Thank you, Dealbreaker.com, for the following moral failing on my part...
Meanwhile
Enjoy, and there will be more when I get back.
This is a blog about interacting systems and how they behave: systems thinking construed broadly. Financial markets and economics; politics; and occasionally physical systems are discussed, with an attempt at focusing on how the rules of the game determine the strategies of participants and the possible outcomes.
Labels: FX
Labels: Tax
Labels: Free speech
Fresh emergency action to pump funds into the money markets was announced on Friday night by the European Central Bank amid renewed fears that liquidity in the credit markets is again starting to dry up.
Mr Trichet hinted that he expected financial turmoil to result in structural changes, saying banks’ losses “may trigger a reassessment by some of them of the suitability of the so-called originate-and-distribute business model”, which relies heavily on loan securitisation.
Labels: Liquidity risk, Securitisation
The main impact of subprime lending on the overall mortgage business was the take-out function. As subprime lending grew, you saw better “performance” of prime or near-prime mortgage portfolios. This was not because subprime lending did away with the traditional default drivers of job loss, illness, divorce, or disorderly conduct; it was because loans in that kind of trouble had a place to go besides foreclosure. Prime lenders could and did congratulate themselves on their low foreclosure rates as if it were a matter of their superior underwriting skills, but that involves a high degree of naiveté. It’s really important to understand this issue, because it gets to the heart of the “contagion” thing. It is not that subprime delinquencies are “spreading” to prime loans as if some infectious agent were in play. It’s that the drain got backed up: when subprime lenders go out of business, or investors won’t buy subprime loans, there is no place for the inevitable prime delinquencies to go except foreclosure. Prime delinquencies become “visible” because they don’t move out of the prime portfolio via refinance into the subprime portfolio, where we “expect” to see them.
Labels: Mortgage
Labels: Federal Agency, Markets, Monoline, Mortgage, Ratings
Labels: Conduit, Liquidity risk, SIV
Labels: Finite reinsurance
Labels: Bank Run, Economic Theory
Labels: Economic Theory, Political Metrics
Moody’s [...] said on Monday that eight financial-company focused constant proportion debt obligations (CPDOs), most of which are currently rated AAA, had been put on review after their net asset values had been hurt by credit-market volatility.
[...]
Two of the deals facing downgrades are from ABN, the other six are from UBS.
One of the ABN CPDOs, called Chess III, went on sale in July priced at 100 percent of face value with that golden Aaa rating. This week, it was worth about 41.5 percent of face value, according to ABN prices.
The UBS deals were the first to face downgrades in the late summer and had all been either downgraded or restructured in September.
Labels: CPDO
Merrill's 6.4 percent notes due in 2017 pay a spread of 2.24 percentage points, almost double the premium of 1.21 percentage points a month earlier
Citigroup paid 1.90 percentage points more than Treasuries of similar maturity to sell $4 billion of 10-year notes on Nov. 14
Credit-default swaps on MBIA more than tripled to 410 basis points since Oct. 15, according to CMA Datavision in New York. The price suggests that investors see a 28 percent chance MBIA will default, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. valuation models. Contracts on Ambac have climbed to 620 basis points, CMA data show. They imply a 40 percent chance of default.
Labels: Bonds, Broker/dealers, Monoline
Such provisions require ACA to post cash equivalent to the mark-to-market loss of the CDS contract pursuant to a ratings cut.
AAA rated subprime CDOs currently trade from the high single digits on junior tranches to 60% of face on super senior tranches.
ACA has only USD 1.1bn in claims paying resources, according to research by Credit Suisse
Labels: CDS, Monoline, Trade Documentation
[...] it is very hard to understand what Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc is doing taking control of ABN Amro Holding NV of the Netherlands with its partners -- let's remember, ABN is a fairly dull bank, with no great growth prospects -- when it could be buying Morgan Stanley instead.
Labels: Broker/dealers
Labels: Basel, Markets, Regulation
Labels: Financial Models, Securitisation
Labels: FX
I’ve had all the fun I can stand in investment banking at the momentRecently discovered footage shows some of that BoA fun: click here to watch. Definitely it's BoA. Unless I'm confused of course. Management isn't. They say that CDO dislocations may effect their results. Shurely shome mishtake.
Labels: Fun
Labels: Basel, Mortgage, Regulation
Black-Scholes works not because it describes some external ontological fact about how pricing relationships between securities and their derivatives have to work; it works because everyone agrees, more or less, that that's how prices should work. It is a convention, not a physical or financial law.
Labels: Financial Models, Model risk
The investment banks have been caught two ways. First, they have been hit by warehousing risk. In the absence of buyers, they are stuck with assets held for sale, such as leveraged loans and assets awaiting repackaging into asset-backed securities.This is further exacerbated by the pro-cyclicality of regulatory capital requirements and most economic capital models. Corporates without long term funding will find life difficult going forward, and a lot of people will need a good measure of endurance to pass through this unscathed.
Second, they face the threat of having to take special purpose vehicles such as conduits back on to their balance sheets.
Add to that the warehousing problem and you have a big number – somewhere well north of $1,000bn globally, I would guess. That amounts to a balance sheet explosion.
For what this means, take the UK example. According to the Bank of England, total new funding required by UK banks to finance those assets could come to £170bn. That is equivalent to 14 per cent of the total stock of lending to UK corporates and consumers.
Self-evidently, this will cramp the banks’ ability to lend. It will also lead to further hoarding of liquidity to help with that funding, thus prolonging the liquidity crisis.
Labels: Liquidity risk
Citigroup's subprime exposure -- and source of its problems -- are two big buckets that together total $55 billion, the bank said. The first bucket totals $11.7 billion, including securities tied to subprime loans that were being held, or warehoused, until they could be added to debt pools for investors. The second, totaling $43 billion, covers so-called super-senior securities.This position is larger than Merrill's and so we can expect further very chunky write-downs from C at some point.
Labels: Conduit, Fair Value, SIV
Labels: ABS, Basel, Markets, Worst case scenarios, Writedown
Labels: ABS
Labels: Broker/dealers, Financial Models, Probability Theory