Congressional attempts to regulate the market for derivatives is bringing this market into the news again. Until the financial crash of 2008 the derivatives market was well below the radar of most people. As the financial crisis unfolded we learned how the market for derivatives had been taken over by financial speculators and financial institutions using them in… innovative ways, turning them into something quite different from what they had been for more than a century.
In a perfect world, derivatives—an agreement between two parties about an exchange in which the price of the item being exchanged is derived from the value of an underlying asset—are used, for example, by a manufacturer to lock in the otherwise widely fluctuating price of a commodity that it buys regularly. When used this way, derivatives are a sort of insurance against volatility, a so-called hedge against risk. Things get more complicated when this sort of insurance is purchased by somebody that doesn’t actually own the insured asset and that is where we enter the world of speculation which has become a large part of the derivatives market during the last two decades.
Geographic reference: World
Year: 2010
Market size: $600 trillion
Source: Aaron M. Kessler, “Carmakers Fear Restrictions of Wall Street Reform,” September 22, 2011, Detroit Free Press, page B1.
Posted on September 22, 2011