There
are 7 stages to executing a successful sting operation. Whether this is the
modus operandi behind the Sultans of Swap operating in the $605 Trillion OTC
Derivatives market or just simple coincidence, I will leave it to you shrewd
reader to determine. The seven stages do however offer us an
instructive theater guide to better understanding these murky instruments called
Interest Rate Swaps.
For
our younger readers
The Sting is a 1973 American movie set in September 1936 (an era not too dissimilar
economically to present day) that involves a complicated plot by
two professional grifters (Paul
Newman and Robert Redford) to con a mob boss Robert Shaw. The story was
inspired by real-life con games documented in “The Big Con: The Story of the
Confidence Man”. (Not
to be confused with “The Confidence Game” by Stephen Solomon
documenting today’s Global Central Banking structure and our own
Federal Reserve).
The
title phrase refers to the moment when a con artist finishes the
"play" and takes the mark's money. If a con game is successful,
the mark does not realize he has been "taken" (cheated), at least
not until the con men are long gone (1)
The 7
steps of a successful Sting normally occur in 3 stages which we will
distinguish as Acts in today’s modern ‘play’. Now that you
understand the plot line, sit back, tightly hold onto your wallet and enjoy
the ‘play’.
ACT
I - SMOKING GUNS
Usually
a caper or heist film will contain a three-act plot.
The first act usually consists of the preparations for the heist: gathering
conspirators, learning about the layout of the location to be robbed,
learning about the alarm system, revealing innovative technologies to be
used, and, most importantly, setting up the plot twists in the final act.
(Wikipedia)
1 -THE
PLAYERS
Like
any play we first need to introduce the actors. Who exactly are the Sultans
of Swap who play the $437 Trillion global Interest Rate Swap game? There are
many actors involved, all with their own motivations and sub plots. We should
pay close attention because like any good mystery the answers are unravelled
in the multitude of sub plots all happening concurrently.
- THE PATSY:
The Counterparties A & B (shown to the right in a simple interest
rate swap structure) actually hold the OTC (Over-the-Counter) contracts.
We will refer to them as the “PATSY” or
“PATSIES”. Like all PATSIES they have an angle and think
they are smarter than most. They have just enough knowledge to
be dangerous.
- THE
ACCOUNTANTS: These are the third parties that administer the ongoing
interest payment stream exchanges. We include here also the major global
law firms making daunting fees for contract writing and consultation. We
will refer to them as a group called “THE ACCOUNTANTS”.
- THE
SPECULATORS: These are the issuers and holders of CDS’s that protect
against or speculate on counterparty failure of the interest rate swap
contract OR the PATSY specifically. We will refer to them as
“SPECULATORS”. It needs to be fully understood that our
SPECULATORS engage in naked shorting of CDS’s in an unregulated
OTC where no DTCC exists that acts as a matching inventory custodian.
Our SPECULATORS appear as sinister looking characters in our fictional
play.
- THE
PRODUCERS: These are the magicians that put the OTC contract together,
take a quick fee and rapidly leave the scene in Act I as an apparent
supporting actor. We could call them the “magicians” but we
will call them the PRODUCERS after the Broadway play by the same name
and possibly with similar motivations. You may recall that the 2005
movie “The Producers” was about two producers pulling a
sting where they intentionally produced a play expecting and planning
for its failure. The TAKE was in the failure. Broadway is only uptown
from Wall Street and in the center of the mid town Investment Banking
crowd. Like a chicken & egg it is hard to tell which was devised
first – the evening theater entertainment or their daily
enterprising activities.
(Note: We need to carefully watch the sub plot of the PRODUCERS unfolding
or we won’t see the sting coming).
