The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means
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Average customer review:Product Description
In the midst of the most serious financial upheaval since the Great Depression, legendary financier George Soros explores the origins of the crisis and its implications for the future. George Soros, whose breadth of experience in financial markets is unrivalled, places the current crisis in the context of decades of study of how individuals and institutions handle the boom and bust cycles that now dominate global economic activity. 'This is a once in a lifetime moment', writes Soros in characterizing the scale of financial distress spreading across Wall Street and other financial centres around the world. In a concise essay that combines practical insight with philosophical depth, Soros makes an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the great credit crisis and its implications for the world.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #23071 in Books
- Published on: 2008-05-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
This was a book that George Soros badly wanted to write. It is probably not what many of its readers expect to read. But it shows that in his deeper thinking about the way markets operate, Soros was several decades ahead of his time... His insights are clear and concisely expressed. They are worth reading for anyone interested in the topic. --Financial Times
Review
"Lots of commentators claim to have anticipated the credit crunch; Soros actually did, years ago. And he says we're `still walking towards the storm rather than away from it.'"
About the Author
George Soros is chairman of Soros Fund Management and founder of a global network of foundations dedicated to supporting open societies. He is the author of several bestselling books including 'The Bubble of American Supremacy', 'Underwriting Democracy', and 'The Alchemy of Finance'. He was born in Budapest and lives in New York City
Customer Reviews
Rushed, and not much new
As a previous reviewer states, this book seems as if it has been rushed into print. In addition to the poor quality of the graphs (they look like they have been photocopied) the short section where Soros provides a chronology of his recent trading decisions just read like a few pages of his diary have been added to the book to fill it out.
In addition, if you have read any of Soros' other books prepare to go over some familiar ground. As he fairly explicitly acknowledges a large motivation for him to write is to promote his conception of relexivity. If you are expecting and wanting to read this and discover trading tips, or very specific economic predictions you might as well save your money. Almost by its nature the concept of reflexivity does not lend itself to precision.
Having said that, the concept itself is an interesting one and can be applied widely, not just in markets, if only as a way to understand how views can affect the reality they seek to explain. One could argue for example that the War on Terror legitimised and reinforced the very thing it sought to oppose, and then in turn in doing so gave more strength to the argument that terrorism needed to be fought. On this point there is an excellent quote included in the book (can't remember if it is from Rummy or Rove) arguing that the US administration creates its own reality, which its critics are constantly struggling to catch up with an understand.
So personally I enjoyed the book more as a sort of scrapbook of what Soros is thinking right now, built around his concept of relexivity, rather than as anything particularly specific to the credit crisis.
Worthwhile the reading regardless of the merits of Soros' paradigm
This is a short and very insightful book regarding the ongoing financial crisis, but be aware that, as the title suggests, Soros' main purpose for rushing publication (April 2008 still in the midst of this crisis) was to put forward and test the validity and importance of the theory of reflexivity, a new framework or paradigm he is proposing for financial markets and social sciences in general. Part One of the book deals almost exclusively with the concepts and details of the refined version of his paradigm, which Soros first proposed in his 1987 book The Alchemy of Finance. He explains that reflexivity was his guiding framework during his very successful trading years, however his proposal was never taken seriously in academic circles. He is convinced that the ongoing international crisis will provided the opportunity for his proposed paradigm to finally be taken seriously and further developed by others.
Most of the book's content in Part One presents the rationale for this new paradigm but unfortunately most of the discussion is in the grounds of philosophy, and heavily influenced by the ideas of philosopher of science Karl Popper (see The Logic of Scientific Discovery and Open Society and Its Enemies) combined with theoretical concepts from social sciences, economics and some finance. Therefore, Part One is not an easy reading for those unfamiliar with these philosophical and technical concepts, as these chapters were clearly written for an audience of scholars and practitioners. He wants to be taken seriously in the academic world and not just as a successful speculator.
