Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Bond Thread (merged)

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 06:05:57

More likely as institutional investors pull money out of junk bonds they will plow it back into investment grade securities, like government bonds, to match their assets to their liabilities. If previous runs on junk bonds is any indication this is actually positive for govies. However, it will hit bond traders, which is why majors such as Citibank & BofA have been struggling as of late with their fixed income trading. Major contributors to their bottom line. But, to put it in context, since cleaning up their balance sheets years ago, many US & international banks sold their large exposures in corporate bonds to hedge funds and other speculators. They will take the hit harder than the banks themselves.

This was an accident happening in slow motion. Yield hungry investors compressed yields to historic lows and in turn tempted more and more companies to tap the sub-investment grade market. Well, if you buy junk, you have to expect some defaults.


Credit is not evaporating. There is too much global liquidity at the moment. If US treasuries rise another 50 bps. it will not pressure homeowners who have jobs and fixed rate mortgages. However, if we see job losses then this will have a much larger affect on the housing market than US treasuries going up to 5%?

Poor borrowing decision linked to poorly thought out and exectued M&A activity is more responsible for these defaults than lack of liquidity. Did anyone expect discounts and rebates to save Detroit? I think digital is the demise of Kodak's film business not interest rates? :)
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby falser » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 11:06:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')ore likely as institutional investors pull money out of junk bonds they will plow it back into investment grade securities, like government bonds


What happens when government bonds become no longer investment grade? Even higher interest rates, which further compounds the problem doesn't it?
User avatar
falser
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 308
Joined: Fri 12 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Arlington, VA

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 11:29:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('falser', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')ore likely as institutional investors pull money out of junk bonds they will plow it back into investment grade securities, like government bonds


What happens when government bonds become no longer investment grade? Even higher interest rates, which further compounds the problem doesn't it?



I am really tired today. Killed in the markets and what's worse I think my view was correct, but the locals played with the WTI on the NYMEX and managed to stop all the shorts out. I know it's not your problem, it is mine, but I am just too tired this evening to deal with 'What if the dollar/treasuries/stocks/bonds all become worthless at the sametime' whine?

US treasuries are not going to become non-investment grade anytime soon and certainly not in 2005-06, so you can come out of your bunker and have a reasonable conversation. Otherwise, you can buy all the Italian government bonds in euros you like, but I don't think they are going to save your butt if the US goes tits up.

Meanwhile I am losing real money in these markets and that tends to keep you focussed on the fundamentals. I get so tired of peak oilers trying to change a geological event into a rant about everything they don't like about America. So, good night and good luck. :!:
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby falser » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 15:23:37

You could have just said you disagree with me and leave it at that. Personally, that US government bonds lock you into US dollars and something like $2 billion worth have to be bought every day to keep the US afloat is enough to keep me away. But alas I am not a professional trader, so I'll leave these investment tools for others.
User avatar
falser
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 308
Joined: Fri 12 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Arlington, VA

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby stu » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 20:40:25

Would it be an overstatement to say that this amazing?

I mean this in two respects.

The first is the amount and size of companies in the financial situation that they are in and the second is the lack of serious media coverage this is getting.

If the US goes belly up 95% of people are going to say they had no idea it was coming.
"The age of excess is over. The age of entropy has begun"
User avatar
stu
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2500
Joined: Mon 04 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ye Olde Englande

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby rogerhb » Wed 12 Oct 2005, 21:31:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')eanwhile I am losing real money in these markets and that tends to keep you focussed on the fundamentals.


Hmm, sympathy for the gamblers?

Fundamentals are keeping your house and putting food on the table.
"Complex problems have simple, easy to understand, wrong answers." - Henry Louis Mencken
User avatar
rogerhb
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
Posts: 4727
Joined: Mon 06 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Smalltown New Zealand

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 03:26:38

I don't know, I was thinking about this last night over a beer and this morning while I was getting ready to come to work. Yes, I gamble for a living. But, I do understand the fundamentals behind what I am doing. If I lose money, it is no one's fault, but my own. Someone else was more clever, quicker or just luckier. That is the game.

However, on the other hand, I have been successful at it for 20-years in commodities, foreign exchange, money markets, fixed income, equities and now energy markets.

