SULTANS
OF SWAP: ACT II - The Sting!
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.
Act I
can be found at SULTANS OF SWAP:
Smoking Guns!
In Act
I of our fictional play before we broke for Intermission, we discovered the players,
how our Sting has been set-up, the innovative financing arrangements employed
and the trading mechanism that allows our Sting to be potentially
perpetrated.
There
was a very interesting development however that occurred during our
play’s intermission. We had a fight break out between our DIRECTORS.
Our sleepy actors were heard arguing amongst themselves behind the stage
curtains as our audience enjoyed a casual libation and pondered the smoking
guns unveiled in Act I.
What
they overheard was the White House (a DIRECTOR) refusing to support European
legislative efforts to stop the apparent deviant behavior of our sinister
SPECUALTORS (see Act I for your theater guide). Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy emphatically demanded changes in European
Derivatives trading and sent Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou to the
White House as an example of a vulnerable victim (PATSY) to plead the case.
He was quickly rebuked, being informed
that this “was a Greek problem”. The audience once again heard
Johnny Depp’s famous quip from the mob movie “Donnie Brasco”,
when Brasco was trapped in similar exposing entanglements responding ‘Forget about it!’.
Without US legislative action any European actions attempted would be
knowingly useless in today’s global trading markets. The President is
fully cognizant of this, especially when he authorized the $170B of bailouts by the US government on AIG’s
CDSs (Credit Default Swaps) which had been headquartered and executed out of
London. Who is our President possibly listening to, especially since he was
elected on a platform of “Change” in the midst of the financial
meltdown?
But
this is not the full argument between our DIRECTORS that the audience
overheard. The day after the President’s meeting, Gary Gensler the
Chairman of the CFTC (US Commodity Futures Trading Commission) and the chief
enforcement DIRECTOR in the US, spoke. In an address to Markit’s Outlook for OTC Derivatives Markets Conference and
then again two days later at the International Regulators to Discuss Future Industry Issues, he spelled out almost verbatim that which we
dear reader laid out in Act I concerning the OTC and CDS trading. I
absolutely applaud him and all the professional members within the OTC. I
strongly recommend you study carefully his remarks in full (1)(2). Make no
doubt about it appalled reader, the vast majority of practicing professionals
want this mess cleaned up. There appears however to be a powerful element
that has the ear of the Legislative Branch of the US government. Without
stringent legislation, the enforcement agencies are toothless tigers. This is
a remake of the play starring former CFTC Commissioner Brooksley Born in her
well documented efforts by PBS
Frontline’s “The Waring” which would have
potentially avoided the whole 2008 financial crisis (3). The Washington
“Blame Game” cannot be placed at the feet of the CFTC, though I
am sure the commissioner will be another ‘Fall Guy’ in future
years when the Sting has occurred and a successful Getaway has taken place.
Our 7 steps to a successful Sting mandate a ‘Fall Guy’ which
allows for the deflection during the masked getaway. Commissioner Gensler
obviously does not knowingly want to be cast as yet another PATSY in our
instructional theater.
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.
6- THE
SHUT-OUT
The
whispering has now ended on stage and only the PATSIES remain. They stand
nervously clutching their newly minted Swap contracts.
This
is the stage where the PATSY finds him trapped by something unexpected. An
original parameter has changed. A key assumption was found critically flawed.
What was commonly accepted as a ‘truism’ or given is no longer
true or predictable.
Our
chart below shows that the financial crisis that began with the Consumer
specific to Sub-Prime lending eventually took down most of the US Housing
financial lending industry but then rolled on to engulf Fannie Mae / Freddie
Mac / AIG and then to almost end Investment Banking as we have known it in
America. What may be misunderstood is how the obligations were all rolled
upward. What was consumer debt suddenly became corporate debt (i.e. Fannie
Mae) which then became Sovereign Debt problems (i.e. Fannie Mae / AIG). This
is not by coincidence. The “assumption” of the obligations and
the securing of the ‘Guarantee’ of debt are part of what we might
label as Regulatory Arbitrage.
Regulatory
Arbitrage strategies were never clearer than during the following periods:
1-
When the US Government was forced to Lend or Guarantee GM and Chrysler Debt
when stock prices were crushed along with their bond prices as CDS’s
activity shot up. Don’t forget GMAC in these commitments.
