Day: December 21, 2013

Classic: Financials are Different

Classic: Financials are Different

The following was published at RealMoney in March 2006:

When you are a corporate bond manager, one of the lessons that you learn early is that financial companies (or, financials) are different from industrials or utilities.? Why?? First, the novice manager wants to buy a lot of financials, because they yield more at equivalent ratings.? Second, you have a staff of analysts, and you realize that only a few of them can do financials, whereas almost all of them can do industrials or utilities.? Again, why?? Here are a number of related reasons:

  • Tangible assets play only a small role in a financial company.? What constrains the growth of an industrial company?? The fixed assets (plant and equipment) limit the technical amount of product that can be delivered in a year.? With services, workers? Finally, demand is the ultimate limiting factor, but this affects financial, industrial, and services businesses alike.? With a financial company, sometimes the limits are akin to a service business (?If only we had more trained sales reps!?), but more often, capital limits growth.
  • The cash flow statement plays a big role with industrials and utilities, but almost no role with financials.? One of the great values of the cash flow statement is the ability to attempt to derive estimates of free cash flow.? Free cash flow is the amount of cash that the business generates in a year that could be removed, and the business is as capable of functioning as it was at the start of the fiscal year.? Deducting maintenance capital expenditure from EBITDA often approximates free cash flow.? Cash flow statements for financials cannot in general be used to derive estimates of free cash flow because when new business is written, it requires capital to be set aside against the risks.? Capital is released as business matures.? In order to derive a free cash flow number for a financial company, operating earnings would have to be adjusted by the change in required capital.
  • Sadly, the change in required capital is not disclosed anywhere in a typical 10K.? Depending on the market environment, even the concept of required capital can change, depending on what entity most closely controls the amount of operating and financial leverage that a financial institution can take on.? Sometimes the federal or state regulators provide the most constraint; this is particularly true for institutions that interact closely with the public, i.e., depositary institutions, life and personal lines insurers.? For entities that raise their capital in the debt markets, or do business that requires a strong claims paying ability rating, the ratings agencies could be the tightest constraint.? Finally, and this is rare, the probability of blowing up the company could be the tightest constraint, which implies loose regulatory structures.? Again, this is rare; many companies do estimates of the economic capital required for business, but usually regulatory or rating agency capital is tighter.
  • Financial institutions are generally more highly regulated than non-financial institutions.? There are several reasons for this: the government does not want the public exposed to financial risk, systemic risk, guarantee funds are typically implicitly backstopped by the government (think FDIC, FSLIC, state insurance guaranty funds, etc.), and defaults are costly in ways that defaults of non-financials are not.? The last point deserves amplification; in a credit-based economy, confidence in the financial sector is critical to the continued growth and health of the economy.? Confidence can not be allowed to fail.? Also, since many financial institutions pursue similar strategies, or invest in one another, the failure of one institution makes the regulators touchy about everyone else.
  • Rapid growth is typically a negative; financial businesses are mature, and there is a trade-off between three business factors: price, quantity and quality.? In normal situations, a financial institution can get only two out of three.? In bad times, it would be only one out of three.
  • Because of the different regulatory regimes, financial institutions tend to form holding companies that own the businesses operating in various jurisdictions.? Typically, borrowing occurs at the holding company; the regulators frown at borrowing at the operating companies, unless the borrowers are clearly subordinate to the public served by the operating company.? This makes the common stock more volatile.? In a crisis, the regulators only want to assure the safety of the operating company; they don?t care if the holding company goes bust, and the common goes to zero.? They just want to make sure that the guaranty funds don?t take a hit, and that confidence is maintained among consumers.

All of these factors together lead to the following conclusion: financials are more complex than other types of companies, and are not correctly analyzed in the same way as non-financials.? Earnings quality is hard to discern, and growth is not always a positive thing.? Bankruptcies are rare, but when they happen, recoveries are poor for common stockholders and holding company debtholders.? Finally, management conservatism and competence are paramount, given the less certain nature of accrual accounting at financial companies, and the inability to calculate free cash flow with any precision.

