January 2, 2008
John Bougearel
www.successfultradingtips.com
SummaryThe
blowup of two Bear Stearns Hedge Funds in the second half of June was
the tipping point for the stock market in 2007. Those two blowups and
their announcement that there would be little or no money left to
return to their investors had a direct impact on credit crunch of 2007.
That event, more than any other triggered the drying up of LBO's,
M&A's, and liquidity in the credit markets. As Bill Gross put it
back in September,
“the commercial paper market, in terms of the asset-backed commercial paper market, is basically history.”
Investors seeking low risk, high yield, predictable and stable returns
simply balked and said "No Mas." This left the major central banks
(primarily the ECB on the hook as lenders of last resort to provide
liquidity to the global financial system – in particular the ABCP and
LIBOR markets.
By the end of 2007, we find the asset-backed
credit markets are still suffering from their lack of transparency and
inability to price their products. So, as we enter 2008, the credit
markets are still shunned by investors, and central banks continuing
their role as lenders of last resort. They have fulfilled their
obligations as lenders of last resort quite well, and will of course
continue to do so. As the ECB succinctly stated at their Sept 6th
meeting
“Given [the] high level of uncertainty…The ECB has a ``determination to act in the future whenever it is necessary,''
It is for that reason the stock markets around the world have proved
resilient to date – even if faltering, as a domestic recession in the
US looms large as a result of the deepening housing recession and an
elevated level of home foreclosures prolongs the credit crunch well
into the first half of 2008.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2007
was a remarkable year for all the colorful commentary that accompanied
the financial turmoil which began in the second half of the year. What
follows is a chronicling of events as they were unfolding liberally
sprinkled with quotes from the brightest of the brightest.
Primary Sources are as follows:
· Bloomberg news
· Moody’s Economy.com Chief Economist Mark Zandi
· Bill Gross and Paul McCauley from Pimco.com
· Morgan Stanley’s Global Economic Forum
· Bank Credit Analyst – BCA
· Chris Whalen of the Instititutional Risk Analyst
Credit Cycle Peaks July 10 (Bloomberg) - ``T
he credit cycle is peaking. In
the past two weeks, more than a dozen companies postponed or
restructured debt sales, '' said John Lonski, chief economist at
Moody's Investors Service..
``The incremental risk aversion
now evident in the financial markets seems to us to be a sign that the
financial liquidity spigot is starting to tighten. The childhood
alliteration to remember how to turn a spigot is `righty-tighty,
lefty-loosey.' It's now righty- tighty time for the financial markets''
said Richard Bernstein, chief investment strategist at Merrill Lynch.
Stock Market and “Animal Spirit’s” Speculative Fever Peaks on Buyout Rumor As
the market peaked in mid-July, animal spirits were high, and the
speculative rumor on the street was that Vodaphone would buy Verizon
for $160 Billion.
July 16 (Bloomberg) -
"I think just the idea of the number floated -- $160 billion -- gets the juices running in the market again even
after this big move. It would be the biggest deal ever. I think when
this might pop is where one of these big deals can't get financing.
Then the game is done" said Greg Church, chief investment officer of
Church Capital Management.
The stock market crested that very
same day, and the Verizon acquisition never happened. What squashed the
bull campaign was Bear Stearns two hedge funds that blew up announcing
to its investors that there would be little if any money returned to
them. Ten days later the animal spirits on Wall Street had
vanished.entirely.
July 26 –
``You have a stampede of the animals away from the watering hole.
Right now, everything that smacks of financial risk is backing out
through the door'' said Scott MacDonald, director of research at
Aladdin Capital.
Credit Crunch Arrives Aug.
9 (Bloomberg) – “The European Central Bank in an unprecedented
response to a sudden demand for cash from banks roiled by the subprime
mortgage collapse in the U.S., loaned $130 billion to assuage a credit
crunch.
The ECB said it will launch an unlimited fine-tuning operation to assure orderly conditions in the euro money market. It intends to allot 100 percent of the bids it receives'' reported Bloomberg.
``This is probably the most serious step of all taken since the subprime crisis started,'' said Glen Capelo, at RBS Greenwich Capital.
``There seems to be a hole in the balance sheet of World Inc. that will have to be filled by government intervention.
The ECB is treating this like an emergency,”' said Peter Lynch, chairman of Prime Active Capital in Dublin.
Aug
9 (Bloomberg) - BNP Paribas halted withdrawals from funds that owned
subprime loans because it can't value the holdings. ``For some of the
securities there are just no prices. As there are no prices, we can't
calculate the value of the funds'' said Alain Papiasse, head of BNP
Paribas's asset ``
``It looks hideous out there.
The fear is obviously not that BNP Paribas has a problem, but that it's
much more widespread, '' said John Wilson, co- director of equity
strategy at Morgan Keegan & Co.
``This is an old-fashioned credit crunch. This
is not a small thing. A credit crunch, when the short-term credit
markets seize up, is extraordinarily serious, almost always the
precursor of a significant recession.'' Chris Low, the chief economist
at FTN Financial.
Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The ECB loaned $83.6
billion pumping funds into the banking system for a second day The U.S.
