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Just when you thought you'd seen it all... Yet how wild could it have been
with the Dow down only 0.3% (down 14.1% y-t-d) and the S&P500 up 0.3% (down
14.5%)? Amazingly so. The Transports gained 0.5% (up 11.6% y-t-d), and the
Morgan Stanley Cyclicals added 0.2% (down 13%). The Utilities were hit for
3.3% (down 17.6%), and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index declined 2.5% (down
7.4%). The broader market rallied sharply. The small cap Russell 2000 jumped
4.7% (down 1.6%), and the S&P400 Mid-Caps gained 2.1% (down 6.2%). The
NASDAQ100 declined 1.2% (down 16.3%), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index
dipped 0.9% (down 16.4%). The Semiconductors rallied 3.7% (down 18.2%); the
Street.com Internet Index added 0.6% (down 10.4%); and the NASDAQ Telecommunications
index gained 0.6% (down 9.7%). The Biotechs were little changed (up 2.8%).
Financials were unbelievably volatile and ended the week up big. The Broker/Dealers
jumped 7.6% (down 31%). The Banks surged 16.3%, slashing y-t-d losses to 6.8%.
With bullion rocketing $108 higher, the HUI Gold index rallied 11.5% (down
20.9%).
September 19 - Bloomberg (Dakin Campbell): "Treasuries tumbled, sending two-
year note yields up the most in 26 years, after Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke announced plans to help stem a
collapse in financial- market confidence."
One-month Treasury bill rates traded as low as one basis point yesterday before
closing the week at 0.69%, down 66 bps Three-month yields collapsed 47 bps
to 0.99%. After today's selloff, two-year government yields ended the week
down only 4 bps to 2.17%. Five-year T-note yields rose 9 bps this week to 3.04%,
and 10-year yields increased 9 bps to 3.81%. Long-bond yields gained 7 bps
to 4.38%. The 2yr/10yr spread increased 13 to 163 bps. The implied yield on
3-month December '09 Eurodollars sank bps to 3.%. Benchmark Fannie MBS yields
bps to 5.%. The spread between benchmark MBS and 10-year T-notes to 1 bps.
The spread on Fannie's 5% 2017 and Freddie's 5% 2017 notes widened to bps.
The 10-year dollar swap spread increased to 6. Corporate bond spreads. An index
of investment grade bond spreads to 151 bps, and an index of junk bond spreads
bps to 6 bps.
I saw only one debt issue this week, a $500 junk borrowing by Sungard Data
Systems.
German 10-year bund yields added 2 bps to 4.21%. The German DAX equities index
declined 0.7% (down 23.3% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields fell 5 bps
to 1.48%. The Nikkei 225 % lost 1.5 (down 22.1% y-t-d). Emerging markets were
under heavy selling pressure before rallying with the world today. Brazil's
benchmark dollar bond yields jumped 23 bps to 6.22%. Brazil's Bovespa equities
index rallied 1.3% (down 17% y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa added 0.6% (down 13%
y-t-d). Mexico's 10-year $ yields surged 34 bps to 5.97%. Russia's RTS equities
index recovered from a crash to end the week down only 3.4% (down 43.4% y-t-d).
India's Sensex equities index was little changed, with y-t-d losses of 30.8%.
Today's 10% rally took China's Shanghai Exchange back to little changed for
the week, with 2008 losses of 60.6%.
Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates dropped 15 bps to 5.78% (down 56bps
y-o-y). Fifteen-year fixed rates sank 19 bps to 5.35% (down 76bps y-o-y), while
one-year ARMs declined 18 bps to 5.03% (down 62bps y-o-y). Bankrate's survey
of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-yr fixed jumbo rates this week up
8 bps to 7.01% (down one bp y-o-y).
Bank Credit gained $13.4bn to $9.406TN (week of 9/10). Bank Credit has expanded
only $193bn y-t-d, or 2.9% annualized. Bank Credit posted a 52-week rise of
$476bn, or 5.3%. For the week, Securities Credit jumped $27.7bn. Loans & Leases
dropped $14.2bn to $6.913 TN (52-wk gain of $380bn, or 5.8%). C&I loans
fell $4.9bn, with y-t-d growth of 6.5%. Real Estate loans declined $8.4bn (up
1.1% y-t-d). Consumer loans added $2.9bn, while Securities loans declined $6.4bn.
