Pathology of Debt
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: Commercial Paper
Market Seizure turns Banks into their own Vulture Investors
Part II: The Commercial Paper
Market and Special Investment Vehicles
Part
III: The
Credit Guns of August heard around the world
Part IV: Lessons
Unlearned
This
article appeared on AToL
on November 30, 2007
Moody’s
Bullish 2005 Report
on Structured Financial Operating Companies
Moody’s has
developed a rating methodology for Structured
Financial Operating Companies (SFOCs). Moody’s has recognized the
similarities
in which various forms of vehicle operate and has developed a new
classification and ratings process for this group of structured finance
entities. SFOCs are operating companies that apply detailed,
pre-determined
parameters to define and restrict their business activities and
operations. The
SFOC designation applies to a number of different structures including:
Derivative Product
Companies (DPCs)
Collateralised Swap Programs (CSPs)
Credit Derivative Vehicles (CDVs)
Structured
Investment Vehicles (SIVs)
Structured Lending Vehicles (SLVs)
Interest Rate Arbitrage Vehicles (IRAVs)
Issuers of
Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GIC Issuers).
Moody’s Special
Report, issued on April 14, 2005 states: “Under this
classification
Moody's has assigned ratings to more than 50 of these vehicles. To
date, there
have been no rating downgrades on any of their publicly-rated issued
debt, which
testifies to the resilience and strength of the structures of these
vehicles
and how robust they are to market disruptions. This view on the
unification of
the general rating approach for these vehicle types provides a basis
for the
continual growth within this market as the markets evolve and converge
as well as
providing a basis for the introduction of new or hybrid vehicle types.”
Optimism Turned to
Panic
By August 2007, this
optimistic statement was rendered inoperative
by events. Fed data show that the $1.1 trillion market for commercial
paper
used to buy mortgages on homes, aircraft, and cars seized up in August
just as
more than half of that amount comes due in the next 90 days. Unless new
buyers
could be fund to buy new debts to replace the old ones, hundreds of
hedge funds
and companies will be forced to sell $75 billion of asset at prices
that
reflect sharp losses. Such distressed
sales would further drive down prices in a market where investors have
already
lost $57 billion as estimated by the Merrill Lynch broadest index of
floating-rate securities backed by home- equity loans. That will
adversely
affect the position held by 38.4 million individual and institutional
investors
in money market funds, the biggest holder class of commercial paper.
Top-rated
commercial paper is one of the safest assets in normal times. But these
are not
normal times.
The major players in
the SIV market by the end of 2005 were:
Beta Finance Corp
was sponsored by Citibank International
Plc (Commercial bank) in 1989 with asset under management (AUM) of
$15.3
billion;
Sigma Finance Corp
was sponsored by Gordion Knot Ltd (Investment
manager) in 1995 with $34 billion of AUM;
Centauri Corp was
sponsored by Citibank International Plc (Commercial
bank) in 1996 with $16.1 billion of AUM;
Dorada Corp was
sponsored by Citibank International Plc (Commercial
bank) in 1998 with $10.5 billion of AUM;
K2 Corp was
sponsored by Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein (Investment
bank) in1999 with $20.6 billion of AUM;
Links Finance Corp
was sponsored by Bank of Montreal (Commercial
bank) in 1999 with $13.5 billion in AUM;
Cheyne Finance was
sponsored by Cheyne Capital Management
Ltd (Investment manager) in 2005 with $7 billion in AUM;
Cullinan Finance
Corp sponsored by HSBC Bank Ltd (Commercial
bank) in 2005 with $27 billion in AUM.
As of March 2007,
every one of the above SIVs was in
distress, plus a few more:
Eiger Capital (Orion
Finance)
III Offshore
Advisors (Abacas Investments)
West LB (Harrier
Finance Funding Ltd., Kestrel Funding
Standard Chartered
Bank (White Pine, Whistlejacket Capital)
Societe Generale
(Premier Asset Collateralized Entity)
Stanfield Global
Strategies (Stanfield Victoria Finance)
Rabobank
International (Tango Finance)
Eaton Vance (EV
Variable Leveraged Fund)
HSH Nordbank
(Carrera Capital Finance)
MBIA (Hudson-Thames
Capital)
IXIS/Ontario
Teachers (Cortland Capital)
Axon Financial (Axon)
IKB KG (Rhinebridge)
Worldwide Investors
with
Complex Holdings
By any measure, this
is a small number of issuers. But the
problem is that the ABCP they issued are bought by large number of
investors
worldwide in patterns that are difficult to sort out because of the
complexity
of the CDO tranches and the variety of hedges employed by investors.