Federal Reserve added $35 billion in temporary funds to the banking
system today and $24 billion in temporary reserves to the banking
system yesterday The Bank of Japan added 1 trillion yen ($8.5 billion)
to the financial system

Aug
10 – Moody’s Economy.com’s Chief economist Mark Zandi, who is usually
optimistically balanced had the following thoughts: “Pressure on
financial markets is likely to remain intense as global hedge funds and
other investors are forced to realize very substantial losses. Forcing
this repricing are investor redemptions in the hedge funds, and margin
calls by other financial institutions worried they won’t be repaid by
the faltering hedge funds…there is a significant amount of repricing
yet to occur, and more hedge funds and other investors will stumble.
Financial markets broadly are panicked at this prospect.
Investors,
not knowing where the next problem will be, are increasingly unwilling
to take any risk at all. Liquidity is thus evaporating, mostly
in the riskiest markets, but increasingly in nearly all markets.
Issuance of subprime, alt-A, and jumbo mortgage loans has come to a
standstill; high-yield corporate bond issuance is a trickle.
With
investor sentiment frayed, less and less separates the current
liquidity problem from a full-blown credit crunch. The economic
implications would be serious, as free-flowing credit is the mother’s
milk of a well-functioning economy. Policymakers must be prepared to
respond more boldly unless markets quickly find their footing.
Most encouraging is that today’s events show global policymakers are working together
and will not make a mistake. The current financial market turmoil
should thus ultimately prove to be no more than a therapeutic cleansing
of financial excesses.
(One can almost always count on Mark
Zandi to find a silver lining in most anything. And his observation of
global policymakers working in concert together has remained in effect
as we enter 2008. The question one might entertain years down the road
is how the burgeoning Sovereign Wealth Funds (with political agendas
buying our distressed financial institutions) might interfere with
central bankers coordinated efforts in the future.)
Aug 10
(Bloomberg) - ``The Fed has almost unlimited ability to supply
liquidity if they feel that is appropriate,'' said Alice Rivlin, a
former Fed vice chairman.
``The
dramatic moves by many of the world's central banks could imply that we
have a whole new ball game when it comes to monetary policy,'' says David Brown, chief European economist at Bear Stearns.
Panic in the Streets as Credit Markets Seize Up
Aug 10 (Bloomberg)
``The market is in panic mode. It is a full-blown unwinding of the carry trade. This is just the beginning'' said Michael Woolfolk, currency strategist at the Bank of New York.
`There's panic in the market, that's the bottom line. There are now systemic issues and risk,'' said David Ader, head of U.S. government bond strategy at RBS Greenwich.
``Data doesn't matter, This is all about the fear of the system ceasing'' to function properly,” said Thomas Roth, head of U.S. government bond trading at Dresdner Kleinwort, a primary dealer. ``
Money funds that had been buying corporate commercial paper ``have all switched to the safe side.
I'm sure their managers have all given them a Treasury-only mandate, at least until the dust settles,'' said Glen Capelo, a trader at RBS Greenwich Capital.
Aug 17 (Bloomberg) - Trichet said the market tumult ``can be interpreted as a normalization of the pricing of risk.'' `
`The
ECB should recognize that the process of risk normalization is
threatening to become disorderly. It's becoming a textbook financial
meltdown now,” said Lena Komileva, an economist at Tullett Prebon.
“As a practical matter, banks both here and abroad don't want to lend for any period longer than overnight.
The ``term'' market is virtually frozen,” according to a NY bank funding desk.
Aug
17 (Bloomberg) - The $1.1 trillion market for commercial paper used to
buy assets from mortgages to car loans has seized up just as more than
half of that amount comes due in the next 90 days, according to the
Federal Reserve.
The credit crunch is ``getting uglier and uglier.
This has moved beyond temporary. It's gotten beyond bailing out some
hedge fund and into the broad economy,'' said Christopher Low, chief
economist in New York for FTN Financial
Aug 20 – Mark Zandi
noted that “Unless these markets perform measurably better in the next
few days, the economic expansion will soon be threatened. Odds that
financial markets resume unraveling, forcing a funds rate cut before
the mid-September FOMC meeting, remain high.
Investor fears are infecting the psyches of consumers and businesses and the odds of recession are rising quickly as a crisis of confidence could undermine the economy's still good, but now weakening, fundamentals.
Aug
21 (Bloomberg) - ``Confusion and uncertainty of risk is creating this
liquidity problem,'' Moody's Senior Vice President Pierre Cailleteau
said.
“Should the panic exhibited over the last few days turn into revulsion, the markets may never be the same again,'' wrote HSBC economist Stephen King and strategist Richard Cookson.
Aug
23 (Bloomberg) – “Nothing within the current marketplace allows for the
hedging of liquidity risk and that's the problem at the moment.
The commercial paper market, in terms of the asset-backed commercial paper market, is basically history,''
said Bill Gross. Banks worldwide have $891 billion at risk because of
credit agreements on asset-backed commercial paper programs, Fitch
Ratings said today.
Sept 5 (Bloomberg) - The Libor rates are ``increasing because banks are anticipating a credit crunch in coming weeks.
The
problem is not the lack of funds in the system, which central banks can
control. It's money not shifting hands. This is the problem that cannot
be fixed by central banks,'' said Lena Komileva, economist at Tullett Prebon.
Sept 6 - More than 100 mortgage companies have halted operations or sought buyers since the start of last year.
Sept.
