Thursday, November 5. 2009When Does The CHARADE Stop? (Fannie)It's a policy (according to Barney Frank) to lose money on purpose, right? Well then Fannie Mae ought to get some sort of award:
Let's face it. They're bankrupt. They've been bankrupt. They continue to become more bankrupt, despite being under "conservatorship" for more than a year! Now let's first and foremost deal with what Fannie IS. From their 10Q:
Got that? This will become important later.
Note that in addition to losing $19 billion through operations, they also had to pay $883 million in dividends for the existing "draw" on their Treasury credit line. They propose to expand that by about 30%, which will of course increase their dividend expense on that draw by an equivalent amount, causing it to reach approximately $1.2 billion dollars next quarter.
These dividends will reach approximately 20% of their net fee and guarantee income next quarter. This is an enormous (and effectively permanent) expense that will only expand so long as they continue to lose money.
Operating losses are increasing sequentially, not stabilizing or receding. The "serious delinquency rate" (loans three or more months past due) has continued to accelerate. In the third quarter it accelerated to 4.72% of Fannie's entire book of business (some $3.2 trillion) When one considers that older loans that become delinquent result in the immediate sale of the property and satisfaction of the note (since the home has positive equity) the magnitude of the disaster in play here becomes clear. To put this in perspective, non-performing loans accelerated by 19.8% in the third quarter. In the second quarter the rate of acceleration was 25%, in the first quarter it was 30%, and in the last quarter of 2008 it was 40%. This looks like a "better" rate of change but that is only because the original numbers were so small (1.72% originally.) In point of fact the "usual" default rate on their credit book has been around 1%, and was in the first quarter of 2008 (1.15%); as such the catastrophe should be clear in that the "serious delinquency" rate is now some 410% what it was in the first quarter of 2008! Fannie also likes to keep some of their credit exposure "off balance sheet." Indeed, in the third quarter of 2009 they had almost $164 billion dollars of seriously delinquent loans off balance sheet, as opposed to $33.5 billion that are on the balance sheet formally. They are holding 72,275 foreclosed properties, up about 10,000 from what had been a very stable 62,000ish number since the fourth quarter of 2008. Now let's talk about these "off-balance sheet" MBS. What does the footnote to that table say on Page 5? This:
Who are those third parties? Do they include this particular this particular third party?
Just curious.... Now let's talk about Fannie's problems with their mortgages. I found this paragraph interesting:
This is bad. Loans that were formerly considered "safe" are defaulting. That is, they're not "safe".
So if a lender didn't classify a loan as "Alt-A" or otherwise risky, according to Fannie, it wasn't. How much attention was paid to whether or not those loans sold to Fannie were properly classified by the sellers? Countrywide Financial anyone? Note that a federal judge has ruled that Countrywide's Mozilo must face securities fraud charges for:
How many of those are (as constituents of MBS) sitting on Fannie's balance sheet (and off) and are in fact a rotting fish instead of the claimed "quality, prime loans"?
The problem with drawing the entire facility is that it would make it almost impossible for Fannie to turn a profit. Indeed, if you look at the above original statement, multiplying the preferred dividend by five (roughly what would be involved) would result in a quarterly dividend payment that would consume nearly all of the free cash flow of the company. This presumes zero credit loss. But that is improbable beyond all reason - even in an ordinary economy a 1/2% loss rate is reasonable and expected (1% default rate and recovery of 50 or so on the defaults, after all expenses, or 1.5% default rate and a recovery of 70ish.) On a $3 trillion credit book this implies an annualized $15 billion in credit losses. The firm not only has to post sufficient net earnings to cover this, but also has to cover the dividends that are roughly $5 billion a year (as of now with the new draw); that is, it must post more than $20 billion in earnings a year just to break even, and that doesn't retire any of the debt. At least they're honest about this:
My analysis: NO KIDDING! Now on to The Fed and the intertwined snake pit between it, The Federal Government and Fannie:
The Fed bought all they could get their hands on. Must be nice, eh?
