Category Archives: Banking industry

Another Reason to Avoid Arbitration Agreements with Big Financial Institutions

Readers of this blog are likely to know that those arbitration agreements that customers have to sign when opening a brokerage account are a scam. As the Wall Street Journal noted, clients must go to industry-operated arbitration forums, and doubts about the fairness of the system to investors have led three senators to urge the […]

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Barclays in a Row With Bear Over Failed Hedge Fund

The Wall Street Journal, in “Barclays Spars Over Its Losses at Bear Stearns,” discusses how Barclays is wrangling with Bear over what may be as much as $400 million in losses related to the failure of its two hedge funds run by Ralph Cioffi. The article is remarkably unclear as to what exactly the disputes […]

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Good Primer on CDOs

The Financial Times’ Paul Davies has written a good short piece on the basics of CDOs, which is useful if you are ever in the unfortunate position of having to explain them to someone new to the concept. He also suggests that subprime-related CDOs going pear shaped is not an indictment of the technology. Nevertheless, […]

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Fitch Points to Credit Derivatives as Possible Accelerant in Credit Downturn

News reports on a Fitch study on credit default swaps came out yesterday, and I saw it reported in the Financial Times and decided to pass, but other elements of the report have been picked up elsewhere, and I changed my mind. Basically (surprise!) leverage cuts both ways. The FT cited the results of a […]

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Jamie Dimon Says Banks Getting Indigestion From LBO Debt

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, fesses up that commercial banks like his have overdone it on LBO debt and are likely to take writedowns. At this point, this statement is no revelation. The main point of Dimon’s remarks is to reassure investors that the prospective losses are not significant relative to JP Morgan’s capital […]

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Congress vs. Bernanke on Borrower Protection

A good old-fashioned showdown is set for this week between the Congress and the Fed. Congressmen are hoppin’ mad at the Fed’s failure not only to act to stem overheated and sometimes predatory subprime lending, but also its patent lack of enthusiasm in doing anything to keep this and other predatory practices from recurring. And […]

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The Junk Food Theory of American Indebtedness

Why do Americans save so little? It’s the temptation, stupid. John Kay of the Financial Times ponders why Americans and Brits are so lousy at saving when our advanced capital market offer us more attractive investment (and speculative) vehicles than other economies. Because they also offer more, and more varied borrowing products, and let’s face […]

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Fitch: Subprime Defaults Hit AA and AAA Tranches With 1-2% Price Declines

This bombshell came courtesy Michael Shedlock, in “Fitch Discloses Fatally Flawed Rating Model“: What follows are excerpts from Absence of Fear, an excellent article written by Robert L. Rodriguez at First Pacific Advisors.We were on the March 22 call with Fitch regarding the sub-prime securitization market’s difficulties. In their talk, they were highly confident regarding […]

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Debt Prices Falling

Whether you choose to see it as subprime contagion, repricing of risk, or a temporary correction, prices of debt in various markets are falling, which translates into higher yield requirements. At RGE Monitor, Nouriel Roubini took note (as we did) of a Fitch report warning of overheated lending practices in the commercial real estate lending […]

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Fitch Issues Another Warning About US Commercial Real Estate

The Wall Street Journal, in “Fitch Sees Rising Shakiness In Commercial Mortgage Arena,” tells us that the rating agency issued a warning Wednesday on frothy lending in the commercial real estate arena. The problem with this story is that the WSJ makes it sound as if that’s news. It isn’t. The Financial Times reported on […]

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"Warsh, Steel Don’t See `Systemic Risk’ From Subprime"

A Fed and Treasury official both said they don’t see the downgrade of some subprime related debt leading to a broader meltdown, but instead see the repricing of credit working itself through in an orderly fashion. The fact that they felt the need to issue the reassurance in and of itself isn’t a good sign, […]

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"Thrift Regulator May Ban ‘Unfair’ Lending Practices"

Today’s Wall Street Journal describes how the Office of Thrift Supervision is weighing new rules that would bar the banks it supervises from engaging in “unfair and deceptive” practices, a response to widespread claims of “predatory lending” in the subprime mortgage market. This effort, if it comes to fruition, is less and more than it […]

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