Showing posts with label risk taking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risk taking. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Winterspeak — Securitization of real estate serves no purpose

The purpose of banking is to make credit decisions by having private capital in first loss position against default. To ensure that that private capital remains in first loss position, any loan extended by an institution which has made a credit evaluation should stay on the books of that institution until the loan has matured.

This may make loans more expensive, but you're getting what you are paying for -- good credit decisions where the incentives are to lend out money when you expect it will be paid back.
Winterspeak.com
Securitization of real estate serves no purpose
Winterspeak

Do we want banks to be chiefly risk managers or risk takers?

Sunday, June 10, 2012

John Coates — The Biology of Bubble and Crash

WHAT happens to your body when you take risks? What happens to it when you make or lose money? Economics rarely asks these questions. It tends to view the assessment of financial risk as a purely intellectual affair, involving the calculation of asset returns, probabilities and allocation of capital. It is economics from the neck up.

But to this bloodless account of decision making, I want to add some guts. Advances in neuroscience and physiology have shown that when we take risk, we do a lot more than just think about it. We prepare for it physically.

Read the rest at The New York Times Sunday Review | Opinion Pages
The Biology of Bubble and Crash
by John Coates, a research fellow at Cambridge University and a former derivatives trader. This essay is adapted from his forthcoming book, The Hour Between Dog and Wolf: Risk Taking, Gut Feelings, and the Biology of Boom and Bust.
(ht Mark Thoma)

This report gives "animal spirits" and "irrational exuberance" concrete meaning in physiology and correlated psychology and behavior. These are not just cognitive biases but also physiological conditions.