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"The
derivatives genie is now well out of the bottle, and these instruments
will almost certainly multiply in variety and number until some event
makes their toxicity clear....[They] are financial weapons of mass
destruction, carrying dangers that, while now latent, are potentially
lethal."
--
Warren Buffett, Chairman and Chief Executive, from his Letter to
Shareholders, 2002 Berkshire Hathaway annual report
For
years, experts had warned about the near certainty of disaster. With its
unique geography and hurricane-track locale, New Orleans was a city at
risk, and it was only a matter of when, not if, a powerful hurricane
would eventually roar ashore and overwhelm the Big Easy.
To be
sure, steps were taken beforehand to try and minimize suffering and
disruption in the wake of such a catastrophe. Levees were built up and
secured. Arrangements were made to cope with the mass evacuation of
hundreds of thousands. Federal, state and local emergency preparedness
officials drew up myriad plans to mobilize people and supplies.
Nonetheless,
when the event many feared finally came to pass in late August 2005,
much of those efforts seemed for naught. Instead of organization there
was chaos. Instead of action, incompetence. Instead of lives saved, the
focus was on what was needlessly lost.
For
all the awareness, advance planning, and available resources, the
reality was that there was little to show for it when the terrible
moment of truth arrived. As a result, it will take a long time for the
people of that Gulf Coast region, and for the country as a whole, to
fully recover from the disaster known as Hurricane Katrina.
Still,
if there was one silver lining to the tragedy, it was the lesson that,
as a nation, we needed to be better prepared. Ready, in other words, for
the inevitable worst. Indeed, in a September 19, 2005, cover story,
“The Next Big One,” Business
Week noted as much, describing a litany of potential disasters, from
earthquakes to pandemics to “dirty-bomb” terrorist attacks, lurking
on the horizon.
Curiously
though, one threat, a brewing economic hurricane, was not mentioned.
That was odd given the magazine’s audience and purview. Nonetheless,
it was not a complete surprise, because the disaster that already seems
to be unfolding is one few people understand or are even aware of, let
alone are prepared for. Once full-blown, however, it is likely to wreak
havoc not only in the U.S., but around the world.
No
doubt this sounds alarmist, but there are experts who would suggest
otherwise. Indeed, such estimable giants of the financial world as
Warren Buffett, legendary investor and chairman of Berkshire Hathaway,
and Bill Gross, founder and principal of Pimco, one of the world’s
largest fixed-income managers, have raised serious concerns about this
growing menace.
In
truth, while no one can say for certain when the day of reckoning will
arrive, it seems a good bet that if some of those who are in a position
to know are worried about the derivatives market and the associated
systemic risks, you should be, too.
One
of the difficulties people have with understanding this particular
disaster-in-the making is its complexity and seeming irrelevance to
their day-to-day lives. Unlike an earthquake or a car bomb, a
derivatives-inspired financial meltdown won’t to lead to leveled
buildings or bloodshed, at least initially. Yet, the toxic fallout will
likely be as painful, long-lasting, and difficult to overcome as any of
the more widely discussed scenarios.
What
makes the coming debacle even more difficult to comprehend is that it
stems from a long chain of seemingly benign interactions and financial
relationships. Indeed, despite the fact that the modern derivatives
market has flourished because of big money, complex technology, and
highly-paid talent, the culprit when it all goes wrong is likely to be
simple: human emotions -- fear and greed -- run amok.
For
most people, the term “derivative” has little meaning. In many
cases, the mere mention of the word is enough to cause eyes to glaze
over. That is partly because these financial instruments are somewhat
ethereal. They are, in other words, largely created out of thin air.
Practically speaking, they have no value in and of themselves.
They
are also hard to understand because, like many intangible concepts that
occasionally involve a great deal of theory and calculation, academics
have done wonders transforming the complex into the incomprehensible. As
is often the case, though, if you break them down into smaller, more
digestible parts, they are easier to grasp. That is also true with
respect to the derivatives market.
