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I had another installment of “Banks
and Bubbles” all set to go today. This one was going to have a
little fun with the rumor that Bank of America is negotiating to buy
Countrywide Credit, and repeat the by-now-tired observation that at the
peak of the credit cycle, bankers tend to start indulging their inner
day traders, which always leads to trouble, yada yada.
But something more interesting just
happened. It seems that the markets have stopped mistaking the banking
debt orgy for “innovation” and started seeing it for what it is: the
last bit of debauchery in history’s greatest credit bubble. According
to reports by Bloomberg and Associated Press, the price of
“credit insurance” on the bonds of the big investment banks has
spiked.
To understand this bit of poetic justice,
you first have to understand what credit insurance is. In a nutshell,
it’s a derivative contract, known as a credit default swap, in which
one party promises to cover whatever losses result from a given borrower
not being able to repay a given loan. Sounds innocuous enough, right?
But in bubbles, otherwise useful tools often become monsters
that enrich their masters for a while and then break free, eviscerating
everyone within reach. Recall the collateral damage from junk bonds and
dot.com IPOs, and you get the idea.
In the case of credit insurance, the
financial engineers at the big investment banks and hedge funds figured
out that writing these contracts—that is, promising to cover losses on
various kinds of bonds—was easy money as long as no one was defaulting
(like writing flood insurance in a drought, as Prudent Bear’s Doug
Noland puts it). And so the bubble machine created a positive feedback
loop, with hedge funds writing cheap credit insurance on pretty much
anything and investment banks lending money to pretty much anyone, in
order to insure the debt and sell it to pension funds and other gullible
souls. Defaults, even among the most overleveraged companies, were low
because there was always another investment bank waiting to underwrite
another issue of junk bonds. So hedge funds competed to write the
insurance, sending the cost through the floor. And the big investment
banks borrowed immense amounts of money to leverage this process—after
all, if no one is defaulting, you can bet infinite amounts on the
proposition with impunity. They reported stunning earnings, and paid out
bonuses that would have made Mike Milken and Frank Quattrone smile.
But this week cycle shifted into reverse,
and suddenly the linchpin of the whole system, cheap credit insurance,
ain’t so cheap. Based on what it costs to insure it against default,
the debt of the of Wall Street’s biggest banks now looks like junk,
which is another way of saying that Goldman, Merrill, Lehman and
the other masters of yesterday’s universe have been exposed for what
they are: slick, sophisticated Ponzi schemes that can only operate in
their present forms with ever-larger infusions of new money. Cut off the
cash—by, say, raising the price of credit insurance—and the whole
thing falls apart. With that in mind, here’s how Bloomberg put it
today:
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Goldman,
Merrill Almost `Junk,' Their Own Traders Say
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co. and Morgan
Stanley, which earned a record $24.5 billion in 2006, suddenly
have become so speculative that their own traders are valuing
the three biggest securities firms as barely more creditworthy
than junk bonds.
Prices for credit-default swaps linked to the bonds of the New
York investment banks this week traded at levels that equate to
debt ratings of Baa2, according to Moody's Investors Service.
For Goldman, Morgan Stanley and Merrill that's five levels below
the actual Aa3 rating on their senior unsecured notes and two
steps above non-investment grade, or junk.
Traders of credit derivatives are more alarmed than stock and
bond investors that a slowdown in housing and the global equity
market rout have hurt the firms. Merrill since 2005 has financed
two mortgage lenders that subsequently failed and bought a
third, First Franklin Financial Corp., for $1.3 billion.
``These guys have made a lot of money securitizing mortgages
over the years in a mortgage boom time,'' said Richard Hofmann,
an analyst at bond research firm CreditSights Inc. in New York.
``The question now is what is the exposure to credit risk and
what are the potential revenue headwinds if they're not able to
keep that securitization machine humming along.''
Credit-default swaps on the debt of Goldman, the world's biggest
securities firm, have risen to $32,775 per $10 million in bonds,
up from $21,500 at the start of the year, according to prices
compiled by London-based CMA Datavision. The price touched
$35,000 on Feb. 28, the highest since June 2005.
Spokesmen and spokeswomen for Goldman, Lehman, Merrill and
Morgan Stanley declined to comment. A spokeswoman for Bear
Stearns didn't immediately return calls for comment. |
The effects of a cutoff of cheap credit to
the securitization machine will be felt pretty much everywhere. But one
obvious—and okay, amusing—impact will be on the big investment
banks’ market value. If their debt is junk, then their
earnings—driven as they are by cheap capital—are suspect. If their
earnings are suspect, then their shares probably aren’t worth anything
like the levels they’ve soared to on the wings of their last few
blow-out quarters. Can’t wait for Monday.

© 2007 John Rubino
DollarCollapse.com | Financial
Sense Editorial Archive
John
Rubino is
the author of The
Coming Collapse of the Dollar (co-written with James Turk), How
to Profit From the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003), and Main Street, Not Wall Street (William Morrow, 1998). A former Wall
Street financial analyst and columnist with theStreet.com, he
currently writes for Fidelity Magazine and CFA Magazine He lives in Moscow,
Idaho. Contact by Email.
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