Emac's Stock Watch | Fox Business
  • October 13, 2008 11:23 AM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    No Dice

    With governments around the world finally attacking the global credit crisis in concert, the push is on to stop the global economy from tipping over into a protracted recession that could last for years.  

    But there still exists a little known, mystifying reason why Wall Street has been leveled, why markets around the world have been shaken, why central bankers have taken to the barricades, and why the US government has been brought to a virtual standstill as it hashes out an historic rescue of Wall Street, a $700 bn bailout in the form of a mega-dumpster to buy the Street's Kryptonite paper, a taxpayer-funded trash compactor whose size has never before been seen in the history of finance.

    The Heart of the Problem

    The problem has been blamed for worsening the credit crisis, as it stands behind the record $650 bn in writedowns and losses taken by financial companies around the globe, a sum whose size surpasses the gross domestic product of at least 100 countries combined.

    It's a problem I've been warning you about since last fall.

    It's called mark-to-market accounting, the practice of pricetagging the value of mortgage bonds churned out during the housing bubble, bonds whose values now stand at pennies on the dollar, Kryptonite bonds strung in a drunken daisy paper chain now perambulating mindlessly around the globe, zapping hundreds of trillions of dollars out of investment portfolios.

    Mark to market, meaning, companies must treat these bonds as if they were to sell them today and then pricetag what they could get for them accordingly. Companies must then book these losses on these bonds even if they did not sell them.

    As the markets remain in a blackout for these subprime bonds, companies can't do mark to market accounting for them because there is no market to mark them too. This sounds like a bad Abbot and Costello movie.

    And as the markets continue to bungee-cord around, as the magnetic gravity forces of this whipsawed market continue to torque prices of these bonds beyond recognition, the calculators auditors use to price them are wildly gyrating around as fast as a compass held over the North Pole.

    Yes, understanding accounting can make you feel like you are bicycling through quicksand. But this rule is important--it's being partly blamed for the chaos worldwide. 

    Warning Bells Rung

    The accounting practice is partly why Wall Street has been demolished and why your taxpayer dollars are now heading toward a potential sinkhole, and again it's a practice I've been repeatedly warning you about since last fall when the credit crisis first picked up speed.

    A sample of the blogs: "A New Rule Change That Could Hurt Taxpayers," "What's Really Rocking the Stock Market," "Where Do We Go From Here?," "Forget the Bailout: Here's a Better Way," "What Inning is the Great Credit Crunch In?", "The Reality Check That Bounced", and "What Congress Must Ask the Federal Clean-Up Crew."

    No one really knows the value of these bonds and whether they are worth more or less than what the market says they are worth because the cash flow is or is not really there. As trust vanishes, the markets have now turned to the last triple-A rated borrower standing, the US government, to buy these damaged bonds.

    The debate now is: Suspend mark to market accounting and hurt taxpayers, as the US government may overpay? Or are the rules so dangerously flawed that they have unwittingly and unnecessarily blown Wall Street to smithereens?

    FASB Under Fire

    The pressure is on, the cry is growing from places like the American Bankers Association for market watchdogs and accounting regulators, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Accounting Standards Board, to suspend mark to market accounting to give banks and financial companies some breathing room.

    No dice. The FASB has stuck to its guns and said it would merely clarify, not suspend, the rule, called FAS 157, a clarification which hopefully will give companies a better sense of when they have to mark down their bad assets.

    "So audit firms will continue to pressure the banks to permanently write down assets that have no credit-quality problems," economist Edward Yardeni notes, though the triple-A rated bonds that in reality were built on subprime loans have been axed in value.

    And although Congress gave the SEC the authority to suspend mark-to-market accounting in the new legislation, the agency hasn't acted on it other than to have its chief economist also clarify FAS 157, Yardeni notes.

    It is no small irony that the government's bailout plan essentially is an attempt to put a pricing floor under these bad securities that are now being priced and written down according to a governmental accounting body's rules.

    How Crazy it Gets

    The losses have caused banks to be in violation of their statutory capital requirements, forcing them to raise capital to plug balance sheet holes. The losses are also the reason why a growing number of financial companies have shut down, been forced into mergers, or been nationalized.

