Archivo de marzo/2009

30
Mar

Are Hedge Funds guilty?

Escrito el 30 marzo 2009 por Francisco López Lubián en Corporate, Financial Markets

One of the most striking proposals of the new Obama plan to fix financial system is the regulation of the so-called prívate pools of capital: hedge funds, prívate equity funds and venture capital funds.

According to this plan, which would require Congressional approval, these fund advisers would have to register with the SEC and provide to government confidential information on topics like level of leverage, investors and partners. Most probably, these tougher rules will limit fund´s ability to borrow money to invest in high risk bets.

Before this approach I wonder whether, for this kind of investments, it makes sense to regulate more or rather to enforce what it´s already regulated. Especially on topics related to information and transparency.

At least until now (and in theory), hedge funds were limited to investors who can afford big risks, looking for big rewards… that can become positive or negative. So, what is the explanation to the fact that in the last years traditional investors (like university endowments and pension plans) had become heavy hedge funds investors?

On the other hand, can we say that these funds caused the present crisis? Do we have enough evidence on this? The answer is clearly no. I do believe that the financial mess which led to the current economic crisis was provoked by investments banks acting as hedge funds, or selling to their customer hedge funds solutions as normal investments.  

As Wharton´s Professor M.E. Blume notes: «If the hedge funds lose money, that´s okay. No problem. It´s when the banks lose money that we have a problem»

More than new regulation, I would say that emphasis should be put in to fulfill the present one.  And avoid speculative actions with lack of transparency, like selling short without control. In that sense, the «uptick rule,» which limited short selling, is likely to be proposed early next month by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The rule, which was in effect in the USA from 1938 until 2007, restricted short selling in a declining market. Under the rule, the market needs to have an upward drift to it in order to short.

26
Mar

¿Hay un precio justo?

Escrito el 26 marzo 2009 por Francisco López Lubián en Corporate

El culebrón de la esperada fusión entre British Airways e Iberia está poniendo de manifiesto, una vez más, la importancia de encontrar un precio razonable en este tipo de operaciones.

¿Cómo puede establecerse un precio adecuado en una operación de compra-venta de empresas? Si las empresas cotizan, su precio de mercado suele ser un referente sobre el valor de una participación minoritaria, ya que suelen tener un accionariado disperso. ¿Debe ser este el precio con base en el que se articule la operación? No necesariamente, ya que el mercado no tiene por qué estar reflejando las expectativas futuras que la operación provoca en ambas partes.

En consecuencia, tanto si las empresas cotizan como si no es necesario llevar a cabo una valoración económica de las mismas, basada en supuestos razonables,  para determinar un precio razonable. Sin entrar en detalles técnicos y dando por aceptada la razonabilidad de los supuestos empleados, un simple ejemplo puede ayudar a entender la lógica de este proceso de valoración.  Supongamos que A quiere adquirir B: ¿cómo estimar un precio razonable de B para A? Bajo la perspectiva de A, se debería estimar los valores de A y  B en un escenario de no realización de la operación, y el valor de B en un escenario de control por parte de A, es decir, el valor que para A tiene B incorporando las sinergias que dan fundamento a la operación. Lógicamente, este valor de B para A sería el precio máximo que debería pagar A por una participación mayoritaria (ó de control) de B, que sería líquida si B cotizara.

22
Mar

AIG´s bonus scandal clarified

Escrito el 22 marzo 2009 por Antonio Rivela Rodríguez en Uncategorized

I wanted to take advantage of this article published by Bloomberg on AIG´s bonus scandal to clarify 4 points that men in the street are not familiar with. Many times it is easier to be negative than to be informed, aware and cool. But information is key and this blog is about unbiassed info.

1. The fact that AIG has made losses does not mean that all the employees contributed to that situation. In fact, at most of the banks/insurance companies only 50/100 traders out of 50,000-100,000 employees dealt with CDOs & Subprime stuff (1 per thousand of the total).

2. Many other employees (99%) of the insurance company not only did not damage AIG´s reputation, but honorably made their corresponding budget for the year.

3. I understand Americans are furious & frustrated and the easy solution is to use taxes as a tool to get moneys back asap (congress was working on 80%/90% tax on AIG´s Bonuses for year 2008)

4. You need to bear in mind that executives were on guaranteed contracts

 

And that´s the key… Guaranteed Contracts mean and always meant that you get paid under any circumstances…. And try to twist that sacred legal concept upside down is not consistent with democracy…

Anyway… now with the «pan et circus» kind or article by Bloomberg so we can all be happy with other´s problems…

 

March 22 (Bloomberg) — Protesters hired a bus to hand deliver the message that President Barack Obama sent executives of American International Group Inc.last week: Give the bonus money back.

About 20 protesters, along with a press corps of national and international media who outnumbered them, yesterday rode to the Fairfield County, Connecticut, homes of two AIG executives who received portions of $165 million in extra compensation. The payments were made after their Financial Products unit in nearby Wilton had losses that precipitated the insurer’s $173 billion government bailout.

“There needs to be some accountability,” said bus rider Mark Dziubek, a father of five from Southington, Connecticut, who was laid off recently at a Theis Precision Steel Corp. rolling mill after 19 years on the job. “It’s putting pressure on them to do what’s right.”

Douglas Poling and James Haas, whose houses the protesters stopped at, weren’t seen. Both have agreed to return their bonuses, AIG spokeswomanChristina Pretto said in an e-mail yesterday. She declined to say the amount they received.

The AIG bonuses have sparked a national furor, with Obama calling them an outrage and vowing to get the money back. This week the Senate will consider legislation passed by the House of Representatives that would impose a 90 percent tax on employee bonuses at companies that received at least $5 billion in taxpayer bailout funds.

‘More Harm’

AIG Chief Executive Officer Edward Liddy, summoned to Washington on March 18 to explain the bonuses, told a Congressional subcommittee that the bonuses have brought death threats and that he was unwilling to name the payment recipients because he feared for their safety.

Asaad Jackson, 24, a musician, agreed. “With how the country feels right now, naming these executives might do more harm than good,” he said on the bus.

