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cover of episode How Banks Turned Into Giant Synthetic Hedge Funds

How Banks Turned Into Giant Synthetic Hedge Funds

2025/2/21
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Elham Saeidinezhad
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Elham Saeidinezhad: 我认为硅谷银行的倒闭并非简单的风险管理失误,而是银行试图转型为合成对冲基金的典型案例。他们利用利率互换等工具复制对冲基金的固定收益套利策略,而非传统的风险规避策略。这体现在他们进出利率互换的时机以及对收益率曲线的预测上。此外,他们还通过提供资本抽调信贷额度,试图成为私募股权投资的合成有限合伙人,以获得更高的回报。这种行为并非源于无能,而是他们试图将对冲基金的策略融入银行的传统业务模式。然而,由于受到监管和资本要求的限制,他们缺乏灵活性和时间,最终导致失败。 我认为,监管机构应该改变视角,从另类投资基金的商业模式和产业组织的角度来评估银行的行为,而不是仅仅将其视为传统银行。如果银行不想做银行,监管机构应该改变自身,创造一个更安全的环境,而不是限制银行的行为。 SVB 的案例并非个例,它反映了银行商业模式的转变趋势。越来越多的银行正在尝试采用类似的策略,监管机构需要适应这种变化。 Tracy Alloway: 我们讨论了银行是否在对冲或交易,以及他们是否试图建立类似于对冲基金或私募股权结构的抵押品以获得更高的回报。SVB 的案例是否具有普遍性?即使没有利率互换问题,SVB 的债券投资组合也会遭受巨大损失,他们也误判了存款基础。这些都是银行的重大失败。 我们还讨论了监管问题,如果银行不想做银行,我们该如何阻止它们?Elham 指出,如果银行正在转向合成对冲基金模式,那么监管机构的首要任务是改变自身,创造更安全的环境,而不是简单地限制银行的行为。 Joe Weisenthal: 我长期以来一直认为 SVB 是一家不错的银行,他们非常认真地对待自己的业务。然而,他们也犯了很多错误,误判了存款基础的波动性,并且可能缺乏像大多数银行那样的传统贷款机会。 在硅谷,银行可能并不仅仅想做一家银行,他们也希望获得类似于股权的潜在收益。SVB 的案例虽然特殊,但它反映了银行系统中存在的张力:银行不想再仅仅做银行了,他们正在寻找替代方案,这些方案通常存在于另类投资领域。SVB 的倒闭并非简单的个案,它预示着银行商业模式的转变。

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This chapter explores Elham Saeidinezhad's perspective on Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), arguing that its activities resembled those of a hedge fund rather than a traditional bank. The discussion centers on SVB's off-balance-sheet and on-balance-sheet operations, analyzing their risk management strategies and comparing them to those of a hedge fund.
  • SVB engaged in activities similar to a hedge fund, termed 'synthetic hedge fund' activities.
  • These activities involved both on-balance-sheet and off-balance-sheet operations.
  • SVB's interest rate swap positions were analyzed to determine if they were hedging or trading activities.
  • The timing of entering and exiting these positions aligned more with a hedge fund's strategy than a bank's risk management approach.

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Hey there, Odd Lots listeners. It's Tracy Alloway. And Joe Wiesenthal. We are very excited to announce that Odd Lots is going to Washington. That's right. For the first time, we are going to do a live public Odd Lots recording in our nation's capital. That's going to be March 12th in Washington, D.C. at the Miracle Theater. And guests will be announced in the coming days. But in the meantime, you can find a ticket link at Bloomberg.com slash Odd Lots.

Bloomberg Audio Studios. Podcasts. Radio. News. Hello and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots podcast. I'm Joe Weisenthal. And I'm Tracy Allaway. Tracy, remember SVB? I vaguely remember something happening with a bank called Silicon Valley Bank.

Here's actually sort of something I've been wondering about is like, okay, there was this moment where suddenly people got anxious about regional banks and stuff like that. You know, we did episodes like, how should we reform banking? And should banking be semi-public? And all this stuff. But like nothing happened in the wake of it, right? No. And in fact, I mean, the Basel endgame stuff seems to be pretty much off the table at this point. Oh, yeah. What happened?

