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
Part V: Off-Balance-Sheet
Debt
This article
appeared in AToL
on December 1, 2007
Conduits and SIVs
allow companies and banks to take on
off-balance-sheet debt. These vehicles usually hold highly rated,
short-term
debt that offers a higher yielding alternative to ultra-safe Treasury
debt.
Banks use the low-cost proceeds to buy longer-term debt like
auto-loans, credit
card, or mortgages to profit from their high cash flow. Banks that have
stakes
in conduits have provided “liquidity back-stops”, promises that the
vehicles’ debts
will be paid by the banks when the debts come due even if the vehicles
are not
able to pay them. Banks are reluctant to consolidate the distressed
vehicles
because it would have to put the liabilities on bank balance sheets
thus restricting
lending. Also, allowing conduits or SIVs to fail could damage a bank’s
reputation and might even create financial systemic risk if investors
should lose
faith and stop purchasing commercial paper altogether. This creates
possible
scenarios where banks must lend the distress vehicles money in hope of
riding
out the storm or take substantial immediate losses.
The trillion dollar
commercial paper market that raises funds
for the purchase of assets from home mortgages to car loans seized up
in August
2007 just as more than half of that amount comes due. Unless the
issuers continue
to find new buyers to roll over the maturing debt, hundreds of hedge
funds and
home-loan companies will be forced to draw on bank loans or sell some
$75
billion of debt at fire sale prices every 90 days which would drive
further down
prices in a market where investors have already lost $44 billion. That
will hurt
the 40 million individual and institutional investors in money market
funds,
the biggest owners of commercial paper. The money comes predominantly
from retirement
funds. Let that be a warning to those
who advocate the privatization of social security.
Ottimo Funding Ltd.,
whose name is “excellent” in Italian,
started selling its $2.8 billion of mortgage bonds at the end of
October after failing
to raise roll over financing in the commercial paper market. Many of
Ottimo’s
securities were backed by option adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs).
Borrowers
with option ARMs are permitted to make low initial interest payments
for the
first few years, causing loan balances to grow. Monthly payments can
later more
than double.
The securities
auctioned were rated AAA and backed by Alt-A
mortgages, a credit class above subprime, made to borrowers with good
credit
scores who opt for unusual terms, such as reduced income documentation
or
delayed principal repayment, without enough visible assets to offset
the risk,
such as sufficient cash in the bank. The sale of Ottimo securities did
not generate
enough cash to fully repay investors who bought short-term debt from
the fund
that were now maturing.
Ottimo, created six
months earlier by Stamford,
Connecticut-based $20 billion hedge fund manager Aladdin Capital
Management,
extended the maturity of its asset-backed commercial paper in August
after
being unable to roll over the debt. Investors in short-term commercial
paper
issued by Ottimo and similar funds fled to safety in US
government bonds after losses linked to subprime home loans began to
spread. S&P
in August cut Ottimo credit rating to C, the second-lowest ranking,
from AAA.
The threat of a fire
sale of assets by investors that also
rely on the shrinking market for asset-backed commercial paper prompted
U.S.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to broker talks that may lead to the
creation
of an $80-100 billion super fund by Citigroup Inc., JP Morgan Chase
& Co.
and Bank of America Corp.
The super fund would
buy securities from structured investment
vehicles, or SIVs, to prevent them from dumping their $320 billion of
holdings
and further roiling credit markets.
But Ottimo is not
considered a SIV. Ottimo’s bonds are
backed by mortgages to people with credit scores of 708 and higher,
compared
with scores for subprime loans that average less than 620. The
company's commercial
paper has an A1+ rating from Standard & Poor's and P1 from Moody's
Investors Service, the highest available.
Aladdin was not
forced to immediately shutter Ottimo because
the company exercised an option to extend the maturities on its
commercial
paper, providing 30 to 45 more days to find buyers. No issuer had
extended
maturities in the 12-year history of the asset-backed market until
Ottimo. Two
other issuers, Luminent and a unit of Melville, New York-based American
Home
Mortgage Investment Corporation did so within the last two weeks of
October.
More than $100 billion of extendible commercial paper is still
outstanding.