The house tour in Fairfield County was organized by the Connecticut Working Families Party, a coalition of union and community groups. The county had a population in 2007 of 910,003 and a median income of $79,326, according to the Connecticut Economic Resource Center, Inc. It’s located about 60 miles north of AIG’s headquarters in lower Manhattan. In addition to the protesters on the bus, another 20 demonstrators along with more print and TV reporters, cameramen and photographers trailed in a caravan of cars.

‘A Good Start’

When a handful of protesters got off the bus to deliver their written message at both houses, they were met by private security guards.

At Poling’s house, one of the people read the group’s letter aloud. Returning the bonuses was “a good start,” said the letter, which asked Poling and Haas to press for public policy that addresses the concerns of working and middle-class families. The protesters then left the letter in a mailbox at the end of the driveway and got back on the bus for the 4.3-mile drive to Haas’s house.

“They bear responsibility for some of the malfeasance that that company took part in,” said Stacey Zimmerman, a 35-year- old political organizer for Service Employees International Union in Stamford, Connecticut. The tour was “a way to show our members and members of our community how the other half lives.”

The Gold Coast

For Craig Stallings of Hartford, the state capital, that was one of the reasons why he took his three sons, ages 4, 6 and 11, on the bus. The trip was their first visit to Fairfield, parts of which are known as “the Gold Coast” because of large houses and views of Long Island Sound. Poling’s house has three chimneys and at least 18 windows facing the front yard. To the rear of Haas’s house is the Sound and the Fairfield Country Club.

“It’s important for my kids to see what hard work and an education will get you,” said Stallings, a 36-year-old small- business tax preparer.

Stallings said there was another reason why he made the bus trip. “You shouldn’t be afraid to confront people when they’re wrong,” he said. “You’ve failed at your jobs, so why should you be rewarded?”

AIG declined 97 percent in the last 12 months of New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

“While this controversy is very regrettable, it should not overshadow the fact that all AIG employees, including the employees of AIG Financial Products, are working very hard to pay back the government,” said AIG’s Pretto in an e-mailed statement. “The people working at AIG today are part of the solution, not part of the problem.”

A Point to Be Made

After stopping at the two homes, the bus pulled up to the AIG unit’s red-brick offices, where there were three police cars with flashing lights. The protesters chanted “Money for the needy, not for the greedy!” and held numerous signs, some saying, “Middle Class, Too Big to Fail” and “Taxpayers Want Their Money Back!”

On the streets of Fairfield County, one resident acknowledged that the demonstrators had a point.

“Of course, any American would be appalled by this gross excess in the financial sector right now,” said Sissy Biggers. At the same time “it’s gotten personal,” she said. Her husband Kelsey called the demonstration “classist warfare.”

“You’re bringing people from outside to come and, in essence, harass a neighborhood,” he said. It’s just not right, and I wonder where it might go.”

 

12
Mar

GENERAL ELECTRIC debt downgraded to AA+

Escrito el 12 marzo 2009 por Antonio Rivela Rodríguez en Uncategorized

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Just a few lines to comment on GE´s recent downgrade to AA+ by S&P.

They used to have the maximum rating – i.e. AAA-. The market has digested the news with a positive tone because they can still do business with a AA+ rating. In my personal opinion they could even be fine with a AA or a AA-.

The market reacted positively not only in the US but in Europe.

See below for Bloomberg analysis.

 

 

y Rachel Layne

March 12 (Bloomberg) — General Electric Co. shares and bonds rallied after Standard & Poor’s lowered its debt ratings one level and raised the outlook to “stable,” comforting investors who feared a sharper cut as profit falls at GE’s finance arm in a global recession.

The switch to AA+, from AAA and with a “negative” outlook, affects long-termdebt, S&P analysts said in a statement today.

GE, which held the top rating since 1956, said in a statement doesn’t foresee “any significant operational or funding impacts.” The Fairfield, Connecticut-based company’s shares rose 87 cents to $9.36 at 11:55 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

“A one-notch downgrade and ‘stable’ mean you can take away the ratings as an issue for the time being,” said Stephen Tusa, a JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst in New York. If S&P had kept the negative outlook, “it would have lingered as an issue.”

The downgrade is a setback for Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt, who until January was saying that GE generates enough earnings to justify keeping both its annual dividend and the AAA, an endorsement that a company is among a handful of the world’s safest and strongest. On Feb. 27 he reduced the shareholder payout for the first time since 1938 in a move to save about $9 billion a year.

Robert Schulz, the S&P analyst who oversees the GE parent company, said in an interview that the ratings committee balanced the “excellent risk profile” of GE’s industrial businesses against the prospects of weaker earnings or a “modest net loss” at GE Capital.

“We’re not expecting any real earnings or cash flow from GE Capital this year or next year,” Schulz said. Without the support of the parent company, GE Capital’s rating would be an A, lower than the previous A+ assessment, S&P said.

Market Reaction

S&P left GE and GE Capital’s commercial paper ratings at A- 1+ and said the rating for debt sold backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. remains AAA.

GE Capital’s $3 billion of 5.625 percent notes due in 2017 rose 1.4 cents to 82.9 cents on the dollar, according to Trace, the bond-pricing service of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The notes yield 8.49 percent. The notes earlier rose as much as 2.1 cents to 83.7 cents, a two-week high.

The new rating “takes away that ambiguity,” said Peter Sorrentino, who helps manage $15 billion at Huntington Asset Advisors in Cincinnati. “The short-term rating was affirmed and the outlook is stable, so that’s a plus.”

The cost of protecting bonds sold by GE Capital fell 0.7 percentage point to 8.3 percent upfront today, according to CMA Datavision prices for credit-default swaps. The price means it would cost $830,000 in advance and $500,000 annually to protect $10 million of debt for five years.

GE Capital Transparency

The shares dropped 75 percent in 12 months through yesterday and traded below $6 on March 4, the lowest since December 1991, as some investors and analysts criticized the company for a lack of transparency at the GE Capital finance arm. Investors are concerned that the unit, already facing rising credit-card delinquencies and $4 billion in unrealized property losses, will require more capital than GE anticipates.