    We saw very early on in the crisis how crazy the rule can get. Standard & Poor's, the US credit rating announced in March that it expected banks to write off $285 bn of mortgage assets. But then it quickly raised that estimate by $100 bn-odd, due to falling asset values and the rules.

    That is just one of many revisions that has left banks, government regulators and investors so seriously disoriented, that widespread confusion has taken hold in the stock market, with unprecedented volatility, as the fear gauge, the VIX volatility index on options, broke through an unheard of 70 threshold, more than double the 30 limit reached last March when the markets turned suicidal after the government's rescue of Bear Stearns, which, with government help, was merged with JPMorgan Chase.

    So, there is a bum's rush for the exits, there's gridlock there, as investors flee to the safety of government Treasurys, of nationalized banks (maybe their deposits will plug holes there), or they're standing on the sidelines not trading at all. 

    Drill Down into the Problem

    Wall Street and auditors have been using a potentially flawed index to find valuations for these bonds, such as the so-called "ABX" index, which tracks the cost of insuring mortgage-backed bonds against default.

    The index has already been criticized by the Bank of International Settlements, the central bank of all central banks, the premier organization for central bankers around the world based in Basel, Switzerland, which warned last June that the writedowns may be overblown due to accounting rules used to book them (see blog "Are Wall Street's Writedowns Overstated?")

    The indices, called the ABX  series, is run by Markit, a London-based company that sells financial data, portfolio valuation information and over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives processing.

    Again Markit's ABX index is illiquid and is only about three years old. Trading in the first ABX index series started in January 2006. Each index consists of a group of equally weighted, static portfolios of CDSs based on 20 subprime MBS transactions.

    The ABX Index is Unreliable

    The ABX is a synthetic credit derivative index, or a basket of credit default swaps that are basically high-priced gambling bets on where investors think the direction of the underlying bonds backed by subprime mortgages are headed.

    I know this is complicated, but bear with me, it's important. The swaps in the ABX are basically bets on the prices of the 20 supposedly most liquid (not saying much) subprime mortgage-backed bond deals. It's an understatement to say booking prices based on this index is accounting that is more art than science.

    It's not just that the index was historically used to grab a quote, and not as a regulatory cudgel deployed by auditors.

    Can an index based on values for just 20 bond deals legitimately be used for an asset class that is trillions of dollars in size? An index that historically undervalued the cash bonds it purportedly represents? An index now noted for its negative sentiment and one that is routinely used by short sellers to attack these securities?

    An index, depending on how you look at it, that is tossing off wildly different ranges of losses for the financials, anywhere from $220 bn to $300 bn to $400 bn to $700 bn? An index that seemingly doesn't take into account that the underlying assets, the houses, still exist?

    The ABX is essentially tossing off prices based on perceptions, the perception of traders who are looking at the credit rating agencies who are looking at the auditors who are looking at the banks who are looking at the traders. All locked into a claustrophobic graveyard spiral. All calamitous for stocks.

    So it's either this dizzying turntable of bearish fears, or a distressed sale, that Holy Grail of the capitulation event Wall Street has been searching for, a washout that would finally tell the world what these bonds are really worth and would let investors put the crisis in the rearview mirror.

    A slow dribble of mini-capitulations that has turned into investor water torture.

    Central Bankers Criticize the Rule

    Already, the report from the Bank of International Settlements has warned that ABX prices may not be representative of the total subprime universe, due to the indices' limited coverage of the overall market.

    For instance, the BIS report notes that the subprime securities picked up by the concomitant subprime ABX index are valued at about $31 bn. But the 2004 to 2007 vintage subprime MBS volumes are estimated at around $600 bn in outstanding amounts, so each ABX index only represents some 5% of the overall universe on average.

    The BIS notes that, when you drill down into the ABX, the ABX prices may not be representative because each index series covers only part of the capital structure of the 20 deals included in each index.

    On top of that, the indices appear to misrepresent deals as being long term in nature, making the writedowns larger, when they are actually shorter in duration, which in turn should make the writedowns lower, the BIS report explains.

    Devastating Consequences

    That has had devastating implications for the banks. Over the last year, the ABX has tumbled: the implied prices for some AAA instruments are now nickels on the dollar.

