Saturday, March 6, 2010

Hedging World Cup Risk

Today I was walking around Barcelona and saw this interesting time-deposit offer from Banesto (a local bank). They promise you 3%/year, but IF Spain wins the World Cup, the investor gets 4%.


Around the World Cup we see all kinds of offers like this (in Spain, the UK, and Brazil at least): buy a flat-screen TV and if Brazil wins you get another one, etc.

An interesting question is how much money does the bank expects to spend with this offer? How should  this be hedged?  Of course, based on historical probabilities they won't lose a dime, but with Spain being one the favourites, what to do to at least find an estimate? 

Supose that the bank's reinvestment rate is 4%. If Spain does not win the World Cup, they make a 1% profit. If Spain does win, they make zero. The expected return is the 1%*(Prob Win), which looks good on their side given previous history.

I wonder if they could hedge this against a portfolio of online bets held by betting houses. 

Any ideas? This might turn into a nice exam question or topic for the derivatives course.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Incredible Mistake

This story is in Spanish, but it is so good that I had to post the video here. Basically, the Romenian army wanted to help the humanitarian effort in Haiti by sending a battalion of mountain troops and 2,000 tons of supplies. However... their defense ministry messed up the names and sent everyone and everything to Tahiti instead!

I guess this is the kind of mess that we only expect to see in financial markets!

UPDATE: Just found out it was a hoax. I guess I should have done my due diligence better! :) Nice one though.

UPDATE2:  The story did appear in Spanish news, but THEY didn't do their due diligence. The story was in fact a hoax from a Romanian website. Nothing like blaming others... ;)

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Spanish Mess

Paul Krugman has written a nice summary of how Spain has reached its current (poor) economic situation.

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/09/anatomy-of-a-euromess/

The comparison with Germany is also nice. We can definitely see all the rent income earned by Germans who invested in Spanish real estate. I bet that if we look at the UK we might see the same thing.

I wonder what will happen with the deficit as this rental income (due to smaller demand for real estate) goes down.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Financial Bets

This is funny: the directors of the Indianapolis Museum of Art waged an online bet with the New Orleans Museum of Art which depends on who wins the Super Bowl this Sunday (the Indiana Colts play the New Orleans Saints). The losing city will lend a good paiting to the winning one for three months (Indianapolis waged a Turner, while New Orleans waged a Claude Lorrain).

Here is a quick suggestion for how to solve the problem with the Chinese yuan overvaluation: if the US has more medals than China during the next Summer Olympic Games, the Chinese agree to revalue their currency by say 20%. If they lose, the US government refrains from calling for a revaluation for at least 20 years...

Monday, February 1, 2010

Something to Relax the Eyes

Possibly my favorite painting:



I really should have gone to the d'Orsay last time in Paris. I'll pay the National Gallery a visit next time I go to London to see its cousin.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Myth of the American Over-spending

I enjoy seeing a statistic that changes my preconceptions about an issue. Over this decade I've read many articles about the excess spending by American consumers and how people were buying cars, flat-screen TVs, etc...

This article by Doug Henwood shows the share of consumption relative to GDP with and without medical expenses. I guess the UK picture would look completely different given the impact of NHS.



I guess this yet another good reason to improve the health-care system in the US.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Poor Haiti!

Poor people in Haiti, who seem to have been hit by every possible man-made and natural disasters know to mankind.


Hope that they can receive as much help as they sorely need and can rebuild/improve their country quickly.

For those of you who would like to help, here is a Google-page with well-known organizations that are accepting donations for the relief effort.

http://www.google.com/relief/haitiearthquake/#utm_campaign=en&utm_source=en-ha-na-us-sk&utm_medium=ha&utm_term=haiti%20support

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

So Long Holiday Feeling!

Wow, it doesn't even feel like I just came back from a very pleasant holiday break in Brazil! This is a gone be a busy couple of weeks!

This Friday there is a deadline (the 2010 FMA meeting in NYC in October), I'm finishing a revision to re-submit a paper to the RFS (fingers crossed for me!) and "own" things to three different sets of co-authors. in very orthogonal projects. Luckily - or not - one of them works right next door to me. so I can always negotiate a small extension...

