>Their lenders likely understand the risks pretty well. Their lenders are going to be large banks that have entire departments dedicated to modeling risks like these, and making sure that the risks don't exceed certain limits on these accounts.
Three words: Mortgage Backed Securities. Large banks with entire risk modelling departments have made multi-billion-dollar errors in recent memory.
I have a complete lack of faith that any institution whose day-to-day experience completely differs from their catastrophic risk scenario is ever truly prepared.
The personal and organizational strain of maintaining constant vigilance against an invisible enemy is simply too high.
People get lazy, complacent, and think they're more prepared than they are. That's just human nature.
This is absolutely true. Due mainly to wishful thinking as well as some bizarrely bad statistical assumptions, the risk of something like 2008 was simply not forseen. There's absolutely no reason to think that other unforeseen crises couldn't arise in the future.
You're right. But there's very good reasons to think that they won't come from levered quant strategies like Renaissance's. They're extremely diversified and tend to be market neutral.
Yes, you can name one time that that happened. But do you understand the types of strategies RenTech is using? They're diversified across thousands of equities on the long and short side. They're market neutral. Taking on amounts of leverage that seem crazy to you is actually very reasonable in this setting, and it's very easy to show that this is reasonably safe.
Nobody outside of RenTech knows what trading strategies RenTech are using, because they're extremely secretive. There is a strong suspicion that they are generating very high returns by passing on concealed risks to other, less sophisticated players - in the case of RenTech, literally anyone else in the market counts as less sophisticated.
That's really not true. Everyone knows what they're doing. They're doing statistical arbitrage. There's many firms that do it, Two Sigma, Citadel, etc.. The only thing secretive about it is the exact details of each strategy. Renaissance, for instance, pioneered techniques like using satellite imagery to track sales. One of their early strategies noticed that the market tended to go up on days when the weather was nice in NYC. Things like this are what they're doing, but on a grand scale and with a lot of very very smart people working on them.
While it is possible that they're making their profits by shifting risk onto unsophisticated players, it's certainly not necessary for them to do that to make money. They have the smartest people in the world working for them.
Three words: Mortgage Backed Securities. Large banks with entire risk modelling departments have made multi-billion-dollar errors in recent memory.