- THE CON MEN:
These are the “Confidence Men” or “CONS” for
short. Their role is make our PATSIES feel confident. These are
the Credit Rating Agencies who have starred in previous plays (i.e. the Toxic Asset
ratings associated with the financial crisis) once again
doing their mysterious and well disclaimed ratings. In our play they are
rating both the credit worthiness of either PATSY and even the SPC
(Structured Private Company) involved in certain Sovereign Interest Rate
Swaps (more on that
later). Their role allows either PATSY to feel comfortable
that the other PATSY can pay (we
need to immediately recognize the difference between operative words:
can and will)
- THE
DIRECTORS: These are the SEC, CFTC & corresponding international
regulatory authorities. This group additionally includes Legislative
authorities such as the US House Financial Services Committee and the US
Senate Banking Committee that somehow are always overlooked but are
senior DIRECTORS in this play. All the DIRECTORS in our fictional play
are dressed as sleepy eyed police officers with little to no interest in
the shenanigans of the other actors throughout all three acts. The
DIRECTORS are seen to react to telephone calls that occur throughout our
play where there is a brief flurry of disorganized and short lived
attention. They are then seen to supervise the fallout of some exploding
financial event, before just as quickly returning to their ongoing
siesta.
- THE
BANKSTERS: These are the international banks making obscene fees and
trading charges. We are talking $35B in 2009 trading fees alone (6) for
brokering these swaps from parties desperate to re-align contract bets
since the financial tsunami arrived. We will call them the
“BANKSTERS”.
As in
any mystery thriller the sub plots can make a simple story appear more
complex than it really is. We need to remember what the old carnival ‘3
shells & a pea’ game teaches - it is a sleight of hand &
deception that allows the trick to work.
Enter
stage left our PRODUCERS and PATSIES.
2- THE
SET-UP
The
Set-Up must achieve two objectives: Establish the NEED and create CONFIDENCE.
THE
NEED – Debt Addiction
The
ideal need is one that is addictive. Drugs, Alcohol and Tobacco are three of
the clearer examples. Like pushers conning children into using drugs for the
first time, the PRODUCERS must convince the PATSIES there is no danger.
Everyone is doing it and it will make life better.
Our
addiction of choice in this sting is Debt. Whether Consumer, Corporate or
Sovereign Debt, western economies have become addicts over the last 30 years
– there can be little disputing this fact. It did not happen by chance.
To those trafficking in debt the Holy Grail is Sovereign debt. This is due to
both its size and its ability to guarantee debt payments based on a legal
authority to tax. It
has the law and enforcement powers behind it.
John
Perkins has authored a series of books from “Confessions of an Economic Hit Man”
in 2004 to “Hoodwinked”
in 2009, laying out his personal involvement in intentionally establishing
false economic justifications for large sovereign infrastructure projects
around the globe. Whether you believe his assertions that it was at the
behest of elements within the US government, we can clearly see is he was up
front and involved in perpetrating the plans & justifications upon which
governments in third world countries could secure massive levels of debt
based on fraudulent economic justifications. Even those who weren’t
addicted because they didn’t have the ability to borrow were drawn into
the game by agents that would free foreign leaders from debt constraint. Debt
obligations through the hands of these pushers quickly flowed like drugs to
an addict and liquor to an alcoholic.
In
more developed countries with legacy social entitlement programs we are
seeing massive social entitlements continuing to only get larger, more
generous and more underfunded. None is more obvious than in Greece, Portugal,
Italy, Spain (PIGS) and across Western & Eastern Europe where the
unquenchable thirst for more debt has reached the terminal stage that all
substance abusers will eventually find them if all restrictions to drugs (lending) are
removed.
Enter
stage right the CON MEN to join the others on the stage.
CREATING
CONFIDENCE – The “AAA”
In “The Swaps that
Swallowed Your Town”, the New
York Times on 03-05-10 illustrated how Interest Rate Swaps were shrewdly
peddled to US municipalities, school districts, sewer systems and other
tax-exempt debt issuers. In this world of the intersection of Derivatives and
Municipal debt financing, the sales pitch they report “(the peddlers) accentuated
the positives in them. “Derivative products are unique in the history
of financial innovation,” gushed a pitch from Citigroup in
November 2007 about a deal entered into by the Florida Keys Aqueduct
Authority. Another selling point: “Swaps have become widely accepted by
the rating agencies as an appropriate financial tool.” And, the
presentation said, “they can be easily unwound” (1).