In part 2 of this two-part series, I will give my approach to analyzing a sector of the insurance space in order to demonstrate some of these ideas.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Monetary Policy

 

  • The theory of money entanglement (Part 1) http://t.co/zfCM2rPxBx The effects of monetary policy vary w/finl institutions need for credit $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Repo market as a form of free banking http://t.co/4m3PSuFViG? @isakaminska describes a hybrid credit system where central banks r weak $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Why Do So Many People Hate QE? http://t.co/ZpcQhSrSpH Basic reason is fairness. Y can the Fed create credit out of thin air, & we can’t? $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Visualizing the Fed | The Big Picture http://t.co/J7K15MIDdZ @ritholtz shares a cool interactive graphic on the Fed’s Balance Sheet $$ $TLT Dec 19, 2013
  • ‘Was The Fed A Good Idea?’ How Cato Cleans Keynesian Clock http://t.co/qaalFGBvML Economies grow faster when currency stores real value $$ Dec 17, 2013

?? TIPS Wipeout Signals Fed Losing Fight Against Disinflation http://t.co/3GeeSDpZAv Implied inflation rising across TIPS curve $$ $TIP $TLT Dec 17, 2013

 

FOMC & Data

 

  • Fed Seen Tapering QE in $10B Steps in Next Seven Meetings http://t.co/gvmopTBufm Y do economists assume that things follow a simple path? $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Fascinating Bernanke can call Fiscal policy restrictive when deficit huge & shrinking a little, doesn’t apply same logic 2 LSAP shrinking $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for Fed funds rate 2013-6 &long-run 0.25%, 0.34%, 1.06%, 2.18%, 3.88% Change 0.00%, -0.06%, -0.19%, -0.09%, -0.04% $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for Fed Tightening — January 2016, 25 months away vs 27 last September, one month further out $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for PCE Inflation 2013-6 & long-run 0.99%,1.52%, 1.79%, 1.87%, 2.00% Change -0.21%, -0.01%, -0.10%, 0.00%, 0.00% $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for Unemployment 2013-6 & long-run 7.05%, 6.45%, 5.91%, 5.53%, 5.54% Change -0.11%, -0.13%, -0.12%, -0.10%, 0.04% $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for real GDP 2013-6 & long-run 2.27%, 2.91%, 3.09%, 2.83%, 2.25% Change 0.14%, 0.00%, -0.07%, -0.05%, -0.09% $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Someone ask Ben Bernanke if they would issue fed funds at longer terms/tenors Dec 18, 2013
  • @AlephBlog wrong again, David — decrease of $10B, $5B each of Treasuries and MBS Dec 18, 2013
  • @AlephBlog sorry — $5b/month change Dec 18, 2013
  • RT @NickTimiraos: MBS issuance has plunged since Sept, so a $5 billion taper of MBS doesn’t mean the Fed will decrease its *share* of MBS p? Dec 18, 2013
  • Statement Regarding Purchases of Treasury Securities &Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities http://t.co/97DNRGXJFQ Pares MBS buys by $10B/mo $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • An Opiate for Underachievement: Bernanke Says Fed in ?Finest Hours? Stood Up to Pressure http://t.co/soQDjBHZea Rather, they caved & hid $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • The One Thing Bernanke Must Not Do Tomorrow http://t.co/AvDcElOHTY Saying & not doing loses credibility 4the Fed. Don’t say wut u wont do $$ Dec 17, 2013

 

Companies & Industries

 

  • The Buffett difference, derivatives edition http://t.co/5VUI7WxOUB Soft collateral reqs, tolerated earnings vol, bot in size w/variety $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Target Data Breach Has Become a Card Data Fire Sale http://t.co/jUxgOpv7SP B especially wary here because it can b used as a debit card $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Buffett’s massive wind-power order shows wind energy becoming cheaper http://t.co/0lOSGp3NQi Wind power becomes economical, end subsidies $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Facebook Is Selling Stock For Some Reason http://t.co/x9LsnLUMNb $FB makes it easier 4 index buyers to get shares as it enters the S&P500 $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Facebook, Zuckerberg to Sell Stock Worth Nearly $4 Billion http://t.co/B4joZJZYR9 Note $FB compny selling shares; not usually a good sign $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Regional Shippers Pose New Threat to UPS, FedEx http://t.co/RNUpcBrL3Y And USPS too. Regionals can get it there the next day $$ $FDX $UPS Dec 19, 2013
  • AT&T Sells Wireline Assets To Frontier Communications http://t.co/or1n1lWqbD Interesting 2c $T sell off rural wireline customers 2 $FTR $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Gold Town Turns to Dust as Metal Decline Shutters Mines http://t.co/unN2Mi97A3 Life at high-cost mines is very cyclical. Boom-bust $$ $GLD Dec 18, 2013
  • Dodge CVT Animation http://t.co/cfEWG0Y9jQ Cool 82-second video of how a continuously variable transmission works $$ $GM $F $TM $HMC Dec 18, 2013
  • How Good Old Car Engines Got So Efficient http://t.co/hM5ZmjdXpK Most progress w/energy has come by using hydrocarbons more efficiently $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Delta Battles Tiny Upstart Airport http://t.co/HbalfXKYc3 B careful of small airports near big cities, u don’t want 2create the next $LUV $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Poor Americans Lead Movement to Abandon Landlines http://t.co/MmUfqiljPa Landlines r dying; I’m thinking of getting rid of mine $$ $SPY $VZ Dec 18, 2013
  • Pizzerias Try to Apply Chipotle Formula http://t.co/afyCN5xi2u Creating Fast, Custom & Inexpensive 4 pizza; many r trying, who will win? $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Campbell Seen as Next Buffett Target Post-Heinz http://t.co/zryODDWpRs Likely wishful thinking; soup shrinking; PE high, no growth $$ $CPB Dec 17, 2013
  • Wind Power Rivals Coal With $1B Order From Buffett http://t.co/WXJfEAHmrn Wind power gets competitive on price; can we end the subsidies? $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Google Just Bought a Mechinized Cheetah and Other Military Robots http://t.co/5ZO3XXzcNF 1st internet search now robotic world domination $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Google, Facebook Push to Control Web’s Pipes http://t.co/nmDzeospON Content companies want more control over their delivery over the web $$ Dec 17, 2013

 

Market Impact

 

  • Three things long/short hedge funds cannot do (well) http://t.co/zyiE65FcAZ Manage risk, Short stocks on a systematic basis &stop trading $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Investors should abandon long-term commodity bets http://t.co/5rGgYXj5fy End of supercycle, no income, correlated w/equity returns $$ $GLD Dec 20, 2013
  • DJIA Rises to Inflation-Adjusted Record High http://t.co/nseI2H9eF4 Closes at 16,221. Guess I have 2 eat my words: http://t.co/A6kJoniqG5 $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • The FOMC- SCR Factors- Bullish SP500? http://t.co/pI3A04XM71 The TINA effect: TINA stands 4 There Is No Alternative.(to Stock investing) $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Investor Hunger 4US Corporate Bonds Signals Confidence http://t.co/PsCIMa25A9 Retweet after me:Credit spreads r free $$, credit spreads r… Dec 17, 2013
  • Want to invest like Buffett? Here?s how http://t.co/3CIqNByFVU Focus on cheap, high-quality stocks w/moats, lever using ins float $$ $BRK-B Dec 17, 2013
  • Corn Plummeting Spurs Talk of ?80s US Farmland Bust http://t.co/QoO5lVTXSx Will b interesting 2c how many recent buyers get inverted $$ $SPY Dec 17, 2013

 

Financial Sector

 

