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by JumpCrisscross
607 days ago
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> What about--I've done this--showing your brokerage statements to American Express to get a better rate? Of course not You say "there is nothing complex about this" after conceding this loophole the size of a planet. For starters: loan with a covenant that governs further borrowing and requires you to instruct the lender if your marketable assets fall below a certain value. Not technically secured. But not relevant if you're lending tens of millions to a billionaire--plenty of firms will provide this. Next up: loan to heirs. Next up: unsecured loans at preferential rates if you store your securities with the lender. (This is already a thing.) > want to use it for ANYTHING, you pay taxes on it Swapping "use" for "usage" doesn't address the fundamental issue. |
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You wrote:
This raises a very interesting question. When institutional clients use a "repo" trading desk to pledge liquid assets for cash (or vice versa), from a legal perspective, it is not treated as a secured loan. (Yes, it is bizarre. Truly, looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck... but not a duck!)For these private bank-style loans backed by liquid equity stocks, are they considered secured or unsecured? Honestly, I don't know.