The ratings agencies were at the center of the collapse in the mortgage
securitization collapse because of the perceptions that the rating agencies
rated CDO (Collateralized Debt Obligations) and all the other toxic waste as
AAA. In the interest rate swap play the credit rating agencies rate the
sovereign debt based on what the balance sheet shows them. They would likely
argue that even if they are fully aware of off balance sheet activities their
duties are to appraise only what is before them, what the accounting
standards of a particular sovereign outlines and specifically how those
standards interpret ‘contingent liabilities’. (More on this subject as our play
unfolds). Armed with the newly arrived CON MAN’s credit rating
on both PATSIES, with the assurances of the PRODUCERS, and with the help of
the now present ACCOUNTANTS, our PATSIES feel confident that risks are
manageable based on everything they have heard from the experts present on
stage.
3- THE
HOOK
The
hook is about the Timing and Rationalization of the Sting.
The
BANKSTERS join the large crowd of actors now performing complex magical acts
before the PATSIES on stage.
Like
any addiction it takes an event to initiate the addiction. The event delivers
both Timing & Rationalization.
Whether
it is a third world leader clinging to power by offering expensive populist
solutions, declining revenue bases due to failing industrial policy,
geo-political defense requirements, a natural disaster, economic
strategies like Dubai’s opulent extravagances or membership in the
European Union with its Maastricht Agreement requirements etc, etc., these
are the justifications, excuses or motivations for the loan and expanding
debt.
This
list and endlessly more justifications have always existed. Getting the money
historically has been the constraining element. No more constraints thanks to
our Sultans of Swap.
4- THE
TALE
The
Tale is the presentation of the OFFER.
With
all our actors seated at the table in the center of the stage we hear the
quiet whispers as the plan is secretly divulged.
From
the endless list of timing & rationalizations we will select just one to
overhear in our fictional play which is garnering a lot of investor &
media attention – The European Union Experiment.
According
to the Maastricht Agreement and the EU Stability & Growth Pact (SGP) a
condition of entry and ongoing membership is the adherence to fiscal deficits
of no more than 3% of GDP and total debt of no more than 60% of GDP. It is
now emerging that members were creative in their accounting to facilitate
membership, and then even more creative to allow for existing debt
compounding and the increases due to additional populist programs.
The
audience tentatively listens as the whispered plans are unveiled:
GREECE
We
form a PPP (Public Private Partnership) under the direction of a PPI (Public
Private Initiative). We form a SPC (Special Purpose Company). Through the
contractual use of a legal opus magnum called a Novation Agreement the Greek
government exchanges fixed interest streams for floating interest rate
streams and in so doing receives cash up front with a bubble payment at the
termination of the Interest Swap Agreement. Presto, we have an off balance
sheet debt without any impact to Greece’s sovereign debt rating. It is
much more involved than this and I therefore refer you to: SULTANS OF SWAP: Explaining $605 Trillion in Derivatives! and SULTANS OF SWAP: Fearing the Gearing! which
outlines this structure as specifically applied at Kitlos PLC (SPC) in
Greece.
Reggie
Middleton at the BoomBustBlog.com has
done some truly tenacious digging and has unearthed the following further
smoking guns:
“According
to people familiar with the matter interviewed by China Securities Journal,
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. did as many as 12 swaps for Greece from 1998 to
2001, while Credit Suisse was also involved with Athens, crafting a currency
swap for Greece in the same time frame. Under its "off-market" swap
in 2001, Goldman agreed to convert yen and dollars into euros at an
artificially favorable rate in the future. This helped Greece to use that
"low favorable rate" when it recorded its debt in the European
accounts-pushing down the country's reported debt load.