On the liability
side, some SIVs experimented with the capital
structure in order to meet the risk/reward requirements for a broader
scope of
new and traditional capital note investors. This has been mainly
through the
adoption of a three-tier structure similar to that of collateralized
debt
obligations (CDOs) – with senior, mezzanine and equity levels of
issuance – and
some of the established SIVs have been restructured to take advantage
of this
new market trend. The issuance of junior tranches by SIVs is not a new
practice, but it has not been widely adopted until recently. Asset
Backed
Capital (ABC), one of the oldest SIVs, has long achieved a Moody’s A1
rating
for its senior subordinated notes, with a tranching ratio of
approximately 60
junior notes to 40 mezzanine capital.
One new SIV trend
has been the rapidly growing demand for
rated capital notes. As the first loss piece of the SIV capital
structure
(subordinate to MTNs and CP), capital notes typically expose holders to
first
gains and losses in the asset portfolio. According to Standard &
Poor’s,
over US$11 billion in capital notes have been rated to date, pointing
to the
transparency and disclosure required by investors as well as the
expected
impact of Basel II on institutions holding unrated notes.
Shrinking spreads
had led to innovations to the traditional
SIV structure. On the asset side, some SIVs trended away from the
absolute
practice of investing in high grade and liquid ABS. They explored less
liquid
products such as CDOs and mezzanine ABS (these are usually harder to
get marked-to-market
prices and have larger bid/offer spreads). Several existing and new
SIVs received
approval from rating agencies to synthetically purchase assets (in lieu
of highly-rated
ABS/MBS) by selling credit default swap (CDS) protection on corporate
assets.
As with conventional SIV portfolio management, the vehicle would profit
from
the credit arbitrage between long-maturity assets on a leveraged basis
and
short-maturity liabilities. Additionally, the ability to use repurchase
agreements (repos) as alternative asset-purchase funding was
incorporated into
SIV mandates, as they were within other structured finance operations.
In 2004, Citigroup
introduced a new vehicle that takes this
to a whole new level. Sedna Finance
incorporates a three-tier liability structure, with
AAA-rated first priority senior notes (FPS), A-rated second priority
senior
notes (SPS) and an unrated first loss piece. Citibank raised 90% of the
US$1
billion capital through its SPS notes with 150 times leverage,
exponentially
greater than the 15 times industry average leverage. In addition to
funding the
purchase of various assets, proceeds from the issuance of bonds and
paper may
also be used for single-name CDS as either protection buyer or seller.
Sedna was
approved to take up to 20% of its total portfolio risk in synthetic
instruments.
As the industry grew
more adept with the application of
single-name corporate CDS, credit-linked notes
(CLNs) took on a more significant role
on the funding side as they could be used to achieve lower funding
costs. For
example, an SIV can issue a euro-denominated CLN synthetically linked
to the
credit risk of a BBB-rated entity, swap the euro to US dollarand use
the
proceeds to acquire AAA-rated securities. In effect, it has hedged out
currency
risks while potentially improving net yield, at least in theory.
The Impact of the
New Basel Capital Accord
The New Basel
Capital Accord will make the back-up liquidity
structures for many ABCP conduits very expensive. What had been a zero
capital
charge will become a capital charge of up to 8% of the outstanding
exposure. In
the US, the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and Office of Thrift Supervision all also has specified
new sets
of capital requirements for ABCP.
In Europe, various national
regulators and the EU will be specifying capital levels for European
banks. One
major impact is that US ABCP program bank sponsors are required to hold
risk based
capital against liquidity facilities that have maturities of less than
one
year. A 10% credit conversion was applied to all of these liquidity
facilities
until 30 September 2005.
Further to this date, conduits are required to pass certain asset
quality tests
in order to maintain the 10% credit conversion; otherwise they will be
subject
to 100% credit conversion. This is one reason why partially enhanced,
market
value securities arbitrage program have grown in leaps and bounds in
recent
years. Basel II will potentially change this and result in similar
capital
requirements for liquidity facilities within Europe. As
of yearend 2004, securities arbitrage and SIVs accounted for
approximately 25%
of the total ABCP market.
