Showing posts with label Level 3 Assets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Level 3 Assets. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2009

I've written on mark-to-market many times. I've always felt it was a good concept but has been applied incorrectly.

TO BE NOTED: From Accrued Interest:

"FASB: The Dark Side clouds every thing

The new FASB ruling is getting more play than it deserves.

I've written on mark-to-market many times. I've always felt it was a good concept but has been applied incorrectly. When the rules were written, it was never assumed that generalized risk aversion would ever rise to the extent that it has. Thus the rules assumed that a $30 decline in a bond price would always and every where indicate a security-specific problem. The rules (and/or the auditors) also assumed that securities that seemed similar at a glance could be used to value each other. They never assumed that various securities would ever become as granular as they eventually became. For example, a whole-loan RMBS with 15% California exposure suddenly was valued drastically differently than one with 25% CA exposure. But both were valued off the ABX as if they were the same, because the ABX was the only thing trading.

Anyway, the key thing that changes with this FASB guidance is the assumption of distress. Now any trade that occurs in an inactive market is presumed to be a distressed trade unless proven otherwise. I'd expect this means that most Level 3 asset prices will become more PV model-based and less trade based.

BUT...

I'd argue that this won't result in banks writing up their asset valuations. Think about it. Say XYZ Bank announces some huge quarterly EPS figure, but when the analysts look deeper into the number, it turns out it was all paper gains on Level 3 assets. Investors would universally pan the earnings figure, claiming it was all phantom profits on marks to make-believe valuations.

Conversely, let's say the same bank reports break-even earnings with no change in Level 3 and a healthy increase in loan loss reserves. Now what does the market think? Analysts would say that the bank has potential latent gains in their Level 3 portfolio that haven't been recognized.

This market is all about imagination. If you are a bank (or any financial), the market isn't going to just accept your balance sheet as reported. The market is going to try to imagine what your balance sheet is really. Since no one knows what it is really worth, investors are going to imagine. I argue that a bank is better off convincing the market that it is being too conservative, thus guiding the imagination to better times.

Otherwise the bank will only stimulate the imaginations of the "its all worthless" crowd, which I realize is the majority of the blogosphere. I don't get this point of view, and I think its all rooted in some sort of visceral desire to see the banking system crash and burn. I think Jim Cramer said it well on TheStreet.Com today:

"The first side is the "it doesn't matter and it is bad" camp. This is the camp that says it [the FASB ruling] is a mistake because it will give the banks too much latitude, and they don't deserve it. "Deserves," as they say in Unforgiven, "got nothing to do with it." This is a completely worthless position that makes you no money. Who the heck cares whether they "deserve" it? What is this, some sort of civics lesson? We are now going to invest on whether someone should be punished? This is about money. I could care less about "deserves". "

Its similar to my position on politics. As an investor you need to forget about what "ought" to happen and worry about what will happen. That's how you make money."

Friday, November 7, 2008

"‘mark to make-believe’ assets on the rise"

Alphaville on Level 3 assets:

"JP Morgan’s ‘mark to make-believe’ assets on the rise

JP Morgan’s level three assets rose by $1.3bn in the third quarter, the investment bank said in an SEC filing on Friday.

Level 3 assets represented 6 per cent of its total assets at September 30, JP said. The increase was primarily due to a $15.2bn transfer of mainly triple-A rated CLOs ‘backed by corporate loans for which liquidity decreased and market activity was limited’ and $5.8bn of ‘purchased mortgage servicing rights related to the Washington Mutual transaction’

Further:

These increases were largely offset by decreases in level 3 assets due to $12.3 billion of sales and markdowns of residential mortgage exposure and $3.5 billion of sales and markdowns of leveraged loans and transfers of similar leveraged loans to level 2 due to the increased price transparency of such assets.
The bank also threw in some increasingly negative perceptions of the US consumer - it expects the managed net charge-off rate for its card services segment to be 5 per cent or higher in the fourth quarter, and to increase again in 2009.

Some grim reading (emphasis FT Alphavillle’s):

Potentially, the Card Services net charge-off rate could be 6% in the early part of 2009 and possibly reach 7% by the end of the year (excluding the impact resulting from the acquisition of Washington Mutual’s banking operations).

These charge-off rates could increase even further if the economic environment continues to deteriorate more than current management expectations. The wholesale provision for credit losses, nonperforming assets, and charge-offs are expected to increase over time as a result of the deterioration in underlying credit conditions. The wholesale provision may also increase due to loan growth.
JP has more than $395bn in consumer loans on its books, heavily weighted to home equity.

And now for some chart porn to lighten the mood, via Econompic Data (charts correct as at August 15 2008):
Econompic Chart of Level 3 assets as at Aug 15 2008.png

Here's my comment:

Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat [report]

Keep up the good work with the graphs. They get me really hot!

"This is why Treasury's original TARP plan, to buy up illiquid assets, was doomed from the start"

Felix Salmon on liquidity and TARP:

"This kind of stuff isn't easy to read, but the point is that over the course of the third quarter, CLOs became so illiquid that there was no market for them at all any more, and they had to be classified as Level-3 assets. At the same time, however, the leveraged loans which make up those CLOs managed to see "increased price transparency", with the result that they got promoted to Level 2 from Level 3.

The idea behind the TARP was that liquidity and price transparency could trickle upwards from simple to more complex instruments. If you know the price of a bunch of bonds, then you can work out the price of the CDO that they're packaged into. And if you know the price of a bunch of CDOs, then you can work out the price of CDO-squareds. And so on.

But as JP Morgan shows today, it doesn't really work like that: it's entirely possible for loans to become more liquid even as CLOs become less liquid.

There's actually a good reason for that. In crunchy times like this, there's a finite amount of liquidity to go round, and when it arrives in one neck of the financial woods, that's often because it's left another. For instance, CDS are popular because they're more transparent and liquid than bonds. But the rise of CDS has seen liquidity move from the bond market to the CDS market, which means that bonds have become increasingly illiquid as the CDS market has grown. Far from making it easier to price bonds, the CDS market has actually, in some ways, made it harder.

And so Treasury's plan for some kind of trickle-up TARP liquidity was always overoptimistic. You might be able to make one market liquid and transparent, but that doesn't mean that related markets will be any easier to price."

Here are my comments:

Posted: Nov 07 2008 3:13pm ET
In order to price a product in the real world, you need someone to agree to buy it.
If bonds are a safer investment than investments made up of a bunch of them, in a crisis like this where buyers are moving to safety, why would anyone expect buyers to move to the less safe investments, unless of course they could obviously get them at a major discount. But stocks are now at a major discount, and yet people still might prefer safer investments for now. In other words, liquidity seems to simply mean a place where one can find buyers. Am I wrong?

Excuse me, I am follower of J.L. Austin and endeavor to simplify everything.