The Fed Is Buying Mortgage-Backed Securities? Hoisted from Comments
Paul Krugman Recommends Floyd Norris Today

Today Is a Great Day in Finance!

Today is a great day in finance! That is, it is a great intellectual day for those of us who are friends of and committed to the intellectual project of Shleifer and Vishny, for today one of their theories is made flesh, and stomps about Wall Street like Godzilla:

Andrei Shleifer and Robert W. Vishny (1997), "The Limits of Arbitrage," Journal of Finance, 52:1, pp. 35-55. Abstract: Textbook arbitrage in financial markets requires no capital and entails no risk. In reality, almost all arbitrage requires capital, and is typically risky. Moreover, professional arbitrage is conducted by a relatively small number of highly specialized investors using other people's capital. Such professional arbitrage has a number of interesting implications for security pricing, including the possibility that arbitrage becomes ineffective in extreme circumstances, when prices diverge far from fundamental values. The model also suggests where anomalies in financial markets are likely to appear, and why arbitrage fails to eliminate them...

Yes, today we have reached the limits to arbitrage: most of the people who spend their lives trying to buy low and sell high using other people's money and leverage have given up extending their positions (and so pushing prices back toward normal-time fundamentals), and are hunkered down simply hoping to survive the next month.

Whether this will have macroeconomic implications is unclear, but I would bet not. The Fed and the ECB are pegging the prices of liquid securities, and injecting as much in the way or safe, liquid, short-term assets into the system as needed to keep that so. They are also in the market in other ways. And the nightmare scenarios always involved a simultaneous collapse in the dollar and in consumer demand, and a Fed that couldn't decide whether to fight the inflation coming from rising import prices or the unemployment coming from collapsing consumer spending. Neither of those show any signs of happening.

Yet.

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=shleifer+vishny+limits+to+arbitrage&num=100&hl=en&c2coff=1&safe=off&client=safari&rls=en-us&pwst=1&um=1&oi=scholart

Comments