The impact of these
regulatory changes will be far-reaching,
further increasing the cost of liquidity provisions. However, the
proposed
Basel Accord is also expected to provide additional downward pressure
on the
spreads of high-rated assets, removing the arbitrage opportunities for
these
conduits as their funding costs move closer to the spreads on the
assets. It is
not expected to drive these vehicles out of the market, but rather
enforce the
need to restructure and adopt many alternative funding and liquidity
management
techniques.
On 26 June 2004
the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision released its revised
framework for
the capital adequacy of banks. International Convergence of Capital
Measurement
and Capital Standards (Basel II) substantially revises the 1988 Basel
Capital
Accord.
Under Basel I: A
$100,000 commercial loan with AAA credit
rating would require $8,000 capital charge while the same loan with a B
credit
rating would require the same $8,000 capital charge.
Under Basel II: A
$100,000 commercial loan with AAA credit
rating would require $370 while the same loan with a B credit rating
would
require up to $42,000 capital charge.
The logic is that
capital requirements should increase for
banks that hold risky assets and decrease significantly for banks that
hold
safer portfolios. Basel II creates incentives for banks to move risky
assets to
unregulated parts of the holding company, and to transfer risk to
investors
through securitization. Banks have strong incentive to undertake
regulatory capital
arbitrage to structure the risk position of a group of loans in a
manner that
allows it to be reclassified into a lower regulatory risk category
compared
with the Basle 8% standard. Securitization is the key tool used by
large banks
to engage in such arbitrage.
Credit derivative
vehicles (CDVs)
Credit derivatives
have been responsible for a sea-change in
global investment management practices. A number of SIVs have been
approved to
engage in synthetic trading. Other firms are also focusing on synthetic
trading
adopting the ways of the SIV.
Similar to an SIV, a
CDV has its assets reviewed by the
agencies on a regular basis to ensure economic
capital levels are capable of supporting
their business volumes. The high rating provides the firm with an
extraordinary
competitive advantage in terms of counterparty creditworthiness.
Qualification
requires intensive monitoring of market and credit risks integrated
into their
asset and liability management process. These firms must also report
risk exposures
and limits on a very frequent basis to the rating agencies.
One such vehicle is
Primus, which is an AAA-rated structured
credit vehicle established as a dedicated
seller of single-name CDS protection.
Recently, Primus has moved into portfolio credit derivative trades,
namely
tranched CDS.
Hybrid vehicles
With the ongoing
convergence in the market, more hybrid-type
vehicles entered the market. In August 2005 BSN Holdings Ltd launched
an
innovative ABCP program that engaged in securities arbitrage and lend
in the
repo market. The US$20 billion ceiling program, Chesham Finance,
resembled
conventional securities arbitrage conduits and structured investment
vehicles
in that it could buy a wide variety of short- or long-term securities
rated at
least AAA or AA. However, the vehicle would not be required to maintain
a bank
liquidity support or a capital base. Asset-liability maturities would
be
managed to an exact science through a system of repaying maturing CP by
issuing
paper exactly matched to its assets and monitoring this using SIV-like
cumulative net cumulative outflow (NCO) tests. Additionally, this may
include
using extendible CP and call and put options on the CP to ensure
perfect matching.
In addition, Chesham was approved to lend to highly rated
counterparties under
reverse repos.
Structured lending
vehicles (SLVs)
Bear Stearns’ Liquid
Funding Ltd, a US$1.7 billion (MTN) ceiling
program, was among the first vehicles to use reverse repos and total
return
swaps as collateral. Although it has been referred to as SIV-like, its
motivations are very different. Whereas SIVs look to arbitrage the
spread between
long-dated assets and short-term liabilities, Liquid Funding seeks to
provide
borrowers with a secured source of long-term funds as an alternative to
the
unsecured and repo markets.
Due to prohibitively
costly regulatory capital charges, many
repo desks are reluctant to provide deals with maturities exceeding one
year.
Liquid Funding seeks to bridge this gap with its innovative program of
rated
notes. It most resembles an SIV in that it achieves a high rating for
its notes
through a battery of tests, including NCO analysis and a capital
adequacy test
incorporating market value risk. In addition, its collateral portfolio
is
marked to market on a daily basis. Liquid Funding is labelled a
structured
lending vehicle (SLV) under Moody’s SFOC rating classification.
