|
|
|
|
|
by throwaway19423
1172 days ago
|
|
You are right of course. The fed wants businesses to stop/slow down investing and only prioritize high returning projects. But since rates went up so quickly, are various sectors really prepared? E.g unsophisticated home buyers who got ARMS clear ly were not. It was shocking to see SVB make a similar mistake .. but was it really a mistake? In hindsight, if you had crappy assets (e.g. low yielding MBS), as soon as the fed started tightening you should have sold off your assets (albeit making a small loss). Are people really doing that? It seems the expectation was that rates would go down again in a year (mid 2024) so it seems people just "let it ride". I guess the equivalent argument works for a house too but transaction costs are high (and you need a place to live in the interim). Someone could have sold their house right as tightening began and bought the house back once rates stabilized. |
|
I mean, I know people did but it’s hard to figure out what they were thinking.
What SVB should have done was raise additional capital much earlier. Rates didn’t just start rising in the last year. Even if rates did start falling again they could do a dividend or stock buyback. We expect banks to be conservative.