Quote from sjfan:
What does cds have anything to do with ruining the economy? It's no different from a equity call or put ...
And what you think is an insurance contract doesn't matter. It's not.
Yes but I'm not concerned with speculators - no biggie if they get burned.Quote from jonbig04:
you dont have to HOLD the bonds to buy CDS on them![]()
Quote from GTS:
Yes but I'm not concerned with speculators - no biggie if they get burned.
The issue is that folks that did hedge their positions by buying CDS's will be blowing out of the water if someone pulls the rug out from under them and declares the CDS's void - leaving them unhedged.
Quote from dve250:
This helps my argument that the CDSs are illegal insurance:
Former staff member of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Michael Greenberger describes a credit swap in brief: "A credit default swap is a contract between two people, one of whom is giving insurance to the other that he will be paid in the event that a financial institution, or a financial instrument, fails. It is an insurance contract, but they've been very careful not to call it that because if it were insurance, it would be regulated. So they use a magic substitute word called a 'swap,' which by virtue of federal law is deregulated."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_default_swap
Anyone care to dispute this?
Quote from simpleton:
That means that a whole host of derivatives can be considered insurance. I buy a put to protect me on the downside to my stock. I enter into a dividend swap to protect my dividend on a stock. I do a variance swap to protect me against volatility...etc. There is no end to this line of thinking. And clearly you don't know much if anything about how this market works.
Quote from dve250:
What you describe is hedging and not insurance. CDSs are written to specifically protect against default of the bonds. Your nickname explains where you're comming from with that argument though, I understand.