Cover image for Systemic Liquidity Risk and Bipolar Markets : Wealth Management in Today's Macro Risk On / Risk Off Financial Environment.
Systemic Liquidity Risk and Bipolar Markets : Wealth Management in Today's Macro Risk On / Risk Off Financial Environment.
Title:
Systemic Liquidity Risk and Bipolar Markets : Wealth Management in Today's Macro Risk On / Risk Off Financial Environment.
Author:
Corcoran, Clive M.
ISBN:
9781118410752
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (365 pages)
Series:
Bloomberg (UK)
Contents:
Systemic Liquidity Risk and Bipolar Markets -- Contents -- Foreword -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 HOWHELPFUL IS THE NOTION OF TAIL RISK? -- 1.2 DICHOTOMIES AND AMBIGUITIES -- 1.3 TRUST AND SOLVENCY ARE ALL OR NOTHING DICHOTOMIES -- 1.4 THE ASYMMETRY OF PRIVATE GAIN AND PUBLIC LOSSES -- ENDNOTES -- 2 Cross-Sectional Asset Correlations -- 2.1 LESSONS FOR RISK MANAGEMENT -- 2.2 CORRELATIONS AND VOLATILITY -- 2.3 INCREASED ASSET CORRELATIONS -- 2.4 STRESS REGRESSION ANALYSIS -- 2.5 HEAT MAPS ILLUSTRATE THE BINARY NATURE OF RISK ON/RISK OFF -- ENDNOTES -- 3 The Changing Character of Financial Markets -- 3.1 MARKET RETURNS DO EXHIBIT MEMORY -- 3.2 HURST COEFFICIENT -- 3.3 HURST VALUES REACHED EXTREMES DURING 2008 -- ENDNOTES -- 4 The Flash Crash -- 4.1 MARKET MICROSTRUCTURE -- 4.2 PREDATOR PREY DYNAMICS -- 4.3 COMPUTER SIMULATIONS OF MARKET BEHAVIOR -- ENDNOTES -- 5 Detecting Mini Bubbles with the VPIN Metric -- 5.1 ADVERSE SELECTION AS THE BASIS FOR THE VPIN METHOD -- 5.2 THE ROLE OF THE JAPANESE YEN IN THE FLASH CRASH -- ENDNOTES -- 6 Foreign Exchange and the Carry Trade -- 6.1 PRIMER ON THE FOREX MARKET -- 6.2 THE FX CARRY TRADE -- 6.3 DOES THE CARRY TRADE POSE A RISK TO THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM? -- ENDNOTES -- 7 The Enigmatic Performance of the -- 7.1 THE NIKKEI 225 AND THE YIELD ON THE US TREASURY TEN-YEAR NOTE -- ENDNOTES -- 8 The Aussie/Yen Connection -- 8.1 THE ROLE OF AUSSIE/YEN IN INTER-MARKET STRATEGIES -- ENDNOTES -- 9 Precursors to Illiquidity -- 9.1 USING HEAT MAPS FOR FX AND OTHER ASSET CORRELATIONS -- ENDNOTES -- 10 Mainstream Financial Economics Groping Towards a New Paradigm -- 10.1 DISAPPEARANCE OF INCOME -- 10.2 VENDOR FINANCING -- 10.3 GLOBAL IMBALANCES AND THE MARTINWOLF THESIS -- 10.4 PROJECT EVALUATION AND THE COST OF CAPITAL -- 10.5 TOWARDS A NEW PARADIGM IN ECONOMIC THINKING -- 10.6 RATIONAL AND EFFICIENT MARKETS -- ENDNOTES.