6-7 (Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank pumped $57.7 billion into
money markets to lower borrowing costs and said there's more to come.
``Financial-market volatility and reappraisal of risks over recent
weeks have led to an increase in uncertainty…
Given this high level of uncertainty…The ECB has a ``determination to act in the future whenever it is necessary,'' ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said
``There's a lack of liquidity and a lack of trust. We're not looking at weeks.
We're looking at months before the market normalizes” said Padhraic Garvey at ING.
Sept
10 - ``Here's saying a prayer that 100 basis points of Fed funds cuts
by the end of 2007 will not be too late,'' McCulley wrote after
attending the Jackson Hole symposium..
Sept. 11 (Bloomberg)
Defaults by U.S. companies will more than double in the coming year as investors shun riskier debt, Moody's Investors Service said.
Econmy.com
- Homeowners with adjustable rate mortgages facing their first payment
reset will crest this fall, but remain elevated well into next year
(see chart).

Axel Weber at Jackson Hole Symposium
Axel Weber president of the Bundesbank in Jackson Hole, Wyoming said
“The
current turmoil in the financial markets has all the characteristics of
a classic banking crisis, but one that is taking place outside the
traditional banking sector… What we are seeing is basically what we see underlying all banking crises,
The
comments mark the first time that a top central banker has endorsed the
notion that the non-bank financial system is seeing an old-style bank
run. Mr Weber told fellow central bankers and economists at the Federal
Reserve's Jackson Hole symposium that the only difference between a
classic banking crisis and the turmoil under way in the markets is that
the institutions most affected at the moment are conduits and
investment vehicles raising funds in the commercial bond market, rather
than regulated banks.
"Most of the conduits are owned by the
banks," he said. In many cases, sponsoring banks are being forced to
take risky assets back onto their balance sheets, in turn causing banks
to keep hold of their own cash, putting pressure on short-term money
markets, he argued.
Paul McCauley and the Run on the Shadow Banking System
There
was a "run on the shadow banking system" McCauley said. The shadow
banking system held $1,300 billion of assets that now had to be put
back onto the balance sheets of the banks. The issue is "how it is done
and at what price."
“Unlike regulated real banks backstopped by
access to the Fed’s discount window, unregulated shadow banks fund
themselves with un-insured commercial paper, which may or may not be
backstopped by liquidity lines from real banks.
Thus,
the shadow banking system is particularly vulnerable to runs –
commercial paper investors refusing to re-up when their paper matures,
leaving the shadow banks with a liquidity crisis – a need to tap their back-up lines of credit with real banks and/or to liquidate assets at fire sale prices.
And
make no mistake: that is precisely what has been happening in recent
weeks, as evidenced both by a near $200 billion plunge in asset-backed
commercial paper (see Chart 1) and soaring spreads between the Fed’s
Fed funds policy rate and LIBOR. Indeed, LIBOR itself has widened
sharply relative to the Fed’s Fed funds policy rate, further straining
the financial health of all borrowers – not just shadow banks – that
borrow at a spread to LIBOR.

This
problem was frequently referred to at Jackson Hole as the Fed’s
"plumbing problem," meaning that the basic plumbing of the financial
system is clogged up, despite very hefty Fed injections of excess
reserves, as those injections get stopped up in the real banking
system, which is reluctant to lend them on to the shadow banking
system. This plumbing problem was precisely the rationale for the Fed’s
50 basis point cut in the discount rate on August 17.
A (So Far) Impotent Roto RooterI
certainly applauded the Fed’s actions that day thinking they might help
unclog the plumbing and at worst do no harm, But the fact of the matter
is that these actions are not effectively roto rootering the plumbing –
getting Fed-created liquidity from its discount window to the shadow
banking system.
Bill Gross on Transparency and Trust: “Where’s Waldo”
While
market analysts can guesstimate how many Waldos might actually show
their face over the next few years – 100 to 200 billion dollars worth
is a reasonable estimate – no one really knows where they are hidden.
First believed to be confined to Bear Stearns hedge funds, Waldos have
been popping up with regularity in seemingly staid institutions such as
German and French Banks that have necessitated state-sanctioned
bailouts reminiscent of the LTCM Crisis.
Regulators have been
absent from the game, and information release has been left in the
hands of individual institutions, some of whom have compounded the
uncertainty with comments about volatile market conditions unequaled
during the lifetime of their careers. And too, many institutions
including pension funds and insurance companies, argue that accounting
rules allow them to mark subprime derivatives at cost.
Defaulting
exposure therefore, can hibernate for many months before its true value
is revealed to investors and importantly, to other lenders. The significance of proper disclosure is, in effect, the key to the current crisis.
Financial institutions lend trillions of dollars, euros, pounds, and
yen to and amongst each other. In the U.S., for instance, the Fed lends
to banks, which lend to prime brokers such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley which lend to hedge funds, and so on. The food chain in this
case is a symbiotic credit extension, always for profit, but never
without trust and belief that their money will be repaid upon
contractual demand.
When no one really knows where and how
many Waldos there are, the trust breaks down, and money is figuratively
stuffed in Wall Street and London mattresses as opposed to extended
into the increasingly desperate hands of hedge funds and similarly
levered financial conduits.