Actually, I haven't been following that. What's happening with that? I don't think it's happening. Michael Barr has like, he's left, hasn't he? So, I mean, it seems like there's not going to be a big change on that front. I will also say, like, one of the interesting things when it comes to bank regulation is there was a 2018 change

where I think the Trump administration made it easier for regional banks to do some potentially riskier stuff. And the argument there was that regional banks should be treated differently to large banks. They should be able to do certain things, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I guess you could argue that that might have fed into some of the SVB drama as well.

Actually, it's good that we're talking about this because when we talk about financial markets these days, like so much of it is about tech in particular. But if you go back and look at a chart of KRE, the regional bank ETF, that is another one that was just a straight line up on

November 5th. And there's a widespread expectation and I think pretty well founded that the Trump administration is going to have a much more sort of liberal attitude towards financial market regulation than the last administration. And so we shouldn't go too long with, you know, take our eye off the ball of financial regulatory issues, because also if history is any guide, like the next thing that happens, like we'll get no warning of it. It'll just happen one day. Yeah. Also, I love talking about banks.

Like, let's just do it for bank purposes. Okay, well, I'm very excited about this episode. It's a guest I've actually wanted to have on for a very long time. We're going to be speaking with Elham Sayedinejad. She's a term assistant professor of economics at Barnard College at Columbia, as well as an adjunct professor at NYU, and also the author of a recent paper sort of revisiting the collapse of SVB and POSG.

applying a new lens to it. The paper is called Banks as Synthetic Hedge Funds. So Elham, thank you so much for coming on Odd Lots. Thank you so much for having me. I'm very happy to be here. Absolutely. I'm not used to this phrase or this term synthetic hedge funds. I can sort of take a stab in my mind of what it means. But what does this term synthetic hedge funds mean?

A synthetic hedge fund is a type of activity and rather than being a specific type of firm, and this is when a non-hedge fund wants to replicate the activities of a hedge fund and therefore get the same type of return. And it is about the replication, or it's about the replication of the return and risk of a hedge fund without being an actual hedge fund. So this is when we call an institution doing what we call a synthetic hedge fund type of activity.

Tracy, I already like this conversation because normally we talk about shadow banks, right? And so the idea that there's banks inside regulated institutions and then other non-banks sort of replicate their activity. And it feels like we're looking through the other end of the telescope here talking about...

hedge funds being replicated inside regulated institutions. Yeah, it's replication all the way down. But OK, talk to us about how SVB fits into the category of synthetic hedge funds, because I think that'll help us understand exactly what's going on.

So basically, SVP fits in this category from two different perspectives. And one type of activity is actually being generated through the unbalanced sheet operation, and the other one is being generated through off-balance sheet operation. So I want to start with the off-balance sheet operation, and then I will continue the conversation to discuss what SVP has done in the balance sheet as well.

When it comes to the off-balance sheet operation, it is like the way SPB have used interest rate swap replicates what a hedge fund does in order to conduct a fixed income arbitrage strategy rather than what a bank does in order to protect itself against interest rate risk.

So to be more specific, what do I mean by that? Like when you try to kind of like match the activities of the SVB risk managers with the narratives of the CFO of the SVB, we see that the timing of entering and exiting the interest rates tool by SVP really replicates what a hedge fund would do in order to kind of like exploit the so-called mispricing in the bond market.

And that mispricing in the bond market would generate this so-called like arbitrage opportunity that a hedge fund wants to naturally exploit. So I want to start with what happened to the SVB in order to decide to exit the interest rate swap positions.

So when you look at like the timing of the exit, it just doesn't make sense. If you think of SVB as a bank that wants to actually hedge itself against interest rate movements, but if you think of it as a hedge fund who has a

entered this particular position of having a long position in the US Treasuries and a short position in interest rates swap because it was actually thinking that the swap rate, which is the difference between the swap spread, which is the difference between the swap rate and the US Treasury rate is too narrow.

