US$ & Monoline Bond Insurers
Jim Willie
CB
Jim Willie CB is the editor of the "Hat Trick
Letter"
Dec 20, 2007
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The hidden bond insurers used
by Wall Street firms are in the news, especially ACA Capital
and MBIA. Implications are huge, with monumental ripple effects.
Financial press reporting of the bond insurers is woefully inadequate.
Moodys and Fitch are giving analysis review to nine 'AAA' rated
bond insurers to see if they have sufficient capital to conduct
their insurance operations. The list includes ACA Capital, MBIA,
Ambac Financial, and Financial Guaranty Insurance. ACA Capital
has only $1.1 billion in cash for payout of bond failure claims,
but has lost $1 billion in the most recent quarter. More losses
are assured. This insurer is very important, since it is widely
abused by Wall Street banks to hide cratered bond derivative
losses. If ACA insures a bond, then Goldman Sachs or Merrill
Lynch for instance can take the under-water bond off the balance
sheet. They can do so under fast changing rules, since any potential
loss is not perceived to affect the firms themselves. ACA is
widely called the 'garbage can' for Wall Street, where
tremendous losses are concealed from stock investors, corporate
bond investors, debt rating agencies, and bank regulators. But
the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is changing against
the firms, forcing firms to bring losing assets onto their balance
sheets in droves. Several Wall Street firms own sizeable stakes
in ACA, a ploy that enables them to hide gigantic losses in blatant
collusion. Bear Stearns is the fifth largest US securities firm.
They own a 39% stake in ACA Capital.
Once again, leveraged mortgage
bonds and mortgage-based Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO)
bonds are the root cause of the problem. Losses are amplified
with the CDO packages of credit derivatives. My expectation is
that mortgage bond losses will be an order of magnitude larger
in 2008 than 2007, as prime adjustable mortgages face their nightmare,
next on the debacle docket. JPMorgan bank analyst Andy Wessel
claims if ACA defaults, banks would be forced to bring their
ACA-guaranteed CDO bonds onto their books. Wessel says, "ACA
is a likely candidate to get thrown to the wolves first."
If ACA loses 'AAA' rating, then possibly $60 billion in CDO
bonds will be forced onto bank balance sheets in the banking
sector generally. For instance, an ACA default would force
Merrill Lynch to declare a $3 billion writedown of its CDO bonds.
Expect this type of story to continue endlessly. Yesterday Morgan
Stanley announced an additional $5.7 billion in bond writedown
losses, making their recent total a robust $9.4 billion. Expect
that their ultimate total will be three to five times larger.
Bear Stearns is engaged in a parade of announced losses, each
touted as the climax. Their latest made Thursday was for another
$.19 billion. In my book, the entire gaggle of corrupted Wall
Street broker dealers is insolvent, defending against bankruptcy
with accounting shenanigans, all with the USGovt and Dept Treasury
blessing.
MBIA faces similar threats,
as a bond insurer. They have faced a likely downgrade by Moodys
for weeks, sure to put in grave doubt the status of $652 billion
of structured finance bonds, as well as state and municipal bonds
that they insure. The world's largest bond insurer, MBIA
beat the market to the punch in surprising admission of having
$8.1 billion in CDO bond exposure. They also opened the door
to discussion of 'CDO Squared' derivatives, which are leveraged
instruments built recklessly atop other leveraged mortgage bonds
securities. Expect the MBIA actual losses will ultimately be
three to five times larger. MBIA, ACA Capital, and six other
bond insurers sweat bullets over debt rating agency downgrades.
A loss of their top rating would cast serious doubt on $2400
billion in asset backed debt securities collectively. Given
the size of their total insured bond portfolios, Bloomberg Data
estimates the downgrades could result in $200 billion in bond
losses and bank writedowns. The rating agencies consider
the bond insurers as a group to be holding far too little capital
for to justify 'AAA' ratings as corporate entities. Remember,
the entire US bank/bond risk management model is dissolving before
your eyes!!!
Finally on Wednesday this week,
the bomb hit. Debt rating agency Standard & Poor lowered
the ratings on Ambac and MBIA to NEGATIVE. S&P lowered ACA
Capital was lowered to CCC grade, suggesting strong potential
of actual default. The ripple effects to the bank/bond system
will reverberate for weeks, if not months. In fact, my expectation
is that successive ripples in 2008 will be larger than all previous.
The ACA Capital ratings cut will lead to massive writedowns at
Merrill Lynch and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC).
