You do realize that if a counterparty goes bankrupt and cannot pay its debts to Goldman then Goldman doesn't have to pay its debts to the counterparty, right? You can't simply look at liability ratio and assume that all of the creditors were different than all of the debtors.
That's true- you typically get right of offset, but at the same time, your individual exposure to each counterparty is going to look in the aggregate like the inverse of their market view. When the markets become very correlated as they did in September, all of your counterparties that were betting on a milder recession owed you money- and probably were in weaker financial shape. And naturally, if the same counterparty enters into an offsetting trade, you get to take that off your balance sheet.
Also, the right-of-offset can get tied up under bankruptcy protection. I would note that JP Morgan ran into trouble when it tried to bring Lehman's collateral onto its books. Creditors can wait if they think there might be a solvency issue, but if there's a liquidity crisis, you don't have time to get your collateral out of bankruptcy court.
So again, we could have been looking at a potential 50% default rate with counterparties. Do you mean to claim that there is an
immediate 90% recovery rate on those defaults AND that on top of that, Goldman could get the necessary liquidity on 95% of its entire balance sheet to meet its margin calls during a financial crisis? Smart people can disagree on stuff, but I'm inclined to be pretty skeptical about their ability to stay liquid if the crisis had played out for another two weeks.
I don't know, because I don't have a copy of their balance sheet in front of me, as I'm not a GS employee (and I'm sure that even most GS employees don't get access to that info).
Their balance sheet is public record- you can certainly discover their liability ratio pretty easily via Yahoo. Just take liabilities divided by assets (actually do that for basically all of the banks back in September) and you'll understand why we were in a lot of trouble if there was a system-wide problem with counterparty risk.
I do know that they take management of counterparty risk seriously, so I would think that a heck of a lot of their transactions ARE balanced out pretty well.
Yeah, everyone takes counterparty risk pretty seriously, now. And if GS had eliminated all counterparty risk and all other market exposures back in September, they would not have needed to report a 95% liability ratio.
I don't really think it's useful to have a discussion about "wisdom". It's one of those qualities which is virtually impossible to measure meaningfully. I like sticking to results, and I'm not sure the position of GS was as precarious as you make it out to be. They certainly weren't in a comfortable position, but no firm which was at all plugged into the markets was at that time. Did GS benefit from the intervention of the US gov't into the financial system? Undoubtedly. I just find it a bit incongruous to single them out as having received some sort of extraordinary assistance, when all the indications are that they'd actually done a better job than most of managing their risks (GS and JPM seem to be the good guys, as far as such a thing existed!)
Not true at all. Northern Trust had a huge business- actually bigger than GS- as an asset manager and was also heavily involved in the mortgage business. They were probably a little nervous back in September, but I don't think any of their creditors lost sleep. Compare that with GS.
Also, it's pretty easy to look wise when markets implode if you just didn't take part. That doesn't mean that the real market participants weren't accomplishing something good overall.
Subprime mortgages accomplished empty and dilapidated McMansions in the deserts of Arizona and California. Smart investors who focus on the fundamentals try to avoid things that will wind up that way, whether or not the price could go up in the near-term. It helps us sleep better.
Some or all of them simply got a bit carried away. We wouldn't have stock market crashes without joint stock companies, yet I doubt many people would argue that this proves the wisdom of not participating in the stock market. Overexuberance is a human failure, not a failure of any particular market instrument.
The question is whether you should participate in a bubble. Buffet basically took Berkshire Hathaway out of the market from 1970 to 1974 because he knew it was fundamentally overvalued. He also cut back from 2007 to 2009.
My view is that if you know the market is overpriced, you shouldn't buy into it on the hopes that a bigger sucker will buy your stock later. It's a dangerous and possibly immoral business model.
Thanks for the reference to the Buffett statement. However, it looks like he's saying that the market as a whole (not just financial companies) was going to suffer without some sort of government help. Doesn't seem particularly damning a statement about Goldman.
I think if you search through the news back then, he clarifies that he would never have bought into Goldman Sachs if he didn't think there would be a bailout.