And like the hedge fund was predicting that this spread is going to widen in the future. But at some point it realizes that that prediction was wrong and the swap spread is not actually going to widen. And in order to minimize the losses, it tried to kind of like exceed that particular position sooner rather than later. This is

the narrative that the SVB CFO was kind of like offering to the rest of us, that they tried to minimize losses and that's why they exceeded the interest rates to our position, which again matches with what the very same CFO and very same type of like people from the SVP group were telling us about their prediction about the shape of the yield curve, which informs

such a strategy, but it does not align with what a typical bank risk manager would do if it wanted to actually protect itself against interest rate risk because it was holding very long-term U.S. Treasury securities.

So in short, when it comes to the off-balance sheet operation, the timing of entering and exiting the swap positions and the reason the SVB has actually conducted both operations matched with their understanding of what the yield curve should be and what the yield curve is rather than what the interest rate risks are. And they wanted to protect themselves against those type of risks.

So if you want to understand it from the traditional bank risk management, this doesn't make sense. If you want to understand it through a hedge fund strategy that want to actually exploit mispricing in the bond market and then realizes that that mispricing was mistake, that estimation of a mispricing was mistake, then it does make sense to do what SVB did.

At the same time, when it comes to the unbalanced operations, when we look at the asset side of the SVP, there is this item in the asset side, which I think we should explore more, and we haven't done so yet. And that's what we call the subscription line or a capital call line of credit, which is

Something that I think is growing in the commercial banking world and in terms of the economics of this credit line is a very unusual type of bank credit. I just want to ask a question on the swap spreads. So I remember this came up a lot when the Volcker rule was coming into being. But a reality of the way banks operate is that the line between a hedge and a trade can be pretty thin.

And hedges can end up being very profitable or they can end up losing a lot of money. How do you actually distinguish between the two? Because, again, one man's hedge is another man's trade, right?

That's a very, very good question. Like one way to distinguish between the two is that again, listening to what they are saying and the reasoning behind their entrance and they entering a particular position and they exit from that particular position. So it's really about collecting narrative. That's one thing. The second thing is to match what they are doing with what they also doing in parallel and saying in parallel about their prediction of what the shape of the yield curve should be.

Because when it comes to like most hedge fund strategies, especially the fixed income hedge fund strategies, it's all about what a particular hedge fund manager thinks the yield curve should be.

and what the yield curve in the market actually is today. And if there's a difference between the two, a hedge fund is going to conduct a sort of an inter and compose a portfolio that enables the hedge fund to actually exploit that so-called mispricing.

So what I would say is that the defining point here is whether that particular entity, it can be a synthetic hedge fund such as a bank or an actual hedge fund, is connecting its activity with the mispricing in the bond market and what the shape of the yield curve should be versus what the shape of the yield curve is.

or what they do think about like a particular direction in the prices. And then they want to actually kind of like very immediately and short term exploit those particular directional benefits. So I take your point about, OK, the CFO is saying one thing, we're doing a hedge, but some of this stuff doesn't line up.

Could it be incompetence? Right? Like, so there's one, okay, this does not look like a hedge. They're making a trade. They're taking some sort of risk that's different from the economics of the bank. Could it just be bad management? It can.

It can be, but in terms of SVB, I don't think it was. I do think it was incompetence, but not because they were incompetent in terms of being a bad risk manager as a bank or as a banker, but I think they were a very bad hedge fund manager. And again, I want to go back to what they were saying about what they think the market is doing, which they thought is wrong. And they thought that

the swap rates are too low and they thought the swap rates, based on the fundamental value, they should be higher. And then when you look at their action, they were actually acting based on that particular belief. And I would not call that incompetence. I would call that someone, in this case, a banker who is actually trying to think like a hedge fund and is trying to align his action based on that particular belief about the shape of the yield curve.

And the other important difference between a hedge fund strategy and a trade, just going back to the previous point, is that a trade is usually shorter term. But when it comes to the hedge fund strategies, these guys are patient. At least some of these guys are very, very patient. And especially in the world of fixed income arbitrage, you need to be patient. But when you're acting, you need to be very quick.

And that's also one of the distinctions between just like you are entering the interest rates swap because you just want to trade a particular derivative, in this case, swap versus you are entering interest rates swap because it is part of your broader portfolio. And I do think that in the case of SVB, they were entering interest rates swap because it was part of a broader portfolio.