Another SLV entrant
was $10 billion ceiling Atlas Capital,
launched by Wachovia Capital Markets that leveraged SIV and
market-value CDO
technologies to provide a flexible funding and warehousing platform for
its
clients’ investments. On the asset side, Atlas engaged in reverse repo
and
total return swap activity as part of its charter. It issued MTNs, CP
and repos
to fund pools of investments that could either be leveraged for asset
managers
or hedge funds, or warehoused for asset managers who have plans for a
CDO
launch, but were waiting for more favorable market conditions. In an
interesting twist, Atlas’s clients selected the assets that were
purchased with
the proceeds from the debt issued.
The Importance of
the
Commercial Paper Market
A crisis in the
commercial paper market which normally is an
arena of high safety spooks investors of all levels of risk appetite.
The
average yield on overnight asset-backed paper rated A1+, the highest
short-term
credit rating by Standard & Poor's, rose another 4 basis points, or
0.04
percentage point, to 6.09 percent on Friday, August 24, rising 59 basis
points
since August 9.
Fed data show
outstanding U.S.
commercial paper fell 4.2% in the second week of August, the biggest
weekly
drop in at least seven years, as investors fled asset-backed debt and
opted for
the safety of Treasuries. Short-term debt maturing in 270 days or less
fell
$90.2 billion to a seasonally adjusted $2.04 trillion in the week ended
August
24. Commercial paper outstanding has fallen by $181.3 billion in two
weeks. The retreat tells market participants that the
Fed’s discount rate cut last week failed to instill enough calm to draw
back
investors.
On April 10, 2006,
the Federal Reserve Board made major changes to its CP outstanding
calculations. New outstanding categories were added, some existing
category
definitions were modified, and current and historical CP issuer
information was
updated. The historical data for the new outstanding structure contains
data
for January 2001 through the most recently completed month. The
historical data
for the old outstanding structure contains data for January 1991
through March
2006. Prior to April 10, asset-backed was considered to be a
subcategory of financial
and other (unknown) was not included in total outstanding. Asset-backed
outstanding is no longer a subcategory of financial outstanding.
Financial
outstanding and all its subcategories no longer include asset-backed
outstanding.
Rule 2a-7 of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 limits the credit risk that
money market mutual funds may bear by restricting their investments to
"eligible" securities. An eligible security must carry one of the two
highest ratings (1 or 2) for short-term obligations from at least two
of the
nationally recognized statistical ratings agencies. A tier-1 security
is an
eligible security rated “1” by at least two of the rating agencies; a
tier-2
security is an eligible security that is not a tier-1 security. The sum
of
tier-1 and tier-2 securities will not add up to the total due to
ineligible
securities.
Money funds may hold
no more than five percent of their
assets in the tier-1 securities of any individual issuer and no more
than one
percent of their assets in the tier-2 securities of any individual
issuer;
moreover, a money fund's holdings of tier-2 securities may constitute
no more
than five percent of the fund's assets.
The one day rate for
AA financial commercial paper peaked at
6.62% on January 2, 2001. It
bottomed at 1.64 on January 18, 2002. As of the week of August 22, 2007, there were $2.042
trillion of outstanding CP in the US
credit markets of which about half were asset backed or $1.057
trillion,
falling from $1.083 of the week of August 1. The non-financial CP
volume peaked
around $350 billion in January 2001 and was $204 billion in the week of
August 22, 2007. The
non-financials had difficulties accessing
the CP market in 2001. Reports to that
effect concerning Ford, DB/Chrysler and GM were in the news.
The CP Crisis of 2001
The European
communication sector that fell into deep crisis
in 2001 began rather innocently. Nokia signed a $500 million
US-Commercial
Paper Program on March 12, 1997.
The dealers of the Program were Credit Suisse First Boston (CSFB) and
Merrill
Lynch, and the issuing and paying agent was Citibank N.A. The issuer in
the
Program was Nokia Capital, Inc. guaranteed by Nokia Corporation.
Nokia’s
Program has A-1 rating by Standard & Poor´s and a P-1 rating
by Moody´s
Investors Service. Nokia said it was re-entering the US
commercial paper market to further diversify its funding sources. The
success
of the Nokia CP program started a wave of communication issues that led
to the
communication debt bubble in Europe.
When CP rates are at
historical lows, the net effect is to
keep the walking-dead companies alive, a situation well recognized in Japan
in recent decades, or to launch new white elephants. British Telecom,
privatized
in 1984, having spent extravagantly on 3G technology crumbled under a
debt of
₤28 billion in 2001, losing ₤1.8 billion in the first quarter.
