Friday, March 27, 2009

it is that the market does not offer a price at which many sellers are willing to sell.

From Free Exchange:

"Alive and kicking
Posted by:
Economist.com | NEW YORK
Categories:
Financial markets

MY COLLEAGUE wondered about the existence of a secondary market for mortgage-backed securities. There does seem to be a perception that the market is frozen and no one can move these things. That is why we can’t get these things off the banks' balance sheets.

I’ve asked a quant who actually has a job pricing and selling these existing securities. He has been very busy for months. When Moody’s downgraded many of these securities last month, lots of institutional investors (pension funds, endowments, etc.) had to unload them (because they can only hold investment grade securities) for whatever price the market could fetch. That meant realising the losses and often taking 30 cents on the dollar. Many of these securities will probably yield a nice return over the long run, so hedge funds and private equity firms (and apparently Bank of America and Citibank) are snatching them up.

The problem is not that a market for these securities does not exist, it is that the market does not offer a price at which many sellers are willing to sell. Many banks and insurance companies still won’t take much less than par. That may be because some sellers are in deep denial and realise they will be insolvent if they sell at the current market price. Though according to our piece this week that tends to be more of a problem with whole loans; Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley at least have been a bit better at marking their MBS to market.

Or the market simply is not offering a price that reflects the true value of the security. Prices may be depressed because of uncertainty or the premium on liquidity. Sellers also knew all along that the government would step in with a plan to bridge the bid-ask spread. With subsidies on offer, banks knew the market price would eventually increase. So it made sense to just hold on to the assets until the auctions commenced. But whether or not sellers actually participate remains to be seen.

Now that the government has offered a subsidy to buy these assets the price will probably rise. If you expect the scheme to work, scooping up these asset for 30 cents on the dollar now may not be so crazy. Though Felix Salmon doubts prices of MBS bought on the secondary market will rise—he actually reckons they might fall. That remains to be seen. If the securities are seriously undervalued and the plan is effective, the uncertainty will be resolved, we’ll see less of a liquidity premium, and the prices on these assets could increase (though probably not to levels of assets eligible for the subsidised money). In any case, further speculation on MBS and the effectiveness of government policy was probably not what the Treasury had in mind when it doled out TARP funds to Citibank."

Me:
Don the libertarian Democrat wrote:
March 27, 2009 22:49

"Sellers also knew all along that the government would step in with a plan to bridge the bid-ask spread. With subsidies on offer, banks knew the market price would eventually increase. So it made sense to just hold on to the assets until the auctions commenced. But whether or not sellers actually participate remains to be seen.

Now that the government has offered a subsidy to buy these assets the price will probably rise."

You're correct.They were hoping for government intervention. It was an incentive to hold the TA. That's why the government now needs to give an incentive to buyers.

"In any case, further speculation on MBS and the effectiveness of government policy was probably not what the Treasury had in mind when it doled out TARP funds to Citibank."

On the contrary, it's exactly what we want Citi to do if it makes money. After all, we're shareholders.

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