I have lived through several currency crashes and survived - the drop in the dollar in the 80's, the ERM crisis in 1992, the Asian crisis, the Czech currency crisis in 1997 and the Russian crisis in 1998. I was trading the entire time. Market making. Providing liquidity to the market. Smoothing the volatility. I have watched other defaults like the Argentine default from the sidelines. I have seen a few near misses like Turkey & Brazil more recently where you wonder how they managed to pull another rabbit out of the hat? I guess to keep from walking over a cliff you do not have to turn around, you just have to stop going forward?

On the otherhand, I have seen the excesses in Japan & HK worked off much more slowly. A decade of deflation in asset prices, slow to no growth and several recessions. It is not as spectacular as a currency crisis, but it is good medicine for an economy whose fundamentals get outta whack.

Most people probably are only vaguely aware that the dollar was at 0.8200 against the euro in 2000 and at 1.3670 in 2004. That is a swing of 40% (i.e. the external value of the dollar lost 40% of it's purchasing power outside the USA). I saw the yen at 80.00 and at 145 in 1995 and 1998 that is a move of 45%. Yet, in neither case did the system implode in Europe, Japan or the USA. Real wealth was created and destroyed, but most people were quite unaware about it or very passively interested because it might have effected where they took their vacation. Sometimes these asset reallocations are necessary.

So, yes, the US borrow too much money. They do not raise enough taxes to pay for their spending. Housing markets need to correct downwards. Relative to incomes, housing prices are less affordable today than they were in 1991, and that is in a low interest rate environment, so as interest rates rise, this will be a shock to homeowners. Nevermind high heating bills this winter, which I am sure many households have not budgeted for as the savings rate in the US is negative.

It is going to get painful. There is no avoiding this. And, if the government tries to borrow their way out of this coming recession it will only make America's external situation worse (i.e. higher interest rates and/or a weaker dollar). I would not rule out a euro/dollar of 1.4000 in the next 2-years and Fed funds of 6% in any case.

But, back to sub-investment grade junk bonds. There is chance of default attached to every bond by S&P, Moody's, Fitch, Dun&Bradstreet, etc. All the way from AAA to D for default. The lower the rating the greater the chance of a default. This has very little to do with the availibility of credit or liquidity, but is a mathmetical formula that measures a firm's ability to repay debt just like your own personal credit score measures how big a mortgage you can repay. Now you may have a crap credit score and your local bank may still give you a loan. That is silly, but it happens. A firm may issue debt with a really bad credit rating and if investors are foolish enough to buy their debt then they deserve to lose money.

GMAC & Ford credit have been on my radar screen for at least 3-years as their ratings continued to slide. Serious investors have been shedding their debt at each negative turn. The only ones holding their debt now are the speculators, hedge funds and a core of investors who believe naively that GM & Ford are too big to fail therefore there will always be a rescue somewhere along the line. I don't buy that line of thinking. I have seen enough defaults to know better.

However, it is very hard to protect investors from their own greed. When an Italian retail (i.e. amateur) customer buys Argentine bonds because they carry a high coupon or interest rate it is his own naive belief that the IMF or someone will never let Argentine default, except Argentine has spent roughly half of the past 200-years in technical default on their debts, then who am I to stop them? They are not a good investment. Emerging market bond traders know this. Ordinary investors should just avoid them. If Argentina defaults it has nothing to do with the health of the global economy and everything to do with their own mismanagement and prolifagy.

Did anyone seriously believe that people would keep buying SUVs forever? That Ford & GM could keep giving zero interest loans and rebates forever? That Toyota and it's competitors were just going to let Ford & GM dominate forever despite making inferior autos? That Ford & GM could borrow at will from their employees pension fund accounts and then magically make those funds reappear when their employees retired and started drawing pensions? It is criminal what these firms did. Fobbing off their pension liabilities on Delphi or on the federal government. However, it did not stop stupid investors continuing to back their idiocy by buying GM & Ford stock or investing in GMAC & Ford Credit bonds. Buyer beware. I certainly regret buying Ford stock in 2003 'for the bounce'! :oops:

So, if you think the US will default on their debt you can invest in other asset classes. But, before you do, you may want to compare the debts & deficits of the US to each country of the eurozone like Italy, Portugal, Greece, Spain & France, and you might find out that the US' deficit is no worse. You may want to consider that gasoline in the US is $2.50-3.00 versus $5.00-6.00 in Europe; that income taxes are 29% vs. 41%; that sales taxes are 3-4% vs. 17% VAT in Europe; that the US economy grows at roughly twice the pace of Europe (3.5-4.0% vs. 1.5-2.0%); you may look at the US economy with 5% unemployment vs. Europe with over 10%; and then you might consider the costs of integrating the newer members into the EU15, and the efficiency of transfering wealth from successful economies to less successful ones as a matter of policy?