When companies cannot roll over their CP
because of a drop of credit rating, they generally have to resort to
drawing
down their revolving bank credit line at much higher cost which in turn
puts
further stress on their already falling credit ratings. In a high
leverage situation, the downward
spiral can undo a major corporation is days. For financial companies,
the
impact can be catastrophic.
Growing concern
about access to short-term capital sent
tremors through Wall Street in February 2002 amid signs that more
companies
were about to be frozen out of the commercial paper market, the main
source of
day-to-day corporate funding. Investors dumped stocks of
telecommunications
companies after Qwest Communications was forced to turn to its banks
for $4 billion
after it was squeezed out of the commercial paper market. It had failed
to find
buyers for an issue of new short-term funding.
Concern that other
companies would suffer the same fate rose
after JP Morgan Chase said Sprint, another US
carrier, was overextended in the commercial paper market and would have
to look
elsewhere for financing, such as the bond markets or bank loans at
higher cost.
Sprint had $3 billion of commercial paper outstanding at the end of the
year.
It needed to raise an extra $1.7 billion to meet its funding needs for
the next
year as current paper matured. It sought to cut $60m in costs by laying
off
3,000 staff to meet the cash short fall.
On February 15, 2002, New
Hampshire
conglomerate Tyco International Ltd got clipped by up to $3 billion in
its sale
of CIT Group, the commercial financing firm it bought in June for $10
billion. The
company, which was grappling with a heavy debt load and trying to
soothe
skittish investors, was negotiating from a position of weakness as it
sought a
quick sale of CIT, one of the nation's leading specialty and commercial
finance
companies. It specialized in lending, leasing, and financing for small-
to
mid-sized companies. CIT was an expert in some of the more arcane
aspects of
corporate borrowing, using intimate knowledge of its client companies
to
arrange successful deals for equipment leasing, factoring, lending for
acquisitions and expansion, and credit management. The company’s
clients
included more than 700,000 companies, with specializations in the
transportation industry, the apparel industry and the construction
equipment
industry. CIT operated across North and South America,
in Europe and the Pacific Rim.
The company was a subsidiary of RCA and then Manufacturers Hanover Bank
in the
1980s, after being a freestanding public company for many years. CIT
went
public again in 1997. It was briefly owned by Tyco International Ltd.
in 2001
and then was spun off to the public again in 2002.
CIT's business
suffered when it lost access to the
short-term commercial paper market, the cheapest source of financing
for big
companies, because of questions raised about Tyco's accounting
practices.
Lenders like CIT depend heavily on inexpensive financing for the loans
they
make. Being shut out of the commercial-paper market left CIT at a big
competitive disadvantage.
An industrial
company known for its ADT brand security
systems and for its electronics component business, Tyco had begun
growing
quickly through acquisitions with easy credit, making four major
purchases in
the four months before it announced the CIT deal. Tyco apparently
thought it
was getting CIT for a bargain price, given its low recent performance.
CIT Group was under
Tyco’s umbrella only for about a year.
By early 2002, Tyco's stock price was in a steep slide as rumors hit
Wall
Street about accounting regularities and suspicious payments to its
director, Dennis
Koslowski. Tyco's declining reputation had damaged CIT Group’s ability
to
borrow, and in February 2002 Tyco announced that it would sell the
financial
company within the next few weeks. When it failed to find an immediate
buyer,
Tyco spun CIT Group off to the public. Tyco had hoped to sell CIT for
$10
billion, but spun it off for about $4.6 billion. The public offering
took place
in July 2002, and CIT Group was once again a stand-alone public
company. At
almost the same time, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced
that it
was investigating Tyco. Dennis Kozlowski was sentenced to jail in
September
2005 and ordered to pay fines of $167 million for his part in financial
wrongdoing at his company.
Tyco and CIT were
dealt serious blows when they were shut
out of the commercial paper market and rating agencies downgraded their
debt on
concerns about Tyco’s finances. Commercial paper represents a critical
source
of borrowing for firms like CIT, which was forced to turn to $8.5
billion in
more expensive bank loans when it lost access to commercial paper. CIT
cannot
effectively compete in the market place if it cannot play in the
commercial
paper markets. Their inability to sell commercial paper, and their
having to
take down short-term debt to cover obligations, has forced CIT into the
position of having to sell right away. Tyco International was forced to
draw
down $14.5 billion of bank funding to repay all its commercial paper
debt
outstanding.
