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I
fancy myself to be a pretty good investor. While I think I'm a pretty bright
guy, I know I am not at the level of the rocket scientist known to be hired
by the quant funds. While I am fairly creative, I am far from an artist. While
I am not a high school drop out, I don't have a PhD. So, what makes me a good
investor? I have this uncanny knack of being able to smell bullsh1t a mile
away!
Now, for those banking CEOs, homebuilder CEOs (ex. Mr. Hovnanian), monoline
CEOs and government officials (ex. Mr. Paulson), who claim that the worst is
behind us - I can smell you guys!
I am starting to come clean on my commercial bank research and personal investment
positions. I do not publish my research until after I have established my positions,
but I do release broader market and macro stuff early - figuring it can do
little harm.
So, I hear Paulson says the worst is behind us!? I am assuming he is referring
to the subprime mess, and the capital market melee that followed. Well, I don't
believe the subprime mess is over, but if it is we still have to contend with
at least 5 other failing categories of bank products that are imploding due
to securitization imprudence - all rivaling or surpassing that of subprime.
Let's go over my research trail on the Current US Credit Crisis. Sections
1 through 5 are background material that is probably known to the professional
in this arena, but will make good reading for the lay person. I used it to
make sure I made judgments based on observable facts vs. media representation
and/or personal bias. I feel the section on counterparty risk should be required
reading for everybody, though. The report on PNC basically outlines, in full
detail, why I chose that bank out of 329 others, to initiate my short foray
into the regionals.
- Intro:
The great housing bull run - creation of asset bubble, Declining lending
standards, lax underwriting activities increased the bubble - A comparison
with the same during the S&L crisis
- Securitization
- dissimilarity between the S&L and the Subprime Mortgage crises, The
bursting of housing bubble - declining home prices and rising foreclosure
- Counterparty
risk analyses - counterparty failure will open up another Pandora's box
- The
consumer finance sector risk is woefully unrecognized, and the US Federal
reserve to the rescue
- Municipal
bond market and the securitization crisis - part I
- An
overview of my personal Regional Bank short prospects Part I: PNC Bank
- risky loans skating on razor thin capital
Now, let's take a more mundane look at the banking sector in general. Looking
at how much of the banking industry's portfolio is concentrated in real estate,
one should be concerned when housing priced drop precipitously (no spell checker,
and I'm tired). We are in much more heady territory than in the S&L crisis
(started by CRE lending), and the housing price drop is much worse as well.

This graph should speak for itself. To put it in a few short words, "You ain't
seen nuthin' yet!"

We are overbuilt, not just in residential but commercial as well. Construction
and development loans have always been a high risk/high reward endeavor, well
the risk part is coming home to roost. We are at a historical high in the riskiest
classes of bank loans, at a time when supply is excessive, the macro environment
is downright destructive, and bank capital levels are at all time lows.

It appears as if the banks believe Henry Paulson's bullshit, excuse me, "assertions" that
the worst is behind us, for they appear to be explicitly under-reserving for
what I see as a historically high level of RE loan concentrations. This is
not even taking into consideration the performance trend of those loans over
the last few quarters.

More to the point, look at the last two times real estate has gotten into
trouble. Both times really hurt the US, with the earlier one (the S&L crisis)
probably costing the US citizen and the banking system the most since the Great
Depression. Despite this, the banking industry was much more prepared (in terms
of loan loss provisions) to whether the storm then they are now. If you have
read through my Asset Securitization Crisis primer and you are a reasonable
man/woman, you should gather that we are in a much worse position now than
we were in either of the last two downturns. This means that loan loss provisions
are going to spike up sharply, and along with it capital requirements increase
dramatically (spell the word D-I-L-U-T-I-O-N slowly, for we will be seeing
a lot more of it) while earnings plummet. But then again, if the worse is behind
us, it doesn't really matter, does it???

I have screeched many times on my blog that some very smart people who should
really know better are definitely overestimating the power of the Fed to get
us out of this situation. Those guys over at CNBC say, "but we are getting
rate cuts, margins are improving, yada, yada." Yes, we did get rate cuts. Yes,
margins are improving. But from what level. As you can see, regional CRE lending
institutions had it better during the S&L crisis, and you see what
happened to over a thousand of them .

