Showing posts with label 2 yr Benchmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2 yr Benchmark. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Across The Fear

The Fear and Aversion to Risk is staggering. From Across The Curve:

"Anyway, the cash AAA bonds which I note above are super senior and are packaged for the bondholders’ enjoyment with 30 percent credit enhancement. They are designed to absorb enormous stress. I am not sure how much the landscape would need to mimic 1929 before these things are wounded but they are wounded, but they are designed to withstand a lot of pain.

My belabored point is that at currents levels they are Libor + 1200 which is somewhere north of 14 percent.

One participant citing that yield level noted that sales at these levels can only be motivated by fear and panic.

There are some other factors involved in the panic. I mentioned the failure of the TARP to purchase assets. Anticipation of the TARP led some shorts to keep their powder dry. Those shorts are now happily establishing positions.

Additionally, two loans which comprise a large portion of a deal in the index soured yesterday and that struck fear into the hearts of participants.

And one participant noted the overall dismal state of the economy and noted that it was likely to lead to a glut of office space."

And:

"The corporate bond market had experienced a renaissance or revival of sorts over the last several weeks. The implosion in the CMBS market as well as the persistent weakness in the equity market has drained that sanguine attitude and substituted the melancholic mindset which had prevailed previously.Participants report that there is very little trading. Bid to offer spreads have widened and the little which does trade trades into the bid side."

And:

"By Gabrielle Coppola and Caroline Salas
Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Yields on speculative-grade
corporate bonds surpassed 20 percent for the first time in at
least two decades as a declining economy increased the risk of
default.
“Prices are in a virtual freefall,” Fridson said.
“Either the market is right and expecting a default rate
considerably higher than it was in the Great Depression, or we
have such profound dislocations and selling pressures going on
that it really is creating extraordinary fundamental value.”
“The risk premiums are just at a staggering level; the
number is not something any of us expected to see,” he said,
referring to the 20 percent yields. "

And:

"I had not watched the agency market today but it is undergoing an historic meltdown of its own. (I should sponsor a contest in which the winner supplies me with a synonym for meltdown which I am overusing. First prize is a free subscription to Acrossthecurve.com.) The 2 year benchmark widened 22 basis points today to finish at 180. Less than two weeks ago on November 7 it closed at 113. The five year benchmark sector widened 11 basis points today to finish at 155 basis points. The five year benchmark was 109 on November 7th. Ten year benchmarks are 9 basis points wider at 162 basis points. They closed at 115 on November 7,

I use the November 7th date as that was about the low point following an episode of spread tightening following the previous widening. That date is also just prior to the announcement by Secretary Paulson that he was not unrolling the TARP and chose to spend his money by purchasing bank equities rather than illiquid and damaged assets.

It was also just prior to the time in which the Secretary and several of his acolytes engaged in linguistic acrobatics in which they would not ever say that agencies are full faith and credit instruments. Lack of that explicit guarantee has led some large buyers to shun the sector."

Now, from my view as a novelist and philosopher, there's something irrational at work here. The Human Agency type of explanation would recommend combating the irrational fear and aversion to risk. How to do that?

For Corporate Bonds, I would think tax breaks down the line will help, but now? How about Agencies? Fully back them, or not? Into this mix the auto maker's bailout fits, which is why it is such a hard call in this crisis. But not to understand the effects of human agency in this crisis, is to resort to the kind of mechanistic explanation that got us into this mess in the first place, although not by itself, by any means.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The Bad Sleep Well or Rashomon?

Here's Bloomberg on Paulson's testimony. You're right, you're right, to me it's a bit like Rashomon:

"Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson plans to use the second half of the $700 billion financial rescue program to help relieve pressures on consumer credit, scrapping an effort to buy devalued mortgage assets.

``Illiquidity in this sector is raising the cost and reducing the availability of car loans, student loans and credit cards,'' Paulson said today in a speech at the Treasury in Washington. ``This is creating a heavy burden on the American people and reducing the number of jobs in our economy.''

His remarks are an acknowledgement that the pitch he made to Congress for the bailout hasn't delivered what was promised. Paulson sold the Troubled Asset Relief Program as a way to rid bank balance sheets of illiquid mortgage assets, and he may encounter resistance from Congress for the remaining $350 billion after using most of the first half to buy bank stakes."

No kidding?

"Lawmakers will ``put his feet to the fire,'' said Kevin Petrasic, a former official at the Office of Thrift Supervision, now an attorney with the Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker law firm in Washington. ``I'm not sure how you get around dealing with what is clearly the congressional intent.''

Charles Grassley of Iowa, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said the shift makes ``you wonder if they really know what they're doing.'' Grassley, in a letter to Paulson and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke, raised the possibility Congress could block appropriation of the remaining $350 million under the rescue package.

``Congress can act any time to revoke the Treasury's authority,'' Grassley said. ``They will be watched and they will be questioned.''

Well, here's my take:

1) He doesn't really know what he's doing

2) He doesn't need asbestos shoes ( Between Waxman, Frank, and Grassley, I don't know who scares me less )

"Paulson said he has no regrets for the revised plan. ``I will never apologize for changing a strategy or an approach if the facts change,'' he said."

God, don't quote Keynes.

"Officials are considering using a portion of the bailout money to ``encourage private investors to come back to this troubled market,'' he said.

The Treasury chief said the department is also considering having companies that accept new taxpayer funding get matching private capital. Buying ``illiquid'' mortgage-related assets -- the reason the program was established a month ago -- is no longer being considered, he said.

``We will continue to examine whether targeted forms of asset purchase can play a useful role,'' he said."

So far, no one yet knows what this public/private plan is, except, that it's public/private, which, correct me if I'm wrong, it already was.

``A collapse of the American automobile industry would be the worst possible thing that could happen at a time when we are already weakened,'' Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. He also said he disagreed with Paulson's decision to forgo buying bad assets."

I like Frank, but that's hyperbole. This business is slowly dying. This is simply a way to allow workers in roughed up states to transition more easily over time. I understand the human dilemma.

He also said he disagreed with Paulson's decision to forgo buying bad assets.

``That was an important part of the way we sold the program, and I think he's making a mistake,'' Frank said."

Talk about moral hazard. These are empty threats.

"Paulson said he has no timeline for notifying Congress of his intent to use the remaining TARP funds, and reiterated that he's ``comfortable'' that $700 billion is ``what we need'' to stabilize the financial system."

I know that this follows from my Austinian philosophy, but this system talk leads to fruitless analysis.

"Some lawmakers are also calling for greater oversight over use of the funds. Senator Charles Schumer of New York today reiterated his calls for Paulson to require banks taking public capital to increase lending rather than use the money to finance takeovers.

``The TARP really gave no incentive for the banks to lend the money, carrot or stick, and that's a big problem,'' he said on a conference call with reporters."

And you know, dummy bloggers like me said that.

Maybe instead of Rashomon, we should view The Bad Sleep Well again.