Moreover,
in exchange for the good
deal on rates, Greece had to pay Goldman (the amount
wasn't revealed). And since the payment would count
against Greece's deficit, Goldman and Greece came up with another twist:
Goldman effectively loaned Greece the money for the payment, and Greece
repaid that loan over time.
And the two sides structured the loan as another kind of swap. So, the deal
didn't add to Greece's debt under EU rules. Consequently, Greece's total debt as a
percentage of GDP fell from 105.3% to 103.7%, and its 2001 deficit was
reduced by a tenth of a percentage point in GDP terms, according to people
close to Goldman”. (3)
ITALY
“As
discussed in a recent ZeroHedge article, a 1996 Italian
currency swap, arranged by J.P. Morgan, allowed Italy to receive large
payments upfront that helped keep its deficit in line, with the downside of
greater payments later. In addition, to curbing their current deficits,
countries are now using these swap agreements to push off their loan
liabilities (related to swap agreements) to a later date through
securitization, and Greece is one such example.
Under
the 2001 deal brokered by Goldman, Greece swapped dollar and yen-denominated
debt for Euros at below-market exchange rates. The result was that the country
got paid €1 billion ($1.35 billion) upfront on the swap in exchange for
an obligation to buy the swaps back later. In 2005, this obligation was in
turn securitized as part of a 20-year debt issue, further pushing off the day
of reckoning.
Moreover,
one of the key reasons why such manipulations continued is the apparent
ignorance of the EU's Eurostat, which knew enough about these deals to
tighten the rules governing their accounting-albeit only after they had
served their purpose - the Ponzi! When Italy's then-Prime Minister Romano
Prodi miraculously achieved a four-percentage-point improvement in Italy's
budget deficit in time to usher the country into the common currency, Italy's
use of accounting gimmicks was widely discussed, and then promptly ignored.
As at that time, everyone was only too eager to look the other way in the
drive to get the single currency up and running.
It
wasn't until 2008, a decade after the deals became popular, that Eurostat was
able to revise its rules to push countries to include swaps in their debt and
deficit calculations. Still, todate too little is known about countries'
continued exposure to the deals that are already out there.
Overall,
though there is less evidence to support that there are more such swap deals
that happened during the late 90's until early part of this decade, the data
to the right showing a sharp decline in interest payments as a percentage of
GDP particularly for Belgium (apart from Greece and Italy), hints that there
are considerably more of these deals to be discovered. The question is, will
they be discovered before or after the respective sovereign issues record
debt to the suckers sovereign fixed income investors.
Notice
the extremely supercalifragilisticexpealidocious reductions Belgium, Greece
and Italy have made in their interest payments from 1993 to 2000 in this
graphic made pre-2000. If one didn't know better, one would have thought
these countries actually used magic to make such reductions. Italy
practically cut their debt service (projected, of course) in half. It really
makes one wonder. I'm just saying...
According
to DERIVATIVES AND
PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT by Gustavo Piga, "The political
stakes of the 1997 budget package were enormous. Therefore, it was no
surprise that many countries were accused of ‘creative window-dressing'
in their budget through the use of accounting tricks to reach the desired
goal. One contentious item was interest expenditure, which is the interest
expense that governments sustain to finance their deficit and roll over their
debt. Interest expenditure represents a high percentage of public spending
and GDP in the European Union. It is highly variable over time, especially
when compared to other components of the budget. Because of its relevance and
because it is subject only to minimal scrutiny during budget law discussions
(and many times even after its realization during the fiscal year), interest
expenditure is an ideal target for reaching fiscal stabilization goals
without incurring excessive political protest or opposition". (3)
Reuters
leaves little to speculation when it reported on March 11, 2010:
Forget Greece: Italy derivatives bomb also ticking
Many
local governments eager to cut financing costs for years rushed to sign up
for complex derivatives contracts, even when the terms were in English. But
some cities, facing big losses when interest rates go up, are now trying to
pull out of derivatives and suing the international and local banks that
arranged the deals.