2-
When the US government was forced to payout AIG obligations of $182.3B based on contracts that were heresy. The
US government felt it had no choice but to immediately pass legislation to
spend $700 Trillion for TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program) to
bailout insolvent banks who less than 9 months later declared record profits.
3-
When the US government was suddenly forced to accept the obligations of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as conservatorships. This was after years of the
US government denying it had implicit responsibility for the debt and
obligations of these agencies. This public charade came crashing down in
September 2008.
It is
a chess game between a keen eyed chess champion executing a carefully
choreographed strategy with each move versus a hallucinating crack cocaine
addict.
Strategy
is something that happens to you when you are looking the other way! Anonymous
CEO during a bankruptcy proceeding
Let’s
take a second and ‘peel the onion’ on just one of many examples.
Let’s use the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac example above as an
illustration.
On
Christmas Eve 2009 the Obama administration quietly slipped out an
announcement entitled “Treasury Issues Update of Support For Housing Programs”.(4)
The Sub-Titles are labeled ‘Program Wind Downs’ and
‘Amendments to Terms of Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements’. A
person would have to have nearly no life to start crawling through such a
document with these headings instead of slipping away to do some last minute
family shopping. But there buried near the end of the fourth paragraph:
“Treasury is now amending the PSPAs to allow the cap on Treasury's
funding commitment under these agreements to increase as necessary to
accommodate any
cumulative reduction in net worth over the next three years”.
(bold mine) Then
at the end of the next paragraph: ” The amendments to these agreements
announced today should leave no uncertainty about the Treasury's commitment
to support these firms as they continue to play a vital role in the housing
market during this current crisis.”. Immediately the Washington Post
who pay people to work these holidays on Christmas Day ran this story:
‘U.S. promises unlimited financial assistance to Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac’. I am sure this pulled everyone
away from the Christmas family meal to read. Bloomberg also hastily ran the
story on Christmas Day: ‘U.S. Treasury Ends Cap on Fannie, Freddie Lifeline for 3 Years’
which many who have Bloomberg screens in their home office would have been
riveted to. By Monday the coverage was way down the reading list below
breaking news and the stale ‘yesterday’s news’. I thought
Representative Scott Garrett (R-N.J.), a member of the House Financial
Services subcommittee that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, said it well
in the Washington Post on Christmas Day:
"The
Obama administration's decision to write a blank check with taxpayer dollars
for the continued bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is appalling. Not
only is this a continued bailout of failed entities that need to be
privatized to protect the taxpayer, the timing of the announcement is clearly
designed to try and sneak the bailout by the taxpayers."
Representative
Scott Garrett (R-N.J.)
U.S. promises unlimited financial assistance to Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac
Washington
Post
This
is used simply as an instructive example of how things work when people are
feeding at the public trough and the Holy Grail of Lending when Sovereign
Guarantees are involved. What we learned from the housing bubble is when
accountability is removed then deviant behavior is prone to occur. When the
banks stopped holding the mortgages on houses they initially lent money to,
their motivations change. In our example here the ultimate accountability
rests with the taxpayer who is almost completely unaware. The
taxpayers’ elected representatives are not representing. They are
absent or ‘handcuffed’. I have heard endless politicians like
Representative Scott Garrett express their frustrations. Michael Moore’s
alarming new movie: “Capitalism: A Love Story” is worth
reviewing simply to listen to our elected officials using words like
“Coup d’état”.
We
have never witnessed more debt so successfully shifted up the Debt Risk
Ladder to Sovereign debt in the history of the MANKIND.
There
is an old saying:
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”.
TODAY’S
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, MANKIND has a problem”.
To say
governments are being trapped is rather an understatement. Ask the furious
electorate what they think. In the US many border on rebellion with
‘tea parties’ while the lunatic fringe crashed a plane into a
government building and another shot military personnel at the pentagon. This
is new behavior not seen in the US. The rage was palpable for those that
witnessed firsthand the election of Scott Brown in Massachusetts. Ask the
rioters in the streets of Greece. It is obvious to all but our DIRECTORS
– still in near oblivion to how they are being played like a violin.
The public has the street smarts to spot a sting, even when those in power
claim to not see it. Like former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan not seeing the
US housing bubble. This may all seem like just political hyperbole from yours
truly but it is important as you will see later in Act III to the success of
“The Getaway”
The
vice is squeezing to set up the actual STING.
