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U.S. mortgages in foreclosure rose in April 62% from a year ago according
to RealtyTrac Inc. Folks are increasingly losing their homes as we
warned last October. Attempting to allay fears, Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke spoke last Thursday: "We believe the effect of the troubles in
the subprime sector on the broader housing market will be limited and we do
not expect significant spillovers from the subprime market to the rest of the
economy or to the financial system." We clearly disagree. Credit Suisse's ARM
Reset Schedule, included in our last
report, shows that over $1 Trillion dollars worth of adjustable rate mortgages
will reset over the next 5 years. Bloomberg is just now reporting on the extent
of the subprime meltdown. Even more telling is what credit derivative market
charts are showing.
Credit Derivatives
The credit derivative index, ABX.HE, prices the cost of default insurance
on U.S. mortgages. For instance, the ABX.HE falls in value if the risk increases
that a pool of mortgages will default. During the February subprime panic,
BBB and BBB- (or subprime credit) derivatives collapsed. This is evident in
the chart below from Markit.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland's economists, "That's a
29 percent drop in only one month. Since then, there's been a rebound, up over
10 percent, but the
market seems to be anticipating continuing large losses in the subprime market." According
to their analysis, subprime troubles won't be limited to the February panic.
After looking at the chart below, 'spillover effects' are also evident. It
shows the A-rated credit derivative index which has not recovered either. In
fact, this index has displayed the same pattern as subprime, especially that
slow corrective (a-b-c) rise, which implies the market here too is 'anticipating
continuing large losses.' Perhaps Chairman Bernanke does not expect it, but
reports in the field, credit derivative indexes, and the Federal Reserve Bank's
own research economists are warning of further U.S. mortgage woes.

So Where Are The Losses?
Derivatives are something of a financial accounting anomaly. Since they are
traded between parties (Over-The-Counter), holders do not have to use mark-to-market
accounting (assigning value based on current market price). To quote Warren
Buffet on derivatives:
"...there is no real market and "mark-to-model" is utilized. This substitution
can bring on large-scale mischief. As a general rule, contracts involving multiple
reference items and distant settlement dates increase the opportunities for
counter-parties to use fanciful assumptions. The two parties to the contract
might well use differing models allowing both to show substantial profits for
many years. In extreme cases, mark-to-model degenerates into what I would call
mark-to-myth."
A hedge fund manager that I have been discussing this with said: "None of
these guys mark to market even though there are no question big losses. The
CDO's (Ed Note: Collateralized debt obligations based on credit derivatives)
are held by hedge funds, insurance companies and foreign banks etc. Once these
CDO's start getting downgraded or hedge funds that own this paper get redemptions
and are forced to sell, then things will start to get ugly."
We are preparing clients for when things do get "ugly." For more details,
visit our website. Starting in July,
our monthly Investment Analysis
Report will require a subscription fee of $40 a month. Current readers
may 'reserve their seat' via FeedBlitz for
half price ($20 a month).
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