The problem was
global. A new procedure was implemented on November 13, 2001 by Euroclear group
enabling GE Capital, the largest issuer of Billets
de Trésorerie, to deliver on a
same-day basis an EONIA Index linked BT not only
to Euroclear France
clients but also to Euroclear Bank participants. This new procedure
explains
the operating process between the Issuer, its Issuing and Paying Agent
(i.e. domiciliataire) Euroclear France
and Euroclear Bank. The development was driven by GE Capital, the
largest
issuer of commercial paper in Europe. GE Capital
actively
sought to offer its floating rate commercial paper to institutional
investors across Europe. Euroclear extended
the deadlines for index
communications between Euroclear France and Euroclear Bank to provide
to BT
issuers a same day issuance for one day securities. The new procedure
confirms
that the Billets
de Trésorerie are not
domestic instruments any more and can circulate all across Europe.
This also confirms that any financial product under French law can be
provided
to all international investors.
In October 1999, GE
Capital Aviation Services (GECAS), a
wholly owned subsidiary of GE Capital, completed the financing of four
A330-200
aircraft for Flightlease, a wholly-owned subsidiary of SAir Group of Switzerland.
The aircraft have been sub-leased to Swiss Air under a long-term
operating
lease. The four aircraft were part of a 10 aircraft order by
Flightlease and were
purchased in September and October 1999 by GECAS. This cross-border
financing
involved a US leveraged lease. GE Capital arranged 100% of the
financing
through a combination of a GE Capital equity investment and
non-recourse debt
provided by an off balance sheet asset backed commercial paper conduit.
This
structure enabled Flightlease to achieve 100% financing of the
equipment cost
and off-balance sheet treatment for the aircraft lease at an attractive
lease
rate.
But in 2002 the
impact of the squeeze in the commercial
paper market has been limited to the bottom end of the market, among
companies
with short-term ratings of A2/P2. The spreads between rates on
individual issues
has widened to between 50 and 75 basis points, up from 15 to 25 basis
points. More
highly rated companies were not affected and sector related.
GE, the world's
largest non-bank financial conglomerate that
incidentally also manufactures, issues credit at the retail level
through
vendor financing, to capture sales for GE products. It gets its funds
wholesale
from the commercial paper market, which GE dominates because it has a
good
credit rating. When GE credit rating was downgraded recently, it faced
being
frozen out of the commercial paper market in the Fall of 2002, and had
to
revert back to costly bank credit lines that adversely affected its
interest
rate spread and profitability.
More than 20
companies, including San Francisco-based
Luminent Mortgage Capital Inc. and Thornburg Mortgage Co. in Santa Fe,
New Mexico, have been
unable to roll over asset-backed commercial paper. Thornburg said sold
$20.5
billion of securities at about 95 cents on the dollar to pay down
commercial
paper it couldn't refinance.
GMAC Commercial
Paper
(CP)
GMAC Financial
Services is a global, diversified financial
services company. GMAC maintains a diversified portfolio of business
operations, including automotive finance, dealer and personal line
insurance,
real estate finance and other commercial businesses. At December 31, 2006, GMAC held more
than $287
billion in assets and earned net income for 2006 of $2.1 billion on net
revenue
of $18.2 billion.
GMAC was established
as a wholly owned subsidiary by General
Motors Corporation (GM) in 1919, and currently operates in
approximately 40
countries. GMAC offers its Commercial Paper directly to institutional
and
commercial investors in the United
States.
These short-term promissory notes are obligations of GMAC and are
generally
available for 1 to 270 days. GMAC CP is issued on a discount or
interest-bearing basis at identical yields and is payable upon maturity
at a
designated bank. Settlement is made via Depository Trust Company (DTC).
In November 2006, GM
sold a 51 percent controlling interest
in GMAC to a consortium of investors led by Cerberus Capital
Management, L.P.
to insulate itself from potential credit downgrade of General Motors,
its
parent. By the end of 1991, money market funds were shying away from
GMAC
commercial paper. As the nation's second-largest issuer of these
short-term
debt securities, G.M.A.C. had more than $23 billion in commercial paper
outstanding, about $5 billion more than the value of GM common stock.
