Emac's Stock Watch | Fox Business
  • June 23, 2008 07:43 AM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    Did the SEC Miss Warning Signs at Bear Stearns?

    Did the Securities and Exchange Commission miss warning signs back in 2005 that could have helped it stop the meltdown at Bear Stearns?  

    It's a question that arises from an SEC probe into Bear Stearns in 2005 alleging that the Wall Street firm may have fraudulently valued mortgage-related securities, the very same products that led to Bear Stearns' collapse, forcing a rescue orchestrated by the Federal Reserve that involved getting JPMorgan Chase (JPM) to park its ambulance outside its doors.

    The SEC subsequently dropped the 2005 case, prompting an inquiry from Senator Charles Grassley (R-IO), a ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee. But the senator's inquiry went nowhere. 

    Allegations about the fraudulent valuations and disclosures of these securities also led last week to the arrests of two former hedge fund managers who ran two Bear Stearns hedge funds that collapsed and cost investors $1.6 bn last summer, triggering the downfall of Bear Stearns. JPMorgan Chase eventually bought Bear for $10 a share. At the time, Bear had $389 bn in assets and $387 bn in liabilities against just $11.9 bn in shareholders equity. JPMorgan is now digesting this outsized balance sheet.

    The funds at issue were the High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund and its highly-geared cousin, the High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage Fund.

    The 2005 case involving Bear Stearns raises serious concerns for investors when it comes to the strength of the market police and its oversight of credit derivatives concocted during the housing bubble.

    The case is a little known and little understood matter brought in 2005, one that critics say could have saved the SEC a lot of headaches now, if it had chosen to use its regulatory muscle at the time.

    Award-winning journalist Michael Siconolfi at The Wall Street Journal broke this story in December 2007, "Did Authorities Miss a Chance to Ease Crunch? SEC, Spitzer Probed Bear CDO Pricing in 2005, Before Backing Away."

    The SEC has come under fire lately for not taking a tougher oversight role on Wall Street. The agency's trading and markets division is supposed to regulate the biggest broker-dealers, which means it's charged with keeping tabs on whether investment banks have enough capital on their balance sheets as well as the strength of their risk management systems.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now probing 19 large companies, including investment banks, credit rating agencies, accounting firms and hedge funds to determine their potential criminality in the subprime and credit mess.

    The FBI, which is looking at large-scale, corporate insiders, has not disclosed which companies are the subject of these probes. Accounting fraud, insider trading and criminal failure to disclose appropriate valuations of securitized loans and derivatives are under investigation. The SEC has also opened numerous investigations.

    At issue are collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), ultra-high risk credit derivatives that the investment banks sold to complacent institutional funds, including pension funds, endowments and insurance portfolios.

    Back in July of 2005, Bear Stearns buried in a footnote a terse, cursory disclosure about a regulatory probe in a quarterly filing, after disclosures about things like fights with the Utah state retirement board and the state of West Virginia.

    It noted it faced a possible civil enforcement action related to pricing, analysis, and valuation of $62.9 mn in CDOs, a series of high-yielding bonds supported by revenue streams from commercial, residential and mobile-home mortgages.

    Bear Stearns reported too that then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer had subpoenaed the firm about $16 mn in CDOs it had sold to an undisclosed client. The firm also disclosed it had set aside $100 mn in legal reserves to handle the investigation and possible litigation.

    Bear Stearns didn't provide any details or identify the customer that bought the CDOs.

    Later, it came to light that the SEC's Miami office allegedly planned to recommend that Bear Stearns be civilly charged for fraudulently pricing and valuing $62.9 mn of CDOs it sold to W Holding Co.'s Westernbank Puerto Rico bank unit, CDOs which reportedly later cost the bank $20 mn.

    Bear Stearns was reportedly valuing these CDOs at more than 90 cents on the dollar, but when the client wanted to sell the securities back to Bear, the firm priced the CDOs in the high-30s. Hudson United Bank also had reportedly complained to Spitzer after trying to unload the CDOs and allegedly discovering they were worth far less than Bear Stearns claimed.

    By that time, CDO sales were already posing trouble for the highly leveraged Bear Stearns. The firm's leverage ratio rose from 26.0 in 2005, meaning that total assets were 26 times the value of its shareholders' equity to 32.8 in 2007.

    Bear Stearns went belly up largely due to a run on the bank, which exposed that it had little capital to support its ocean liner of debt, partly because of problems it had with CDOs backed by mortgages issued in 2005 and 2006 during the peak of the US housing bubble.

    Recently, Sen. Grassley wrote SEC Inspector General David Kotz to look into the 2005 Bear Stearns matter.

    "Given the later collapse and federally backed bail-out of Bear Stearns, Congress needs to understand more about this case and why the SEC ultimately sought no enforcement action," he wrote, asking that the inspector general look into "the degree to which more aggressive action by the Enforcement Division may have led to an earlier and more complete understanding of the issues that contributed to the collapse of Bear Stearns."