Wikipedia excerpt:
The U.S. Savings and Loan crisis of the 1980s and 1990s was
the failure of several savings
and loan associations in the United
States. More than 1,000 savings and loan institutions (S&Ls) failed
in what economist John
Kenneth Galbraith called "the largest and costliest venture in public
misfeasance, malfeasance and larceny of all time."[1] The
ultimate cost of the crisis is estimated to have totaled around USD$160.1
billion, about $124.6 billion of which was directly paid for by the U.S.
government -- that is, the U.S. taxpayer, either directly or through charges
on their savings and loan accounts-- [2],
which contributed to the large budget
deficits of the early 1990s.
The resulting taxpayer bailout ended up being even larger than it would have
been because moral hazard and
adverse-selection incentives compounded the system's losses. [3] The
concomitant slowdown in the finance industry and the real estate market may
have been a contributing cause of the 1990-1991 economic recession.
Between 1986 and 1991, the number of new homes constructed per year dropped
from 1.8 million to 1 million, the lowest rate since World
War II. For the record, we are on track to easily break that housing
starts record. Why would anyone bid up the homebuilders??? Study balance
sheets and history, people!!!
As a matter of fact, the current environment shows the weakest net interest
margins for the last 30 years! To make matters worse, I believe that sooner
or later (probably sooner) the government is going to be forced to stop thier
core inflation charade as energy, food, housing, and the materials used to
produce these commodities, skyrocket through the clouds and into outer space. Of
course inflation is under control as long as you don't have to eat, drink,
drive or sleep in warm shelter! If real inflation forces the feds hands into
raising rates, even just a little, the banks are toast. That little dip in
NIMs at 1985 in the graph was probably the straw that broke the camel's back
in the S&L crisis. Yes, Mr. Bernanke --- Conundrum!Or maybe not.
Mr. Paulson said the worst is behind us!
Below, you can see where we have a whole lot more loans to default on than
we did in the S&L crisis, even after adjusting for inflation (not reflected
in the chart).

So, after taking all of this into consideration, you can see why I don't think
the worst is behind us. As a matter of fact, many focus on subprime, and more
recently HELOCs (for good reason). Here is an interesting article on Calculated
Risk regarding the losses on HELOC's being understated because the servicers
are too busy to get timely information out. But (I know, never start a sentence
with a conjuntion, but this is my blog - Enlgish teachers are not allowed here),
if one simply takes a gander at what is really going on, you will find there
is a broad field to choose from when selecting banks to short.

I think I'll end this here. My next research post will be on muni losses affecting
credit default swaps, charge offs in the banking sector, more bank short candidates
that I chose to bypass, and a homebuilder update. I will also be hosting a
high net worth and institutional investor pow wow on the Hudson River leaving
from Chelsea Piers in Manhattan, for anyone of the aforementioned interested
in my opinions and outlooks. Stay tuned.
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Reggie Middleton
http://boombustblog.com/
Reggie
Middleton is the personification of the freethinking maverick--the penultimate
nonconformist as it applies to macro strategies, investment, and analysis.
He uses his background and knowledge in new media, distributed computing, risk
management, insurance, financial engineering, real estate, corporate valuation,
and financial analysis to pursue, analyze, and capitalize on global macroeconomic
opportunities.
Finding most available research lacking, both in quality
and quantity, Mr. Middleton assembled his own talented research staff. As forensic
research is a lynchpin for his own investing, "to actually put food on the
table," he stands behind it as doing what it is supposed to do - illustrate,
elucidate and educate.
He does not sell advice or research. He is an entrepreneur
who exists outside of mainstream corporate America and Wall Street. This allows
him the freedom to do things that many cannot--perform without conflicts of
interest and corporate politics. He prides himself on developing some of the
highest quality, actionable research available - regardless of price. He welcomes
any and all to peruse his blog of freely available analysis, opinion and participatory
social media; use his custom tools, download files, interact with the community
and make critical comparisons from a results orientated perspective. Reggie
believes ideas and implementations are improved and fine-tuned when bounced
off of the collective intellect of the many, in lieu of that of the few - in
essence, a form of collaborative open source financial analysis.
Visit his blog Boom
Bust Blog.
Copyright © 2007-2008 Reggie Middleton
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