    And even if Wall Street buys up the full $700 bn in mortgage bonds out there, can we be sure that investors will start buying these bonds until they have a real sense of what clearing prices should be?

    Merrill Lynch, for example, just a couple of quarters back told the world a portfolio of bonds was worth more than 30 cents on the dollar, but within days then sold a portfolio of these distressed bonds at 22 cents on the dollar to vulture fund Lone Star Capital-and since Merrill financed 75% of Lone Star's purchase here, Lone Star effectively is saying that, to it, the bonds are only worth 6 cents on the dollar.

    Size of the Remaining Writedowns?

    Again, under new US accounting rules that took effect only last year, publicly traded US companies must value their assets at market prices and include them in certain buckets in their financials.

    The rules set up three buckets to hold problem assets. The Level 1 bucket holds the assets that can more easily be sold in the markets.

    Those assets not easily sold and valued based on partial market data by using valuation models get stuck in the Level 2 bucket.

    If there is no market available, the assets are Level 3, and may be valued based on the best guesses of management. Meaning, these assets are poison, Kryptonite, so they are valued based upon what's called marked-to-myth or mark-to-make-believe accounting.

    Economist Yardeni and his squad plowed through the quarterlies of the S&P 500 Financials to find out more about these assets. What they found should send a chill down your spine:

    * Among the eight large commercial and investment banks that have been reporting this information since Q3-2007, over the past four quarters, Level 3 totaled $461 bn (Q3-2007), $485 bn (Q4-2007), $600 bn (Q1-2008) and $612 bn (Q2-2008).

    * Level 2 totaled $4.3 tn (Q3-2007), $4.5 tn (Q4-2007), $6 tn (Q1-2008) and $5.5 tn (Q2-2008). "These numbers suggest that there may be plenty more kitchen sinks that will weigh on earnings for the large banks during the second half of this year," Yardeni warns.

    * What about Level 1 for the big 8 banks? "Unbelievably, these are tiny compared to Level 2 and aren't that much bigger than Level 3," Yardeni says. Level 1 totaled $1.1 tn (Q3-2007), $1.1 tn (Q4-2007), $1 tn (Q1-2008) and $956 bn (Q2-2008).

    There's more, Yardeni notes. I can't deliver this information any better than Yardeni did, this is straight from his report - again, his information, and the analysis collected and delivered by his team, is as vital as oxygen to investors.

    Yardeni has noted that at the time of its collapse, Lehman Brothers had only $32.4 bn of Level 3 assets, far behind Goldman's $58.8 bn and Morgan Stanley's $57.1 bn.

    But Lehman on its own was in dire straits. Its Level 3 assets constituted 23% of all of its financial instruments - the same percentage as much-larger Morgan Stanley and far higher than Goldman Sachs, for which Level 3 assets account for only 18% of its total financial instruments.

    However, Yardeni says: "Compare those Level 3 assets as a percentage of tangible common equity, which is a metric that measures how much equity is available to stockholders.

    Lehman's Level 3 assets were 146% of its tangible common equity - less than Goldman, where it is 162%, but far more than Merrill Lynch, whose recent fire sale of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) to Lone Star Capital dropped its percentage down to just 48%.

    Where is Housing Headed?

    We are now just about 20% down from the peak in house prices reached in the summer of 2006, as measured by the widely followed housing index, the Standard & Poors Case/Shiller index.

    The futures market is pricing in peak-to-trough declines in home prices of 33%, an estimated drop that would put homeownership prices back to 2002 and 2003 levels, when homeownership rates stood at 68%.

    But that 33% decline would only bring the markets back to levels seen at a time when the mortgage securitization engines were still gunning, pumping out dirt-cheap mortgages on terms borrowers demanded, boosting house prices.

    The Banks' Off-base Assumptions

    However, Meredith Whitney, top bank analyst at Oppenheimer Equity Research, has already warned that banks are using way too rosy assumptions about house prices, which means more mark-to-market writedowns could be forthcoming.

    For instance, Whitney says Bank of America (BAC) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM), through 2008, are using 25% to 30% and 24% peak-to-trough declines, respectively. Citigroup is using just a 23% peak-to-trough assumption.