The laws of finance
may be bent but cannot be denied by
obscuring the unwinding of obligations through manipulation to postpone
the day
of reckoning by adding more obligations. Ponzi schemes of paying early
creditors with money from new creditor eventually will fail, with the
final
bill increasing in size as time goes on. The reckoning of the debt
cancer faces
a choice of facing the music honestly by excising the invasive
malignancy now
or let it metastasize over the entire financial system over the painful
course
of several quarters and even years and decades. Until October,
investors were
willing to buy extendible commercial paper because it offered higher
interest
rates than standard asset-backed commercial paper. Since then, as Wall
Street
carnival barkers continue to urge investor to take advantage of buying
opportunities, it is time to sell.
Financial Panic
Short-term corporate
debt yielded 5.75% to 5.95% on average
on August 8, compared with 5.45% for non-extendable asset-backed
commercial
paper and 5.25% to 5.30% for corporate commercial paper. Since then,
asset-backed commercial paper with a maturity of 30 days or less are
yielding
above 6% on average if buyer could be found, and corporate borrowers
pay about
5.2% while three-month LIBOR hovers around 4.89%. Extendible commercial
paper
has no market.
Wall Street is
gripped by financial panic and has stopped funding
mortgage bonds, even AAA rated bonds backed by prime home loans. Even
the Fed’s
decision on August 17 to cut discount rate 50 basis points to 5.75% and
the
September 18 decision to cut the discount rate another 50 basis points
to 5.25%
and the Fed Funds rate target 50 basis points to 4.5% and the October
31
decision to cut the discount rate another 25 basis points to 5% and the
Fed
Funds rate target another 25 basis points to 4.5% failed to revive
demand for
ABCP. The rate for overnight borrowing in the asset-backed commercial
paper
market soared 0.39 percentage points, the biggest
rise since the September 11 terrorist attacks. Overnight yields fell 2
basis
points to 6.01% while 30-day paper widened 9 basis points to 6.09
percent. A
basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The distinction
between asset-backed securities and
asset-backed commercial paper is primarily one of the tenure of the
paper -
commercial paper by definition is short-term funding, and is therefore
mostly
used for short-term assets such as trade receivables.
Asset backed
commercial paper (ABCP) is a device used by
banks to get operating assets such as trade receivables funded by
issuance of
securities. Traditionally, banks devised ABCP conduits as a device to
put their
current asset credits off their balance sheets and yet provide
liquidity
support to their clients whose working capital needs are funded by the
bank. If
the bank wants to release the regulatory capital that is locked in this
credit
asset, the bank can set up a conduit, essentially an SPV that issues
commercial
paper. The conduit will buy the receivables of the client and get the
same
funded by issuance of commercial paper. The bank will be required to
provide
some liquidity support to the conduit, as it is practically impossible
to match
the maturities of the commercial paper to the realization of trade
receivables.
Thus, the credit asset is moved off the balance sheet giving the bank a
regulatory relief.
So depending upon whether the bank provides full or partial
liquidity support to the conduit, ABCP can be either fully supported or
partly
supported. ABCP conduits are virtual subsets of the parent bank. If the
bank provides full liquidity support to the conduit, for regulatory
purposes,
the liquidity support given by the bank may be treated as a direct
credit substitute in
which case the assets held by the conduit are aggregated with those of
the
bank.
Non-bank entities also set up ABCP conduits. ABCP conduits can
be single originator or muliple
originator conduits. In the latter case, the credit enhancements
(and/or
liquidity enhancements) are found both at the level of transfer by each
originator (originator-level enhancement) and at the program level.
The ABCP
market
Bank-sponsored ABCP
conduits are the oldest and largest
segment of the asset-backed commercial paper market. As of June 30, 2007, there were over
200 such conduits
worldwide, with approximately US$900 billion of ABCP outstanding,
comprising
two-thirds of the outstanding ABCP rated by Moody’s. On June 30, 2000, ABCP outstanding
was $570
billion. By the end of year 2001, it had reached USD 745 billion, up
from USD
641 billion year-end 2000.