Other loans added $1.6bn.
M2 (narrow) "money" supply slipped $1.9bn to $7.714 TN (week of 9/8). Narrow "money" has
expanded $251bn y-t-d, or 4.9% annualized, with a y-o-y rise of $357bn, or
4.8%. For the week, Currency was about unchanged, while Demand & Checkable
Deposits declined $5.2bn. Savings Deposits fell $4.5bn, while Small Denominated
Deposits increased $3.9bn. Retail Money Funds also rose $3.9bn.
Total Money Market Fund assets (from Invest Co Inst) sank an astonishing
$169bn to $3.413 TN, with a y-t-d increase of $299bn, or 13.5% annualized. Money
Fund assets have posted a one-year increase of $587bn (20.8%).
Asset-Backed Securities (ABS) issuance has basically ground to a halt. Year-to-date
total US ABS issuance of $129bn (tallied by JPMorgan's Christopher Flanagan)
is running at 27% of comparable 2007. Home Equity ABS issuance of
$303 million compares with 2007's $232bn. Year-to-date CDO issuance
of $22.6bn compares to the year ago $277.4bn.
Total Commercial Paper outstanding dropped $52.1bn this week to $1.763
TN, with CP down $22.2bn y-t-d. Asset-backed CP declined $18.6bn last
week to $772bn, with 2008 now showing a decline to $11.2bn. Over the
past year, total CP has contracted $106bn, or 5.7%.
Fed Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt last week (ended 9/17) increased
$13.5bn to $2.409 TN. "Custody holdings" were up $352bn y-t-d, or 23.5% annualized,
and $421bn y-o-y (21.2%). Federal Reserve Credit surged $43.1bn to a record
$931bn. Fed Credit has expanded $57.8bn y-t-d (9.1% annualized) and $78.3bn
y-o-y (9.2%).
International reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg's
Alex Tanzi - were up $1.186 TN y-o-y, or 20.6%, to $6.929 TN.
Global Credit Market Dislocation Watch:
September 19 - Bloomberg (Scott Lanman): "The Federal Reserve and Treasury
began a series of emergency measures to prop up the mortgage and money markets
ahead of congressional action on a broader lifeline for the U.S. financial
system. The Treasury plans to double its purchases of mortgage- backed debt
to $10 billion and use a $50 billion fund to insure against losses on money-market
funds. The Fed plans to extend emergency loans to banks to purchase asset-backed
commercial paper from money funds, and to buy short-term debt from Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac and other agencies. Today's announcements are aimed at combating
a record exodus of investors from money-market funds, long considered to be
among the safest investments."
September 19 - MarketNews International: "U.S. Senator Jim Bunning today issued
the following statement regarding the Treasury Departments bailout of Wall
Street. 'Instead of celebrating the Fourth of July next year Americans will
be celebrating Bastille Day; the free market for all intensive purposes is
dead in America. The action proposed today by the Treasury Department will
take away the free market and institute socialism in America. The American
taxpayer has been misled throughout this economic crisis. The government on
all fronts has failed the American people miserably. My great grandchildren
will be saddled with the estimated $1 trillion debt left in the wake of this
proposal.'"
September 19 - Bloomberg (Rebecca Christie and John Brinsley): "The U.S. government
moved to cleanse banks of troubled assets and halt an exodus of investors from
money markets in the biggest expansion of federal power over the financial
system since the Great Depression. 'We're talking hundreds of billions,' Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson said in a press conference. 'This needs to be big enough
to make a real difference and get to the heart of the problem.' The Treasury
is likely to run the program, which would involve auctions where the government
buys devalued assets, said House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney
Frank. The plan is designed as a comprehensive approach after a series of individual
rescues failed to stem the crisis."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Alison Vekshin): "House Financial Services Committee
Chairman Barney Frank said Congress within two weeks will pass legislation
letting the Treasury take on financial companies' soured assets to help revive
credit markets. 'I'm pretty sure this will be Treasury being the one that executes
it because you don't have time to create a new agency,' Frank said... The plan
may cost taxpayers 'ultimately not a great deal,' because Treasury will buy
'selectively,' Frank said."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Hugh Son, Erik Holm and Craig Torres): "American
International Group Inc. averted the worst financial collapse in history by
accepting an $85 billion federal loan and giving the government a majority
stake. The U.S. reversed its opposition to a bailout of AIG, the nation's biggest
insurer by assets, after private efforts failed and the Federal Reserve concluded
that 'a disorderly failure of AIG could add to already significant levels of
financial market fragility,' according to a Fed statement..."
