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Friday, July 20, 2007

Today's Nugget of Hilarity

by Tanta on 7/20/2007 10:20:00 AM

There appears to be some questions about Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski's recent real estate deal. (Stunning? Surprising? On tenterhooks yet?) It seems the parcel traded at the assessed value, not the appraised value. So?

SOLDOTNA -- U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski is drawing criticism this week over Kenai River property she bought late last year from real estate developer and political supporter Bob Penney. . . .

After two days of criticism online and on talk radio, both Penney and a spokesman for Murkowski described the deal as a fair trade between people who chose to become neighbors on the river.

They said Murkowski, R-Alaska, and husband Verne Martell paid Penney the amount of the Kenai Peninsula Borough's most recent assessment on the 1.27 acres: $179,400. Murkowski's spokesman said there was nothing improper about the sale.

This year's borough assessment, completed after the sale, is for $214,900. . . .

Penney said he was surprised that the assessed value was as high as it was -- and that the family agreed to the price. The assessed value the year before the sale was $120,300, and Penney said he didn't know it had changed in 2006.

"Word of honor, I did not know what the assessed value was," he said. "I thought it was still $120,000."

The 2005 assessment was up only about $11,000 from 2004, compared to the $59,000 increase last year and $36,000 this year.

"Who the hell would ever think it would jump like that?" Penney said.
Who the hell would ever think it would jump like that? How about everybody in the universe?

Today's Nugget of Wisdom

by Tanta on 7/20/2007 07:53:00 AM

From Bloomberg, "Miami Condo Glut Pushes Florida's Economy to Brink of Recession":

In the 1970s, when condos were a new product, Florida developers built 500,000 units and prices fell 50 percent, said Brad Hunter of MetroStudy, a research firm in West Palm Beach.

``The difference is, back then they were two-story condo buildings that had $50,000 units,'' Hunter said. ``Nowadays they are $700,000 units in 20-story buildings. Instead of building too much stuff that people could afford like we did then, this time we built too much stuff that people can't afford.''

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Chrysler sweetens pricing on loans

by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2007 08:53:00 PM

From Reuters: Chrysler sweetens pricing on loans

Pricing has been sweetened on Chrysler Financial Services' $6 billion of first- and second-lien term loans, sources told Reuters Loan Pricing Corp. on Thursday.

The $4 billion first-lien loan pricing is being raised by 25 basis points to 300 basis points over the London interbank offered rate, while the $2 billion second-lien term loan is being raised by 50 basis points to 550 basis points over Libor, sources told Reuters LPC.

Call language on both term loans also is being tightened.
...
The changes come on the heels of talk of revisions to the Chrysler Corp. deal earlier this week.
Also from Reuters: Tower Automotive sweetens pricing on loan
Pricing has been sweetened on Tower Automotive's $895 million of first and second-lien bank loans, sources told Reuters Loan Pricing Corp. on Thursday.

The first-lien term loan has been increased to 400 basis points over the London interbank offered rate from 325 basis points to 350 basis points over LIBOR, while the second-lien term loan is being raised to 750 basis points over LIBOR from 625 to 650 basis points over LIBOR, sources said.

The first-lien loan, which did not have call language earlier, now benefits from 101 soft-call and is being issued at 98.5.

Call language on the second-lien loan is being tightened ...

Bernanke: Housing ATM Overblown

by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2007 03:04:00 PM

From Greg Ip at the WSJ economics blog: Bernanke Rains on Theory of Houses as ATMs

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the role of home equity as source of purchasing power isn’t significant, a clear break from the views of Alan Greenspan and many economists.
...
Mr. Bernanke ...: “Our sense — and this so far seems to be borne out by the data — is that consumers respond to changes in the value of their home essentially because there’s a change in their wealth, not because there’s a change in their access to liquid assets.”
Bernanke has been wrong about everything else related to housing, but maybe he'll be correct here. However, clearly Bernanke's view is "not borne out by the data" - at least not yet. Based on most research on MEW, the impact of declining MEW, if any, would probably hit consumption in the 2nd half of '07. We already know there was a sharp slowdown in Q2 PCE growth, but that might be related to higher gas prices and not declining MEW.
Mr. Bernanke went on to reiterate it’s the price of homes, not MEW or financial contagion that represents the biggest risk of spillover from the housing slump. “House prices, nationally speaking, have not declined,” he said. “They’ve only risen more slowly, and so we have not yet seen anything except in a few local areas akin to a decline in house prices.” If they do decline, he said a hit to consumer spending could be expected on the order of “4 cents and 9 cents on the dollar” of lost home wealth.
Although prices have increased slightly according to OFHEO, prices have fallen nationwide by several other measures (NAR, FHFB):
The FHFB reported the decline in the average price was $501, or 0.16 percent, from $306,759 in October 2005 to $306,258 in October 2006. This is the first decline in the MIRS since 1992-93.
And prices have most likely fallen more since October of last year.

