The Big Picture |
- 10 PM Tuesday Reads
- Greece
- Ex-Product Sketch
- Do MF Global and Long Term Capital Mgmt Have Anything in Common?
- No referendum vote likely but what about the govt
- Mayor Bloomberg Reveals He is Clueless About Housing, Economy & Bailouts
- The China Startup Report
- Economist Editor: Global Risk of “Self-Induced” Stagnation
- Global Wealth Distribution
- Merkel and Sarkozy Speak
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 01:30 PM PDT My train reading for the luxurious ride home:
What are you reading? |
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 12:47 PM PDT |
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 11:30 AM PDT The following is from Macro Man, an American fund manager living abroad: ~~~ As we approach month-end, after what has been one of the most eventful months of TMM’s careers, we thought we’d expand upon our somewhat mischievous obituary yesterday. In all seriousness, TMM have argued for some time that the Sovereign CDS market is ill-designed, particularly with respect to developed markets. Several bank analysts and traders – including Citi’s Willem Buiter – have spent the past 24 hours trying to argue that the Sovereign CDS market will be unaffected by the latest Greek restructuring. Now, TMM rate Professor Buiter as one of the smartest people they have ever met, however, they strongly believe that he has got this wrong. So TMM now switch deftly from meta-physical poetry and paraphrase Monty Python:
But jokes aside, TMM are incredulous that banks have been able to get away with selling Sovereign CDS for so long. The ill-design of the product is palpable – for it not to pay out in the event of a 50% haircut (60% in NPV terms) because the restructuring was “voluntary” is laughable. Sovereign CDS has turned out to be less useful as a hedge than a glass panel in a nudist camp. This is an exceptionally serious issue for the credit market as banks have used CDS to hedge their bond holdings, loan books and other related country exposures, particularly from CVA desks. And this is what worries TMM – these desks have been very large players in the Sovereign CDS market, hedging counterparty and country risk on bank balance sheets. Given the now exceptionally questionable quality and value of these swaps as a hedge, both in terms of MTM moves and in terms of eventual pay out, TMM expect that auditors and risk managers will be alerted. Hedges that offset bond positions are likely now to have lost money and require banks to restate their earnings, while at the same time reduce their gross books. TMM find it particularly amusing that this effectively represents a wealth transfer from US/UK and German banks toward those of France and Austria. But this was all avoidable. TMM have been arguing for years in favour of the migration of vanilla derivatives on-exchange. And in particular, while TMM agree that the Corporate CDS market has improved both liquidity, price discovery and market efficiency, it does not appear to be like this with respect to Sovereigns. There have been many cries of “it’s a fix, the politicians have changed the rules!”. Well, that’s not all that surprising is it? TMM have many times highlighted that the difference between this crisis and the banking crisis was that in 2008 the banks had to play to someone else’s rules. In a sovereign crisis, the sovereign plays to its own rules and these it can be change to suit its purpose. We cannot help but feel the schadenfreude at how jealously banks guarded their CDS franchises of large bid/ask spreads and price opacity has backfired. Because there was never any reason why Sovereign CDS needed to be structured as it is. Why…? There have been many cries to regulate or ban the existence of Sovereign CDS, both from the sovereigns that felt their nations under attack, and by the masses who see them as one of Satan’s investment bank tools designed to steal from the poor. Rather than ban or regulate further, TMM feel (as noted above) that all it would take is for the auditors and risk managers to declare them invalid as a hedge (which they have now proved to be) and these CDS will be confined to the financial bin. If, however there are still folks stupid enough to see value in them, then true to Darwinian theory, they should be left free to trade them. Let’s be honest, Greek bonds with a 50% haircut still have a better payout than the National lottery… and no-one’s banned that yet. But there is a viable alternative. TMM would like to introduce their readers to the humble Bond Future. That long-standing, well-understood derivative that has provided liquidity, transparency and price discovery to bond markets in many countries for 40 years. Bond futures with deliverable bond baskets allow basis trading, speculation and hedging, without the idiosyncrasies of CDS contracts. But of course, futures markets aren’t that profitable for banks… well, you reap what you sow, right? And on that note, TMM wish their readers a very good weekend. ——————————————————————————- ADDENDUM: Having received many insightful comments, TMM thought they would attempt to clarify a few points: 1) Sovereign CDS has been seen as an MTM hedge due to its correlation with country-related assets. As per one comment, if it is not known for several years whether or not it will pay out, via lawsuits, then it is hardly a “liquid hedge”. 