7- THE
STING
Events
have changed and our PATSIES find what was a good idea doesn’t appear
to be such a good idea any longer. They begin reading the small print in
their Swap contract to see how they might alter their commitments (see Sultans of Swap:
Fearing the Gearing!).
What
we have witnessed since 2002 is a race by consumer borrowers to capture what
they perceived to be low rates and by consumer lenders (i.e. pensioners on
fixed income) to chase yield. Like addicts needing a fix they both wanted it
now – immediately. In the case of Professional borrowers and lenders;
jobs, careers and advancement were on the line. Success was felt to be
determined by getting another 15 points or possibly 100 basis points. All are
clearly short term preoccupations. They
are looking the other way!
We see
States and Municipalities locking themselves into contracts unwittingly for
30 years versus 10 years, as the New York Times points out (5). They are
locking themselves into balloon payments that they can’t possibly ever
pay as we witnessed with Kitlos PLC and the Greek government debt. Debt that
will be financed in the future with higher principle amounts (see the growing
list at SULTANS). We will discuss in a moment the
interest rates these rollovers may potentially command.
How
for example will the US ever realistically pay for its $62 Trillion (Niall
Ferguson estimates it to be $104T (6)) in unfunded liabilities associated
with Medicare / Medicaid and Social Security? Add to this another $20T in
fiscal spending imbalances by the end of the decade. Since we don’t
have a clue, is it too hard to imagine that those who eventually will be
orchestrating the lending just might?
Unknowable
you say? Maybe not? The BANKSTERS seem to know something if you study the
chart to the below. What they know might be debatable. That they know
something is coming, that is not!
“The
number of companies globally that were rated B- or lower rose to 523, or 9.3
percent of the total, at the end of last year as speculative-grade issuers
were downgraded, Standard & Poor’s analysts led by Diane Vazza said
in a March 5 report. That compares with 8.4 percent in 2008 and 5.8 percent
in 2007, S&P said.” (8)
“S&P
said, in December, 260 companies had defaulted in the year to date, the
highest count since its series began in 1981. The trailing 12-month
speculative default rate has continued to climb since the crisis though
S&P has lowered its default rate forecast for 2010, because of the
improvement in capital markets. But the more positive default rate
expectation is being driven by increased forbearance by lenders “in a
monetary environment propped up by policy-induced liquidity”. The
S&P analysts said in a report: “Without a revival in top-line
earnings and growth, many surviving leveraged issuers originated during
2003-2007 could face renewed default risk unless they significantly reduce
their debt burdens”. (9)
“At
the annual conference for the Loan Syndications and Trading Association,
investors and observers said the market’s focus should be farther into
the future. “2011 will be the exciting year,” said James
Ferguson, chief investment officer at Octagon. Problems could arise again
because much of the debt rose to finance the buy-out boom a few years ago
will begin to mature from 2011. The demand that helped to fuel that boom,
mainly from structured vehicles called collateralized loan obligations
(CLOs), has fallen. The financial market also will not have the support of
government stimulus, which will be winding down by then. Roughly $1,000bn of
leveraged loans and bonds are coming due over the next five years, according
to Michael Zupon of Sound Harbor Partners, while $500bn of CLOs are coming to
the end of their investment periods. New issuance of CLOs has dried up in the
downturn. “It sets the stage for what could be a dramatic period in
2012, 2013 and 2014,” said Mr Zupon. “If it comes at the same
time as an economic downturn, it could create a pretty serious
situation.” (10)
“Edward
Altman, the Max L Heine professor of finance at the Stern School of Business
at New York University, said that the surge in so-called distressed exchanges
over the last two years also could add another layer of defaults. Companies
ranging from casino operator Harrah’s to commercial lender CIT, have
tried, both successfully and not, to convince investors to exchange existing
debt for other securities or cash to avoid bankruptcy. Such exchanges, which
usually only happen a few times a year, exploded to 14 in 2008 and 39 this
year. “Fifty per cent of all distressed exchanges wind up in bankruptcy
one to three years after,” Mr. Altman said. “Of the 2009 crop of
distressed exchanges, half will go bankruptcy in 2011, 2012 and 2013.”
Mr. Altman, a noted default forecaster, also warned that optimistic 2010
default forecasts were vulnerable to a downturn in the economy. (10)
The
growth area in Investment banking is presently bankruptcy, restructuring and
workouts as they gear up for the eventuality. Massive defaults are coming and
everyone knows it except the PATSIES, DIRECTORS and unfortunately the
taxpayer. (see SULTANS OF SWAP: Fearing the Gearing!)
