“Get a grip on financial regulation ! Hedge funds, short
selling, spread betting, leveraged buyouts must be curtailed. Regulate them
hard ! Better, ban them !”
-
Reader’s posting (“PCMyrs, Tonbridge”) on the BBC’s G20 weblog.
Where to start ? With all due
respect to PCMyrs, the financial
crisis was not caused by the activities of hedge funds – a disparate and fast
dwindling band of asset managers in any case following myriad trading approaches.
It was not caused by short selling, either. For every short seller, there has
to be a buyer taking the other side of the trade. One might as well suggest
banning equity purchases, on the basis that they involve somebody else selling
stock. This crisis was not caused by spread betting. It was not even caused by
leveraged buyouts – although the recent rapid impoverishment of private equity
fund holders was. If one can identify just one proximate cause of the Panic of
2007 - ..?, it was the uncontrolled growth of credit nurtured by weak
regulators, fanatical central bankers and conflicted politicians, and
supercharged by banks and, yes, greedy homeowners and investors. To suggest
that ineffectual financial regulation should be replaced by the effective closure
of free markets is akin to saying that because swimmers occasionally drown,
water should be made illegal. Meanwhile, the G20 summit, in time honoured
fashion, gave rise to all sorts of ludicrously unrealistic hopes of some
“co-ordinated solution” by the participants. And workers in the City were
obliged to co-exist, briefly, with a handful of yobs comfortably outnumbered
but nevertheless goaded on by press photographers.
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