Look
closely at how the world works, how people function and otherwise go
about their daily business. It is not hard to see that our modern
existence is, and is increasingly, about interdependence. We survive
because of our ties to each other, whether spiritual, emotional,
organizational, geographical, or genetic. We also rely on an extensive
network of financial relationships with people and institutions we know,
as well as many we don’t.
Moreover,
all of us operate within a framework of uncertainty. Life is about risks
-- taking them, mostly -- and acting on imperfect information. Some may
claim to see the future and perhaps one day that may be proved true. For
now, most of us can only guess what will happen tomorrow, or next week,
or in a year’s time.
Because
we can never know for sure, we make calculations and compromises. Like
deciding whether it is better to have a bird in the hand or two in the
bush.
This
usually involves agreements of one kind or another. Contracts,
obligations, promises, and responsibilities -- whether written or oral,
implicit or explicit, they are a means by which we work together with
others. To secure what we want or need, now or in the future.
And,
hopefully, to protect ourselves in ways that suit us best. Buying
insurance, for example, is one way we try to alleviate some of the
harmful effects of life’s inevitable misfortunes.
Derivatives
are, generally speaking, contractual agreements that offer a means for
individuals or businesses to restructure or rearrange the risks they may
face in future. In many respects, they function like insurance, though
with some critical differences, as will be noted later on.
Although
they are usually in written form, like most financial commitments, that
is not necessarily a prerequisite. Unless, of course, either party wants
to be able to trade, exchange, or sell these contracts. In that case,
they usually take shape as securities.
In
their simplest form, derivatives provide for certain rights or
obligations between two parties, or “counterparties.” Most
important, the way in which these instruments are evaluated almost
always takes into account that they are linked to some other security,
commodity, event, or any of a wide variety of agreed-upon conditions. In
essence, they derive their value -- hence, “derivative” -- from
something else.
In
some ways, a marriage proposal has elements in common with a derivative.
In that case, a couple decides in advance to come together on a certain
day and exchange vows. They promise to live together as man and wife and
assume a host of obligations and responsibilities. Essentially, they
agree now to make a deal later.
Similarly,
the purchase of an airplane ticket, or a ticket for a rock concert,
could also be viewed as a crude form of a derivative. Money is handed
over today in exchange for enabling a service to take place at some
future date.
The
most appropriate examples, of course, are those securities that have
evolved to form the cornerstones of the global derivatives market:
futures, forwards, options and swaps. In simple terms, they are
contracts where two counterparties agree to undertake, or to possibly
undertake, a transaction or transactions at some point in the future,
based on conditions established at the outset.
In
practical terms, futures and forwards are alike: both create obligations
between two parties. The main difference is that the former tend to have
standardized terms and trade on recognized exchanges. Typically, there
is a designated middleman, or “clearinghouse,” which acts as the
official counterparty to every transaction. That makes it easier to
transfer -- by buying and selling -- commitments between the various
market participants.
Probably
the most widely known derivatives of this type are the futures contracts
that trade at places like the Chicago Board of Trade. The CBOT was
originally founded in 1848 as a centralized marketplace to help growers
and others protect against the risks and often wild price fluctuations
inherent to the agriculture industry.
The
classic example of why these contacts exist describes a farmer wishing
to lock-in a price for his wheat before the actual harvest. To do this,
he might strike a deal with a baker, also keen to fix his costs. Both
sides could then take comfort in knowing that no matter what happened to
prices in the interim, they would be protected and wouldn’t have to
worry. Then, on the agreed date, they would make the exchange: crops for
cash.
In
this arrangement, both sides end up hedging their exposure to the
vagaries of the marketplace -- which could be affected by unexpectedly
high or low yields, unusual weather, plant diseases, etc. They gain
security today at the expense of uncertainty tomorrow. In theory, they
have shed at least some of the risks they do not want in exchange for
those they do. Net-net, a positive.
