New Financial Instruments/Profitability of Banks
"We interrupt regular programming to announce that the United States of America has defaulted …" Part 2
By: Satyajit Das
This is the second and final part of the series.
"We interrupt regular programming to announce that the United States of America has defaulted " Part 1
By: Satyajit Das
This is the first of a two part series, looking at the solvency of the United States.
Fannie and Freddie on the rope
By: Wolfgang Münchau
When house price are expected to decline by 30%, some strange things are happening
Tales of Leverage
By: Satyajit Das
There are many ways to increase leverage in a financial transaction that is not properly understood, and not recorded in official statistics. This article gives some examples of the use of total return swaps, digital options, and credit leverage in CDOs.
17.06.2008 Bank Earnings – The "V", "U" or "L" Recovery
09.06.2008 Voodoo Banking
26.05.2008 What is to be done
12.05.2008 Nuclear De-Leveraging
29.04.2008 Global adjustment will be long and painful
10.03.2008 Central bankers cannot stop this contagion
Eurointelligence Briefing Notes
Should Central Banks target asset prices?
One of the most controversial issues in modern macroeconomics is the question whether the central should prick, target, take an interest or ignore asset price bubbles. It is a multi-faceted subject, on which no consensus has yet emerged, which is in part a reflection of much ongoing research in this area. This briefing note is in part related to the briefing note about whether money has a role to play in modern central bank. Some of the arguments are parallels, and pro-bubble-pricking advocates also tend to favour to rely on monetary aggregates, at least to some extent.
Interest in this subject was sparked by the Federal Reserve's monetary policy in the mid-to-late 1990s, a period characterised by Alan Greenspan, former governor of the Fed, as one of "irrational exuberance" as early as...