Uh, how do they intend to replace those facilities? We're talking about three and six months hence here folks! Now on to their "help"....
Well that's better than nothing, but you might try explaining how someone who has had their payments double - or more - is going to be kept from foreclosure by a $154 decrease in their monthly "nut." While any decrease is better than none, to believe that people are losing their homes over $150 a month is likely a losing bet. Now let's talk about The Fed and the impact of it's programs. Specifically:
It is rather clear that The Fed is buying more than "the entire market" of new issue thus far, since only $400 billion (roughly) of new issue into the market occurred. The rest was retained on balance sheet, and The Fed has been buying Fannie debt issues that are used to fund that as well. In other words, The Fed is not a participant in the market, it IS the market.
Fannie sees continued deterioration in the macro economic environment that bears on consumer mortgage performance. This is in STARK CONTRAST to the media pumpers and pundits, all of whom are claiming that "the worst is behind us" for the economy. Since consumers are 70% of the overall economy, it is simply impossible for both of these views to be correct. Fannie has more current and more topical information on the performance trends in their book than any of the media folks. Guess who is more likely to be right, and who has nothing to sell you under the rubric of "hope"? Fannie also has $47 billion of ALT-A and other "garbage" securities for which there is no market price (under "Level 3".) What are those really worth? Good question - and we also don't know what their acquisition cost was. Surprisingly (pleasantly so) there are few derivatives on their book. In short while Fannie has managed to increase its interest and fee income dramatically (some 77% over last year) it hasn't mattered, as credit losses have risen at a stagging 246% over the same time period. This is an organization that is going to die on it's present course. Only extraordinary intervention has kept it from happening thus far, but that intervention has imposed a bone-crushing liability in the form of dividend payments - a liability that will only increase as the line is further drawn down. It appears that the original $200 billion line was set not with an eye toward what the firm could ultimately sustain and pay down, but rather with the singular goal of assuaging the financial markets at that instant in time. This, as we all know, was an utter failure, as the line was extended in the spring and summer of 2008, yet the market melted in the fall anyway. Worse, we have now embedded The Federal Reserve in this charade, with them buying debt and MBS that under the black letter of the law appears to be flatly impermissible. I cite Section 14 of The Federal Reserve Act:
This paper is not a cable transfer, bankers' acceptance of a bill of exchange. This section thus does not apply.
They are not gold. Nor does this paper qualify under:
Again, these are not bills of exchange. This leaves us with:
These notes and debt instruments have maturities exceeding the limits specified; therefore, the debt must carry the full faith and credit of the United States as to principal and interest. But again, according to the 10Q:
Treasury has the authority (under the laws passed by Congress) to prop up Fannie and Freddie in this fashion, ill-advised though it may be, and inextricable though it may be given their credit position, earnings power, and required dividend payments. THE FED, HOWEVER, HAS NEVER HAD AND STILL DOES NOT HAVE THE AUTHORITY TO BUY EITHER FANNIE'S MBS OR ITS DEBT! THE ENTIRETY OF THAT $1.2 TRILLION DOLLAR PROGRAM CONTINUES TO APPEAR TO BE, AS I HAVE REPEATEDLY ASSERTED, ENTIRELY BEYOND THE LAWFUL CONFINES OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE'S AUTHORITY. Fannie, by its own disclosure in this 10Q, is surviving ONLY due to the extraordinary acts of Treasury and, I would argue, the blatantly impermissible acts of The Federal Reserve. Fannie has turned into nothing more than a politically-motivated toxic waste receptacle, first abused by Countrywide (and others, assuming the SEC's complaint against Mozilo is valid) and now by the FHA! This is a black hole that has consumed almost $1 trillion dollars of taxpayer money thus far. Worse, there is no viable exit strategy on the table nor can there be under the current course we are on. THIS CHARADE MUST STOP AND THE GSE'S MUST BE RESOLVED. Comments
Thursday, November 5. 2009More Insider Trading (UUP Options)Ok, who knew in advance of the UUP "dislocation" from this news:
SOMEONE came after the front month (November) $23 CALLs yesterday, with the underlying trading in the mid 22s. For 10-15 cents. Some 300,000 of them were bought yesterday. They just spiked on the re-open for more than a clean double after UUP's halt and some 60,000 of those contracts have, in the last few minutes, been sold. The "nutso premium" has since relaxed and is now "only" a clean double from yesterday's 10 cent close. You don't think they expected this to happen, do you?