    Grassley had cited a congressional probe which found that SEC investigators purportedly treated Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack with "undue deference" in its inquiry into Pequot Capital Management, because of his "Wall Street prominence and ability to hire prestigious counsel," implying the agency backed off from investigating Bear Stearns for similar reasons.

    The SEC declined an enforcement action against Pequot Capital Management in connection with an insider-trading investigation in 2006.

    Back then, Gary Aguirre, a former SEC attorney, told a congressional panel that he suspected John Mack, now the chief executive of Morgan Stanley , was a possible source of tips to Pequot.
    Aguirre claims he was fired from the agency when his investigation got too close to Mack, a major fundraiser for President Bush. But the SEC denied giving Mack special treatment.
    "I am particularly interested in this [the Bear Stearns] case in light of the SEC's failed investigation of Pequot Capital Management," Grassley wrote.  "I need to know whether the same problems identified in the Pequot investigation were repeated in the Bear Stearns case."

    But citing confidentiality, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox rejected Grassley's request for information in an April 16 letter, stating: "The Commission does not disclose the existence or nonexistence of an investigation or information generated in any investigation unless made a matter of public record in proceedings brought before the Commission or the courts."

    The alleged weakness in market oversight is chilling at a time when it's clear even Wall Street doesn't understand the Frankenstein products it has created, securities backed by loans given to borrowers with no compunction about mailing back the keys to their homes, dead loans walking.

    Aggregate global CDO issuance exploded in dollar size along with the inflation of the housing bubble. CDO issuance totalled $157 bn in 2004, $249 bn in 2005, and $489 bn in 2006, says the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

    Many CDOs are cut and paste jobs. For example, they often are constructed on the backs of credit default swaps, which are bets about the direction of mortgage-backed securities, which are built on landfill, meaning, mortgages given to borrowers who got these loans even though they had no income and no assets and no credit history. 

    There is virtually no independent pricing information about these CDOs, as there is a limited secondary market for trading these specialized bonds. Many of these securities are not liquid or tradable as a share in, say, IBM or a barrel of oil is. Instead, investors must depend on the Wall Street firms that create and sell them to get an inkling of what they are worth, valuations the firms can cook up on their own, according to accounting rules

    Check out this interview in the August 2005 edition of Wall Street & Technology with Ralph Cioffi, one of the former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers now under arrest. In it Cioffi reveals how rickety the whole process of creating credit derivatives really is:

    The interview notes that Cioffi explained that in the dealer-to-customer market [for credit default swaps], traders mostly construct contracts over the phone and via Bloomberg e-mails. Transaction and settlement records are created through a good deal of cutting and pasting of documents, and confirmations sometimes do not arrive for as long as 90 days, he noted.

    Question: Did Cioffi, or anyone else on Wall Street for that matter, vet the underlying collateral backing these securities, the mortgage debt taken out by shaky borrowers?

    "When we execute via Bloomberg," Cioffi continued, "we have to notify our back office through an e-mail, we calculate the settlement amount, the dealer sends us the amount and then we notify the buyer or seller of protection, so there are a number of steps."

    Really? Did any of those steps include checking in on homeowners who got loans with no money down and no assets?

Nick

How could anyone have predicted that a company with hundreds of billions in assets which were leveraged at approximately 35-1 to create something like $11 trillion of counter-party risk and leveraged returns could possibly fail? Oh, wait... I think Buffet said something exactly like that, a few years before it happened. And, come to think of it, a first grader could have probably figured out there was something inherently unstable and ultra-risky with their investments (given the right pictures and high-level metaphors). The whole idea of oversight without personal responsibility is a path to failure, especially when there's so much overlap in the players. Let the principles at the SEC be jointly and personally liable for any losses due to systemic meltdowns of public companies which cost taxpayers money; then you would see some aggressive risk management and real oversight. Until then, all we're likely to get is calls for more useless, ineffectual oversight which costs taxpayers money for no tangible benefit, and taxpayer bailouts after meltdowns sponsored by corrupt purchased politicians.

June 23, 2008 at 7:04 pm

Obvious

CDO values have been inflated for the past several years...every time it seems as though the good folks at the SEC are going to take a run at the banks and holders of CDO paper on this point, they back off. The press is practically ignoring the impact of the monolines' downgrade on these products too...is it really better to keep investors' heads in the sand?

June 23, 2008 at 5:40 pm

Greedom

P.S. Thanks for another great article. I wager there is a GREAT need for books on the 'what happened' regarding this whole sub prime mess and CDO's as you bring forward to being a great part of this. I don't see a lot out there, I know of the first one- WAY back in 2005 - WP promoted it, it's what's his name from innercitypress.org - one of my favorite resources to learn further about who's doing what, for worse or for worse. I like those people over at innercitypress, they're always filing charges, keeping people accountable, they won't give preferential treatment just because someone is JP or BS. Either way, I find the whole 'Did you do your book' thing over there at Fox and to be fair, OTHER places too - hollow, but I do say - if you did a book on this matter, you could probably help people understand better through the result of your labored efforts here on this subject. I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't hit best seller list !

