Bailout Humor.....
Man muß wirklich humorvoll sein um die ganze Bailout Rhethorik, Initiatven, Regelauslegungen zu ertragen..... Allen ein schönes Wochenende
Thanks to all the comments and mails!
Dank für all die Kommentare und Mails!
Gold...The Ultimate Triple-A Asset
Thanks to all the comments and mails!
Dank für all die Kommentare und Mails!
Through the conduits’ convoluted structures, banks were able to “lend” huge amounts off-balance sheet and collect fees on no-capital-required lines of credit. No one - and I mean no one - ever expected these conduits to move from off-balance sheet back on-balance sheet and I don’t think the market yet understands the earnings, capital and liquidity impact of this migration.
If you figure you need anywhere from 6-8% capital per dollar of loans, then a move of $1.0 trln from off-balance sheet to on requires $60-80 bln in additional equity capital. I don’t know about you, but I don’t see this kind of free capital sitting around.
Eleven junk-rated borrowers have sold bonds since the beginning of July, compared with an average of 41 a month in the first half of the year, Bloomberg data show. Three found buyers in August.
Labels: abcp, book value, clo, conduits, goldman sachs, hedge funds, investmentbank, junk, lbo, leverage, rating agencies, siv´s, state street
Unsafe at Any Rating, CDO Speeds to CCC From AAA: Mark Gilbert
Aug. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Watching the rating cuts trickle out of the derivatives forest is akin to searching for elephant dung on a path to try and work out how many pachyderms are in the jungle. There's clearly a herd in there. And it's probably much bigger than the ordure you have seen so far would suggest.
Last week, Standard & Poor's butchered the ratings on $3.2 billion of debt from structured investment vehicles spawned by Solent Capital Partners LLP in London and Avendis Group in Geneva. About $254 million was slashed from the top AAA grade to CCC+ and CCC -- slides of 16 and 17 levels, triggered by their investments in mortgage-backed bonds.
Think about that for a second. You left the office Tuesday owning a AAA rated security. By the time you got back to your desk on Wednesday morning, it was eight steps below investment grade in a category S&P defines as ``currently vulnerable to nonpayment.'' Try explaining that to your pension-fund trustees.
DBS Group Holdings Ltd., Singapore's biggest bank, said on Aug. 7 it had S$1.4 billion ($921 million) at stake in collateralized-debt obligations. This week, it boosted that total to S$2.4 billion. It seems the bank had overlooked its commitment to a unit called Red Orchid Secured Assets. As the man said, a billion here and a billion there and pretty soon you're talking about real money.
`An Oasis of Calm'
A rare moment of comedy arises from what Moody's Investors Service had to say about the oversight. ``I don't think DBS will be the only one who has missed something the first time,'' said Deborah Schuler, a senior Moody's analyst in Singapore.
Could this be the same Moody's that called structured investment vehicles ``an oasis of calm in the subprime maelstrom'' in a July 23 report? ``The vehicles are not structured to forcibly liquidate assets in times of crisis,'' Moody's said. Their ability to access several sources of finance ``obviates the need to liquidate large buckets of assets at potentially the worst period in the life of the vehicle.''
Tell that to Cheyne Capital Management Ltd., which said yesterday it may be forced to dump the securities owned by its $6 billion Cheyne Finance LLC fund because the asset-backed commercial paper market is freezing up and the SIV is struggling to fund itself beyond November.
Shifting Scenarios
Moody's recently added some new phrases to its lexicon of code words. When the rating company refers to ``updating its methodology'' or ``refining its risk assessments,'' what it really means is that its historical models say absolutely nothing about how the future might turn out.
> Even Homer would have done a better job.....
> Selbst Homer Simpson hätte das besser hinbekommen....
Marked to Which Market?
Here's what is most worrying about the coming flood of downgrades and defaults. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating how the biggest brokerage firms priced securities caught up in the subprime meltdown as their values collapsed. My colleague Jonathan Weil last week detailed some of the accounting shenanigans that accompany how banks measure the ``fair value'' of their assets.
What happens if the SEC discovers that different units of a single bank assign different values to identical securities? That seems like a viable scenario for what might happen when a complex market of infrequently traded securities whose prices are dependent on a series of assumptions hits trouble.
And what happens if the SEC finds that banks marked the securities they owned at high prices, while attributing much lower values to identical securities offered by their hedge-fund clients as collateral? Again, that seems like a plausible strategy for a bank concerned about the longevity and liquidity of its customers.