September 15 - Bloomberg (Yalman Onaran and Christopher Scinta): "Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc., the fourth-largest U.S. investment bank, succumbed to the subprime
mortgage crisis it helped create in the biggest bankruptcy filing in history.
The 158-year-old firm, which survived railroad bankruptcies of the 1800s, the
Great Depression in the 1930s and the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management
a decade ago, filed a Chapter 11 petition with U.S. Bankruptcy Court... The
collapse of Lehman, which listed more than $613 billion of debt, dwarfs WorldCom
Inc.'s insolvency in 2002 and Drexel Burnham Lambert's failure in 1990."
September 15 - Bloomberg (Jeff St.Onge): "Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the
fourth-largest U.S. investment bank, owes its 10 largest unsecured creditors
more than $157 billion, including debts to bondholders totaling $155 billion."
September 16 - Bloomberg (John Glover): "Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bondholders
may lose more than $111 billion in the collapse of the investment bank, based
on contracts used to set a recovery value for the debt, according to Bank of
America Corp. analysts. So-called recovery swaps... Lehman's $146 billion of
outstanding senior debt traded at 35% of face value, the analysts wrote, indicating
a loss of as much as 65%. Holders of about $18 billion of subordinated notes
may recover 4% at the most..."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Shamim Adam and Nate Hosoda): "Central banks in
Japan and Australia pumped some $113 billion into money markets this week...
Central banks injected more than $220 billion globally this week..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Scott Lanman): "The Federal Reserve lent a record
$59.8 billion to securities firms and $28 billion to American International
Group Inc. as of yesterday, while daily borrowing by commercial banks increased
in the past week to a fourth straight high."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Liz Capo McCormick): "The Federal Reserve added
a record $105 billion in temporary reserves to the banking system as part of
its efforts to break a logjam in lending spurred by financial market turmoil."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Liz Capo McCormick and Jody Shenn): "The Federal
Reserve bought $8 billion of short-term federal agency debt under a new emergency
program intended to help keep a run on money-market mutual funds from worsening
the credit crisis."
September 15 - Bloomberg (Rebecca Christie and Sandra Hernandez): "The U.S.
Treasury has added almost $300 billion in extra borrowing to offset the impact
of Federal Reserve programs aimed at helping troubled financial markets and
the economy... As Wall Street grappled with the credit crunch and a weaker
economy in the past year, the Fed has introduced lending programs to boost
banks' access to funds... That 'resulted in nearly $300 billion in additional
Treasury issuance,' [said] Karthik Ramanathan, director of the Treasury's debt
management office..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Pierre Paulden): "The credit crisis that brought
down Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. is pushing corporate
borrowing costs to the highest since at least November 2002...The average yield
on the most actively traded investment- grade bonds has risen to 7.43% from
5.99% a year ago. High-yield borrowing costs have jumped to 13.6% from 9.17%."
September 18 - Dow Jones (Anusha Shrivastava): "In a replay of last year's
dramatic crunch in short-term corporate debt markets, the cost of borrowing
in the commercial paper market moved sharply higher Tuesday. The asset-backed
sector of the commercial paper market has felt the brunt of rising concerns
about cash shortages at financial companies such as American International
Group. Rates on asset-backed commercial paper spiked Tuesday, with investors
demanding a yield of 4% to 8% on paper that matures in one day, up from between
2.15% and 3.5% Monday..."
