A technically-oriented trading blog sprinkled with various (ir)relevant and/or (ir)reverent musings (formerly known as Musings of a Trader)
April 30, 2009
Sell in May or Go Away?
April 24, 2009
Non-Nationalization as a Way to Increase Control
Sorry About That
April 22, 2009
Icelandic for Depression
April 21, 2009
Brooks on the Georgetown Speech
Rather, it's because we believe that preemptive government takeovers are likely to end up costing taxpayers even more in the end, and because it's more likely to undermine than create confidence.
Governments should practice the same principle as doctors: First, do no harm. So rest assured, we will do whatever is necessary to get credit flowing again, but we will do so in ways that minimize risks to taxpayers and to the broader economy.
April 19, 2009
Moment of Truth for TLT?
April 18, 2009
What Deleveraging?
TYO: 10-Year Treasury Bear 3x Shares
TMV: 30-Year Treasury Bear 3x Shares
April 17, 2009
The Bank of England on the Financial Crisis
Beware the Green Shoots
And cautions us against the "real risk that all the talk of green shoots and glimmers will breed a dangerous complacency."
April 11, 2009
Fears of 1934
April 10, 2009
Gold: The Moment of Truth
April 9, 2009
Various Musings on Gold
April 7, 2009
XHB: A Finely-Tuned Market Seismograph?
April 3, 2009
Quick Circular Thinking about the Plan
April 2, 2009
The Critique of the Critique
The authors of the piece remind us of the two-dimensional aspect of any solution to the financial crisis: the economics part and the politics part:
As the liberal economist of record, Krugman’s critique of PPIP received a lot of press much of it uncritical. I think a little more critical reading is warranted, that his cry for nationalization now misses something crucial. Namely, he has a blind spot for the political and implementation risks and challenges. As John Heilemann wrote in the New York Magazine, “Getting the economics right may be devilishly difficult—but the politics are even trickier, and just as crucial.”
Krugman, in his critique, gets to the crux of why he thinks the PPIP (Public-Private Investment Program) is less than ideal:
[It] tr[ies] to fix the banks by driving up the price of a whole asset class. Most of those assets are NOT held by the probably insolvent banks. So it’s a diffuse, inefficient way of tackling the problem — a taxpayer subsidy to basically anyone holding toxic waste legacy assets, rather than a direct infusion of funds where needed. Contrast it with what the FDIC does when it moves in: it doesn’t shower money on banks in general, hoping that this will solve the problem; it seizes banks that are in trouble, and recapitalizes them.