US Economy and Globalization Part 2 of 17
By the time we met again on October 30 and 31, the hardening of the arteries or the blocking of the aorta, or whatever cardiovascular analogy you choose to describe what was afflicting the circulatory system of Learn to Trade Markets the credit markets, was no longer as severe and life threatening as it was in August. Indeed, investors had begun moving toward marking financial assets and exposures to marketpricing them according to what they might actually be bought or sold forrather than at values posited by hypothetical mathematical models.
A startling statement appeared in the Financial Times on October 26: A particularly astute market operator commented that “corporate treasurers are no longer investing in things they don’t understand.” Imagine that! Investors are coming home from la la land. To be sure, they are not out of the woods quite yet, and they have miles to go before they, and we as central bankers, sleep. But they have gone beyond suspended reality. You might say The MasterTrader E Book the credit markets have gone from the ridiculous to the subprime; the subprime and related derivatives market is the focus of angst, but the ridiculous practice of the suspension of reason in valuing all asset classes appears to be in remission, if not over.