These structures in turn are
experiencing runs from depositors and lenders exposed to asset price
declines of unexpected proportions. In such an environment, markets
become incredibly volatile as more and more financial institutions
reach their risk limits at the same time.
Waldo
morphs and becomes a man with a thousand faces. All assets with the
exception of U.S. Treasuries look suspiciously like every other.
They’re all Waldos now.Aug
27 (Bloomberg) - "This is one of the greatest financial panics I've
seen in fifty-five years in financial services," said Angelo Mozillo
CEO of Countrywide Financial Corp
Run on Northern Rock Bank and Bank of England Bailout
Sept.
17 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has spent the
past month trying to stay above the fray as the U.S. subprime-mortgage
collapse roiled credit markets. Now he's getting dragged in, whether he
likes it or not.
Two days after King told lawmakers on Sept.
12 that central banks should avoid giving the impression they will help
lenders that made bad decisions, the Bank of England provided emergency
funds to Northern Rock in the biggest bailout of a British bank in
three decades.
Northern Rock's customers have ignored assurances that their deposits are secure. While Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said today their deposits are ``backed by the Bank of England,''
customers have removed at least $4 billion since Sept. 14.Sept.
19 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England abandoned its opposition to
emergency three-month money auctions and loosened lending standards, a
week after Governor Mervyn King said such steps would encourage ``risky
behavior.''
``This measure is being taken to alleviate the
strains in longer-maturity money markets,'' the central bank said in a
statement today. The bank said it will accept ``mortgage collateral''
at the auction of 10 billion pounds ($20 billion) in loans next week,
which will have a penalty rate of 6.75 percent.

Q3 Financial
Earnings Recession Begins
Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Wachovia Corp said earnings dropped for the first time in six years
after trading losses and writedowns for home loans. Citigroup Inc., Bank of America
Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. led financial shares to their worst week
since 2002 after Wachovia Corp. said loan defaults reduced profit.
More than one-third of the 92 financial companies
in the S&P 500 have reported third-quarter results. Their 17 percent
average profit drop is the biggest since Bloomberg began tracking quarterly
earnings growth in the third quarter of 1997. Financial firms account for about
19 percent of the S&P 500's value and produced 27 percent of the index's
profits last quarter, according to Bloomberg data.
``Right now
financial stocks are like radioactive waste. People just do not want to touch
them.,'' said Michael James at Wedbush Morgan Securities.
SIV’s –
Structured Investment Vehicles
Oct 19 - Many of the 30 SIVs worldwide can't find
buyers for their commercial paper -- debt that comes due in 270 days or less.
The concern is that without the funding, the SIVs would have to sell their
investments and might have to accept fire-sale prices. SIVs are starting to go
under because they can't obtain funding once short-term loans come due.
On average, about 44 percent of SIV holdings are
in mortgage-backed securities, 2 percent of which is in subprime mortgage bonds,
and 11 percent is collateralized debt obligations. ``There's still a very
serious problem of lack of transparency in those markets, lack of trust on the
part of market participants in the value of securities and the lack of trust in
their counterparties,'' Martin Feldstein, an economist at Harvard University in
Cambridge
Warren
Buffett on SIV’s
``One of the lessons
that investors seem to have to learn over and over again, and they'll have to
learn it over again in the future, is that not
only can you not turn a toad into a prince by kissing it, but you also cannot turn a toad into a prince by
repackaging it,'' Warren Buffett said
today in South Korea.
Estimating Q4
Financial Writedowns – Sovereign Wealth Funds begin Providing Capital Raises to
Distressed Financial Institutions
Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) - Merrill Lynch & Co., the
world's biggest brokerage, tumbled on a report that it made deals with hedge
funds that may have been intended to postpone credit-market losses.
Fourth-quarter
earnings at U.S. banks and brokerages may decline by 20 percent due to charges linked
to credit-market losses, Deutsche Bank analysts said. The biggest financial
firms will be hurt by ``worsening trends'' in credit markets that may cause
them to write down a further $10 billion. Reserves for loans are the lowest
since 1983, they said.
Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup has seized up. The biggest U.S.
bank by assets said that subprime mortgages and related securities lost as much
as $11 billion of their value in the past month, a decline that may wipe out
half of the company's profit so far this year.
The company said credit-market upheaval in October
impaired by as much as a fifth its $55 billion book of subprime mortgages and
related bonds. The writedown costs, which will
be recorded in the fourth quarter if markets don't recover, add to the almost
$7 billion of costs for bad debt, bond and loan losses recorded in the third
quarter. ``Significant uncertainty
continues to prevail in financial markets,'' Citigroup said.
Nov. 7-- Credit-default swaps on bond
of Citigroup Inc., Wachovia Corp. and Morgan
Stanley are trading at the highest in at least five years on speculation the
nation's biggest banks may be forced to write down more subprime assets.
Analysts began revising writedowns at the banks after Citigroup
this week said losses from the assets may rise to $11 billion. Credit-default
swaps tied to Citigroup more than tripled in
the past three weeks, indicating the risk of default is rising.
``Until there is much greater disclosure of what
people have on their books, and off balance sheets as well, it just feeds into
uncertainty,'' said Scott MacDonald, head of research at Aladdin Capital
Management
Dollar’s
Confidence Crisis grows as China Signals Further Foreign Reserves Diversification
The U.S. currency reached a new low today after
Chinese officials signaled plans to diversify the nation's $1.43 trillion of
foreign exchange reserves after Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of China's National
People's Congress, said the nation
``will favor stronger currencies over weaker ones and will readjust
accordingly.''
