
Originally Posted by
Christian Fox
Sorry, I came across as a dick. The SLR had the intention of reducing bank leverage, which clearly needed to be done after the financial crisis. But SLR is a very blunt tool in that it effectively charges a huge cost to a bank balance sheet for assets that are essentially risk-free (treasuries, repo, and excess reserves). It limits banks ability to trade, make markets, and provide financing for the treasury market. What this has done is distort the treasury market. Right now 30yr bank credit has a lower interest rate than 30yr US Treasuries, simply because the cost of holding a treasury bond on a bank's book is too high. That doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Higher treasury yields mean higher borrowing costs for tax payers. And, more importantly, a very liquid treasury market is important (on a global scale) in times of financial crisis. If in a time of panic, a flight of capital to the US treasury market finds fewer buyers, that panic becomes a spiral.
Again, I apologize for sounding like a condescending dick. I'm not all that smart, but this stuff is my day job. Tweaking the SLR is many light years away from going back to pre-2008 regs.
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