I guess the alternatives to have to work a lot are much worse. Finding interesting and useful ideas were the most difficult aspect of the PhD (and always a challenge). Hope my (poor) time management skills kick in and everything gets done fast.

Anyway, dinnertime and then back to work!

Friday, January 8, 2010

Freezing Europe - From Space Edition

Most of you know about or having been feeling the effects of the cold snap hitting Europe and the US. The UK has been particularly hit by it and today the BBC showed one of the prettiest pictures I've seen so far:




I really wish that sub-orbital flights were cheap enough such that I could go take a peek of Earth from above. I wouldn't mind getting rich either... This company (based in Barcelona) has a really cool business model. I hope they succeed!

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Paul Krugman on Crises

For my (few) non-academic readers, every January Econ and Finance academics get together for the AEA/AFA meetings, the most important conference we have. (Off-topic: for anecdotes on how cheap economists are during these meetings, check this WSJ article)

This year they took place in Atlanta, where I heard was freezing relative to the nice weather in San Francisco last year. On top of presenting papers, interviewing job market candidates and going out for dinners with old friends, people also get to attend panels and luncheons with speeches by top people.

I just read Paul Krugman's summary of his Nobel luncheon speech on financial crises. It's a very good piece looking the effects of the current financial crisis relative to previous currency crisis.

Every time I think about currency crises, I think about Mark Twain's quote:  "History does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes."

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Macroeconomics Take-Home Exam: 2009 Crisis Version

During the hearings to reappoint Ben Bernanke to another term as chairman of the Federal Reserve, US senators asked many questions. The WSJ's Real Time Economics blog posted several questions from economists and Sen. David Vitter submitted them in writing. Mr. Bernanke replied and I find the  one below particularly interesting (beware, long read).

Two comments:
i) It's very nice to see public officials being held accountable and presenting their answers to questions from academic experts rather than journalists. All too often they lack the brainpower to reply and pin down inconsistencies and attempts by officials to avoid replying "tough" questions. In Brazil officials are never properly quizzed and there is no culture of being held accountable. Another thing is our list of needed improvements.

ii) The optimal size of banks is a fascinating topic. My hunch is that retail banks should be very large, benefiting from the large returns to scale they have and the relatively low risks associated with the business. On the other hand,  investment banks should not be as large, specially due to systemic risk. Unless we find a good way to measure/manage it, we'll still observe some too-big-to-fail institution making wrong bets (or their clients) in poorly-understood financial instruments. Perhaps this was one of the ideas being the Glass-Steagall Act.

Mark Thoma, University of Oregon and blogger: "What is the single, most important cause of the crisis and what s being done to prevent its reoccurrence? The proposed regulatory structure seems to take as given that large, potentially systemically important firms will exist, hence, the call for ready, on the shelf plans for the dissolution of such firms and for the authority to dissolve them. Why are large firms necessary? Would breaking them up reduce risk?"

Answer: The principal cause of the financial crisis and economic slowdown was the collapse of the global credit boom and the ensuing problems at financial institutions, triggered by the end of the housing expansion in the United States and other countries. Financial institutions have been adversely affected by the financial crisis itself, as well as by the ensuing economic downturn. This crisis did not begin with depositor runs on banks, but with investor runs on firms that financed their holdings of securities in the wholesale money markets. Much of this occurred outside of the supervisory framework currently established. An effective agenda for containing systemic risk thus requires elimination of gaps in the regulatory structure, a focus on macroprudential risks, and adjustments by all our financial regulatory agencies.
 

Supervisors in the United States and abroad are now actively reviewing prudential standards and supervisory approaches to incorporate the lessons of the crisis. For our part, the Federal Reserve is participating in a range of joint efforts to ensure that large, systemically critical financial institutions hold more and higher-quality capital, improve their risk-management practices, have more robust liquidity management, employ compensation structures that provide appropriate performance and risk-taking incentives, and deal fairly with consumers. On the supervisory front, we are taking steps to strengthen oversight and enforcement, particularly at the firm-wide level, and we are augmenting our traditional microprudential, or firm-specific, methods of oversight with a more macroprudential, or system-wide, approach that should help us better anticipate and mitigate broader threats to financial stability. 

