The decade which began in July 1997 saw a global financial system that
generated more wealth for more people for a much longer period of time than any other in
financial history.
But ten years later, in a seemingly sudden move, there was a flight of capital
and a collapse of the global banking system. What went wrong? Did anyone see it coming?
What lessons can we learn from this?
And is it really all that bad?
Fooled Again is not a history book, but it looks at the history of recent
financial management, mismanagement, extraordinary risk and greed, flows of global capital
and international toxic balance sheets to identity the key lessons to be learned from the
global financial crisis.
Taking a considered and long-term view, Meyrick Chapman gives an immensely
readable and insightful view of what really happened and shows us why not all crises are
bad, and why the events of 2008 and 2009 may ultimately benefit us.
A History graduate from Cambridge, Meyrick Chapman began his career in
finance in 1982 on the trading desk of a commodity house. He moved to investment banking
in the late 1980s and worked as a proprietary trader for several years at Banker Trust. In
1997 he joined then Swiss Banking Corporation (later to become UBS) framing strategy in
international bond markets. It was in this role that he gained first hand experience of
the colossal international capital flows that eventually led to the financial crisis which
are investigated in "Fooled Again". He has contributed to policy think tanks,
industry magazines and the general financial press as well as speaking at many
international conferences. He is married with two children and lives in West London
Table of Contents
Introduction: Financial disruption has pervaded the last decade, not
just the period 2007/8; the background of recent financial history will be considered, its
influence on current disruption and the lessons it delivers. First, the constants of all
banking crises are established. Then the unique circumstances that led to the current
crisis. The book argues the bubbles and busts of 1997-2007 may be the costs that accompany
the benefits of historic expansion of global trade, technological change and freedom that
followed the Cold War.
Section 1: Constants
Chapter 1 – What happens in all financial crises and why don’t we see them
coming? Few borrowers or bankers set out to lose money, why do banking crises
happen? There are a number of constants to all banking crises including short-termism,
leverage, banking competition, inability/ unwillingness to measure accurately credit
expansion and real estate booms. The results of banking crises also frequently look
similar – collateral problems, illiquidity and insolvency and economic downturn. The key
to understanding banking crises is not just to identify the constants but to acknowledge
the impact of the unique circumstances that preceded the bust. There is little indication
that policy makers have yet acknowledged the circumstances that led to the crisis.
Section 2: Specific causes and specific lessons
While some of the credit conditions and the immediate effects of banking crises are
broadly similar, the 2007/8 banking crisis was the result of specific and positive global
changes in trade and technology together with a number of policy errors. Although the
constants can be easily identified, the unique circumstances of the current banking crisis
may reveal the limits of reform and may mean amelioration of bubbles and busts is
unlikely.
Chapter 2 - Lessons for policy & regulation
This chapter will look at the behaviour of central banks and regulators through the
past decade. It will examine Alan Greenspan’s approach to financial emergencies &
innovation/ productivity which then took up the theme of housing growth in the aftermath
of the dot com bust. European Central Bank and Bank of England. In background was the
lesson of the Bank of Japan of how not to ‘prick a bubble’ and how not to react to a
banking crisis. There will be five subsections:
a. Bank of Japan and pricking the Japanese bubble
b. Basel I & II, rating agencies – regulatory innovation
c. Greenspan and dot-com
d. Lessons from the collapse and bail out of Long-Term capital Management LTCM
e. European Central Bank and Bank of England
Chapter 3 – Lessons from globalisation
Lessons from globalisation: growth of reserve management as a protection and then a
trade tool. Stemming from previous lessons learnt in the Asian crisis of 1997/98. Japanese
export of savings due to low returns within Japan. Four subsections:
a. Asian Crisis and the lessons learnt by China
b. Reserve management (hedging an uncertain future)
c. Japanese savings and the lessons from the Other Asian Crisis
d. Large Current Account surpluses created through globalisation often nationalise
citizens’ savings and withhold the reward due to workers.