You tell me what that looks like, and let me know when the responsible party for those CALL buys (they were happening yesterday in blocks of 10,000 at a shot - that's institutional) is identified and we see an investigation of what looks like blatant insider trading. CNBC just asked "is insider trading literally everywhere" on air. The answer, as I have repeatedly chronicled here in The Ticker, appears to be "Yep!" Comments
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Thursday, November 5. 2009Breaking Up The Big Banks?
The author goes on to say that Kanjorski may be the originator of this. Good, as far as it does, assuming it's real. But that's not the bombshell in the post. No, it's this:
Was that a threat? And isn't threatening the United States (whether directly or otherwise) something you're not supposed to do? Sounds like "Bail me out or I will crash everything." Isn't that analagous to walking into a bank, opening one's coat to reveal an explosives-laced belt, and saying "gimme all the money or everyone dies!" Does such an act constitute a terroristic threat? You decide. Then decide whether or not anything has actually changed for the better in terms of stability, or whether we're really in far more danger than we were last fall, as we've not only failed to de-fuse the bomb, we've allowed those who made the threats to profit from it - and thus have increased, rather than decreased, the risk of an all-on collapse.
Comments
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Thursday, November 5. 2009WHERE ARE THE DAMN HANDCUFFS? (Fraudie)
This has exactly nothing to do with helping "homeowners." It is entirely about Fannie not having to recognize the written-down value of these houses - that is, allowing them to hold the "mark" on the loan at it's original value, rather than recognize the loss.
Fannie won't sell the properties because then they would have to recognize the mark. This is nothing other than yet another scam to avoid recognition of bad paper Fannie took on their books and has a HUGE embedded loss.
Oh, so the rent can't be more than 31% of their pretax income, but the original note's payment was, right? After all, if it wasn't then the homeowner wouldn't have been in foreclosure in the first place! That's the key paragraph, and tells you that:
This is yet another scam folks, all courtesy of our government who will do anything to avoid admitting the extent of the liabilities that are now in Fannie and Freddie's portfolio (and by extension, partially in The Federal Reserve as well!) But the economy is getting better, right? That's why we keep seeing scheme after scheme, scam after scam, all intended to do one and only thing - avoid a true and accurate accounting of losses that have already occurred. And the market roars - it spiked a full 1% on this announcement - on yet more government-sanctioned and legalized fraud. IF the economy was truthfully improving we wouldn't need any of these schemes. Honest profits would be sufficient to both support the housing and stock market. The fact is those honest profits simply do not exist, and neither does the value of these "assets" support the loans outstanding against them. IF the government gave a damn about these homeowners they would instead reset the loan to the discounted cash amount of that market rent and re-write the loan at that same 31% of the homeowner's income. Of course that would force recognition of the fact that the property isn't worth anywhere near what the loan balance is, and thus force Fraudie and Phoney to EAT the bad paper they're holding. Scam scam scam scam scam - it's all good for the banks and oligarchs, while the average American is dispossessed of his house! Comments
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Thursday, November 5. 2009Legislative Voting Fraud (Texas)How can the people of Texas sit for this? And this begs the question - in The US House, where voting is done by "electronic card" (as opposed to open outcry in the Senate), do you really believe this isn't going on there too? So much for a so-called "representative republic." Comments
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