SteveG’s Posts


The ‘Perfect Hedge’ Remains Elusive at JPMorgan

In a previous post A simple remedy for a Wall Street danger, James M. Stone talked about the danger facing banks who try to take large “hedging”  positions in financial derivatives that are supposed to nearly balance each other out and minimize risk.  The risk is in the imbalance between the two sides of the hedge.  If that imbalance is smaller than the original risk, then the risk has been made smaller.  If the imbalance is bigger than the original risk, then the risk has been made larger.

The “hedging” positions on each side of these trades have become so huge, that the likely imbalance itself is big enough to sink the bank.  The total notional value of these hedges is as much as 240 times the size of the bank’s equity.

From Wikipedia we have the definition, “The notional amount (or notional principal amount or notional value) on a financial instrument is the nominal or face amount that is used to calculate payments made on that instrument. This amount generally does not change hands and is thus referred to as notional”  Note that when they say that the amount does not generally change hands, they use those weasel words to disguise the fact the this amount could need to change hands under extreme circumstances, such as a financial collapse.

I understand all this, but there is still a nagging question. Hedging is supposed to minimize risks.  A perfect hedge neither makes money nor loses money under any circumstance.  Why would banks engage in these huge transactions that put the entire bank at risk of going out of business?  I would have thought that any hedge transaction that is meant to offset the risk in any normal bank investment, would not be larger than that investment itself.  There is something going on here that I don’t get.

Well, the answer to that question is in the article The ‘Perfect Hedge’ Remains Elusive at JPMorgan.

In the process of writing and rewriting the Volcker Rule over the last two years, the banks pushed hard to be allowed to hedge risk related to “market-making” and to “portfolio hedging.” Market-making is when a firm acts as buyer or seller to help facilitate a trade for a client. The banks actually made a persuasive case that if they are going to take risks for clients, they should be able to seek to hedge each trade individually.

However, they also sought an exemption for something much more expansive: “portfolio hedging.” In other words, they wanted the ability to try to hedge their entire firm’s portfolio against macroeconomic factors. And that’s where JPMorgan’s botched trade comes in.

So let’s discuss how JPMorgan got in this mess in the first place. Here’s an overly simplistic primer, but you’ll probably get the idea: The company’s chief investment office originally made a series of trades intended to protect the firm from a possible global slowdown. JPMorgan owns billions of dollars in corporate bonds, so if a slowdown were to occur and corporations couldn’t pay back their debt, those bonds would have lost value.

To mitigate that possibility, JPMorgan bought insurance – credit-default swaps – that would go up in value if the bonds fell in value.

But sometime last year, with the economy doing better than expected, the bank decided it had bought too much insurance. Rather than simply selling the insurance, the bank set up a second “hedge” to bet that the economy would continue to improve – and this time, traders overshot, by a lot.

Jamie Dimon, the bank’s chief executive, said of the trade on “Meet the Press”: “We know we were sloppy. We know we were stupid.” Senior executives at the bank say privately that the trade should have never been made; they even concede that it looks like a proprietary trade – which the Volcker Rule would explicitly prohibit – rather than a “hedge.”

The point is that hedges are meant to reduce risk.  A purchase of a derivative like a credit default swap which may be used to hedge is not a hedge transaction at all when not balanced.  It can make huge profits for a bank.  The “risk management” departments of banks were named for the function that they used to provide when they were initially created.  They were supposed to mitigate risks, but not make any profit themselves. In fact mitigating risks usually means lowering profits. Banks have learned that these “hedging” transactions, when unbalanced, can lead to huge profits for the banks.  Since the “risk management” departments were experts in making these kinds of derivative investments, why not have these departments actually make money instead of just losing money while mitigating risks?

It may not be obvious to the smart bankers what seemed only too obvious to me.  If mitigating risk is a profit diminishing operation in the long run, then if you expect to make profits over the long run, you are not doing risk management anymore.

