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On August 11 2005 Reuters reported that Moody's
affirms Fannie Mae 'AAA' senior debt rating.
Moody's Investors Service on Thursday affirmed the 'AAA' senior debt ratings
of Fannie Mae (FNM.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the largest U.S. home finance
provider but said its preferred stock and subordinated debt remain on review
for possible downgrade.
I do not know about you, but I do not find it likely that Moody's can possibly
know precisely what Fannie Mae's debt rating should be. I offer the following
as proof:
Matthew Goldstein on the street.com reports Fannie
Restatement Nowhere Near Done.
The government-sponsored mortgage finance firm says it might not complete
the restatement before the second half of 2006. The lengthy delay is just one
more indication of the size of the accounting irregularities at the nation's
biggest buyer of mortgages.
"As our normal business operations continue, we also are committing every
available resource to the restatement,'' said Fannie President and CEO Daniel
Mudd. "This year we expect that over 30% of our employees will spend over half
their time on it, and many more are involved."
In fact, the restatement is such a big task, Fannie expects to hire some
1,500 consultants by year's end.
Let's see if I have my facts straight.
- Fannie Mae's books are so screwed up and they are so late in reporting
that there are threats of FNM being delisted.
- It will take 1,500 consultants to straighten out their derivatives mess.
- Moody's is willing to affirm their AAA debt rating anyway.
Mish can Fannie Mae be delisted?
Yes, not only can it, but perhaps it should have already been done.
Let's
take a look.
Fannie said the NYSE may start a delisting proceeding when a company fails
to file its annual report in a timely manner. Current exchange standards allow
the NYSE to continue a listing for nine months from the due date of the financial
filing, and for Fannie, that extension ends Dec. 16, the company said.
The exchange may opt to extend the listing for another three months, according
to Fannie.
Still, Fannie Mae said it was unlikely to report any results before the second
half of 2006.
Please bear in mind that even though Fannie May can and possibly should be
delisted, I seriously doubt that it will be. A lot of mutual funds would have
had to dump amazingly large holdings of Fannie Mae if it was delisted. They
would not be happy about it either. Is it possible this at all influenced Moody's
decision?
With that thought in mind, please remember the "Big Three" failed to see LTCM
coming, failed to see Enron coming, failed to see Tyco coming, failed to see
Worldcom coming, etc. Clearly something is wrong somewhere. What is it? Is
it because of relationships that the big three maintains with the customers
they rate, or is it just plain bad luck, or is it something else?
At any rate, how can anyone possibly know what is in those books if it takes
1,500 consultants working for a year to straighten them out? I contend that
no one can possibly know what the bottom line result of that audit will be.
If one does not know what is in the books, the next logical question is: How
can it be possible to affirm a top rating on that company's debt? Hmmm the
questions keep coming. Going one step further, Does anyone even care what is
in the books? The final question along these line is: Even if someone does
care, are they just hoping that nothing bad comes up knowing they have a fallback
excuse "We did not know what was in the books".
Clearly we need to remove all such doubts if credibility on debt ratings is
to be truly restored. That means that all rating companies need to be completely
independent of outside relationships with companies that they rate. It also
means that companies should be competing for business solely on the accuracy
of their ratings, not on anything else. I have a strong suspicion that we would
have seen Worldcom, Enron, and Tyco all downgraded far earlier if accuracy
was what mattered most.
Part of the problem lies in the fact that billions of dollars change hands
when there are even small changes in debt ratings. A downgrade to junk (as
with GM recently) can have a severe impact. It almost seems as if everyone
has to firmly expect it before it happens. Nudge nudge wink wink. On unexpected
unfavorable ratings business relationships will be stressed. The solution is
not more "oversight" committees or more accusations and subsequent denials
from the Big Three that they are not at fault. We need to remove suspicion
of fault and the only way to do that is for outside relationships need to be
made illegal.
Back in February, the New York Times said Wanted:
Credit Ratings. Objective Ones, Please.
"I think it's fair to say that the oversight of the industry is insufficient," said
Annette L. Nazareth, director of market regulation at the Securities and Exchange
Commission. "We want the firms to commit to meet certain standards with respect
to policies and procedures on conflicts of interest and solicitation of ratings.
