Thursday, November 6, 2008

"The data are ``likely to underestimate the amount of net CDS exposure"

There has been a lot of talk about CDS's. Bloomberg has another story today:

"Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The most comprehensive report on unregulated credit-default swaps didn't disclose bets in the section of the more than $47 trillion market that helped destroy American International Group Inc., once the world's biggest insurer.

A report by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corp. doesn't include privately negotiated credit-default swaps that insurers such as AIG, MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. sold to guarantee securities known as collateralized debt obligations. It includes only a ``small fraction'' of contracts linked to mortgage securities, according to Andrea Cicione at BNP Paribas SA in London.

New York-based DTCC's data, released on its Web site Nov. 4, showed a total $33.6 trillion of transactions on governments, companies and asset-backed securities worldwide, based on gross numbers. While designed to ease concerns about the amount of risk banks and investors amassed on borrowers from companies to homeowners, the report may have missed as much as 40 percent of the trades outstanding in the market, Cicione said.

The data are ``likely to underestimate the amount of net CDS exposure,'' Cicione, who correctly forecast in January that the cost of protecting European companies from default would rise, said in an interview. ``A broadening of the coverage to the entire market is what investors really need.''

`Increased Transparency'"

Now, I might be reading this incorrectly, but there seem to be two possibilities:

1) CDS's are so complex, no one knows their amounts

2) A lot of CDS's are unreported, though probably calculable

I'm reading the story as saying 2, while a lot of people are reading the situation as 1, concluding that CDS's are some kind of undecidable proposition. The importance of transparency is the public knowledge of these CDS's and their amounts.

"CDX Indexes

Investors hedging against losses on CDOs helped push the cost of default protection to a record last week. The benchmark Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index, linked to the bonds of 125 companies in the U.S. and Canada, reached 240 basis points on Oct. 27. The index rose 5 basis points to 192 basis points as of 8:48 a.m. in New York, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group.

The Markit iTraxx Europe rose to as high as 195 basis points from as low as 20 in June 2007. It was quoted at 139.5 basis points today, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. A basis point on a credit-default swap protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years costs $1,000 a year.

Credit-default swaps, contracts conceived to protect bondholders against default, pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a company fail to adhere to its debt agreements. An increase indicates deterioration in the perception of credit quality; a decline signals the opposite."

Here's the point:

"Among the information the Fed wants to see are prices at which the derivatives trade, according to a New York Fed spokesman."

So, again, their not incomprehensible.

But this is no fun:

``The worry is that these bespoke tranches are being eaten away, and who knows if and when these losses will get realized,'' Tim Backshall, chief strategist at Credit Derivatives Research LLC in Walnut Creek, California, wrote in a note to clients yesterday. "

It is simply a matter of which CDS's will explode. The CDO thing is another story.

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