In the latest New Money Review podcast I’m delighted to welcome Satyajit Das, a former investment banker, derivatives expert and author.
Satyajit Das
Das’s book “Traders, Guns and Money”, published in 2006, remains one of the best books ever written about the world of high finance.
It’s been called “a wickedly comic exposé of the culture, games and pure deceptions played out every day in trading rooms around the world. And played out with other people’s money.”
Das went on to publish “Extreme Money” and “The Age of Stagnation”, in which a common theme is the high global levels of debt.
In the podcast, Das talks in detail about debt and the complexities of measuring it. He says all financial markets are now at risk from excessive leverage.
Japan, whose currency has recently undergone a big devaluation, may point the way ahead for all of us, he says.
We discuss:
- Why debt is like heroin
- How the marginal productivity of debt has been falling
- Reaching the “trust moment” in government bond markets
- How vulnerable are US Treasuries to a liquidity crisis?
- Why inflation may be higher for longer…
- …and interest rates could overshoot expectations
- Debt on debt and the challenge of understanding leverage
- How tech entrepreneurs borrow against equity
- Complexities in leverage chains—the example of Greensill
- Why non-bank financing of debt is particularly risky
- Why regulators struggle to monitor shadow banks
- Cross-border exposures in the Evergrande bankruptcy
- Why the “usual disinfectants”—better disclosure and more capital—no longer work
- How Japan finally escaped its debt trap—by devaluing its currency
- Why sovereign wealth funds are buying up global infrastructure
- The end of financial engineering
In each thirty-minute episode, the New Money Review podcast brings you the best minds from the world of money.
From economics to payments, financial markets, technology, law, digital assets, crime and fraud, you’ll find an episode that interests you. Listen in.