Friday, November 7, 2008

"A heat map of the relative cost of insuring debt worldwide, according to current credit default swap prices"

Via Paul Kedrosky, these interesting graphs on Bespoke:

"
Country Default Risk

Yesterday we highlighted credit default swap prices for major banks and brokers around the world. Below we provide the same default risk levels for individual countries. These prices represent the cost per year to insure $10,000 of debt for five years. We also show what the prices were at the start of the year. Of the G-8 countries, Russia has by far the highest default risk with a CDS price of $523. That's higher than any of the struggling banks we highlighted yesterday. Japan, France, the US, and Germany have the lowest default risk of the group of countries, but they have all spiked more than 200% this year. Argentina is in the most trouble, with a cost of $4,453 per year to insure just $10,000 of debt. Venezuela is the second worst at $2,016, followed by Lebanon, Egypt and Indonesia.

Cdsdefault

And:

Default Risk for Key Financials

Below we highlight current credit default swap prices for 13 global financial firms. The prices indicate the cost per year to insure $10,000 of bonds for five years. These prices were much, much higher a few weeks ago, so it's good to see them come down, but they still remain elevated. Morgan Stanley and Goldman currently have the highest CDS prices, followed by Merrill and Citigroup. As of yesterday's close, Wells Fargo and HSBC were the only two financials of the group below to have CDS prices below 100.

Cdsprices1106

Good stuff.

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