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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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    Why I Don’t Think the Troubles in Financials are Over Yet

    When I was a investment grade corporate bond manager back in 2002, there were three “false starts” before the recovery began in earnest. The market started rallies in December 2001, August 2002, and October 2002. I remember them vividly, and I behaved like the estimable Doug Kass during that period, buying the dips, and selling the rips.

    In this bear market for the financials, we are only through the first leg down. Here is what remains to be reconciled:

    • Residential housing prices are still too high by 10-20% across the US on average.
    • The same is true of much of commercial real estate.
    • The mortgage insurers have not failed yet. Triad Guaranty is close, but at least two of them need to fail.
    • There is still too much implicit leverage within the derivative books of the investment banks.
    • Too many credit hedge funds and mortgage REITs are left standing.

    I have tried to avoid being a pest on issues like these, but the overage of leverage has not been squeezed out yet.

    3 Responses to “ Why I Don’t Think the Troubles in Financials are Over Yet ”

    1. Doug M Says:

      I noticed that MGIC got pretty good terms for their recent capital raise. They might be the one monoline that survives.

    2. glory Says:

      but, but, but the Fed and the Society for the Preservation of Wall Street (read FCBs and SWFs) are on the case :P

      cheers!

    3. Peter Duray-Bito Says:

      Hi,

      I just wanted to make you aware of a few charts I maintain to help you track the Fed’s activity:

      Fed’s Temporary Open Market Balance:

      http://www.bullandbearwise.com/FOMOOut.asp

      This is combined with Securities Lending, TAF, PDCF and TSLF:

      http://www.bullandbearwise.com/FOMOSP500.asp

      The red bars are securities reverse repos or redemptions FACTORED BY 9 as their significance is proportional to the reserve requirement.

      SOMA account:

      http://www.bullandbearwise.com/SOMAHold.asp

      And not on the radar screen yet, Foreign Custody holdings as a percent of SOMA:

      http://www.bullandbearwise.com/SOMAForeignRatio.asp

      Please bookmark these for future reference.

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