The WSJ is reporting S&P President Corbet Is Replaced
McGraw Hill Cos. replaced the top executive at Standard & Poor's Corp. as criticism of the company's financial-information division mounts for its role in the unfolding subprime-mortgage crisis.
Labels: .... of the day, "mark to model", bernanke, conduits, don´t fight the fed, rant, rating agencies, siv´s
But there is hope if you can stand to listen what Lawrence Yun from the NAR has to say about the future of the housing market.....
Twist from the excellent Housing Doom was so polite to put this warning in front of her post
WARNING: Do not attempt to read if you suffer from vertigo
I think that not even Charly Brown and all his friends can safe Snoopy & co......
Wenn man den Prognosen von Lawrence Yun dem Cheflobbyisten der Immobilienmakler glauben schenken möchte besteht noch Hoffnung für Snoopy & co....
Twist von Housing Doom war so freundlich die Leser zu warnen das diese Aussagen wirkich nur für Hartgesottene oder Leute mit viel Humor zu ertragen sind.
Ich denke das nicht einmal Charly Brown samt all seiner Freunde Snoopy & co retten kann.....
The city's vertical growth has been stunted by overly restrictive floor-space-index norms; supply of land has been stymied by a draconian Urban Land Ceiling Act, which was brought in to curb hoarding but has ended up discouraging genuine and economically beneficial transactions.
At the same time, demand for office space in Mumbai is soaring because of a surge in the flow of money and deals, in line with what one would expect to see in the world's second- fastest-growing major economy. ....
Even before the current bout of rental escalation, Mumbai offices were the third-most-expensive in the Asia-Pacific region after Hong Kong and Tokyo.
Mumbai's urban planners should realize that the city's acute space crunch is now spiraling out of control, and that work on a brand-new financial district must begin immediately.
> Looks like the same could be said about the residential market in Mumbai
> Sieht ganz so aus als wenn die Probleme auch den wohnwirtschaftlichen Immobiliensektor betreffen
Mumbai, India’s financial capital is one of the most expensive places in the world to buy a condominium unit, according to a Global Property Guide survey.Apartments in South Mumbai cost around US$9,000 to US$10,200 per square metre. “Such stellar prices can only be found in the world’s leading cities,” says Yasmin Rahman, yields and valuation analyst at the Global Property Guide.
These prices are exceptionally high for a country with a GDP per person of only US$770 in 2006. Even for highly paid call centre agents with annual income of around US$3,000 to US$4,500, these condominiums are still unaffordable.
Property prices in other cities in India are significantly cheaper than in Mumbai. In New Delhi, the administrative capital, used apartments cost around US$2,000 to US$3,000 per sq. m. In Bangalore, India’s Silicon Valley, prices are around US$950 to US$2,000 per sq. m.
Shares of Unitech Ltd., India's largest real-estate developer by market value, soared 26,869 percent during the past three years. Anant Raj Industries Ltd., a competitor, leapt 39,548 percent
Labels: bubble world tour, india, mumbai
At least this new offering is not yet common in Germany Patients Turn to No-Interest Loans for Health Care .....
Immerhin sind solche Angebote bei und noch nicht der Regelfall Patients Turn to No-Interest Loans for Health Care .....
But even the US can learn something regarding creditinnovations from the Dutch.....New Business Opportunity: SMS Loan Sharking
Aber selbst die Amis können in Sachen Kreditinnovationen noch etwas von den Niederländern lernen.....New Business Opportunity: SMS Loan Sharking ....
Hat tip to Yves Smith from Nacked Capitalism
Labels: bankruptcies, germany, loan sharks
LIBOR is an abbreviation for "London Interbank Offered Rate," and is the interest rate offered by a specific group of London banks for U.S. dollar deposits of a stated maturity. LIBOR is used as a base index for setting rates of some adjustable rate financial instruments, including Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) and other loans.
The average rate on a one-year adjustable mortgage surged to 6.51 percent, the highest since January 2001, from 5.84 percent the prior week. The rate also surpassed the cost of a 30-year fixed loan for the first time.
Labels: exotic mortgages, libor
S&P had said this two weeks before......
In Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services’ view, SIV managers recognize the importance of managing price volatility in the asset pool. These investment vehicles have weathered the difficult credit conditions of 1990-1991, the Long-Term Capital Management collapse, and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. SIVs responded to each event by diversifying into multiple funding markets, such as Europe and the U.S., and by having access to the best available liquidity sources, including banks and easily traded assets. SIVs also maintained access to the CP and MTN markets through each crisis during those 19 years
position SIVs to manage very differently than, for example, mutual funds or traditional CDOs. The market value tests and related assumptions penalize less-liquid, less-transparent, and less-understood asset selection. The tests encourage diversification, best-of-class asset selection, and defensive leverage management….As markets go through volatile periods, such as the current one, SIVs are not immune to eventually failing a test. However, SIVs are generally structured to have incentives to maintain asset portfolio and liability profiles that would help them in the face of volatile markets.
Aug. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Cheyne Capital Management Ltd., a London-based hedge fund, may be forced to liquidate $6 billion in assets backing a commercial paper program after the global credit rout reduced the value of the securities, Standard & Poor's said.
> Here is the Cheyne Letter to clients via the FT
> Hier der Brief an die momentan wohl ziemlich aufgebrachten Cheyne Investoren via der FT
Labels: abcp, cheyne, conduits, credit crunch, rating agencies, siv´s, spreads
> see also the chart "P/E Ratios: Nasdaq vs China"
Vor einigen Tagen haben die chinesischen Offiziellen durchblicken lassen das es zukünftig möglich sein wird auch chinesische Aktien in Hongkong ohne größere Einschränkungen zu erwerben. Dieser Schritt soll etwas den Druck von den heimischen Aktienmärkten nehmen und die Liquidität etwas breiter streuen.
Bisher hat diese Maßnahme in erster Linie dazu geführt das die chinesischen Aktien die in Hong Kong gelistet sind einen kleinen Teil der Lücke von unten geschlossen haben (obwohl einzelne Aktien über 70% explodiert sind). Überflüssig zu erwähnen das der Index in Shanghai munter weiter neue Hochs markiert hat. Es wird spannend zu sehen sein von welchsem Ende die zukünftige Bewertungslücke geschlossen werden wird. Momentan notieren die China/Hong Kong Aktien mit einem 08 er KGV von rund 20 während die Festlandaktien noch immer mit einem atemberaubenden KGV von 40-50 allen die Show stehlen.
Je länger die Anpassung von oben aufgeschoben wird desto ungemütlicher dürfte das erwachen sein.
> The table shows the run druing the last 5 days and ytd, estimated pe 2008 H shares Hongkong and mainland China, the "theoretical valuation gap", marketcap
Here another example that shows how different the two chinese markets act.
Hier ein weiteres Beispiel das anschaulich zeigt wie verschieden die zwei chinesischen Märkte zur Zeit noch reagieren.
The Financial Times is asking What’s the real Bank of China price?
On Thursday, Bank of China fessed up to holding just under $10bn in US subprime paper and CDOs. While its ‘H’ shares fell more than 6 per cent in Hong Kong in response, the reaction of investors in Shanghai was to push the price of the ‘A’shares up 1.3 per cent.
The gap between Bank of China’s mainland and HK prices has been widening for nine months now. This week the average premium of A shares over H generally widened to 70 per cent for the first time - and that is in response to Monday’s news that China intends to let its residents buy overseas stock (such as H shares)!
> But this is what happens when the central bank is offering deposit rates that are lower than the inflation rate...
> Aber das sollte nicht weiter verwundern wenn die Notenbank den Einlagenzinssatz unterhalb der Inflation festsetzt......
Labels: china, excess liquidity, hongkong, nasdag vs china, pe ratio, yuan
Maybe you don´t need to handle the truth if you believe in forecasts like this The Triumph Of Hope Over Experience
Aber evtl. verdrängt man die Wahrheit einfach am besten mit Prognosen wie diesen The Triumph Of Hope Over Experience
Should be great news for the Greenback down the road..... Thank god that the Fed is vigilant in fighting inflation ( see chart ) ...... ;-)
Das alles sollten zukünftig "tolle" Neuigkeiten für den US$ sein.... Wie gut das die Fed stets ein entschlossener Inflationsbekämpfer ist ( siehe Chart) ...... ;-)
Thanks to Bud Wood for the excellent Chart!
(Marketwatch) Comptroller General warns (again), we're 'bankrupting America'
What do Cassandra, "Chicken Little," the "Boy Who Cried Wolf" and David Walker, America's Comptroller General and head of the U.S. Government Accountability Office, all have in common?
