by zerohedge.com
Back in 2002 Warren Buffet famously proclaimed that derivatives were ‘financial weapons of mass destruction’ (FWMDs). Time has proven this view to be correct. As The Amphora Report's John Butler
notes, it is difficult to imagine that the US housing and general
global credit bubble of 2004-07 could have formed without the widespread
use of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and various other
products of early 21st century financial engineering. But to paraphrase
those who oppose gun control, "FWMDs don’t cause crises, people do."
But then who, exactly, does? And why? And can so-called 'liquidity
regulation' prevent the next crisis? To answer these questions, John
takes a closer look at proposed liquidity regulation as a response to
the growing use of 'collateral transformation' (a topic often discussed here): the latest, greatest FWMD in the arsenal.
Submitted by John Butler of The Amphora Report,
Back in 2006, as the debate was raging whether or not the US had a
mortgage credit and housing bubble, I had an ongoing, related exchange
with the Chief US Economist of a large US investment bank. It had to do
with what is now commonly referred to as the ‘shadow banking system’.
While the debate was somewhat arcane in its specifics, it
boiled down to whether the additional financial market liquidity created
through the use of securities repo and other forms of collateralized
lending were destabilizing the financial system.