There are good reasons to invest in some parts of Europe, but after you add up the sums, you might consider the size of the US' deficits against potential revenue it can raise from taxes vs. how highly Europeans already are taxed and their deficits are no better. It is your decision, but just do the math before you write the US dollar off and tell me how great the euro is. I like Europe. I have spent the past 13-years living in Austria, Germany, the UK, the Czech Republic, the Ukraine, Russia and now Cyprus. I really enjoy the quality of life & diversity of languages & cultures. However, I don't pretend that I like paying up to 50% of my income in taxes, healthcare and unemployment insurance like I had to in Germany. Mind you I have those same high costs if I move back to Canada, too. So, it is just a personal choice.

Take care of your own personal finances and urge your government anyway you can to curb their spending. I am just watching from the sidelines. It won't hurt me per se, but a lot will get hurt if the US does not mend its ways.

In the meantime, I will continue to second guess central bankers, undermine prolific governments and try to keep them honest. If I lose money, no big deal, it is someone else's gain. But, yesterday was a bad day. No one is smarter than the markets. It is very humbling. :)
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby SHiFTY » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 04:27:07

Interesting commentary. Thanks for that.

I guess my biggest fear is the sheer size of the US deficit and debts. Sure, in percentage terms it is on par with those of many Euro-zone countries, but in sheer dollars, wow.

I would imagine the US cannot borrow 85% of the world's savings, $2b a day, forever. There must be consequences.
User avatar
SHiFTY
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 163
Joined: Mon 27 Jun 2005, 03:00:00

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 04:55:06

I agree. I think the US absorbs 70% of the world's current account savings, but let's not tribble over details. It is still a huge amount. Here is a new article in this week's Economist. Very timely.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')rad Setser and Nouriel Roubini, of Roubini Global Economics, a consultancy, reckon that central-bank buying at its peak could have dampened Treasury yields by up to two percentage points. And a new paper by Francis Warnock and Veronica Cacdac Warnock, of the University of Virginia, published by the Fed, finds that if foreign central banks had bought no Treasuries over the past year, ten-year yields would be 60 basis points higher. If all foreigners had boycotted American bonds, the increase would be 1.5 percentage points.


Behind the Treasury-bond market's recent ups and downs

If you cannot access the whole article I can post it if you like?

I think in summary what they are saying is that the appetite to buy US bonds is decreasing, but if foreign central banks had not bought treasuries then perhaps yields might have reached only 5.75-6.00% on the 10-year treasury instead of the sub-4% we saw, and that now instead of 4.4% that yields would be closer to 5.5-6%. That extra investment would have to come from private & institutional investors that would demand higher yields than the mainly Asian central banks did. If yields are high enough you might even tempt US investors back into the market? :)

To be honest, in historical terms, 6% is not a bad yield. Certainly, lower than the levels we saw during the 70/s-80/s, and had Fed funds not dipped to 1% & 10-yr UST 4% then likely we would not have seen the recent run-up in housing prices that we have seen since 2000?

It is a big problem. But, what scares me is the current admin's almost total disconnect from reality over this and other issues. Ideology is dangerous. It is much better to be pragmatic and fiscally conservative.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBean » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 06:48:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')It is a big problem. But, what scares me is the current admin's almost total disconnect from reality over this and other issues. Ideology is dangerous. It is much better to be pragmatic and fiscally conservative.


Well if it's true what many observers say, that the bureaucratic and politically mangled CPI number (not even mentioning the utterly ridiculous "core" CPI) is downgraded by several points compared to "real" inflation... then it's not just the current admin but the whole economic community that is disconnected from reality.

If US inflation is really higher than CPI shows, then US real GDP growth is much smaller (perhaps comparable to Europe, assuming that EU's CPI numbers are not as badly twisted as US - which they could be for all I know).

