The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory. / Krarup, Troels.

In: Competition & Change, Vol. 23, No. 3, 23.04.2019, p. 245-265.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Krarup, T 2019, 'The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory', Competition & Change, vol. 23, no. 3, pp. 245-265. https://doi.org/10.1177/1024529419845810

APA

Krarup, T. (2019). The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory. Competition & Change, 23(3), 245-265. https://doi.org/10.1177/1024529419845810

Vancouver

Krarup T. The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory. Competition & Change. 2019 Apr 23;23(3):245-265. https://doi.org/10.1177/1024529419845810

Author

Krarup, Troels. / The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory. In: Competition & Change. 2019 ; Vol. 23, No. 3. pp. 245-265.

Bibtex

@article{10b2e7edb9f94d43984e8747460f1b27,
title = "The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory",
abstract = "Since the 2008 crisis, the liquidity of collateral has become a serious concern for financial market institutions and regulators due to its increased importance in risk and cash flow management. Surprisingly, market participants mobilize old-fashioned economic theory, such as Irving Fisher{\textquoteright}s quantity theory of money in their discussions of how to deal with the new problems of collateral liquidity. Today, {\textquoteleft}collateral is the new cash{\textquoteright}, as one sector report claims, marking a shift from a quantity theory of money to one of collateral. Liquidity, I argue, poses not only practical problems to market participants and regulators, but also epistemic ones. Accordingly, practitioners not only produce practical but also theoretical responses to it, mobilizing classical economic theory in so doing. The problem of liquidity is shown to relate closely to a problem of {\textquoteleft}sovereignty{\textquoteright} in the narrow sense of guaranteeing the safe value of collateral. Contrary to established conceptions, sovereignty in this sense is not limited to states, but can also occur with monopolistic agents in the market such as global custodians. Thus, following the recent decade of crisis, general epistemic problems of liquidity and sovereignty in contemporary finance become visible through the practical problems and solutions in relation to collateral – specifically in the practical problems of buttressing liquidity in its double nature of collateral velocity and quality or safety.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Financial markets, liquidity, collateral, economic theory, European Union, Target 2 Securities",
author = "Troels Krarup",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1177/1024529419845810",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "245--265",
journal = "Competition and Change",
issn = "1024-5294",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The collateral liquidity problem in contemporary finance and the resurrection of quantity theory

AU - Krarup, Troels

PY - 2019/4/23

Y1 - 2019/4/23

N2 - Since the 2008 crisis, the liquidity of collateral has become a serious concern for financial market institutions and regulators due to its increased importance in risk and cash flow management. Surprisingly, market participants mobilize old-fashioned economic theory, such as Irving Fisher’s quantity theory of money in their discussions of how to deal with the new problems of collateral liquidity. Today, ‘collateral is the new cash’, as one sector report claims, marking a shift from a quantity theory of money to one of collateral. Liquidity, I argue, poses not only practical problems to market participants and regulators, but also epistemic ones. Accordingly, practitioners not only produce practical but also theoretical responses to it, mobilizing classical economic theory in so doing. The problem of liquidity is shown to relate closely to a problem of ‘sovereignty’ in the narrow sense of guaranteeing the safe value of collateral. Contrary to established conceptions, sovereignty in this sense is not limited to states, but can also occur with monopolistic agents in the market such as global custodians. Thus, following the recent decade of crisis, general epistemic problems of liquidity and sovereignty in contemporary finance become visible through the practical problems and solutions in relation to collateral – specifically in the practical problems of buttressing liquidity in its double nature of collateral velocity and quality or safety.

AB - Since the 2008 crisis, the liquidity of collateral has become a serious concern for financial market institutions and regulators due to its increased importance in risk and cash flow management. Surprisingly, market participants mobilize old-fashioned economic theory, such as Irving Fisher’s quantity theory of money in their discussions of how to deal with the new problems of collateral liquidity. Today, ‘collateral is the new cash’, as one sector report claims, marking a shift from a quantity theory of money to one of collateral. Liquidity, I argue, poses not only practical problems to market participants and regulators, but also epistemic ones. Accordingly, practitioners not only produce practical but also theoretical responses to it, mobilizing classical economic theory in so doing. The problem of liquidity is shown to relate closely to a problem of ‘sovereignty’ in the narrow sense of guaranteeing the safe value of collateral. Contrary to established conceptions, sovereignty in this sense is not limited to states, but can also occur with monopolistic agents in the market such as global custodians. Thus, following the recent decade of crisis, general epistemic problems of liquidity and sovereignty in contemporary finance become visible through the practical problems and solutions in relation to collateral – specifically in the practical problems of buttressing liquidity in its double nature of collateral velocity and quality or safety.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Financial markets

KW - liquidity

KW - collateral

KW - economic theory

KW - European Union

KW - Target 2 Securities

U2 - 10.1177/1024529419845810

DO - 10.1177/1024529419845810

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 245

EP - 265

JO - Competition and Change

JF - Competition and Change

SN - 1024-5294

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 216918829