The
real world, of course, is not so simple, and though the farmer might
want to reduce his exposure today, the baker may not have reached that
same conclusion yet. What happens then, and what markets and exchanges
facilitate, is that other parties -- speculators -- jump into the fray.
Often, they are individuals who don’t have any inherent interest in
agriculture or the products being traded, other than how they can profit
from fluctuations in their prices.
So,
in this case, the farmer might end up fixing a price for his wheat in,
perhaps, three months time, by selling a futures contract on the CBOT,
typically through a broker. By doing so, he commits to deliver a set
amount of grain, of sufficient quality, to a location determined by the
exchange. He receives today’s price in return.
In
contrast, the buyer of the futures contract, who could be a trader on
the exchange floor, makes a different decision. He operates on the
premise that, at least temporarily, the farmer is wrong. If the
speculator turns out to have bet correctly, he can sell the obligation
for a profit later on. Maybe even to the baker, or to another trader,
though it doesn’t really matter who.
Typically,
both sides put up a good faith deposit, or “margin,” which
represents a small fraction of the face, or “notional” value of the
contract. In theory, this is meant to serve as protection against
default. However, it also allows both sides to assume a large commitment
without having the full value of the contract immediately on hand.
The
ebb-and-flow of prices tends to be driven by the interplay between the
two groups: those who have a direct involvement in what happens -- the
hedgers -- and those who are merely betting on which way prices are
headed -- the speculators. As long as the two camps remain somewhat in
balance, it serves as a useful mechanism for divvying up risk in an
efficient manner.
However,
once out of whack, as appears to be the case in the derivatives market,
the potential for instability expands dramatically. History suggests the
value and relevance of a market ultimately depends on those who actually
need it, not those who only seek to profit from it.
Another
other popular form of derivative is an option. Options are different
from futures and forwards in that one party has a right, rather than a
firm commitment, to initiate a transaction at some future date based on
the established terms. Typically, the option is granted by the
“writer,” the one who is obligated if called upon, in exchange for a
payment up front.
In a
sense, these types of contracts resemble traditional insurance products.
The writer of the option is like Allstate, Prudential, GEICO or any
other company issuing a life or homeowner’s policy, where the holder
ends up receiving a predetermined amount if an event takes place (e.g.,
a fire ravages the property) in exchange for paying a premium or
premiums beforehand.
But
the terms can vary widely. So can the triggering event and the action
that may be taken. A simple example of an option might involve the owner
of a parcel of land offering a prospective buyer the right to acquire
the property at a fixed price in six months time, for a relatively small
payment at the time the deal is struck. This is usually referred to as a
“call” option.
In
this case, the owner, who is writing the option, is acknowledging that
he is willing to sell the property and accept the risk that the market
value might rise above the contract or “strike” price and that he
can do nothing about it. He also faces the prospect that he may still
own the property after the agreement ends. In other words, he might find
himself in the same position as when he started, though with some extra
income for his troubles.
The
option buyer, on the other hand, is essentially locking-in the cost of
acquiring the property by making the initial premium payment, thereby
reducing the risk resulting from market gyrations while the agreement is
in effect. There are many reasons why he might want to make that
decision. Perhaps he is hopeful, but unsure, whether he will be able to
line up financing to make the purchase.
Or
maybe he believes market prices are headed higher, and wishes to have
temporary control of the property with a relatively small outlay. In
this way, options represent a form of leverage, similar in some respects
to the margin on a futures contract, where the holder can potentially
receive the upside benefit without having to pay the full cost up front.
Whatever
the reason, it is up to the option holder whether he goes ahead and
“exercises” the option. Once the premium payment is made, he is
generally under no further obligation other than to come up with the
money necessary to cover the specified contract price if he wishes to
acquire full ownership of the property.
Instead
of the underlying asset changing hands, some agreements allow for a
payment of the difference between the strike price and the market value,
depending on whether it is higher or lower and what rights the holder
has. This “cash settlement” feature is also seen in many modern
derivatives contracts, especially those involving indexes or
“events.” Stock index futures are a well known example.