I guess the temporary success in making huge profits in the “risk management” departments blinded these executives to the obvious.  Well, actually, no.  This would be far too generous an interpretation to make.  The executives were hoping that they could fool the regulators or at least fool the politicians who voted on  funding the regulators, or let the politicians fool their constituents.  After all, if the house of cards came falling down, the banks might go under, but the executives would walk away with the fortunes they made before the collapse.  So they could be fully cognizant of the risks that they were making their banks take, and it would still make sense for them personally to have the banks take this risk.

You might even relate the bankers’ brazen behavior to what Eliot Spitzer had to say in the video of my previous post, Striking fear in Wall Street’s heart.


Striking fear in Wall Street’s heart

In this “Viewpoint” Web exclusive, Eliot Spitzer continues his conversation with Glenn Greenwald, author of “With Liberty and Justice for Some” and a contributing writer at Salon.


If people are aware of the activities of the financial elite, I cannot understand why they still buy into the proposition that we should not tax the wealthy because that would be penalizing them for being successful. How about penalizing them for being crooks? Is that a concept we can get behind?


Don’t Eat Fortune’s Cookie

In response to my previous post, A simple remedy for a Wall Street danger, reader RajV sent me a pointer to the video below with the introductory remark:

It is mind-boggling that such controls are not already legislated on these banks. I came across this article that shows the caliber of people at the helms and the greed at work:


Michael Lewis, a member of Princeton’s Class of 1982 and author of such books as “Liar’s Poker” and “Moneyball,” speaks at the 2012 Baccalaureate in a speech called “Don’t Eat Fortune’s Cookie.”

By the way, RajV, among his other sterling qualities, is perhaps the most mathematically astute person that I have ever worked with. I presume that he won’t blush for my having said so.


“It’s a boson:” Higgs quest bears new particle

Only in America ccould this Reuters article, “It’s a boson:” Higgs quest bears new particle, appear in a political blog.  Only in America would the following statement describing the standard model in physics be controversial:

It is the last undiscovered piece of the Standard Model that describes the fundamental make-up of the universe. The model is for physicists what the theory of evolution is for biologists.

I think I like the following description of the Higgs boson.

Scientists struggling to explain the theory have likened Higgs particles to a throng of paparazzi photographers; the greater the “celebrity” of a passing particle, the more the Higgs bosons get in its way and slow it down, imparting it mass; but a particle such as a photon of light is of no interest to the paparazzi and passes through easily – a photon has no mass.

 


A simple remedy for a Wall Street danger

A local newspaper has this column, A simple remedy for a Wall Street danger, behind a pay firewall. The article is by

James M. Stone, former chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and commissioner of insurance for Massachusetts, is CEO of the Plymouth Rock group of property and casualty insurance companies.

It should be safe to assume that James M. Stone knows what he is talking about, at least until proven otherwise.

A few quotes from the article ought to be enough to boggle your mind.

All three of the largest US banks have open derivatives positions in excess of 24,000 percent of their equity capital. Neither models nor markets can protect them from small percentage imbalances. In addition, bank trading relationships around the world are so interconnected that if one goes down all are threatened. No CEO or board of directors, however talented and honorable, can oversee trading at the multi-trillion dollar scale with perspective and precision enough to assure the avoidance of systemic impairment. Nor can any government oversight body.
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Bank lobbyists insist that all this trading is needed to facilitate commercial transactions, but don’t be fooled. The open derivatives positions at the three largest US banks exceed twice the GNP of the world. Add in large European and Asian banks, and the commercial hedging argument becomes a parody.
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Under present rules, banks are free to put us all at risk in derivatives trading without creating any offsetting cushion. Every derivatives transaction involves some basis risk (that two paired commodities will not continue to move in unison), some counterparty risk (that the trade will not honored by the other party), and some human error risk. Accountants and regulators know well that netting massive positions to zero cannot reflect true exposure.

Among other people who understand the problems of “netting massive positions to zero” are mathematicians, computer scientists, chemist, physicists, and engineers.  Let me see if I can present an example to people who might not get the implications of what Stone is saying.

Supposing that a bank’s $75 trillion in derivatives positions consist of $37,501,000,000,000 on one side of a transaction and $37,502,000,000,000 counterbalancing position.  The unbalance between these two positions is 0.003%.  That would be an amazing accuracy to achieve in any human endeavor.  The only issue is that the approximately 0.003% imbalance amounts to $1 billion dollars.