Unlike the
bank-sponsored conduits in the US
and Europe, bank-sponsored
ABCP market in Japan
had been reported by Moody’s as largely unaffected by recent market
turmoil. But
the Tokyo stock market
suffered its
sixth straight loss on Friday November 9 amid persisting nervousness
about the
impact of the subprime mortgage crisis. Selling accelerated late in the
day on
November 9 following a news report that Mizuho Securities might have
lost as
much as ¥100 billion ($8.7 billion) due to the turmoil stemming
from problems
in the subprime mortgage market. Moody’s also rates 20 bank-sponsored
ABCP
conduits in Australia
and Asia with outstanding of
US$39 billion.
Some notable
administrators of ABCP in the US
market are:
Citigroup N.A,
ABN-AMRO Bank N.V.: Banc One, N.A., JP Morgan
Chase; General Electric Capital; Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale;
Rabobank
Nederland; Liberty Hampshire Co. LLC; Societe Generale; Bank of America
National
Trust & Savings Association; Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce;
Barclay's
Bank PLC; Credit Suisse First Boston; First Union National Bank,
Charlotte;
Bayerische Landesbank Girozentrale; General Motors Acceptance
Corporation;
Firstar Bank, N.A. and Dresdner Bank AG.
Back in unusually
heavily attended 2002 annual Bond Market Association
meeting in New York featuring then Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill,
Securities
and Exchange Committee chairman Harvey Pitt, and former Fed chairman
Paul
Volcker, a swarm of reporters, looking for the next Enron, turned up to
ask
questions about special-purpose entities (SPEs) and other means of
moving risk off
corporate balance sheets.
One association
member asked Pitt how the market could
distinguish between how SPEs now were different from those used by
Enron which
had been deemed legally fraudulent. Pitt had no ready answer. The
off-balance-sheet genie had been let out of the bottle, and there was
no easy
way to put it back in.
New Accounting Rules
on Off-Balance-Sheet Obligations
The Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) adopted new rules for
consolidating SPEs and disclosing off-balance-sheet activities. SPEs
can no
longer be all-purpose entities, especially not the kind of debt-hiding
entities
that Enron used and abused to puff up its profits. Interpretation No.
46,
“Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities”, expands on existing
rules to
more precisely specify under what conditions a parent company must
consolidate
an off-balance-sheet SPE. Now, the question of consolidation is a
matter of who
takes the risks and who reaps the rewards of the enterprise.
Hundreds of US companies keep
trillions of dollars in debt in off-balance-sheet subsidiaries and
partnerships, skirting the consolidation rules of FASB 94, FASB 125 and
FASB
140. If a company creates a legal structure, called a special-purpose
entity
(SPE) with a 3% minimal equity infusion, they do not have to
consolidate the
transaction under SEC and FASB rules. Banks arrange many of the devices
and are
big users themselves. JP Morgan revealed in the Enron bankruptcy that
it had
nearly $1 billion in potential liabilities stemming from a single
49%-owned Channel Islands
entity called Mahonia that traded with Enron. Dell Computer had a joint
venture
with Tyco called Dell Financial Services (DFS) that originated $2.5
billion in
customer financing, mentioned only as a footnote to Dell’s accounts.
Dell owned
70% of DFS, but did not control it and therefore could keep DFS debts
off its
own balance sheet.
To move assets off its books, a
company typically sells them to an SPE, funding the purchase by
borrowing cash
from institutional investors. As a sweetener to protect investors, many
SPEs
incorporate triggers that require the parent to repay loans or give
them new
securities if its stock falls below a certain price or credit-rating
agencies
downgrade its debt or other triggering events. However, the
International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB) resisted this type of treatment.
Under
pending European Union legislation, all listed companies in the EU had
to
report under IASB by 2005, except those that report under US GAAP,
which would
have to move to IASB by 2007
Moving debt off the balance sheet is more difficult in Europe than
in the US
under IASB rules which use the standard of whether a
company participates in the risks and rewards attached to that debt in
deciding
whether debt can be off-balance-sheet. By contrast, US GAAP uses the
standard
of what legal form such an entity takes. In the post-Enron world, the
rules on
off-balance-sheet debt have tightened up, but new loopholes have been
exploited. Under existing accounting rules, the assets
of SPEs must be consolidated when outside investors’ stakes are
protected in
that fashion. Yet Some 42% of off-balance-sheet debt provide guarantee
for
outside investors in indirect ways to get around the rules.
