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SWIM
WITH THE SHARKS
BUT RISK BEING EATEN
ALIVE
by
Richard Benson
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
July 27, 2007
Private companies that
lend their own money are generally very careful with their loan
underwriting, and they know how to collect the money they lend. Most
reputable finance companies use simple accounting procedures and have
adequate loan reserves, and conservative financial leverage. These firms
generally understand derivatives and don’t rely on them to manufacture
profits. They’re not sharks.
This
article is not about the private companies that use sound lending
practices. It’s about the many big financial players, the giant hedge
funds, major money center banks, and Watt Street Investment banks. These
are the “Big Boy Sharks” who created $2 trillion in subprime
mortgages, using hubris and Gordon Gekko-style greed, and have
recklessly used leverage and risk with other peoples’ money to book
corporate profits. A typical example of this is the over-levered Bear
Stearns hedge funds investing in crappy mortgage securities that have
now left many investors scratching their heads while they search for
answers as to why their equity vanished overnight.
Are
the codes of conduct being abused by the credit rating agencies when
they effectively “sell their souls” to rate untested mortgage
product in unproven financial structures? Should investors look askance
at the mono-line bond insurance companies that are backing about $2
trillion dollars in asset-backed, mortgage-backed and other securities?
How else could the Big Boys get away with it?
To
fully grasp the risk for the financial sector, it’s important to
understand how finance companies make money. For finance, the greatest
profit engine of all time has been the ability to take advantage of a
positively sloped yield curve. Long-term interest rates are usually
significantly higher than short-term. If you borrow short and lend long,
you can make an interest spread of two percent on the 10-year Treasury,
with no credit risk at all. However, over the last year and a half, the
yield curve has been flat or inverted and the Fed Funds rate of five and
a quarter percent is actually above the 10-year Treasury yield of five
percent! This means that the greatest profit engine for banks and
finance is totally out of gas.
Another
big profit engine for banks and finance is borrowing at a highly rated
credit rating, and investing at a lower credit rating. The difference
between the high rated cost of funds, and the lower rated investment
yield, is called the “credit spread”. For the past few years, credit
spreads have set a new record for being the least
profitable ever recorded! A flat yield curve and narrow credit
spreads are usually a disaster for bank and finance company earnings.
You would think that the right time for finance companies to be minting
money is when the yield curve is steep and the credit spreads are wide,
not now during times like these.
So,
why are the Big Boys still reporting record profits? It’s actually
easy, with a combination of the following: 1) Taking on unprecedented
risk by exploding up the size of the balance sheet; 2) Adding massive
amounts of leverage, including hidden leverage through derivatives; 3)
Robbing loan loss reserves; and 4) Playing accounting games that allow
earnings to be booked today at the expense of losses tomorrow.
Included
in the unprecedented risk category is when these same financial firms
switch to the foreign carry trade. Big carry trade profits can be
achieved by borrowing in a low interest rate foreign currency (such as
the Yen). As long as the Yen declines in value, a fortune can be made
borrowing below one percent interest, and investing in U.S. financial
assets yielding much more. However, this trade is placed and highly
leveraged and if the Yen ever goes up against the dollar, the carry
trade losses will make the subprime fiasco appear like a minor footnote
in history.
On-balance-sheet
leverage has also reached new heights. If a financial institution makes
nothing on borrowing short and lending long (and credit spreads are cut
in half just to keep profits the same), the firm will have to double its
leverage, which means twice the risk! Even so, the Big Boys have
exploded the size of their balance sheets and are funding massive
positions in securities with short-term “repurchase agreements” in
the money market. (Many of the
securities funded are just like those in the subprime mortgage hedge
funds where the security can’t find a buyer who will make a bid in the
market.) These securities have value recorded on the balance sheet
because a trader or portfolio manager, with a fancy financial model,
says they have value, not because the market says they do. These balance
sheets are like sandwiches filled with hundreds of billions of dollars
of “mystery meat”. This over-leveraged and frequently rotting meat
is something you really wouldn’t want to eat. It smells.
Many
lenders who have not adequately deducted loss reserves from earnings for
credit losses have, instead, goosed their earnings by short-changing the
loss reserves. These same lenders also continue to reward their
executives by paying them large bonuses and allowing them to cash out
their stock options. It’s really all about booking a profit today, and
telling you about the losses tomorrow.
In
the derivatives world, credit derivatives are the new new thing. Very
simply put, a credit derivative – known as a Credit Default Swap or
“CDS” – is when the insured pays a premium (like any insurance
policy) and if the credit goes belly up, the insurance pays off. Today,
there are tens of trillions of dollars in notional credit derivatives,
and all of the big players have become sharks with their use of these
derivatives.
For
financial institutions, CDSs are a way of making a credit bet (just like
making a loan) without the inconvenience of putting any real money up or
having to place the loan on the balance sheet, that would require
equity. Indeed, there are now about 10 CDSs written for each and every
corporate bond that actually exists! That means that 90 percent of the
business is pure speculation because it is not hedged by someone who
owns a bond or loan. Most of the CDS business is simply a way for the
Big Boys to place big bets with no money down. Remember,
if you own the stocks of big financial institutions, they are gambling
with your money.
Why
is all this Big Boy betting going on? Just like the accounting for
subprime mortgages, the financial institution gets to value the
instrument they created. Accounting for derivatives allows both the
seller and buyer of the insurance to pretend that the financial
institution isn’t gambling at all, as both get to book a profit!
The
seller of the credit default insurance can claim “I know the credit
will never default; I can book the premium I collect as pure profit and
don’t need to book a loss reserve.” At the same time, the buyer of
the credit default insurance can claim “The credit will default within
a few years so I can amortize my profit, net of the premium I paid, to
my expected date of default.”
The
best analogy would be to picture watching a poker game and around the
table are the biggest Wall Street Sharks. A lot of chips are on the
table and depending on the accounting treatment used, each player would
claim to have won the entire pot even though the last cards have yet to
be dealt. The problem is, those cards will be dealt eventually and
someone is going to have to book a loss. In this type of poker game, if
you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy! A number of
investors in some big subprime mortgage hedge funds just found this
out.
The
accounting treatment used in each credit default swap derivative is,
unfortunately, not the same. For each and every derivative, each player
gets to build their own fancy computer model and mark the value of their
credit default swaps, or similar securities, to the model. Since the
bonuses that the traders receive are based on what they show to be their
profit, human nature and a combination of hubris and greed lead to
massively over-optimistic and self-serving modeling, instead of an
honest value “mark to market”.
Think
sausages. We all know they taste great yet we don’t dare ask how
they’re made or what’s in them. The major rating agencies and
accounting firms have been the helpful and highly paid facilitators in
the making of the sausage. Profits at the Big Boy houses look great,
too, at the end of the quarter but if you saw how these profits were
actually made, you might have reconsidered your investment. Don’t
count on the accountants or rating agencies to even take a look, until
the Sharks have eaten and everyone sees the blood in the water.
For
the past couple of years, 40 percent of profits in the S&P 500 have
come from financing activities, and financial profits have a long way to
fall just to get back to historical averages. Remember, the U.S. economy
has been driven by the financial system which has created an
unprecedented level of debt. For those of you celebrating when the Dow
edged up toward 14,000 and the S&P 500 hit a new record high, you
may find the next celebration a long time coming. The recent stock
market slide is caused primarily by worries over credit quality and
excess leverage. The problems are just beginning.
The
high level of risk in the financial sector is one major reason why I buy
gold and silver. Remember, these precious metals have no accounting
games attached to them. That gold coin in your hand won’t go bust and
suddenly vanish into thin air!

©
2007 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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