|
Back in mid-December, in Master
of Disaster we picked on Citigroup as the bank who brought down Glass
Steagall and ironically would be on the front line of the subsequent financial
disasters Glass Steagall was designed to prevent. In Follow
The Bouncing Banks with Citigroup trading in low $30 range we noted that
ultimately the stock could trade down to $20 or 1x book in a back of the
napkin worst case analysis, which put it down another 45%. This week C made
it back down near its 52 week low of $22.35 so we wanted to highlight some
of the issues in the banking system so that we can be prepared for further
risk out of the credit markets.
These banks are currently sucking wind on various fronts and have been in
preservation mode trying to protect what's left of their non-transparent black
hole balance sheets. This retrenchment by the banking system has reared its
head yet again as the unwinding of numerous hedge funds last week put renewed
strain and drove chain reactions across the financial system. With massive
credit supply hitting the street last week we saw the ripple effects hit the
balance sheets of other companies who rely on the commercial banks for credit.
As bid lists were circulated throughout the street and the massive supply of
bonds increased, real money buyers backed off pricing and placed large discounts
on these credits. The mark for the trades in turn caused the collateral for
other leveraged owners of debt to fall which triggered further margin calls
which triggered further selling. We saw the ill effects of this chain reaction
in the price of Thornburg Mortgage (NYSE: TMA) which he past week has collapsed
over 60% from already depressed levels just in the last couple of weeks.
Consider how the dominoes fall. Money centers and prime brokers such as Citi/Smith
Barney are operating impaired balance sheets. They don't even know themselves
what their assets are worth. Their leveraged customers are seeing stress in
their own accounts due to adverse pricing in the credit markets. The banks
who are under stress themselves increase the margin requirement for their customers
which causes forced liquidation in the credits which in turn drives the prices
even lower. Other institutions who aren't even involved with the prime brokers
are seeing their collateral fall in value which is in turn causing their lenders
to require more collateral for the credit facility which is driving further
selling.

I don't mean to beat a dead horse but we have to be cognizant of the fact
that we operate in a financial economy and the banks are the central players.
As long as they can't get a handle on the value of their assets their balance
sheets will be under stress and these collateral calls will continue. The carry
trade model was overly leveraged and now has been busted. Any institution that
depends on short-term credit to buy higher yielding long-term credit will be
lucky to survive as long as the banks are de-levering themselves and driving
de-leveraging across the system. Our whole economy is being held hostage by
the banks and finding the bottom will be difficult to quantify. If you can
tell how many leveraged credit vehicles are out there and how much debt they
own you might be able to estimate the embedded risk. Without that information
we are just guessing.
As we navigate the coming weeks we will keep a close eye on the treasury market
and yield curve for clues that credit market stress is either abating or intensifying.
Further steepening could be indicative of further stress while a front end
led flattening could indicate the market is stabilizing.
|