Synthetic Leases
Synthetic
leases allow a company to own financial instruments that would give it
the tax
benefits of ownership without the accounting burdens of ownership.
Synthetic
leases are designed under current accounting rules to achieve
off-balance sheet
treatment of both assets and liabilities by classifying lease payments
as
operating expenses. Return on assets (ROA), return on equity (ROE),
interest-coverage ratios and leveraging ratios (debt to equity) are
improved
relative to standard on-balance sheet treatment.
Synthetic transactions qualify for off-balance sheet status if the
lease does
not: (1) transfers ownership of the property at the end of the lease
term; (2)
does not contain an option to purchase at a bargain price; (3) the
non-cancelable lease term is not equal to or greater than 75% of the
estimated
economic life of the property; and (4) the present value of rents and
other
minimum lease payments does not equal or exceed 90% of the fair market
value of
the property.
Generally, the
ownership transfer and bargain purchase
criteria are structured to provide a fixed, market-rate purchase price
at the
end of the lease term. The non-cancelable lease term is structured so
that the
non-cancelable portion of the lease term is short-term.
Under a synthetic
lease, the lessee retains the tax advantages of ownership
since the transaction places significant benefits, burdens and control
of
ownership with the corporate user who is regarded as the tax owner of
the
property and is eligible for the accelerated depreciation and interest
deductions contained in the lease payments.
Several factors
determine if synthetic leases are beneficial to a company: (1) the
value of the asset is expected to appreciate over time; (2) the cash
tied up in
the asset can be better utilized and (3)
100% financing allows the company faster more cost-effectively growth.
In most
cases, 100% financing is available, thus creating a structure with “all
in”
cost that may be substantially lower than traditional financing
programs.
Synthetic leases are
used for financing equipment integrated into industrial
buildings, corporate headquarters, hospitals, single-tenant offices,
movie
theaters, hotels, retail branches, call centers, and data centers.
Under a
synthetic transaction, a capital source provides funding for the
construction
or acquisition of equipment to be utilized by and leased to a corporate
user.
If the equipment is purchased by the user upon the expiration of the
lease, a
predetermined purchase price is paid to the lessor. Funding sources for
synthetic leases are commercial paper on a floating-rate or fixed-rate
basis
through interest-rate swaps, private placement, bank debt or other
sources.
Leases can be
structured such that funds are provided on a drawn basis usually
with spreads over Bankers’ Acceptances, or an undrawn basis where funds
are
raised in the commercial paper market by a major funding source using a
funding
conduit.
In a typical
synthetic transaction, the borrower would have two options at the
expiration of the lease term: One is to purchase the property from the
lessor
(or owner) for the balance due. Because this amount cannot be a bargain
purchase, an appraisal is required at the lease inception stating that
the
amount is not a bargain price. The other option is to sell the property
on the
last day of the lease term to a buyer unaffiliated with the borrower
and
guarantee the lessor any deficiency in the sale proceeds up to a
specified
amount with any excess payable to the lessee. Through a fixed price
purchase
option available at any time, lessees may benefit from any appreciation
in the
underlying value of the leased asset(s) even though such assets are not
owned
for GAAP accounting purposes. Alternately, lessees have the right to
“return”
such leased assets at the lease maturity upon making a residual
payment,
assuming there is no event of default and certain return provisions
have been
satisfied.
Implementing
synthetic leases has led to unique and bleeding-edge structures
(beta testing), which are highly influenced by accounting and tax rules. FASB new rules regarding SPEs, including
those involving synthetic leases, would make it much harder, if not
impossible,
to make use of such arrangements when they involve SPEs. Some companies
such as
Symantec continued to use synthetic leases to keep real estate
financing off
their balance sheets. Symantec defended its practices by pointing out
that the
arrangements meet new accounting rules because its synthetic leases do
not
involve SPEs. But most lenders have to get a regulatory exemption to
offer such
leases without the use of SPEs, and only a handful have done so.
