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by than3
1282 days ago
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I hadn't seen that, thanks. I try to always keep a healthy level of skepticism with these things. I'll have to dive into this in more detail tomorrow as it is now quite late and I spent most of my time deep diving/corroborating research from the recently released BiS report regarding the off-balance sheet, 85 trillion in USD denominated FX market swap liabilities, which supposedly are expiring in 12 months. Looked real bad, but its too early to draw any kind of sentiment/market speculation without a lot more research. This is the report I was checking out.
https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt2212h.htm |
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Make no mistake, the Fed, and other regulators, have full visibility of what banks do. Every dollar they lend, every derivative, every repo, every mortgage, everything.
With the annual CCAR exercise, banks send a huge amount of information to the Fed. Not only numbers, but documents as well. A large bank will send tens of thousands of pages in one year. And countless number of spreadsheets with lots and lots of numbers.
A lot of these numbers have to be disclosed to the public as well. This way the banks are not subject to only regulatory supervision, but to market discipline as well. That's by design. The financial regulations rules were overhauled over the last decade and a half, and this is one of its pillars, the disclosure and market discipline.
If you are curious, here's [2] the full Basel framework in all its glory. Almost 1700 pages. Of course, this is just the tip of the iceberg. The actual regulations go into the hundreds of thousands of pages.
[1] https://www.bis.org/statistics/rpfx22.htm
[2] file:///Users/viorelcosteanu/Downloads/BaselFramework.pdf