparently undercapitalised and following the steamroller penny strategy to get away with this. Thus, the real question is whether central bankers should bail out all depositors at institutions run by fools. The current practical response – though not the theory of deposit insurance – is yes.
In that case the only way to deal with moral hazard is to treat all of the wealth and past income paid to managers – or all staff – at all financial institutions as unpaid equity that can be tapped in the event of a bailout being required – i.e. a combination of joint and several liability with no limits. That is the old 19th century way of dealing with bank failures. However, its effects can be modified by allowing staff to buy reinsurance against the potential liability, because then the market in reinsurance will clearly signal an external assessment of the risks being taken by company strategies such as the steamroller penny one.
None of this either new or unexplored by financial economists. The problem is that politicians, bureaucrats and regulators are unwilling to jeopardise their cosy future incomes from the financial sector. The effusions of people like Senator Elizabeth Warren are merely a distraction from the issue of getting real incentives right. Populist demands to send fools to jail are pointless because laws and regulation are procedural rather than substantive so being a well-advised fool is protection against conviction. On other hand, bankruptcy is considerably easier to enforce, especially under a regime of strict liability.