June 23, 2008 at 11:11 am

Greedom

HAts off there Ms. MacDonald on your final line - as I just finished the article: "Really? Did any of those steps include checking in on homeowners who got loans with no money down and no assets?" Yeah, I think that hits the nail on the head. I think about this too - the entire no money down, no assets, and probably ? no credit check either. Citi has been found to rubber stamp sketchy 20 to 40% loans through their ugly CitiFinancial unit - "We'll just check this box here that says you're a. ok, all right Mr. homeless person" At least Citi has them buy the insurance FOR the loan and embed it INTO the loan and have it paid off from the initial offering (very sketchy). Now, heh, question is - will the US government be the one with no assets - low GDP, highly inflated currency - will the US be the one seeking a bad loan from say - China come 2009, 2010 ? to help pay for runaway debt. In so many ways I intuit the federal budget isn't so far away from BS- Bear Stearns of course on that acronym.

June 23, 2008 at 11:05 am

Greedom

"Grassley had cited a congressional probe which found that SEC investigators purportedly treated Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack with “undue deference” because of his “Wall Street prominence and ability to hire prestigious counsel,” implying the agency backed off from investigating Bear Stearns for similar reasons." "Ah gee mr. District Attorney - sure they killed em, but you know ? they've got 7 top attorney's - let's just let this one go ! ?" ??? UNDUE DEFERENCE ? sheesh If that's the approach to an investment bank, what would this look like with a president !? Or Senator ? "awe, let em go, they have too good of a legal team" ? ouch !

June 23, 2008 at 10:59 am

Greedom

from article: "Grassley had cited a congressional probe which found that SEC investigators purportedly treated Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack with “undue deference” because of his “Wall Street prominence and ability to hire prestigious counsel,” implying the agency backed off from investigating Bear Stearns for similar reasons." Wow - sounds strange, is it the OJ Dream Team / Scarface syndrome ? Just put an obscene amount of funds up front into a legal defense team and intimidate the other party that you're going to run this out until the cows come home ? BS has 'set aside' 100 million to cover legal fee's on a 10 million 'problem' ? hmm If only they covered their financial risk the way they cover their legal risk I suppose ? BS either had more than 10 million in CDO problems - and the 100 million was on the UNDERSIDE of that total, OR, it was perhaps meant to intimidate the SEC ? "Don't bother us, we have 100 million set aside to run you dry, you're budget for this is blah blah blah, we topped it ? " Strange, I agree with that senator - the 'why' of the SEC passing it up. Is it the police officer stopping Mr. and Mrs. Howl on the island ? Oh wait, there was no policing of Gilligans Island come to think of it, but I mean to say was it some case of favoritism ? "Oh sorry Mr. Gates, the light must have been green (says the officer)" ? - where anyone else would get a ticket for running the red light ? It's always nice to hear a senator go after favoritism though, I mean, I was reading that police report from Larry Craig and on a certain page in the PDF - the officer says Larry pulled out his senator ID card and said "what do you think of THAT" <- I ok, I capped it. The officer said it was clear to him it was meant to bring favor since he was a US senator to just drop it. I hate to end an SEC subject with Larry Craig, but all in all, BS wasn't far from these con-people we see that persist debt - WorldCom comes to mind, uh oh, so does the US Federal Government ! augh! back to work for me !

June 23, 2008 at 10:56 am

Greedom

from article: "It’s a question that arises from an SEC probe into Bear Stearns in 2005 alleging that the Wall Street firm may have fraudulently valued mortgage-related securities, the very same products that led to Bear Stearns’ collapse, forcing a rescue orchestrated by the Federal Reserve that involved getting JPMorgan Chase (JPM: 36.87, -0.99, -2.61%) to park its ambulance outside its doors." In respect to the hospital allegory - I do find my self asking two things here. One, what will BS do when they get to the ER and need that Cat Scan of the head only to be told "Your insurance doesn't cover that". And Two, speaking of insurance, I observe these investment banks now gain access to the Fed's borrowing window. Apparently this allowing investment banks to borrow was firewalled after the great depression, and is a first time happening since then. My questio is this, if investment banks now gain access to borrowing (OH great I say, let's let them borrow to go play the stock markets, heck, why not let them borrow and head out to Reno or Vegas) window from the Fed ? I ask - what's next ? FDIC insurance for stock trading firms ? the FGIC ? The Federal Gambling Insurance Company ? Wow - I am not so sure that what Bernanke did when he allowed investment banks access to borrowing money the same as consumer banks can ? Is not short of CitiBank standing outside of casinos in Vegas saying "here, need some credit ? " at entry. I say the universe may be a zero sum game (hey, I don't mean to say non-being beats being, that's a different issue though), some say derivatives are a zero sum game, but I do say - they sure aren't played that way. Funny ref though to ambulance. Now, to finish reading the article!

June 23, 2008 at 10:41 am

about this blog

  • Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.

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