Sub-prime regulation

Why did no one do anything?

September 01, 2008


The Financial Stability Forum's report has a long list of recommendations. But one question goes noticeably unanswered

In a presentation on the sub-prime crisis to The Economic Club of New York on April 8 2008, Paul Volcker, previously Chairman of the Federal Reserve, emphasised systemic issues, highlighting five breakdowns in the past 25 years. He emphasised "warning enough that something rather basic is amiss." Here is the warning:

"Until the New York crisis [in the seventies], the [US] had been free from any sense of financial crisis for more than 40 years. In contrast, today's financial crisis is the culmination, as I count them, of at least five serious breakdowns of systemic significance in the past 25 years – on average one every five years. Warning enough that something rather basic is amiss. The sheer complexity, opaqueness and the systemic risks embedded in the new markets – complexities and risks little-understood even by most of those with management responsibilities – has enormously complicated both official and private...




It’s not as simple as waving a cheque for HK$1 million and saying: ‘I want some shares’

Teresa Ma, of Linklaters, on retail investor restrictions for Rusal's listing

Web seminars

US and EU hybrid capital
February 3 2010
The future of hybrids, in a popular discussion between IFLR, Morrison & Foerster and Calyon

Latest Issue

March 2010

Basel III: The revenge of Basel
New Basel rules are affecting everyone differently. In the UK banks are worried about grandfathering, in Germany the headache is hybrids and in the US it's risk structures. Meanwhile Japan has some tips and Hong Kong structured its first hybrid [more]