September 16 - Wall Street Journal (Simona Covel, Kelly K. Spors and Raymund
Flandez): "As Wall Street quaked Monday, small and midsize businesses prepared
to feel the aftershocks in the form of tighter credit and tougher borrowing
standards. The financial crisis is the latest blow to small businesses, which
have suffered through a tough year. As consumers pulled back on spending, these
companies have faced more-stringent requirements from bankers, higher rates
on credit cards and other loans, and the loss of funding sources from real
estate, such as home-equity loans. Now, the environment looks grimmer. Small
and midsize companies are likely to see tougher requirements from their bankers
in coming months. 'If you're seeking a new line of credit, [the effect] will
be instantaneous,' says Andrew Zacharakis, professor of entrepreneurship at
Babson College..."
September 16 - Bloomberg (Gavin Finch and Kim-Mai Cutler): "Credit markets
seized up as the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and downgrades of
American International Group Inc. drove the cost of borrowing in dollars overnight
to the highest level since 2001. The London interbank offered rate, or Libor,
that financial institutions charge each other for loans soared 3.33 percentage
points to 6.44%... The increase was the biggest in its history. The rate was
as low as 2.07 percent in June."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Sandra Hernandez): "Money-market funds are 'on the
cusp' of an investor run after Reserve Primary became the first such fund in
14 years to expose investors to losses, Paul McCulley, a portfolio manager
at Pacific Investment Management Co., told the financial news network CNBC.
'It's an incredibly serious issue,' McCulley said. 'A tipping point in this
crisis would be when you have a run on money markets, and we are right on the
cusp of that.'"
September 16 - Bloomberg (Betty Liu and Elizabeth Stanton): "U.S. financial
markets are facing the worst crisis since 1932 and require 'an enormous overhaul'
of regulations, said Roger Altman, the former deputy Treasury secretary in
the Clinton administration who founded investment bank Evercore Partners. 'The
outlook is very poor,' Altman said... 'This is the worst financial market environment
it seems to me since 1932.'"
September 19 - Bloomberg (Jeff Plungis): "Ongoing turmoil in financial markets
may test the strength of the Securities Investor Protection Corp., the securities
industry's consumer safety net. Brokerage customers have emerged largely intact
as two of Wall Street's five largest brokerages have failed. The... SIPC, a
nonprofit corporation funded by Wall Street to ensure the safety of customers'
accounts, hasn't been tested on a bankruptcy on the scale of a Morgan Stanley
or Goldman Sachs Group Inc... Unlike the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp...,
the securities corporation doesn't have a direct line to the U.S. Treasury.
The SIPC maintains about $1 billion in reserves..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Rich Miller): "The rapid-fire rescues of financial
firms may end up tarnishing America's free-market reputation as the moves expose
defects in the U.S. economy, undermining its standing with foreign buyers of
the dollar and U.S. Treasury securities. The government's actions might add
hundreds of billions to a budget deficit already expected to hit a record next
year. The salvage operations, which include Tuesday's takeover of American
International Group Inc., also raise questions about the U.S. commitment to
a free-market economy that, until recently, was the envy of the world. America's
credit 'profile is now weaker because contingent risks have become actual risks
to the U.S. government,' said John Chambers, managing director of sovereign
ratings at Standard & Poor's..."
September 18 - Wall Street Journal (Jon Hilsenrath, Serena Ng and Damian Paletta): "The
financial crisis that began 13 months ago has entered a new, far more serious
phase. Lingering hopes that the damage could be contained to a handful of financial
institutions that made bad bets on mortgages have evaporated. New fault lines
are emerging beyond the original problem -- troubled subprime mortgages --
in areas like credit-default swaps, the credit insurance contracts sold by
American International Group Inc. and others firms... Each episode seems to
bring intervention by the government that is more extensive and expensive than
the previous one, and carries greater risk of unintended consequences."
September 18 - Dow Jones (Matthias Rieker): "The dominance of commercial banks
over the capital market business will lead to a fundamental re-adjustment of
risk: Leverage will leave the capital markets in the United States overall.
Those bankers willing to take risk would demand to be paid for it. This change
to a calmer Wall Street - albeit one with slower growing profits - could encourage
a more stable economy. What exactly the impact of the shrinking leverage is
going to have on the financial system, ranging from the innovation of capital
markets products to trading and underwriting and leveraged lending, is uncertain.
