Previous Page  16 / 40 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 16 / 40 Next Page
Page Background

16

|

THE INVESTOR

25TH ANNIVERSARY

It started in the US housing market.When the derivatives market ran

into trouble, the contagion spread worldwide.Ten years later,we’re still

recovering from the financial hangover...

RASHCR

t has been nearly a decade since the world

succumbed to its worst economic crisis in the

post-war era.The crisis, which began in 2007

and had its most devastating phase in 2008–9

when large parts of theWestern banking

system had to be rescued by governments,

still casts a long shadow.

It can be seen in the fact that the official

interest rates set by the major central banks

are still at rock-bottom, near-zero levels.

It can be seen in the fact that those central

banks resorted to‘unconventional’monetary

measures, including quantitative easing (QE),

some of which has yet to be reversed.And

it can be seen in disappointing post-crisis

growth rates, which have had political and

economic ramifications. Some would even argue that there is a

direct line from the crisis to the UK’s Brexit vote and the election

of President Donald Trump in the US.

The causes of the crisis were many and varied. Its immediate

cause was that poorly understood derivatives linked to the US

housing market, and in particular to‘subprime’mortgages , had

spread around the global financial system.On one calculation at

the time, a single $135,000 US subprime mortgage supported

as much as $5 billion of derivatives

1

.These instruments were

held by banks around the world in the belief that they were safe,

AAA-rated investments, offering a decent return.The‘search for

yield’, as investors sought out above-average returns in an era of

low interest rates, drove the banks into instruments which, on the

face of it, were inherently risky but which were given a clean bill

of health by the ratings agencies.

When the US housing market slump began in 2006, these

instruments were found not to beAAA after all, but no better than

junk status.This sparked panic, particularly in 2008.The banking

systemwas suddenly sitting on huge losses.The problemwas

spread so widely that normal banking activity dried up – banks

could not trust others they were dealing with. Governments had

no choice but to step in.

The subprime issue was not the only cause of the crisis; there

had been a prolonged rise in private-sector debt in the preceding

years.Other contributory factors were economic imbalances –

some countries were running large balance of payments deficits

and some had equally large surpluses – and what became known

as the‘global savings glut’ (produced by high savings in countries

such as China), which put downward pressure on interest rates.

This is why, perhaps, the crisis has had such a long legacy.The

banking hangover, during which bank balance sheets had to be

repaired and capital buffers built up, combined with the fiscal

hangover that resulted, in part, from bank rescues but mainly from

the deep recessions thatWestern economies suffered in 2008–9.

BY DAVID SMITH

THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS