Just
Another Credit Crunch?
Many
investors are beginning to think that income investing is every bit as risky as
equity investing, but nothing has really changed in the relationship between
these two basic building blocks of corporate finance. What has changed in
recent years is the nature of the derivative products created by the wizards of
Wall Street to deliver both forms of securities to investors. The most popular
form of equity delivery today is the three-levels-of-speculation Index Fund.
New ETFs are birthed every day and, in total, have become as common as common
stocks. Have you noticed that regulators always strive to prevent financial
disasters from happening... again?
But, in
the meantime, the forever-sacred bond market has become the hysteria arena of
the moment in media, country clubs, neighborhood pubs, and retirement villages.
Does my nest egg have a crack in it? No, not really.
Stories
abound concerning the sub-prime mortgages that financed the recent bubble in
real estate prices. Many people, who couldn't afford to purchase homes at any
price, were able to obtain financing with no-documentation-required mortgages.
Many loans had sub-prime, short-term teaser rates that would adjust to above
market levels too quickly. Many borrowers weren't concerned because they never
intended to occupy the properties... speculators attempting to flip the
properties quickly in a much too hot real estate market. Predatory lenders and
some greedy realtors exacerbated the problem. Lenders didn't care because the
bad loans and higher risks were gobbled up by Wall Street institutions to be
sliced, diced, seasoned, and syndicated into CMOs, CDOs, and SIVs of all
imaginable shapes and risk levels.
Rating
agencies gave the products AAA status because they were guaranteed. Insurers
guaranteed the derivatives because they were AAA rated. Investment bankers
underwrote and syndicated the products because of their high quality ratings
and their banker friends made markets for them through their trading desks. It
was party time on Wall Street, as it always is before such MLMesque schemes
unravel. Have you noticed that regulators always strive to prevent financial
disasters from happening... again? You can bet that attorneys have.
So when
over-the-top real estate prices began to settle and the flippers were hooked
with homes that began to smell fishy, the houses-of-cards began to tumble,
bursting bubbles and drowning speculators as they fell. Borrowers with adjustable rate mortgages had
to face new financial realities, but contrary to the picture painted by the
media, most homeowners are making their payments right on schedule. Speculators
should expect losses, but should financial institutions encourage the
speculators? Welcome to Las Vegas east.
It is
practically impossible to determine how many and precisely which mortgages
within the CDOs and SIVs are in or near default. As a result, the market value
of these products has fallen to levels that unrealistically presume a major
default experience. The fact that Wall Street leveraged some of the products
excessively has made a bad situation worse, and banks worldwide have written
down billions on mortgage portfolios that contain an unknown number of potential
defaults. But regardless of the financial reality, the market value reality of
having no buyers for these securities has caused a global panic and spiraling
illiquidity in the financial markets. So, as a result of their self-inflicted
capital-raising problems, the banks have become risk averse with everyone.
Aren't banking and mortgage lending regulated industries? Is it time to change
the way banking institutions assess the value of their debt investments?
Individual
investors have always relied upon fixed income obligations to fund everything
from college to retirement. Historically, the default rate on corporate bonds
has been low, and that on Municipal bonds approaches zero. Dot-com debt was
added to the markets in the later half of the 1990s, and the 8%
leveraged-corporate-bond default rate in that era helped cause recession a few
years later. But corporate balance sheets were far less liquid than they are
today, and by early 2004 the default rate was under 1%. In late 2005 there was
a short-term spike to 2%, but since then the default rate has dropped to a
recent historic low of 1/4 of 1%. There does not seem to be a major quality
issue within corporate debt right now, but fearful investors have abandoned all
but treasury securities... finding even the commodity markets more of a safe
haven than Municipals. Boy, are they in for a surprise. The fear of a routine
cyclical economic slowdown and the credit crunch has caused massive selling of
income securities while the default rate has not increased at all.
Corporate
and municipal closed end funds have not responded normally to recent reductions
in interest rates because of the general problems plaguing the industry and,
additionally, because of questions about the Auction Rate Preferred Stock (APS)
they use to finance short-term borrowing. (Keep in mind that nearly all
corporations and municipalities use debt financing and that such financing is
not, in and of itself, a bad thing.) APS in effect resets the interest rate the
borrower pays every seven to twenty-eight days. The preferreds are mostly
purchased by banks, but may also be sold to individual investors. The credit
crunch that originated with the sub-prime problem has spread to the APS market
as well. Consequently, CEF managements now have a higher cost-of-carry on
short-term borrowing.
APS
issues include maximum interest rates that are generally well below the amounts
the funds receive from their holdings, and all Closed End Funds can raise new
capital by selling additional shares of stock. As long as the earnings
generated by the assets in the portfolio continue to exceed the costs of the
APS financing, such financing is beneficial to the shareholders. Should the
cost approach the revenue, the manager can simply redeem the APS and reduce the
holdings in the portfolio.
To
alleviate the problems, central banks worldwide have injected billions to help
ease tight credit conditions. Ours has slashed the Fed Funds rate to lower
borrowing costs and to ease general credit conditions; more rate cuts are
expected. Unlike the quality issues in the sub-prime mortgage market, the
weakness in the corporate and municipal CEF markets is a more solvable
liquidity problem. Historically, the easing of interest rates and injection of
reserves into the system eventually move credit markets toward normal
conditions. The Fed Funds rate now stands at 3%, down from 5.25% a few months
ago. In 2003, the rate moved to 1% as the Fed liquefied the credit markets
after 911; there is still a lot of rate cutting room in the system.
Investors
would fare better if they could learn to think long-term in the face of
short-term problems. This is not the first, and certainly not the last,
dislocation in the financial markets. The Treasury Secretary and the Federal
Reserve Chairman have testified that they expect economic growth to resume
during the second half of 2008. The congressional stimulus package will be
implemented quickly. The Fed stands ready with rate cuts and will inject
additional reserves if needed. Typically, credit crunches with or without stock
market corrections have proven to be investment opportunities. This one will be
no different.
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.valuestockindex.com
Professional
Portfolio Management since 1979
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
credit
crunch,investing,income investing,CDOs,CMOs,SIVs,auction rate preferred,sub-prime,risk,
market risk,Federal Reserve,interest rates
Just
Another Credit Crunch?
Many
investors are beginning to think that income investing is every bit as risky as
equity investing, but nothing has really changed in the relationship between
these two basic building blocks of corporate finance. What has changed in
recent years is the nature of the derivative products created by the wizards of
Wall Street to deliver both forms of securities to investors.