Right now we don't have that at all."
Obviously no progress has been made since then. Perhaps the ratings agencies
will not care unless and until they are slapped with a thousand lawsuits. Forget
the lawsuits, change the law so that confidence in the system is restored and
rating agencies have a NEGATIVE incentive to play games. Do that an the credibility
problem goes away instantly. Given how totally messed up legislation is these
days, I fully expect to see dozens of "oversight committees" rather than correcting
the basic problem of ensuring that there are no relationships between rating
companies and the companies they rate.
For arguments sake, however, let's give Moody's the benefit of the doubt and
assume that everything is fine for now and there are no new surprises forthcoming
in Fannie Mae's books if and when they are every completed. Are we off the
hook?
I think not. Regardless of whether or not something is wrong with Fannie's
books, given all of the appraisal fraud, no doc loans, 0% down loans, piggyback
loans, and negative amortization loans, people better be well prepared for
a huge credit implosion when this mess blows up. In the meantime, party on
dudes as banks and other mortgage originators attempt to keep the good loans
on their books but pass the trash on to Fannie Mae or someone else. That garbage
is ending up in state pension plans, other retirement plans, and in the hands
of hedge funds and others that probably have no idea just how toxic it is.
In the meantime the sheep are grazing and perhaps a blatant attempt is being
purposely made to spread the Fannie Mae risk around enough so that no single
entity gets wiped out by it all.
Let's take a look at one more thing.
Please listen to at least the last 15 minutes of the Saxon
Capital, Inc. Earnings Conference Call (Q2 2005).
Given that some of you are too simply time pressed to do that, following is
a brief transcription of the highlights. Starting about 43:10 minutes in
Saxon states.....
- Too much risk taking will lead to a "credit event"
- Much of the volume of competitors is refinancing customers from one product
to another to another to another.
- If you are going to be competitive in the business, you HAVE to have a
product basket that the customer is demanding and the market is willing to
provide
- Offering these products will allow us back into these markets
- 45:25
- "At the point in time WHEN the credit event comes, AND IT WILL we will
be very well placed to take advantage of what happens next"
- "I am concerned about the level of capital" of our competitors "to service
the bonds as those portfolios age"
- "Should real estate on the west coast flatten out I would be worried
about a credit event"
- There are people that will buy a 100% Loan to Value (LTV). We do not have
that product we do not believe in it. We want the stated income borrower
to actually have some skin in the game"
- We can now offer those products but "We have no intentions of putting
those loans in our portfolio... We are going to pass them thru to other
investors "
- Question: and you think that is a good strategy thinking this is The
Perfect Storm you are describing?
- Answer: "As long as the market is willing to provide that credit... they
attempt to deliver the customer as much cash as possible with the least amount
of investigation or effort...That's what drives our customer... In order
to get the customers we want we need to be able to offer those products"
- Question: "Since I have known you, you have been bearish on the industry
... now you are saying I want to be more like people offering products that
are unsustainable. I am struggling with that"
- Answer: "The only difference is that I do not intend to put those in
my portfolio... and the day that I can't sell these (to someone else) is
the day that I stop offering them".
If lender conference calls are routinely discussing "Credit Events" and "Perfect
Storms" and companies such as Saxon are only willing to take on loans
as long as they can pass the trash to Fannie Mae or someone else, exactly
what confidence should there be in
- Fannie Mae
- The System in general
- Financial institutions specifically
- The Big Three credit rating companies
- What the pundits are saying out housing
- What the administration is saying about the recovery
Right now the questions Mish is asking are as follows:
- How long will it be before we see genuine reform of the credit rating companies?
- How long will mortgage originators willfully and knowingly take total garbage
just because they can pass the trash on to others?
- With horror stories like I presented above, is there any boom left in real
estate other than a loud popping of the bubble?
- How many lawsuits will eventually be filed by people losing their homes?
- What will the ultimate cost to taxpayers be for the upcoming credit implosion
and subsequent bailout of the credit industry?
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