The Panic Of 2007 - The Recent Volatile Markets Explained
End of the World or Muddle Through? This week I try to explain in
simple terms the very complicated story of how we went from some
bad mortgage loan practices in the US to the point of world
credit markets freezing up. There is a connection between the
retirement plans of Mr. and Mrs. Watanabe in Japan and the
subprime problems of Mr. and Mrs. Smith in California. We find
the relationship between European banks and problematic hedge
funds. And finally, we try and see how we get out of this mess.
Oddly, I think it is hedge funds (and maybe Warren Buffett) to
the rescue, but not in the way you would think. It is a lot to
cover, so let's jump right in. (And there are a lot of charts,
so while this will print out long, it is only a little longer
than the usual in word length.)
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which features the writing of other analysts and comes out on
Tuesday.
To say the credit markets are frozen is an understatement.
Talking to any number of people who have been in the markets for
decades, this is the worst in their memory. Ironically, it is the
100-year anniversary of the Panic of 1907, when one banker (J. P.
Morgan) stepped in and provided liquidity to the markets. The
central banks of the world are providing liquidity; but as we
will see, it is not mere liquidity that is needed.
You cannot explain the problems with just one or two items. A
perfect storm of this sort takes a number of factors all coming
together to work its mischief. Bad mortgage underwriting
practices, bad rating agency practices, a destruction of
confidence, excessive leverage and then the withdrawal of that
leverage, the need for yield, greed, and complacency which then
in a Minsky moment (explained below) becomes paralyzing fear -
all play their part.
An Alphabet Soup of Credit
But let's start at the beginning. In the early '90s, investment
banks created a new type of security called an Asset Backed
Security (ABS). And it was a very good thing. Essentially,
investment banks would take a thousand mortgages or car loans or
commercial mortgages or bank loans and put them into a security.
You could have a Residential Mortgage Backed Security (RMBS) or
Commercial Mortgage Backed Security (CMBS) or a Collateralized
Loan Obligation (CLO) and then a Collateralized Debt Obligation
(CDO).
I am going to grossly oversimplify the following description, but
the principle is correct. Let's take a look at how a Commercial
Mortgage Backed Security is created. If you are a bank or
institution, when you make a loan on a mall or office building,
you incur a certain amount of risk. If you hold 100 such loans,
you can almost be certain that some of those loans are going to
be bad. Further, you are limited in the amount of loans you can
make by the capital you have in your company. But what if you
could package up those loans and sell them? You get your cash
back, and then you can keep the servicing fees and make more
loans. But who would want to take the risk of your loans?
Through a form of financial alchemy, you can take your loans and
increase the quality of them to potential investors. Let's say
you have $100 million in commercial mortgage loans. You take this
pool and divide it up into 5-7 (or maybe more!) groups called
tranches. The first group gets the first (as an example) 60% of
the principal which gets repaid. That means that 80% of the loans
would have to default and lose 50% (80% of the loans times 50%
loss is 40% total portfolio losses) of their value before your
money would be at risk. If the bank originating the loan is not
completely asleep at the wheel, your risk of an actual loss is
quite small.
So, an investment bank goes to a rating agency (Moody's,
Standard and Poor's, or Fitch) and pays them a fee to rate that
tranche in terms of risk. Since the level of risk is small, that
first tranche gets an AAA rating. Then the agency goes to the
next group. Maybe it is 10% of the pool. It would get all the
principal repayments after the first group. In this case, 60% of
the loans would have to default and lose 50% of their value
before your group lost money. The ratings agency might give this
group an AA rating.
This process goes on until you get to the lowest-rated tranches.
There is typically an "equity" tranche which is about 2-4%.
That tranche is the last group to get its money repaid. In our
example, if 8% of the loans went bad and lost 50% (8% times 50%
is 4%) of their value, the equity tranche would lose all their
money.
Let's assume the average interest rate on the loans was 10%.
Because of the lower risk, the investment bank putting the CMBS
together might decide to pay the AAA-rated tranche only 7%. Each
successive tranche would get a higher rate, as they were taking
more risk. The equity tranche is priced to pay in the mid-teens
(or more) if all the loans are paid off.
Now, insurance companies, pension funds, and other institutions
can buy this security that pays an interest rate higher than they
could get from a similar government bond. This difference is
called the spread. And in the beginning, spreads were high, as
not everyone was comfortable with these new-fangled investments.
Let's also notice something. In order to get someone to buy the
lower tranches you have to pay them more. So, the more of the
loans you can get the ratings agency to classify as AAA, the more
interest you can pay to the buyers of the lower tranches to
entice them to buy. This is going to become an important point.
(I should note that it also means you can charge higher fees for
putting the deal together and selling it to your clients.)
Now, this financial engineering is a very good thing. It is one
of the reasons for the worldwide economic boom, as it allows
capital to invest in all sorts of loans that would normally be
considered too risky. And for the vast majority of all these
various alphabet securities, the ratings are going to be just
about right. AAA CMBS or CLO paper is where it should be. Even
AAA-rated prime mortgage paper, which is now selling for a
discount, will (in my opinion) turn out to be just fine.
Investment banks put together all types of asset-backed paper.
Car loans, mortgages, business loans, credit card debt, etc. are
all fair game. And you can mix and match risk if you like. The
combinations are endless. So it can be quite a complex task to
analyze what you are buying. And to a very great extent, that
analysis was delegated to the rating agencies. For all practical
purposes, institutional buyers would look at the general
classification of the security and then at the rating. It was on
the screen, so they hit the bid. If you can't trust your
friendly neighborhood rating agency, then who can you trust? And
most of these securities had ratings from at least two if not
three agencies.
But (and you know there is a but) there is a problem with
subprime-rated paper. In the beginning, subprime loans were made
the old-fashioned way. You had to have 80% loan to value and show
you had a job and could actually pay back the money. And these
loans were packaged up into a subprime Residential Mortgage
Backed Security. Eventually, 80% of those loans would get an AAA
rating. Now, this means that 40% of those subprime loans would
have to go bad and the value of those homes drop 50% before the
holders of that tranche of debt lost money. Even with today's
loose lending practices, that is unlikely. I think any rating
agency is going to be able to justify that initial AAA rating.
But then in 2004 loan practices began to change and had got
completely out of hand by 2006. In 2005-6, about 80% of subprime
mortgages were adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, also called
"exploding ARMs." These loans are so-named because they carry
low teaser rates that often reset dramatically higher, increasing
the borrower's monthly mortgage payments by 25% or more. Let's
look back at what I wrote in March in this space.
"Let's say I want to buy a $200,000 home. I can qualify for an
option Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM) with a starter rate of 2%.
I can pay interest only for the first year, and then the rate
goes to 5%. So, I have an interest payment of $4,000 a year, or
$333 a month. But starting the second month, the interest is
actually at 5%, so the real interest amount is almost $10,000,
and the amount on my mortgage grows by roughly $6,000 the first
year. I now owe $206,000 on the home. If I put down just 5% as a
down payment, I now owe more than I paid for the house, if you
take out 6% realtor fees when I sell! But as the interest rate
resets in the second or third year, it can go up to 8%. I am now
paying $16,500 in interest, and my monthly payment for just the
interest is $1,375.
"According to reports from loan counseling agencies across the
nation, the main reason homeowners give for falling behind on
their mortgage payments is not a change in personal circumstances
(such as a job loss), but instead, they are not able to make the
increased payments on their ARMs.
"The loan application and review process for 'no-doc' loans
was so lax that such loans are referred to as 'liar loans.' In
a recent report by Mortgage Asset Research Institute, of the 100
loans surveyed for which borrowers merely stated their incomes on
loan documents, IRS documents obtained indicated that 60% (!) of
these borrowers overstated their incomes by more than half.
"The newer mortgage products, such as 'piggyback,' 'liar
loans' and 'no doc loans' accounted for 47% of total loans
issued last year. At the start of the decade, they were estimated
to be less than two percent of total mortgage loans. As a result,
homeowners have never been more leveraged: the average amount of
debt as a percentage of a property's value has increased to 86.5
percent in 2006 from 78 percent in 2000."
