Hend Abuenein
Active Member
Hi David,
I hope you're feeling good today.
According to Duffie, if a dealer bank is in a repo agreement, and is denied renewal, then counterparty may sell the colateralized securities. If the sale does not cover the position then the dealer counterparty may face litigation for improper disposal of assets. And if no government party steps in as a lender of last resort, then they would have no where to turn to. "They could reinvest their cash in new repo, but other counterparties are unlikely to take these positions if dealer's solvency is questioned"
This is from Schweser's notes on Duffie, emphasis mine. I'm sorry I have no means of referring to the original reading, but I assume structure of concepts in it is deliberate and conforming.
1- In the emboldened sentence, would you please explain, what improper disposal of assets did the dealer commit?
2- In red, if the dealer bank is the party indebted in the repo agreement, and agreement ends without renewal and in the manner explained, then reinvestment opportunities for their cash would be the last they'd worry about. So how does this relate to the case?
3- Even in the case of a dealer with questionable solvency, if they wanted to invest cash in repos, then why wouldn't counterparties take the position (as said in red)? If a netting clause is embedded in the agreement, there could be chance for these counterparties to gain from the dealer's weakness (adverse selection?)
Thanks
I hope you're feeling good today.
According to Duffie, if a dealer bank is in a repo agreement, and is denied renewal, then counterparty may sell the colateralized securities. If the sale does not cover the position then the dealer counterparty may face litigation for improper disposal of assets. And if no government party steps in as a lender of last resort, then they would have no where to turn to. "They could reinvest their cash in new repo, but other counterparties are unlikely to take these positions if dealer's solvency is questioned"
This is from Schweser's notes on Duffie, emphasis mine. I'm sorry I have no means of referring to the original reading, but I assume structure of concepts in it is deliberate and conforming.
1- In the emboldened sentence, would you please explain, what improper disposal of assets did the dealer commit?
2- In red, if the dealer bank is the party indebted in the repo agreement, and agreement ends without renewal and in the manner explained, then reinvestment opportunities for their cash would be the last they'd worry about. So how does this relate to the case?
3- Even in the case of a dealer with questionable solvency, if they wanted to invest cash in repos, then why wouldn't counterparties take the position (as said in red)? If a netting clause is embedded in the agreement, there could be chance for these counterparties to gain from the dealer's weakness (adverse selection?)
Thanks