Although regulators can do a great deal on their own to improve financial regulation and oversight, the Congress also must act to address the extremely serious problem posed by firms perceived as “too big to fail.” Legislative action is needed to create new mechanisms for oversight of the financial system as a whole. Two important elements would be to subject all systemically important financial firms to effective consolidated supervision and to establish procedures for winding down a failing, systemically critical institution to avoid seriously damaging the financial system and the economy.
 

Some observers have suggested that existing large firms should be split up into smaller, not-too big- to-fail entities in order to reduce risk. While this idea may be worth considering, policymakers should also consider that size may, in some cases, confer genuine economic benefits. For example, large firms may be better able to meet the needs of global customers. Moreover, size alone is not a sufficient indicator of systemic risk and, as history shows, smaller firms can also be involved in systemic crises. Two other important indicators of systemic risk, aside from size, are the degree to which a firm is interconnected with other financial firms and markets, and the degree to which a firm provides critical financial services. An alternative to limiting size in order to reduce risk would be to implement a more effective system of macroprudential regulation. One hallmark of such a system would be comprehensive and vigorous consolidated supervision of all systemically important financial firms. Under such a system, supervisors could, for example, prohibit firms from engaging in certain activities when those firms lack the managerial capacity and risk controls to engage in such activities safely. Congress has an important role to play in the creation of a more robust system of financial regulation, by establishing a process that would allow a failing, systemically important non-bank financial institution to be wound down in an orderly fashion, without jeopardizing financial stability. Such a resolution process would be the logical complement to the process already available to the FDIC for the resolution of banks.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Happy Holidays everyone!

I'm in Brazil for the spring break and while Europe is freezing to a halt I'd like to wish a merry Christmas and a great 2010 to all my three readers!

To warm the European ones, I went to a fantastic region in Brazil this weekend (Angra dos Reis, about 2 hours from Rio) and took the two pictures below right from my window.

Of course Photoshop and the HDR technique helped a bit, but it is as close to the definition of paradise you can get.

Cheers everyone!






Monday, December 14, 2009

How to know you are from a civilized country - Instrumental Variables proposal

I've just arrived in Brazil for the Holidays, taking one of those crowded flights with a random sample of those that left the country in search of a better life and are also returning for Christmas. I am usually ashamed about the average Brazilian immigrant's behavior and this last flight just reinforced my beliefs (or prejudices...).

During the flight, I was thinking that what really sets apart "civilized" from "non-civilized" societies (or groups of people) is how much individuals from this group respect others around them There are so many niceties simply forgotten by people that show, at least to me, a clear display of the lack of development of human beings.

I think that economists could use the intensity of clapping when a plane lands in their home country as a measure of low development. Shouting "Thank you pilot!" or "My mother loves you for landing us safely" gives your extra bonus points. From my small sample, here goes the ranking so far on a 1-10 scale:

Brazil: Average 10. My last flight: 134.53
Egypt: 9
Italy 7.5
Spain: 6.5
Portugal: 3
US: 2 (although there were many Brazilians in it).
France, Iceland, Sweden, UK: 0.

Perhaps a binary variable would work better... Anyway, suggestions accepted!

R.I.P - Paul Samuelson


Today was a sad day for Economics with the passing of Paul Samuelson.

My first textbook in college was his classic "Economics" and I'll never forget talking about "guns and butter" when talking about resource allocation.

Let his soul rest in peace.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

New Paper!

I haven't reached that stage in my career in which I can write 10 great papers per year (hope springs eternal so maybe one day...), so I'm happy whenever I have something.

"Equity Lending Markets and Ownership Structure" is joint work with Jason Sturgess (now at Georgetown) and it talks about how equity lending markets are influenced by institutional ownership structure. We are currently exploring how previous results on return predictability given short selling demand shocks are influenced by ownership measures.

Here is the link if you're interested:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1509650

Comments are more than welcome!