Nobody pays attention to them!
Except for a short piece in London's Financial Times, Walker's warnings were generally ignored by the American press, by the public and even by the very Congress that hired him and has the power to do something, yet still refuses to heed his warnings. ......
>Here a not so depressing interview with the Comptroller himself with Colbert :-)
>Hier zur Abwechslung ein nicht so ganz deprimierendes Interview mit David M. Walker von Colbert :-)
got gold.....?
Labels: budget forecast, colbert, comptroller, deficit, fed, gao, gold, inflation, us$, us$ index
Eleven junk-rated borrowers have sold bonds since the beginning of July, compared with an average of 41 a month in the first half of the year, Bloomberg data show. Three found buyers in August.
Labels: .... of the day, covenant, credit crunch, junk, risk aversion, spreads, toggle bonds
Here the saga with all the nasty details and early dementies that evevthing is just fine 14 days ago....
Hier nochmal das ganze Drama mit dem frühen Dementi das alles in bester Ordnung vor gerade einmal 2 Wochen.....
Second Major Bailout Underway In Germany ?
SachsenLB Has EU3 Billion in Subprime Investments
Marketwatch Stuttgart-based state-owned bank Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg will buy Sachsen LB, one of two German banks threatened by a global credit crisis, Baden-Wuerttemberg's state governor said at a press conference Sunday.
Sachsen LB is selling itself to Landesbank Baden-Württemberg an investment in a hedge fund turned sour, adding to the bank's struggles in the asset-backed commercial paper market, according to a report in the online edition of the Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified people familiar with the situation.
Under the terms of the deal, Gov. Guenther Oettinger said, the state of Saxony, which holds 37% in Sachsen, and the Sachsen-Finanzgruppe, owner of 63%, will receive stakes in LBBW, but that exactly how large these stakes will only be determined on Dec. 31.
bigger overview all Landesbanken including balance sheet, ownerstructure etc.... Too bad that they didn´t include the off balance sheet vehicles....
größere Übersicht über alle Landesbanken inklsuive Bilanzsummen, Eignerstruktur usw....leider ohne die ganzen Aktivitäten ausserhalb der Bilanz......
Earlier Sunday, Oettinger estimated that Sachsen might be worth between 300 million and 800 million euros, less that the 1.5 billion euros in equity capital the bank had according to the latest figures. The Journal report that as an immediate measure to support Sachsen liquidity, LBBW will inject $342 million into the bank.
Sachsen has an estimated €200 million ($271 million) stake in a fund run by Synapse Investment Management LLP, a London-based fixed-income hedge fund firm, the Wall Street Journal said on Saturday.
The fund has received margin calls from British bank Barclays Plc and faced a seizure of collateral, the newspaper added. Barclays discussed with Sachsen the idea of Sachsen providing money to Synapse to protect Sachsen's own investment. But it appears that Sachsen will be sold, the WSJ said.
20 times leverage
Synapse was set up in 2006 by Graeme Anderson and Mark Holman, former managing directors at Barclays Capital, the investment banking business of Barclays. The firm oversees more than $500 million in assets.
It's not clear which Synapse fund Sachsen invested in. However, one of the London firm's funds, the Synapse High Grade ABS Fund No. 1 Plc, lost 6% in July, according to the firm's Web site.
The 189.5 million euro fund, run by Rob Ford, Ben Hayward and Eoin Walsh, invests in AAA and AA rated asset-backed securities only, according to an update from Aug. 1 on the firm's Web site.
The update also noted that the fund is expected to be 20 times leveraged. That means it borrows 20 times the level of equity invested by clients. So a 189.5 million euro fund could in theory control more than $3 billion in assets using this amount of leverage.
Conduit crunch
Sachsen LB had already been hit by credit turmoil. The bank said on Aug. 17 that disruption in the asset-backed commercial paper market left doubt about whether an investment conduit called Ormond Quay could repay 17.3 billion euros in debt that it owed.
bigger / größer
A group of German banks and regulators lent $17.3 billion to the conduit so it could repay what it owed.
But more trouble emerged when another affiliate, Sachsen Funding I Ltd., said it was having financial difficulties amid the lack of demand by asset-backed commercial-paper investors and might have to be restructured, the WSJ said.
Labels: bafin, bailout, conduits, Landesbank Sachsen, Ormond Quay, rating agencies, Sachsen LB, siv´s