And that portfolio, the goal of that portfolio was not to hedge a particular risk. In this case, the interest rate risk of those U.S. treasuries, but rather the goal was to exploit a mispricing in the yield curve. ♪

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Talk to us about the on balance sheet activities. You mentioned them earlier. So alternative credit lines, subscription lines, how did those actually factor into this idea of SVB being a synthetic hedge fund?

That's a very good question. And when it comes to the capital line of credit, there are so many interesting differences between this particular credit line and a typical bank credit line. I want to start by saying something which is very different from what banks do. So as a bank, when you extend a line of credit, when you extend a loan which earns interest, your biggest interest

is to actually earn return based on the interest you are actually kind of like earning. And your biggest fear is for the guy, for your counterparty not to show up. You don't want to actually be engaged in this type of credit activity. But when it comes to the capital line of credit or subscription line, it's actually the opposite.

When it comes to the interest rate on these lines of credit, the interest rate is actually very low. They are a structure to be low. They are a structure to be too low so that in this case, this is actually a line of credit between the bank and usually a private equity fund manager. So the interest rates are very low because you want to attract those private equity fund managers to come

to you and actually postpone the capital call and instead bridge those funding gaps through this particular line of credit. Explain that, sorry, I don't understand that. Basically, like the first thing is that these subscription lines are not a credit line between a bank and a private equity. It is a credit line between a bank and a private equity fund manager.

So the reason the private equity fund manager goes to the bank in order to kind of like establish this line of credit is that they want to postpone capital call from their limited partner, because that's how the private equity fund manager can actually kind of like synthetically or artificially increase the internal rate of return and therefore increase its own compensation.

So we know why private equity fund manager is doing so, but why the bank is involved in this type of activity, given that the interest rate on this particular loan is not very attractive? The answer to this question is the type of collateral.

Unlike the other type of credit lines where the collateral is usually, let's say, the physical assets or, you know, another type of like financial assets. In this case, the collateral is the implied liability of credit.

private equity limited partners. Even though these limited partners may have no idea, as a matter of fact, they do not have any idea that this line of credit has been established at all.

In this case, the incentive is structured in a very interesting way. The incentive for the banker is structured so that if for any reason the private equity fund manager doesn't show up and does not clear the loan or the line of credit and it defaults, that's where the money and the profit and the attraction is going to be for the banker. So what is going to happen in this case?

In this case, the banker can use what we call the power of attorney, and then it becomes a synthetic limited partner in that particular private equity.

And the amount of loan, the amount of credit that was extended to the private equity fund manager now is going to be like as if the banker was actually one of the limited partners in that particular private equity investment.

And the rate of return for the banker in this case is going to be the internal rate of return of the private equity fund, which is considerably higher than the interest rate. In a sense, if you are a banker and if you have extended this type of line of credit, you're just like praying and like you're hoping that the fund manager doesn't show up so that you become the synthetic private equity fund manager.

So in this paper, basically, I am actually highlighting this activity, which was actually a significant part of SVB's activity as well, to say that in this case, what the banker wants to be is to become a synthetic private equity limited partner.

And this particular line of credit is enabling the bank to do so. And I also want to say something about the prospect of like other banks using this. This is actually a growing business. Wells Fargo now does have a whole department trying to exploit this type of line of credit. And I do think if a bank is interested in this, it is because the bank wants to become a synthetic private equity investor.

Wait, talk to us more about how endemic this actually is. And I'm curious as well, like how you know that other banks are doing this. And I can think of one deposit taking institution that does this and loads has been written about them over the years. But where are you getting the data from and how are you making that judgment?

So basically, like, I am conducting this research on market microstructure. And this project is called Market Microstructure Project. And because of this project, I am actually kind of like reading everything that the bankers, the fund managers are saying, like in the news, in the newspaper, in the news articles.