While the debt reflected by Symantec’s synthetic leases is kept
off the balance sheet, the amounts involved are footnoted on the
balance sheet
under “restricted cash.” Krispy Kreme unwound a non-SPE synthetic lease
that
was slated to finance a new mixing plant in Illinois, and
instead carried some $33 million to $35 million of the
debt on its balance sheet. Cisco also decided to abandon its use of
synthetic
leases announcing last March that it would unwind all the leases it has
used to
finance its San Jose, California,
headquarters and several manufacturing facilities in California and New England. Cisco consolidated
roughly $1.6 billion in real estate assets by the end of the last
fiscal year,
betting that it was better to have investors see a bigger balance sheet
than
suspect that it was hiding debt.
When Sears returned
$8 billion in credit card receivables from an SPE to its
balance sheet, in early 2001, the company's ROA dropped from 3.6% in
2000 to
1.6% in 2001. Even so, Sears's stock soared by almost 70% as a result
of the
change toward more transparency.
Skepticism about GE
lingers. Toronto-based credit-rating agency Dominion Bond
Rating Service figured that if all of GE Capital’s off-balance-sheet
securitizations were added back to the debt it consolidated as of
year-end
2001, the finance subsidiary’s leverage ratio would rise from 13.5
times
tangible assets to closer to 16 times.
The activities conducted through SPEs in the asset-backed
securities market now raise the same issues of disclosure and hidden
risk as did
in the Enron disaster. More than a trillion
dollars of assets were taken off corporate balance sheets in 2006 and
put into
SPEs and vehicles known as commercial-paper conduits. That amount makes
Enron
look small time.
Commercial banks use
SPEs to securitize their own assets,
and also sponsor asset-backed commercial-paper conduits, which purchase
and
securitize assets from third parties. New accounting rules for these
activities
will cost both banks and their corporate borrowers. After FASB rule 157
goes
into effect on November 15, 2007,
banks were supposed to be required to consolidate their SPEs to add a
lot more
assets on their balance sheets, requiring banks to raise capital to
meet
regulatory reserve requirements. Banks and near-banks may then be
compelled to
rein in their SPEs and conduit programs, and the terms for both loans
and
asset-backed commercial paper would tighten. Moreover, without the
liquidity
guarantees provided in bank-sponsored conduits, many companies might
lose their
access to the asset-backed market altogether. One day before the
deadline, the
FASB announced that Rule 157 would be postponed for one year, allowing
the
off-balance-sheet liability issue to remain obscure and the malignancy
of opacity
to fester for another twelve months. The crash of 2007 will be
prolonged through
the end of 2008.
On Monday, November
12, a rumor was circulating that FASB Rule 157 was going
to be delayed. This helped to power markets higher. The accounting
change
requires is that all of the paper on the balance sheets of various
funds,
banks and brokers -- RMBS, CDOs, CDS, etc. -- must be "carried at fair
value on a recurring basis in financial statements."
The FASB announced
in a news release at 12.05
am:
“At its Board meeting today, the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) reaffirmed its vote against a blanket deferral of
Statement 157,
Fair Value Measurements. For fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007, companies will be
required to
implement the standard for financial assets and liabilities, as well as
for any
other assets and liabilities that are carried at fair value on a
recurring
basis in financial statements. As a result, Statement 157 becomes
effective as
originally scheduled in accounting for the financial assets and
liabilities of
financial institutions. The Board did, however, provide a one year
deferral for
the implementation of Statement 157 for other nonfinancial assets and
liabilities. An exposure draft will be issued for comment in the near
future on
this partial deferral.”
In other words, no
more mark-to-model or other accounting fantasies are
permitted. Still the implementation of the full FASB 157 being
partially
delayed suggests
that banks’ balance sheets are not sufficiently strong to cope with
that shock
at the moment. Whilst this undoubtedly gives banks more time to work
out their
problems, that is actually bad news as it will mean the financial
markets
remain in a state of closure for longer, and the process of removing
capacity
will take longer to materialize. A total deferral for
a full year
nearly passed, the seven-member FASB rejected such a proposal only by a
four-to-three vote.
