June 27, 2007

There’s just been a change of shackles.

Sir, Martin Wolf writes so intelligently about the “Risks and rewards of today’s unshackled global finance”, June 27, that I almost feel ashamed about raising the question of whether the global finance really has been unshackled, as I believe that it has only had a change of shackles.

We have shackled much of the market to the opinions of some few credit rating agencies; we have shackled the market into the belief that risks can actually be derivated away and will not reappear elsewhere; and we have shackled the financial reward structure to something more akin to the time-share industry, rewarding those that are in fact restructuring the long term realities of our portfolios with success fees paid out immediately, based on the vendors own valuation models, and which most certainly do not bear much relation to our true long term results; and finally, the mother of all the shackles, the mind-boggling financial positions that have been built up around the world without really knowing how to get out of them, in an orderly way.