Look, I tried

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From our “understanding the behavioural science of contract negotiation” series — it is a short series — comes this oft-overlooked motivation for your counterparty’s negotiation demands: to be able to show, to its own clients, that it tried.

In our crazy, inter-connected world, much financial markets activity comprises of fattened intermediaries sitting cross-legged in a circle, passing a parcel around amongst themselves belonging, at some remove, to a client. As it passes by, each one takes a nibble at it.

Now the intermediaries need to agree the terms on which the parcel passes. Their main concern is that they get enough of a handle on the asset for long enough to have a good bite before they pass it on, but each needs also to prepare for the consequences of the parcel not, eventually coming back to them when their immediate client — in most cases the person who passed the parcel to them — decides to ask for it back.

See also