Showing posts with label futures market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label futures market. Show all posts

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Policies to Deal with the Implosion in the Mortgage Market

By Robert J. Shiller from The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy:

This paper relates the 2006-2008 meltdown in mortgage markets to falling asset prices, excessive psychological reaction to the burst bubble, and new mortgage vehicles incapable of accommodating sudden changes in asset values. A combination of market-based and regulatory innovations are proposed. The paper suggests placing greater reliance on innovative futures markets in real estate, inducing the flow of capital to vehicles having self-regulatory features and cultivating resiliency in the market.
Download the full article

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Transcript: U.S. Economist Robert Shiller Prescribes 'More Derivatives'

From Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty:

He was one of the few people to accurately predict the bursting of not one but two financial "bubbles." The dot-com collapse in technology stocks at the beginning of the decade, and the U.S. housing-market collapse that triggered the current economic crisis. So when Yale professor Robert Shiller comes up with suggestions for a way forward, they're likely worth hearing. One is about derivatives, the complex financial instruments -- many based on mortgages -- that were blamed for fueling the crisis. Shiller's prescription: not fewer derivatives, but more of them. RFE/RL's Kathleen Moore asked him why.
Read interview transcript