  • US Credit Markets: US Lite Covenant: Freshness without Protection ? http://t.co/F2HguklHFM Credit protections getting worse 4 bank debt $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • OCC believes banks might be gambling again http://t.co/lMG9YG24dj The OCC is seeing looser underwriting, reminds them of 2007 $$ #toosevere Dec 20, 2013
  • Man Who Said No to Soros Builds BlueCrest Into Empire http://t.co/UNksM1mSvl Borrowed $750M to hire 25 equity mgrs 4 his hedge funds $$ $SPY Dec 20, 2013
  • Secret Currency Traders? Club Devised Biggest Market?s Rates http://t.co/dtBfuqR48w There is no human system that cannot b gamed $$ $SPY Dec 19, 2013
  • New Mortgages to Get Pricier Next Year http://t.co/oNfGLJeZCC About time F&F raised fees; dodgy mtges have much higher loss rates $$ $FNMA Dec 18, 2013
  • Volcker Rule Shows Its Wide Reach http://t.co/MOZMjUFoj8 Securitized assets, when they default, most frequently default w/zero recovery $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • First Volcker Victim? Zions Dumping Its Hedge Funds http://t.co/Kj8uYfltTn $ZION cleans up the trash w/now-sufficient capital $$ Dec 17, 2013

 

PPACA / Obamacare

 

  • Obamacare Initiates Self-Destruction Sequence http://t.co/VkbqqPzMYb @asymmeticinfo asks what will Obama do next year on indiv mandate? $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Obama Lifts Health Mandate for Those With Canceled Plans http://t.co/aCYJLzaOZz Must b nice 2b able 2alter laws by presidential fiat $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • More Obamacare Delays. Surprised? http://t.co/keWUsmLvay @asymmetricinfo thinks the law will survive b/c insurers benefit in long-run $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • A Medicaid Bet in Wisconsin http://t.co/Ejgbmbd61B Scott Walker Says He Wants to Protect the Poorest; Critics Assail 4Not Taking US Funds $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • National Lampoon’s ObamaCare Vacation http://t.co/Vzp636uMCW Interesting to hear how poorly Maryland is doing w/its healthcare website $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Half of Uninsured Say Health Law Is Bad Idea http://t.co/BEWOeZg1gK When those that u r trying 2 benefit don’t like it, u know it is bad $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Is Obamacare Really an Improvement on the Status Quo? http://t.co/Zc1umGhp1l More people lose insurance than gain it; status quo better $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Insurers Fight Hospitals’ Paying Premiums for Poor http://t.co/WnuoAo481T Hospitals pay to get sick people insured, so they can make $$ $SPY Dec 17, 2013
  • Errors Continue 2Plague Government Health Site http://t.co/5j6OZRqkqZ Flaws Include Missing Customers & Erring Eligibility Determinations $$ Dec 14, 2013

 

Rest of the World

?

  • Putin Bets $15B to Capture Junk-Rated Ukraine Vassal http://t.co/vjxhVcT8gv Rebuilding the USSR is tough work for a tough man to do $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • South Sudan Rebels Take Key Town of Bor http://t.co/MMQumSSIHZ It’s in the center of the country, kind of a crossroads 4 commerce/travel $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Vatican Hires Global Firms to Modernize Communications, Accounting http://t.co/1CRwzMDbs8 Humility arrives at the Vatican, expertise 2 $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Russian Amnesty Includes Greenpeace as Well as Pussy Riot http://t.co/b8FNVgaQx6 Is Russia getting soft? 😉 Courting international favor $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Mom Can?t Visit Daughter as Airlines Shun Venezuela Cash http://t.co/1uds13LW3t Such is life 4those under currency controls; freedom goes $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • North America to Drown in Oil as Mexico Ends Monopoly http://t.co/5bV35xIc7o Oil is no good to Mexico if can’t get it out of ground $$ #tech Dec 18, 2013
  • South Sudan Puts Down ‘Attempted Coup’ http://t.co/19KfhoRdVJ A young nation, very experienced in corruption; attempted coup unsurprising $$ Dec 17, 2013

?