The company has scheduled what it calls a “deep-dive” meeting with analysts for March 19 to give more detail about GE Capital holdings.

Standard & Poor’s in December said GE had a 1-in-3 chance of losing its top AAA designation within two years, and S&P kept GE’s “negative” outlook after the dividend reduction. Moody’s Investors Service put GE on review in January and, after the dividend cut, said it would keep studying GE’s debt for a possible lower rating than its top-level Aaa.

Ratings Services

“The rating agencies are catching up to the reality within the finance operations at GE,” said Joel Levington, director of corporate credit for Hyperion Brookfield Asset Management Inc. in New York, citing the global slowdown.

The global recession and credit crisis may lower odds GE Capital can make its $5 billion profit goal this year and that demand will hold up for GE’s goods as the world’s largest maker of jet engines, power turbines and medical-imaging equipment.

General Electric had held S&P’s AAA since 1956, the year Immelt was born. The company has had Moody’s Aaa top rating since 1967. Today’s downgrade squares with what investors already see: GE has traded for six years as though its bonds were less than the highest rating.

Immelt Strategy

Immelt, 53, said in a March 5 interview that a ratings drop won’t change the way he runs the company or alter his plan to shrink GE Capital to produce a lower percentage of the parent’s profit.

“I will run GE with reduced leverage, reduced commercial paper, and earning money in GE Capital, which have long been the elements of being a AAA,” Immelt said in the interview. “I’m going to continue to run the company, the same as I’ve always run the company which is with that kind of discipline.”

Under debt instrument guarantees and covenants, GE would have to post additional collateral if the ratings were cut below AA-/Aa3 or A-1 and P-1, or four levels, the company said in its annual filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last month.

GE said in December it may generate as much as $16 billion in cash after capital expenses this year, mainly from the sale of industrial goods, more than enough for the annual dividend payout. GE’s non-finance businesses had $16.7 billion in free cash flow from operations in 2008, after capital expenditures.

Profit Prospects

GE Capital posted $8.6 billion of the parent company’s $18.1 billion in profit last year and predicts it will earn $5 billion this year. Chief Financial Officer Keith Sherin said Feb. 10 that projection exceeds most analysts’ forecasts.

Immelt and GE’s board last month decided to cut the quarterly dividend by 68 percent, to 10 cents a share from 31 cents. The decision will free up about $4.4 billion in this year’s second half, the company said. GE has paid a dividend in each of the past 110 years.

On Sept. 25, GE reduced its annual profit forecast for a second time and suspended its stock buyback. A week later, GE got a $3 billion investment from investorWarren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and said it would sell $12 billion in common stock.

 

 

12
Mar

Forecasting: what for?

Escrito el 12 marzo 2009 por Francisco López Lubián en Corporate

According to a recent article published in The Economist, a growing number of companies have decided not to give annual earnings estimates for 2009. The article cites companies like Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch consumer-goods firm, Costco, a big American retailer, and Union Pacific, one of the America´s big railroads.

We all know that forecasting is difficult… especially the future.  But, given the present circumstances, is it possible to make any forecast? Is it needed?

Some people say that now is not possible to make any reasonable forecast for any business. Well, I would say that this depends on what we understand by «to make a forecast».  If to make a forecast consists in anticipating what´s going to happen in the future, I agree with this pessimistic opinion on forecasting. Nobody can anticipate the future now. And, I would say, never.

I believe that the objective of a forecast is not to use the crystal ball, envision the future and see what happens. On the contrary, the objective of a forecast is to provide information about what you are going to do to build up this future, and to deal with the present situation. In other words, what is your plan? Who is going to implement it? When? Using what means?

But to release this information can be dangerous, critics may say. It certainly can. But it can be more dangerous not to issue any information on this matter, especially in moments of global downturn like the present ones.

At the end, the point is what kind of information we want to deliver about our plans for the future, how we want to provide that information. For example, are rolling forecast better than scenario planning? Do we have to make simulations and only give probabilistic information? Or should we keep simple and be in touch more frequently with the market?

The answer is neither white, nor black. In any case, communication policy in any company needs to be consistent with the rest of operational and financial policies. The image of any company is based on fulfillments.

10
Mar

Back to basics

Escrito el 10 marzo 2009 por Francisco López Lubián en General

In times of crisis like the one we are having, companies are encouraged to go «back to basics». That advice is very useful providing:

 1) companies know what are their basics

2) companies have good basics

Which leads us to the key question: what is a good basic in a company?  How can we know if a company is founded in good basics? The answer is neither easy, nor simple, since there are several factors to take into consideration: type of industry, sustainable competitive advantages, management team profile, external circumstances, etc.

Without the intention of being exhaustive, let me share with you some elements I believe should be considered in any identification of good basics in any company:

a) Management is about taking decisions and implementing them. Base those decisions on the expected economic value, not only in the accounting value.

b) Resources used have a cost

c) Do not forget the associated risk of any business decision

d) Expectations depend on external and internal factors. To improve expectations through internal factors we have to generate confidence, which means delivering.

e) Growth does not necessarily mean economic value creation

f) Know the economic profitability of your customers, not only the accounting profitability

g) Reward management according economic value created, not only for the accounting profit

h) With short term outlook, focus on economic feasibility. With a long term perspective, look for economic value and economic profitability.

As mentioned in a classic textbook on valuation (Valuation, Copeland, Koller and Murrin): 

«Becoming a value manager is not a mysterious process that is open to only a few. It does require, however, a different perspective from that taken by many managers. It requires a focus on long run cash flows returns, not quarter-to-quarter changes in earnings per share»

8
Mar

Once again: Greece is not going to default.

Escrito el 8 marzo 2009 por Antonio Rivela Rodríguez en Uncategorized

As I said a couple of months ago, Greece is not going to default.

Greeks will be helped by the European Union in every imaginable way, shape or form.

See below for an excellent article where Bloomberg explains how corporate risk is improving on the back of Greece´s budget positive deficit news.

