by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 06:41:00 PM
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Citi and BofA: No More Capital Needed
Tell me if you've heard this somewhere before ...
Earlier today from MarketWatch: Lewis warns against U.S. seizures, says bank doesn't need more U.S. aid
Lewis stressed that he thinks Bank of America won't need more public support.And from CNBC: Citigroup Does Not Need Further US Capital Injections: Chairman
"I'm confident we'll pass the stress test," he said
Counterparty Risk: Mortgage Insurers Again
by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 05:20:00 PM
A couple of mortgage insurer stories ...
From the WSJ: MBIA's Split of Businesses Raises Ire of Banks, Hedge Funds
Representatives of about 15 financial institutions will meet Thursday with New York State Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo to complain about MBIA Inc.'s decision to split its bond-insurance unit into two companies...And from Dow Jones (no link): MGIC Dn 35% As Payment-Deferral Points To Liquidity Issues
The group includes many banks that feel disadvantaged by MBIA's move last month to separate its municipal-bond insurance business from its commitments to insure mortgage-backed bonds and other structured securities. The banks are counterparties to MBIA on derivatives called credit-default swaps that were written on securities they own ... These institutions were left holding contracts with a financially weaker insurer when MBIA transferred about $5 billion in capital from its main unit to another company that guarantees only U.S. municipal bonds.
MGIC Investment Corp. ... said in a late-Wednesday regulatory filing it deferred its interest payment on some debentures by 10 years.Actually the mortgage insurers were lucky - they were cut out of the worst deals because Wall Street happily securitized 100% financing with 2nds and no MI. But the losses are still piling up. And so are the counterparty risks ...
The filing, which revealed MGIC is likely having liquidity issues ...
... Fitch Ratings put its credit ratings on MGIC and two of its units on watch for possible downgrade Thursday. ... Mortgage insurers such as MGIC cover potential lender losses on loans to borrowers who can't come up with a 20% down payment. The sector continues to struggle with soaring claims and declining new business ...
Stock Market Rallies to 1997 Prices
by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 03:58:00 PM
The only thing that is certain recently is volatility.
DOW up 3.5%
S&P 500 up 4.1%
NASDAQ up 4.0%
The S&P has now rallied back to 1997 prices! Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".
This is still the 2nd worst S&P 500 / DOW bear market in the U.S. in 100 years.
Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.
S&P: Delinquencies Surge for HELOCs and Jumbo Prime Loans
by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 03:01:00 PM
From Dow Jones: S&P: Home-Loan Delinquencies Grow In January
Standard & Poor's said delinquencies of home-related loans climbed in January, with the rate surging in particular from December for home-equity lines of credit and prime-rated jumbo mortgages.Subprime delinquency rates are still much higher than other categories, but HELOCs and Jumbo primes delinquencies are increasing at a faster rate. The delinquencies are moving up the value chain - we're all subprime now!
...
S&P said the smallest month-to-month increase as of the January distribution date was subprime mortgages ... The delinquency rates, though, still range from 42% of current total pool balances for 2005 to 49% for 2007.
emphasis added
Fed: Household Net Worth Cliff Dives in Q4
by Calculated Risk on 3/12/2009 12:13:00 PM
The Fed released the Q4 2008 Flow of Funds report today: Flow of Funds.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This is the Households and Nonprofit Net Worth as a percent of GDP.
This includes real estate and financial assets (stocks, bonds, pension reserves, deposits, etc) net of liabilities (mostly mortgages).
This ratio was relatively stable for almost 50 years, and then ... bubbles!
Rex Nutting at MarketWatch has more: Household net worth plunges 18% in 2008
Hit by the double whammy of declining home prices and a falling stock market, U.S. households saw their net worth fall by $11.2 trillion, or 18%, to $51.5 trillion at the end of 2008, wiping out five years of gains ...Household percent equity was at an all time low of 43.0%.
This graph shows homeowner percent equity since 1952. When prices were increasing dramatically, the percent homeowner equity was declining because homeowners were extracting equity from their homes. Now, with prices falling, the percent homeowner equity is Cliff Diving!
Note: approximately 31% of households do not have a mortgage. So the 50+ million households with mortgages have far less than 43.0% equity.
The third graph shows household real estate assets and mortgage debt as a percent of GDP. Household assets as a percent of GDP is now declining rapidly. Mortgage debt as a percent of GDP was up slightly in Q4, and is only declining slowly.
It's an old lesson: Assets values can fall quickly, but debt lingers!


