Greater
Global Risk Now Than At Time of LTCM
Financial Times Published:
May 7, 2007
From Ms Janet Tavakoli.
Sir, The Financial Services Authority claims that hedge fund
gearing has decreased (report, May 2) and the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York suggests that there is no close correlation
between hedge fund returns making the current situation less
alarming than in the past
(May 3). I believe it was Winston Churchill who said
we must alert somnolent authority to novel dangers; but in
this matter
authority seems complacent, and the dangers are not novel.
The
FSA produced numbers from a partial survey of hedge funds
and discussed "average" leverage, thus highlighting
the well known flaw of averages. If a swimming pool's average
depth is four feet, but the deep end of the pool is eight feet,
non-swimmers are presented with unacceptable risk. The average
would suggest non-swimmers can safely use the pool, but a drowning
man finds out the hard way that the average doesn't contain information
descriptive of the risk.
The NY Fed uses data to examine volatility
and correlations, both of which are not of much use in a crisis
when correlations
deviate from historical measures and even approach one. Indeed
even today, one should consider that hedge fund returns are anything
but independent. Hedge funds are often called "alternative" assets,
but they have not created new asset classes. Hedge funds invest
in the global markets along with other investors, albeit hedge
funds may be more creative, more illiquid and may employ more
leverage.
"
Tavakoli's law" states that if
some hedge funds' returns soar above market averages, then others
must crash
and
burn. If one accepts that passive investors are indexed and reap
average market returns, then active investors that reap extraordinary
returns above the market average are offset by active investors
who experience extraordinary losses in aggregate.
The current
situation may indeed be different from that presented by Long
Term Capital Management, but it may be even more alarming,
not less alarming. Due to the use of structured products and
derivatives, hedge funds can take on hidden leverage above and
beyond that which can be explained by polling prime brokers.
Furthermore, illiquid structured products will experience a classic
collateral crash when hedge funds try to liquidate these assets
to meet margin calls or collateral "cures".
Since 2000,
assets invested in hedge funds have more than tripled to around
$1,500bn. While on average leverage may appear manageable,
some hedge funds - Amaranth to cite a recent example - employ
high degrees of leverage. A potential source of a "great
unwind" arises from a trigger event affecting highly leveraged
hedge funds, and another potential source is systemic risk that
effects a larger cohort of hedge funds.
Many hedge funds are not
highly leveraged, and they will weather the storm. But the explosion
of hedge fund investments in illiquid
assets combined with leverage currently pose a greater risk to
the global financial markets than we experienced at the time
of the LTCM debacle.
Janet Tavakoli,
President,
Tavakoli Structured Finance,
Chicago, IL 60601, US
END OF EXCERPT
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