China

 

  • China s Stealth Tightening? http://t.co/tuW7JvVhFI A new squeeze hits the China Interbank market & the authorities aren’t doing much $$ $FXI Dec 20, 2013
  • Why Are the Chinese Scared of American Corn?? http://t.co/lEGbWgh2r4 Probably some Party bigwig who sells domestic corn complaining $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Can China Teach North Korea to Grow Up? http://t.co/J6Ba2jpzVz If N Koreans had as much freedom as the Chinese do, Kim would b overthrown $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • China’s Cities Chop Down Hills for Industrial Land http://t.co/KTpYOwgXNK Wonder what the secondary effect will b from this terraforming? $$ Dec 17, 2013

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • The Trouble With Populism? It Isn?t That Popular http://t.co/RXSmHLDWTu All sorts of extreme positions, mine included, r never popular $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Republicans Block Symbolic Step to Extend Tax Breaks http://t.co/mxUZ31R7GZ Rationality. Maybe temporary tax breaks will b temporary? $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Obama?s own panel rips NSA spying on phone calls of Americans http://t.co/QYx1lJXLfc The consensus is that the NSA has gone too far $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • John Podesta eats crow: ?I apologize to Speaker Boehner? http://t.co/XyCLBNrjWs Don’t blame Podesta, he just drank his own Kool-aid $$ 😉 Dec 19, 2013
  • At 61 She Lives in Basement While 87-Year-Old Dad Travels http://t.co/KTF0YCOpWx Each generation does successively less well on average $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • That’s the nature of all of the fixed payment plans devised by the “Greatest Generation.” They borrowed from children & grandchildren $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Top Democrats reject court ruling over NSA spying on Americans http://t.co/wnNGQmJwys Interesting 2c varying opinions in both parties $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Unmasking the Mortgage Interest Deduction: Who Benefits and by How Much? http://t.co/4PzAbpa7rs Benefits the well-off; end & balance bdgt $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Hidden Danger in Public Pension Funds http://t.co/lBgACsI12P Low Funded status, high amounts in risky assets, bonds offer little yield $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Disarming Surveillance http://t.co/70nAEtNTJA The opposite danger is that by snooping on others intensively they grow to resent the US $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • NSA Phone Spying ‘Almost Certainly’ Unconstitutional, Judge Says http://t.co/cnqxDbGXrW Probably won’t b upheld, good 2try overturning $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • The truth about the NSA’s bogus malware apocalypse http://t.co/nJ3hMCrcwq Most mass attacks r hard 2pull off w/any significant force $$ $TLT Dec 17, 2013
  • In Bankrupt Detroit, the Bills Are Piling Up http://t.co/eJrX6tgIgO One tough part of a muni b/k – who gets paid & what r reasonable fees $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Accidental Tax Break Saves Wealthiest Americans $100B http://t.co/RU6y8vCNZc ?I?ve done a lot4 Democratic contributors,? he sez w/a smile $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Look How Easy It Is 2 Game Estate Taxes http://t.co/u3YGvZ491l Y the estate tax needs 2b replaced & income taxes disallow income deferral $$ Dec 17, 2013

 

US Economics

 

  • GDP Grows 4.1% in Third Quarter, Biggest Gain Since 2011 http://t.co/tUCz0bQViw Guess I have to eat more of my words, US looks good 4 now $$ Dec 20, 2013
  • Boomers as Retail Clerks Shows Y Greenspan Saw Low Growth Era http://t.co/phoiELeks2 Long good article how aging populace changes economy $$ Dec 19, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Finished the #GoogleCrossword http://t.co/VtaoYkaQdt Haven’t done a crossword in years $GOOG #fun Dec 21, 2013
  • Why Successful CEOs Get Fired http://t.co/KehYfcljKv Founding CEOs get fired when tasks get larger than them, &the board loses confidence $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • Doctors Eye Cancer Risk in Uterine Procedure http://t.co/CD5OKwWs2I Grinding up fibroid in the uterus may increase the risk of cancer $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Top Products in Two Decades of Tech Reviews http://t.co/GQjGsMR1Xz Walter Mossberg’s last column @ WSJ; a joy 2 read, will still b on web $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Youthful Migrants Lured by Perks to Shrinking US Areas http://t.co/jxFNa41ftZ Promising idea to create urban jobs in rural areas $$ #winwin Dec 18, 2013
  • How Dogs Might Protect Kids Against Asthma: Gut Bacteria http://t.co/HaWa0goqdn Fascinating that dogs may aid kids w/immunity to asthma $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Multivitamins Found to Have Little Benefit http://t.co/5o8jUZGkYc The controversy will continue; nothing this profitable ever dies $$ $SPY Dec 17, 2013
  • Vonn Rivals Schuss From Slope to Boardroom for Funding http://t.co/GaJHLVAyob Olympians r little corporations seeking sponsors, donations $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Stocks That Still Have Perks http://t.co/k93IaeQlgl From discounts on cars&computers 2cruise bounty, here’s where 2find shareholder perks $$ Dec 14, 2013
  • The Tsarnaevs and the Boston Bombing http://t.co/Pz8MxYQXEf A decade ago, WSJ reporter happened to befriend the Tsarnaevs- an inside view $$ Dec 14, 2013
  • Mike Tyson Explores Kierkegaard http://t.co/n2mrAx1KuW Philosophy is a dead end; no truth to their views of existence, knowledge &ethics $$ Dec 14, 2013