Ratings will continue to be downgraded which will drive out borrowing costs
and possibly more importantly will drive collateral calls associated with
Interest Rate Swaps.
We
mentioned previously that a key part of a sting is that the assumptions upon
which decisions were taken change. We pointed out in “SULTANS OF SWAP: Smoking Guns!” that
“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.” (11)
But it
gets worse. In a March 15th, 2010 Business Week article entitled: Goldman Sachs Demands Derivatives Collateral It Won’t Dish
Out the “vig”of $35B pales in comparison to
“demanding unequal arrangements with hedge-fund firms, forcing them to
post more cash collateral to offset risks on trades while putting up less on
their own wagers. At the end of December this imbalance furnished Goldman
Sachs with $110 billion, according to a filing. That’s money it can
reinvest in higher-yielding assets. “If you’re seen as a major
player and you have a product that people can’t get elsewhere, you have
the negotiating power,” said Richard Lindsey, a former director of
market regulation at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission who ran the
prime brokerage unit at Bear Stearns Cos. from 1999 to 2006. “Goldman
and a handful of other banks are the places where people can get
over-the-counter products today.”(12) It isn’t just new deals, it
includes deals that not only corporate but more and more sovereign PATSIES
must restructure.
“Over
the last three years the BANKSTERS are extracting ever larger amounts from
the $605 Trillion over-the-counter derivatives market according to filings
with the SEC and reported by Business Week & Bloomberg. The firm led by
Chief Executive Officer Lloyd C. Blankfein collected cash collateral that
represented 57 percent of outstanding over-the-counter derivatives assets as
of December 2009, while it posted just 16 percent on liabilities, the firm
said in a filing this month. That gap has widened from rates of 45 percent
versus 18 percent in 2008 and 32 percent versus 19 percent in 2007, company
filings show. “That’s classic collateral arbitrage,” said
Brad Hintz, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York who
previously worked as treasurer at Morgan Stanley and chief financial officer
at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. “You always want to enter into
something where you’re getting more collateral in than what
you’re putting out.”” (12)
THE
COLLATERAL SQUEEZE
|
2007
|
2008
|
2009
|
GOLDMAN SACHS
|
|
|
|
COLLECTS
|
32%
|
45%
|
57%
|
POSTS
|
19%
|
18%
|
16%
|
NET
|
13%
|
27%
|
41%
|
|
|
|
110B
|
|
|
|
|
JP MORGAN
|
|
|
|
COLLECTS
|
47%
|
47%
|
57%
|
POSTS
|
26%
|
37%
|
45%
|
NET
|
21%
|
37%
|
45%
|
|
|
|
37B
|
SOURCE:
03-15-10 Goldman Sachs Demands Derivatives Collateral It Won’t Dish
Out Business Week / Bloomberg
“Banks
have an advantage in dealing with asset managers because they can require
collateral when initiating a trade, sometimes amounting to as much as 20
percent of the notional value, said Craig Stein, a partner at law firm
Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP in New York who represents hedge-fund
clients.” (12)
"We
will make them an offer they can't refuse!" Marlon
Brando on consummating a financial deal in the "Godfather'
All
MBA students have studied decision trees and probability paths. Our PRODUCERS
and BANKSTERS with little doubt have the finest army of young MBA and
PhD’s (Quants) graduates in the world working for them. Smart
strategists know that one of the secrets to successful strategy optimization
is in understanding the probability chains. The primary probability chain
presently suggests an unfolding sequence that will start with Credit Rating
downgrades. This pattern as I mentioned above is now underway but still is
not as visible as it soon will be.
Interest
Rates will soon begin to rise for many. A
global shortage of savings to fund what is simply monumental levels of debt
can lead to no other result. The question is only when? Smart money
doesn’t let the daily noise, pre-occupying the amateurs, distract them.
The
next shoe will be collateral calls. In the financial crisis we had margin
calls on falling equity prices. This time the probabilities suggest it will be Collateral Calls
because of lowered ratings and increased risk metrics. We outlined this
inherent trigger with Interest Rate Swaps in Sultans of Swap – Explaining $605 Trillion in Derivatives and Sultans of Swap: Fearing the Gearing! The
03-15-10 Business Week / Bloomberg article: “Goldman Sachs Demands Derivatives Collateral It Won’t Dish
Outgives” gives a pretty clear sense of the
activity presently going on in this area.
