Banks Sell 'Toxic Waste' CDOs to Calpers, Texas Teachers Fund
who is holding the bag.......looks like more and more pension funds are on the hook for the junk tranches of the rsikiest loans from homeowners, loans that financed buyouts etc..... to me this is just like buying internetstocks in 1999...... wall street at its best!
wer bleibt im schadenfall auf dem schrott sitzen....sieht so aus als wenn immer mehr pensionskassen unter den ersten sein werden....wer allerdings die riskantesten kreditprodukte erwirbt verdient wenig mitleid....ich vergleiche das vom timing und der risikoeinschätzung mit dem kauf von internetaktien im jahr 1999....auf der anderen seite muß man wall street dafür bewundern das die alles an den mann brigen können
June 1 (Bloomberg) -- Bear Stearns Cos., the fifth-largest U.S. securities firm, is hawking the riskiest portions of collateralized debt obligations to public pension funds. At a sales presentation of the bank's CDOs to 50 public pension fund managers in a Las Vegas hotel ballroom, Jean Fleischhacker, Bear Stearns senior managing director, tells fund managers they can get a 20 percent annual return from the bottom level of a CDO.
>vegas is probably the right place to host this event
>mit vegas haben die in jedem fall den richtigen platz für die veranstaltung gefunden
``It has a very high cash yield to it,'' Fleischhacker says at the March convention. ``I think a lot of people are confused about what this product is and how it works.''
Worldwide sales of CDOs -- which are packages of securities backed by bonds, mortgages and other loans -- have soared since 2003, reaching $503 billion last year, a fivefold increase in three years. Bankers call the bottom sections of a CDO, the ones most vulnerable to losses from bad debt, the equity tranches.
They also refer to them as toxic waste because as more borrowers default on loans, these investments would be the first to take losses. The investments could be wiped out. ....
Pension funds in the U.S. have bought these CDO portions in efforts to boost returns.
Many pension funds, facing growing numbers of retirees, are still reeling from investments that went sour after technology stocks peaked in March 2000. Fund managers buy equity tranches, which are also called ``first loss'' portions, even though those investments are never given a credit rating by Fitch Group Inc., Moody's Investors Service or Standard & Poor's.
`I Have Trouble'
The California Public Employees' Retirement System, the nation's largest public pension fund, has invested $140 million in such unrated CDO portions, according to data Calpers provided in response to a public records request. Citigroup Inc., the largest U.S. bank, sold the tranches to Calpers.....
The California Public Employees' Retirement System, the nation's largest public pension fund, has invested $140 million in such unrated CDO portions, according to data Calpers provided in response to a public records request. Citigroup Inc., the largest U.S. bank, sold the tranches to Calpers.....
Tough to Track
....it's extremely difficult to track the contents of any CDO or its current value, he says. About half of all CDOs sold in the U.S. in 2006 were loaded with subprime mortgage debt, according to Moody's and Morgan Stanley.
Since CDO managers can change the contents of a CDO after it's sold, investors may not know how much subprime risk they face, Das says.
As the $503 billion-a-year CDO market thrives, CDO marketers like Bear Stearns and Citigroup find buyers for the portions known as toxic waste, the equity tranches.
A typical $500 million CDO requires a $40 million unrated equity tranche, says Fleischhacker,
Chriss Street, treasurer of Orange County, California, the fifth-most-populous county in the U.S., says no public fund should invest in equity tranches. He says fund managers are ignoring their fiduciary responsibilities by placing even 1 percent of pension assets into the riskiest portion of a CDO.
``It's grossly inappropriate to take this level of risk,'' he says. ``Fund managers wanted the high yield, so Wall Street sold it to them. The beauty of Wall Street is they put lipstick on a pig.''
Seven percent of all the equity tranches sold in the U.S. in the past decade were purchased by pension funds, endowments and religious organizations...
The New Mexico State Investment Council, which funds education and government services for children, has $222.5 million invested in equity tranches. The council decided in April to buy an additional $300 million of them. That investment would be 2 percent of the $15 billion it manages.
Broker Suggested Purchases
The General Retirement System of Detroit holds three equity tranches it bought for $38.8 million. The Teachers Retirement System of Texas owns $62.8 million of them. The Missouri State Employees' Retirement System owns a $25 million equity tranche.