Ok, let's run the math. Almost 50% of the loans made last year
were made with little or no documentation check, and 60% of those
people overstated their incomes by more than half!!! That means
30% of the loans made were to people who were stretching to buy a
home and whose actual income would not qualify them for a home
anywhere close to what they bought.
Research by RBS Greenwich (assuming I read it right) suggests
that 20-23% of the subprime loans made in 2006 will go into
default and foreclosure. I talked with one head of a mortgage
brokerage business in California this week (he has over 800
brokers who work for him) and he thinks that home values in
certain areas he services could drop by as much as 50%. Others in
my area (Texas) think these defaulting home values will drop by
as much as 20%. No one can be sure, as the supply of homes for
sale is already very high and likely to get worse.
But let's look at what that can mean for a buyer of a
lower-rated tranche of a 2005-6 vintage in a subprime RMBS. If
20% of the loans default and lose 30% of their value, the loan
portfolio would be out a total of 6%. If defaults were higher,
the losses could be more. 8% would not be a stretch. The problem
is that the lower-rated tranches comprise as much as 8% of the
total pool.
And that may be optimistic. The study done by RBS Greenwich
reads: "Our cumulative default projection would translate to a
cumulative loss of 10%-11.5%."
As I showed last week, there are already some 2006-vintage
subprime RMBS's that have over 50% of their loans at 60 days
past due, with over 25% already in foreclosure or having been
repossessed. That is in less than a year, and the interest-rate
mortgage resets have not even really kicked in! (To see those
charts, you can go here.)
Turning Nuclear Waste Into Gold (and Back Again!)
But that's not really where the problem is. Let's go to a great
chart from good friend Gary Shilling (www.agaryshilling.com). In
an effort to make it easier to sell the lower-rated tranches, the
investment banks put together a Collateralized Debt Obligation
(CDO) composed of just the BBB-rated paper. And then got the
rating agencies to give 75% of that paper an AAA rating! So we
have turned 75% of BBB waste into gold with the alchemy of
ratings.
That means that if those RMBS lose just 5% of their value,
everything but the AAA portion of the CDO is wiped out. Any
losses beyond that start eating into the value of what a rating
agency said was AAA! If the Greenwich projections are right (and
these are very serious analysts), then all 2006-vintage CDO's
will lose their AAA rating when the rating agencies look at them
again. The new rating becomes "toast."
Who owns this stuff? According to Inside MBS, foreign investors
own as much as 16% of the total mortgage securities. Mutual funds
have about 16%. Oddly, for all the publicity, hedge funds
probably have less than 5%. But they were leveraged, so the
losses are magnified.
Mrs. Watanabe and the Hedge Fund Connection
If you live in Japan and are retired, investing in bonds is not
all that exciting at rates that are barely 1%. But you can
exchange your yen into all sorts of currencies that have
investments that pay much higher rates. And of course, that makes
the yen go lower, which increases your yield. You notice your
neighbor is making very nice returns, and you open a retail
currency account and start trading. 25% of Japanese currency
trading is from small retail accounts.
If you are a hedge fund, you borrow massive amounts of Japanese
yen at 1% and invest in higher-yielding investments and make the
spread. Life is good. The trade goes on and on.
Hyman Minsky famously said that stability breeds instability. The
longer things are stable, the more likely investors are to become
complacent and risk premiums drop. Because of the lower yields,
investors tend to over-leverage to try and keep up their returns.
The markets are then likely to have a "Minsky Moment" of
instability, and then risk premiums rise and all sorts of assets
are repriced.
And that is exactly what has happened. The markets are
de-leveraging. The yen carry trade is going away, and hedge funds
and Mrs. Watanabe are driving the yen back up in as violent a
move as I can ever recall.
Notice the steady move up in recent months of the euro against
the yen, and then a 12% correction in just two weeks! Ouch.
Whether it was the Canadian or Aussie dollar, you were down big.
And that is forcing a lot of funds to sell anything they can in
order to meet margin calls. And since they can't sell their
CDOs, they sell stocks, commodities, and anything that is
high-quality. That means that assets that do not normally
correlate with each now all move together. And the movement is
down.
Groundhog Day For Hedge Funds
One of my all-time favorite movies is Groundhog Day, featuring
Bill Murray, where the main character keeps living the same day
over and over. One hedge fund manager I know in the credit sector
says this whole credit cycle has been like Groundhog Day for
certain types of hedge funds.
In February some of the lenders began to notice that the credit
quality of some of the CDOs they were lending on might not be as
good as that rating they had. So they went to the hedge funds and
banks and said, "We are not going to offer you as much leverage
as before and are going to make you take an extra 5% haircut on
those bonds."
So the funds sold collateral to make the margin calls. And guess
what? They had to take less than face value. And that lowered the
value of those bonds on everyone's books. Which means the banks
went to anyone holding those bonds and demanded more margin money
and gave less credit, which created more selling and fewer
buyers. The cost of hedging became expensive. It started a
vicious cycle. In May, the Bear Stearns fund blew up, and the
rout began in full earnest. According to a chart from
www.markit.com, you can look at any of the scores of indices they
track, and see that the problems began in February. (Chart
ABX-HE-BBB 07-1)
The above chart is of a BBB RMBS CDO (enough alphabet soup for
you?) issued early this year! It is now down to $.33 on the
dollar, and it may well go lower. Pools of senior bank loans are
selling by as much as a 10% discount. All manner of debt is
selling at significant discounts to what it was just 7 months
ago.
The problem is, quite bluntly, that no one knows what the values
of some of the mortgage-backed securities are. And if you don't
know, you don't buy. And today, even very well-designed CDOs
with no subprime exposure are selling at discounts, if they are
selling at all. Senior bank loans are selling at an apparent
discount to subordinated debt (which is not selling, so no one
knows the value, so the "price" is the last trade).
And what about the banks that bought those CDOs? What exposure do
they have? Are they in a fund or part of the bank capital? Do you
want to lend them money on the overnight markets, for a few basis
points more than government securities? The commercial paper
market for many banks has simply evaporated. These banks depend
on this market for their financing.
Last week, the Germans had to completely rescue an older,
venerable bank which had a great deal of commercial paper and
some off-balance-sheet funds which essentially made the bank's
balance sheet negative. If you can't trust a German bank, who
can you trust?
This has consequences. As of today, the largest mortgage lender
in the US, Countrywide, is now only doing "agency" loans
(Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac). Even the best of firms, like
Thornburg, are having problems. If you want a nonconforming loan
this week to buy a home, either subprime or over $417,000, you
may have a very hard time.
The Rating Agency Blame Game
The ratings agencies have put 101 different CDOs on "watch,"
which is market speak for "we are probably going to change our
rating." But that's a little too late.
In 2006, nearly $850 million or 44% (up from 37% in 2002) of
Moody's Investors Service total revenue came from the rarefied
business known as structured finance. In 1995, its revenue from
such transactions was a paltry $50 million. Moody's took in
around $3 billion from 2002 through 2006 for rating securities
built from loans and other debt pools. The same pattern holds for
Standard and Poor's and Fitch.
In short, the ratings agencies were making huge amounts of money
from the investment banks for rating these structured products.
And let's make no mistake about it, they were selling their name
and credibility. Everyone knew what a AAA rating meant when it
came to a corporation or a country. And even though there were
disclaimers in the 500-page documents accompanying the CDO sales
material, the investment banks were clearly pointing to the
ratings as they sold that paper.
The entire process hinged on the credibility of the rating
agencies. Somehow, no one seemed to think that the default rates
from "no-documentation" and "liar" loans would possibly be
different. I am sure you can find a paragraph in the offering
documents which will make that contention, at least obliquely.
Lawyers are good at that stuff. But that is entirely beside the
point.
