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TH*NK*NG
(RISKS)
by Fred
Cederholm
Economic Analysis
Column
Columnist, Baltimore
Chronicle & Sentinel
October 8, 2007
I’ve
been thinking about risks. Actually I’ve been thinking about ratings,
the sub-prime loan Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs), the GSE’s
of Fannie/Freddie/Ginnie, the 1933 Securities Act, “Red Herrings,”
and Caveat
Emptor. Last week saw more banks, investment banks, and
investment funds effectively write-off
their investments in the CDO derivatives. To say the “marking (down)
to market (value)” was a write-down
would be a gross misstatement as the current charges against income
effectively took balance sheet valuations of these to near zero. Last
week’s hits alone were in the TENS of BILLION of dollars; these were
worldwide, and there will many, yes, many more yet to come.
You
see although I was one of the very first anywhere to question “Is the
Housing Market Going to Crash? - TH*NK*NG (HOUSING) in 2005 http://baltimorechronicle.com/033105Cederholm.shtml
, even I never foresaw the total bloodbath that is now unfolding. I was
left thoroughly confused by such a meteoric drop in the values of the
CDO’s from near par (initial offering values) to near zero in one full
swoop. I had been carrying my understanding of the workings of the more
traditional Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS’s) issued by the
Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSE’s) of Fannie Mae, Ginnie Mae,
and Freddie Mac and the mandated risk and financial disclosures of the
1933 Securities Act to these new classes of debt based investment
vehicles. TH*NK*NG I knew/ understood more than I actually did was a
critical flaw in my logic. There is a moral in this for me and for all
of us. For those who bought into these, a lack of real understanding of what
was what will prove exceedingly costly.
The
sub-prime and alternative-A loans that gave rise to theses new bodies of
derived investment vehicles in no way met the standards of the loans
that were pooled and sold to Fannie, Ginnie, and Freddie. The borrowers
lacked the necessary credit worthiness, there were little (if any) down
payments required, and the loan-to-value approached (or exceeded) 100%
of the properties – there was no cushion available to the lenders in
the event of a downturn. Even at advancing more money than the
properties were worth, everything was honky dori as long as
payments were being made timely, interest rates stayed low, the required
mortgage payments didn’t increase, the properties continued to
appreciate in value, and the investors (in the CDO’s) were content to
let things ride and not try to cash out. Well guess what? ALL of those
pre-requisites went away. Poof, the houses of “cards” began to
tumble and collapse!
I
should have caught the distinction in the shift of wording from
“Mortgage Backed Securities” to “Collateralized Debt
Obligations” because there is a huge terminological difference in
“the terms of art” – phrases/words having a unique and defined
meaning in a specific context. I must warn my readers I’m speculating
on what happened; but at least in the following context, it begins to
make sense to me.
In a
Mortgage Backed Securities scenario one could ultimately identify the
property’s mortgages making up the investment pools. Even in arrears,
default, or foreclosure; this is true. They could be identified; thus
some value could be attributed to investor units. If, in the case of the
Collateralized Debt Obligations scenario; the “investments” entitled
the investor(s) to future cash flows from “X” amount of $’s of
debt as a fungible commodity like bushels of corn, pounds of pork
bellies, or shares of a particular class of common (or preferred) stock
that was NOT true - because all properties are not equal. The late
Arthur Rubloff stated: “in real estate; the three most important
things are location, location, location.”
Were
these critical distinctions (and risks) disclosed to the investors on
the front page of the offering circular/ prospectus in red ink (hence
the term “red herring”) - as required of all initial public
offerings under the 1933 Securities Act? Did the 1933 Act even apply to
all these derivative offerings? Did the investors really know what they
were buying? How many pearls
and how much lipstick
were used in the marketing of these “pigs” to the investors? Answers
to such questions will eventually come from the litigation flood which I
guarantee will follow. Will “deep pockets” or Caveat
Emptor – let the buyer beware – rule? I’m Fred Cederholm
and I’ve been thinking. You should be thinking, too.

© 2007 Fred Cederholm
Editorial
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Fred
Cederholm
Creston,
IL USA
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