Unsurprisingly there has been a lot of comment on my post "The Great Repricing." Since the original post Congress has now passed the rescue bill and there are some signs of stability appearing in the banking world (viz Wells Fargo’s unsupported bid for Wachovia); however the credit markets remain all but closed and I believe banks will need to recapitalize their balance sheets beyond the sale of bad assets under the TARP legislation.

Below I reply to one commentator who requested specific responses in bold.

Positiveskew said:

Dear Tom

I would love to know your view on these (and probably rank them in order of being the worst culprit in the genesis of this mess)

a. Too-low-for-too-long interest rates. Actor: Alan Greenspan

Not fatal in itself. With developments like the Yen carry trade and huge foreign dollar reserves it could be argued that conventional monetary policy no longer could cool the economy.

b. Sleeping on watch as publicly traded banks built up ginormous leverages. Actor: Chris Cox of the SEC.
It has been too long since I have practiced securities law to give you a definitive view here (bank lawyers invited to comment). My sense is that this is more an issue of broker dealers not being subject to the same regulatory regime as (say) bank holding companies. Thus the SEC lacked some of the tools that the Fed or FDIC possessed.

c. Utter dereliction of duty by the Credit Rating Agencies in correctly assessing risk of the CDO/CDS/MBS instruments. Actors: Moody’s S&P Fitch (some of these are competitors to Thomson Reuters’ business so I will understand should you want to refrain from commenting)
I just think these services were totally outgunned by investment banks. The systemic bias of credit ratings paid by the issuer or sponsoring bank also contributed to the problem.

d. The toxic derivatives being OTC rather than Exchange Traded. Actors: Capital Market policy makers .
I don’t think the OTC trading of instruments such as CDS was fatal in and of itself. As long as there is an effective settlement system as is the case in most FX trading OTC markets alone are not to blame.