In a
test case, a judge in Milan will decide in coming weeks whether to try 13
people and four banks -- UBS (UBSN.VX), Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), Germany's Depfa and JPMorgan Chase
& Co (JPM.N) -- on aggravated fraud charges. The
case stems from a derivatives swap over a 1.68 billion euro ($2.28 billion)
30-year bond, the biggest issued by an Italian city.
Milan,
Italy's financial capital, is facing a 100 million euro loss on the deal,
city officials say. Milan is also suing the banks for 239 million euros in
overall liabilities.
In the
southern region of Puglia, prosecutors are seeking to bar Merrill Lynch, a
unit of Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), from government contracts for two
years. The move stems from derivatives losses from 870 million euros in
regional bonds.
JPMorgan,
UBS and Deutsche have denied wrongdoing, and Depfa has declined comment.
Merrill has not commented.
MAKE
THE SWITCH
Almost
500 small and large Italian cities are facing mark-to-market losses of 2.5
billion euros on the contracts, according to the Bank of Italy. Analysts say
that figure will balloon when interest rates go up.
Most of the contracts involved switching fixed rates on loans to variable
ones with banks.
"With
the economic crisis, the problem has been lessened a bit (with lower rates)
... But in fact with
a rate rise it becomes an even worse problem," said
Fabio Amatucci, an expert on local government finances at Milan's Bocconi
University.
The
European Central Bank is expected to start hiking rates at the end of this
year or early next year.
U.S. and European officials are looking into how U.S. investment bank Goldman
Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) may have helped Greece disguise the
size of its budget deficit through the use of cross-currency derivatives in
2001.
The
Italian deals differ somewhat from the Greek case since the instruments were
usually for switching rates on loans, but Italy stands out because of the
vast number of cities, regions and public entities -- even a theater
association -- that turned to them from 2001 to 2008.
The
Bank of Italy put the notional value of derivatives contracts at 24.1 billion
euros in June 2009. However, Il Sole 24 Ore business newspaper on Thursday
cited Treasury data to put the overall figure at 35.5 billion euros -- a third of local governments'
debt -- when wider criteria were used.
Although
central bank figures show 467 local governments had derivatives contracts at
the end of September, Amatucci believes the real number could be around 3,000 as more deals
emerge.
The
government banned new contracts in 2008 pending new rules. Economy Minister
Giulio Tremonti has said there is "no effect" from derivatives held
by local governments.
LOOSEN
UP
Local
governments rushed into derivatives in part because they helped ease the
rigidity of a 2001 law that bars taking on new debt except to finance
investment.
But another big draw was the upfront
payment many cities got in advance for signing revamped agreements, usually
done without a bidding process, analysts said.
Renegotiated
deals shoved back payment and costs in a "political manipulation"
of signings, said Giampaolo Gialazzo with the Tiche consultancy in Treviso.
Revised
deals also carried increasingly
restrictive terms and higher costs for municipalities and other local
governments.
"Greece
did nothing more than get itself money right away and then pay it back
slowly. Local administrations in Italy did the same thing," said
Massimiliano Palumbaro with CFI Advisors in Pescara.
Pescara, a southern Italian city, itself took out a total of 108 million
euros in interest rate swaps and is suing UniCredit SpA (CRDI.MI) and BNL, a unit of France's BNP Paribas
(BNPP.PA), over them. UniCredit had no comment,
while BNL had no immediate comment.
When
rates are low, as they were when many contracts were agreed, local
authorities using a variable rate could find their costs shrinking. However,
when rates rose, officials would find themselves owing more money.
Milan
has argued, as have many other local administrations, that the contracts were murky, carried
hidden costs and banks had failed to explain them.
However,
a source close to the issue said Milan could not argue that it was ignorant
about derivatives since the 2005 swap replaced a contract that had been
renegotiated repeatedly.
The
city also has wide securities markets experience given its joint control of
listed utility A2A (A2.MI), the source said.