March 8 (Bloomberg) — The cost to protect against corporate defaults fell to the lowest in seven weeks as optimism builds that Greece’s budget crisis will be contained and Dubai moves closer to restructuring its debt.

The Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, linked to credit-default swaps on 125 companies, fell 2.5 basis points to 83 as of 9:41 a.m. in New York, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group. That’s the lowest since Jan. 14. A benchmark credit swaps index in Europe dropped to its lowest since Jan. 18, and Asia-Pacific credit indexes also fell.

Investors are growing less skittish after Greece sold 5 billion euros ($6.8 billion) of notes last week and passed 4.8 billion euros of spending cuts, reducing the risk of default. Also the European Union is preparing a proposal for a European Monetary Fund, a spokesman for EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said today. Such a fund may ease the disruption caused by a euro member failure.

“The EU and Germany have stepped in and said, ‘We’re going to support Greece,’” said Joel Levington, director of corporate credit for Brookfield Investment Management Inc. in New York, with $24 billion in assets under management. “It seems like that’s being managed prudently.”

Investor perceptions of risk also fell as Dubai World, the state-owned holding company renegotiating about $26 billion of debt, prepares to present a plan to creditors this month where lenders may be repaid in full if they’re willing to wait for their money, said bankers familiar with the talks. The company said in November it planned to postpone repaying loans until May, sparking the biggest plunge in developing-nation stocks.

Dubai Swaps Decline

Credit-default swaps covering Dubai debt for five years fell 28 basis points to 479 basis points, the lowest in more than five weeks, according to London-based CMA DataVision. Contracts on Greece declined 11 basis points to 285, the lowest since Jan. 12.

The extra yield investors demand to own company bonds rather than government debt fell 2 basis points on March 5 to 163 basis points, or 1.63 percentage point, the lowest since Jan. 21, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Global Broad Market Corporate index. Spreads narrowed 5 basis points for the week, the biggest drop since the period ended Jan. 8. Average yields are 4.06 percent, the data show.

“With credit spreads on a tightening trend over the past few days, this is tactically a good moment for opportunistic bond issuance by well-established corporate names with flexibility to move quickly,” Charles Stephens, a debt capital markets specialist at Matrix Corporate Capital LLP in London, wrote in a note to clients today.

Trading Surge

Improved market sentiment prompted a flurry of bond issues today, with at least seven corporate borrowers including Telefonica SA, Renault SA and Italcementi SpA marketing debt in Europe, according to people familiar with the transactions who declined to be identified because terms aren’t set.

Elsewhere in credit markets, mutual funds that buy high- yield bonds had $479 million of inflows, the second week of increases, research firm EPFR Global said. Investors plowed a record $2.6 billion into global bond funds in the week ended March 3, moving out of money markets to seek higher returns, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based data company said in a report.

Corporate bond trading in the U.S. surged to a two-month high. An average $21.1 billion of debt securities traded daily on Trace last week, the most since the period ending Jan. 8, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The average was $18.5 billion a day during the previous week. Trace is Finra’s bond-price reporting system.

AIG, Tribune

American International Group Inc.’s aircraft-leasing unit is seeking to add a $550 million term loan to bank financing, boosting its first debt sale through capital markets since AIG’s 2008 U.S. bailout to $1.3 billion, according to a person familiar with the negotiations. Bank of America Corp. and Goldman Sachs are arranging the financing for International Lease Finance Corp.

A group of Tribune Co. creditors sued the banks behind the publisher’s 2007 leveraged buyout, claiming the $8 billion in loans they arranged doomed the media company to bankruptcy. The banks knew the buyout “would render Tribune insolvent,” attorneys for bondholders owed $1.2 billion wrote in their complaint. Spokesmen for JPMorgan and Citigroup Inc. declined to comment, while representatives of Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley didn’t return telephone calls.

Loans Climb

The S&P/LSTA US Leveraged Loan 100 Index climbed 0.7 cent to 89.66 cents on the dollar last week, the highest since Feb. 3. The debt has risen from a record low of 59.2 cents on the dollar on Dec. 17, 2008.

Spreads on speculative-grade bonds narrowed 29 basis points last week to 637 basis points, the tightest since Jan. 22, according to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield Master II index. High-yield, high-risk companies are rated lower than Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and below BBB- by S&P.

Alfa Bank, Russia’s biggest private lender, plans to sell five-year dollar bonds this week, yielding between 8.25 percent and 8.5 percent, according to a person familiar with the matter. The bank hired JPMorgan Chase & Co. and UBS AG to manage the transaction.

Signs that the U.S. recovery is on track have helped investors look past Greece’s budget struggles. U.S. employers in February cut fewer jobs than economists had forecast, even as East Coast snowstorms forced some to temporarily close, a government report showed. Of the 469 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index that reported earnings since Jan. 11, three- quarters beat analysts’ expectations, Bloomberg data show.

Cash Rich

Companies have started exceeding estimates on revenue, not just profits, “indicating that actual revenue growth as opposed to mere cost-cutting is now helping drive profitability,” Morgan Stanley strategists Rizwan Hussain and Adam Richmond wrote in a March 5 note to clients.

Cash-to-debt ratios are at record highs for investment- grade companies, the Morgan Stanley strategists said. The smallest percentage of non-financial companies in three years, 39 percent, increased leverage in the fourth quarter, they said.

The improving economic and earnings trends may help credit spreads narrow this week, Barclays Capital credit trader Jason Quinn and Citigroup strategist Mikhail Foux said March 5. Foux, in a note to clients, said investors should be cautious as “we do not feel that the sovereign story has fully played out.”

‘Initial Signs’

Investors aren’t likely to enter the market as quickly as they exited, Quinn, the co-head of high-grade and high-yield flow trading at Barclays Capital in New York, said in an interview.

“That’s going to happen slowly,” he said. “When investors pull back from the market, it’s often in response to something they weren’t expecting and tends to happen quickly. Coming back in usually takes a bit of time, but we’re definitely seeing the initial signs.”

Concern that Greece’s budget woes would spread to other countries had pushed credit-default swap indexes, which measure corporate credit risk, to at least three-month highs. They’ve retraced more than half of that increase.

