Dr. Jayanthi Sankaran
Well-Known Member
Hi David,
In one of your videos covering repo's and the haircuts during the 2007 crisis, you mention that the cash borrowed appears in the Bank Balance sheet as a liability. This caused a run on the shadow banking system.
The example is a bank borrowing say $100 (the buyer of the repo) against a collateral bond from the seller of the repo (the lender). During the first half of 2007, the haircut = $0 and the cash borrowed = $100.
However, in the second half of 2007, the collateral which also included CDO's, ABS's and Corporate bonds had haircuts of 20% such that the cash borrowed by the bank = $80. This appears on the liability side as $80 which caused the bank to sell assets which led to a price lowering which led to a cycle of selling assets causing a run on the shadow banking system.
What I don't understand is that repo's are overnight borrowings and so are they shown in the Bank Balance Sheet as a liability of $80? Or are these term repos?
Thanks!
Jayanthi
In one of your videos covering repo's and the haircuts during the 2007 crisis, you mention that the cash borrowed appears in the Bank Balance sheet as a liability. This caused a run on the shadow banking system.
The example is a bank borrowing say $100 (the buyer of the repo) against a collateral bond from the seller of the repo (the lender). During the first half of 2007, the haircut = $0 and the cash borrowed = $100.
However, in the second half of 2007, the collateral which also included CDO's, ABS's and Corporate bonds had haircuts of 20% such that the cash borrowed by the bank = $80. This appears on the liability side as $80 which caused the bank to sell assets which led to a price lowering which led to a cycle of selling assets causing a run on the shadow banking system.
What I don't understand is that repo's are overnight borrowings and so are they shown in the Bank Balance Sheet as a liability of $80? Or are these term repos?
Thanks!
Jayanthi