Creating Liquidity
out of Illiquid Assets
The ability to
create liquidity out of illiquid assets by
packaging them into securities has been the most significant innovation
in the capital
markets in the past two decades. Since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
started the
trend in the mortgage market as part of their official mandate from
Congress to
foster more home ownership, securitization has expanded into a variety
of credit
markets. This was not a problem when the
relationship between asset value and debt was kept within normal bounds.
At some point, asset
securitization shifted into debt
securitization as the debt bubble expanded from the Fed’s loose
monetary policy
coupled with the Treasury abusive use of dollar hegemony, using the
capital
account surplus to finance an expanding trade deficit.
Asset-backed securities were eventually overwhelmed
by collateralized debt obligations, backed by payment streams from
credit-card
debt, auto and home-equity loans, commercial mortgages, and trade
receivables
beyond consumer ability to carry once the temporary wealth effect of
astronomical asset appreciation fueled by massive debt ends. The debt
bubble
was being serviced of new debts.
Asset-backed
securitization allows originators to monetize
illiquid assets and remove them from their balance sheets to devote the
proceeds as new capital to finance growth. The macro-economic benefit
of securitization
is that it has enables the extension of credit to far more individuals
and
businesses in the US.
The macro-economic cost of securitization is vastly expanded systemic
risk of
default in a debt bubble, especially when the debts proceeds come
largely from
taking on new debt and are largely devoted to financing more debt,
rather than
real investment for expansion.
Securitization of
Debt Fed the Debt Bubble
As the debt bubble
expanded, industrial companies began to
look for profit from financial engineering, a respectable euphemism for
manipulation. The problem was exacerbated by outdated
financial-reporting
practices that failed to keep pace with securitization innovation, thus
allowing debt proceeds to be swapped with counterparties as current
income and
payment of principle counted as long-term capital investment. Debt
liabilities
then magically disappear from corporation annual reports. Programs
executed in
SPEs off-balance-sheet kept investors in the dark about the risks
involved in
their high-yield investments.
As early as 2002,
Pacific Investment Management Co. (PIMCO)
bond fund manager Bill Gross accused General Electric of using
off-balance-sheet activities to manipulate its reported earnings, and
also
suggested that the company’s heavy dependence on the short-term
commercial
paper market was becoming precarious. See my AToL series on central
banking: BANKING
BUNKUM - Part 3d: The Lessons of the US Experience
Paying for Bad Loans
Made in Good Times
As the biggest
players in the structured-finance market,
commercial banks in the US
and Europe may have to face up
to the real liabilities
of their SPEs. Several studies of securitization programs by Standard
&
Poor's showed that all the major banks, and many minor ones, conducted
significant
off-balance-sheet securitizations through their own SPEs and through
commercial
paper conduits. Conduit programs alone financed approximately $500
billion in
assets in 2006, none of which appeared on corporate or bank balance
sheets,
except as minor footnotes.
Securitization has
enabled banks to finance assets through
the capital markets, but the process has not eliminated associated
risks for
banks. In fact, in most cases, banks and asset-sellers have retained
the
majority of the risk of assets transferred off-balance-sheet. The
process works
profitably when the economy is strong and expanding and credit losses
are small
as easy and low-cost credit can bail out trouble loans, as was the case
through
most of the 1990s. But as Greenspan was fond of rationalizing: “Bad
loan are
made in good times.” He never bothered to finish the second half of the
truism:
“No loans are made in bad times,” a fatal fact when the economy depends
on the
roll over of existing debt.
Under current rules
regarding SPE accounting, neither
financial-services firms nor other types of businesses need disclose
much about
their off-balance-sheet activities. Even the rating agencies have to
essentially take banks at their word about the performance of the
assets in
their SPEs and conduits. But that happy state of affairs will end in
one week’s
time.
FASB Rule 157
Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) rule 157,
effective November 15, 2007
will make it harder for companies to avoid putting market prices on
securities
considered hardest to value, known as Level 3 assets. Level 1 asets are
mark-to-market, based on liquid real prices. Level 2 assets are
mark-to-model,
an estimate based on observable inputs and used when no quoted prices
are
readily available. Level 3 assets those the value of which are based on
“unobservable” inputs reflecting companies’ “own assumptions'” about
the way
assets would be priced.
