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Speedhump wrote:Misery Called Life wrote:Am so bored and sleepy rit now. Need to be studying derivatives!
Oh, you want to be the cause of the next economic crisis eh???
Here buy my mortgage debt from my lender, I can't afford to pay it so you'll get it nice and cheap! :d
Speedhump wrote:Plus in my (and OPEC's) opinion, the unrestricted trading of oil derivatives (we're away from collateral bonds etc now, and into pure paper trading of commodities) led to the horrendous oil price spike last year, and is even starting up again now.....
Misery Called Life wrote:Speedhump wrote:Misery Called Life wrote:Am so bored and sleepy rit now. Need to be studying derivatives!
Oh, you want to be the cause of the next economic crisis eh???
Here buy my mortgage debt from my lender, I can't afford to pay it so you'll get it nice and cheap! :d
It's too simplistic to blame derivatives for the financial crash. The fault lines were in fact embedded into the system. Regulation or lack of it is cited to be the single most contributing factor to the current mess.
In accountancy I always argue that for major companies mark to market shouldn't hold that much importance.
Why did AIG require a bailout? No it wasn't because the entire company failed. One department suffered owing to certain circumstances, mainly the Lehman Brothers collapse.
It was in fact a collateral call on AIG's CDS position's that led to the failure of the banking giant. A stupid collateral call, owing to mark to market accounting. Mr. Obama the shroud man that he is, exploited the situation till it could be exploited no more. Poor employees didn't even get their bonuses, that too after 70 hour weeks.
And we all know in the finance sector bonuses are everything. Salaries tend to be quite measly.
Misery Called Life wrote:Speedhump wrote:Plus in my (and OPEC's) opinion, the unrestricted trading of oil derivatives (we're away from collateral bonds etc now, and into pure paper trading of commodities) led to the horrendous oil price spike last year, and is even starting up again now.....
Yea I read that!
And to be honest I really don't know what to make of it. I don't follow commodities all that much.
But if the OPEC really wants to keep speculation at bay, then they could always adopt a Price Band Mechanism.
I think ultimately it boils down to supply and demand. You can't write a futures contract to sell oil at 150 dollars a barrel and forever expect buyers. At that price you only get buyers if there is a supply problem.
Speedhump wrote:I think we hijacked this thread. Last post from me then!
Misery Called Life wrote:Mood:- Feeling good! Will go to study derivatives now.
GEM wrote:Scared -- I have history exam after three days and I haven't studied anything...
Leda wrote:The battle with hangover is almost won. Have to selebrate.
Just got over another birthday, so just white wine... just white wine, Leda...Speedhump wrote:Leda wrote:The battle with hangover is almost won. Have to selebrate.
With champagne!!!