Kay Chippeaux, fixed-income portfolio manager of the New Mexico council, says it decided to buy equity tranches after listening to pitches from Merrill Lynch & Co., Wachovia Corp. and Bear Stearns.
The council is relying on advice from bankers who are selling the CDOs, Chippeaux says. ``We manage risk through who we invest with,'' she says. ``I don't have a lot of control over individual pieces of the subprime.''
Return: 6.1 Percent
As of March 31, the Texas teachers pension fund's CDO investments had returned a total of 6.1 percent since December 2005, spokeswoman Juliana Fernandez Helton says. They include the fund's $62.8 million in equity tranches, which were purchased from Credit Suisse Group, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup and other banks.
>well, and how have the seperate cdo´s performed......?
>und wie haben die besagten cdo´s dazu beigetragen...?
The Texas fund also bought $10.1 million in investment-grade tranches from Merrill Lynch and RBS Greenwich Capital Markets, a unit of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
Last September, the Missouri retirement system bought half of the equity tranche of the BlackRock Senior Income Series 2006 collateralized loan obligation, managed by New York-based BlackRock Inc. A CLO is a CDO that invests exclusively in loans, not bonds.
`Ahead of Curve'
The Missouri pension system invested $25 million of its $7.7 billion fund. Jim Mullen, fixed-income director of the fund, says he thinks the investment will pay off because he got into that market before most others did. ``We tend to be ahead of the curve,'' he says.
The Missouri pension system invested $25 million of its $7.7 billion fund. Jim Mullen, fixed-income director of the fund, says he thinks the investment will pay off because he got into that market before most others did. ``We tend to be ahead of the curve,'' he says.
Das says banks have good intentions when they create a CDO; what they lack is control of the performance of subprime loans and other bad debt. ``To just rely on somebody's reputation is absolving your own fiduciary responsibility as a manager,'' he says. .....
Citigroup spokesman Stephen Cohen says public funds pick CDOs based on their management. ``The evaluation centers on the track record and expertise of the manager,'' he says. ...
Orange County Similarities
Orange County's Street says he sees similarities between that county's 1994 bankruptcy, which was the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, and investments by pension funds in equity tranches.
Orange County's Street says he sees similarities between that county's 1994 bankruptcy, which was the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, and investments by pension funds in equity tranches.
In the 18 months before the collapse, Street, 56, who then ran financial advisory firm Chriss Street & Co., alerted the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or OCC, that the county faced a financial disaster.
The manager of the Orange County fund, which included pension money, had borrowed more than $12 billion and speculated that short-term interest rates would remain low. ``The county was earning 8 percent in what was a 3½ percent world,'' Street recalls telling federal regulators.
`Spiked Up Yield'
Those returns ended when rates rose in 1994. Street's warnings went unheeded. Orange County's investment losses totaled $1.69 billion.
Street says the big risks taken by public pension funds managers to juice up their investment performance with CDO equity tranches could result in big losses. Those tranches are filled with risky debt, which is sometimes in the form of subprime mortgages, he says.
``Very few pension plans could meet their fiduciary duty by buying portfolios of subprime loans,'' he says. ``They spiked up the yield, but that yield means nothing when the defaults start to mount, as we know they will. The funds will take big losses.''
Foreclosure filings in the U.S. jumped to 147,708 in April, up 62 percent from a year earlier, as subprime borrowers stopped making mortgage payments, according to data released by research company RealtyTrac Inc. on May 15.
As foreclosures rise, the subprime-mortgage-backed securities in CDOs begin to crumble.
`Eager to Learn'
At its sales presentation at the pension conference in Las Vegas, Bear Stearns has set up a booth stacked with literature about CDOs, including a 14-page primer titled `Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs): An Introduction.' Fleischhacker stands in front of the display of brochures after she speaks.
At its sales presentation at the pension conference in Las Vegas, Bear Stearns has set up a booth stacked with literature about CDOs, including a 14-page primer titled `Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs): An Introduction.' Fleischhacker stands in front of the display of brochures after she speaks.
``They should be looking at these types of asset classes,'' she says. ``They're eager to learn. We're doing lots of education.''
Fleischhacker tells the public pension managers that a CDO is like a financial institution: Both have strict oversight, she says. ``The outside agencies that oversee these structures are the rating agencies,'' she says, comparing them with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the OCC, which regulates banks.