Credit markets function because there is the belief that if you
lend money you will get it back. Ratings are the grease for those
markets. Now they have become sand in the gears. If you are a
bond buyer on an institutional desk, do you want to risk a
career-ending move and buy a bond that you are not ABSOLUTELY
sure it is what you think it is? Do you want to buy 3-month
commercial paper for a few points of spread from a bank or
corporation about which you are not 100% sure? Just how solvent
is that bank? So, you wait and go to US government bonds in the
meantime.
If you are in Europe, you worry about your money market fund. In
the US, you think about your CD at Countrywide if it is over
$100,000. Everyone gets nervous, and central banks everywhere
have to step in and offer massive amounts of liquidity, as they
should.
Where Do We Go From Here? Hedge Funds to the Rescue!
This is not the end of the world. I actually think things should
sort themselves out by October or so, given no new major
surprises. But how do we get back to normal markets?
It might be helpful to look at how we got out of the savings and
loan crisis in the late '80s. As everyone now knows, Congress
changed the rules and allowed local savings and loan thrifts to
finance all types of debt. They jumped in with both feet. Many
were very bad at assessing risk and went bankrupt. The government
had to step in and bail out the depositors. The assets of the
collapsed savings and loans went into the Resolution Trust
Corporation (RTC).
I had friends who made a great deal of money in that market. They
would walk into the RTC offices. There would be two-foot stacks
of manila folders, each folder representing a loan. You could go
through the files and then make a bid for the whole stack.
Quite often, in the file there would be checks from good
borrowers who kept sending in their check for the car or boat.
Since the S&L was gone, there was no one to cash them. People
were paying $.15 cents on the dollar for good loans, and working
out the rest. Now, some of the loans were indeed 100% write-offs.
But a lot were not. But there were so many that the RTC simply
took high bid and went on to the next pile.
I also had a friend (whom I have lost touch with) that bought
half a dozen older apartment complexes that needed work. He got
them for very little cash, put his own work into fixing them up,
got them certified as lower-income housing and then got
government-guaranteed rent. He was able to retire in a few
years.
The same process needs to happen in the credit markets. First, we
need someone to step in and actually make a market for the
downgraded credits. Who is that going to be? Mutual funds?
Investment banks? The Fed? No, no, and no.
The answer is that it will largely be distressed-debt hedge
funds, both those that exist today and the scores that are being
formed as I write. There are bonds and loans, various CDO
securities, CLO funds, etc. that are seriously mispriced because
of the lack of liquidity and transparency. When you can buy a
loan today for $.94 that has a 99.9% chance of being good, you
simply take the interest and get the extra return for allowing
the loan to go back to par. Even modest leverage produces very
nice returns.
Savvy distressed-debt managers will go in, look at the paper, and
buy it. This time, instead of manila folders it will be
electronic files. But with a lot of work, someone will be able to
assess the value. Of course, the bad paper needs to be written
down and off the books. There will be little appetite for a lot
of the riskier paper.
Also, the structure of many CLOs will help. Most CLOs are formed
and have a finite life. But for the first 5-7 years, they take
the principal repayments and reinvest those dollars in other
loans. CLOs that are getting cash today are finding good values.
Warren Buffett Needs to Take Over Moody's
Second, the rating agencies need to restore their credibility.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway owns about 19% of Moody's.
I would suggest that Mr. Buffett step in take over the company
(much as he did with Salomon years ago) and put his not
inconsiderable credibility on the line for all future ratings and
the inevitable re-ratings that are going to be done.
The Panic of 1907 was solved by the credibility of one man, J. P.
Morgan, who stepped in to provide liquidity. The Panic of 2007 is
not a problem caused by lack of liquidity. It is a problem caused
by lack of credibility. Morgan could (and did) provide liquidity.
Buffett can (and should) provide credibility.
And someone of similar stature needs to step in at S&P and Fitch.
(Can Volker be summoned into the trenches yet one more time?)
This is not about whether some person or group at the ratings
agencies necessarily did anything wrong, although more than a few
lawyers will suggest just that. This is about restoring
credibility to the ratings and markets as soon as possible.
Without someone new at the head, future ratings are likely to be
viewed with the skeptical (and correct) question, "Is this from
the same group of people who rated that bond that I bought just a
few months ago that is down 50%? Why are they right now? Where is
the adult supervision? Who has made sure the process is now
working?"
The SEC has announced that they will allow mortgage lenders to
work out resetting mortgages with borrowers in cases where there
is an obvious default about to happen. In many cases, that will
mean extending the lower coupon rate another year. That may just
put off the problem, but it will keep a home off the market and
allow for a more orderly solution.
Will a Fed Rate Cut Make a Difference?
A rate cut will not make a difference as to the credibility of
the ratings, nor will it transform bad debts into good ones. But
my view has been for a year that the economy is heading for a
recession due to the housing market problems. Given the turmoil
in the markets, a rate cut may be in the offing later this year.
And given that lower rates will make mortgages cost less, that
will help.
The significance of today's cut of the discount rate, and the
willingness to look at up to 30 days of loans and high-quality
asset-backed paper, is not the actual cut but more the boost to
confidence. It is the Fed saying to the market, "Daddy's home.
Everything is going to be all right."
Beyond that, let's look at what Nouriel Roubini says today in
his blog about the Fed move to cut the discount rate:
"More important than the symbolic 50 basis point cut in the
discount rate was the move in today's FOMC statement from the
semi-neutral bias of the last few months ('semi' as inflation
was still their predominant concern until recently) to a clear
easing bias today. Essentially today the Fed telegraphed a
certain Fed Funds rate cut at the September meeting and possibly
more cuts in the months ahead.
"The statement was very clear in signaling an easing bias and a
policy cut ahead: 'Financial market conditions have
deteriorated, and tighter credit conditions and increased
uncertainty have the potential to restrain economic growth
forward. The statement also pointed that 'the downside risks to
growth have increased appreciably.' And it clearly signaled that
the FOMC is 'prepared to act as needed to mitigate the adverse
effects on the economy arising from the disruptions in financial
markets.'
"The stress on the downside risks to growth and the failure of
the statement to even mention the 'I' word (Inflation) suggests
that, in about a week since the previous FOMC meeting, concerns
about inflations as the predominant risk have faded and concerns
about growth have sharply increased. For a Fed that until
recently was in the soft landing camp (slowdown of growth but
still moderate pace of growth) today's statement is a signal
that they are starting to worry about a hard landing of the
economy.
"For the first time in over a year the Fed is now implicitly
admitting that they underestimated the downside growth risk:
until now the official Fed view was that the housing recession
was contained and bottoming out and not spilling over to other
sectors of the economy; and that the sub-prime problems were also
a niche and contained problem. The sudden shift to a strong
easing bias suggests that the Fed miscalculated until now the
damage to the economy and to financial markets of the housing
recession and its real and financial spillovers."
While I am not so sure that the Fed will cut in September, they
have signaled that they are aware of the problems, as noted
above.
As an answer to my opening question, I think we are in for a
return of the Muddle Through Economy rather than the End of the
World. Credit markets will get back to normal, as there is a lot
of money that needs to find a home. It is just looking for a
credible home and one that will feature higher risk premiums and
spreads.
Vacation, Europe and Reading
I am off to Europe (London, Denmark, Poland, and the Czech
Republic). Other than a speech and a few meetings, I actually
intend to take a vacation and do some sight-seeing. In my
absence, though, Thoughts from the Frontline will still be coming
your way. Next week, it will be written by Barry Ritholtz and the
following week by Rob Arnott, so you are in better hands than
mine. And Michael Hewitt is going to do the Outside the Box on
September 4, about how the credit markets are doing.
And thanks to the hundreds of readers who sent in suggestions as
to what books to read on my vacation. I made a new folder to save
them, as many of you suggested books that I have always intended
to read but not gotten around to.
Tonight I have to hurry home, as I have dinner with friends and
then off to The House of Blues. I see margaritas and tacos in my
near future, and some much-needed rest in the next few weeks.
All the best, and remember that the world is not in all that bad
a shape. We just have to work through a few kinks, and Muddle
Through is still moving forward.
Your enjoying the ride analyst,
John Mauldin
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