In a nutshell, Soros' reflexivity theory states that contrary to classical economic theory, which assumes perfect knowledge, neither market participants nor the regulators can base their decisions purely on knowledge. Their misjudgments, biases and misconceptions affect market prices, and more importantly, market prices affect the fundamentals they are supposed to reflect. He claims that markets never reach the equilibrium postulated by economic theory and financial models, and therefore policies and predictions based on market fundamentalism are both false and misleading. He explains that outcomes are subject to diverge from expectations, and he claims that markets move away from a theoretical equilibrium almost as often as they move towards it, and they can get caught up in initially self-reinforcing but eventually self-defeating processes.
Fortunately for the general public, Soros explicitly gives the readers the option to jump directly to Part Two, where he concisely discusses in detail the roots of the current crisis, along with his criticism to the prevailing paradigm in terms his new paradigm. Whether Soros' new paradigm is right or not, his analysis of past and the present boom and bust bubbles is worth the reading, as the key mistakes, misconceptions and actors self-deceiving behavior is analyzed in depth, and lets you understand why almost nobody saw this crisis coming, despite the lessons learned from previous bubble bursts and warnings by some prestigious individuals.
In Soros view the origin of the present international crisis or super bubble as he called it, can be traced to three trends. A first trend is to be found in the ever increasing credit expansion. Another trend is the globalization of financial markets and the last, the progressive removal of financial regulations and the accelerating pace of financial innovations. The last two trends began in the 1980s, when under Reagan and Thatcher administrations began an excessive reliance on the market mechanism, or what he calls, market fundamentalism, and the inception date of the super-bubble is the 1980s, when market fundamentalism became the guiding principle of the international financial system, and this process started with the recycling of petro-dollars generated by the 1973 oil crisis, and accelerated during the Reagan-Thatcher years. Chapter 6 is particularly interesting in understanding the chain of events and how the previous bubbles and crisis led to the present "super-bubble".
He claims that regulators abandoned their responsibility and because the newly invented instruments were so sophisticated that regulatory authorities did not fully understood these new instruments and lost the ability to calculate the risks involved, and they came to depend on the risk control methods and evaluations developed by the institutions themselves, and even worst, something similar happened to the rating agencies who were supposed to evaluate the creditworthiness of the financial instruments, as they too came to rely on the calculations provided by the issuers of those instruments. Soros found this the most shocking abdication of responsibility on part of the regulars, because if they could not calculate the risk they should not have allowed the institutions under their supervision to undertake them. By relying on the risk estimates of the market participants, the regulators unleashed a period of uncontrolled credit expansion. Soros is particularly critical of value-at-risk calculations, as high standard deviations occurred with high frequency and this warning signal was largely ignored by regulators and participants alike. Here he blames Alan Greenspan for allowing his political views to intrude into his conduct as chairman of the Federal Reserve more than would have been appropriate, and so he missed the chance to stop the real estate bubble.
Even if his paradigm is wrong Soros raises several very interesting and insightful ideas. Paralleling Heisenberg's uncertainty principle Soros asserts that our understanding of the world "is inherently imperfect because we are part of the world we seek to understand" and this introduces an element of uncertainty into the course of events that is absent from natural phenomena. This implies that "social events have a different structure from natural phenomena", and particularly economist do not accept this limitation because this will downgrade their "science", economists have to accept a reduction in their status, no wonder they put up resistance. He claims that financial models are mistaken and they do not represent reality, and its widespread use for the design of synthetic financial instruments is at the root of the current financial crisis
He makes several bold conjectures and among the more controversial ideas he asserts that the ongoing crisis will have far-reaching consequences, resulting in the end of an era, with a decline in the power and influence of the US and a decline of the dollar as the internationally accepted reserve currency. Among other significant changes, he thinks sovereign wealth funds (from China, Singapore, the oil producing Arab-states, etc.) will become important players in the international financial system. He also contends that market fundamentalism is no better than Marxist dogma, as both ideologies cloak themselves in scientific guise in order to make themselves more acceptable, but the theories they invoke do not stand up to the test of reality, they use scientific method to manipulate reality, not to understand it.