``The dollar is suffering a confidence crisis. The
dollar is on the ropes. Comments from China
about diversification and surging oil prices pushed the dollar to new lows'' ''
said Michael Woolfolk.
``The big issue on any currency is if its rate of
depreciation is so fast that it scares off
capital, and the announcement that we heard from China feeds those fears,''
said Larry Smith at Third Wave Global Investors.
Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp.
reported a record $39 billion quarterly loss after three money-losing years
forced the company to write down the value of future tax benefits.
The $2.80 a share loss, excluding the tax
writedown, was more than 12 times analysts' estimates. Mortgage-related losses
at GM's partly owned finance unit overwhelmed third-quarter auto sales that
were the highest ever. The automaker signaled that it won't generate enough
earnings to use the benefits, citing defaults on subprime mortgage loans at
GMAC LLC..
``This all suggests that GM thinks that things are so ugly out there that they can't see the
possibility of profitability for many quarters, maybe even years,'' said
Bradley Rubin at BNP Paribas.
Level One, Level Two, Level Three
Banks Face $100 Billion of Writedowns on
Level 3 Rule, RBS Says
Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. banks and brokers face as much as $100
billion of writedowns because of Level 3 FASB accounting rules, in addition
to the losses caused by the subprime credit slump, according to RBS.
The FASB's
rule 157 will make it harder for companies to avoid putting market prices on
securities considered hardest to value, known as Level 3 assets, Royal
Bank's Chief Credit Strategist Bob Janjuah wrote. The new rule is effective
Nov. 15, he said.
``This credit crisis, when all is out, will see
$250 billion to $500 billion of losses,'' London-based Janjuah said. ``It is inevitable that more players will
have to revalue at least a decent portion'' of assets they currently value
using ``mark-to-make believe.''
Under FASB terminology, Level 1 means
mark-to-market, where an asset's worth is based on a real price. Level 2 is
mark-to- model, an estimate based on observable inputs and used when there
aren't any quoted prices available. Level 3 values are based on
``unobservable'' inputs reflecting companies' ``own assumptions'' about the way
assets would be priced.
Nov 7 - Washington
Mutual declined the most in 20 years after New York Attorney General Andrew
Cuomo said there's a ``pattern of
collusion'' in the bank's home-loan appraisals. Fannie and Freddie Mac sank
to a seven-year low after Cuomo subpoenaed the two biggest U.S.
providers of mortgage financing
Nov 7 –
SIV’s Roll-Over Challenge
Most money market funds are ``still reluctant to
roll over ABCP and SIV paper. Given the lack of public disclosure by SIVs, it
is exceedingly difficult'' to address concerns that SIVs will be forced to dump
their assets in a fire-sale,” Hans Vrensen, director of European
mortgage-backed securities at Barclays Capital.
Nov 8 -
Commercial paper outstanding fell $15.6 billion in the week ending November 6. At $1.87 trillion, commercial paper
outstanding sits 16.1% below the high set in the week ending July 25.
ABCP outstanding fell $29.5 billion, over three
times the decrease reported in the prior week… the fact that the decline is reaccelerating starting from a much lower
base makes this week's data equally troubling, notes Bloomberg.
Nov 15 - ``Anything sensitive to the consumer is
struggling…`we had fooled ourselves a
little bit thinking that the third-quarter was going to be the proverbial
`kitchen sink' quarter where you got all the loan losses. I don't think we
really had our arms around what they were,'' said Benjamin Pace chief
investment officer at Deutsche Bank ``We have an almost perfect storm for the
steepening trade,'' said Christopher Sullivan chief investment officer at the
United Nations Federal Credit Union.
Dollar Woes
and Foreign Diversification Revisited
Nov. 14 (Bloomberg) -- ``It may be our currency, but it's your problem'' was Treasury
Secretary John Connally's taunt when the U.S. unhooked the dollar from the gold
standard in 1971, unilaterally rewriting the rules of world business in
America's favor.
Now the world is taunting back. Almost four
decades after the U.S.
tore up the monetary arrangements that governed the post-World War II
international economy, the dollar's fall
from grace amounts to a tectonic shift in the global hierarchy. This time,
the U.S.
currency is on the losing side.
``What
we're seeing is a very broad rebalancing of economic and political power in the
world. The scales are moving, and they're moving quite fast'' said Yale Professor
Jeffrey Garten.
The Fed's trade-weighted major currency index
bottomed at 71.11 on Nov. 7, the lowest since the era of free-floating
currencies started in 1971. Against the yen and European currencies, the dollar
is now worth about a third of what it was in the days of fixed rates.
One of the main U.S.
exports since then has been the dollar itself, in exchange for foreign capital
to finance trade deficits and a national debt of more than $9 trillion. While
the current- account deficit is narrowing from last year's record $811.5 billion,
the U.S. still requires $2.1 billion a day of other
people's money.
``We're getting into a very unstable situation,''
says Richard Duncan, a partner at Blackhorse Asset Management in Singapore
and author of the 2005 book ``The Dollar Crisis: Causes, Consequences, Cures.''