The
Cerberus deal was worth $14 billion payable over 3 years. In 2005,
GMAC
made a net profit of $3 billion while GM overall lost $10.6 billion,
reducing
GM bonds to junk status in 2005. Financial plight of GM depressed
GMAC
value against the Cerberus transaction, which required GM to make good
the
difference in value to Cerberus.
General Motors
announced it will take a $39 billion charge against
third-quarter 2007 earnings as a result of writedowns in the
carrying value of
deferred tax valuation allowances. The charges stem from difficult
business
conditions in GM’s US and German operations and hefty losses at the
real-estate
arm of GMAC in which GM has a 49% stake.
GM said in early November that it was writing down deferred-tax
benefits by
$39bn as a result of difficult business conditions in North America
and Germany,
and heavy losses at ResCap, the mortgage-lending arm of GMAC. ResCap
reported a
third-quarter loss of $2.3bn, pushing GMAC’s income down by $630m
compared to a
year earlier.
The third-quarter
results include various other special items, including a
$3.5bn after-tax gain from the sale of Allison Transmission, a maker of
heavy-duty transmissions, and charges of $1.6bn in pension service
costs.
On August 15, 2007,
Fitch Ratings said Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. affiliates KKR
Atlantic
Funding Trust and KKR Pacific Funding Trust might have to sell
securities
because of losses. There were about $385 billion outstanding in SIVs
and 23% of
their assets were MBS or CDOs. SIVs often are not backed by credit
lines from
banks like ABCP programs, of which there are $1.05 trillion outstanding.
At the same time,
Barclays Capital had
to provide rescue financing to $1.6 billion Cairn High Grade
Funding I,
a so-called SIV-lite
that it had structured for hedge fund
Cairn Capital that could not raise short-term funding due to the ABCP
market seizure
related to the US
subprime mortgage crisis. Barclays would
provide US$1.6
billion in fresh funding to pay off all maturing short-term
asset-backed
commercial paper. Barclays said it had fully hedged its credit exposure
to the
vehicle.
The US
subprime mortgage crisis has dealt structures like SIV-lites a double
blow. Theses
SIV-lites have been having difficulty in raising short-term funding as
investors grew more risk averse, forcing ABCP yields to six-year highs,
and
have seen the value of their longer-term investments, mostly in
asset-backed
securities, fall sharply.
Bank holding
companies, including Citigroup, are not simply
limited to the risks on the balance sheets of their banks. Little known
affiliated investment vehicles that issue billions in commercial paper
are
partially owned by large banks and create a whole new source of risk.
These
vehicles, known as “conduits” and SIVs, are run separately and because
of US
accounting standards, do not have to appear on the holding company’s
balance sheet.
Citigroup controls 25% of the SIV market, totaling nearly $100 billion
under
management. Citigroup-own Centauri Corporation holds $21 billion in
debt, which
however is not mentioned in the holding company’s 2006 annual filing.
Citigroup said it
has given its SIVs, $10 billion of
available financing, and the funds had drawn $7.6 billion of that
financing as
of October 31. The move, disclosed in a quarterly filing with
regulators, may
add to investor concern about Citi’s $83 billion of structured
investment
vehicles, which issue short- and medium-term debt to finance their
acquisition
of bank bonds, repackaged debt, and other securities. Citi said in its
filing
that its credit lines to the SIVs were done on “arms-length commercial
terms,”
and that the bank has no plans to list the SIVs' assets on its own
balance
sheet.
The funding problems
are likely to get worse if Moody’s cuts
the ratings on some of Citibank’s SIVs. Citigroup and HSBC Holdings Plc
received warning of possible downgrades to their structured investment
vehicles
as Moody’s reviewed its ratings on $33 billion of debt. SIV “debt
ratings
continue to be vulnerable to the unprecedented large and sustained
declines in
portfolio value combined with a prolonged inability to refinance
maturing debt,'”
Moody’s said in a statement.
At this late date,
when dead bodies of the credit market
crisis are floating to the surface and the carnage no longer deniable,
there
are still public voices trying to calm market sentiment by presenting
the raging
crisis “in perspective”, pointing to the low percentage of distress
mortgages
in relation to the entire mortgage market. Yet in a top-heavy structure
precariously balanced on complex mechanics, a few small bricks removed
at
critical points can bring the whole structure crashing down. It is
irresponsible for public figures to label the tip of a massive credit
iceberg
as merely a fly in the ointment so as to persuade a trusting public to
view the
escalating crumbling of the financial sector as a buying opportunity.
Next: Off-Balance-Sheet
Debt
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