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Ongoing uncertainties left the stock market mixed for the final week of the
quarter. The Dow increased 0.6% (up 11.5% y-t-d), while the S&P500 was
little changed (up 7.6%). The Utilities were hit for 1.6% (up 8.0%), while
the Morgan Stanley Consumer index gained 0.8% (up 7.4%). The Morgan Stanley
Cyclical index increased 0.5% (up 18.8%), and the Transports added 0.2% (up
6.1%). The broader market appeared increasingly vulnerable. The small cap Russell
2000 declined 0.9% (up 2.3%), while the S&P400 Mid-cap index gained 0.4%
(up 10.0%). The high-flying NASDAQ100 jumped 2%, increasing y-t-d gains to
19.0%. The Morgan Stanley High Tech index rose 1.6% (up 17.6%), while the Semiconductors
dipped 0.2% (up 6.9%). The Street.com Internet Index gained 1.4% (up 17.3%),
and the NASDAQ Telecommunications index surged 2.7% (up 23.1%). The Biotechs
were little changed (up 8.9%). Financial stocks again underperformed. The Broker/Dealers
slipped 0.6% (down 4.6%), and the Banks dropped 2.3% (down 9.8%). Although
Bullion rose another $11.60, the HUI Gold index declined 1.7% (up 16.2%).
Will the weak dollar finally place a floor under U.S. yields? Three-month
T-bill rates rose 4 bps this week to 3.80%. At the same time, two-year U.S.
government yields declined 6.5 bps to 3.97%, and five-year yields fell 5.5
bps to 4.24%. Ten-year Treasury yields declined 4.5 bps to 4.58%, and long-bond
yields ended the week 4.5 bps lower at 4.83%. The 2yr/10yr spread ended the
week at 61 bps. The implied yield on 3-month December '07 Eurodollars jumped
11 bps to 4.83%. Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields added 2 bps to 5.965%, this
week underperforming Treasuries. The spread on Fannie's 5% 2017 note narrowed
4 to 42, and the spread on Freddie's 5% 2017 note narrowed about 3 to 43. The
10-year dollar swap spread declined 1.8 to 62.5. Corporate bond spreads were
mixed. The spread on a junk index ended the week 7 bps wider.
September 27 - Financial Times (Stacy-Marie Ishmael): "The global market for
credit derivatives grew 32% in the first half and increased 75% over the year
to the end of June, the slowest rate of growth since 2003. Credit derivatives
volumes outstanding rose by almost a third, to $45,460bn at June 30 from $34,420bn
at the end of last year, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association
said... Over the same period last year, the notional volume of contracts outstanding
more than doubled... Contracts to swap between fixed and floating interest
payments, the biggest component of the over-the-counter derivatives markets,
increased 38% to $347,100bn over the year to June 30... Volumes in equity derivatives...grew
40% in the first half, and are up 57% over the past year, to $10,100bn."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Sarah Rabil): "Bear Stearns Cos....and newspaper
owner Quebecor Media Inc. led companies selling U.S. bonds this week, taking
advantage of an easing in the credit rout that roiled sales in July and August.
U.S. corporate bond offerings reached $25.6 billion this week, Bloomberg data
show, pushing September issuance to a record $112 billion."
Investment grade debt issuers included Goldman Sachs $2.5bn, Bear Stearns
$2.5bn, Thomson Corp $800 million, Oneok Partners $600 million, Kohls $1.0bn,
Exelon Generation $700 million, Eaton Vance $500 million, Oglethorpe Power
$500 million, Hospitality Properties $350 million, Protective Life $300 million,
and PNC Funding $250 million.
Junk issuers included USG $500 million, American Tower $500 million, Range
Resources $250 million, Downstream Development $200 million, Waterford Gaming
$130 million, MCBC Holdings $105 million, and Standard Pacific $100 million.
Convert issuers included USEC $575 million and General Cable $475 million.
Foreign dollar bond issuance included Mexico $3.5bn, Royal Bank of Scotland
$3.1bn, ICICI Bank $2.0bn, Turkey $1.25bn, Ghana $750 million, Corp Durango
$520 million, and Grupo Senda $150 million.
German 10-year bund yields dipped 3 bps to 4.32%, as the DAX equities index
added 1.1% (up 19.4% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields were unchanged at
1.675%. The Nikkei 225 rallied 2.3% (down 2.6% y-t-d). Most emerging debt and
equities Bubbles took on additional air. Brazil's benchmark dollar bond yields
fell almost 5 bps to 5.85%. Brazil's Bovespa equities index jumped 4.6% to
a record high (up 36% y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa declined 0.9% (up 14.5% y-t-d).
Mexico's 10-year $ yields rose 8.5 bps to 5.63%. Russia's RTS equities index
gained 2.2% (up 7.8% y-t-d). India's Sensex equities index surged 4.4% to an
all-time high (up 25.4% y-t-d and 40% y-o-y). China's Shanghai Composite index
gained 1.7% to another record high (up 108% y-t-d and 220% y-o-y).
September 25 - Financial Times (Joanna Chung): "Emerging market equities are
defying the financial turmoil. Having staged a dramatic recovery in the past
month, more than recouping the losses suffered over the summer, emerging market
share prices yesterday pushed to an all-time high to stand 28% above the low
seen on August 16, as measured by the MSCI emerging markets index. But this
spectacular performance of assets that usually retreat in times of crisis has
raised questions about whether a bubble is developing in emerging markets.
Those questions have been fuelled by the US Federal Reserve's interest rate
cut last week, which triggered a strong rally in stock markets globally. Rate
cuts have produced bubbles before. One of the unintended consequences of monetary
easing during the credit market crises of the late 1980s and the late 1990s
- following crises in Latin America, Asia and Russia - were bubbles in the
Japanese equity market and the technology stocks sector, said Michael Hartnett,
emerging market equity strategist at Merrill Lynch. 'It's essentially 1998
in reverse,' he said. 'The credit problem is now in the US rather than emerging
markets. So liquidity to ease the US credit problem will be redirected towards
emerging markets just as liquidity to ease the Asian and Russian financial
crisis and problems stemming from Long-Term Capital Management was redirected
toward technology.'"
Freddie Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped 8 bps this week to
6.42% (up 11bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year fixed rates rose 11 bps to 6.09% (up 11bps
y-o-y). Moving the other direction, one-year adjustable rates fell 5 bps to
5.60% (up 13bps y-o-y).
A $53.5bn decline in Securities Credit pushed Bank Credit $42.6bn lower for
the week (9/19) to $8.882 TN. Bank Credit is now up $241bn over the past
eight weeks, with a $585bn, or 9.7% annualized, y-t-d gain. For the week,
Loans & Leases increased $10.9bn to a record $6.539 TN (8-wk gain of
$210bn). C&I loans jumped $11.6bn, increasing the y-t-d growth rate
to 20%. Real Estate loans dropped $10bn. Consumer loans rose $8.4bn. Securities
loans declined $8.1bn, while Other loans gained $9.0bn. On the liability side,
(previous M3) Large Time Deposits surged $32.4bn.
M2 (narrow) "money" jumped $18.9bn to a record $7.370 TN (week of 9/17). Narrow "money" has
expanded $327bn y-t-d, or 6.3% annualized, and $487bn, or 7.1%, over the past
year. For the week, Currency was about unchanged, while Demand & Checkable
Deposits fell $16.1bn. Savings Deposits surged $29.8bn, and Small Denominated
Deposits increased $4.4bn. Retail Money Fund assets added $1.9bn.
Total Money Market Fund Assets (from Invest. Co Inst) jumped $29.8bn last
week to a record $2.855 TN. Money Fund Assets have now posted a 9-week gain
of $271bn and a y-t-d increase of $473bn (26.5% annualized). Money
fund asset have surged $637bn over 52 weeks, or 28.7%.
Total CP declined $13.7bn to $1.855 TN, boosting the seven-week drop to
$368bn. Asset-backed CP fell $6.3bn (7-wk drop of $251bn) to $922.6bn. Year-to-date,
total CP is now down $118.9bn, with ABCP declining $161.3bn. Over
the past year, Total CP has contracted $47bn, or 2.5%.
Asset-backed Securities (ABS) issuance slowed to $5.7bn this week. Year-to-date
total US ABS issuance of $461bn (tallied by JPMorgan) is now running 30% behind
comparable 2006. At $210bn, y-t-d Home Equity ABS sales are half of last year's
pace. Year-to-date US CDO issuance of $261 billion is running only slightly
ahead of 2006 sales.
Fed Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt last week (ended 9/26) gained
$7.7bn to $1.995 TN. "Custody holdings" were up $243bn y-t-d (18.5% annualized)
and $334bn during the past year, or 20.1%. Federal Reserve Credit last week
jumped $6.6bn to $860bn. Fed Credit has increased $7.4bn y-t-d and $34.3 over
the past year (4.2%).
International reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg's
Alex Tanzi - were up $905bn y-t-d (25.1% annualized) and $1.120 TN y-o-y (24.4%)
to $5.716 TN.
Credit Market Dislocation Watch:
September 28 - Financial Times (Lina Saigol and James Politi): "The global
mergers and acquisitions market reached a record $3,850bn over the first nine
months of the year as a whole, but experienced a dramatic drop in the third
quarter as the credit markets seized up and buy-out activity collapsed. The
volume of deals worldwide fell 42% to $1,000bn during the third quarter...
Dealogic...said."
September 28 - Financial Times (James Politi and Lina Saigol): "For a while,
it seemed that strategic buyers would try to take advantage of private equity's
immobility by making acquisitions that they had long coveted but decided not
to pursue during the buy-out boom for fear that they could be outbid. But those
hopes have not yet materialised. This is partly because the credit squeeze
has hurt confidence across the board... According to Dealogic, global M&A
activity in August and September combined was worth $417bn, only 73% of July's
volume of $574.7bn... According to Dealogic, $119.8bn worth of deals were announced
in Brazil, Russia, India and China - the highest quarterly total on record
for those countries. Latin American deal activity hit $30.5bn - the second-
highest quarterly total after the second quarter of 2006."
September 28 - Financial Times (David Oakley): "The world of junk-rated corporate
bonds and leveraged loans came to a juddering halt in the third quarter this
year as the credit squeeze took a heavy toll on issuance. Global bond and loan
issuance fell sharply as even the US, which had withstood the shocks of the
credit turmoil better than other regions, suffered... Leveraged loan volumes
fell 26% to $65bn in the third quarter... European bond issuance also showed
a big slump with volume falling 31% to $323.5bn in the third quarter... Like
the US, it was in the high-yield space that volumes dropped most markedly,
with not one deal pricing since July... Asia, excluding Japan, also saw bond
issuance decline in the third quarter. Total debt volume in the third quarter
stood at $45.6bn, down 40%..."
September 28 - Reuters (Walden Siew): "Global sales of collateralized debt
obligations plunged by about 50% in the third quarter, a drop that means sales
are unlikely to reach record levels this year, Thomson Financial said... Global
sales of CDOs fell...$61.6 billion in the third quarter, from $120.1 billion
for the same period in 2006, as deteriorating subprime loans sapped demand
for structured debt..."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Neil Unmack): "Sales of collateralized debt obligations
backed by European high-risk, high-yield loans may stutter into next year as
investors avoid the securities following losses on subprime debt, Fitch Ratings
said. 'Deals are getting postponed continuously,' Stefan Bund, a managing director
at Fitch...said...We expected a recovery in September, but that may be put
back to October or November, or even after that.' Sales of collateralized loan
obligations...slumped to 4.9 billion euros ($7 billion) in the past three months,
a 40% drop from the previous quarter..."
September 27 - Financial Times (James Mackintosh): "Hedge funds are about
to be hit by several billion dollars of withdrawals as a popular method of
gearing up investment in the industry is reversed in the wake of poor performance
this summer. Fund-linked derivatives, which have been booming as investors
pile cash into hedge funds, are likely to finish their quarterly reviews by
the end of next week, and, bankers say, many will trigger automatic redemptions...
Big withdrawals could spark crises at funds investing in illiquid assets and
prompt further selling pressure in markets dominated by hedge fund money...
Bankers specialising in the area estimated the total structured product exposure
at about $200bn, and said several billion of that would be redeemed this month,
with money likely to come out by the end of the year... There are two main
ways in which investors in hedge funds have used derivatives to boost returns.
But both work in the same broad way: banks offer finance at a set multiple
of the investment, and modify it every month or every quarter to ensure multiple
remains within certain limits, typically a cushion of 3-5 per cent. For example,
an investor putting $100m into a fund of funds might secure matching funding
of $300m from a bank, giving a total investment of $400m, with a condition
that the investor's money make up a minimum of 20% of the total... If the fund
then fell 10%, the investment is worth only $360m, wiping out $40m of the original
investment and triggering redemptions, as the investor now has only 17% of
the total. The first way this is applied is via leveraged share classes, typically
in funds of funds, which spice up returns for investors who find the 7-9 per
cent annual returns of many in the industry too dull."
September 26 - Financial Times (Jane Croft ): "As the dust settles after the
Northern Rock crisis, the spotlight will shift to other small banks such as
Alliance & Leicester and Bradford & Bingley, as well as the UK's 59
building societies. The Northern Rock debacle has increased worries about the
banking sector, particularly those institutions that rely in part on wholesale
funding. Questions have been raised about how UK banks, particularly small
mortgage banks without the comfort blanket of large balance sheets, will access
wholesale funding - given that capital markets are in effect closed for business..."
September 24 - Bloomberg (Cecile Gutscher): "Banks reduced the backlog of
unsold corporate debt to $370 billion after seizing on improved investor demand
to issue $7 billion of leveraged loans and bonds in the past two weeks, Bank
of America Corp. analysts said... 'The door creaks slowly open in credit markets,'
Bank of America strategists led by Jeffrey Rosenberg said... Banks in the U.S.
and Europe still have to syndicate the equivalent of almost three-quarters
of the entire $500 billion of loans held by money managers in America, according
to the research published Sept. 22."
September 27 - Bloomberg (Frederic Tomesco): "Banks and investors seeking
to restructure C$35 billion ($35 billion) of Canadian asset-backed commercial
paper said they need more time to come to an agreement. 'Given the highly complex
process and the significant number of stakeholders involved, a successful restructuring
cannot be completed by mid-October' as agreed to, Purdy Crawford, who leads
the investor committee, said... Under the so-called Montreal proposal announced
Aug. 16, the group, which includes banks and pension funds, would convert the
commercial paper into floating-rate notes. The group has until Oct. 15 to come
up with a plan for restructuring the debt."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Maria Levitov): "Investors withdrew a net $5.5bn
from Russia in August because of international turmoil on financial markets,
the Economy Ministry said, citing the central bank's preliminary calculations.
'The mortgage market crisis and the difficulties with liquidity on the global
financial markets affected Russia's financial system,' the Moscow-based ministry
said..."
September 27 - Financial Times (Catherine Belton): "A senior Russian banker
warned yesterday of debt defaults as the liquidity squeeze in Russia tightened
following the global credit crunch and interbank lending rates climbing to
a two-year high. 'If debt markets remain closed until the end of the year the
situation is going to get very difficult for many banks,' said Oleg Vyugin,
chairman of privately owned MDM Bank and former head of Russia's financial
markets regulator. 'There could be some defaults. The Russian rouble bond market
is not working.' Overnight lending rates in Russia climbed to 10%, the highest
since mid-2005, even after the central bank yesterday pumped an additional
$2.56bn into the banking system via two one-day repo auctions... 'Banks are
not lending to each other,' said Alexei Yu, a fixed income trader at Aton brokerage....The
Central Bank was also forced to pump liquidity into the system via repo auctions
at the end of August after foreign investors fled Russian money markets amid
the flight to quality following the US subprime crisis and tax payments fell
due. Russia racked up more than $5bn in net capital outflows in August."
Currency Watch:
September 25 - Financial Times (Krishna Guha, Eoin Callan and John Authers): "The
dollar closed at a record low on Tuesday after data showed US consumer confidence
fell and the overhang of unsold homes grew. The figures intensified concerns
that the strain in the credit markets was affecting the economy, although the
severity is hard to gauge. The reports also made investors more confident that
the Federal Reserve - which cut interest rates by 50 basis points last week
- will reduce rates further to offset economic weakness. Bond markets rallied
with the yield on the two-year note falling 5 basis points to 3.99 per cent.
With yields falling, the dollar's appeal diminished and measured against an
index of major currencies, it finished at its lowest level in New York trading
since the benchmark was initiated in 1973."
September 25- Bloomberg (Kim-Mai Cutler): "Foreign-exchange trading rose 65%
to a record $3.2 trillion a day on average, led by growth in hedge funds and
foreign investors, the Bank for International Settlements said... The increase
in the value of transactions from 2004 was the biggest in the survey's 18-year
history... At current exchange rates, turnover rose 71%.... 'It's really massive
and it says a lot about financial globalization,' said Stephen Jen, the...global
head of currency research at Morgan Stanley... 'Trades can go up in any local
market but the survey tells us that cross-border flows have shifted into a
higher gear...' At the same time, hedge fund assets have risen to a record
$1.76 trillion, according to...Hedge Fund Research Inc. Transactions involving
hedge funds, pension funds, mutual funds and insurance companies rose to 40%
of all trades, from 33% in 2004..."
September 25 - Bloomberg (John Fraher): "The U.K.'s foreign-exchange market
has almost doubled in the past three years, further evidence that London has
cemented its position as the predominant centre for currency trading, a survey
by the Bank of England showed. The value of daily currency transactions in
April was $1.4 trillion, compared with $753 billion in the same month in 2004..."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Joshua Gallu): "The value of transactions in Switzerland's
foreign exchange and derivatives markets tripled in the past three years to
an average $242 billion a day in April, according to...the Swiss National Bank."
The dollar index sank 1.1% to 77.69. The Fed's trade weighted dollar index
fell to the lowest level since 1971. For the week on the upside, the Australian
dollar increased 2.2%, the Norwegian krone 2.2%, the Brazilian real 2.1%, the
New Zealand dollar 1.6%, the Danish Drone 1.2%, and the Euro 1.2%. On the downside,
the Paraguay guarani declined 1.4%, the Ghana cedi 0.9%, and the Algerian dinar
0.9%.
Commodities Watch:
September 28 - Bloomberg (Millie Munshi): "Commodities headed for the biggest
monthly gain in 32 years, led by wheat, crude oil and gold, as the dollar's
slump enhanced the appeal of energy, grains and precious metals as a hedge
against inflation. The 19-commodity Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index was up 8.7%
this month, the most since July 1975. Wheat climbed to a record in September
amid a global grain shortfall, boosting corn and soybeans. Oil also hit a record,
and gold reached a 27-year high. The Federal Reserve cut borrowing costs to
bolster the U.S. economy, sending the dollar tumbling."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Danielle Rossingh): "Gold rose to the highest since
1980 in London as the dollar weakened against currencies including the euro,
increasing demand for bullion as an alternative asset."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Jae Hur and Madelene Pearson): "Wheat futures headed
for the biggest two-month gain in 34 years after adverse weather in Australia,Canada
and Ukraine crimped harvests. Prices have risen 59% since July 1... Global
reserves are headed for a 26-year low as a drought in Australia...threatens
the crop for a second year in a row. 'The supply situation is still critical
and demand doesn't seem to be waning at high prices,' Simon Roberts, head of
agricultural commodities at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.,
said..."
September 24 - Bloomberg (Katherine Espina): "Coal and iron ore shipping rates
may extend gains to records this week on rising demand to transport raw materials
across the Pacific and the Atlantic amid a limited supply of vessels. The Baltic
Dry Index, an overall measure of commodity-shipping costs on different routes
and ship sizes, advanced 3.9%to 8,956 on Sept. 21, setting a record for a second
day... This year, the measure has broken records for a total of 83 days. 'There
seemed to be no stopping the market as it rocketed' in both the eastern and
western regions last week... shipbroker Galbraith's Ltd. Said... Charter rates
for tankers have more than doubled in the past year..."
September 27 - Bloomberg (Tan Hwee Ann and Helen Yuan): "Cia. Vale do Rio
Doce, Rio Tinto Group and BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's three largest iron-ore
exporters, may increase prices by 30 percent next year as demand driven by
steelmakers in China outpaces growth in supply."
For the week, Gold jumped 1.6% to $743.1 and Silver 2.2% to $13.92. December
Copper added 1.3%. November crude slipped 23 cents to $81.39. October gasoline
added 0.3%, while November Natural Gas declined 2.2%. December Wheat jumped
another 7.4%. For the week, the CRB index added 0.2% (up 8.6% y-t-d). The Goldman
Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) gained 0.3% (up 25.9% y-t-d) to another record
high.
Japan Watch:
September 26 - Business Standard India: "Planning Commission deputy chairman
Montek Singh Ahluwalia has projected that India needs $492 billion investments
in the infrastructure sector to its maintain growth. Addressing a gathering
of top CEOs and business persons at the conference India @60: A New Age for
Business... Ahluwalia said the challenge is to create the right policies that
will attract additional funding of this size."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Lily Nonomiya): "Japan's August trade surplus widened
to 743.2 billion yen ($6.5 billion), three times higher than economists predicted,
as car and steel shipments jumped and import growth slowed. Exports rose at
more than twice the pace of imports... Exports climbed 14.5% in August, faster
than July's 11.8%..."
China Watch:
September 26 - Financial Times (Richard McGregor): "In any other country,
a shortage of pigs might be brushed off as a temporary phenomenon, cured by
another turn in the perennial 'hog cycle' as rising prices prompt higher meat
production. But in China, where pork is the staple meat and food counts for
a large part of the household budget, the shortage - and its feared spillover
to other parts of the economy - is being treated as something approaching a
national emergency. The spectre of inflation fomenting broader discontent -
as it did two decades ago, culminating in the Tiananmen Square protests of
1989 - taps into the deepest existential fears of Chinese rulers about mass
disorder and regime survival. In recent weeks, protests by students angry at
higher prices and smaller food servings in their canteens have been reported
in Anhui and Guangdong provinces. Even in affluent urban centres, including
Beijing and Shanghai, the food price rises are causing resentment. Inflation
hit 6.5% in August, the highest rate in 11 years, largely because of a 49%
year-on-year surge in meat and poultry prices.... 'We have entered a very delicate
stage of our development,' says a senior economist and government adviser...
'For a long time, I was very optimistic about China's growth, but now I am
quite worried. Real inflation is much higher. No one believes the government's
figures.'"
September 27 - Bloomberg (Nipa Piboontanasawat and Patricia Chua): "Profits
at Chinese industrial companies surged 37% in the first eight months from a
year earlier, adding to funds that fuel investment in the world's fastest-growing
major economy. Combined net income rose to 1.6 trillion yuan ($213 billion)...
Sales jumped 27.4% to 24.5 trillion yuan."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Chua Kong Ho): "Citic Securities Co. is the fastest-growing
brokerage firm in the world thanks to the booming market for Chinese stocks,
and Wall Street may have to get used to the industry neophyte challenging Goldman
Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch & Co. as the biggest.
Founded just 12 years ago, Beijing-based Citic now has a market capitalization
of $40.7 billion, or $8.8 billion more than Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.,
$24.4 billion more than Bear Stearns Cos. and $16.4 billion more than Charles
Schwab Corp., after rising more than threefold in 2007. Haitong Securities
Co., China's No. 2, also eclipsed Bear Stearns as the seven largest U.S. brokers
lost $37 billion in value this year."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Bei Hu and Winnie Zhu): "China Shenhua Energy Co.,
the Nation's largest coal producer, attracted at least 2.6 trillion yuan ($350
billion) of orders for its Shanghai share sale, a record..."
Asia Bubble Watch:
September 24 - Bloomberg (Shamim Adam): "Singapore' consumer prices rose in
August at the fastest pace in more than 12 years, suggesting the central bank
will maintain a policy of allowing its currency to appreciate to damp inflation.
The consumer price index increased 2.9% from a year Earlier..."
September 25- Bloomberg (Jason Folkmanis): "Vietnamese inflation accelerated
in September for a seventh month to the highest since January 2006, driven
by surging food prices. Consumer prices climbed 8.8% from a year earlier..."
Unbalanced Global Economy Watch:
September 28 - Bloomberg (Fergal O'Brien): "European confidence in the economic
outlook dropped to a 16-month low in September and inflation accelerated above
the European Central Bank's ceiling as borrowing costs climbed and oil prices
reached a record."
September 27 - Bloomberg (Gabi Thesing): "Money-supply growth in the euro
region held close to a 28-year high in August, adding to the European Central
Bank's inflation concerns. M3 money supply...rose 11.6% from a year earlier,
after 11.7% in July... The three-month average of the annual growth rate of
M3 through August rose to 11.4% from 11.1% through July... Loans to the private
sector rose 11.2% in August from a year earlier, up from 11%... That's the
highest since November 2006."
September 27 - Bloomberg (Jennifer Ryan): "U.K. lenders approved fewer home
loans in August after a credit-market slump and five interest-rate increases
in the past year made mortgages more expensive... Banks granted 61,051 loans
for house purchase, down from 66,965 in July... The reading is 14% lower than
a year ago."
September 24 - Bloomberg (Mark Deen): "Britain had a 9.1 billion-pound ($18.4
billion) budget deficit in August, the largest for the month in at least 14
years, as spending grew at double the pace of tax income."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Simon Kennedy): "French manufacturers grew more
pessimistic about the economic outlook in September as increasing borrowing
costs and the appreciating euro threaten to sap growth. Insee...said today
an index based on a survey of 4,000 manufacturers measuring expectations for
production fell to its lowest since March..."
September 27 - Bloomberg (Claudia Rach): "Germany's unemployment rate fell
in September to the lowest level in 14 years as companies in Europe's largest
economy continued to recruit workers to meet rising demand for goods and services.
The jobless rate, adjusted for seasonal swings, declined to 8.8% from 8.9%
last month..."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Jonas Bergman): "Sweden's consumer confidence index
fell to a six-month low in September as higher interest rates pushed optimism
about future growth to the lowest in almost two years. The index slid to 16.2,
the lowest since March, from 19.7 in August..."
September 25- Bloomberg (Adam Brown): "Private debt in Romania increased an
annual 50% in August as individuals and companies took out more loans in foreign
currencies."
September 24 Bloomberg (Maria Levitov): "The Russian Economy Ministry increased
this year's economic growth forecast to 7.3% from 6.5%, the ministry said..."
September 27 - Financial Times (Catherine Belton): "It is after 9pm on a Tuesday
in Moscow and shoppers are still poring over television sets and washing machines
at M-Video, an electronic goods retailer and one of the biggest operators in
Russia's consumer boom. But at the consumer loans desk, the bank that has played
a big role in stimulating the rapid growth of Russia's retail sector has not
been issuing many loans. "A lot of customers are being rejected," says Julia,
a sales representative for Russian Standard Bank, the top consumer lender.
'We used to approve 90% of applications for loans. Now the majority . . . are
declined.' Faced with rising borrowing costs on international markets amid
a global credit squeeze, Russian Standard Bank has been rapidly reassessing
its loan procedures. The bank said last week it was suspending the issuance
of cash loans and mortgages while tightening requirements for credit card and
point-of-sale lending, though it denied any big cutback in overall lending."
Latin America Watch:
September 27 - Bloomberg (Andre Soliani and Katia Cortes): "Brazil's central
bank raised its inflation forecasts for this year and next as rising food prices
spread to other sectors of the economy, boosting expectations that the central
bank will pause after two years of rate cuts. The bank raised it 2007 inflation
forecast by a half-point to 4.0%..."
Bubble Economy Watch:
September 26 - Bloomberg (Shobhana Chandra): "Consumer confidence in September
fell more than forecast to the lowest level in almost two years, as falling
home values, a deteriorating labor market and tougher borrowing standards took
a toll on Americans' spirits. The Conference Board's index of confidence plunged
to 99.8, from a revised 105.6 in August and workers were less optimistic about
job prospects..."
September 28 - Bloomberg (Tom Randall): "Profit in the U.S. may grow at the
slowest rate in more than five years this quarter as the housing slump hurts
results at companies from IndyMac Bancorp Inc. to Target Corp. Earnings of
Standard & Poor's 500 Index members may rise an average of 3.2% from a
year earlier, breaking a 20-quarter streak of gains exceeding 10%..."
Fiscal Watch:
September 27 - Financial Times (Demetri Sevastopulo): "At a dramatic congressional
hearing that saw the eviction of several dozen mostly female protesters, Robert
Gates, the US defence secretary, yesterday urged lawmakers to approve $190bn
to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2008. Mr Gates said the Pentagon
needed another $42bn for the conflicts on top of the $147bn outlined earlier
this year. The request would bring total US military spending for fiscal 2008,
which begins in October, to $671bn. If approved, the budget would equate to
spending almost $21,300 a second and would rank the Pentagon ahead of the Dutch
economy, the 16th largest in the world, in terms of size."
Central Banker Watch:
Second quarter GDP expanded at a nominal 6.6% rate, up from Q1's 4.9%. August
Personal Income was up 6.8% y-o-y, with the Wages & Salary component up
7.1% y-o-y. Personal Spending increased 5.2% y-o-y. Total August New and Existing
Home Sales were down 14% from a year earlier. Year-to-date Total Home Sales
were 10.7% below the comparable year ago level.
September 26 - Bloomberg (Scott Lanman and Anthony Massucci): "Federal Reserve
Bank of Philadelphia President Charles Plosser said last week's interest-rate
cut could cause inflation to accelerate and that policy makers must be ready
to reverse course if needed. 'Cutting the funds rate has the potential for
aggravating inflation, there's no question about that,' Plosser told the New
Jersey Technology Council... Should inflation or price expectations rise in
coming months, 'the outlook will be affected and policy may have to be adjusted.'"
September 26 - Bloomberg (Robin Wigglesworth): "Norway's krone advanced against
the euro after the central bank unexpectedly raised interest rates for the
sixth time this year. The krone rose to the highest since May 2006 after Norges
Bank lifted borrowing costs a quarter-point to 5%..."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Meera Louis): "European Central Bank council member
Guy Quaden comments on inflation and economic growth in the economy of the
13 euro nations... On growth and inflation: 'Projections published a few weeks
ago by the ECB staff indicate continued growth and persisting risks for inflation'
and that 'is still the baseline scenario. 'Governors have recognized that the
uncertainty surrounding that scenario has strongly increased. So what we have
to do these days is to wait and see and, above all, to scrutinize all the incoming
data before taking the appropriate decision.'"
September 27 - Bloomberg (Lily Nonomiya): "Japan's economy may overheat should
the nation's 'very low' interest rates be raised too slowly, central bank board
member Miyako Suda said. 'If adjustments are too slow, the risk of the economy
overheating may rise,' Suda said... 'It's desirable that early and gradual
action is taken.'"
California Watch:
September 25 - The California Association of Realtors (CAR): "Home sales decreased
27.8% in August in California compared with the same period a year ago, while
the median price of an existing home increased 2%... 'Despite the overall increase
in the statewide median price, prices declined in 11 regions last month, falling
11.5% in the Central Valley region and 12.1% in Sacramento,' said C.A.R. President
Colleen Badagliacco. 'Price softness is even more pronounced when we look at
different segments of the market. For example, the statewide median price in
the entry-level price range of less than $500,000 fell 5.1% [y-o-y] in August
to $349,360... The median price per square foot for a single-family home is
also on the decline, falling 4.3% this year to $336... 'While low affordability,
tighter underwriting standards and expectations of lower prices continue to
pose challenges for the market, the decline in sales accelerated in August
as a result of the so-called credit or liquidity crunch that began in July.,'
said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young. 'The
credit crunch emerged as uncertainty about the extent of the subprime problem
drove investors across the globe to turn off the tap of funds to lenders in
mortgage and other credit market segments. With credit drying up, even qualified
buyers were unable to receive funding for home purchases. We expect the impact
of the credit crunch to play out over the next several months, and that it
will continue to negatively impact sales,' she said... C.A.R.'s Unsold Inventory
Index for existing, single-family detached homes in August 2007 was 11.8 months,
compared with 5.9 months (revised) for the same period a year ago." C.A.R.'s
unsold inventory stood at 2.6 months in August 2005.
GSE Watch:
Fannie expanded its "Book of Business" (held mortgages and outstanding MBS)
by almost $30bn during August (17.1% annualized) to $2.279 TN. Year-to-date,
Fannie's Book of Business has expanded at a 12.9% pace. Freddie's Book of Business
increased about $19bn during the month, an 11.6% growth rate, to $1.983 TN.
Year-to-date, Freddie's Book of Business has expanded at a 12.9% pace.
Mortgage Finance Bust Watch:
September 26 - Bloomberg (Brian Louis): "Lennar Corp., the largest U.S. homebuilder,
reported the biggest quarterly loss in its 53-year history after $848 million
of costs to write down the value of real estate. The third-quarter net loss
was $513.9 million... exceeding the most pessimistic estimates from analysts
and suggesting the worst housing market in 16 years shows no signs of stabilizing.
Revenue at Miami-based Lennar fell 44% to $2.34 billion, the lowest in more
than three years."
Foreclosure Watch:
September 28 - Bloomberg (Hugh Son and Josh P. Hamilton): "Defaults on privately
insured U.S. mortgages climbed 30% last month from year-earlier levels, an
industry trade group reported, adding to evidence that home foreclosures may
continue to rise. Insured borrowers more than 60 days behind on their payments
rose to 58,441 in August...Mortgage Insurance Companies of America said..."
MBS/ABS/CDO/CP/Money Funds and Derivatives Watch:
September 26 - Financial Times (Richard McGregor): "Losses in the US subprime
mortgage market are set to escalate as falling house prices prevent borrowers
with adjustable-rate mortgages from refinancing on better terms, data released
yesterday suggest. Housing prices in the main 20 US cities fell 3.9% in July
from the previous year, the worst performance this decade, according to...Case
Shiller. Analysts expect house prices to decline further and predict such falls
could devastate homebuyers who took out subprime mortgages in late 2005 and
2006. Many of these borrowers took out adjustable-rate mortgages in the belief
that rising housing prices would increase their home equity and enable them
to refinance loans before rates rose."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Jody Shenn): "Late payments and defaults among subprime
mortgages packaged into bonds rose last month, according to data for loans
underlying benchmark ABX derivative indexes. After August payments, 19.1% of
loan balances in 20 deals from the second half of 2005 were at least 60 days
late, in foreclosure, subject to borrower bankruptcy or backed by seized property,
up from 17.5% a month earlier, according to...Wachovia... Prepayment speeds
for the loans slowed, suggesting it's more difficult for borrowers to sell
their homes or refinance, according to...UBS AG. Record levels of delinquencies
and defaults on subprime mortgages are worsening as home prices decline and
interest rates on loans adjust higher for the first time. As lenders tighten
standards, borrowers are finding it harder to refinance into new mortgages
with lower payments. The 'reports showed the first inkling of the impact of
shutdown of subprime market,' the UBS analysts...wrote... 'In our opinion,
the full impact is yet to come.'"
Real Estate Bubbles Watch:
September 26 - Florida Association of Realtors: "Low mortgage rates, low unemployment
rates and strong demographics continued to reflect positive economic signs
in Florida in August. Statewide, sales of existing single-family homes totaled
11,279 last month and were closer to activity in August 2001 and 2002 -- before
the peak of the housing boom years -- than the August 2006 figures, when 15,252
homes sold for a 26% decrease in the year-to-year comparison... Florida's median
sales price for existing single-family homes last month was $231,900; a year
ago...6% [y-o-y] decrease."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Kathleen M. Howley): "What happens in Las Vegas
doesn't stay in Vegas when it comes to the city's housing market. Tumbling
home prices in the gambling Mecca will show how far and how fast U.S. property
values will fall in 2008 as the housing decline enters its third year, said
William Wheaton, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
'Las Vegas is an important barometer for where the rest of the nation's home
prices are going because it's going to show us how quickly the investors head
for the doors,' Wheaton said... Almost half of Las Vegas home sales in 2005
and 2006 were to people who intended to resell quickly for a profit, according
to data compiled by Fannie Mae... Nationally, investment purchases accounted
for 28% of sales in 2005..."
Speculator Watch:
September 26 - Financial Times (Peter Garnham): "London's dominance of the
global foreign exchange market has grown sharply while New York's share has
slipped, a survey revealed... The UK's share of foreign exchange trading volumes
jumped from 31.3% in 2004 to 34.1% in April 2007...from the Bank for International
Settlements... This was more than double that of the US, its nearest rival,
which saw its share of the market fall from 19.2% to16.6%. London's rise in
the world's largest financial market will be a fresh blow to New York..."
September 26 - Bloomberg (Jason Kelly and Jenny Strasburg): "Carlyle Capital
Corp., the publicly traded credit fund backed by private-equity firm Carlyle
Group, fell 24% in August as it sold assets and global debt prices declined.
Carlyle Capital's net assets dropped to $642.1 million from $843.5 million
at the end of July... The decline wiped out 61% of the $327.8 million in capital
that the Guernsey, U.K-based fund raised in the previous two months."
Crude Liquidity Watch:
September 26 - Bloomberg (Jim Kennett): "Chevron Corp...will repurchase as
much as $15 billion of its stock as record crude prices increase earnings.
The three-year buyback program follows stock repurchases of $5 billion each
that were completed in 2005, 2006 and September 2007..."
September 24 - Bloomberg (Zainab Fattah): "The Saudi riyal hit a 21-year high
against the dollar last week and is likely to be under greater pressure to
re-value against the dollar if the Federal Reserve cut rates again this year,
Standard Chartered Plc said."
September 23 - Bloomberg (Arif Sharif): "Oman's annualized M2 money supply
growth...slowed to 31.2% in July from a decade-high 31.7% in June..."
Clash of the Paradigms:
David Tice, banking analyst Charlie Peabody (Portales Partners), and I led
a panel discussion, "End Game for Credit Bubble: Implications for Financial
Markets & Wall Street Finance," last Thursday at an Argyle Executive Forum
("Alternative Thinking About Investments" in NYC). It was moderated by the
wonderfully talented Kate Welling (welling.weedenco.com).
The following is certainly not an official transcript of David and my comments
but, rather, Q&A expanded in hope of providing more complete responses:
Question: For starters, why don't you provide us a framework for the
analysis behind your provocative title, "The End Game for the Credit Bubble."?
It is our view that we are in the midst of history's greatest Credit Bubble.
History and sound economic theory have taught us that unconstrained credit
systems are inherently unstable - and the longer excesses and imbalances are
accommodated the more serious the consequences from the impairment of underlying
financial and economic structures. We'll begin by presenting two slides that
contrast between the current conventional view and our own. We see this very
much as the Clash of Incompatible Paradigms - and it's this "clash" that will
remain at the epicenter of unfolding Credit system instability.
The Conventional View Paradigm:
-
"Perfect/Efficient" Markets Paradigm
-
Economic performance governs market behavior
-
Underlying economic fundamentals are sound
-
Fed commands system liquidity
-
Capacity to initiate reflations/reliquefications on demand
-
Disregard asset Bubbles until they come under stress
-
Current Account Deficits are largely irrelevant.
-
The system enjoys unlimited capacity to leverage and limitless liquidity.
-
Contemporary models-based finance presumes continuous and liquid markets
-
The present-day U.S. financial system is more stable, with banks actively
disbursing risk throughout the markets.
Our Paradigm - History's Greatest Credit Bubble
-
Unconstrained Credit systems are inherently unstable.
-
Markets are inherently susceptible to recurring bouts of instability and
illiquidity.
-
Wall Street financial innovation and expansion created what evolved into
a precarious 20-year Credit cycle, replete with self-reinforcing liquidity
abundance and speculative excess.
-
"Wall Street Alchemy" - the transformation of risky loans into enticing
securities/instruments - has played a momentous role in fostering myriad
Bubbles.
-
Unrelenting Credit and speculative excesses have masked a deeply maladjusted
U.S. "services" Bubble Economy.
-
The prolonged U.S. Credit Bubble and resulting interminable Current Account
Deficits have cultivated myriad global Bubbles.
-
Recessions are an integral aspect of Capitalistic development - and busts
are proportional to the preceding booms.
-
Today, speculative-based liquidity commands the financial markets and
real economy, creating unparalleled fragility.
-
Late-cycle "blow-off" excesses are the most perilous because of their
deleterious affects upon the underlying structure of the financial system
and economy.
Question: Can you provide a brief explanation of "Bubble Economies," "Credit
Bubbles" and some of your theory behind these concepts?
Bubble Economies are highly complex creatures. Clearly, they are dictated
by financial excess - most notably a sustained inflation in the quantity of
Credit. Substantial Bubble Economies develop over an extended period of time.
The momentous variety are often nurtured by the interplay of extraordinary
technological and financial innovation, and are almost always perceived at
the time as so-called "miracle economies." Both Credit and speculative excess
play prominent roles, especially late in the cycle. Central bankers are likely
to be caught confused and accommodating.
It is the nature of Credit that excess begets only greater excess. Major Bubbles
are associated with exceptional yet generally unrecognized Credit system phenomenon
("Monetary Disorder"). It is imperative to appreciate that Bubble Economies
are as seductive as they are dangerous. Credit excess causes different strains
of inflation - rising consumer, commodity, and asset prices to note the most
obvious. Asset inflation is the most dangerous, as there is no constituency
to stand up and demand the Fed rein it in. Furthermore, the longer asset inflation
and Bubbles run unchecked the greater their propensity to go to wild, destabilizing
extremes - likely hamstringing policymakers in the process.
Bubble Economies become progressively distorted by inflations in incomes,
corporate earnings, government receipts and spending, and Current Account Deficits.
Inflationary spending, investment, and speculative financial flow distortions
play prominent roles in progressive economic maladjustment. By the late stage
of the Credit boom, inflation effects tend to be highly divergent and inequitable.
The greatest systemic danger arises when speculative-based liquidity comes
to dominate financial flows and economic development, creating a highly Credit-dependent
and unstable system. End of cycle market price distortions tend to create the
greatest impairment to financial and economic systems. Bubbles are inevitably
sustained only by ever-increasing Credit and speculative excess. Any bursting
Bubble must be supplanted by a more pronounced one (or series of Bubbles).
As we are witnessing these days, the great danger associated with central banks
accommodating Credit and asset Bubbles is that a point of Acute Fragility will
be reached - with policymaking gravitating toward prescriptions to sustain
financial excess.
Question: You have discussed in the past a concept that you refer to
as "The alchemy of Wall Street finance." Can you describe it for us and
relate it to our current environment?
There are two related concepts that are fundamental to our analytical framework
- how we view Credit-induced booms and their inevitable busts. These are the "Alchemy
of Wall Street Finance" and the "Moneyness of Credit."
First, the "Alchemy of Wall Street Finance:" This is basically the process
of transforming risky loans - loans that become increasingly risky throughout
the life of the credit boom - into debt instruments that are appealing to the
marketplace. This is very important, because as long as Credit instruments
enjoy robust market demand they can be created in abundance - in an extreme
case fueling a runaway Credit Bubble with dire consequences for the financial
system and real economy.
Our second concept, "Moneyness of Credit," also plays a central role in boom
dynamics. If you think about contemporary "money", it's really not about the
government printing press or Federal Reserve issuance. Instead, "money" is
today largely the domain of private sector Credit and the Marketplace's Perceptions
of Safety and Liquidity. "Moneyness" always plays a prominent role in Credit
booms, due to the unbounded capacity to inflate Credit instruments that are
perceived as safe and liquid.
Think of it this way, a boom financed by junk bonds likely isn't going to
progress too far - market restraint will be imposed by limitations in demand
for these risky Credits. On the other hand, a boom fueled by virtually endless
quantities of highly-rated agency debt, ABS, MBS, commercial paper, repos and
the like - instruments the market perceives as "money"-like no matter how many
are issued - has the very real potential to get out of hand.
And this gets to the heart of the issue - the dangerous state of this Wall
Street Alchemy. Over the life of the boom there has been a growing disconnect
between the market's perception of "moneyness" and the actual mounting risk
associated with the underlying Credit instruments. Especially because of the
heavy use of derivatives, sophisticated structures, and leveraging, along with
Credit insurance and various guarantees throughout the intermediation process
- the entire risk market became highly distorted and dysfunctional.
And we would argue that the market's perception of "moneyness" has recently
changed - and we believe this to be a momentous development. The market now
has serious trust issues related to ratings, pricing, liquidity, leveraging,
counter-party risk, Credit insurance, and sophisticated Wall Street structures
in general. In short, Wall Street's capacity to create contemporary "money" has
been dramatically constrained.
Of late, the rapid growth of central bank and banking system balance sheets
has taken up the slack. But this is only a temporary stop-gap. The unrecognized
dilemma today is that to sustain our Bubble economy will require continuous
huge quantities of Credit creation - and these loans are by nature high risk.
Wall Street risk intermediation is impaired - the market today seeks risk avoidance
and de-leveraging - and there is little alternative than the banking system
turning to risky lender of last resort.
Question: So where are we today, and what are the ramifications for
the current economy?
Putting it all together, a confluence of factors has created what we expect
to be an ongoing highly unstable Credit backdrop. In the nomenclature of economist
Hyman Minsky - we have today "Acute Financial Fragility" - as opposed to previous
backdrops where the U.S. system, in particular, was positioned to weather periods
of turmoil relatively well. Despite dogged global central bank interventions,
we still fear the potential for the Credit market to seize up - with devastating
economic consequences. And the combination of unusually frail financial and
economic structures leaves us very fearful of a dollar crisis of confidence.
At the minimum, the bursting of the Mortgage Finance Bubble has instigated
a serious tightening of mortgage Credit Availability, leading to escalating
foreclosures, Credit losses, pressures on home prices, and ongoing marketplace
illiquidity for MBS and mortgage-related debt instruments. A classic real estate
bust will feed on itself, ensuring further havoc throughout mortgage finance
and imperiling the over-borrowed consumer sector.
Question: There's a lot of talk these days about the GSEs - their roles
in market excess, previous financial crises, and the potential for GSE
liquidity to come to the market's rescue once again. What's your view on
these matters?
There is a key facet of GSE analysis that does not garner the attention it
deserves - and it relates, importantly, to the stark contrast between the inherent
stability of GSE obligations and the underlying instability of much of today's
debt market structures. Let me begin by sharing data I believe go far in illuminating
recent acute financial fragility. Returning to the four-year period 1998 through
'01, direct GSE borrowings expanded $1.2 TN versus a $788bn increase in outstanding
asset-backed securities (ABS). Compare this to the three-years 2004 through
'06, when GSE debt grew only $57bn while ABS ballooned almost $2.0 TN.
In developing his hypotheses of inherent financial instability, Hyman Minsky
coined the terminology "Ponzi Finance." It is crucial to appreciate that GSE-related
debt (agency debt and MBS) behaves atypically during crisis: I refer to the
GSEs as the "Anti-Ponzi Finance Units" - in that finance flows aggressively
to this (quasi-government) asset class during periods of market tumult. The
GSEs enjoyed basically unlimited capacity to expand liabilities during previous
crises - 1994, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001/02 - and their operations played a momentous
role in repeatedly backstopping the Credit boom.
Today - the GSEs are constrained and their balance sheets will not play their
typical prominent role in accommodating speculator deleveraging and system
reliquefication. Furthermore, by far the greatest excesses over the past few
years were in Wall Street "private-label" ABS/MBS - subprime and, more importantly,
Alt-A, jumbo, interest-only and other mortgages that encouraged borrowers to
reach for more home than they could afford.
So, from a GSE standpoint, these agencies played an instrumental role in fostering
the Mortgage Finance Bubble. When, in 2004, the scandal-plagued GSEs faltered,
Wall Street was keen to snatch control. Consequently, trillions of unstable
non-GSE debt instruments now permeate the system. At the same time, the GSEs
are today incapable of orchestrating their typical market liquidity operations.
This helps explain the difference between previous relative stability during
crises versus recent Acute Fragility - especially in Wall Street ABS, sophisticated
leveraged strategies, and derivatives more generally.
And we don't expect this dynamic to be easily reversed or even meaningfully
mitigated. Central bank interventions will have minimal intermediate and long-term
impact on the bursting Mortgage Finance Bubble. Liquidity today flows in abundance
to gold, precious metals, crude oil, commodities and virtually any non-dollar
asset market - where robust inflationary biases prevail - content to avoid
Wall Street mortgage-related securities and exposures. The situation will only
worsen as home price declines gather momentum and Credit losses escalate.
Question: So, it is your contention that the current crisis marks a
major inflection point for the Credit system?
We strongly believe so. Going forward, markets will be decidedly more cautious
when it comes to ratings and liquidity. "AAA" was perceived as "always liquid" -
even in the midst of financial crisis. In reality, GSE-related debt and their
ballooning balance sheets played a prominent role in fostering this fateful
market misperception. Yet, over the past few years, the most egregious Credit
excesses were in speculative leveraging of highly-rated non-GSE securitizations.
This scheme is now over.
The bursting of the Mortgage Finance Bubble has ushered in a major tightening
of mortgage Credit, which will lead to escalating foreclosures, Credit losses,
home pricing pressures, and ongoing marketplace illiquidity for MBS and mortgage-related
debt instruments. We see the so-called "subprime crisis" transforming over
time to an expansive dislocation in "Alt-A", jumbo and "exotic" mortgages.
There are now literally trillions - and growing - of suspect debt instruments
and many multiples more in problematic derivative instruments. We suspect that
the proliferation of sophisticated leveraged strategies created considerable
demand for high-yielding mortgage products, and now these vehicles are trapped
with losses and illiquidity. Worse yet, Credit insurance and guarantees in
the tens of trillions have been written and, as the downside of the Credit
cycle gains momentum, we expect this exposure to become a major systemic issue.
In short, we see Credit "insurance" as a bull market phenomenon that will not
stand the test of the impending Credit and economic downturns. In too many
cases, Credit guarantees, "insurance," and myriad other exposures have been "written" by
thinly-capitalized speculators and financial operators. They will have little
wherewithal in the event of a serious Credit event. This is a major evolving
issue. We fear the entire Wall Street risk intermediation mechanism is at considerable
risk.
Question: Can you wrap thing up with some summary comments?
To summarize, we believe the current fragile boom - one characterized by unprecedented
imbalances and maladjustments - can only be sustained by ongoing massive Credit
creation. In an increasingly risk-averse world, this poses a colossal risk
intermediation challenge. Thus far, the confluence of a highly inflationary
global backdrop, extraordinary central bank interventions, and a major expansion
of U.S. banking system Credit has sufficed. We, however, view Fed and the U.S.
banking system capabilities as constrained and aggressive actions feasible
only over the short-term. Importantly, an impaired Wall Street risk intermediation
mechanism - the main source of finance behind the past few years of "blow-off" excess
- will be hard-pressed to meet challenges and new realities.
Likely, liquidity issues and faltering asset markets will instigate problematic
de-leveraging upon highly over-leveraged Credit and economic systems. We expect
significant unfolding tumult in the securitization, derivatives, and risk "insurance" marketplaces.
We view ballooning Credit insurance and derivatives markets as a bull market
phenomenon that won't withstand the test of the downside of the Credit Cycle.
We believe the stock market has of late benefited from a combination of complacency,
misperceptions with respect to Fed capabilities, and its newfound status, by
default, as favored risk asset class. We see US equities, in particular, highly
susceptible to unfolding detrimental financial and economic forces. We expect
the economy to soon succumb to recession. California and other inflated real
estate Bubble markets are now poised to suffer severe price declines - residential
as well as commercial. And we expect contemporary "Wall Street Finance" to
face a crisis of confidence - to suffer on all fronts - liquidity, Credit losses
and regulatory. Our faltering currency is, as well, a major issue.
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