The Markit CDX index, linked to 125 companies in the U.S. and Canada, has fallen 23 basis points since Feb. 8.

In London, the Markit iTraxx Europe index of swaps on 125 companies with investment-grade ratings, fell 3.75 basis points today to 74.25, the lowest since Jan. 18, JPMorgan Chase & Co. prices show. The index has declined 19.75 basis points since reaching 94 on Feb. 8.

Asia Swaps Fall

Default swaps pay the buyer face value if a borrower defaults in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point and equals $1,000 a year on a contract protecting against default on $10 million of debt for five years.

In Asia, the Markit iTraxx Japan index dropped 6.5 basis points to 121.5 basis points as of 3:45 p.m. in Tokyo, according to Morgan Stanley prices. The Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment-grade borrowers outside Japan decreased 7 basis points to 96 basis points in Hong Kong, Citigroup Inc. prices show. The Markit iTraxx Australia index fell 4 basis points to 84.5 basis points in Sydney, according to Citigroup.

Companies globally issued $45.6 billion of bonds last week, compared with $50.2 billion in the previous period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales total $493.7 billion for the year, down 34 percent from the $745 billion raised through March 5, 2009. Issuance in Europe dropped 36 percent to 8.9 billion euros, the second-slowest week this year, the data show.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. led $34.5 billion of investment- grade offerings in the last two weeks, compared with $6.8 billion in the previous period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Goldman Sachs, the most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history, sold $2 billion of dollar-denominated debt due 2020 on March 1 as U.S. banks seek to replace $309 billion of government-guaranteed debt with longer-dated maturities. The New York-based bank last sold 10-year, dollar-denominated notes in May.

Antonio Rivela is a IE Business School Professor.

5
Mar

Li: A revolution after Black Scholes Formula

Escrito el 5 marzo 2009 por Antonio Rivela Rodríguez en Uncategorized

I always had the intention to write about the normal copula formula applied by Li in 2000: the most important financial engineering paper after Black-Scholes and the very topic of my PhD tesis.

Li, put together a very elegant way – mathematical wise-  to price up CDOs.

And sadly, he is been blamed for the crisis. So, I do not think he is getting the Nobel Prize, but he should.

Funnily enough, his formula was never used to price up US Suprime MBS, which were on the back of the disaster but Synth. CDOs or the so called CSOs that had nothing to do with the crisis.

I attach an amazing article published by Wired written by Felix Salmon last week that truly explains Li´s work for the men in the street.

 

In the mid-’80s, Wall Street turned to the quants—brainy financial engineers—to invent new ways to boost profits. Their methods for minting money worked brilliantly… until one of them devastated the global economy. 

A year ago, it was hardly unthinkable that a math wizard like David X. Li might someday earn a Nobel Prize. After all, financial economists—even Wall Street quants—have received the Nobel in economics before, and Li’s work on measuring risk has had more impact, more quickly, than previous Nobel Prize-winning contributions to the field. Today, though, as dazed bankers, politicians, regulators, and investors survey the wreckage of the biggest financial meltdown since the Great Depression, Li is probably thankful he still has a job in finance at all. Not that his achievement should be dismissed. He took a notoriously tough nut—determining correlation, or how seemingly disparate events are related—and cracked it wide open with a simple and elegant mathematical formula, one that would become ubiquitous in finance worldwide.

For five years, Li’s formula, known as a Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities, expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels.

His method was adopted by everybody from bond investors and Wall Street banks to ratings agencies and regulators. And it became so deeply entrenched—and was making people so much money—that warnings about its limitations were largely ignored.

Then the model fell apart. Cracks started appearing early on, when financial markets began behaving in ways that users of Li’s formula hadn’t expected. The cracks became full-fledged canyons in 2008—when ruptures in the financial system’s foundation swallowed up trillions of dollars and put the survival of the global banking system in serious peril.

David X. Li, it’s safe to say, won’t be getting that Nobel anytime soon. One result of the collapse has been the end of financial economics as something to be celebrated rather than feared. And Li’s Gaussian copula formula will go down in history as instrumental in causing the unfathomable losses that brought the world financial system to its knees.

How could one formula pack such a devastating punch? The answer lies in the bond market, the multitrillion-dollar system that allows pension funds, insurance companies, and hedge funds to lend trillions of dollars to companies, countries, and home buyers.

A bond, of course, is just an IOU, a promise to pay back money with interest by certain dates. If a company—say, IBM—borrows money by issuing a bond, investors will look very closely over its accounts to make sure it has the wherewithal to repay them. The higher the perceived risk—and there’s always some risk—the higher the interest rate the bond must carry.

Bond investors are very comfortable with the concept of probability. If there’s a 1 percent chance of default but they get an extra two percentage points in interest, they’re ahead of the game overall—like a casino, which is happy to lose big sums every so often in return for profits most of the time.

Bond investors also invest in pools of hundreds or even thousands of mortgages. The potential sums involved are staggering: Americans now owe more than $11 trillion on their homes. But mortgage pools are messier than most bonds. There’s no guaranteed interest rate, since the amount of money homeowners collectively pay back every month is a function of how many have refinanced and how many have defaulted. There’s certainly no fixed maturity date: Money shows up in irregular chunks as people pay down their mortgages at unpredictable times—for instance, when they decide to sell their house. And most problematic, there’s no easy way to assign a single probability to the chance of default.

Wall Street solved many of these problems through a process called tranching, which divides a pool and allows for the creation of safe bonds with a risk-free triple-A credit rating. Investors in the first tranche, or slice, are first in line to be paid off. Those next in line might get only a double-A credit rating on their tranche of bonds but will be able to charge a higher interest rate for bearing the slightly higher chance of default. And so on.

    

«…correlation is charlatanism» 
Photo: AP photo/Richard Drew

The reason that ratings agencies and investors felt so safe with the triple-A tranches was that they believed there was no way hundreds of homeowners would all default on their loans at the same time. One person might lose his job, another might fall ill. But those are individual calamities that don’t affect the mortgage pool much as a whole: Everybody else is still making their payments on time.