Fleischhacker's comparison is disputed by Gloria Aviotti, Fitch's group managing director of global structured finance, which includes CDOs. ``It's not accurate,'' she says. ``We don't provide any oversight.''
`A Common Misperception'
Yuri Yoshizawa, group managing director of structured finance at Moody's, says people often think of credit raters as investor advocates or oversight groups. ``It's a common misperception,'' he says. ``All we're providing is a credit assessment and comments.''
Darrell Duffie, a professor of finance at the Stanford Graduate School of Business in Stanford, California, says he's concerned about public pension trustees' getting their CDO education from the banks that are selling the investment.
``Either they need to be very sophisticated themselves or they have to know that they're getting into something that could be quite risky,'' he says. Pension fund managers should get advice from independent financial consultants, Duffie says.
Some public fund investors are forbidden from buying junk- rated or unrated portions of CDOs. Wall Street has come up with ways to sell dressed-up CDO toxic waste so that it qualifies as investment grade. One is called principal protection.
Bear Stearns offered this hypothetical example at its Las Vegas presentation: A pension fund wants to buy $100 of CDO equity. Instead of buying it directly, the fund buys a zero-coupon government bond for $46 that will be redeemed for $100 in 12 years. That bond is paired with a $54 investment in CDO equity.
Zero-coupon bonds pay no interest; the investor is paid the full face amount -- that's $100 in this hypothetical situation -- when the bond matures.
Principal Protection
``Principal protection is guaranteed,'' Fleischhacker says. ``It's AAA since you're buying a U.S. Treasury.'' If there are no defaults, this method of investing in CDO equity would return 9.3 percent annually, she says.
The presence of the zero-coupon bond ensures the pension fund will recover its $100 investment even if the equity tranche becomes worthless. While the fund wouldn't lose any money if that happened, there would be no return on the investment for 12 years.
If a fund manager puts all of the same hypothetical $100 into zero-coupon bonds only, it would more than double its money in 12 years, Das says. ``I would have thought with pension fund money, they don't really want to lose principal,'' Das says of this equity tranche sales technique.
``And clearly here the principal is very much at risk. You've got a highly leveraged bet on no defaults, or very minimal defaults.''
Chippeaux says she concluded the principal-protection plan was good for her fund in New Mexico at a time when the state required that public funds buy only investment-grade debt.
>speaking of lipstick ......wie war das noch mit dem lippenstift....
`Smoke and Mirrors'
Chippeaux says she knows there are subprime loans in the New Mexico fund's CDO investments. Wollman says he's confident New Mexico doesn't hold many of the poorest-performing subprime loans that were made at the height of the real estate boom in 2006.
Chippeaux says she knows there are subprime loans in the New Mexico fund's CDO investments. Wollman says he's confident New Mexico doesn't hold many of the poorest-performing subprime loans that were made at the height of the real estate boom in 2006.
``One of the things that's going to be helpful to us is that we don't have a lot of exposure to 2006 subprime loans,'' he says. ``I think that is going to help us deflect any exposure should subprime collapse.''
> the trouble won´t be islolated to 2006 vintages....the slump is just starting....and this time the bubble was unprecedented....
>da sollte er sich nicht zu früh freuen....die problemen werden mitnichten auf 2006 emissionen beschränkt sein....wir sehen gerade die anfänge...und diese blase ist bei weitem größer als alles bisher dagewesene.....
``I think `smoke and mirrors' in some sense understates the problem,'' he says. ``You can see through smoke. You can see something reflected in a mirror. But when you look at the CDO market, you really can't see enough information to enable you to make a rational investment decision.'' .....
That hasn't stopped pension funds from taking high risks with the retirement plans of teachers, firefighters and police.
Pension fund managers face the same hurdle as all CDO investors: The market has almost no transparency, with both current prices and contents of CDOs almost impossible to find, says ..
``I think `smoke and mirrors' in some sense understates the problem,'' he says. ``You can see through smoke. You can see something reflected in a mirror. But when you look at the CDO market, you really can't see enough information to enable you to make a rational investment decision.'' .....
That hasn't stopped pension funds from taking high risks with the retirement plans of teachers, firefighters and police.
Labels: cdo, cds, clo, pension funds, rating agencies
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