2) It only works as a hedge for a hold-out if a re-default does indeed occur and is ruled to be coercive by ISDA DC. By definition of "holdout", this is only works for a minority of investors, and therefore its liquidity, pricing and usefulness as a hedge for banks will have to reflect this. 3) It is too complex as a product given the intentions behind it – to hedge the credit risk of the underlying asset. 4) Differentiation between voluntary and involuntary default provides politicians (or whoever else) a means to prevent their trigger inevitably leads to the question: your 100%-guaranteed working parachute has just had a moth fly out of it. Are you *sure* it will work when you need it to? 5) Finally, regarding the very valid point that the flaws of Sovereign CDS are common to all OTC derivatives, including ones that are a lot more liquid and actively traded, like vanilla interest rate swaps (IRS). Given the recent (as well as the not so recent) shenanigans around the LIBOR fixing, TMM agrees. However, let's note that a) the vanilla IRS market has responded to these issues and there has been a sustained push to get away from OTC and onto exchange; b) there's no question that there's a LOT less settlement/litigation risk and uncertainty for contracts like vanilla IRS and FX options; c) the very fact that we're not having discussions about the validity of the current mid 10y par swap rate suggests that there's a lot less ambiguity among market participants about these derivatives. There are, obviously, other issues with vanilla IRS, e.g. pricing of these contracts under different funding assumptions, but the uncertainties that these issues introduce into the marketplace are not sufficient to cause a significant disruption. Moreover, the IRS market is responding and adapting as we speak. There are two conclusions: as per another comment, either markets will need to price in the probability of actually getting paid, when they will get paid, and which court will govern that decision, not just the probability of default. This is an exceptionally difficult thing to do. Alternatively (or, indeed, additionally) markets need to come up with a simpler product that provides the hedging requirements without such uncertainty and complexity. TMM would suggest that bond futures, which are inherently simple, with a long and well-understood history, are a more appropriate model for such a hedge. And there we were thinking that CDS was only stupid in its complexity. Now we're forced to conclude that, additionally, it's even complex in its stupidity. |
Do MF Global and Long Term Capital Mgmt Have Anything in Common? Posted: 01 Nov 2011 11:00 AM PDT They are both defunct they each used an excessive amount of leverage; their blow ups were public, closely watched, and spectacular. But what might be most unusual is a strange similarity between the two of them. The bets that blew up LTCM eventually paid off a few months after the debacle. It was the leverage, not the directional bets, that killed them. I wonder: Might something similar occur with MFG? Had they not used used leverage, would their European bets soon begun to have paid off . . . ? |
No referendum vote likely but what about the govt Posted: 01 Nov 2011 10:42 AM PDT |
Mayor Bloomberg Reveals He is Clueless About Housing, Economy & Bailouts Posted: 01 Nov 2011 10:40 AM PDT I am enormously disappointed to learn the Mayor I had supported as a data driven, objective technocrat turns out to be just another empty-headed idealogue spouting disproven talking points. Any previous suggestions I’ve made as to his fitness to run for president are hereby revoked. ENORMOUS DISAPPOINTMENT |
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 10:00 AM PDT A 15-minute Crash Course by Bowei Gai (October 2011) The China Startup Report View more presentations from Bowei Gai |
Economist Editor: Global Risk of “Self-Induced” Stagnation Posted: 01 Nov 2011 09:03 AM PDT ~~~ Source: |
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 08:30 AM PDT As we have discussed, from 1979 to 2007, inflation-adjusted incomes of the top 1 percent of households increased significantly versus the rest of the wage earners (i.e., the remaining 99%). Those even better off, the top 0.1 percent (the top one one-thousandth of households), saw their incomes grow 390%. In contrast, incomes for the bottom 90 percent grew just 5 percent between 1979 and 2007. All of that income growth, however, occurred in the unusually strong growth period from 1997 to 2000, which was followed by a fall in income from 2000 to 2007. Is this wealth concentration a global phenomena, or is it a US centric? Lets go to the global data, via Credit Suisse Research Institute’s Global Wealth Databook: > > >
> And as a reminder, here is the recent growth in the US data, via EPI: ~~~ UPDATE: November 1 2011 12:51pm David Wilson of Bloomberg News points out that a rising Misery Indexes worsens the income-gap effect:
> |
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 07:37 AM PDT BN: *MERKEL, SARKOZY COMMITED TO IMPLEMENTING FULL EU SUMMIT DEAL, *MERKEL, SARKOZY SEE EU DEAL AS `MORE NEEDED NOW THAN EVER.’ *GERMANY, FRANCE URGE QUICK IMPLEMENTATION OF GREEK PACKAGE. Now they have to hope that the revolt in the Greek Parliament over the PM’s move in addition to some likely behind the scenes harsh words between Papandreou and other EU officials will work and no referendum will take place. |
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