So to answer your question, I would say that unfortunately, as of now, I do not have access to the data set that gives me this kind of like concrete picture of like how many banks are actually using these subscription lines or extending these subscription lines. But the good news here is that I'm in touch with a few people in the Fed, they might extend

such data to me. So this is hopefully going to be the next project for me to formalize that and showing that in the data. But I'm collecting narratives. I'm listening to the people. And also because of this market microstructure project, I'm talking to all the bankers. Like I go to this, like, let's say a happy hours of the bankers, like the hedge fund association, like parties. And I talk to these guys and I'm

I'm hearing over and over again that like the bankers are either using this in their business model as part of their business model or they are trying to actually adopt it. So as of now, this is me as one professor who is just trying to listen to the market. But hopefully this is soon going to be formally shown to the rest of us through the data that I will have access to.

So there are like multiple things going on. There's the question of is the bank hedging or is the bank trading? There is the question of are they trying to establish collateral that's in a sort of like hedge fund or private equity structure so that they can get higher returns and so forth. If the data is available, is this the type of thing that like that you believe is detectable in advance? This bank is starting to look more like a synthetic hedge fund than what we think of as the economics of a bank.

I do think it is. And I do think like the data is amazing source. And I'm very glad that the central bankers, at least they do have access to so many data. At the same time, I think right now there is not that much the question of like data, but rather our framework, the lens through which we are looking at. And also the lens through which we are looking at this data. If you are looking at the same data and the only framework that you have adopted is the industrial organization of a bank,

you're going to see what you want to see, that this was a bank who did a very bad and even a stupid type of risk management because they just exited their interest rate swap position just before the Fed started to increase rates. So it is about the industrial organization that you adopt

in order to assess the data that is being provided to you by banks. And I really think that in order for the regulators not to fail, it's not that much the question of supervision. I think banks are being supervised, but you have to supervise and assess the bank through new perspectives and understand that the banks do not want to be banks.

anymore and they want to actually have some share of those higher returns that are actually being accumulated and generated in the private market and also like in the alternative investment fund market. So once you look at what banks are doing through the business model and industrial organization of alternative investment fund, I think then you can become even a more effective bank supervisor.

By the way, Tracy, I'm looking at a blog post right now from MSCI. And it doesn't look at it from the bank level, but through the fund level.

You can just see the rise in charts, whether it's looking at venture capital, buyout, various forms of private equity, the number of them using subscription lines of credit is pretty interesting. Charts, lines going up and to the right. Lots of lines going up. So, I mean, I agree with the point that supervisors should be looking at this activity. And we probably don't want banks to be synthetic hedge funds. We don't want them to do risky things because we would all like to one day get our deposits back.

But in the case of SVB, I don't think I agree with the point that they were a bad synthetic hedge fund versus just a bad bank. And I guess my question is, like, is this the right thing to focus on for SVB? Because even without the swap spreads, SVB's bond portfolio would have had massive losses, right? And they also misjudged their deposit base. That's a pretty big failure for a bank, right?

And by the way, I saw a presentation that was made to their asset liability committee in late 2020. And the recommendation there from the Treasury was to buy shorter term bonds as deposits were flowing in. And the ALM committee basically decided not to do it. They said, like,

If we do it, it'll cost $18 million in earnings. So they didn't want to do it because they wanted to protect their profits. But it seems to me like there are some bigger issues here.

Really good question. I still do believe that SVB was a good bank, a very bad alternative investment fund. And also they weren't very good like in accounting. So like speaking of the U.S. Treasury, the holding of the U.S. Treasury is one of the other mistakes they made was that instead of like accounting for them as held to maturity, they did do that as available for sale. And that was also one of the reasons that their balance sheet was negatively affected. So if anything,

They weren't really good accountant. But in terms of like being a banker, I do think they were decent enough bank, but they just didn't like to be that. They wanted to be something beyond that. And that's where they weren't really good at. And again, I'm going back to like the narratives that I collected and these are all public narratives.

narratives. And when you look at why they did what they did, they really had a very, very specific view of what the yield curve should be and what the yield curve is. They thought the swap rates are going to increase and in order to actually match their fundamental value,

And they thought the swap rates are kind of like artificially suppressed, and they wanted to take advantage of that. And they failed dramatically, and mostly because they couldn't wait long enough, because they were actually constrained by regulation as well. So for me, rather than thinking that SVB was not a good bank, this is actually showing an inherent

tension for any type of banks who wants to actually do something that non-banks are doing, especially like alternative investment funds are doing, that even if you manipulate your models in order to synthetically replicate the trading strategies, investing strategies, or the risk and return portfolio of a hedge fund, you do not have the same flexibility to execute those type of strategies.