But not all calamities are individual, and tranching still hadn’t solved all the problems of mortgage-pool risk. Some things, like falling house prices, affect a large number of people at once. If home values in your neighborhood decline and you lose some of your equity, there’s a good chance your neighbors will lose theirs as well. If, as a result, you default on your mortgage, there’s a higher probability they will default, too. That’s called correlation—the degree to which one variable moves in line with another—and measuring it is an important part of determining how risky mortgage bonds are.

Investors like risk, as long as they can price it. What they hate is uncertainty—not knowing how big the risk is. As a result, bond investors and mortgage lenders desperately want to be able to measure, model, and price correlation. Before quantitative models came along, the only time investors were comfortable putting their money in mortgage pools was when there was no risk whatsoever—in other words, when the bonds were guaranteed implicitly by the federal government through Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Yet during the ’90s, as global markets expanded, there were trillions of new dollars waiting to be put to use lending to borrowers around the world—not just mortgage seekers but also corporations and car buyers and anybody running a balance on their credit card—if only investors could put a number on the correlations between them. The problem is excruciatingly hard, especially when you’re talking about thousands of moving parts. Whoever solved it would earn the eternal gratitude of Wall Street and quite possibly the attention of the Nobel committee as well.

To understand the mathematics of correlation better, consider something simple, like a kid in an elementary school: Let’s call her Alice. The probability that her parents will get divorced this year is about 5 percent, the risk of her getting head lice is about 5 percent, the chance of her seeing a teacher slip on a banana peel is about 5 percent, and the likelihood of her winning the class spelling bee is about 5 percent. If investors were trading securities based on the chances of those things happening only to Alice, they would all trade at more or less the same price.

But something important happens when we start looking at two kids rather than one—not just Alice but also the girl she sits next to, Britney. If Britney’s parents get divorced, what are the chances that Alice’s parents will get divorced, too? Still about 5 percent: The correlation there is close to zero. But if Britney gets head lice, the chance that Alice will get head lice is much higher, about 50 percent—which means the correlation is probably up in the 0.5 range. If Britney sees a teacher slip on a banana peel, what is the chance that Alice will see it, too? Very high indeed, since they sit next to each other: It could be as much as 95 percent, which means the correlation is close to 1. And if Britney wins the class spelling bee, the chance of Alice winning it is zero, which means the correlation is negative: -1.

If investors were trading securities based on the chances of these things happening to both Alice andBritney, the prices would be all over the place, because the correlations vary so much.

But it’s a very inexact science. Just measuring those initial 5 percent probabilities involves collecting lots of disparate data points and subjecting them to all manner of statistical and error analysis. Trying to assess the conditional probabilities—the chance that Alice will get head lice if Britney gets head lice—is an order of magnitude harder, since those data points are much rarer. As a result of the scarcity of historical data, the errors there are likely to be much greater.

In the world of mortgages, it’s harder still. What is the chance that any given home will decline in value? You can look at the past history of housing prices to give you an idea, but surely the nation’s macroeconomic situation also plays an important role. And what is the chance that if a home in one state falls in value, a similar home in another state will fall in value as well?

Here’s what killed your 401(k)   David X. Li’s Gaussian copula function as first published in 2000. Investors exploited it as a quick—and fatally flawed—way to assess risk. A shorter version appears on this month’s cover of Wired. 

Probability

Specifically, this is a joint default probability—the likelihood that any two members of the pool (A and B) will both default. It’s what investors are looking for, and the rest of the formula provides the answer.

Survival times

The amount of time between now and when A and B can be expected to default. Li took the idea from a concept in actuarial science that charts what happens to someone’s life expectancy when their spouse dies.

Equality

A dangerously precise concept, since it leaves no room for error. Clean equations help both quants and their managers forget that the real world contains a surprising amount of uncertainty, fuzziness, and precariousness.

Copula

This couples (hence the Latinate term copula) the individual probabilities associated with A and B to come up with a single number. Errors here massively increase the risk of the whole equation blowing up.

Distribution functions

The probabilities of how long A and B are likely to survive. Since these are not certainties, they can be dangerous: Small miscalculations may leave you facing much more risk than the formula indicates.

Gamma

The all-powerful correlation parameter, which reduces correlation to a single constant—something that should be highly improbable, if not impossible. This is the magic number that made Li’s copula function irresistible.

Enter Li, a star mathematician who grew up in rural China in the 1960s. He excelled in school and eventually got a master’s degree in economics from Nankai University before leaving the country to get an MBA from Laval University in Quebec. That was followed by two more degrees: a master’s in actuarial science and a PhD in statistics, both from Ontario’s University of Waterloo. In 1997 he landed at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, where his financial career began in earnest; he later moved to Barclays Capital and by 2004 was charged with rebuilding its quantitative analytics team.

Li’s trajectory is typical of the quant era, which began in the mid-1980s. Academia could never compete with the enormous salaries that banks and hedge funds were offering. At the same time, legions of math and physics PhDs were required to create, price, and arbitrage Wall Street’s ever more complex investment structures.

In 2000, while working at JPMorgan Chase, Li published a paper in The Journal of Fixed Incometitled «On Default Correlation: A Copula Function Approach.» (In statistics, a copula is used to couple the behavior of two or more variables.) Using some relatively simple math—by Wall Street standards, anyway—Li came up with an ingenious way to model default correlation without even looking at historical default data. Instead, he used market data about the prices of instruments known as credit default swaps.

If you’re an investor, you have a choice these days: You can either lend directly to borrowers or sell investors credit default swaps, insurance against those same borrowers defaulting. Either way, you get a regular income stream—interest payments or insurance payments—and either way, if the borrower defaults, you lose a lot of money. The returns on both strategies are nearly identical, but because an unlimited number of credit default swaps can be sold against each borrower, the supply of swaps isn’t constrained the way the supply of bonds is, so the CDS market managed to grow extremely rapidly. Though credit default swaps were relatively new when Li’s paper came out, they soon became a bigger and more liquid market than the bonds on which they were based.