    Cause for Optimism?

    But in a paper presented before the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., Wellesley College economist Karl Case, the Case in the Standard & Poors Case/Shiller index, argues that there is cause for optimism. He notes that of the 20 metropolitan areas covered by the Case/Shiller index, nine have shown prices slightly improving in recent months.

    Case also says that the relationship between incomes and home prices has neared a level seen at the end of past housing slumps.

    How far home prices fall matters greatly for financial institutions, Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius argued in another paper presented at Brookings. If the Case/Shiller index stays at its June level, total mortgage losses will come to $473 bn, Hatzius estimates. He estimates that a further 10% decline in home prices would lead to losses of $636 bn and a 20% decline would lead to $868 bn in losses.

    Loophole Dangerous to Taxpayers in the Rescue Bill

    Check out this sentence I've highlighted in italics in section 101 of the new bill, entitled "purchases of troubled assets"-it could also mean even higher costs to taxpayers:   

    "(e) PREVENTING UNJUST ENRICHMENT. In making purchases under the authority of this Act, the Secretary shall take such steps as may be necessary to prevent unjust enrichment of financial institutions participating in a program established under this section, including by preventing the sale of a troubled asset to the Secretary at a higher price than what the seller paid to purchase the asset. This subsection does not apply to troubled assets acquired in a merger or acquisition, or a purchase of assets from a financial institution in Conservatorship or receivership, or that has initiated bankruptcy proceedings under title 11, United States Code."

    Quite the loophole-acquirers can use the rule to mark up the value of these bonds in a merger, and then dump them on the US taxpayer.

    The section "probably indicates that JPMorgan Chase can sell the troubled assets of WaMu to the US government and make windfall profits," notes market analyst Richard Suttmeier. "Other future deals as well. That is a direct bailout of Wall Street on the back of taxpayers."

chuck

Liz here's my theory. The depressed house market has been the deep root of the problem.And this same problem spun the credit crunch and the subprime mortgage debacle which has crashed most banks on wall and broad. Question the market to market accounting be used with depressed housing market? Just trying to look at this problem in a different way that's all.

October 15, 2008 at 2:52 pm

Karen - Plantation, FL

I understand the mark to market, I understand the "swaps", the Community Reinvestment Act, the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the repeal of the uptick rule, not enforcing prohbiting naked short selling etc., etc., etc. What I continue to not understand is why the Federal Reserve did not DEMAND that Bush understood them, why the SEC did not DEMAND that Bush understood them, why the individual states that were trying to write laws against bad lending did not DEMAND that Bush understood. Why was Bush not made to understand the gravity of the situation and why wasn't Bush given the chance to tell the house and senate that the partisan politics have to go regarding this issue? As far as I am concerned the whole SEC, the whole Federal Reserve, the whole house and the whole senate should resign ASAP. What all have done borders on criminal in my book.

October 14, 2008 at 9:34 am

mike

One must only look at the end of their nose to see the home value decline still has a way to go. Probably 2 years at least, a time when wages will equal pricing. What will happen to the folks who have been paying their mortgage but see massive declines in value and wind up way upside down? walk aways? why pay on a 600k mortgage if your house is worth 300k! It aint over till its over.

October 14, 2008 at 7:38 am

daveM

Great Insights.!!

October 13, 2008 at 8:50 pm

Phx Dave

"(Failing Financ Inst)acquirers(i.e., Wells, BankAmer, Mistsu, Bufft) can use the ($700 bn bailout's)rule to mark up the value of these (junk)bonds in a merger, and then dump them on the US taxpayer" - this should have been the headline, but it's too late anyway. What was done in a week, would take years to change, if at all. The level of corruption is disgusting. We are sadly nearly powerless. PS: I wrote my congressman (US Rep Shadegg) before the 2nd vote about changing mark-to-market to a three yr rolling average instead of bailout, he replied with a form letter... Now that the market had a little uptick today, and because the public/media has the attention span of a flee, the greedy (financial mrkt)rats will end up with a lot of the $700 bn cheese on their plates. I saw the new commissioner of the bailout talk about 'oversight' measures for 20 minutes this weekend-ya right! The media will drop this issue once the market gains half its losses or less. Wish I could have had a piece of the bailout action... Never ever call the $700 bn deviant bailout a rescue plan. Btw, good article E