Foreign
Sovereign Wealth Funds buying distressed US Financial Institutions
Nov 16 (Bloomberg) - Middle Eastern funds such as Mubadala are snapping up stocks around the
globe as governments in the region invest the windfall revenue from surging oil
prices. So-called sovereign wealth funds, through which
governments buy equities and other assets, will grow to $7.9 trillion by 2011
from $1.9 trillion now, Merrill Lynch & Co. economists wrote in a report
last month.
Rising Corporate Bond Spread to
be a Stock Market Problem in 2008 – BCA Research
“Wider credit spreads are a road block to the
stock market because it raises the cost of capital and keeps a lid on expansion
plans. Expansion plans will stay dormant until businesses regain confidence the
housing debacle will not continue spreading….If there is no further Fed action,
recession risks will mushroom and the resolution
of equity market trading range will be on the negative side. We are more
optimistic, but the struggle between deflation and reflation could take months
to play out.”

BCA and Fed both acknowledge Growth Scare
“Market signals are consistent with a growth scare. Global
bond yields are moving lower. Until global central banks acknowledge
the squeeze on their economies from strengthening currencies, (the BOE
has already blinked) then the deflation scare we have been worried
about since late summer will continue to dominate equity market trends…”
Nov.
20 (Bloomberg) ``Most members saw substantial downside risks to the
economic outlook and judged that a rate reduction at this meeting would
provide valuable additional insurance against an unexpectedly severe
weakening in economic activity,'' according to minutes of the Federal
Open Market Committee's Oct. 30-31 meeting.
Records of the gathering were accompanied by estimates and phrases that highlighted risks to growth.
The language contrasted with the October statement, which said the
dangers of a slower expansion and faster inflation were ``roughly''
equal.
Knightian Uncertainty Persists
Nov 21(Bloomberg) ``It's a very panicky market. There's a growing feeling that the problems are unknowable and unquantifiable,
and that there's no way of dealing with it except through the passage
of time,” said John Kattar chief investment officer at Eastern
Investment Advisors.
Year End Funding Needs Heightens Tensions in Money Markets - Another Run on Shadow Banking
Nov. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. asset-backed commercial paper market fell for a 15th week as
rising losses from mortgage-related securities prompted investors to
avoid buying the short-term debt. Debt maturing in 270 days or less and
backed by mortgages, credit-card loans and other assets fell $17.5
billion to a seasonally adjusted $835.8 billion for the week ended Nov.
21, the Federal Reserve said.
The ABCP market has shrunk 29% since its peak on Aug. 8 of $1.18 trillion,
as record defaults on subprime mortgages caused buyers to shun new ASCP
from structured investment vehicles (SIV’s) including Cheyne Finance
and Rhinebridge Plc.
Nov 26 Nov. 26 (Bloomberg) - HSBC will bail
out two structured investment vehicles, taking on $45 billion of assets
to avoid a fire sale of bond holdings. ``HSBC believes there is not likely to be a near-term resolution of the funding problems faced by the SIV sector,'' the bank said.
Nov.
26 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve sought to ease concern that banks
will be short of cash next month by planning its first long-term
injection of year-end funds in two years.
The Fed's New York
branch said in a statement that it plans a series of repurchase
agreements, starting with an $8 billion injection on Nov. 28, extending
into next year. The New York Fed said it planned the steps ``in
response to heightened pressures in money markets for funding through
the year-end.'' The move follows the European Central Bank's commitment
last week to make extra cash available to ``counter the re-emerging
risk of volatility'' in money markets.
``The Fed is pulling
out all stops to try to alleviate funding pressures in the money and
financing markets as the markets lurch into year-end,'' said Chris
Rupkey, senior financial economist at Bank of Tokyo.
Sovereign Wealth Funds Help US Financial Companies Raise Badly Needed Capital
One
of the drags on the stock market through Tuesday November 27 2007 was
investor perception Citigroup and many other large financial
institutions like Freddie Mac to be short of capital. Indeed, many
observers noted that dividend suspensions would soon be required by
these two institutions to offset capital deficits. And if dividend cuts
were not sufficient, these institutions would have to raise more
capital. That is where the Sovereign Wealth Funds stepped up to the
plate.
November 27 (Bloomberg) In order to shore up its
depleted capital, Freddie Mac cut its dividend in half and announced
plans to sell $6 billion in preferred stock with an 8.25% dividend
attached to it. Citigroup also raised $7.5 billion from Abu Dhabi in a
preferred stock offering carrying an 11% dividend to replenish its
“tangible capital levels.”
“It’s going to be expensive capital for [these companies], but they just don’t have a choice. Sometimes the rate isn’t as important as getting the loan itself” noted Allegiant Asset mgmt CIO Andrew Harding.
Even
though cash infusions have been secured for many financial institutions
like Citigroup and Freddie Mac via Sovereign Wealth Funds, Chris Whalen
of Institutional Risk Analytics warns that “bank
equity valuations are likely to move even lower as the imbedded losses
on the banking book of most institutions become increasingly visible
and painful in 2008.”
Commercial Real Estate as a Full Blown Bubble at Bursting Point
Nov.
28 (Bloomberg) -- In the bond market, commercial property investors are
about as creditworthy as U.S. homeowners with subprime mortgages.