The
most probable outcome by 2012 will be an extremely serious problem within the
global “fiat” currency markets. It will be centered on
“fiat” currencies” because they are not anchored or based
on any specific standards such as a gold standard. They are based on
“confidence”. Presently the vast number of currencies are
‘fiat’. Confidence today is becoming a commodity in short supply.
Fiat
currencies are also open to debasement. Competitive devaluations and
beggar-thy-neighbor policies are highly likely as trade is fiercely fought
over in PIMCO’s “New Normal” . The
world’s largest Bond Fund has some fairly clear views on this and you
would suspect is acting accordingly – now.
What
will this mean to those with a strategy, who have set-up the pins and have
been patient? It means initially (as we are seeing now) huge OTC Spreads by
panicky PATSIES forced to get out or renegotiate contracts. It will soon mean
years of built in balloon payments come due just as interest are rising and
the PATSIES have even lower credit ratings than they had when they assumed
the underlying contracts.
The
real crunch potentially comes when interest rates are rising but inflation is
falling, as we have heightened concerns with a deflationary depression.
However, we don’t need this to occur to have low inflation rates. This
will potentially crush our debt junkies in its jaws.
Only a
minor move could, as illustrated below, leave PRODUCERS and BANKSTERS with a
‘take’ of monumental proportions.
The
never ending argument of whether we are going to see Inflation or Deflation
never ceases to amaze me. No one ever asks the question, when? This is
important because the element of time allows for the possibility of both. A
probability path could entail a brief period of stagflation with slow growth
and increasing rates, then as the government continues to print more money,
velocity of money finally kicks in and we have a near “Minsky
Melt-up’. This short lived period of Inflation just as quickly ends in
a currency crisis and subsequent global deflation. The probability path of this
produces profits on a $605T derivatives market that would restructure the
global balances of economic and financial power.
All
the probability paths models lead to profits of varying degrees for key
members of the Sultans of Swap. Unlike the PATSIES or taxpayer the SULTANS
HAVE A STRATEGY. The probability paths suggest an ugly future for the PATSIES
and those that either work for them or are the taxpayers responsible for the
commitments our elected officials have guaranteed. It is hard to win against
someone who has a strategy and you are unaware of the game, the rules, the
goals and even worse, don’t even know it is being played.
The
above is not how the process will likely unfold. That is precisely why you
have a strategy – to know what to alter to meet your goals. You need to
be organized to do this. If there is one thing the Sultans have demonstrated
in developing a $605 Trillion derivatives market as fast as they have, is
that they are organized.
INTERMISSION
We
will return shortly with Act III
Sign
Up for the next release in the Sultans
of Swap series: Sultans
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
organisations or individuals, or fellow criminals.
SOURCES
(1)
03-09-10 Keynote Address of Chairman Gary Gensler, OTC Derivatives Reform,,
Markit’s Outlook for OTC Derivatives Markets Conference
(2)
03-11-10 Remarks of Chairman Gary Gensler, OTC Derivatives Reform ,
FIA's Annual International Futures Industry Conference
(3) ”The
Warning” PBS FRONTLINE - Video
(4)
12-24-09 TREASURY ISSUES UPDATE
ON STATUS OF SUPPORT FOR HOUSING PROGRAMS
(5)
03-05-10 The Swaps that Swallowed Your Town the
New York Times
(6)
12-14-09 An Empire at Risk Newsweek
Magazine
(7) CSPAN - Rep Paul Kanjorski Reviews the Bailout Situation
(8)
03-05-10 Nearly 10% Of Global Corporate Issuers Were Rated 'B-' Or Lower At
The End Of 2009 Standard & Poors
(9)
12-22-09 S&P’s ‘weakest links’ list falls sharply
Financial Times
(10)
10-29-09 Warning on 2011 corporate default risk
Financial Times
(11)
03-01-10 Frank, Peterson Vow to Eliminate Provision Keeping Swaps Opaque
Bloomberg
(12)
03-15-10 Goldman Sachs Demands Derivatives Collateral It Won’t Dish
Out Business Week / Bloomberg
To see
the original article in full with all supporting graphics: The Sting!
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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