Category Archives: Banking industry

Bank of America to Liquidate $12 Billion (Down from $40 Billion) Enhanced Cash Fund

The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg report that Bank of America will be shuttering a $12 billion enhanced cash fund. Note that this was a fund for institutional investors, and not a money market fund. Note that we had reported on a freeze on redemptions at this fund earlier. Investors who are still in the […]

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Societe Generale to Take $4.3 Billion of SIV Assets on to Balance Sheet

Although $4.3 billion is not a large amount of credit by large bank standards, Societe Generale’s decision to take assets of affiliated assets on to its balance sheet is further confirmation that the SIV rescue plan is coming too late to have any impact. From Bloomberg: Societe Generale SA, France’s second-biggest bank by market value, […]

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UBS: $10 Billion in Writedowns, Selling Stake to Foreign Investors

When it announced its third quarter writedowns of nearly $4.7 billion, UBS had predicted a profit for the fourth quarter. The planned $10 billion writedoff of subprime-related debt announced today not only will lead to a fourth quarter loss, but may lead the Swiss bank to show losses for the full year. The bank plans […]

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UBS May Take Further Subprime-Related Writedowns

Both Bloomberg and MarketWatch feature stories on the possibility of further mortgage-debt triggered writeoffs at UBS. Readers may recall that the markets took cheer when UBS announced its third quarter chargeoffs, believing the bank and its peers were putting their troubles behind them. However, the bank now has lower MarketWatch cited a Swiss newspaper that […]

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Wall Street Journal Versus the Financial Times on the SIV Rescue Plan

Once again, another example of the Wall Street Journal basically printing a press release and calling it a story, as contrasted with the Financial Times, which did some real reporting. The object lesson today is the latest news on the SIV rescue plan, which has retreated from the limelight as the Treasury’s other brainchild, the […]

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Sheila Bair Launches Ad Hominem Attack on Subprime Plan’s Critics

The quality of debate in America has become so debased that for the most part we have become desensitized to the use of ad hominem attacks. In logic and rhetoric, an ad hominem argument, which attempts to discredit the person mounting the criticism, is considered invalid, since the substance of the charge has not been […]

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Further Confirmation of the Political Motivations for the Subprime Rescue Plan

We wrote earlier this week that the subprime relief deal orchestrated by the Administration was an effort to forestall a bill sponsored by Democrats that would, among other things, give judges the ability to change some mortgage terms in consumer bankruptcies. Elizabeth Warren at Credit Slips confirms this view in her assessment of the subprime […]

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Subprime Rescue Plan: Investors Indeed Have Grounds for Lawsuits

Dear readers, I had wanted to go through the geeky American CoreLogic Mortgage Resets study, which gives mind-numbing detail on what type of mortgages reset when to come up with a more refined guesstimate of how many borrowers might be eligible for the formerly-Paulson, now Administration subprime program. The Administration claims its program could help […]

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Home Equity Loans: Source of Systemic Risk?

Minyanville has a post on three potential sources of systemic risk that have been largely overlooked by the media and in the markets. Numbers two and three on the list – downgrades to monoline insurers damaging municipal credit and counterparty risk in derivatives markets – have been covered in this blog. But the first, the impact […]

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"S&P Says Mortgage Freeze Plan May Cause Downgrades"

Duh. Note how, nevertheless, S&P bends over backwards to look supportive…. From Bloomberg: U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s plan to freeze some subprime mortgage rates in an effort to stop a wave of foreclosures may lead to ratings cuts on some mortgage bonds, Standard & Poor’s said. “Simply freezing interest rates on some U.S. first-lien […]

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Subprime Relief Deal Spurred by Fear of Pending Democratic Legislation

As some cynics speculated, the subprime freeze proposal, scheduled to be unveiled early this afternoon, got a considerable push from worries about legislation sponsored by Barney Frank which would have allowed judges in bankruptcy some ability to change mortgage terms in bankruptcy. Note that these proposed rules merely put consumers on the same footing as […]

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Saving Face (SIV Rescue Edition)

Events have overtaken the SIV rescue plan brokered by the Treasury Department and sponsored by Citigroup, Bank of America, and JP Morgan. The concept, first announced as a way to unfreeze the commercial paper market, is now being depicted as providing only modest benefits, namely, giving bank sponsors more time to sell the vehicles’ assets, […]

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Why Do Subprime Investors Wind Up in Foreclosure?

David Gaffen at the Wall Street Journal’s MarketBeat blog found some information showing why subprime borrowers lose their homes via foreclosure. The data is from a Countrywide presentation at the Bank of America investing conference, courtesy Peridot Capitalist: Causes of Foreclosure (July 2007) 58.3% Curtailment of income13.2% Illness/Medical8.4% Divorce6.1% Investment property/Unable to sell5.5% Low regard […]

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