And you do not have the same time and you are considerably more constrained in terms of being supervised, in terms of like you have to put considerably more capital. This is something that hedge funds do not need to do. And you have to respond to people who are very impatient. And those are depositors, people that as a hedge fund, you don't need to deal with.

So for me, this is an inherent tension between being a bank with all the realities of being a bank and just think that's not good enough. You want to be something better.

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You know, I, for a long time, and I still do, like, I consider myself, like, Tracy probably heard me at various times. I'm like an SVB apologist. And I've said on the podcast, I'm like, oh, they're like a good bank. They, like, took themselves really seriously. Everyone here has a different view of whether they were a good bank. That's right. I think, like, I'm, like, in the middle here because I was, for a long time, it's like, no, this is, like, what a bank should be. And they really get to know their clients and they really get to, like, know their industry. Yeah.

On the other hand, I agree with Tracy that they just seem to have made a lot of bad mistakes and miscalculated the flightiness of its depositor base. And they probably didn't have traditional lending opportunities like most banks. So they're like, oh, we'll just put it in something safe like Treasury is not thinking about that. Treasury sometimes go down.

I also take your view that, you know, like you're in Silicon Valley. You probably don't just like want to be a bank, right? You know, everyone else is like getting super rich and you're just getting rich. And management is dealing with tech people, right? So I imagine some of that optimism kind of rubs off on them. Yeah. So it's like everyone else is getting mega rich and they're just getting kind of rich.

So it's like you probably want to look for ways to get something that resembles equity upside. All this being said, and this is sort of my final question, the fact that we're having this conversation,

SVB is like a weird situation. There aren't many banks like SVB, I don't think, in that one specific industry, in an industry that's specific to a location, et cetera. And then there wasn't much contagion. There were a few other sort of similar banks that went down. There were some crypto-related banks.

But it was not contagious in the end. It was not a big crisis of regional banks. It was not a big flight of deposits away. Regional bank stocks have been doing very well lately. And they're like basically, they're a little bit above where they are when SVB collapsed. How do you think, this is all a long-winded way to set up, but like the prevalence of this type of risk elsewhere? Because it feels to me that SVB intuitively feels like a unique situation. Yeah.

I should disagree with you. And I don't think it's about the question of like, okay, what happened immediately after the collapse of SVB? To me, this is a signal that where the banking is going. And this is about like the commercial banking. Those are like, they're not too as big as JP Morgan, the Citibank or Bank of America. I do think that the biggest lesson we have to learn from the SVB is that the business model of banking system is changing.

And SVB was just showing a window or opening a window towards that new world that the banks are doing different things. They are manipulating their model in order to take advantage of some flexibility or any flexibility they might have in order to conduct hedge fund-like strategies. So to me, the collapse of SVB was very important.

not because what happened immediately afterwards or the bank run on other banks, but because it is showing us that there is this tension in the banking system that banks do not want to be banks anymore. And they are looking for alternatives. And these alternatives are usually being financed

found in the alternative investment world. And the banks are going to move towards the direction of adopting more of that type of strategies into their traditional banking model. And it is in that regard, it is from this perspective that I think what happened to SVB is very important.

because it is showing us that banks are extremely uncomfortable with their identity and they want to shift their identity. Is it a bad thing or a good thing?

I actually don't know. I think it's a very exciting thing. This is Tracy Elham has my approach to news. No bad or good, just exciting. Yeah. Although I was going to say it was actually pretty amazing to hear you take a middle ground position on something. I don't think I've ever heard that before. I'm just a normal, moderate guy. Yeah. OK. So just on this point, one thing I remember from our discussions around SVB, I think we were talking to Lev Menand earlier.