Most likely - and some say, ideally - there will be a little less of everything"
September 19 - Bloomberg (Christine Richard): "MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial
Group Inc. fell after Moody's... said it's considering cutting the two bond
insurers' financial-strength ratings by several grades."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Linda Shen): "The American Bankers Association objected
to the U.S. Treasury's plan to insure money-market mutual funds, saying it
may compromise the ability of banks to attract and keep deposits."
September 16 - Bloomberg (Robert Schmidt): "FBI Director Robert Mueller told
lawmakers that his agency won't hesitate to pursue top financial executives
as it investigates the subprime mortgage meltdown. The Federal Bureau of Investigation
is now probing 24 large companies for possibly misstating their assets, up
from 21 in July, Mueller told the U.S. House Judiciary Committee in Washington.
'The FBI will pursue these cases as far up the corporate chain as necessary
to ensure those responsible receive the justice they deserve,' he said. The
FBI has come under pressure to hold companies responsible as the loan crisis
has rocked Wall Street and led to the biggest housing slump since the Great
Depression."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Alexis Xydias and Mark Gilbert): "Falling currency
reserves will stall emerging-market growth and turn assets linked to developing
economies into 'toxic waste,' according to Albert Edwards, global strategist
at Societe Generale... 'All things connected with emerging markets will become
toxic waste,' Edwards wrote... 'The emerging-market liquidity squeeze will
intensify ferociously and, much to the shock of most commentators, recessions
will unfold in the emerging-market universe.'"
September 19 - New York Times (Andrew E. Kramer): "The Russian government
will inject up to $20 billion into domestic stocks in an effort to halt the
free fall of the Russian stock markets, President Dmitri A. Medvedev said...,
in the most direct effort yet to use oil profits to ease a deepening stock
market crisis here. The two main Russian stock exchanges remained closed Thursday
after authorities halted trading Wednesday afternoon. By that time, they had
each lost about 57% since their peaks in May..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Denis Maternovsky): "Russian bonds dropped to the
lowest in four years after the government poured $44 billion into its three
largest banks to stem its worst financial crisis since the nation defaulted
in 1998."
September 15 - Bloomberg (Christopher Swann): "About one-third of the world's
biggest government-run investment funds are considering plans to overhaul their
operations, according to a survey by an International Monetary Fund..."
Currency Watch:
September 18 - Dow Jones: "The next cause for concern in the battered U.S.
economy is whether there will be buyers abroad for the nation's billions in
debt, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned... In a speech at Georgetown
University in Washington, the billionaire political leader said the tumult
in financial markets is being felt worldwide and it's unclear who will continue
to buy U.S. Treasury bills."
It was another wild ride in currency. The dollar index dropped 1.6% to 77.68.
For the week on the upside, the New Zealand dollar increased 4.5%, the Australian
dollar 3.4%, the Swedish krona 2.3%, the Canadian dollar 2.3%, the South African
rand 2.0%, the British pound 1.7%, and the Euro 1.6%. For the week on the downside,
the South Korean won declined 2.7%, the Japanese yen 2.6%, the Brazilian real
0.8%, the Taiwanese dollar 0.4%, and the Singapore dollar 0.3%.
Commodities Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Stewart Bailey and Millie Munshi): "While TV camera
crews staked out American International Group Inc.'s Wall Street headquarters
following its takeover by the U.S. government, Jules Karp was quietly trading
gold coins in 'unbelievable' numbers from his basement dealership across the
street. Karp... has traded physical gold, including one-ounce Canadian Maple
Leafs, American Eagles and South African Krugerrands, since 1974. Demand has
'hit a crescendo,' he said... while an assistant prepared the special packages
used to send gold coins to a growing list of mail-order customers."
The merits of precious metals became a little clearer this week. Gold recovered
14.1% to $874 and Silver 15.6% to $12.475. October Crude rallied $3.67 to $104.55.
October Gasoline dropped 6.1% (up 5% y-t-d), while October Natural Gas added
2.2% (up 0.6% y-t-d). December Copper slipped 0.5%. December Wheat was little
changed, while December Corn fell 3.7%. The CRB index ended the week about
unchanged (up 0.2% y-t-d). The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) was almost
exactly unchanged (up 5% y-t-d and 17.6% y-o-y).