At stake is the
value of the assets on bank balance sheets,
i.e. liabilities of increasingly complex and esoteric instruments, such
as ABS
(asset backed securities), MBS (mortgage backed securities), CDS
(credit
default swaps), CDO (Collateralized Debt obligations) and similar
instruments.
Level 3 assets are
those that are so complex, or so remote
from the initial underlying assets because they have been sliced,
repackaged,
re-sliced, repackaged, and combined with other bits that there simply
is no way
to reliably calculate what they are worth in changing market
conditions,
because there is no ready market for them, and no market for the easily
identifiable bits, and their value can only be derived from the
changing value
of other instrument through a complex network of hedging. Banks are
still
allowed to assign to Level 3 assets the value they can rationalize, but
they
are now obliged to tell regulators and the markets how of the holdings
are in
that category.
US banks and brokers
reportedly face as much as $100 billion
of writedowns because of Level 3 accounting rules, in addition to the
losses
caused by the subprime credit slump. Estimates of final losses from the
credit
crisis have suggested a range of $250
billion to $500 billion. More institutions are expected to revalue
their
currently mark-to-market value downward.
Big Wall Street
firms to date have written down at least $40
billion as prices of mortgage-related assets dwindle because of record
foreclosures. Morgan Stanley, the second-biggest U.S. securities firm, is said
to have 251% of its equity in Level 3 assets, making it the
most vulnerable to writedowns, followed by Goldman Sachs at 185%.
Citigroup, which already wrote down $11 billion, has 105% of its equity
in
Level 3 assets. As market capitalization shrinks from falling share
prices, the
ratio of Level 3 assets to equity will rise.
Beside Citigroup,
other banks may be forced to write down as
much as $64 billion on collateralized debt obligations of securities
backed by
subprime assets, up from about $15 billion so far.
ABX Indexes and Level
3 assets
ABX indexes, which
investors use to track the subprime-bond market,
are showing “observable levels” that would wipe out institution capital
if ABX
prices were used to value their Level 3 assets.
ABX value reflects a percentage of the instrument face value.
Ultra-safe
AAA paper has lost 30% of their face value, more than half of that in
the last
two days of the second week in November. AA paper (Japan
is rated AA, as are the best banks) has lost more than half its value.
Lower
rated indices dropped earlier, now hovering around 20 cents on the
dollar.
Adding to the banks’
problems is the amount of Level 3 paper
private equity or hedge funds bought with highly leverage financed by
banks.
Many clients who purchased Level 3 paper from banks are protected by
“guaranteed sell back” clauses in their initial purchase agreements.
Bank
financing provided to real estate and construction firms and private
equity
funds whose business model was underpinned by cheap and easy credit is
destined
to become non-performing loans.
No matter how
finance engineers slice and dice it, risk
cannot be extinguished, it can only be transferred or redistributed. In
the
asset securitization process, companies un-bundle the securities into a
hierarchy of different tranches by assigning varying degrees of credit
risk out
of general pool of assets. The tranches produced in a typical
asset-backed deal
range from AAA credits down to BB.
With the number of
corporations still holding a AAA credit
rating dwindling, and with growth of money rising at a faster rate than
US
sovereign debt, highly rated, asset-backed paper is an easy sell with
institutional investors bulging with cash they must invest.
Securitization can
lower the cost of capital for companies than bank loans.
But in most cases,
the originator of the asset, such as a
manufacturing company financing trade receivables or a specialty
finance lender
securitizing loans, retains a residual interest in the performance of
the
assets. This interest obligates the issuer to cover losses in the asset
pool up
to a certain percentage. If losses exceed that percentage, other
low-rated,
subordinate tranches of the issuance begin to absorb them, with the
loss
climbing up the rating scale. The post-Enron fear taught the market
that there
are all sorts of toxic sludge out there hidden below the surface. Lack
of specific
transparency coupled with certain macro danger is an explosive mixture
in a
jittery market.