Swaps
are another key feature of the derivatives market. In essence, they
involve contracts where two sides agree to exchange one or more payments
during an established period based on conditions determined at the
outset. Widely used in the credit and currency markets, they enable
counterparties to transform undesirable risks or comparative advantages
in one market into obligations that, theoretically at least, better suit
the needs of both.
One
example of this type of agreement is an interest-rate swap. That is
where, for instance, a company with an existing loan whose rate
fluctuates every six months might arrange with, say, a bank, to
eliminate that uncertainty. What happens next is that the financial
institution, for diversification or other purpose, assumes
responsibility for the varying, or floating-rate, payments, while the
borrower agrees to cover the amounts tied to a predetermined or fixed
rate of interest.
These
four categories of derivatives are by no means the end of it. Indeed, it
is safe to say that there are myriad variations, a fact which has likely
laid the groundwork for the coming unraveling. Regardless, it is worth
noting that instruments such as futures, forwards, options and swaps
have played an important role in commerce and finance. In fact,
individuals and businesses have used a wide variety of risk-transfer
methods for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years, and no doubt society
as a whole has benefited.
Without
having some way of gauging or laying off their exposure, people might
find it impossible, for example, to provide for their loved ones upon
death or to protect their homes and businesses from calamities such as
fire. It would also be very difficult for companies to evaluate or make
sizeable investments in large-scale or long-term ventures. Derivatives
can give decision-makers the flexibility to decide which risks to keep
-- and which to try and pass on or trade to others.
In
this respect, they have proved exceptionally useful. Arguably, they have
become integral to the financial lives of almost everyone, though most
people are probably unaware of this fact. Apart from their
straightforward use by investors looking to reduce risk or profit from
potential trading opportunities, various forms of synthetically-created
securities have enabled millions to enhance their economic wellbeing and
tap into the American dream.
From
educating our children to buying a place to live, from the way we manage
our credit and finances, from greasing the wheels of global trade to
overcoming the dizzying array of risks and uncertainties faced by
businesses large and small, derivatives have played a major role.
One
way in particular these instruments have helped is by facilitating a
process known as “securitization,” whereby loans, financial
instruments, and other assets are bundled together and sold to investors
as a package. This has created tremendous economy-of-scale benefits. It
has allowed individuals seeking financing say, for the purchase of a
home, to tap into a plethora of funding sources in the U.S. and around
the world, helping to lower their interest costs. It has also enabled
people to obtain products and services personalized to their needs and
risk requirements.
Many
have recognized the value of synthetically-created financial
instruments. Alan Greenspan, long-time Chairman of the Federal Reserve,
noted in 2003 that "The benefits…have far exceeded their
costs." He also said that the “growing array of derivatives and
the related application of more-sophisticated methods for measuring and
managing risks had been key factors underlying the remarkable resilience
of the banking system.”
Nonetheless,
there is a dark side. It is impossible, for instance, to discuss
derivatives without noting that these instruments, indirectly or by
virtue of their structure (e.g., options), almost invariably employ some
element of leverage (i.e., “other people’s money”). Indeed, that
has likely been a spur to their increased usage among amateur and
professional investors (and speculators) alike, especially in recent
years.
With
difficult conditions in the wake of the post-1990s stock market bubble,
historically low interest rates, and intense competition, money managers
have increasingly sought to garner more bang for their buck by using
high-octane financial instruments such as futures, options and swaps.
This
includes hedge funds, a group of operators that has come virtually out
of nowhere in the mid-1990s to aggressively oversee more than $1
trillion in capital, often geared up with borrowed funds. With inbuilt
incentives to place riskier bets than traditional old-line managers,
this crowd has discovered that derivatives have considerable appeal.
Rather than shedding risk, they have been adding to it. Indeed, many
have taken to these instruments like ducks to water, though not always
with eyes wide open.