With
banks putting in place a complex deal that had to be overseen for 30 years
with hefty back-office costs, "the city could not expect that the banks
were going to take that position for free," said the source.
Despite
the court cases, Milan is still interested in derivatives. The city council
said on Wednesday it was studying a switch from a variable rate on the
contract to a fixed one.
PORTUGAL
“Portugal has also been known for
years to take advantage of derivatives contracts to dress up its budget
numbers in the late 1990s. In a recent press article (Debt Deals Haunt Europe)
Deutsche Bank's spokesman Roland Weichert commented that the bank has
executed currency swaps on behalf of Portugal between 1998 and 2003. He also
said that Deutsche Bank's business with Portugal included "completely
normal currency swaps" and other business activity, which he declined to
discuss in detail. He also added that the currency swaps on behalf of
Portugal were within the "framework of sovereign-debt management,"
and the trades weren't intended to hide Portugal's national debt position
(yeah okay!). Though the Portuguese finance ministry declined to
comment on whether Portugal has used currency swaps such as those used by
Greece, They said Portugal only uses financial instruments that comply with
European Union rules.” (3) The Portugal comment begs the whole issue of
“Framework of Sovereign Debt Management “. What it is and how
exactly it aligns with standard international accounting practices as it
relates specifically to “contingent liabilities” – but we
digress and will return to this briefly.
We
could go from Spain to France and other EU countries operating under the
Eurostat framework guidelines and see the same thing. We could discuss the
Millennium Dome Project in the UK. We could discuss Dubai World and the
hidden amount of debt recently discovered (and still being discovered), but
let’s skip over the pond to the USA to see if this is just an isolated
European “TALE” being told.
US -
NY STATE MUNICIPALS
In
The Swaps That Swallowed Your Town the
New York Times shows that there is widespread use of Interest Rates swaps
across US Municipalities with extremely negative consequences now showing up
that were not understood when the PRODUCERS and BANKSTERS made their
presentations. Though I failed to see clear proof in their examples of the
adoption of the Novation agreement being used in Europe, this doesn’t
necessarily mean it is not being used or there is derivation from being
employed in the US. What I found interesting was that the CEO of an advisory
firm on this subject is quoted as saying ““We need transparency
where Wall Street discloses not only the risks but also calculates the
potential costs associated with those risks. If you just ask issuers to
disclose, even in a footnote, the maximum possible loss or gain from the
swap, they probably wouldn’t do it.” (1) The audience must
surely notice that the DIRECTORS in our play are now completely asleep on
stage though another frustrated call is heard from Harry Markopolos over the
stage loud speaker.
And
here ladies and gentleman – watch closely – we have the sleight
of hand mentioned earlier.
Everything
is aimed at getting debt off the balance sheet. Whether through SPE (Special
Purpose Entities) of various descriptions or conduits such as SIV (Structured
Investment Vehicle) the shell game is all about avoiding the “d”
word or Debt.
A LOAN is a
debt and must be accounted as A LIABILITY.
A GUARANTEE is not a loan! It is a CONTINGENT Liability.
A
Guarantee is something that accountants refer to as a “contingent
liability”. The operative word here is “contingent”.
This quickly gets extremely tricky to quantify in its simplest form without
adding the complexity of layers of structures and parties around it. It
becomes a game of assessed probabilities. The results of the probabilities
determine the amount of contingent liabilities to be accrued as a debt
liability. Then there is the question of timing. What event might trigger
this and when should the liability treatment be reflected.
As an
illustrative example, what were the chances of housing correcting 15% when we
hadn’t seen housing go down in neither our lifetime or our possibly our
parents? Many considered it unlikely and therefore either minimal or no
contingencies were allowed.