The risks for banks
go beyond CDO exposure. The banks are also
obligated to provide liquidity support if cash flow from the conduits
the
structured is not enough to pay off the paper as it matures. If enough
loans in
conduits go bad, the sponsor banks could be liable beyond their capital
can
sustain. The US
economy is strong and resilient and can be expected with weather each
and every
one of these financial problems separately. But the US
economy is now predominantly a finance economy and a confluence of
interrelated
financial market failures can put a mighty economy in intensive care
for a long
time.
Even a
Triple-A-rated company like General Electric could be
vulnerable if it were unable to securitize assets easily. Through GE
Capital, its
finance subsidiary, GE uses sponsored special-purpose entities (SPEs)
and
conduits to securitize loans and receivables fro itself and for
clients. In its
latest annual reports, GE asserts that if required in the event of an
accounting change regarding the consolidation of SPEs, GE could use
“alternative
securitization techniques...at an insignificant incremental cost.”
Still, skeptics
say that GE’s statement in its annual report about SPEs is misleading,
because
such an accounting change would likely affect all off-balance-sheet
financing
alternatives. And if GE has to finance the assets on the balance sheet,
the
impact on its financial statements will be more than incremental.
What has compounded
the problem is that nobody yet knows who
holds the commercial paper that is exposed to the US
sub-prime mortgage market and has been dubbed as toxic. Commercial
paper is
typically bought by pension and insurance funds. But until these funds
can work
out their exposure, they are refusing to buy more. It is this buying
strike
that has created the liquidity freeze.
Skepticism over
SMELEC
The Treasury
constantly monitors financial markets. By mid
year key market participants were telling Anthony Ryan, Treasury's
assistant
secretary for financial markets, their rising anxiety over the
asset-backed
commercial paper market from which SIVs roll over the short-term debt.
The
market saw a massive restructuring approaching with a potential for a
disorderly
unwind of many SIVs. The Treasury became actively engaged in the
seeking a
resolution by playing a lead role in facilitating discussions among
competing
banks.
Critics charged that
the Treasury is essentially helping big
banks escape from the financial pain of risky bets that turned sour,
banks that
in earlier years has given banks huge profits. Ryan countered that the
government's role was merely to “facilitate market participants” and
that no
public sector money was involved. At any rate, the super SIV being
created is
“voluntary” and that no bank is required or forced to take part. Still,
a big promoter
of the arrangement is Citigroup which has the largest risk exposure
from SIVs.
Citigroup, which is
the largest sponsor of SIVs with seven
such affiliates, has been criticized that its own SIVs would benefit
most from
the plan. Bank of America will also benefit; . The Charlotte,
N.C., bank's mutual
funds are big investors
of commercial paper, including debt sold by the SIVs. Bank of America
said its
concern wasn't whether the commercial paper would be paid off but
rather the
unnecessary seizing up of the market. Reportedly, the price of
admission for
SIVs will be high. SIVs will only be allowed to sell assets rated AA or
better
and likely will be unable to sell collateralized debt obligations:
pools of
debt repackaged into slices with different levels of risk and return,
backed by
subprime assets. In addition, the SIVs will have to pay a fee to the
super
conduit and accept a discount in the price of the securities they are
selling.
In return for that discount, the SIVs will receive notes in the
“junior” layer
in the conduit which will take the first hit if losses are incurred.
The restructuring of
SIVs also raises the specter that
certain SIV note holders may find themselves stuck with unexpected
losses. Many
fixed-income managers are intrigued by the idea of investing in a
"Super
SIV" fund. But some also say they are wary of the complexity of the
proposed fund. The banks will
essentially sell all of their currently off balance sheet Structured
Investment
Vehicles (SIVs) to the SMELEC, and use their own balance sheets to buy
the commercial
paper issued by the SMELEC to finance these purchases. Participating
banks will
“insure” investors against some portion of future losses within the
SMELEC.
In November 2005,
Merrill Lynch chief executive E. Stanley O’Neal told
investors that the brokerage firm would shift its strategy and would
become
more aggressive investing its own money to increase profitability.
Two years later, asked how Merrill Lynch could
lose so much money, O’Neal said: “We made a mistake,” as he resigned
from the
company with an option and retirement package of $161.5 million.
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