Aside
from that, because modern financial engineering involving
synthetically-created securities has, in many respects, made it easy for
even the least creditworthy individuals to borrow money for all sorts of
purposes, derivatives have undoubtedly contributed to the breathtaking,
but ultimately very risky, expansion of credit that has occurred during
the past few decades.
Taken
together, the combination of increased leverage and heightened
risk-taking has served to stir up a potentially volatile miasma around
derivatives, especially the newer, more complex varieties. That makes
them exceptionally dangerous if not handled properly.
Conceptually,
it is not hard to grasp the basic economics of a garden-variety
derivative such as a futures contract. If the market price of wheat goes
up between the time a deal is struck and the expiration of the
agreement, the buyer wins and the seller loses. That is what is known as
a zero-sum game. Nonetheless, whatever a farmer, to use the earlier
example, might give up as a result of hedging his output is offset by
the reduced uncertainty.
But
it is an altogether different story when it comes to analyzing options,
or a portfolio of derivatives, especially those with lots of complicated
bells and whistles. In most cases, valuation and risk assessment depend
on mathematical formulas and computerized models, with many inputs
derived from estimates and past data. That is all well and good if the
tools are perfect and the history is complete.
Unfortunately,
there is little evidence that this is the case. In truth, many experts
believe the derivatives market rests on a number of very precarious
assumptions that have yet to be tested.
And
even then, the history of the derivatives market is replete with
high-profile disasters. These include the 1994 bankruptcy of Orange
County, one of California’s richest, due to naïve investments in
exotic derivatives; the 1995 failure of the 200-year old Barings Bank as
a result of unauthorized futures and options trading by a rogue
employee; the 1998 collapse of hedge fund Long Term Capital Management
on the heels of ultra-leveraged bets gone wrong; and, the ongoing
implosion at Fannie Mae, the nation’s largest mortgage lender, because
of derivative, accounting and other irregularities.
Up
until now, none of these derivative-related hurricanes has breached the
high-water levees of the U.S. and global financial systems. But as was
the case with earlier, less destructive storms in the American Gulf
Coast region, rather than decreasing the odds of a disaster, the
relative calm of the past seemed to have inspired a false sense of
security.
Indeed,
the fact that New Orleans had long been spared despite the inevitable
and persistent threat made for considerable complacency. As did the
availability of government-sponsored flood insurance and a belief that
authorities would step in and save the day if need be. Instead of
getting prepared for the worst, people did virtually the opposite: they
boosted development in flood-prone areas without thinking twice about
it.
Likewise,
many view the lack of widespread economic upheaval following earlier
derivative blow-ups as a reason to be unconcerned about the current
state of the financial system. The seemingly unprecedented intervention
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in the wake of the LTCM
collapse, as well as central bank “accommodation” after the 1987
stock market crash, have also inspired confidence that authorities will
not let things get too far out of hand if and when disaster strikes.
Unfortunately,
this sense of moral hazard has almost certainly increased the risk and
destructive potential of a catastrophic meltdown in the derivatives
market.
The
reality is, when people erect a raft of new buildings in vulnerable
locales, it generally doesn’t increase the odds that a hurricane will
strike. That is not the case with respect to risky behavior in the
synthetic securities market, however.
When
big operators take on a lot more risk than they otherwise might -- they
drive faster, perhaps, because they know their car has anti-lock brakes
-- it tends to raise the danger stakes for the system as a whole.
Millions of dollars of losses can break the bank at a few unlucky firms.
Billion -- or even trillion -- dollar failures can bring down the whole
house of cards, especially given the dense network of dependent
relationships that exists in the global financial arena. As well as the
key role that finance-related activities now play in today’s
service-oriented economy.
In
addition, while an earthquake in a major city would likely cause severe
damage and untold loss of lives, it would not necessarily lead to
aftershocks 3,000 miles away. In the modern world, however, the
“counterparty risk” factor seems to be zooming off the charts. What
that means is that a potentially unstoppable domino effect, a “cascade
of ruin,” could be set in motion if a global bank or “bulge
bracket” Wall Street firm ends up with the derivative short straw.
