TheEconomistFebruary12th 2022 Finance&economics 63
marketbonds.Thesedynamicscontribut
edtothepressureonliquidityintheTrea
surymarketsinMarch2020.
Finally,thinkaboutthesettlementlay
ers.Inthepast,banksoftensettledcom
plextradeslikederivativecontractsorin
terestrateswapsbilaterally.Butduringthe
financialcrisisthismeantthattheycould
only seethe tradestheyhad witheach
bank,notthefullpicture.Eachhadnoidea
whetherthereweremitigating(orexacer
bating)trades withothers. Fearful their
counterparts were insolvent, banks
stoppedlendingtoeachother.
Internationalregulatorsdecidedtotry
tofixtheseissuesbyforcingmorederiva
tives trading through central clearing
houses,whichsettletradesbetweena wide
rangeofmembers.Positionsaretranspar
entandnettedoff.Tojoina clearinghouse
a membermustpostan“initialmargin”in
caseitdefaultsonitstrades,andthatmar
gincanclimbifmarketsmoveagainstit.
Therearenowa handfulofmajorclearing
housesworldwideincludinglchinLon
don, which clears most interestrate
swaps;iceinAtlanta,whichsettlescredit
defaultswaps;andthedtccinNewYork,
whichclearsandsettlesAmericanshares.
Insumthesechangeshavereducedthe
roleofbanks:theyownandintermediate
lessthaneverbefore,whilesettlementis
now carried out by centralised institu
tions.Inmanywaysthisseemslikeanim
provementovertheoldsystem,inwhich
banks whose failure could rock entire
economieswerehighlyleveragedandex
posed to swings in asset values. But it
comeswithitsownpotentialperils.
Oneriskisthatalthoughleveragehas
falleninbanks,ithasgrowninsomenon
banks,frominsurers to hedge funds.A
starkillustrationofthiswastheblowupof
ArchegosCapitalManagement,a previous
lylowprofilefamilyoffice,inMarch2021.
Thecasealsoshowedthatbankscanre
maindangerouslyexposedevenwhenitis
nonbankstakingthecraziestrisks.Arche
gos’scollapsecausedbanks—mostlythose
thathadserveditasprimebrokers—more
than$10bnoflosses.
Howmightthishightech,banklight
financialsystemfareunderseverestress?
Someinsightcan bedrawnfromrecent
mishaps.In2019,astheFedcutitshold
ingsofTreasurybonds,interestratesinthe
overnightrepurchasemarket,wherebanks
and investorsswap Treasuriesfor cash,
spikedashighas10%.InMarch 2020 the
Treasurymarketwentintospasmswhena
floodofsellers,spookedbyilliquidityelse
whereanddesperateforcash,alltriedto
offload bonds at once. Marketwatchers
like Mohamed ElErian, chief economic
adviser atAllianz, aninsurer,think the
shortsqueezeinGameStopwipedasmuch
as5%offthes&p 500 ashedgefundswith
openshortpositionswereforcedtodelev
eragetheirportfolios.
InthefirsttwocasestheFedultimately
savedthedaybybuyingassetsandcreating
liquidity. DuringtheGameStopsagathe
clearingsystemimposedsuchhighcapital
callsonRobinhoodandotherbrokerages
thattheywereforcedtosuspendtrading,
haltingthesqueeze.Hadit beenallowedto
continueitcouldconceivablyhavebank
ruptedenoughfunds,andcausedthemto
fail todeliver enoughGameStopshares,
thattheretailbrokerageswouldhavebeen
forcedtobuytherequiredsharesatany
price.Thatcouldhavecausedthemtogo
bust,too.
Itispossibletoimaginesuchanevent
causinghavoc.Insteadofretailtradersand
otherinvestorsbuyingthedip,ashasbeen
their habit, markets continue to slide.
Movesarebigandwildbecausemarket
makingcapacityisreduced.Margincalls
goouttoa slewofhedgefunds,someof
whichfailtomeetthembecausetheyare
moreleveragedthananyoneanticipated.
Bondandequityfundssufferoverwhelm
ingoutflows.Tomeetredemptions,man
agers sell their most liquid assets, like
Treasuries or bluechip stocks, causing
yieldstojumpandequitiestofallfurther.
Retailinvestorsusetheirbrokerageappsto
baleoutoftheirinvestments,too.
Evenifthisdoesnottroublethebanks
much,suchaneventcouldupsetthewider
economy.“Ownershiphaswidenedsignif
icantly,”saysMrElErian.“Thatisa good
thinglongterm,butintheshorttermit
mightamplifyhouseholdfinancialinsecu
rity.Peoplewithlessincomeandlessofa
wealthbuffernowhavea greaterpropor
tionofwealthsubjecttovolatility.”
Insomewaysthiswouldmarka return
toform.Inthe1990speoplewouldgoout
shoppingonthebackofwigglesintheNas
daq, because they felt suddenly richer.
Thatconnectionseemstohavereturned,
especiallyformovesincryptocurrencies
andpopularstocks.
In extremis, volatile markets could
promptbankruptciesofenoughleveraged
investorsorfundstowipeouta memberof
a clearinghouse—perhapsa smaller,weak
erbankorinsurancefund—whichmight
inturnwipeouttheclearinghouse’sde
faultfund.Thiswouldsendmargincalls
aroundallofthebanks.Ifthey,weakened
bythesamedefaultsthatfelledtheother
member,failedtomeetthese,theclearing
house itself could be jeopardised. Paul
Tucker,aformerdeputygovernorofthe
BankofEngland,haswrittenthata clear
inghousethatcouldnotwithstanda mem
ber’sdefaultcouldbea “devastatingmech
anismfortransmittingdistressacrossthe
financialsystem”.
Bothpedalsatonce
This scenario is speculative fiction. At
somepointcentralbankerswouldstepin.
Theadvantageofmarketbasedfinanceis
thatinterveningbybuyingassetsisoften
enoughtoquelldysfunction.Butit ishard
erforcentralbankerstointerveneiftheir
financialstabilityobjectivesandinflation
mandatesarepullingthemindifferentdi
rections,astheywouldbeatpresentwith
inflationwell abovetarget in many ad
vancedeconomies.“You’dbesortofstep
pingonthebrakewhiletryingtokeepone
footontheaccelerator,”saysSirJon.“It’s
notimpossiblebutit couldbedifficult.”
Thebigvulnerabilityofthenewfinan
cialsystemisthatchaoscanbeselffulfill
ing:moreparticipantsareexposedtomar
ketswings,andthoseswingshavebecome
potentiallymoreviolent.Thebanksthem
selvesarecertainlymuchmoreresilient
thantheywerebeforetheglobalfinancial
crisis.Yetitisdifficulttoknowwhether
thehightech,marketbasedfinancialsys
temthathasbeencreatedissturdierthan
themore bankbasedsystemof 15 years
ago.Thosestillinfortheridemaynothave
towaitlongtofindout.n
Stopthiscorrection,I wanttogetoff
Paper gains
United States, household net worth as % of GDP
Source: Federal Reserve
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