If US GDP growth has been much smaller (or even negative or close to) so too has been produtivity growth (GDP/hours worked).

If real inflation is higher, lot's of investors are loosing money instead of profiting, and making bad investments.

If real inflation is higher, US consumers not only have been loosing purchasing power (ie getting poorer) as the numbers show allready, they've been getting poorer BIG TIME.

If US inflation numbers are politically twisted, the whole US economy is make-belief economy. And it seems faith begins to falter...
User avatar
MrBean
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1202
Joined: Sun 26 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 09:04:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell if it's true what many observers say, that the bureaucratic and politically mangled CPI number (not even mentioning the utterly ridiculous "core" CPI) is downgraded by several points compared to "real" inflation... then it's not just the current admin but the whole economic community that is disconnected from reality.


A common misconception, but inaccurate. Lot's of economic activity gets measured & analyzed by both public and private analysts who cross reference and check one another for errors & ommissions such as

trade balance
import price index
initial jobless claims
continuing jobless claims
consumer price index
producer price index
advance retail sales
industrial production
capacity utilization
U of Michigan confidence indicator
business inventories
monthly budget statement
empire manufacturing
net foreign security purchases
housing market index
consumer confidence
mortgage applications
housing starts
building permits
Fed's beige book
leading indicators
existing home sales
income
savings
etc.

So, your complaint may be that because housing isn't captured in CPI that it is invalid, but a housing component in the form of rents is included in CPI, and data on housing itself is captured somewhere else, so it is not like they have forgotten about it. And, as most OECD countries collect data in a similar manner and is compared with the OECD, World Banks, IMF's own forecasts you can compare countries quite easily. Also, as the data is collected in the same manner month after month, you can look for emerging trends, and discount any outliers which may be corrected at a later date.

The interesting thing about data is that everyone uses it. If the number does not support your case, you say it must be wrong. If the number supports your case, you say it is proof. :)
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby linlithgowoil » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 09:23:05

i always wondered why they dont include housing costs in inflation? isnt this the most important thing to the average person? if house cost inflation is rising at 20% but everything else is at 2% (including wages), this is a bad thing. It means houses are becoming less affordable, and given that 'shelter' is one of the basic things you need in life, surely it is wrongto omit this from inflation numbers.

who cares if the cost of a plastic dvd player from china has deflated 50% in 2 years if you are homeless?
User avatar
linlithgowoil
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 828
Joined: Mon 20 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Scotland

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBean » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 09:48:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')So, your complaint may be that because housing isn't captured in CPI that it is invalid, but a housing component in the form of rents is included in CPI, and data on housing itself is captured somewhere else, so it is not like they have forgotten about it. And, as most OECD countries collect data in a similar manner and is compared with the OECD, World Banks, IMF's own forecasts you can compare countries quite easily. Also, as the data is collected in the same manner month after month, you can look for emerging trends, and discount any outliers which may be corrected at a later date.


What is amusing is that a posh investment banker don't know how CPI is calculated but still trusts it blindly, don't apparently know that the basket get's adjusted quite often (to show what politicians wish to see), naively believes that inflation numbers that are gathered and cookep up in various ways in various countries (even among OECD) are directly comprarable - well they are not.

http://www.gillespieresearch.com/cgi-bi ... cle/id=343
User avatar
MrBean
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1202
Joined: Sun 26 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 13 Oct 2005, 10:19:28

Ah Mr. Bean I should have left you on ignore. My curiosity always gets the best of me. A shadow ministry of statistics? What in someone's basement or do they actually carry out all their own surveys? :!:


Estimates, forecasts, actual numbers & revisions are all released daily from various government and non-government agencies. They are usually all based on sample estimates drawn from a population. They are all open to samply bias and error. Collecting all the 'correct data' would be impractical. And as it changes so rapidly quickly out of date in any case.

A temperature will not tell a doctor whether a patient has a flu or is dying of cancer, it just tells him what the patients temperature is at that moment. Without a baseline reading the doctor does not even know if the temperature is rising or falling? And the doctor does not only rely on the thermometer, but also looks for other symptoms before making a diagnosis. Even then the doctor can get the diagnosis wrong, but at least he has collected the data and made the observations, so that if there is a mistake he knows where to start looking.