S&P Cuts Rtgs On 75 US Synth ABS CDOs

by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2007 01:47:00 PM

More downgrades from Standard & Poor's:

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services today lowered its ratings on 93 tranches from 75 U.S. synthetic collateralized debt obligation of asset-backed securities (CDO of ABS) transactions.

The downgrades follow a review of all of Standard & Poor's rated synthetic CDO transactions with exposure to U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities backed by subprime first-lien collateral ("U.S. subprime first-lien RMBS") that saw ratings lowered on July 12, 2007 (see the related press release, "Various U.S. First-Lien Subprime RMBS Classes Downgraded," published July 12, 2007, on RatingsDirect, the real-time Web-based source for Standard & Poor's credit ratings, research, and risk analysis, at www.ratingsdirect.com, and on Standard & Poor's Web site, www.standardandpoors.com).

S&P Downgrades 419 Second Lien Classes

by Tanta on 7/19/2007 11:18:00 AM

Available here for registered users:

NEW YORK (Standard & Poor's) July 19, 2007--Standard & Poor's Ratings Services today lowered its credit ratings on 418 classes of U.S. residential
mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) backed by U.S. closed-end second-lien mortgage collateral issued from the beginning of January 2005 through the end of January 2007. . . .

These rating actions resolve 229 outstanding CreditWatch actions taken since Oct. 6, 2006, involving U.S. RMBS backed by closed-end second-lien collateral. It is important to note that 127 of the classes affected by today's rating actions have been previously downgraded. In fact, prior to today, Standard & Poor's had already lowered its ratings on 197 classes of U.S. RMBS backed by closed-end second-lien collateral issued between the beginning of January 2005 and the end of December 2006. Some of the classes affected by today's rating actions have been downgraded multiple times for a total of 275 previous downgrade actions.

The affected 418 downgraded classes had an original total balance of approximately $3.8 billion, which represents 6.1% of the approximately $62 billion in U.S. RMBS backed by closed-end second-lien collateral rated by Standard & Poor's from the beginning of January 2005 through the end of January 2007. During the same period, the total balance of U.S. RMBS securities backed by all types of residential mortgage collateral issued in the non-agency market was over $2.5 trillion.

Standard & Poor's is taking these actions because it believes that losses on U.S. RMBS backed by closed-end second-lien collateral will significantly exceed historical precedent and our original assumptions. We believe that this poor performance results from a combination of factors including, but not limited to, an environment of looser underwriting standards; pressure on home
prices; speculative borrowing behavior; risk layering (the combination of several risk elements for one single borrower); very high combined loan-to-values (CLTVs); financial pressure on borrowers resulting from payment increases on first-lien mortgages; and questionable data quality. Furthermore, in the past, when borrowers had difficulty managing their mortgage payments, they were able to refinance. However, as a result of tighter underwriting standards, an increase in interest rates, and home price erosion in various regions of the country, we believe it will be more difficult to refinance, and this will result in further delinquencies and defaults.

These U.S. RMBS transactions backed by closed-end second-lien collateral have been experiencing high early payment defaults that have not abated. Originally, we believed that these losses might abate and that the transactions would revert to delinquency and default patterns that are closer to historic norms. However, these transactions have now reached a sufficient level of seasoning for us to conclude that, based on the factors above, they will evidence delinquency and default loss trends indicative of poor future performance that will continue to exceed historic precedent and our original ratings assumptions. . . .

The downgrades on the 418 different classes were spread across the various ratings categories as follows: 34.62% were from the 'BBB' rating category, 25.42% were from 'BB', 17.19% from 'A', 16.22% from 'B', 3.15% from 'AA', 2.66% from 'CCC', and 0.73% from 'AAA'. Therefore, 78.93% of the lowered ratings were from classes rated 'BBB+' or lower. (It should be noted that although there are eight 'AAA' rated classes included in this analysis, they are actually from only three transactions.) . . .