That
potential ripple effect has as much to do with the concentration of
exposure at large players such as banks and Wall Street derivatives
powerhouses as it has to do with the abundance of overlapping ties to
specific developments or changes in asset prices. Many credit-related
derivatives, for example, either shadow or are directly linked to
indexes that include the debt of certain large borrowers. The fact that
the scale of the exposure is obscured by the market’s lack of
transparency adds to the potential for a sudden and unexpectedly sharp
turn for the worse.
Another
point the disaster in New Orleans made clear was that having plans in
place to deal with a long-predicted event doesn’t necessarily mean
success is assured. One of the biggest holes in the emergency response
effort following Hurricane Katrina was the chaos that resulted from poor
communications and overlapping jurisdictional responsibilities.
Essentially, one hand -- of government -- did not know what the other
was doing, and no one was fully in charge, at least in the beginning.
In
the modern global financial system, where many participants are either
unregulated or are monitored by a patchwork of country or
sector-specific regulatory overseers, chances are that a
derivatives-related catastrophe will see a similar lack of coordination
that will produce a far more devastating outcome than if it was a purely
domestic affair.
It is
one thing for a central banker to summon the heads of various financial
firms into a room to sort out the mess at hedge fund LTCM, as the New
York Federal Reserve chief reportedly did in 1998. Despite the fact that
the Fed had limited statutory authority in the matter, it is not hard to
see why none of those who were asked to attend turned down the
“invitation.”
However,
if a derivatives time-bomb is set off by the failure of a large
London-based hedge fund, will a banker in the Cayman Islands, an
investor in Japan, an insurer in Germany, and a regulator in France feel
similarly inclined to respond, or even to take the lead? That is
assuming, of course, that those affected even understand what is going
on or why it may be relevant to their own interests. Overall, there
appears to be little, if any strategy in place for dealing with
cross-border financial upheaval.
What
will likely make matters worse is the fact that the derivatives market
has become mind-numbingly complex and remains extremely opaque. Few
individuals, let alone regulators, have a solid handle on the aggregate
picture, especially globally. And while there is a great deal of
activity that is transparent, such as the trading that takes place on
recognized venues like the CBOT or Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the vast
majority of deals are private, “over-the-counter” transactions that
go unreported.
Adding
further fuel to the fire has been the liberalization and globalization
of financial markets. Because of competitive pressures and the ease with
which capital flows between firms, markets and countries, activities
that used to be limited to large firms in highly regulated sectors
(e.g., banks) are being taken on board by all and sundry. Often in
locations where standards are low or oversight is lax.
Hedge
funds, insurers, corporate treasuries, the finance arms of industrial
companies, and other non-traditional players are increasingly involved
in the derivatives market. For the most part, they have less stringent
capital requirements and less of a history managing complicated
financial risks and broad credit exposure through several cycles of
economic activity than banks do.
In
sum, there are more inexperienced players taking part, more firms with
diverse -- and occasionally inadequate -- capabilities linked to each
other, and a maze of overlapping and often competing jurisdictions. This
suggests that a simple solution, or even a consensus, will be almost
impossible to find if and when the worst-case scenario does come to
pass.
Scarier
still, it is likely the disease that typically goes hand-in-hand with
disasters of the money kind will be transmitted around the world at
light speed because of modern technology and advanced communications
networks. The far-reaching epidemic that people don’t usually like to
discuss in mixed company, let alone acknowledge, when the worst
unexpectedly happens: panic and contagion. Throughout history, they have
been a recurring feature of convulsing markets and dramatic financial
crises.
When
people are calm and otherwise thinking clearly, they tend, more often
than not, to act rationally. However, when problems arise and even the
most sophisticated players become terrified of losing their jobs or
their shirts, or they are overwhelmed by the sheer scale of potential
risks they are confronted with, they frequently experience a primal
fight-or-flight response. Or even temporary paralysis -- like the
proverbial deer in the headlights.
