American Tie

Bye Bye American Tie,

Drove your balance sheet to the ground ,while aiming high

And good old boys were taking risky bets, why

Saying this will be the day I will fly

This will be the day I fly

 

https://i0.wp.com/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/8b/Lehman_Brothers.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/8b/Lehman_Brothers.jpg

 

 

It happened in a land far away,

American suits and ties went to play,

With exotic mortgages and collateral held sway.

The jesters they were, they passed securities

Bought and Sold ,each one in piece.

There was nobody to stop the band,

And music played ,and the players danced.

Then I got the news the day the music died.

I started singing –

 

Bye Bye American Tie,

Drove your balance sheet to the ground ,while aiming high

And good old boys were taking risky bets, why

Saying this will be the day I will fly

This will be the day I fly

 

My hands were clenched in fists of rage,

Bad news from front to last page,

I was going to lose my mortgage,

And no one could tell me why.

The day the music died.

Sub Prime Crisis: A Risk Analyst view from the Trenches

Pricing of Future Securities and Derivatives Based on Mortgage Assets are all about projecting delinquency rates , and it depends on the analysts to be either conservative in projecting a high rate or optimistic in a low rate.

Based on these projections , the assets are priced, packed up in SPV’s or collateralized, and options priced. Now Senior Management gets a big bonus if they sell off their balance sheet like this, and business is able to use cash generated to create higher loans….. so they lean on the analyst to Continue reading “Sub Prime Crisis: A Risk Analyst view from the Trenches”

Tip:Tracking Companies

You can create Google Alerts at http://www.google.com/alerts/

with certain keywords to track certain keywords (like for

1) advertising campaigns (also use Google Trends)

2) tracking companies

3) domains (like Tyres in Poland)

Use Gmail older rules or MS outlook rules to direct the emails to certain folders to avoid flooding your inbox.

BANKING 2.0|India and the Internet

Well for customers who are India bound, and are shopping for loans face an acute shortage of options. Most online banks claim to be award winning in terms of design. Unfortunately, most of them act as lead generators and nothing more. I have worked with one of them myself. Even third party loan comparers end up NOT making a commitment on the final loan and amount, because of 

1) lack of credit assurance in India due to established credit ratings for individuals.

CIBIL is considered too young (< 5 years) and is the only credit rating agency.

2) lack of exposure to latest tools available globally online. 

As the saying goes, Why risk being innovative , if you are already having respectable market share, and are meeting your annual banking bonus in India’s financial services sector – booming (till 2007) and now rapidly growing (despite the central bank’s rate raises).

Indian customers remain the most under leveraged in the world, have very low delienquency rates, have Continue reading “BANKING 2.0|India and the Internet”

OT :The Last Lecture

Here is a great inspirational speech , by a legendary computer science Professor Randy Pausch, who helped make Sims for Electronic Arts. He gave this lecture after being diagnosed of terminal cancer, and its wonderful viewing for anyone. Its inspirational, and its about fulfilling your childhood dreams.It kind of reminded be of the short story “The Last Leaf ” , by O Henry .

Carnegie Mellon Professor Randy Pausch (Oct. 23, 1960 – July 25, 2008) gave his last lecture at the university Sept. 18, 2007, before a packed McConomy Auditorium

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji5_MqicxSo

If you want to read it ,it’s at –
[ad#square]

http://download.srv.cs.cmu.edu/~pausch/Randy/pauschlastlecturetranscript.pdf

The economics of Terrorism :An attempted case study

I am writing this three days after the seventh year anniversary of September 11 , and one day after 5 blasts struck my city Delhi. This is an attempted case study, trying to be objective on a topic that is anything but. It is written more from an observor perspective .

Economists (or would be) try and quantify anything. The price of losing an hand, versus a leg is quantified in insurance circles. This case study deals with the macro flows of economic value in terror related incidents.

A brief political note-

1)Terrorism has no permanent friend or enemy– No cause in fact except for hatred.This is similar to nation stats and balance of power dynamics.

An example is how the US helped Iraq in 1980’s during Iraq -Iran and Al Quaeda (among others) in the Afghanistan conflict. In 1991 , it had to attack Iraq in defence of it’s interests, and it marked a clean break with Al Quaeda which wanted a purely Islamic fight (without any so called infidels in Holy land, even though they had been taking the help of them for the past half decade). Another known example is Sikh terrorists recieving help from Islamic dominated dictatorship in 1980’s as they tried to create a seperate state in Punjab (a part of India). This is despite the fact that Sikhism owes its present form to atrocities by the pan Islamic Mughal emperor Aurnagzeb, and in 1947 ,Sikh and Muslim extremists savagely rioted in the wake of India’s independence.

2) One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter– Even after September 11, this is true . The only difference is covert State support is no longer admissible. Examples are Syrian help to Iraq terrorists, Iranian help to Hezbollah,Pakistani help (during 1990’s )_ to Taliban , and now covert help to Kashmiri terrorists and Afghani Taliban. They draw their self justification from Indian terrorists /Freedom fighters in British Indian, American sabouteurs in the War of Independence, Israeli actions in British Palestine.

3) Just like war, terrorism is politics by another means.

4) Terrorism thrives on over retaliation.

Now for the more quantitative note –

1) Terrorism belives in small steps and economic damages are as important to them as actual damage-

If you over protect your people, the terrorists still win.

Terrorists unlike popular belief is more about losing face, than about actual damages.

So if an expected terror attack is likely to cost USD 1 Billion $ in primary and 20 USD Billion $ in secondary damage (including loss of consumer sentiment) ,

by building in fixed cost infrastructure of say 50 Billion USd $ or embarking on a war (in Lebanon, Iraq ) or by show of strength (Like India placing whole army on border after Pakistani militants attacked its Parliament)…

The terrorists win.

  • By damaging the economy ,
  • or by placing a hundred thousand people out of re possessed mortgages 
  • or by forcing people to change lifestyles (like taking off your shoes before getting on a flight because of a single shoe bomb attack)

 

(to be continued)……….