``Commercial real estate is a full-blown bubble that feels very much at
a bursting point. There's a fairly toxic mix of factors at work,'' said
Christian Stracke, an analyst at CreditSights Inc.
The
seven-year rally in offices and retail properties ended in September
when prices fell an average of 1.2 percent, according to Moody's
Investors Service. More losses are likely because banks are holding $54
billion of commercial mortgages they can't sell.
Shrinking SIV Tumor
Dec.
11 (Bloomberg) -- The tumor in the financial markets known as
structured investment vehicles is shrinking, reducing the urgency for a
bailout sponsored by the U.S. Treasury. ``Every day that goes by we are
seeing more SIVs being reorganized to avoid a fire saleThe longer the
SuperSIV takes, the less of a need there will be for it” ,'' said
Priya Shah, a credit analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort ``
Government Mandate Freezing ARM Resets is Problematic Throughout
Dec 11 (Bloomberg) - The problem with the ARMS’s freeze is two-fold. First, investors
“may completely shun” mortgage debt contracts “if contracts governing
changes to the underlying loans are negated by the US government. If
you are an investor, are you ever going to purchase a US mortgage
backed security again,” asks John Robbins 37 yr industry veteran
who headed the Mortgage Bankers Association through October 07. The
sanctity of these securities contracts will have been made null and
void.
Mandate Places Sanctity of Mortgage Contracts at Risk
Deutsche Bank AG analysts Karen Weaver, Katie Reeves, and Ying Shen said to their clients “We
do not think it is hyperbolic to say that the sanctity of such
contracts, entered into in good faith, is at the cornerstone of
capitalism. And if we are to in anyway devalue that sanctity, we face
a far greater liquidity crunch than the one in which we currently find
ourselves."
Credit Suisse Group notes that more than 30%
of subprime borrowers are already behind on their payments even before
their loans are due to reset higher and estimates 775,000 homes will
still go into foreclosure over the next two years. As US Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson noted last week, “the
current system for working out problem loans would not be sufficient to
handle the anticipated 1.8 million owner-occupied [ARM] resets that
will occur in 2008-2009.”
At Best, Mandate will only help 14% of the 1.8 million Borrowers at Risk of Default
In theory, notes Economy.com’s chief economist Mark Zandi, the
plan to freeze interest rates on those problem loans could help “up to
750,000 homeovers avoid foreclose. [But] in practice, the plan faces
significant hurdles, so that at best some 250,000 borrowers will
actually benefit” – approximately only 14% of the problem would it
help.
The reasons the Plan will only help so few
homeowners are myriad. Loan servicing companies are already highly
distressed companies. Even if they were not “nervous about being sued”
by investors whose loan contracts are being modified, there is still
the question of legitimate question if these distressed loan companies
could beef up their staffs enough to “quickly modify loans.” Moreover,
more than half the subprime loans in 2006 were stated income (no doc)
loans that did not require proof of income. For the loan modifications
to occur, these borrowers will be required to produce more financial
information than before – something “they may be reluctant or unable to do” says Mark Zandi.
San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen Favors Aggressively Easing
Dec
11 (Bloomberg) - Janet Yellen stated on December 4 that she is in favor
of aggressive Fed easing so as not to fall “behind the curve”
And Bill Gross asserted on his monthly missive this week that ``To
restart a near recessionary economy we may need to eventually go down
to 3% or lower.” During previous recessionary periods, notes Gross, the
Feds “rate has dropped to 1% on an inflation adjusted basis [so with]
inflation at 2% a destination of 3% would be a reasonable target.” It’s difficult to argue the point Bill Gross is making, especially with deflating home prices.
Dec
11 - Chris Whalen stated in his weekly missive that “If Secretary
Paulson and others in positions of leadership in Washington and on Wall
Street want to fix the subprime crisis and restore investor confidence,
then the solution must start with a comprehensive, mandatory write down
of all illiquid complex structured assets held by every bank, dealer
and fund. Only when investors are
convinced that the rot has been cut out of the financial system and
that banking institutions are honestly disclosing their full
liabilities will the global capital markets start to clear and recover
in terms of liquidity.”
Greenspan’s Take on the Economy and Inflationary Pressures
Dec
17 (Bloomberg) The worst U.S. housing slump in 16 years, coupled with
a tightening of credit by banks, has brought the world's largest
economy ``close to stall speed,''
according to former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. At the
same time, rapid growth in China and other emerging markets is driving
energy and food prices higher worldwide.
``What lies ahead is a period of stagflation
-- slow or no growth combined with rising inflation -- in the advanced
economies,'' says Joachim Fels, co-chief global economist at Morgan
Stanley. ``This is a much tougher monetary-policy environment than anything I experienced,'' Greenspan told the Wall Street Journal on Dec. 14.
Through
the first 11 months of this year, consumer prices rose at an annual
rate of 4.2 percent. That's up from 2.5 percent for all of 2006 and, if
maintained in December, would be the highest rate in 17 years.
``Global
inflation pressures emanate mainly in the emerging countries, where
growth is strong and monetary policy is relatively expansionary,''
Fels of Morgan Stanley says. The same emerging-market nations have also
helped stoke inflation by sheltering their consumers and companies from
rising oil prices through subsidies. That's kept energy demand in
China, India and other countries high because domestic prices are still
low.