Add to
this confusion a slew of accounting standards with various interpretations
and rulings (ias 37 contingent liabilities, ifrs contingent liabilities
, fasb contingent liability, us gaap contingent liabilities, Government Accounting
Standards Advisory Board, contingent liabilities
disclosure etc.) and
you end up in very murky waters - Waters not too dissimilar to those
associated with toxic assets in the financial crisis where is was nearly
impossible to value Level 1 bank Capital Ratios – Mark-to-Market was
Mark-to-Model or more aptly Mark-to-Myth. This is the same problem with a
slightly different twist. There is the same consistent concern about debt
appearing on an asset / liability ledger.
5- THE
WIRE
The
bookie operation was a wire service in the movie ‘The Sting’ and
it was central in pulling off the story’s heist. In our play we have an
electronic wire service but it runs between the BANKSTERS and some of the
PRODUCERS. It is called the OTC or Over-the-Counter trading. This is how all
$605 Trillion Derivatives, including $437 Trillion in Interest Rate Swaps,
are traded. No regulations. No standards. No supervision. No audits. They are
completely private, restricted and proprietary. There is no sheriff or watch
dog. It is the Wild West without a sheriff in town. The boys can shoot it up
all they want. Similar to the DTC & Naked Shorting, Dark Pools,
High Frequency Trading etc., it is ripe for creative enterprise. Just the
kind of secrecy I believe people serving time at “Sing-Sing” like
things.
If you
thought the play was getting complicated when we discussed the Novation
agreement and assessing Contingent Liabilities, let’s add the twist
that all these private contracts are traded. The poor auditors must have
their heads spinning. Which auditor in which country you astutely ask? As
Johnny Depp famously drawls in the mob crime flick “Donnie Brasco”
to explain handling transactions like this – “Forget about it!”
Even
an old fashion Bookie wire operation in the 1930’s had more supervision
than the modern day OTC.
THE
SPREAD or ‘the
vig’
The
difference between the bid and the ask on an open exchange is the spread.
According to Wikipedia the spread or Vigorish,
or simply the vig,
also known as juice
or the take,
is the amount charged by a bookmaker, or bookie, for his
services. What we have on the closed non transparent OTC is no visibility to
either the Bid nor Ask. Only the BANKSTERS trade on this info. Therefore the
spread is more accurately called the
vig. This is completely different to electronic trades today
on the NYSE and Nasdaq where spreads have become negligible with many
‘spread men’ being forced out of the business. So what is the the vig or the take on
the trades where the PATSIES are desperate to get out from under trades that
have went bad since the financial crisis occurred? According to Bloomberg in
a March 1, 2010 report:
“The
five largest U.S. derivatives dealers, including JPMorgan
Chase & Co., Goldman
Sachs Group Inc. and Bank
of America Corp., were on pace through the third quarter
to record as much as $35
billion in revenue last year from trading unregulated
derivatives contracts, according to company reports collected by the Federal
Reserve and people familiar with banks’ income sources.” (3)
In our
modern day world of Trillions being bantered around daily we need to think
about this number. It borders on the completely insane! It is bigger than the
GDP of a vast majority of the member countries of the United Nations. It
almost makes us feel compassion for our poor desperate duped PATSIES.
“Bookmakers
use this (the vig)
concept to make money on their wagers regardless of the outcome. Because of
the vigorish concept, bookmakers
should not have an interest in either side winning in a given sporting event.
They are interested, instead, in getting equal action on each side of the
event. In this way, the bookmaker minimizes his risk and always collects a
small commission from
the vigorish. The bookmaker will normally adjust the odds, or line, to attract equal
action on each side of an event. - Wkipedia
CDS’s
(CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS)
The
OTC also trades CDSs (Credit Default Swaps) which allows our PATSY to feel
confidence that they are protected if something should go wrong and the
counterparty they are contracted with is unable to pay. CDS’s are
thought as insurance but they have none of the protection of insurance where
collateral is posted for potential payouts.