So you say, $1 billion is a lot of money, but it is small potatoes compare to $75 trillion.  Taking Stone’s figure of derivatives positions of over 24,000 percent of equity capital gives a figure of about $312 billion of equity capital.  That still seems pretty big compared to a $1 billion loss.  However, $312 billion equity capital is only 0.4% of the derivatives positions.  If there were a mistake of 0.4% in the balance of the positions that turns out to be a realized loss, then the bank’s equity capital is wiped out.

Leverage is a wonderful money making tool if it doesn’t turn against you.  Also compare the $75 trillion of private leverage to the $14 trillion in government debt that has the Republicans so concerned.

So let me cut to the chase and give you Stone’s proposed solution:

Whenever a new position is taken, there should be a mandatory accompanying reserve or capital charge. This would have a two-fold benefit. It would increase protection for both the public and the banks and it would dull the appeal of hazardously oversized trading accounts. Although regulators should set the actual amounts, imagine that the charge was uniformly 0.1 percent of the notional position value. Open positions of $75 trillion in derivatives would require $75 billion put aside, an amount large enough to make that trading scale unappealing. Charges to match the risk created would bring trading volumes back to sensible size with a minimum of new regulations and no need to outlaw useful commercial practices. They would simply acknowledge that all derivatives positions, however useful, impose some risk on the holders and the public. Current scale imposes an unmanageable risk.

It is a shame that this article is behind a pay firewall meaning that more people will not get to read the article.


July 5, 2012

RichardH has discovered that the article has emerged from behind the paywall. A simple remedy for a Wall Street danger appeared in The Boston Globe.


Presidential candidate Mitt Romney owns offshore company

The UK Daily Mail has the story Presidential candidate Mitt Romney owns offshore company which means he could be even RICHER than the estimated $250million.

The use of offshore companies such as Sankaty is allowed under U.S. tax laws. They are typically set up as shell corporations by private equity and hedge funds to route investments from large foreign and institutional investors, such as large pension plans, into corporate takeovers.

The money is used to provide equity and buy up debt. In turn, the investors gain U.S. tax advantages by passing their funds through the offshore ‘blocker’ corporations, avoiding a high 35 per cent tax on earnings that the Internal Revenue Service describes as ‘unrelated business income.’

This story has details of tax dodges that most of us could never even imagine.  If Romney and his ilk were not so adept at using their financial clout in Congress to mold the tax laws to their liking, they would not be nearly as rich.  It is easy to win a game by following the rules scrupulously, when you, yourself, make up the rules to follow.

If members of Congress cannot be convicted of accepting bribes for enacting this tax treatment, then perhaps they could at least be convicted of conflict of interest.  Who do you suppose is going to bring these charges and prosecute the cases?


Ed Herman on Global Finance

This is part 1 of a three part series on The Real News – Ed Herman on Global Finance.

The three parts of the interview are titled:
Ed Herman, Co-Author of “Manufacturing Consent” Pt 1
Ed Herman on “Humanitarian Imperialism”
Ed Herman on Global Finance

I’ll include the first video below to whet your appetite, but it isn’t even the most controversial part of the series.


I don’t find it too hard to accept what Herman says in parts 1 and 3, but part 2 is the most challenging for me. My mind just does not want to believe that aggression in defense of humanitarian causes can never be justified. It is easy to accept the premise that aggression in defense of humanitarian causes is a concept that can and is abused. It is going to take me a while to digest part 2.

Anything that is that challenging is probably worth the time to consider. At least it is when presented by a person who attempts to discuss it rationally. I don’t think you will ever convince me that it isn’t a waste of time to listen to the likes of Rush Limbaugh, for instance.


What a president believes matters

What do you think of this political ad from President Obama?


Learn More: http://OFA.BO/Vu7cxb

What a president believes matters.

Mitt Romney’s companies were pioneers in outsourcing US jobs to low-wage countries. He supports tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas.

President Obama believes in in-sourcing.

He fought to save the US auto industry, and favors tax cuts for companies that bring jobs home.

Outsourcing versus in-sourcing. It matters.