During
many of history’s broad-scale financial upheavals, such as the period
surrounding the 1987 stock market crash and the collapse of Long Term
Capital Management, markets became momentarily transformed. Traders
stopped buying and selling and even answering phones. Money managers
froze or reacted in knee-jerk fashion. Bankers called in loans. And
regulators, for the most part, stood back and watched. All the while,
many of those who were most heavily exposed were forced to liquidate
positions at fire-sale prices.
At
those points, fear had taken over -- the kind that says “run” when
someone shouts “fire” in a crowded theater.
And,
perhaps, the kind that had people shooting and looting, or wandering
aimlessly, or cowering in stifling attics above flooded rooms, when
essential services failed and the lights went out in New Orleans in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Once
troops and emergency responders moved in, and people in the surrounding
regions and elsewhere rallied round, rationality and order returned to
that Gulf Coast city. And in the weeks that followed, many of those
affected did figure out at least some way to start picking up the pieces
and start living again.
We
weathered earlier storms in our financial system, too, though no doubt
the cost has often been considerable. The risk this time, however, is
that conditions are, and will be, more complicated and dangerous than
before. While New Orleans was a relatively self-contained locale, whose
citizens and government officials could potentially reach outside the
area for assistance, a firestorm set in motion by a derivatives debacle
is unlikely to leave many parts of the global financial system
unscathed.
It
doesn’t help that there are unsustainable imbalances in the global
economy, either. America faces record trade and budget deficits. Many
economically advanced countries around the world have aging populations
and underfunded pension systems. Real estate seems to have taken the
bubble baton from the stock market, though there are signs that the top
is already in. And the world is awash in debt and a vast sea of
open-ended obligations and contingent liabilities.
Moreover,
if history is any guide, the period of monetary tightening that began in
June 2004 will likely blow the cover off at least some shaky operations
that had been kept alive by cheap money in the wake of the post-1990s
new-era collapse. Odds are, in fact, that one of those will be the match
that lights the fuse that ultimately triggers widespread financial
turmoil.
Already
there are rumbling in the financial world, akin to the small tremors
that shake the ground ahead of a massive earthquake. In the spring of
2005, several large hedge funds reportedly lost billions of dollars on
complicated credit bets gone wrong. One firm even admitted that it had
made a substantial “miscalculation” -- which they only realized, of
course, after the fact. Given the increasingly complex nature of the
derivatives market, that refrain is likely to be heard over and over
again in future.
Certainly,
the U.S. and global economies have been remarkably resilient, especially
in recent years, and it may be a mistake to bet on the downside.
What’s more, there are those who would argue that the financial
markets have attracted the best and the brightest, and a gut-wrenching,
blood-letting debacle is in no one’s interest. Unfortunately, the odds
seem stacked against a happy ending, and the cyclical nature of
financial crises suggests it is definitely the wrong time to be thinking
like a Pollyanna.
Unfortunately,
the reality is, if it all goes horribly wrong, it will not only be Wall
Street that suffers. Main Street will, too. In the worst case, brokerage
firms and banks will shut their doors. Markets will plunge and many
investors will lose everything, Interest rates will shoot sharply
higher, taxes will rise, and parts of the economy will grind to a halt,
at least temporarily. Those seeking a mortgage, a college education, a
job, or even day-to-day sustenance may find themselves left wanting.
At a
time when many have abandoned prudence in search of profits, and where
those who are knowledgeable about the disaster-to-come in the
derivatives market are seeking to protect themselves, it is the timeless
wisdom that remains true: forewarned is forearmed.

© 2005 Michael J. Panzner
Michael
Panzner is author of The
New Laws of the Stock Market Jungle: An Insider’s Guide to
Successful Investing in a Changing World
and a 20-year veteran of the stock, bond and currency markets. He
is currently at work on a book about global financial risks.
Contact
Information
Michael
J. Panzner
P.O. Box 115
Manhasset, NY 11030
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