The book ends with a chapter on policy recommendations that rather presents Soros' summary on lessons learned for the future and identifies some key social issues that need urgent attention. Among the key recommendations, Soros concludes that obviously the financing industry needs to be regulated in order to prevent excesses, but severe regulation could impede economic development, so the right balance must be found. Leverage has to be controlled even if it results in the reduction in both the size and the profitability of the financial industry.
He also concludes that some of the newly introduced financial instruments are unsustainable and they will have to be abandoned, but the regulators need to gain better understanding of these instruments and they should not allow practices they do not fully understand. Risk management needs to be managed by the regulatory authorities, not the participants, that was an aberration.
Soros also advocates that additional measures are required to avoid foreclosure to allow as many people as possible keep their homes; they are victims of the housing bubble deserving some relief and to avoid the human suffering and social problems that are likely to hit senior citizens, Hispanics, and black communities.
Highly recommended, even if you only read Part Two or if you are skeptical about his reflexivity framework. Personally I think Soros is quite right to question the predictive capabilities of economic and financial models however, I do not think reflexivity is truly a paradigm, but rather one key assumption made in economics, and indeed in some application (such as finance) practitioners got mistakenly carried away and forgot to properly take this uncertainty into account, because then their models would be worthless.
PS: If you enjoyed this book, then I recommend you The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable, with a similar but more solid theory on how to deal with uncertainty and risk, and written just before the Financial Crash. Also, Soros just published an update of his book under the new title The Crash of 2008 And What It Means: The New Paradigm For Financial Markets. Be aware that most of the contest is the same, just one chapter is devoted to his analysis on the latest developments of the financial crisis.
An Insightful Analysis of Financial Markets and the Current Crisis
This slim volume of 160 pages and small format was written and published in haste something the author readily acknowledges and attributes to his desire to release the book during the current crisis in order to make an impact. It shows: the book lacks not only bibliography but also an index and contains only footnotes, headings in charts are barely legible, there are lose statements, his prose is dyspeptic while the coined and key word in the book namely reflexivity is awkward.
On the other hand the author presents concisely significant insights on the nature of financial markets, the causes of boom and bust cycles and the causes and nature of the present crisis which he characterizes as super-bubble, the most serious since the great depression and discusses its likely consequences.
The core postulates of the author are:our understanding of the world in general and of financial markets in particular is inherently imperfect because we are part of the system we seek to understand. People with imperfect understanding interact with reality in two ways. On the one hand they seek to understand the financial markets which he calls the cognitive function. On the other, they seek to make an impact and change the situation to to their advantage which he calls the manipulative function. The interaction of the two functions which compounds the uncertainty and indeterminacy, the author calls reflexivity (uncertainty relates to the participants' thinking, indeterminacy to the course of events).
The author contents that the prevailing paradigm that financial markets are self-correcting and tend towards equilibrium is fallacious.
Financial markets under ordinary conditions seemingly are in equilibrium with small random variations. But on rare occasions because of misconceptions which initially are self-reinforcing financial markets lead to boom but ultimately they are self-defeating and lead to bust.
The present crisis, the author characterizes as super-bubble and the worst since the great depression. And this because it does not relate to a specific sector of the Economy i.e the subprime mortgages but permeates the whole Economy.
The current crisis which the author believes that it has evolved over the last 25 years attributes to the following factors:the long-term and ever increasing credit expansion, globalisation, the accelerating pace of financial innovations and the progressive removal of financial regulations.
Finally the author contents that the present crisis marks the end of a long period of relative stability based on the United States as the dominant power and the dollar as the main international reserve currency. He foresees a long period of political and financial instability hopefully followed by the emergence of a new world order.