When the price of a credit default swap goes up, that indicates that default risk has risen. Li’s breakthrough was that instead of waiting to assemble enough historical data about actual defaults, which are rare in the real world, he used historical prices from the CDS market. It’s hard to build a historical model to predict Alice’s or Britney’s behavior, but anybody could see whether the price of credit default swaps on Britney tended to move in the same direction as that on Alice. If it did, then there was a strong correlation between Alice’s and Britney’s default risks, as priced by the market. Li wrote a model that used price rather than real-world default data as a shortcut (making an implicit assumption that financial markets in general, and CDS markets in particular, can price default risk correctly).

It was a brilliant simplification of an intractable problem. And Li didn’t just radically dumb down the difficulty of working out correlations; he decided not to even bother trying to map and calculate all the nearly infinite relationships between the various loans that made up a pool. What happens when the number of pool members increases or when you mix negative correlations with positive ones? Never mind all that, he said. The only thing that matters is the final correlation number—one clean, simple, all-sufficient figure that sums up everything.

The effect on the securitization market was electric. Armed with Li’s formula, Wall Street’s quants saw a new world of possibilities. And the first thing they did was start creating a huge number of brand-new triple-A securities. Using Li’s copula approach meant that ratings agencies like Moody’s—or anybody wanting to model the risk of a tranche—no longer needed to puzzle over the underlying securities. All they needed was that correlation number, and out would come a rating telling them how safe or risky the tranche was.

As a result, just about anything could be bundled and turned into a triple-A bond—corporate bonds, bank loans, mortgage-backed securities, whatever you liked. The consequent pools were often known as collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs. You could tranche that pool and create a triple-A security even if none of the components were themselves triple-A. You could even take lower-rated tranches ofother CDOs, put them in a pool, and tranche them—an instrument known as a CDO-squared, which at that point was so far removed from any actual underlying bond or loan or mortgage that no one really had a clue what it included. But it didn’t matter. All you needed was Li’s copula function.

The CDS and CDO markets grew together, feeding on each other. At the end of 2001, there was $920 billion in credit default swaps outstanding. By the end of 2007, that number had skyrocketed to more than $62 trillion. The CDO market, which stood at $275 billion in 2000, grew to $4.7 trillion by 2006.

At the heart of it all was Li’s formula. When you talk to market participants, they use words likebeautifulsimple, and, most commonly, tractable. It could be applied anywhere, for anything, and was quickly adopted not only by banks packaging new bonds but also by traders and hedge funds dreaming up complex trades between those bonds.

«The corporate CDO world relied almost exclusively on this copula-based correlation model,» saysDarrell Duffie, a Stanford University finance professor who served on Moody’s Academic Advisory Research Committee. The Gaussian copula soon became such a universally accepted part of the world’s financial vocabulary that brokers started quoting prices for bond tranches based on their correlations. «Correlation trading has spread through the psyche of the financial markets like a highly infectious thought virus,» wrote derivatives guru Janet Tavakoli in 2006.

The damage was foreseeable and, in fact, foreseen. In 1998, before Li had even invented his copula function, Paul Wilmott wrote that «the correlations between financial quantities are notoriously unstable.» Wilmott, a quantitative-finance consultant and lecturer, argued that no theory should be built on such unpredictable parameters. And he wasn’t alone. During the boom years, everybody could reel off reasons why the Gaussian copula function wasn’t perfect. Li’s approach made no allowance for unpredictability: It assumed that correlation was a constant rather than something mercurial. Investment banks would regularly phone Stanford’s Duffie and ask him to come in and talk to them about exactly what Li’s copula was. Every time, he would warn them that it was not suitable for use in risk management or valuation.

    

David X. Li 
Illustration: David A. Johnson

In hindsight, ignoring those warnings looks foolhardy. But at the time, it was easy. Banks dismissed them, partly because the managers empowered to apply the brakes didn’t understand the arguments between various arms of the quant universe. Besides, they were making too much money to stop.

In finance, you can never reduce risk outright; you can only try to set up a market in which people who don’t want risk sell it to those who do. But in the CDO market, people used the Gaussian copula model to convince themselves they didn’t have any risk at all, when in fact they just didn’t have any risk 99 percent of the time. The other 1 percent of the time they blew up. Those explosions may have been rare, but they could destroy all previous gains, and then some.

Li’s copula function was used to price hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of CDOs filled with mortgages. And because the copula function used CDS prices to calculate correlation, it was forced to confine itself to looking at the period of time when those credit default swaps had been in existence: less than a decade, a period when house prices soared. Naturally, default correlations were very low in those years. But when the mortgage boom ended abruptly and home values started falling across the country, correlations soared.

Bankers securitizing mortgages knew that their models were highly sensitive to house-price appreciation. If it ever turned negative on a national scale, a lot of bonds that had been rated triple-A, or risk-free, by copula-powered computer models would blow up. But no one was willing to stop the creation of CDOs, and the big investment banks happily kept on building more, drawing their correlation data from a period when real estate only went up.

«Everyone was pinning their hopes on house prices continuing to rise,» says Kai Gilkes of the credit research firm CreditSights, who spent 10 years working at ratings agencies. «When they stopped rising, pretty much everyone was caught on the wrong side, because the sensitivity to house prices was huge. And there was just no getting around it. Why didn’t rating agencies build in some cushion for this sensitivity to a house-price-depreciation scenario? Because if they had, they would have never rated a single mortgage-backed CDO.»

Bankers should have noted that very small changes in their underlying assumptions could result in very large changes in the correlation number. They also should have noticed that the results they were seeing were much less volatile than they should have been—which implied that the risk was being moved elsewhere. Where had the risk gone?

They didn’t know, or didn’t ask. One reason was that the outputs came from «black box» computer models and were hard to subject to a commonsense smell test. Another was that the quants, who should have been more aware of the copula’s weaknesses, weren’t the ones making the big asset-allocation decisions. Their managers, who made the actual calls, lacked the math skills to understand what the models were doing or how they worked. They could, however, understand something as simple as a single correlation number. That was the problem.

