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Discussing the Archegos Capital Fallout and PayPal s Cryptocurrency Move

Discussing the Archegos Capital Fallout and PayPal s Cryptocurrency Move
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Media Malpractice

Media Malpractice   Share Trending There is a strong possibility that many of you reading Dividend Cafe this week will be completely unaware of the subject I have chosen for this week’s topic.  I do not mean you will be unfamiliar with the concept or will find the investment vocabulary tricky, or other such things that may very well happen from time to time in the Dividend Cafe.  I mean, the actual event that I am writing about may be totally foreign to you, despite the fact that it has dominated financial news for five or six days now.  There is a good reason for this if, indeed, it is true for you.  The “news” story of which I write has proven to be a really weak “news” story in my mind (not for lack of trying), but even apart from the broader news hype, it has further proven to be a weak “financial news” story, and that

The number of the week is $100 billion

updated: Apr 04 2021, 15:46 ist By Robert Burgess If you believe in the adage that a healthy economy can’t exist without a healthy financial system, then you’re in luck. It wasn’t looking good for large banks when news broke last weekend that Wall Street firms were liquidating the positions of Bill Hwang’s Archegos Capital Management after it failed to meet margin calls. Estimates of the firm’s total positions reached $100 billion. The first question that came to mind was whether this had the potential to turn into a financial crisis; early reports focused on “excessive leverage” and Archegos’s generous use of derivatives to amplify bets.

Swaps, options and other derivatives aren t just for the financial elite

Swaps, options and other derivatives aren t just for the financial elite Wall Street Sign. Credit: Ramy Majouji Sunday, April 4, 2021 9:36 AM UTC One of the biggest trends in economics over the past 40 years has been so-called “financialisation” – whereby an increasing proportion of GDP in advanced economies comes from the financial sector. This has involved the development of ever more sophisticated “financial instruments” such as swaps, options and other derivative securities. The global mobility of financial capital has also given banks and hedge funds massive piles of money with which to make leveraged bets on everything from stock prices to the fourth derivative of the volatility of South American currencies which is (I kid you not) a contract on the rate of change on the rate of change on the rate of change in currency value.

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