For me any given number is not very important, but many observations taken together. Usually when a headline number is released the market reacts to the number based on its own prediction of the number. If the number comes out as expected there is little or no reaction. If the number is higher or lower than expected, then the market reacts, often violently, to the new information. Also, the market quickly discounts today's number and looks forward to the next set of numbers. It is like wishing your life away.

Is the system perfect? Obviously not, but without economic statistics you are a blind as a ship in the fog without navigational maps or a compass. So, whether I am naive or not is not really the issue. You work with the numbers you have and make the best of them.

If Italy, Spain, Greece and Portugal get caught lying about their debts & deficits in order to qualify for entry into the euro it has political as well as economic ramifications on the value of the euro and European interest rates. Deliberate falsification of data released to the market is inexcusable.

However, unless you trust a number until proven otherwise it is the number you use. Otherwise you would be paralyzed. Just sitting there wondering if the world had 25-50-75-100-125 mpbd of oil or not? Does VZL produce 3 mbpd or just 2.3 mbpd? You rely on various sources and if it is 3 mio as Chevez says then you have to ask where are the $4 billion in central bank reserves that should be there from the revenue?

I guess I am naive. :)
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 14 Oct 2005, 09:46:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ctober 14, 2005; Page C3
The price of Refco Inc. bonds yesterday plunged to levels that suggested the derivatives-trading company might renege on its debts, adding to concerns in a junk-bond market already jittery over troubles in the automotive industry.
Investors headed for the exits as Refco shut down trading subsidiary Refco Capital Markets Ltd., citing a shortage of cash. Also, people familiar with the situation said yesterday that Refco may be meeting with its bankers to discuss the company's financial situation.
The market value of Refco bonds maturing in 2012 fell as low as 30 cents on the dollar, from 76 cents on Wednesday and 108 last week. The price of the company's traded loans fell as low as 60 cents on the dollar, from more than 90 cents Wednesday. Ratings firm Standard and Poor's downgraded Refco's "junk," or speculative-grade, subordinated debt two notches, to triple-C from single-B-minus.



This one affects me personally. I cannot really say why, but let's say, it is the result of fraud charges & accounting irregularities at Refco, and they in turn are holding some collateral from us on a loan. Unfortunately, the collateral is worth substantially more than the loan. If they go into bankruptcy, our collateral will likely get divided amoung other unsecured creditors and we may only get dimes back on our dollars. The fact that they illegally seized our collateral will not likely matter too much to the judge in the bankruptcy proceedings. It really sucks. Sometimes you rol with the punches, sometimes you get knocked-out. :!:
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby BabyPeanut » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 08:21:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'S')ometimes you rol with the punches, sometimes you get knocked-out. :!:

Image
Refco appears to have imploded. :shock:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/10/14/business/refco.php]Refco to shut unit as SEC halts withdrawals (link)[/url]
By Jenny Anderson The New York Times
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2005

...skip...

The SEC said clients would not be allowed to withdraw capital from the securities unit and from Refco Clearing, citing concerns about the impact on financial markets and the company's financial stability.

Trading in Refco shares was halted on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. On Thursday, the company's shares fell $2.95, or 27 percent, to $9.10.

Standard & Poor's on Friday cut its credit rating on Refco's debt for the third time this week, this time to CC from B-minus - both are junk bond ratings - and maintained a negative credit watch on the rating, indicating that it may downgrade the company further.

...snip...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')url=http://www.refco.com/about/index.asp]WTF is Refco? (link)[/url]
REFCO provides a broad range of financial products and services world-wide through its subsidiaries and affiliates. REFCO globally integrates client requirements with its extensive product offerings, including exchange-traded derivatives, managed futures, prime brokerage services, fixed income, foreign exchange, equities, OTC derivatives and asset management.


Derivatives, derivatives...where have I heard that term before? Oh! I remember it was the phrase "ticking timebomb derivatives market". That was it!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')url=http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/1310AP_Refco_Explainer.html]Refco: What it does, why it's in trouble (lnk)[/url]
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Friday, October 14, 2005 · Last updated 2:06 p.m. PT

...skip...

