@interfluidity@econtwi**er.net Profile picture
Sep 25, 2020 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Listening to the conversation between @csissoko and @DavidBeckworth on the evolution of banking and money markets, which is of course amazing. podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/mac…

Some highlights for me: 1/
@csissoko points out the obvious-once-you-think-about-it fact that in a world where institutional money is collateralized, borrowed liquidity (i.e. repo), a change in interest rates amounts to a sharp change in the quantitative money supply… 2/
and immediate in that it does not depend on a reequilibration of investment decisions, which would unfold over time, that is implicit in imagined "hurdle rate" channels. (Interest rate rises, equivalently bond price drops, mechanically destroy collateral value.) 3/
@cssisoko emphasizes that lots of money in a macroeconomic sense is almost entirely submerged, invisible, unmeasurable, bc it takes the form of *off-balance-sheet* contingent liabilities, like committed lines of bank credit that don't show up on most stmts until they r tapped. 4/
@csissoko & @DavidBeckworth go thru an account whereby a regulatory tweak at the Fed (charging for intraday credit) nudges instit'ns into using repo as money, + an incrementally increasing role by JP Morgan in triparty repo, plus TBTF, turns JPM into a "de facto central bank". 5/
@csissoko, i think it's fair to say, sees the way our money markets have evolved, placing leveraged collateral at the center of "money" made of margined loans and contingent liabilities ("derivatives") as unfortunate… 6/
a deviation from a prior system where trust, mutual surveillance, and internalized responsibility for outcomes vouchsafed security and stability rather than mechanical and deceptively "objective" collateral values. 7/
She traces the evolution of this not-so-great system to three developments:

i) adoption of TBTF in the early 1970s US, even for a fraudulent bank; 8/
ii) a financial-deregulatory arms race between the US and Britain (forcing an end to the joint-and-severally-liable partnership model for US investment banks); and 9/
iii) legal innovations privileging and expediting recovery of collateral on margined loans and derivatives, including firm normalization of derivatives with this privileged recovery, where previously derivative counterparties faced legal uncertainties under antigambling laws. 10/
@DavidBeckworth asks whether, given the sensitivity of institutional money to collateral prices, wouldn't it be better for the US Treasury to issue predominantly short, to avoid instability due to the sensitivity of the effective money supply to interest rates? 11/
Thank goodness (my editorializing), @csissoko pushes back against that. Issuance of long-term debt is an important tool for preserving sovereign power against the vicissitudes of financiers. 12/
Instead, @csissoko suggests regulatory changes that would strongly favor short-term debt as repo collateral over longer-term, more volatile securities. 13/
(I wonder of the effect of this wouldn't be just to make long-term debt very expensive to issue, as collateral demand dries up, pushing the Treasury back to issuing mostly short as @DavidBeckworth suggested and @csissoko resisted.) 14/
The podcast ends with first an acknowledgment that the current system is very unstable and, for now, the current system relies almost entirely on the US Federal Reserve to stabilize it, and then a discussion of reforms that might make it more inherently stable. 15/
"Stability" in this conversation (not surprisingly on @DavidBeckworth's Macro Musings) is very macro- focused, how can we avoid disruptive crises and shocks? 16/
From other contexts, I know that @csissoko has useful critiques that more micro- focused, on qualitative repercussions of our evolution to this brave new collateral-centric financial system. 17/
Both @csissoko and @DavidBeckworth are great. If you are interested in this stuff at all, give it a listen. /fin

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with @interfluidity@econtwi**er.net

@interfluidity@econtwi**er.net Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @interfluidity

Sep 9, 2022
@scottsantens @aaronfhamlin @StevenHill1776 I think this piece is off about a couple of things. At a normative level, it presumes that it’s wrong somehow if a 55% 1st preference doesn’t win. But what if the other 45% detest that candidate, and there’s a third candidate 80% would be okay with? 1/
@scottsantens @aaronfhamlin @StevenHill1776 I’d argue the health of our polity is better served (in single winner elections) by the voting system that chooses the consensus candidate rather than a polarizer who can command a small majority. 2/
@scottsantens @aaronfhamlin @StevenHill1776 strategic voting (“bullet voting” for approval voting) is indeed a problem. but it is also a problem for ranked choice voting, where it often makes sense to support the candidate whose other supporters would favor the shittiest second-choice, lest a victory over that… 3/
Read 8 tweets
Mar 2, 2022
I see a lot of blame of Russians for complicity—they should have checked their vicious ruler long ago. Maybe, though in a complicity olympics we all have a very great deal to answer for. 1/
But going forward, we want Russians NOT to rally behind Putin as their country collapses out of modernity. We want to them to know there is a world community that would welcome them under a political order that lives in peace with its neighbors. 2/
“Why do we need a world if Russia is not in it?” Putin famously asked, signaling his willingness to destroy the world if his idea of Russia is sufficiently threatened. But we all need a world, and we need one with Russia in it. 3/
Read 5 tweets
Jan 12, 2022
A way to understand it is that, under US antitrust, it’s dangerous for participants in concentrated industries to restrict “ordinary” supply, but nothing prevents them from designing *inflexible* supply. i/

re @glastris washingtonmonthly.com/2022/01/12/pre…
Inflexible supply has two desirable characteristics:

(1) it’s cheaper and narrowly more “efficient” to arrange, reducing costs and increasing profit in ordinary times; and

(2) it offers firms a convenience yield in the form of pricing power during spikes in demand. ii/
When there are spikes in demand, the structure of production forces the very supply restrictions that an antitrust regulator would otherwise attack. You get thrown by circumstance into the briar patch of the old-school profiteering US antitrust still plainly forbids… iii/
Read 8 tweets
Jan 4, 2022
.@MattBruenig suggests a very direct form of competition policy: when an industry is concentrated, have the state buy and manage one of the oligopolists in the public interest. peoplespolicyproject.org/2022/01/04/why…

i/
Two concerns immediately spring to mind:

(1) How do you set the price of the acquisition? (The premium demanded over prior-to-government-interest market cap will be very high if you just let the sellers name their price.)

ii/
(2) As an institutional matter, how should such a firm be managed, so that it neither behaves as a pure profit maximizer (which would just continue the oligopoly squeeze) nor is captured by one stakeholder (industry peers, vendors, customers) at the expense of others?

iii/
Read 4 tweets
Jan 1, 2022
When demand increases, two things typically both happen: quantities supplied increase and price increases. There is a name in economics for the quantitive relationship between these two effects: "price elasticity of supply". 1/
A good "infinitely" elastically supplied would see no price change at all in response to an increase in demand. All of the effect would be absorbed by an increase in quantity supplied. 2/
A good completely inelastically supplied would simply be price-rationed. In response to an increase in demand, no additional units would be produced at all, the fixed quantity supplied would just be allocated to the highest bidders, pushing all response into price. 3/
Read 13 tweets
Dec 4, 2021
there’s a sense in which Donald Trump’s administration was the best thing that could happen to the professional-managerial class that most loathed him. he drew all kinds of fire that otherwise would turn towards them. 1/
i just listened to @LRCkcrw, and (on COVID stuff) it might have been Rush Limbaugh talking, the way all three of (“left”) @ebruenig (“right”) @DouthatNYT and (“center”) @jbarro used the term “bureaucrats”. castro.fm/episode/4N02rT 2/
i found this particularly striking with respect to @jbarro, who five years ago, in the wake of Trump’s election, became a pretty full-throated defender of elites and deference to elite guidance. 3/
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(