timelets: (Default)
timelets ([personal profile] timelets) wrote2019-01-25 11:02 am
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Investment vs consumption loans

On the merits of Ross' advice to furloughed federal workers: If you are in a difficult financial situation, have no assets and somebody advises you to take a consumption loan instead of seeking alternative sources of income, dump the advisor.

Negligible risk

[personal profile] malobukov 2019-01-25 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Shutdown lasted for one month. A government worker who applied for a new credit card on day one, put all his purchases during this period on this new card, then paid it back within the typical 21 day grace period from the date of the first statement, would have lost exactly zero.

Re: Negligible risk

[personal profile] malobukov 2019-01-25 11:32 pm (UTC)(link)
That's why I said "negligible risk" rather than "zero risk".

US sovereign default risk is quite low. Surely investing in treasury bills is quite safe, so betting on government shutdown ending should not be much riskier.

But before you do

[personal profile] malobukov 2019-01-26 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
Let's do the numbers. After all we're talking financial advice, so numbers are kinda important. What is your expert estimate of

1. PD (probability of default, in this case government shutdown continuing uninterrupted for, say, 3 months), and

2. LGD (loss given default, amount of money a hypothetical government worker loses in this case). Monthly minimum due payment on a typical credit card is interest plus 1/48th of principal balance.

Doesn't have to be precise, just order of magnitude. You can pick another horizon instead of 3 months if you like.

I'll then very scientifically multiply those two numbers to get expected loss.
Edited (Keyboard slip) 2019-01-26 01:35 (UTC)

I get it

[personal profile] malobukov 2019-01-26 02:20 am (UTC)(link)
No offence taken. Without context I just wasn't sure if your original post was based on your expertise in quantitative finance, retail credit, or risk management and therefore should be taken literally. Now I know.