The Toronto-based CIBC announced it will probably take a $3.5
billion loss from bond writedowns. Ironically, and surely mindlessly,
Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns are working to organize several
major banks to bail out ACA. The giants are toppling. The exercise
is mindless since whatever new capital is infused to ACA will
melt in a matter of two to three months. They are trying to buy
time, to hope for a recovery, a mirage in the desert. They are
dying in public view, but with a very opaque lens trained on
their balance sheets.
The group of bond insurers
combine to insure over 80,000 bonds and related securities. The
insurers wrote contracts on almost $100 billion in risky CDO
bonds backed by subprime mortgages as of mid-June, according
to Fitch. The disaster that befalls ACA Capital will serve as
the first true tough test of credit default swaps, those insurance
contracts for corporate bonds and mortgage bonds. In June, the
value of bonds linked to credit default swaps rose to a staggering
$42.6 trillion, up from only $6.4 trillion at yearend 2004. These
figures are supplied by the Bank for International Settlements
in Switzerland. A melt-up precedes a melt-down.
My contention is that the entire
US financial engineering contraption is being dissolved, a crumbling
pile of wreckage, with evidence of fraud throughout the structure.
It is an historically unprecedented failure in innovation, a
reckless extension to develop the inflation-based system. Such
a system is destined for the scrap heap though, since every bubble
in history suffered a contraction, this one no different, only
bigger. The threat to the entire banking system has never been
this great since the Great Depression. When comparison after
comparison is made to magnitudes of this or fact factor never
being so great since the Great Depression, one must raise the
possibility that conditions are indeed similar and approaching
such an outcome, but with central bank reactions assured. The
Euro Central Bank infusion of $500 billion is such a powerful
reaction, enough to soil the boxer shorts of any Deflation Theorist.
My contention is that the inflation forces will ramp up considerably,
in offset to the deflation forces building momentum, enough to
create massive scheiss storms. The lightning, high winds, and
resulting destruction will be enormous. Opportunity abounds.
Details are provided on the
banking debacle, with many specifics on the asset backed bond
problems, in the December Hat Trick Letter reports. The January
report upcoming will surely continue the sad saga. It is honestly
very difficult to provide complete reporting on a mushrooming
national catastrophe. As an editor, one must pick & choose
what is important.
BANK/BOND TARGETED BAILOUT
My expectation is that
the USGovt will ultimately step in to offer a gigantic bailout
to the bond insurers, the current focal point of destruction.
The threat to the USDollar will then be known globally, from
bank system collapse coupled with broad bond system insolvency.
One might expect that some bond insurers will go bankrupt themselves.
Imagine what your commercial building is worth if its insurance
lapses. THE FIRST GIGANTIC RESCUE GESTURE IS NOT THE MORTGAGE
FREEZE, BUT RATHER WILL BE THE USGOVT BAILOUT OF THE ASSET
BACKED BOND INSURERS. Why? Because they serve as the operator
of the dike main valve toward a flood of liquidations, the focal
point of destruction. The impact on the reputations of the US
banking system, the integrity of the US financial sector, the
confidence in the US Federal Reserve, and of the viability of
the USDollar by implication will surely suffer. If the USGovt
fails to bail out the bond insurers, expect a monumental flood
of well north of $300 billion in bond losses, extending to the
municipals. Communities will not be able to continue, and will
announce layoffs. It will not just be a California story. The
most tragic, but absurd, yet hilarious, observation is that the
investment community has yet to conclude that the US bank/bond
system is officially bankrupt, broken, insolvent, and wrecked
beyond repair!!! Imagine Homer Simpson sitting on his couch,
watching television, while all the walls around him collapse.
GOLD WILL REACT TO THE FIRST
GIGANTIC ACTION MANIFESTED IN POLICY, THE BOND INSURER BAILOUT.
Many factors force the gold price up: 1) monetary debasement
with huge money supply growth (inflation), 2) broad price inflation
downstream, but also 3) threats to the integrity of the banking
system. My forecast is that the Western banking system, including
Europe and England, will be similarly threatened on matters of
integrity. The English banking system perhaps is as royally screwed
and doomed as that of the United States. To the extent that European
banks loaded their vaults with toxic US$-based mortgages, their
banks will suffer integrity problems also. Integrity is basically
defined as having sufficient reliable capital to support a portfolio
of loans and asset backed bonds. Both figures are changing, reductions
in both, as ratios are strained and turn negative.
The bank system is burning,
in need of urgent medicine.
The BKX bank sector stock index chart looks downright catastrophic.