 

Wrong

 

comment from a guy who doesn’t understand how banks work $$ Dec 19, 2013

  • What Bible is Pope Francis reading? http://t.co/EvnvIDNZlo Jesus never questioned property rights in his teaching, w/charity voluntary $$ Dec 19, 2013
  • How Pope Francis Misunderstands the Free Market http://t.co/Ksmn5DzS0O Simpler than that; he is unstudied, engages in wishful thinking $$ Dec 18, 2013
  • Wrong: Technology Adoption Discrepancy Btw Individuals & Institutions http://t.co/YkLJscgP7S Tries 2 connect falling ROA & Social Media $$ Dec 14, 2013

Comments

  • “Artificially forcing down Treasury yields via QE has 4 major bad effects?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/z9nLhQSknr $$ $TLT $IEF $SHY Dec 19, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: but the company is selling; it needs cash more than shares — good companies typically s… http://t.co/AkpvtYiijw Dec 19, 2013
  • Commented on The Economist | Daily chart: Doomsdays http://t.co/21NoGGuzuD Dec 18, 2013
  • “I analyzed TRUP CDOs 4a bank in 2008 and 2009 — built a special model that could dig into the?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/tRm5NtJ0mk $$ Dec 17, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: ‘ @MMula534 A lot. Most of the best investors r lifelong learners, & they c patterns whe… http://t.co/5pQzWca6Nm Dec 17, 2013

 

Classic: The Correlation Trade Gone Wrong

Classic: The Correlation Trade Gone Wrong

The following was published at RealMoney on May 23rd, 2005.? It’s a little obscure, but indicative of what can happen when too much money pursues an obscure arbitrage.? If nothing else, the piece tries to explain a complex concept to those with moderate market knowledge.

Because of the market dislocations last week, I want to give a primer on the class of derivatives that really jolted the markets this week: Indexed Synthetic CDOs.? First, some definitions:

1)????? CDO – Collateralized Debt Obligation.? A trust that owns bonds, loans, or credit default swaps.? The ownership in the trust is hierarchical.? There are several classes of certificates that have different interests in the trust, which get defined by which class receives losses from defaults first, second, third, etc.? The earlier that a class (or tranche) receives losses if they occur, the higher the yield a class of certificates receives.

2)????? Synthetic ? a term used in opposition to ?cash.?? One who transacts in corporate bonds participates in the cash market.? The synthetic market in corporate credit is composed of credit default swaps.? It is called ?synthetic? because it transacts in corporate credit risk without making loans to corporations.

3)????? Credit default swaps ? A market participant who buys default protection on a given corporation through the credit default swap market gains the right to deliver a certain amount of defaulted bonds in exchange for the par value of the bonds, when an event of default occurs for the class of bonds covered by the agreement.? In exchange for this privilege, the buyer of protection pays the seller a fixed fee for the term of the swap, which is usually five years, but can vary.

4)????? Spread ? That fixed fee is called the spread.? When the spread falls, the value of a credit default swap to someone who has previously sold protection becomes more valuable, in the same way that a bond price rises when its yield falls.

