RedPhoenixxx wrote:
I have a good mate who's a banker for HSBC. He's been telling me for 3 weeks that he's been selling lots of CDS on Greece defaulting. According to him, that's a relatively new trend, since CDS are usually for private firms. What this means in practice, and maybe Smash will scorn me for my poor economic literacy skills, is that people basically "bet" on Greece defaulting on its huge debt. The more investors bet on Greece defaulting, the more the interest Greece has on its debt goes up, making it harder for Greece to repay its debt, which in turn heightens the chance of Greece defaulting. It's a vicious cycle, one that was applied to banks and financial institutions during the crisis, and which is called "short-selling".
The linked article didn't mention short selling specifically, but it's clear enough to see what's going on. First off, unless the laws in Greece are significantly different, every single short position on something (whether in a stock, bond, or commodity market), must be matched with an equivalent "long" position. You're selling something at todays price, with the promise to buy it down the line for a lower price. Someone else has to agree to buy it today at the higher price and someone else has to agree to sell it at the lower price in order for the numbers to work. In theory, the net effect on the market from doing this should be zero. However, there are examples of large volumes of calls for shorts to create a crash (similarly, a whole lot of trades in the other direction can artificially raise the value).
Bond markets are trickier than stock or commodity markets because it's not the value of the thing that is at issue, but the relative interest and exchange rates. Same principles apply though. However, the government itself may take an interest in keeping those rates at certain levels, which means it might take the long position simply to stave off a short term fluxuation. This is kinda like eating your own limbs to prevent starvation, but in economic terms, it works in the short term (with some negatives in the long term of course). It does create a condition where private citizens can choose to take a short position and drive the economy into the dirt though...
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Isn't that "wrong"? Shouldn't "short-selling" be banned? I'm struggling to think of waht positive purpose this kind of financial transaction serves.
In principle, no. However, governments and central banking institutions need to be aware of the ramifications of this and account for it. Unfortunately, it's one of those "in for a penny" sort of deals. The broader practice of short selling isn't a bad one (and some would argue is necessary for market liquidity). It's those occasional really tricky situations which can cause problems though...
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Secondly, isn't a bit rich for these firms who had to be bailed-out by governments to now make money on betting against those very governments? Is it just me, or is this whole system just completely fucked-up?
Yes. Which is why *how* you bail out banks is as important as actually doing it. A government should take pains to make sure that the risk they are putting themselves into by doing so doesn't outweigh the risk of harm they are attempting to avoid. Unfortunately, when times are good, we tend to forget this, and saddle governments with all sorts of assumed risks in order to protect our fortunes, and those things bite us in the rear when things go bad.
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Finally, what do you guys think of the
Tobin tax? Do people even talk about it in the US?
I think the idea causes as much or more harm as it prevents. It'll mute profits on currency trading (and currency trading as a whole) during "good times", while focusing such on just the extreme rate differences in "bad times". It effectively raises the bar for profits in the currency markets, focusing every single trading dollar (or whatever) into the most unstable markets, thus making them worse. In short, it wont stop the kinds of problems it's designed to stop (and may even make them worse), but it'll create blockages in legitimate currency trading by making it less profitable. Kind of a lose/lose, without much upside.