Moodys reports the Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) market,
which peaked in 2004 & 2005 at $600 to $700 billion annually,
is running arrears late by 60 days at a 16.5% rate. This HELOC
delinquent rate is on par with subprimes. HELOC loans are not
subprime. The main theme of the banking debacle in 2008 will
be the extension far beyond subprimes into PRIME mortgages, as
fully detailed in the article last week. The impact fallout from
the bond insurers might hit home soon, as Wall Street will be
forced to bring countless more wrecked billion$ in mortgage bonds
onto balance sheets. A further $2400 billion in municipal bonds
might be subjected to distress sales after institutions are forced
to sell bonds unable to maintain investment grade ratings, a
second shoe from bond insurers. The banks are under siege. In
time, the USFed and USGovt will have to bail out both major banks
and bond insurers, in addition to mortgage bond holders, and
maybe to home owners. The bigger better question might be what
the USGovt will not bail out??? With the bank crisis growing
worse, not better, gold will be a powerful safe haven, not USTreasurys.
The theme in 2008 will be the
broadening of the banking bond system debacle. More evidence
for example can be found in the rising delinquency rate for prime
mortgages and commercial loans. The prime DQ rate is already
higher than the 2001 rate, the time of the last officially recognized
recession. Soon the DQ commercial rate will easily eclipse the
2001 rate, when a recession hit. Anyone who believes the worst
is over with mortgage problems lives in a fairy tale world, or
downwind from Wall Street media effluent (not affluent) trumpets.
US national housing values are destined to decline another 7%
to 10% next year, directly leading to an all-out assault on prime
mortgage bonds. Their collateral is falling, so the bond must
fall in value. With leverage, losses will be amplified. In all
my reading, only in two cases have analysts mentioned the harmful
effect on 'AAA' mortgage bonds from falling home valuation. They
frequently cite inclusion of prime mortgages in with subprimes,
packaged as damaged CDO bonds. They home valuation factor will
be in the prime news next year.
USDOLLAR & GOLD
Notice that while the
USDollar DX index has enjoyed a moderate bounce, the gold price
has held firm, resilient to the DX counter-trend rally. My
conclusion is that gold is resilient since monetary inflation
is fast rising, and bank turmoil is in the news on a daily basis.
The money supply growth, always intentionally confused by the
financial media and USGovt itself, is rising in every major continental
corner. In Europe and the United States, that money growth rate
is in the 15% neighborhood. The spillover into actual price inflation
and rising cost structure is assured. On Tuesday, the Euro Central
Bank announced a $500 billion (half a trillion dollars) in funding
lines, the details of which will take time to be digested. Talk
finally hit the media networks of a 'Weimar-like' situation,
which means reality is slowly seeping in for desperation not
seen in 70 years. Look for the DX index to enjoy some coordinated
lift from foreign central banks, as well as a perverse lift from
gradually worsening conditions in Europe generally. The central
banks are acting together in the US$ lift, out of vested interest.
Traders are covering their US$ short positions, resulting in
a cover rally. My expectation is that in January, all those successful
speculators will load up again on the next round of US$ short
exercises. They enjoy the higher starting points. The current
rally could reach 78.5 on the DX, perhaps 79. Regard the current
bounce as now of an intermediate variety. The tighter grip of
USEconomic recession will harm the USDollar in the coming months.
The list of dollar negatives is long, powerful, and growing,
counter-trend rally or not.
The gold price is consolidating,
a process well along into its second month. The important moving
averages are both rising. The uptrend provides a line of support
at the 780-785, exactly at the 3/8-ths retracement level pointed
out in previous articles. So far, gold has managed to resist
the USDollar bounce, which has a little gusto. Monetary inflation
has replaced the USDollar as the primary driver for the gold
price in my view. A warning signal comes in the MACD (moving
average convergence divergence) cyclical indicator. A crossover
would be bearish in the intermediate term for gold. The worsening
bank/bond debacle serves as a powerful bullish supporting factor
for gold. While a decline to the 20-week moving average near
760 is possible, or to 750 where minor support shows, this rally
could end in a flash. My forecast is for the USDollar rally to
be abruptly ended by emergence of news on the bank/bond debacle,
or broader USGovt bailout announcements, or focus given to mounting
money inflation as being dangerous. A quiet holiday season could
invite an attack on the US$ DX index after a considerable runup,
whose basis rests little on the reality of fundamentals. That
would further firm the gold price.
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Jim Willie CB
Jim Willie CB is the editor of the "HAT
TRICK LETTER"
email: jimwilliecb@aol.com
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Trick Letter
Jim Willie CB
is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail forecasting.
He holds a PhD in Statistics. His career has stretched over 25
years. He aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered
by the limitations of economic credentials. Visit his website
at www.GoldenJackass.com.
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