5)????? Indexed ? A third party puts together a seemingly diversified (or focused) list of companies so that investors can invest in a liquid pool of similar companies that they want exposure to, whether on a debt, synthetic, or equity basis.

Indexed Synthetic CDOs gather together the risk of debt default for a group of corporations, and parcel the risk of default out in a concentrated form to those who hold the ?first loss? certificates, in exchange for a high yield.? Those who hold other certificates in the loss priority get lesser yields commensurate to the risk of taking losses.

Setting the Stage

The Indexed Synthetic CDO market rallied until March 2005.? In most cases, the more risk an investor took, the better that investor did.? The indexes were rallying.? Those willing to offer protection against the default of a wide number of corporations were willing to do so at smaller and smaller spreads.? As I stated previously on RealMoney, those spreads were too small to compensate for the possibility and severity of losses.

Also, until March of 2005, the decline in spreads was fairly uniform.? There weren?t many credits within each index that were not moving in tune with the rally.? This was significant, because it meant that results were particularly good for the ?first loss? investors.? What hurts ?first loss? investors are credits going into default.? If the spread on the index as a whole improves (goes lower), but a small minority of credits diverge (get wider) and then default, the ?first loss? investor can get hurt, while investors with greater loss protection can still do well.

What Happened Last Week

Last week, not only did spreads rise in general, but some credits related to the auto and auto parts industries widened disproportionately.? This wouldn?t have been such a problem, except that a large number of hedge funds participated in the Indexed Synthetic CDO market doing an esoteric arbitrage trade, where the hedge funds when long the ?first loss? piece, and short 2.0-2.5x the ?second loss? piece.? This trade was sometimes called the ?correlation trade? for reasons I will talk about in a moment.

Why do such a trade?? The lure of free money is inexorable, and the trade had been free money for a while.? So long as movements in the spreads of credits in the index remained closely correlated, the hedge would hold between the ?first loss? and ?second loss? pieces, and the hedged investment would earn a high riskless yield, which to a hedge fund is the holy grail; a lot of hedge fund of funds will throw money at a strategy like that.

All arbitrages boil down to buying and selling two similar securities, and attempting to profit from the price or yield spread over the anticipated time horizon of the transaction.? Arbitrages can be intelligent or foolish depending on whether the anticipated total return is large enough to compensate for the negative results if the convergence anticipated in the arbitrage does not occur.

Last week, conditions for the hedge did not hold as the credit default swap spreads on automotive-related credits rose, leading the ?first loss? pieces to fall in value.? Surprisingly, the ?second loss? pieces actually rose in value, as a number of players moved to close out their hedges, which put downward pressure on the prices of the ?first loss? pieces, and upward pressure on the prices of the ?second loss pieces.? This became self-reinforcing for a while until the close on Tuesday.? On Wednesday, hedge funds and investment banks poured fresh capital into the trade, since the risk reward ratio on the hedged trade was now more attractive, bringing the market back to a more normal state.

Effects on the equity market

This put a damper on the equity market for several reasons: first, some players feared that some of the investment banks were caught on the wrong side of the trade, or had lent to those on the wrong side of the trade.? My guess is that?s not true, but if true, it could raise systemic risk issues, which lowers equity values, as it did in 1998 during the LTCM crisis.? The risk controls at the investment banks are far superior to those at most hedge funds now, and far superior to what they were at the investment banks during LTCM.? That doesn?t mean there can?t be crises, but the preparations for a crisis are better now.? The investment banks have laid off more risks to other market participants.? The other main effect on the equity market was that yields on riskier corporate bonds rose, which usually correlates with lower stock prices.

In closing, just be aware that there are other big markets such as the credit default swap market, both in its single-credit, and indexed forms, that can have a big effect on the equity markets.? There is a lot of leverage around, and ?bets gone wrong? can be big enough to knock some confidence out of the markets.? But I offer this hope: so long as the effects of the ?bets gone wrong? do not affect major institutions such as investment banks, commercial banks or insurance companies, the effects on the markets should be transitory, as they were after LTCM.

Theme: Overlay by Kaira