What
insurance company would allow you to buy fire insurance on someone
else’s house? Insurance companies knowing it is their money at risk on
a claim would be concerned it might foster bad behavior. Since you look
particularly desperate they might suspect you of being what our former
Harvard MBA trained President (who
stood watch during this era), so eloquently erudiated as an
‘evil doer’. You cannot have an exchange where people know (other
than the regulated exchange itself) who is on the other side of a trade. It
leads to deviant and unfair behavior. CDS (Credit Default Swaps) are the case
in point. These instruments, which former New York Insurance Commissioner
Eric Dinallo in testimony before congress, related there was a disagreement
about who was the supervisory authority on these instruments when they first
surfaced. Both the NY Insurance Commission and the CFTC (Commodities Futures
Trading Commission) felt they were not their responsibility and agreed with
the NY Gaming Commission who felt they more appropriately fell under their
purview. That tells you about all you really need to know about CDSs to
understand our play. But there is more – unfortunately.
It
needs to be fully appreciated that our SPECULATORS in our play are engaged in
naked shorting of CDS’s in this unregulated OTC where no DTCC exists
that acts as a matching inventory custodian. There is no limit to the number
of short transactions that can be sold. For those familiar with shorting you
know you get cash upfront when you short. The cash can then be used to fund
buying Option PUTs while additionally selling the PATSIES bonds short. The
number of strategy permutations is limitless. In a $605 Trillion pool you can
do a lot of splashing around.
It
would be remiss of me not to say that CDS’ can have an important role
to play, but not without a regulated exchange and capital requirements on
those selling these instruments. AIG is your blatant example of what the fall
out is!
What
has been the reaction by our DIRECTORS? – You guessed it – they
are still in the midst of their siesta on the side of our stage!
INTERMISSION
OLD
SAYING:
“When you owe the bank $100,000
and can’t pay you have a problem. When you owe the bank 100M ($100,000,000) and
can’t pay the bank has a problem”
TODAYS
VERSION:
When the banks owe 100B ($100,000,000,000)
and can’t pay the banks have a problem. When the Banks owe 1T ($1,000,000,000,000)
and can’t pay the taxpayer has a problem”
INTERMISSION
Sign
Up for the next release in the Sultans
of Swap series: Sultans
To be continued
with:
ACT II
– THE STING
The
second act is the heist itself. With rare exception, the heist will be
successful, though some number of unexpected events will occur.
ACT
III – THE GET AWAY
The
third act is the unraveling of the plot. The characters involved in the heist
will be turned against one another or one of the characters will have made
arrangements with some outside party, who will interfere. Normally, most of
or all the characters involved in the heist will end up dead, captured by the
law, or without any of the loot; however, it is becoming increasingly common
for the conspirators to be successful, particularly if the target is
portrayed as being of low moral standing, such as casinos, corrupt
organizations or individuals, or fellow criminals.
SOURCES
(1)
03-05-10 The Swaps that Swallowed Your Town the
New York Times
(2) 03-03-10 Smoking Swap Guns Are Beginning to Litter EuroLand, Sovereign Debt
Buyer Beware! Reggie Middleton
Reggie Middleton at the BoomBustBlog.com
(3) 03-01-10 Frank, Peterson Vow to Eliminate Provision Keeping Swaps Opaque
Bloomberg
(4) 03-08-10 Default Protection Is Lowest in Six Weeks as Greece Calms BL
(5) 02-10-09 CSPAN Rep Paul Kanjorski Reviews the Bailout Situation
Wkipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sting
The Sting
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heist_film
A Heist Film
03-03-10 Smoking Swap Guns Are Beginning to Litter EuroLand, Sovereign Debt
Buyer Beware!
Gordon T. Long
Tipping
Points
Mr. Long is a former senior group
executive with IBM & Motorola, a principle in a high tech public start-up
and founder of a private venture capital fund. He is presently involved in
private equity placements internationally along with proprietary trading
involving the development & application of Chaos Theory and Mandelbrot
Generator algorithms.
Gordon T Long is not a
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expression of opinion only and should not be construed in any manner
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