IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

53
Barter 3.0 21 st Century Credit Clearing & Beyond Chris Cook IRTA Convention Ocho Rios 14 September 2012

description

 

Transcript of IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Page 1: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Barter 3.0

21st Century Credit Clearing & Beyond

Chris Cook

IRTA Convention Ocho Rios

14 September 2012

Page 2: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

“21st Century problems cannot be solved with 20th Century solutions”.

Page 3: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 1.0 – decentralised & disconnected

Page 4: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 1.0 – physical market presence

Page 5: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 2.0 - centralised & connected

Page 6: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 2.0 - presence via intermediaries

Page 7: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 3.0 - decentralised & connected

Page 8: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 3.0 - network presence

Page 9: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Market 2.0 reached Twin Peaks

Page 10: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Peak Credit - financial demand on people

Page 11: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Peak Resources - demand on finite resources

Page 12: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Peak Credit – intermediary Banks create credit pyramids on their bases of Capital

Credit

Capital

Page 13: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Banks outsourced credit risk

Page 14: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Freeing Capital to support more credit creation

Page 15: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Totally – securitisation and sale of debt to 'shadow bank' investors

Page 16: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Temporarily – Credit Derivatives (CDS - a time-limited guarantee)

Page 17: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Partially – using credit insurance from insurers such as AIG

Page 18: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Radioactive cocktails of all three, like CDOs, structured finance and so on

Page 19: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

The Result was a bigger Credit Pyramid than Banks alone could sustain…

Investor Capital

Credit

BankCapital

Page 20: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

…and an opaque 'shadow banking system' of Investors holding sliced and diced risk

Investor Capital

Credit

BankCapital

Page 21: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

This pyramid of Credit funded the Mother of all Bubbles in US property prices….

Page 22: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

…and servicing this credit finally exceeded the financial capacity of the US population

Page 23: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Maybe the end of cheap oil spiked the bubble?

Page 24: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Peak Credit – was the point when the Property Bubble began to deflate

Page 25: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

But by now no-one knew where the Risk was

Investor Capital

Credit

BankCapital

Page 26: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Banks started to think, “if this is what our balance sheet looks like…..”

Page 27: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

“…what does everyone else’s look like?”

Page 28: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

The problem is not shortage of money - liquidity

Page 29: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

It is shortage of Capital - solvency

Page 30: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Solvency of Banks is one aspect

Capital

Credit

Page 31: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

The other aspect is the solvency of populations

Page 32: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

And a secular decline of purchasing power

Page 33: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Loans which cannot be paid, will not be paid

Page 34: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Non-performing loans drain money out of the system...

Page 35: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

...threatening a deflationary spiral...

Page 36: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

....which requires periodic transfusions

Page 37: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

...to avoid Depression

Page 38: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Quantitative Easing – increases quantity of money and prevents deflation

Page 39: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

This dilutes the value of money, and causes inflation of financial asset prices

Page 40: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Money will only inflate retail prices if lent or spent into circulation

Page 41: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

But at the Zero Bound of 0% dollar interest rates strange things happen

Page 42: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Investors buy anything but dollars whether it carries a return or not

Page 43: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Investors buy Structured Products from Banks and Units in Exchange Traded Funds

Page 44: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

The motive is Fear: investors aim to avoid loss, not to make speculative transaction

profit

Page 45: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Financial demand – not consumption – has caused correlated commodity bubbles

Page 46: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Markets have suffered a cardiac arrest

Page 47: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

So Investors have actually created the very inflation they seek to avoid

Page 48: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Financing - short term investment in creation of new assets......

Page 49: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

....and trade credit necessary for the circulation of goods and services

Page 50: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

Funding – long term investment in productive assets

Page 51: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

“21st Century problems cannot be solved with 20th Century solutions”.

Page 52: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

In fact, the answers lie prior to the 18th Century.........

Page 53: IRTA Conference - Barter 3.0 Intro

…..and in a Flight to Simplicity