China Watch:
September 18 - Market News International: "China's tax revenue growth slowed
sharply in August to the lowest level seen so far this year on the back of
a slowing economy... The government's take from stamp duties on share transactions
also plunged in the face of a slumping stock market. Revenues rose just 11%
year-on-year to 355.1 billion yuan last month compared with the 30.2% spike
in revenues seen during the first seven months of this year..."
Japan Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Kathleen Chu): "Land prices in Japan fell by 1.2%
in the twelve months through the end of June, with the rate of decline accelerating
for the first time in five years as lenders tightened credit after the U.S.
subprime market collapse."
Asia Bubble Watch:
September 19 - Bloomberg (Seyoon Kim): "South Korea said it plans to build
5 million homes over the next 10 years to meet demand for property and bolster
economic growth."
Unbalanced Global Economy Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Tariq Panja): "Manchester United's shirts read AIG.
They might as well say U.S.A. The U.S. government's $85 billion takeover of
American International Group Inc. gave it control of United's shirt sponsorship,
one of the most visible in sports after the team won two of soccer's biggest
club championships last season. The English Premier League is becoming a scoreboard
for the global credit crisis. Newcastle players wear the logo of Northern Rock
Plc, a U.K. mortgage-lender that was nationalized in February; West Ham lost
XL Leisure Group Plc last week when the tour operator grounded all its flights
because it ran out of money... 'There's not that much money sloshing about,'
said Nigel Currie, director of sports marketing at... Rapport. 'Football clubs
are not immune from the credit crunch. They are absolutely in the same boat
as everybody else.'"
September 18 - Bloomberg (Jennifer Ryan): "The U.K. budget deficit widened
more than economists expected in August as the deepening slump eroded tax receipts,
putting Prime Minister Gordon Brown at risk of breaking his own borrowing rules.
The 10.4 billion-pound ($18.5bn) shortfall was up from 8 billion pounds a year
earlier and the largest August deficit since records began in 1993..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Brian Swint): "U.K. money supply increased twice
as much as economists forecast last month, Bank of England data show. M4...
rose 1.4% from July... From a year earlier, it rose 11.5%."
September 16 - Bloomberg (Brian Swint): "U.K. inflation accelerated to the
fastest pace in at least 11 years last month, putting pressure on the Bank
of England to refrain from cutting interest rates as the economy slides toward
a recession. Consumer prices rose 4.7% in August from a year earlier..."
September 16 - Wall Street Journal (Alex Frangos, Darren Lazarus and Conor
Dougherty): "The blast furnace known as the finance industry that has stoked
the economies of New York and London for decades is rapidly cooling. Both cities
have relied heavily on the securities industry for jobs, taxes and a prosperity
that has lifted restaurants, stores, auto sales, fashion, entertainment and
a wide range of other businesses. The future of that largess is in doubt a
year into the credit crunch, with the bankruptcy filing of Lehman... and the
sale of Merrill... adding to the thousands of jobs already lost -- and the
likelihood that more will come."
September 16 - Bloomberg (Laurence Frost): "European car sales tumbled 16%
last month, the fourth straight decline, as higher fuel prices and slowing
economies hurt demand for models from General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor
Corp."
September 15 - Bloomberg (Kati Pohjanpalo): "Finnish inflation unexpectedly
accelerated to 4.7% in August, the fastest pace in more than 17 years, led
by higher food prices. The rate increased from 4.4% in July..."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Firat Kayakiran and Ali Berat Meric): "Turkey's
energy-markets regulator today approved a 9.1% increase in residential electricity
prices to take effect in October."
Bursting Bubble Economy Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Alan Purkiss): "The U.S. government will probably
have to spend between $1 trillion and $2 trillion, or five to 10 times as much
as it has so far, to halt the spreading contagion of the financial crisis,
said Kenneth Rogoff, an economics professor at Harvard and a former chief economist
at the International Monetary Fund."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Alan Ohnsman and Mike Ramsey): "U.S. auto sales
were hobbled in the first half as gasoline prices jumped to record highs. Now,
a financial crisis... has toughened new-vehicle loan terms... 'The panic over
fuel prices this year brought the quickest shift from trucks and SUVs to cars
I've ever seen,' said Dave Zuchowski, vice president of sales for Hyundai...
