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   Investment Thoughts - Beyond Finance

Ecology for bankers
There is common ground in analysing financial systems and ecosystems, especially in the need to identify conditions that dispose a system to be knocked from seeming stability into another, less happy state.

 

 

‘Tipping points’, ‘thresholds and breakpoints’, ‘regime shifts’ — all are terms that describe the flip of a complex dynamical system from one state to another. For banking and other financial institutions, the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression epitomize such an event. These days, the increasingly complicated and globally interlinked financial markets are no less immune to such system-wide (systemic) threats.

 

(...)

 

although the study of payment flows is of immediate interest to central bankers, it may miss an essential aspect of systemic risk, namely the ‘contagion dynamics’ of public perceptions and asset valuation associated with the interaction of balance-sheets (the mutual financial obligations and exposures that link companies).

 

(...)

 

It could be useful to examine the dynamic network of balance-sheets, and if possible to quantify the inter active effects of valuations, credit policies, hedging and so on among financial institutions, especially investment banks.

 

Such balance-sheet networks could be helpful in studying the effects of asset- pricing bubbles, credit crises and the poorly understood but potentially worrying effects of the current widespread use of derivatives (futures and options) and dynamic hedging by investment banks to manage risk on the fly.

 

Whatever the case, it seems that the ephemeral networks that define financial reality and global markets are a key to understanding the ecology of market robustness and its potential vulnerability to collapse.

 

 

Read more

 

 

Ecology for bankers
Robert M. May, Simon A. Levin and George Sugihara
Nature, Vol 451|21 February 2008

Nature, Vol 451|21 February 2008-Robert M. May, Simon A. Levin and George Sugihara

21.02.2009


 

Themes

 

Asia

Bonds

Bubbles and Crashes

Business Cycles
Central Banks

China

Commodities
Contrarian

Corporates

Creative Destruction
Credit Crunch

Currencies

Current Account

Deflation
Depression 

Equity
Europe
Financial Crisis
Fiscal Policy

Germany

Gloom and Doom
Gold

Government Debt

Historical Patterns

Household Debt
Inflation

Interest Rates

Japan

Market Timing

Misperceptions

Monetary Policy
Oil
Panics
Permabears
PIIGS
Predictions

Productivity
Real Estate

Seasonality

Sovereign Bonds
Systemic Risk

Switzerland

Tail Risk

Technology

Tipping Point
Trade Balance

U.S.A.
Uncertainty

Valuations

Yield