11 Could a Eurozone Breakup Trigger Another Systemic Crisis? -- 11.1 THE EUROPEAN STABILITY MECHANISM (ESM) -- 11.2 IMPACT OF MONETARY UNION -- 11.3 THE DEBT DEFLATION TRAP IN THE EUROZONE -- 11.4 EUROBONDS -- 11.5 THE VISCERAL DIMENSION TO THE EUROZONE'S PROBLEMS -- ENDNOTES -- 12 China, Commodities, and the Global Growth Narrative -- 12.1 CHINESE CONSUMPTION OF BASE METALS -- 12.2 THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF THE RENMINBI -- ENDNOTES -- 13 Drawdowns and Tail Risk Management -- 13.1 PROTECTING AGAINST DRAWDOWNS -- 13.2 THE TAIL RISK PROTECTION BUSINESS -- 13.3 RAISING CASH AND SWITCHING TO SAFE HAVEN ASSETS -- 13.4 IMPLEMENTING DRAWDOWN PROTECTION STRATEGIES -- 13.5 TAIL RISK PROTECTION FROM OUTRIGHT FX POSITIONS -- ENDNOTES -- 14 Liquidity and Maturity Transformation -- 14.1 MONEY MARKET SPREADS -- 14.2 LIQUIDITY -- 14.3 REPO FINANCING AS THE SAFEST FORM OF INTERVAL CONFIDENCE -- 14.4 TOWARDS NEW MODELS OF NETWORK OR SYSTEMIC RISK -- 14.5 THE SHADOWBANKING SYSTEM AND LIQUIDITY RISK -- 14.6 MATURITY TRANSFORMATION IS SPANNING AN INTERVAL -- ENDNOTES -- 15 Emotional Finance and Interval Confidence -- 15.1 CONSTRUCTIVE AMBIGUITY -- 15.2 DOUBLE BINDS AND EMOTIONAL FINANCE -- 15.3 PATIENCE AND INVESTMENT DECISION MAKING -- ENDNOTES -- 16 Adjusting to More Correlated Financial Markets -- 16.1 SOME FINAL MUSINGS ON MARKETS AND MAYHEM -- ENDNOTES -- Appendix -- Index.
Abstract:
"Clive does a great job of outlining the changes in investor behaviour in financial markets and volatility as a result of the financial crisis which started in 2007. He highlights clearly the changes in investor behaviour as a result of the skewing caused by central bank intervention and some of the breakdowns in the traditional risk on/risk off behaviour of previous eras. He also looks at how the policy response to the current crisis has led to a change in the concept of what we used to call safe haven assets in this new era of (ZIRP) zero interest rate policy and argues quite correctly that for capitalism to work properly the only solution to the current problems manifesting themselves around the world is for policymakers to make the hard decisions and let bankrupt institutions fail, and for bondholders to bear the consequences of their ultimately erroneous investment decisions."-Michael Hewson, Senior Market Analyst, MSTA, CFTe CMC Markets UK PLC "Clive Corcoran has opened a door to the future of investment management.  With this book he has made the fat tailed Black Swan of the Great Financial Crisis into an understandable creature of logic.  He shows with objective analytical detail, yet with subjective clarity, how the assumptions of economic theory have failed to perceive the essential dynamics of markets.  This dynamism involves the rapid variation of correlations among asset classes, leading to repeated incidents of potential financial disasters, not just in the Great Financial Crisis but in more recent everyday market activity.  Clive shows with examples from current markets exactly the type of behavior which indicates the potential for dramatic market discontinuities such as the Flash Crash of 2010 and how the factors that make such events possible can be monitored in real time.  This is a book that will be an eye opener for hedge

fund and investment managers, institutional asset managers and retail investors."-John B. Lounsbury Ph.D. CFP, Managing Editor, Econintersect.com / Senior Contributor, TheStreet.com / Author, Seeking Alpha "Clive Corcoran's book is a rarity in finance. Most criticisms of conventional approaches to finance go no further than criticism. Corcoran's book also contains practical ideas about how to manage a portfolio in this most chaotic of markets."-Professor Steve Keen, Author, Debunking Economics: The Naked Emperor Dethroned "Clive Corcoran provides compelling empirical evidence that 'market risk' should not be disassociated from 'liquidity risk.' The reader may be surprised to learn that many market risk models used by institutional investors may not give sufficient attention to the probability of a rise in liquidity premiums. Through a myriad of real examples, Corcoran makes the case that, in a 'risk-on/risk-off' environment, those models may be insufficient. The financial system that has emerged after the 2008 crisis may benefit from a broader toolkit.  Rather than relying on any single approach, Corcoran presents many interesting analyses that may signal when it is time to load or unload risk."-Marcos López de Prado, Ph.D., Global Quantitative Research, Tudor Investment Corporation CIFT, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: