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Fingers of Instability, Part IX
In This Issue - 3 Fingers
Marking to Myths!
Keeping the Illusions Front and Center
Bodies Beginning to Float to the Surface...And They Are WHALES!
Things are unfolding in an interesting manner and it is the ebb and flow of
the issues into and out of the financial Media's reporting of them that provide
us with the true picture as it merges. This week several VERY INTERESTING articles
allowed us a better picture on the enormity of this Systemic threat to the
global financial systems of the G7. The enormous lengths the authorities are
going to in order to keep the enormity of the problem from hitting "THE HEADLINES".
It is now becoming clear that new cockroaches are emerging in the biggest money
center banks in the world and they are "STUCK" in the "ROACH MOTELS" (see Tedbits
archives at www.TraderView.com) of
their own making. The solutions they are proposing are to allow the roach motels
to survive by creating a "SUPER" Roach motel to service the existing ones.
The participants are doing so in an act of self preservation. These activities
are creating opportunities of enormous proportions, are you prepared to benefit
from them?
Marking to Myths!
As Alan Greenspan created the greatest bubbles in history during his tenure
as Federal Reserve Chairman there was one consistent element common to them
all. "FIAT CURRENCIE AND CREDIT CREATION" in accordance with the public servants
who wished to MILK the citizens of their money through the printing press and
through the improper "Asset" inflation which generated always increasing tax
revenue from inflation of incomes and investments. This fueled their reelections
and allowed them to grow government far in excess of its benefits under the
cover of these activities.
We all aware how financial "PAPER" based wealth has skyrocketed during the
last 7 years. This is a direct result of the need to create "INVESTMENTS" for
all the money that was created to prevent deflation resulting from the bear
stock markets of 2000-2002, (and previous money printing exercises such as
Y2k, the Russian debt crisis and ad infinitum during the career of Alan Greenscam,
er Greenspan). This demand is what fueled the development of the "OVER THE
COUNTER" derivatives and structured products that are "part and parcel" of
the biggest investment portfolios in the world. It not only the G7 banking
systems that are in trouble, but the institutions, pension funds, and investors
which bought the products and face losses of up to 100% on investments they
were told were of high quality. The only solution for the problem is what else?
Printing money faster than it can DISAPEAR! I hope you all have some gold in
your portfolios.
First let's define the amount of investments which can't be priced, are illiquid
and have very few places, if any, where you can exit them. These investments
have a wide variety of quality, but mainly are the progeny of the largest money
center and investment banks in the world. These investment houses and banks
have gone through the greatest bull markets in the history of their businesses
and a bear market is directly in their futures. This is an overview of the "Dollar
Value" of the products they have created to overcome the loss of their IPO
revenue streams which were losses when the 1982-2000 Bull market ended:
Notice
when the issuance of these investments began to skyrocket? Just as the Federal
funds rate was nearing 1% in 2001. At that point a fine arbitrage opportunity
was set to begin as banks and investment managers were able to buy long duration
investments such as mortgages and bonds and finance them with very short borrowing
from money markets.
The magic of fractional banking and leverage allowed them to borrow "short
term" money cheaply and buy/lend Long Term on higher yielding investments.
But the Federal Reserve was not the only source of cheap funds for these arbitrage
opportunities. The other source was the JAPENESE yen, as interest rates there
were effectively "ZERO" as deflation was then, as it is now, firmly entrenched
since the last asset backed economy ran off the rails in Japan in 1989-1990!
With these two sources of capital "carry trades" have become the main stream
investment technique for the "money center and investment' banks of the G7.
They quit making money the "OLD FASHIONED" way as Smith Barney used to say
and embarked on the STAR TREK model of investing. To go "where no man has gone
before" and the hope of financial alchemy "turning lead into gold" was revived
for the umpteenth time in the history of man.
When Greenspan and Japan effectively lowered interest rates into negative
territory (inflation at 3% and interest rates at 1% = 2% negative interest
rates) investment plans around the world were thrown into turmoil. Negative
interest rates compounding at a rate of 1 percent a year are very unattractive
so it challenges the investors to reach for yields which entail poorer risk
return ratios. Investors which had been very comfortable buying highly rated
bonds which yielded 6 to 8% over the last twenty years or more suddenly couldn't
do it. Using the rule of 72 to determine how long it took to double using compounding
we know at 6% an investment doubles every 12 years, at 8% every 9 years, and
at 9 it doubles 8 years. For the biggest money in the world such as retirement
funds, institutions and insurance companies which only wants the return of
their money with a return of 2% after inflation, these bonds represented safe
and actuarial predictable returns. With 1 percent interest rates those returns
increasingly evaporated, when a government or AAA rated bond only garners 4.5%
the time span zooms to 16 years. At first the long end did not crumble, and "Longer
term" returns stayed decent, but as the trade and budget deficits of the G7
grew and they printed the money to pay for them, so did the numbers of bidders
for the safest categories of investments so the conundrum of low long term
bond interest rates was created as it got very crowded as bidders tried to
stay safe.
The more billions and trillions were printed and created the lower to return
on them as they were widely available. The more money available for capital
investment the lower the returns you (or the lender) can expect, when money
is scarce returns for capital are higher. These currency holders eventually
were forced into riskier investments and Wall Street "ENGINEERED" them due
to the incredible demand for them. Structured products were born!
When you solve problems for large numbers of people you get paid a lot. The
more problems you solve the more you are paid. It's as simple as that, look
no further than Microsoft to see what you are paid for solving problems. The
Money center and Investment banks solved the problems for investors who held
something widely available "infinite amounts of fiat currencies" and increased
the returns on it. They disguised the risks in opacity, illiquidity, complexity
and in concert with the ratings agencies which succumbed to the siren song
shareholders for "MORE PROFITS". Real inflation was running away while reported
inflation was low so public servants could "COVER UP" their irresponsibility.
The structured products they created were testaments to the power of the personal
computer and "MATHEMATICAL" modeling based on assumptions of past behavior.
However, the past behaviors were from a time when irresponsible spending by
the public and governments were generally regulated by responsible banks and
the market place which had to really know who and for what they were lending.
Now lending is designed for the lowest common man and the highest return on
the lending. So the borrowers are all over the spectrum from responsible to
highly irresponsible.
This
reduction in lending standards required that they become packaged in securities
in which good and bad can be packeaged together, if they couldn't be then the
coupons couldn't get to the high level sought after by the lenders. So they
created investment sausages which had all manner of loans in them: corporate
bonds, Municipals, commercial mortgage backed securities, high yield bonds,
mortgage backed securities, leveraged loans, collateralized loan obligations
(private equity, share buybacks, M & A, etc.), asset backed securities,
credit card receivables, CDO's/structured credits, etc. All of these and more
were incorporated in the securitized structured products to blend the yields
to higher levels and to disguise much of the "lending" trash being included
in them.
These securities were bought by large investors, institutions, pension funds,
hedge funds, etc. and off bank balance sheet investment vehicles such as SIV's
(Structured Investment vehicles) and Conduits. Most of the buyers bought them
for the yield and implied safety of the ratings they were given by the ratings
agencies. But many were taken into the carry trade and leveraged for additional
returns. The carry trade is where you borrow money at 1 percent and buy an
asset that yields 4 to 15% and pocket the difference. It can be done with currencies
only or the buy side can include almost anything such as stocks, bonds, structured
products, emerging market bonds, corporate bonds, or anything that promises
a high rate of return over the low cost of borrowing.
The buy side can have lots of twists and turns as many may be denominated
in foreign currencies which may fluctuate, or the buy side can have a lot of
capital risk as they could fail and the money to repay the low cost borrowing
is lost (this is what's happening now). And that is were we find ourselves
now as lending standards have collapsed in New York and the world the value
of the products sold are questionable as there is no exchange in which to discover
their current value. To see how illiquid and undiscoverable these values are
take a look at what investors in these problem products are reporting when
they try and establish their value:
The values of these "structured" products is undiscoverable as to price them
is impossible. What do you do? Call the bank desks and get a quote? One mans
treasure becomes another mans trash during this exercise. However since they
vary according to what's in them and that is unknowable they all move into
the trash column.
The Wall Street Journal reports (www.wsj.com):
"During this summer's credit crunch, more than 80% of investors in bonds tied
to the mortgage market said they had trouble obtaining price quotes from their
bond dealers, according to a survey of 251 institutional investors by Greenwich
Associates, a Connecticut consulting firm.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. analyst Kedran Panageas estimates that 29% of
lower-quality "collateralized debt obligations" -- thinly traded investments
that package pools of loans -- will eventually lose all of their value due
to the recent mortgage shakeout. In the case of quality CDOs, she estimated,
12% will be reduced to zero. The lost value, she says, represents roughly $85
billion of the $475 billion of such securities outstanding. So far, she believes
investors have recognized only a fraction of those losses."
Earlier this year Wall Street saw what was unfolding and created a new way
of valuing these products so their malfeasance would be further obscured from
the public and investors; they devised the tier system so their values could
become more subjective, let's take a look:

This is where they have moved the losses to, level three. This is why the
losses have not been reported, in their BEST JUDGEMENT these holdings will
recover (p.s. do you believe in the tooth fairy as well). A tsunami of Sub
prime bombs er bonds were downgraded by Moody's this week: the Wall Street
Journal reports:
"Moody's Investors Service slashed credit ratings on about 2,000 bonds backed
by subprime home loans that were originally valued at $33.4 billion, in its
largest wave of downgrades. The New York ratings company said it doesn't expect
another bigger round of cuts for such bonds unless conditions in the housing
market deteriorate significantly."
Moody's yesterday placed an additional $23.8 billion in first-lien subprime
bonds on review for downgrades, including 48 securities that have the top Aaa
rating and 529 with the next-highest Aa rating. The rating service said these
ratings aren't expected to be lowered significantly.
Nicolas Weill, Moody's chief credit officer for structured finance, said the
latest actions were taken after a "complete review" of subprime-mortgage bonds
that were issued in 2006, adding that there should be "a fair amount of rating
stability going forward."
Moody's said there has been a steady deterioration in the performance of subprime
loans that were made in 2006 as home prices have continued to decline. But
it noted that as long as home prices don't fall by more than 10%, and the economy
remains steady, the bulk of its subprime bond ratings should be stable. According
to its data, home prices have fallen 4.5% to 5% from their peak.
The latest cuts are expected to spill over to many collateralized debt obligations,
or CDOs, that bought subprime-mortgage bonds last year and repackaged them
into new securities that were sold to investors world-wide.
A significant number of CDOs hold mainly subprime bonds that originally had
weaker credit ratings of A and Baa. Many of these securities have been downgraded
to junk, or high-yield, ratings, and some bonds have suffered principal losses
because of high defaults among the underlying loans. Some CDOs are being reviewed
for rating downgrades."
What? As long as home prices don't fall 10%? Improbable? Ask anyone selling
a home if they would take a 10% lower price from a year ago. I promise you
it would be 100% takers, so the losses have only begun to be realized so....
Keeping the Illusions Front and Center
The minutes of the Federal reserves most recent meeting were released and
it is very clear they were heavily scrubbed. They didn't even discuss whether
to cut .25%, its clear that in private briefings from the Treasury that they
have been told of the coming vaporization of bank reserves. Anyone holding
any of the assets listed in the previous Tedbit is heading for a haircut in
the value of their holdings and that includes banks and their thinly disguised "OFF
BALANCE SHEET" hedgefund operations known as SIV's and conduits. So its man
the lifeboats for the Banks, a steepening of the yield curve is exactly what
the doctor ordered for lenders who hold assets that yield 4 to 5% and short
term rates are above these holdings.
If you wish to know why the stock market is still rising look no further than
MZM and its rate of growth:

Wow, 24.3% growth in Money with zero maturity over the last 4 weeks? And 18.7%
for the 3rd quarter. Can you say money printing and plunge protections team
ammunition? The reason is simple, it is becoming quite obvious that the biggest
bank in the world is....
Bodies Beginning to Float to the Surface...And They Are WHALES!
Floating to the surface, as they are leading to form a consortium to meet
the short term funding needs of their off balance sheet Conduits and SIVs.
Who is this behemoth with branches on every street corner around the globe?
CITIGROUP!
This is the stuff of crashes as the world grapples with the illiquid mess
that is OVER THE COUNTER "structured products", we learn that Citigroup does
not have the capacity to meet the needs of its SIV's and Conduits. So it is
leading an effort to create a "SUPER CONDUIT" called the "master liquidity
enhancement" fund to meet the funding needs of these poorly structured carry
operations and their bank sponsors. Here's a small glimpse of bank conduits
and SIV's that are out on the limb together, as the buy side of their holding
are crumbling and they can't access the critical short term funds they need:
There
are dozens of hedge funds operating with the SIV and conduit business model
enhanced with leverage. The Wall Street Journal Reports:
In a far-reaching response to the global credit crisis, Citigroup Inc.
and other big banks are discussing a plan to pool together and financially
back as much as $100 billion in shaky mortgage securities and other investments.
The banks met three weeks ago in Washington at the Treasury Department, which
convened the talks and is playing a central advisory role, people familiar
with the situation said. The meeting was hosted by Treasury's undersecretary
for domestic finance, Robert Steel, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. official
and the top domestic finance adviser to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. The
Federal Reserve has been kept informed but has left the active role to the
Treasury.
The new fund is designed to stave off what Citigroup and others see as a threat
to the financial markets world-wide: the danger that dozens of huge bank-affiliated
funds will be forced to unload billions of dollars in mortgage-backed securities
and other assets, driving down their prices in a fire sale. That could force
big write-offs by banks, brokerages and hedge funds that own similar investments
and would have to mark them down to the new, lower market prices.
The ultimate fear: If banks need to write down more assets or are forced to
take assets onto their books, that could set off a broader credit crunch and
hurt the economy. It could make it tough for homeowners and businesses to get
loans. Efforts so far by central banks to alleviate the credit crunch that
has been roiling markets since the summer haven't fully calmed investors, leading
to the extraordinary move to bring together the banks.
Secret meetings? Three weeks ago? Two days before the FOMC meeting! Scrubbed
FOMC minutes. Connect the dots... Can you say government condoned and facilitated
cover up? Of course they are only planning to rescue the banks. Now we know
how Bear Stearns and Lehman brothers miraculously had very few losses to report.
People who bought and hold the CDO's, CMO's, MBS's, and other structured products
also face huge write downs as well. Remember Enron, Refco, and MCI? Their bankruptcies
were all centered around OFF BALANCE SHEET operations. Think of it, an off
balance sheet entity to hide losses of an off balance sheet entity, only in
the land of George Orwell and the G7 could things like this be created. A super
conduit to hide the walking dead Mortgage backed securities, why? So they can
have the time to find some other poor fool to buy them and hopefully restart
the money "printing" train aka securitized products of all types.
Citigroup looks like it wants to join this hall of shame. But, they have one
big thing on their side. They are TOO BIG to fail. They are in virtually every
country in the world. They would make Northern Rock a foot note. Can you imagine
seeing bank runs in every major city in the world? Well, the financial authorities
can so they will do what else? THEY WILL PRINT THE MONEY.
In conclusion: The credit crunch continues and the only solution they
(G7 financial authorities) know is printing the money. It is inculcated into
their DNA. This is a fabulous opportunity for those investors that play in
the tier one playing field and a night mare for those who inhabit tier three.
The 100 billion dollar super fund will just allow the biggest players to POSTPONE
paying the price for their previous follies (but it is not going to recover
the losses, those will not disappear, those people who owe the money in those
products WILL NOT PAY, reckoning day will arrive). As we all know the Money
and Investment banks have friends in high places. But that is only the banks,
as Moody's and S&P are FORCED to write down the value of the securitized
products: institutions, pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, etc.
will all have to write down the value of their investment holdings, and the
write downs look to be enormous. The next reflation of the financial system
has commenced in size, the "Crack up boom" (see archives at www.TraderView.com)
is still in the long term horizon.
Citigroup has just announced its earnings and abra cadabra, they beat the
street at .47 cents versus .44 cents, is anyone surprised? Tier three massages
any and all financial shenanigans and investors are turned into mushrooms in
the dark and fed BULL****! Crude oil is at $85 dollars a barrel and Turkey
is about to invade northern Iraq. Do you think there may be a little volatility
emerging? Volatility is opportunity for the prepared investor.
Think of Moody's statements about losses, these people are in on the gaming
of the expectations. Is this an opportunity or a pitfall for your portfolio?
Currencies, interest rates, stock indexes, commodities, precious metals will
all offer opportunities to the prepared as this unfolds. These assets are all
examples tier one markets, liquid, transparent, and well regulated exchange
traded markets.
This is an enormous "Finger of Instability", but will move many markets and
provide lots of opportunities, are you ready to capture them or be victim of
them? This has been a great mental exercise, just like CSI (crime scene investigation)
but in real life: the world economy and financial community is the crime scene.
We see its fingerprints in the markets we have outlined and I promise you its
fingerprints are written in many other markets. Ask yourself, am I going to
be a victim of what's unfolding or are these opportunities that I am prepared
to catch in my portfolio? If not, why not? Thank you for reading Tedbits, if
you enjoyed it send it to a friend and subscribe its free at www.TraderView.com,
don't miss the next installment of "Fingers of Instability".
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