Chapter 4 – Lessons of financial innovation
A feature of many banking crises is a combination of financial innovation and
deregulation; this chapter looks at the unparalleled financial innovation that grew out of
the work of Merton, Black and Scholes. The chapter identifies innovations that add
efficiency and innovations that avoid regulatory control; both were necessary for the
2007/8 credit crisis. Six subsections:
a. Financial innovation: innovations of efficiency and avoidance
b. Merton, derivative laureate
c. Banks and financial innovation – the products and how they work
d. Hedge funds – competition for banks
e. ‘We’re all bankers (hedge funds?) now’, interaction with technology
f. Misinterpretation of historic data sets, limited history of data
Chapter 5 – Lessons of technological innovation
Technological innovation was necessary for both globalisation and financial innovation.
This chapter describes the impact of technology on financial processes and the radical
adjustments in understanding that may still be needed as a result.
a. Aid in creating financial engineering, derivatives
b. Greenspan’s faith in productivity/ American ascendancy
c. Communication technology – violation of ‘law of large numbers’
d. Increased economic efficiency
e. The impact of the internet – ‘its too early to tell!’
Chapter 6 – Lessons from real estate, housing books and mortgages. Three
subsections
a. The ‘conspiracy of mortgage credit’ – politics, housing and profit in America
and Europe
b. American subprime, agencies – yield demand from investors in a low return world
c. International housing booms in Spain, Ireland and United Kingdom – structural
similarities, financial links
Section 3: The costs and benefits of financial crises. Are there benefits in
disruption as well as costs?
Chapter 7 - Costs and benefits from recent banking crises
Sweden & Nordic banking crisis of 1991 grew out of the collapse of the Soviet Union
and a burst of economic and social optimism that followed. The Nordic banking crisis
therefore stemmed from a social advance which encouraged unconstrained credit expansion
and subsequent collapse. The aftermath led to high unemployment and many bankruptcies. The
crisis eventually led to a new era of economic expansion and integration, including the
development of Nokia and the integration of Sweden and Finland into the EU in 1995.
Thailand 1997 and the Asian crisis also grew out of radical global liberalisation
following the end of the Cold War. The consequences of the Asian crisis, however, left
longer lasting damage and fewer obvious lasting benefits compared to the Nordic
experience. One reason was the focus of emerging economies shifted to China, the major
beneficiary of globalisation. There were long term benefits however, in change to the
political structures, expansion of Small and Medium sized business. 1997 Constitution
meant both houses were directly elected for first time. Many human rights are explicitly
acknowledged. Most open and corruption free elections in 2001 but subsequent reverses
followed.
Japan 2003, the long post-war rise in Japanese economic growth and living standards
culminated in the Bubble Economy and subsequent prolonged banking crisis. Unlike the
Nordic experience, Japan failed to find a new role in the world. The country lost its lead
in technology and saw its advantages dissipated. Without thoroughgoing reform, the legacy
of Japan’s financial system encouraged a flight of capital that continues today.
Chapter 8 – What can be good about bubbles and bursts?
Information technology and globalisation formed the background of not one but two
bubbles; the dot-com bubble of 1999-2001 and the housing bubble of 2003-2006. Increased
efficiency and globalisation of trade, reduction in trade barriers lead to an increase in
overall human welfare. There are often political advances associated with the bubble
period, or the aftermath. The speed with which the credit bubble unwound may be a sign of
increased efficiency of markets in processing information, not a sign of increased
inefficiency. A bubble may be rational and the disruption of the bust part of the
long-term adjustment to new technology, trade or social conditions. A bubble may also
reveal the measurement problems associated with any period of novel innovation.
Chapter 9 – The inevitable costs of disruption
If disruption is inevitable, the costs of disruption are also inevitable and serious.
Costs include local loss of jobs, perhaps loss of entire industries. Contractual trust
within a society, which is the foundation of successful society, may be permanently
damaged.
Conclusion - Lessons for the future
How may global financial and trade arrangements be changed by the financial collapse of
2007/8? What does it say about our reliance on markets to allocate resources? We may have
to live with the disruption and uncertainty inherent in market behaviour. The alternatives
may be much worse. What does the banking crisis require from Barak Obama?
296 pages, Paperback