'The new story is access to credit. That will impact us more in the second
half.'"
MBS/ABS/CDO/CP/Money Funds and Derivatives Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Neil Unmack): "Standard & Poor's may cut the
credit ratings on 381 European asset-backed bonds linked to Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc., the collapsed U.S. investment bank. The notes relied on Lehman
as a counterparty for hedges against swings in currencies and interest rates,
or pooled assets created by the... bank, S&P said..."
GSE Watch:
September 19 - Bloomberg (Dawn Kopecki): "The U.S. Treasury will use Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, the two largest mortgage-finance companies, to pump money
into the home loan market by 'immediately' increasing their purchases of mortgage
bonds. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which seized control of the companies
this month, directed them to start increasing their purchases of loans and
mortgage-backed securities as part of Treasury's plan to absorb illiquid and
underperforming assets from financial companies..."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Dawn Kopecki): "Fannie Mae, the mortgage-finance
company taken over by the U.S. government this month, said bankrupt securities
firm Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. owes it 'very substantial sums.' The exact
amounts 'change on a nearly daily basis,' Fannie said in a filing... Lehman
was one of the company's frequent business partners in servicing home loans
and the mortgage bonds Fannie and fellow government-sponsored enterprise Freddie
Mac guarantee."
Speculator Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Saijel Kishan): "Hedge-fund liquidations worldwide
rose about 16% in the first half of the year amid turmoil in the financial
markets, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. About 350 funds shut down compared
with 303 in the first six months of last year... An estimated 700 funds may
go out of business by the end of 2008, an increase of 24% from last year..."
September 16 - Dow Jones (Marietta Cauchi): "Hedge funds' main concern following
the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. is their exposure to unsettled
trades, experts say. Following its bankruptcy filing overnight Sunday, Lehman's
prime brokerage business is no longer trading, leaving hedge fund clients in
the lurch. Like other prime brokers, Lehman offered a smorgasbord of services
to hedge funds - most importantly securities and money lending, as well as
settling and clearing. 'There is a great deal of confusion in the market over
the counterparty risk attached to dealing with Lehman,' one hedge fund adviser
said."
Fiscal Watch:
September 19 - Bloomberg (Sandra Hernandez): "The U.S. may have to borrow
an extra $700 billion to $1 trillion to fund the biggest rescue of the financial
system since the Great Depression, according to Barclays Capital Inc.'s Michael
Pond."
Muni Watch:
September 19 - Bloomberg (Jeremy R. Cooke): "Borrowing by U.S. states and
local governments stalled this week as officials delayed most planned offerings
amid an unprecedented rise in benchmark yields."
September 19 - Bloomberg (Jeremy R. Cooke): "U.S. state and local government
debt grew at the slowest pace in almost five years during the second quarter,
as the auction-rate bond collapse in February forced borrowers to focus on
refinancing deals."
September 18 - Bloomberg (Jeremy R. Cooke): "U.S. municipal bonds plummeted,
driving up benchmark yields by the most in more than four years, on concern
soaring short-term interest rates may be forcing investors to liquidate holdings
financed through borrowing. Average weekly variable rates shot above 5%, the
highest in eight years, as bond dealers sought to entice investors and hoard
capital after Lehman... declared bankruptcy."
California Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Dan Levy): "San Francisco Bay Area home prices fell
a record 32% in August from a year earlier as sales declined and buyers struggled
to get mortgages. The median price tumbled to $447,000, the lowest since January
2004... DataQuick said..."
Crude Liquidity Watch:
September 18 - Bloomberg (Glen Carey): "United Arab Emirates real-estate developers...
declined on concern borrowing costs will rise in a market that has seen property
prices double over the last two years... 'The cost of borrowing money is going
up substantially,' Ali Khan, head of equity trading at Arqaam Capital Ltd.
in Dubai, said... 'It is simply not possible that the U.A.E. can be cocooned
from the U.S. credit problems.'"
September 16 - Bloomberg (Matthew Brown): "Qatari inflation accelerated to
a record 16.6% in the second quarter as the cost of food and housing soared."
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