October 13, 2008 at 5:11 pm

G.P.

please answer this question... instead of buying up dead cdo and cmo assets, that will sit on the fed balance sheet, for years with more and more defaults. worthless and more worthless, at any cents on the dollar. take 700b and since the fed govt is the largest land owner (fnma, freddie mac) buy the 5mm - 7.5 mm troublesd mortges/ hard ship letter in hand proof of job. ok you want to stay in your home, well what can you pay? back into the loan 1% 2% 4% whatever .50%, govt makes money over 1.50%. the orig loan is paid off, NOT modified. now the homeower stays in his house, interest rate does not matter. at 5% on even 15% down who can refi?? who will lend?? the govt. each fed district handles the homes in their district. now as a trader these dead cdo's and cmo's show life, speeds and as a trader can be valued. the market will take care of itself on each traunch of each security. instead of winging out 60 cents or 30 cents (the underlying collateral will still under perform). modifaction just hurts a security owner that thought he bot a 6% coupon and is now a 2% more worthless. speeds and cash flow will make these assets tradeable. if banks want to lend they have competition from the govt or sit on the sidelines and hord their money for the slient bank runs. 250k is nice fdic but mor of the money is comming out of money markets and mutual funds adding more selling pressure. you what to help main street?? just send the money to them, they still have a new affordable mortgage if they truly want to stay in their homes. they are happy. they still owe the money but at a much lower rate. bank balance sheets improve because now cash flow is flowing into some of the "toxic" securities. a market will come alive, instead of selling at 22 cents on the dollar. the fed districts will act as new fannie and freddies and as the loans start paying down the portfolio's of fannie and freddie will shrink. they will be managable or done away with. too bas to the spec buyers unless they can poney up some money or truly pay on all the homes they own. just a tired old mortgage trader. G.P.

October 13, 2008 at 2:34 pm

al lintel

What is the rationale for the exceptions to PREVENTING UNJUST ENRICHMENT such as merger or purchase?

October 13, 2008 at 2:24 pm

EMacFan

So how do you suggest the MBS's and CDS's are priced? And what would the outcome of your new valuation standard be? Or is is too much to expect that you offer an alternative.

October 13, 2008 at 2:15 pm

Steve

Wonderful. So the large and powerful will gobble up the weak - spit out the bones (without any marrow) to the taxpayer without recourse. This is not a loop hole. This is a carefully worded paragraph that gives a wink and a nod to Paulsons banking buddies to "have at it boys! It's feeding time at the taxpayers expense!"

October 13, 2008 at 2:08 pm

C. Goodman

Typical lack of cooperation. The SEC will keeps ignoring this issue with devastating consequences.

October 13, 2008 at 2:01 pm

Mark Sunshine

Liz, Great explanation and wonderful artcle. Yardeni is a really smart economist that deserves a lot more credit than he gets. Thanks for keeping us informed.

October 13, 2008 at 12:55 pm

Jim Smith

E-mac writes a concise history of 'why' we are 'here'. I want to know 'why' FASB won't let us paddle our canoe away from the falls. I want to know 'why' they insist on keeping their own 'good intention/bad law' in place. Maybe they're opionion of themselves is more important then the $2 trillion lost value in the stock market."Off with their heads" or "where's my pitchfork "?

October 13, 2008 at 12:44 pm

GKA

I just have a sneaky feeling that the system is still broke and despite world governments throwing money at the cracks in an attempt to patch the dam, the dam is still going to bust. A second round of earthquakes have yet to hit: drop in demand for consumer goods and the inablility to control inflation.

October 13, 2008 at 12:29 pm

NIck

Remember something.Houses were being built when the material cost to build them was at record highs.That $26 sheet of OSB,is now $6.That 2x4 that cost $4,now costs $2.A house is only "worth" the lowest average price of the materials used to build it.When I can build a new home for 1/2 the price of a home built 3 years ago,you have to deflate the home value.

October 13, 2008 at 12:04 pm

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.