Dec. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Chief Financial Officer David Viniar said ``Just
looking at the world's capital markets and looking at the lack of
liquidity that we saw in November, it has to make us cautious.''
ECB’s $500 Billion Year End Injection
Dec.
18 (Bloomberg) -- The cost to borrow in euros plunged after the ECB
added an unprecedented $500 billion to the banking system as part of a
global effort to ease credit-market gridlock through year-end.
Moody’s Predicts Corporate Defaults to Quadruple in 2008
Dec.
18 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. corporate defaults probably will quadruple next
year after the number of companies that lost their investment-grade
credit ratings rose at the fastest pace since 2003. Moody's Investors
Service predicts companies will default on 4.7 percent of their bonds
in 2008.
Downgrades are accelerating across America. Moody's
reduced ratings on 389 corporate issues this quarter compared with 150
upgrades, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The gap was the
biggest since the first quarter of 2003.
Another 447 borrowers
in the U.S. are at risk of having their ratings reduced, according to
an S&P statement today. Companies in the automotive industry lead
the tally.
More Writedowns Prompt more Capital Raises Via Sovereign Wealth Funds
Dec.
19 - Morgan Stanley reported a steeper- than-forecast loss after $9.4
billion of writedowns on mortgage- related holdings and received a $5
billion cash infusion from state-controlled China Investment Corp. China Investment, the nation's sovereign wealth fund, will acquire as much as 9.9 percent of Morgan Stanley
``Our
assumptions included what at the time was deemed to be a worst-case
scenario,'' said Colm Kelleher, the firm's chief financial officer, in
a phone interview today. ``History has proven that that worst-case
scenario was not the worst case.'' Conditions in the credit markets ``clearly got worse'' after September.
The credit environment remains challenged, it will take several
quarters to return to more normal markets. Credit is going to be a drag
on the fixed-income business going forward for the next few quarters.''
Dec 20 (Bloomberg) U.S. stocks fell after analysts forecast $8.6 billion of writedowns for Merrill Lynch
Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) -- MBIA Inc. fell the most since 1987
in New York after the world's biggest bond insurer disclosed that it
guarantees $8.1 billion of collateralized debt obligations that
investors say have a greater chance of losses. ``We are shocked management withheld this information for as long as it did.
MBIA simply did not disclose arguably the riskiest parts of its CDO
portfolio to investors'' said Ken Zerbe at with Morgan Stanley.
``How
is confidence expected to return to the capital markets when these
types of surprises continue to pop up?'' said Peter Plaut hedge fund
manager at Sanno Point Capital Management.
Going into 2008, Labor Conditions will Deteriorate

Dec
28 - Citigroup Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Merrill Lynch &
Co. may write down an additional $34 billion in securities linked to
the credit market collapse, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimated.
GeoPolitical Instability in the Middle East Grows as we Enter 2008
Dec
28 - Indian ADRs and ETNs fell Thursday following the assassination of
Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto on fears the crime could
worsen instability in Southeast Asia. "We can't think of a more scary
situation in the region, and believe that the fate of Pakistan could
have a much bigger impact on geopolitics than anything Iran could do
right now," said Win Thin, strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman.
Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Defaults on privately insured U.S. mortgages rose 35 percent in November to a record,
an industry report today showed, adding to evidence the U.S. housing
slump is deepening. The number of insured borrowers falling more than
60 days late on payments jumped to 61,033 last month from 45,325 in
November 2006. ``This is another data point that suggests that the mortgage insurers are in for a tough slog for 2008,'' said credit analyst David Havens at UBS.
Summarizing the Overall Impact of events in 2007 on the SP 500 going into 2008
· Up 3.6% on the year, up 2.6% above 2006 year highs.
· Fed rate cuts found lacking in Q4.
· Central Bank injections was a more appropriate response to equity markets in Q4 than were rate cuts
· Still have to face down Q4 earnings recession in Jan 08.
·
Rising Unemployment will be a drag on consumer spending and Rising
Corporate Bond Spreads will be a drag on the stock market.
·
Technically, the stock market trend has managed to remain bullish in
spite of two corrections greater than 10% in both August and November
2007. Thus far, though diminished, the odds still favor bull trend
continuation, but it will be a “tough slog for 2008” to borrow an
expression from David Havens.
· A failure of the November low
without first breaching the October 2007 year highs would be the first
indication the bull campaign of higher highs and higher lows was
ending. Confirmation of an emerging ear trend would come from a failure
of the August 16 2007 low. That is not the anticipated result at the
moment.

*****Author's
Postscript --- As the year 2008 begins, the ISM report slipped into
contractionary territory at 47.7 suggesting the manufacturing sector is
joining the deepening recession in the housing sector. Also, the
December jobs report out on Jan 4th cratered to 18,000, well
below the 94,000 jobs created in the prior three months and well below
the averaete 111,000 during 2007. As summarized by Economy.com "The problems that have been developing in the economy since last summer
related to the subprime implosion and the sharp downturn in the housing
market seem to be coming to a head."
Bottom
Line is that the risks in the equity markets are shifting to the
downside, in spite of all the major central bankers efforts, and the
2007 year lows at 1364 set in Q1 07 may find themselves in jeopardy in
Q1 08.
John Bougearel
Event-Driven Investment Research
www.successfultradingtips.com