And he made the point that the U.S. has basically made a conscious decision to outsource a lot of bank supervisory processes to shareholders. And shareholders, you know, they like making money. And so the incentive is typically skewed towards more risky behavior. If we decide that we don't want banks to be synthetic hedge funds, what type of regulation or limitations would you envision coming into play?

I want to answer your question a different way. Like if that's the future of banking, if banks are actually moving towards this world of being a synthetic hedge fund, I do not think the next regulatory question is how to limit the banks, but how to create a safer environment for them. Because the other lesson that we learned, at least I learned from the SVB's failure, was that one of the reasons they failed was that at some point they realized that they do not have enough

time to fully execute their strategy. Their strategy wasn't necessarily wrong, but they actually prematurely exited that as soon as they thought they might be wrong and they might actually face so many losses. I know this may sound like a revolutionary point, but I do think if the reality of the banking system is that the banks are moving towards that direction, the first regulatory task

is for regulators to change their identity as well. Because you cannot force banks to be banks if they do not want to be banks.

At the same time, if banks are actually conducting riskier strategies, and if as a regulator you're allowing them to take on some of those risks, maybe you want to remove some of the protections. What type of protections can be removed so that you can still maintain the stability of the deposit taking world and the stability of the financial system?

This is a question that I'm proactively thinking about it. I do not have the answer for, but I don't think the first regulatory step is to limit what banks are doing, but rather for regulators to change their DNA and identity as well and know that they cannot be a simple, plain vanilla bank regulators anymore if banks are not banks anymore and banks want to be something else.

Alhamdoulilah, thank you so much for coming on OVLADS. We had a little three-way debate there at the end. It was a lot of fun. Thank you so much. Glad to finally have you on. Thank you so much. It was a pleasure being here and discussing my ideas with you. Tracy, I can't believe you've said I've never taken a middle ground before. I don't take any positions. I just, you know, I just like to learn. Joe, no opinion, wise and tall. Yeah, that's me. That's me. Mm-hmm.

I thought that was a really interesting discussion. I mean, broadly, what we're talking about here is reach for yield behavior and whether that comes about through synthetic leverage or something old school, like just buying a bunch of long duration bonds and then not hedging the interest rate risk. It kind of amounts to the same thing, right? They're still doing this to boost returns.

We should do more on the rise of sub lines. There's always one more thing, isn't there? Yeah. Well, and the other thing I was thinking is this feeds into that idea of banks and private credit, private equity being frenemies, right? Like they are objectively becoming more intertwined. Insurance companies, by the way, are also big players in private credit now. So it does feel like the trifecta of the three biggest industries

financial industries, banks, private equity, slash private credit and insurers are becoming more intertwined. Totally. I mean, it's interesting and it makes total sense, right? If other entities are going to try to become banks or credit, you know, expanding entities, as we've been talking about forever, it makes sense that banks are going to want to look for upside elsewhere and maybe take on positions that resemble more sort of like equity upside. I

I thought Elham said something kind of fascinating at the end in response to your question about regulation, which is that like, if banks don't want to be banks, like there's kind of nothing we can do to stop them. And I think that's like an interesting principle of like financial regulation period that like, you know, it is always this cat and mouse game, right? And in the end, like there's sort of like

entities will evolve into the new thing. And at some point there's going to be a blow up and, you know, hopefully regulators get ahead of the curve. But in the end, like it feels like all financial entities of any sort will like they'll evolve into what they want to evolve into. Yeah. You got to change your opinion when the facts change. Right. Right. Joe. Joe, no opinion. Yeah, that's right. Yeah. OK, shall we leave it there? Let's leave it there. This has been another episode.

episode of the OddLots podcast. I'm Traci Alloway. You can follow me at Traci Alloway. And I'm Joe Weisenthal. You can follow me at The Stalwart. Follow our guest Elham Sayedinashad. She's at Elham Sayedi and check out her recent paper, Banks as Synthetic Hedge Funds. Follow our producers, Carmen Rodriguez at Carmen Armit, Dashiell Bennett at Dashbot, and Kale Brooks at Kale Brooks. For more OddLots content, go to Bloomberg.com slash OddLots. We have transcripts, a blog, and a newsletter.

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