WaMu Staying Committed to Subprime

by Tanta on 7/19/2007 08:36:00 AM

There was some derision over this statement from WaMu in the comments yesterday:

In an interview, Chief Executive Kerry Killinger said that effective immediately, Seattle-based WaMu will require full documentation of income and assets from prospective subprime borrowers, eliminating riskier "stated income" loans.

WaMu will also no longer offer subprime adjustable-rate mortgages with initial fixed terms of fewer than five years. This eliminates so-called 2/28 and 3/27 loans, which carry low initial rates that jump to much higher, floating rates after two or three years. Stagnating home prices have left thousands of U.S. homeowners unable to refinance after rates reset higher.

The thrift will also require tax and insurance escrow accounts for all new subprime home loans.

"Too much money, and some would say, irrational money flooded the subprime market in the last couple of years," Killinger said. "This led underwriting standards to decline, credit spreads to narrow, and volumes to surge, and now has caused delinquencies to soar."

Killinger said WaMu has reduced subprime loan volume 70 percent, and is selling most subprime loans the thrift makes. Still, he said "we're absolutely committed to the subprime mortgage business. It serves a very important customer need."

I'll be honest with you: I hope that WaMu means that, and does stay committed to the subprime business. In my view, the biggest cause of the poison in the subprime market over the last few years has been that respectable regulated depositories have either shied away from the entire market, leaving it to the tender mercies of the envelope-pushers and predators, or have joined the envelope-pushers and predators in offering the toxic loan terms (stated high-LTV 2/28s with no escrows, for instance). To have a regulated player like WaMu announcing that it will stay in this market, but on much safer loan terms, means that there will come some needed stability to a much smaller but still functioning subprime mortgage market.

I have never, and do not now have, any objections to subprime mortgage lending as such. I don't object to bankruptcy laws, either: people do get into trouble and they do need to be able to start over. If the subprime mortgage market goes back to its original and best function of a mostly refi with some low-LTV purchase market that provides a way out of temporary debt problems or a way to re-establish credit for borrowers with past problems, I'll be happy to cheer it on.

I'll be even happier if the big depositories commit themselves to this, so that subprime borrowers have access to regulated lenders who are offering fairly-priced, fully-disclosed, conservatively-structured loans. That won't prevent non-regulated non-depositories from making subprime loans, but it will go a long way to forcing them to meet the standards of big players like WaMu. If the big depositories simply exit the business, the borrowers will simply be left to the sharks. Why would that be a good thing?

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

JPMorgan: `A Little Freeze' in Lending for LBOs

by Calculated Risk on 7/18/2007 03:36:00 PM

From Bloomberg: JPMorgan's Dimon Sees `A Little Freeze' in Lending for LBOs

JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said demand for leveraged buyout debt is drying up and banks may be left holding more loans that they can't sell.

There is ``kind of a little freeze in the marketplace,'' Dimon said on a conference call with investors to discuss the New York-based bank's second-quarter earnings. ``If you see this continue you will see the Street taking on a lot of bridge loans and more aggressive repricing of those things.''

More on "Containment"

by Calculated Risk on 7/18/2007 12:59:00 PM

Greg Ip at the WSJ asks: Will Subprime Problems Remain Contained?

Despite fears in the markets and press that subprime problems would trigger broader contagion, the Federal Reserve has repeatedly predicted that what started in subprime would stay in subprime. Chairman Ben Bernanke largely echoed that sentiment in congressional testimony today, but displayed some concern that troubles might spread.

A key reason for that confidence is [the following] chart, from page 8 of the Monetary Policy Report released today, showing that the sharp rise in delinquencies has been confined to one class of loan: subprime variable-rate mortgages.
Here is the referenced report: Monetary Policy Report to the Congress

Monetary Policy Report Delinquency RatesClick on graph for larger image.

Note that Subprime delinquency rates are through May, but Prime delinquency rates are only through April.

And where are the Alt-A delinquency rates? Just yesterday, Fitch and Moody's expressed concern about Alt-A delinquency rates:
Moody's has noted a negative trend in delinquencies for first-lien, Alt-A mortgage loans originated in late 2005 and 2006. Recent data shows that these first-lien, Alt-A mortgage loans have delinquency rates that are higher than original expectations ...
Because of recent events, and excluded data points, this chart doesn't suggest containment to me in the mortgage market. And it doesn't include increasing concerns about CRE loans, and lower quality corporate debt.

Implode-O-Meter: 100 major U.S. lenders have "imploded"

by Calculated Risk on 7/18/2007 12:45:00 PM

The Mortgage Lender Implode-O-Meter has reached 100.