The First Degree View
  • Home
  • Fund Manager Platform
  • The First Degree View
  • CONTACT
  • Login
  • Menu Menu

What May Have Happened at JPMorgan?

May 1, 2012

Let me start with a disclaimer: I have no privileged information about the USD 2B trading loss at JPMorgan. The reasoning in this post is purely speculation on my part.

How could a firm with a long history of conservative, commercial banking practice make a USD 2B error investing its own capital? The error is not the loss itself. The error was the size of positions taken in the markets based on measures of JPM’s balance sheet exposures. These measurements appear to have been incorrect by an order of magnitude.

Who makes the measurements? In banks like JPM there are two competing sources for measurement, (i) traditional approach as practised by accountants and actuaries, and (ii) the modern finance approach. The traditional approach focuses on dollar-value amounts generated by historical cost based accounting systems. For example, these systems can quantify the total amount of loans as, say, USD 500B. The finance approach speaks in terms of risk, volatility and market value. For example, these systems may estimate the loan book as having a six year duration and market value of USD 700B due to lower interest rates….

….so imagine a person like Jamie Dimon’s confusion when he asks for an estimate of his firm’s loan outstandings? In the example above, his accountants say USD 500B, while his risk-unit says USD 700B. Who is he to believe? … He then learns that his internal investment team has been basing its decision off the USD 700Bn number which means they have USD 200B more exposure than were they to use the USD 500B number…

…then, Dimon’s CFO tells him that the USD 700B is only an attempt at mark-to-market since none of the loan book actually trades. For accounting purposes, therefore, USD 500B is the number that must be used…

Get the picture? My guess is that something like this has happened with the accountants assailing the risk managers. The irony under this scenario is that the risk unit is probably right and there is no loss at all! The truth, however, lies somewhere in between.

Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share on WhatsApp
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Vk
  • Share on Reddit
  • Share by Mail
https://www.firstdegree.asia/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/logo.png 0 0 Tim https://www.firstdegree.asia/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/logo.png Tim2012-05-01 06:46:182018-05-21 06:46:42What May Have Happened at JPMorgan?
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Sign up

Recent Posts

  • My LLM
  • Could Trump’s tariffs deliver luxury to the masses?
  • Markets and penguins
  • How to win the tariff war
  • Deep Seek benefits from some Human Intelligence
  • The brain inside a Large Language Model is a random number generator
  • How much is that DOGE in the window? A lesson in Government
  • US Election-eve special
  • The Private Debt renaissance
  • Godzilla Government v King Kong Elon Musk
© FIRST DEGREE GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT PTE. LTD. | fewStones
  • Link to LinkedIn
Link to: What is the Price of Risk Aversion? Link to: What is the Price of Risk Aversion? What is the Price of Risk Aversion? Link to: So Where Does the Money Go Now? Link to: So Where Does the Money Go Now? So Where Does the Money Go Now?
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website.