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This blog is produced by David Merkel CFA, a registered representative of Finacorp Securities as an outside business activity. As such, Finacorp Securities does not review or approve materials presented herein. By viewing or participating in discussion on this blog, you understand that the opinions expressed within do not reflect the opinions or recommendations of Finacorp Securities, but are the opinions of the author and individual participants. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed constitutes a solicitation for the purchase or sale of any security or other instrument. Before investing, consider your investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. Any purchase or sale activity in any securities instrument should be based upon your own analysis and conclusions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Finacorp Securities is a member FINRA and SIPC.

David Merkel

At my blog there are two main purposes: teaching investors about better investing through risk control, and tying all of the markets into a coherent whole.

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    Insurance Thoughts

    I am known for my views on insurance stocks, and I wrote about those views at RealMoney yesterday:


    David Merkel
    Buy Insurance Stocks. Really.
    1/18/2008 12:04 PM EST

    Bouncing off Adam’s comments on the XLF, the insurers in the index are getting drubbed, and in my opinion, for little good reason. On an earnings basis, many of them are the cheapest I have seen maybe ever, and while some of their earnings prospects will be diminished by the fall in the market, and difficulties in the bond market, in general, the asset side of their balance sheets are in good shape. So, if you are looking for ideas, here are a few I am looking at: MetLife, Hartford, Travelers, Lincoln National, ACE, Chubb, Principal and XL. Hopefully this will do as well as my PartnerRe trade last August.

    Position: Long LNC

    I would add to that list SFG and DFG. After some thought, I acted:


    David Merkel
    Bought Some Hartford, Added to Lincoln National
    1/18/2008 12:45 PM EST

    Lincoln National was a rebalancing buy, Hartford is a new position. Both are quality competitors with good balance sheets. The only possible drawback is in a protracted decline, earnings from variable products could suffer.

    Position: long HIG LNC

    Then, at the end of the day, I added:


    David Merkel
    The Dike Has Sprung a Leak
    1/18/2008 4:30 PM EST

    Fitch downgrades Ambac to AA from AAA. Stock has a temporary rally. Is this a great country or what? Because of the social dynamic of the rating agencies, and the existence of one downgrade, the dike has been breached, and I would expect more downgrades.

    Hey, maybe it’s time for the financing of last resort: Ambac could issue a convertible surplus note. Maybe even sell it privately to Buffett, who could own 30% of the company if things turn around. He won’t delta-hedge common against it. They might even be able to get away with a coupon below 15%. Package it with a reinsurance agreement, and the NY State commissioner smiles on it.

    Okay, I went overboard there, but there was no reason for Ambac to have its short-lived rally. That’s probably why it didn’t stick.

    Position: none

    My last note was half-whimsical and half-serious. Buffett likes convertibles, particularly if they offer attractive optionality at the right price. The question is how big the problems are at Ambac relative to their small capital base.

    Now, after the downgrade of Ambac, Fitch moved to downgrade Ambac-guaranteed bonds. This is serious stuff. Moody’s and S&P will also likely move on Ambac, and MBIA, FGIC, SCA, and more. Channel Re is toast, and PartnerRe and Ren Re have written off their stakes in them (what of MBIA?).  ACA Capital is dead, or nearly so, facing a midnight deadline for forebearance from their counterparties.

    I should also add that there are reinsurance issues among the financial guarantee companies have reinsurance issues.  I mentioned Channel Re, which mainly provided insurance to MBIA.  MBIA and Ambac, from what I remember, mutually reinsure about 10% of each other’s liabilities.  Beyond that, you have poor RAM Re: 

    RAM Re attempts to absorb a quote share of the liabilities of the primary financial guarantors.  I met their management team during their IPO.  They seemed to be good people, and talented managers.  But having a quota share of the seven soon-to-be-formerly-AAA guarantors is a ticket to not being AAA oneself.  They face risks of insolvency of primary writers, which could lead to their own insolvency.

    What I am trying to convey here, is that stress at one guarantor could have ripple effects at other guarantors.  The least affected would be Assured Guaranty, FSA (a Dexia subsidiary), and Berky (of course).

    As for the recent Barron’s article on MBIA, I would only say that it all depends on structured finance losses.  If losses on CDOs are severe, MBIA could be a sell even at these levels.

    These are unusual times, and it pays for investors to avoid for the most part the financial guarantee space (mortgage and title too).  Other insurers (life, health, P&C) are likely better than other financials, and generally cheap; I own a bunch of them.

    Full disclosure: long LNC HIG

    Tickers mentioned: SCA RAMR AGO ACAH MBI ABK BRK/A BRK/B HIG LNC MET PFG DFG SFG CB TRV MET ACE XL

    2 Responses to “ Insurance Thoughts ”

    1. Albert Says:

      Thanks for your comments, interesting and insightful as always. One insurance name struck me by its absence: AIG. I’m curious why it did not make your list. The mortgage insurance business? Subprime holdings? It, too, has gotten a lot cheaper lately.

      Hope you’re doing well. Thanks.

      Albert

      No position in AIG.

    2. Josh Stern Says:

      David, HIG should hire you!

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