Why markets can never be made truly safe
In seeking to prevent a crisis, officials may have planted the seeds of the next one
Collateral is usually a boring affair. Valuing assets and extending credit against them is the preoccupation of the mortgage banker and the repo trader, who arranges trillions of dollars a day in repurchase agreements for very short-term government bonds. This activity is called financial plumbing for a reason: it is crucial but unsexy. And like ordinary plumbing, you hear about it only when something has gone wrong.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Collateral damage”
Finance & economics
March 25th 2023- Policymakers face two nightmares: stubborn inflation and market chaos
- How much longer will America’s regional banks hold up?
- Switzerland’s new megabank is bad news for Swiss bankers
- Why markets can never be made truly safe
- The battle for Europe’s economic soul
- America’s banks are missing hundreds of billions of dollars
From the March 25th 2023 edition
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