«The relationship between two assets can never be captured by a single scalar quantity,» Wilmott says. For instance, consider the share prices of two sneaker manufacturers: When the market for sneakers is growing, both companies do well and the correlation between them is high. But when one company gets a lot of celebrity endorsements and starts stealing market share from the other, the stock prices diverge and the correlation between them turns negative. And when the nation morphs into a land of flip-flop-wearing couch potatoes, both companies decline and the correlation becomes positive again. It’s impossible to sum up such a history in one correlation number, but CDOs were invariably sold on the premise that correlation was more of a constant than a variable.

No one knew all of this better than David X. Li: «Very few people understand the essence of the model,» he told The Wall Street Journal way back in fall 2005.

«Li can’t be blamed,» says Gilkes of CreditSights. After all, he just invented the model. Instead, we should blame the bankers who misinterpreted it. And even then, the real danger was created not because any given trader adopted it but because every trader did. In financial markets, everybody doing the same thing is the classic recipe for a bubble and inevitable bust.

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, hedge fund manager and author of The Black Swan, is particularly harsh when it comes to the copula. «People got very excited about the Gaussian copula because of its mathematical elegance, but the thing never worked,» he says. «Co-association between securities is not measurable using correlation,» because past history can never prepare you for that one day when everything goes south. «Anything that relies on correlation is charlatanism.»

Li has been notably absent from the current debate over the causes of the crash. In fact, he is no longer even in the US. Last year, he moved to Beijing to head up the risk-management department of China International Capital Corporation. In a recent conversation, he seemed reluctant to discuss his paper and said he couldn’t talk without permission from the PR department. In response to a subsequent request, CICC’s press office sent an email saying that Li was no longer doing the kind of work he did in his previous job and, therefore, would not be speaking to the media.

In the world of finance, too many quants see only the numbers before them and forget about the concrete reality the figures are supposed to represent. They think they can model just a few years’ worth of data and come up with probabilities for things that may happen only once every 10,000 years. Then people invest on the basis of those probabilities, without stopping to wonder whether the numbers make any sense at all.

As Li himself said of his own model: «The most dangerous part is when people believe everything coming out of it.»

— Felix Salmon (felix@felixsalmon.comwrites the Market Movers financial blog at Portfolio.com.

3
Mar

Más sobre el sistema bancario en España

Escrito el 3 marzo 2009 por Francisco López Lubián en General

Si hacemos caso a las declaraciones que están realizando últimamente las principales autoridades económicas, lo que parecía un sistema bancario español sólido, eficiente y ejemplar se ha convertido en un conjunto de entidades donde no faltan los problemas.

 Los mensajes son claros y su importancia me parece alta, ya que los que hablan no son figurantes de tercera. Por ejemplo, autoridades públicas (el ministro de Economía) y privadas (el presidente del BBVA) han comentado abiertamente la posibilidad de nacionalización o intervención de entidades bancarias. Por su parte, el gobernador del Banco de España acusa a la banca de sobrerreacción ante la crisis y prevé un proceso de reestructuración del sistema bancario en España.

Hablando hace unos días con un consejero de uno de los dos bancos más importantes de España, me comentaba que en este tema lo peor estaba aún por llegar…

Quizás sea el momento de que todos nos miremos a los ojos y nos digamos la verdad.

Hay problemas y la solución no consiste en negarlos. Y hay problemas en los tres temas fundamentales que determinan el ser o no ser de una entidad financiera: el control de riesgos, la liquidez y la solvencia.

Hasta hace poco se ha argumentado que el principal y único problema en las entidades bancarias españolas eran la falta de liquidez como consecuencia del credit crunch internacional. Siendo la liquidez un evidente problema que se arrastra desde hace bastante más de un año, la cuestión no acaba ahí. 

Hay una regla práctica que suele cumplirse (lo que los anglosajones llamarían una rule of thumb): la morosidad en la banca en un país tiende a situarse en la mitad de la tasa de paro. Con morosidades latentes del 7/8 por ciento la solvencia de algunas entidades financieras es más que cuestionable. No olvidemos que la morosidad es acumulativa y suele acabar en write-offs que erosionan gravemente la solvencia de una entidad financiera.

¿Dónde puede estar el inicio de solución? Desde luego todo debe empezar por reconocer, identificar y cuantificar el problema. Por reemplazar equipos gestores que han desarrollado una labor manifiestamente mejorable. Por reestructurar la cuenta de explotación, mejorando la eficiencia a base de reducir drásticamente los costes. Por limitar o anular el pago de dividendos…

En el caso de las Cajas de Ahorro, será además necesario restringir y racionalizar su número, y profesionalizar su gestión.

1
Mar

Ireland & Greece in trouble?

Escrito el 1 marzo 2009 por Antonio Rivela Rodríguez en Financial Markets

 

Ireland MapGreece Map

Once in a while markets overreact. I believe this is the case with Ireland and Greece. Therefore my crystal ball recommendation would be to buy as much Irish and Greece treasuries as you can.

Both economies are not doing amazingly well but nevertheless are European developed countries. Credit markets are pricing both of them as if they were a high yield corporate bond.

As Bloomberg pointed out last week the cost to hedge against losses on Irish government bonds is now the highest in the Euro region as Moody’s Investors Service changed its outlook on the top-rated debt to negative.

They added that Credit-default swaps on Ireland rose 2 basis points to 262.5, according to CMA Datavision. Investors perceive that the second riskiest nation is Greece, with contracts on its government debt costing 255 basis points, CMA prices show.

“The current economic crisis is likely to significantly affect Ireland’s economic strength and government financial strength for the years to come,” Moody’s analysts Dietmar Hornung and Kristin Lindow wrote in a report last week.

Ireland’s economy is headed for a record 5 percent slump this year as construction and consumer spending shrink, according to government forecasts. The collapse has lifted unemployment to a 15-year high and may push the budget deficit to more than three times the European Union limit.

The cost to hedge against losses on Irish debt is now more than Chile, the Czech Republic, Israel, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Thailand and China, CMA prices showed.

Credit-default swaps, contracts conceived to protect bondholders against default, pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a company or country fail to adhere to its debt agreements.

A basis point on a credit-default swap contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year.

 

 

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