Bond insurers are begging banks to tear up $125 billion in credit default swaps in order to save their lives. You never know, this could be a blackmail situation…”hey, you rip up these Credit Default Swaps or you will take big losses when we fail”.
Yes, I ride these guys hard and always assume the worst first. Why shouldn’t I? Since New Century failed in March of 2007 we have been lied to at least in 99% of the cases regarding potential serious problems with companies claiming ’there is nothing to see here’ and by officials, analysts and famous investors when talking about the mortgage, housing or credit crisis in general.
My standard operating procedure it to assume they are lying and let them prove they are not. What generally happens is a story like this breaks and the company says ‘there is nothing to see here’. The other companies involved and some sort of official, regulator or large scale investor backs up their story. Then, they find someone on which to blame the story as being ‘misconstrued’. Two months later it comes full circle where the worst case scenario was true all along. I believe that this story could be big.[..]
"The nominal value of these CDSs on CDOs is about $125bn, according to estimates by Standard & Poor’s, and banks with the most exposure, such as Citibank, Merrill Lynch and UBS, have already taken writedowns related to the hedges as the credit quality of the bond insurers has deteriorated in recent months. To commute an insurance contract, the policyholder usually receives an upfront payment in exchange for agreeing to tear up the policy.
There is little certainty about whether or not these CDSs will ever have to be paid out. In theory, bond insurers could be on the hook for billions of dollars, but it is possible that if market conditions stabilise and improve, their actual pay-outs might be low.”
This reminds me of when I make my typical $50 bets with friends on a sporting events and half way into it I am getting killed. I always ask, “how about I pay you $5 now and we call it even” before the game is over knowing my odds of losing $50 are near a sure thing. Hey, you never get anything in life unless you ask for it, right?
This desperate act comes as reports are surfacing that the public mutual fund universe has not been truthful about their structured mortgage debt marks. Sources say that most mutual fund managers have their MBS holdings mis-priced, which puts the public at significant risk. The job that structured mortgage debt did on hedge funds and banks has been bad, but a mark-to-market across the public mutual fund universe could be worse because it’s larger and directly effects Ma and Pa America.
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"For my part, whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to know the whole truth; to know the worst and provide for it." - Patrick Henry
The level of injustice and wrong you endure is directly determined by how much you quietly submit to. Even to the point of extinction.