As it says in its Securities and Exchange Commission filings, Refco Inc. - the parent company, the entity whose shares are publicly traded - has two main businesses: derivatives brokerage and clearing, and prime brokerage/capital markets.

The derivatives segment provides trading services for customers for derivatives contracts tied to interest rates, foreign currencies, commodities futures and many other items - they're widely traded in by both speculators and those seeking to hedge risk.

Refco is one of the biggest players in this market; in fiscal 2005, which ended in February, the derivatives segment generated $971.4 million in revenue, out of the company's total of $1.3 billion. It also generated $134.5 million in operating income.

...snip...


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')url=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/15/business/15refco.html]The Fall of Refco Is Providing a Test for Wall Street (link)[/url]

...skip...

Mr. Bennett, smartly dressed and in good spirits, sat and chatted about the paintings on the office walls and the options that Refco had for moving when its lease came up at the end of the year. In riding a worldwide boom in the trading of commodities and derivatives, Refco was on top of its game: the company had successfully gone public in August, selling $583 million in stock and making Mr. Bennett and other top executives very rich men.

"He didn't seem to have a care in the world," said the chairman of the Philadelphia exchange, Meyer S. Frucher.

Mr. Bennett is no longer chief executive. Forced to wear a monitoring device on his ankle, he now faces a charge of securities fraud in connection with $430 million in debt that prosecutors say he hid from regulators and investors. His firm is rapidly sliding over the brink as customers flee and regulators and bankers look to pick up the pieces.

Wall Street's history is littered with abrupt financial collapses, but few have been as fast and furious as the implosion of Refco this week.
...snip...
BabyPeanut
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3275
Joined: Tue 17 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Location: 39° 39' N 77° 77' W or thereabouts
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby rkerver » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 10:22:17

OH NOOOO! Not just MrBill, we're all silly putty! Squish.
User avatar
rkerver
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 119
Joined: Wed 14 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Worcester, Massachusetts

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 17 Oct 2005, 06:57:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')erivatives, derivatives...where have I heard that term before? Oh! I remember it was the phrase "ticking timebomb derivatives market". That was it!



Refco's problems are at that their very heart fraud & corruption and nothing to do with market risks posed by derivatives.

Derivatives are contracts for differences (i.e. cash vs. physical settlement) on any underlying security (US treasuries, commodities, oil & gas, etc.) and as such represent a bet on the underlying securities price movement.

There is nothing intransparent about trading a futures contract on the NYMEX for 1000 barrels of oil for delivery in December. Or I can buy an option on 1000 barrels of oil for delivery in December. Or I can buy an over the counter (OTC) option for 1000 barrels of oil for delivery in December on which the final settlement price will be based on the NYMEX settlement price. None is inherently more risky than the other.

Of course, if I use off-balance sheet loans and swaps to hide losses or distort my true financial condition then that is not using derivatives it is called lying with derivatives. In the case of Refco, they helped themselves to collateral we had pledged against a loan. That is just called stealing. :!:
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby BabyPeanut » Mon 17 Oct 2005, 09:39:01

Thanks. I always feel like I learn so much here.
BabyPeanut
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3275
Joined: Tue 17 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Location: 39° 39' N 77° 77' W or thereabouts

Re: Worst period of bond downgrading since Depression

Unread postby Leanan » Mon 17 Oct 2005, 10:31:04

Jerome a Paris posted a fascinating article at DailyKos.com yesterday. One way or another, he thinks we're headed for trouble. The "fundamentals" are simply too far out of whack.

One interesting tidbit he posted was that 31% of American consumption has been funded by re-financing homes. With interest rates rising, that source of cash has been cut off. And with high energy prices, the bankruptcy bill, and the change in credit card minimum payments, at the very least, people are going to have to severely cut back on their spending.

He thinks we might be facing a '70s type situation, or worse, hyperinflation a la Weimar.

Meanwhile, CNN this morning reported on the rush to declare bankruptcy. The deadline was today, I believe. They showed photos of lines of people, all waiting to declare bankruptcy. Some bankruptcy lawyers have been forced to turn people away. In New York, people waited all day in the pouring rain. In Atlanta, the line stretched for blocks.
User avatar
Leanan
News Editor
News Editor
 
Posts: 4582
Joined: Thu 20 May 2004, 03:00:00

PreviousNext

Return to Economics & Finance

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

cron