Apocalypse
Down-under:
Aussie
bank's
write-offs
signal doom
for Wall
Street
By Mike
Whitney
30/07/08
"ICH" --- -
Monday's
trading on
the New York
Stock
Exchange
(NYSE) was a
real
humdinger.
It started
off with the
White House
announcing
that this
year's
fiscal
deficit
would soar
to a new
record of
nearly $500
billion.
That was
followed by
news of
rising oil
prices, weak
quarterly
earnings and
a slowdown
in consumer
spending.
Plunk,
plunk,
plunk; one
domino after
another. By
mid-morning
the markets
were in full
retreat.
That's when
investment
giant
Merrill
Lynch
announced
that it
would notch
a $4.6
billion
second-quarter
loss and
write-downs
of $9.4
billion on
collateralized
debt
obligations
(CDOs) and
other
mortgage-related
assets.
That's when
the dookie
really hit
the fan.
Stocks
quickly went
verticle and
the rout was
on. By the
closing bell
the Dow was
down 240
points.
Traders
staggered
from floor
of the
exchange
slumped-over
and
bedraggled
looking like
they just
got a
missive from
the draft
board. The
optimism is
being wrung
from the
markets
faster than
the credit
at an
over-levered
hedge fund.
Every day
brings
another
dismal
surprise.
And, yet, on
Tuesday, the
market
staged a
valiant
comeback
surging 260
points in a
matter of
hours. It
was enough
to give the
fund
managers a
bit of a
lift and
hope that
things are
finally
turning
around. But
the market's
woes are far
from over.
They're
deeply-rooted
and
spreading
like Kudzu
throughout
the system.
The
International
Monetary
Fund summed
it up in
warning they
issued
earlier in
the week:
"Global
financial
markets are
'fragile'
and
indicators
of systemic
risk remain
'elevated'...Credit
quality
'across many
loan classes
has begun to
deteriorate
with
declining
house prices
and slowing
economic
growth.'
Bank balance
sheets are
under
'renewed
stress' and
the decline
in bank
share prices
has made it
more
difficult to
raise new
capital.
(There is
an)
'increased
likelihood
of a
negative
interaction
between
banking
system
adjustment
and the real
economy.'
(Financial
Times)
The IMF also
stuck by its
earlier
prediction
that total
losses to
financial
institutions
from the
credit
crisis would
reach $1
trillion
($945
billion) a
sum that
will have
devastating
consequences
for
industry,
consumers
and the
global
economy.
Tuesday's
festivities
on Wall
Street are
likely to be
short-lived.
It's just a
one-day lull
in the
storm.
Over at
Nouriel
Roubini's
blog, Dr.
Doom made
this
observation
about the
Merrill
Lynch's
troubles:
"Merrill
Lynch's
decision to
'sell' a
good chunk
of its
remaining
CDOs at 22
cents to the
dollar has
been widely
praised as
the firm
finally
recognizing
the full
extent of
its losses
on these
toxic
instruments.
This batch
of $30.6
billion of
CDOs was
already
marked down
to $11.1
billion. Now
with the
'sale' of it
to Lone Star
at a price
of 6.7
billion
Merrill
Lynch is
taking
another $4.4
billion
write-down
and
'selling' it
at 22% of
the original
face value.
But is this
a
market-based
'sale'? No
way, calling
this
transaction
a 'sale' is
a joke." (Nouriel
Roubini's
Global
EconoMonitor)
This isn't a
"sale"; it's
more like
abandoning a
sinking
ship. The
investment
chieftains
are getting
scorched by
their
downgraded
assets and
have started
dumping them
at any cost.
There's no
market for
mortgage-backed
anything
now, and
there won't
be until
housing
finds a
bottom. By
time that
happens,
most of the
CEOs and
CFOs in the
mega-brokerage
houses will
be squatting
on
streetcorners
on the lower
East Side
with tin-cup
in hand.
It's that
bad.
The Merrill
Lynch deal
illustrates
just how
crazy things
have gotten.
Merrill said
it "will
provide
financing to
the
purchaser
for
approximately
75% of the
purchase
price."
Whoa. In
other words,
the banks
are so
anxious to
off-load
their
junk-paper,
they're
almost
paying
people to
take it off
their hands.
Now that's
desperation!
No wonder
the market
is
snorkeling
its way to
the bottom
of the
fishbowl.
The problems
haunting the
financial
markets have
cross-pollinated
with the
real economy
and are
spreading
misery
everywhere.
Unemployment
is rising,
growth is
slowing,
inflation is
up, the
dollar is
down. We've
heard it
many times
before, but
it's still
jarring to
see General
Motors stock
fall below
Bed & Bath,
or Starbucks
shut down
600 stores,
or million
dollar
McMansions
sell for
$425,000, or
millions of
middle-class
families
join the
food stamp
rolls.
That's
tragic no
matter how
you slice
it.
Now that the
working
stiff is
maxed out on
his
mortgage,
worried
about losing
his job, and
trying to
keep food on
the table;
the least
congress can
do is
scatter the
oil
speculators;
right?
Wrong. On
Monday, the
Financial
Times
reported
that: "A US
Senate
proposal
designed to
curb
speculation
and increase
transparency
in the
energy
markets was
blocked by
Republican
legislators
on Friday.
The move
frustrates
Democratic
efforts to
show the
party is
taking
action on
record
petrol
prices. The
Stop
Excessive
Speculation
Act,
sponsored by
Harry Reid,
the Senate
majority
leader, fell
10 votes
short of
clearing a
procedural
hurdle."
Unbelievable.
$4.00
gasoline and
millions of
consumers
that are
flat-broke
and congress
still
refuses lend
a hand? What
a scrubby
band of
sandbaggers.
The scariest
news of the
week comes
from
down-under,
where the
National
Australia
Bank (NAB)
announced it
would "slash
a £400m bond
sale by two
thirds. The
retreat
comes days
after the
Melbourne
lender
shocked the
markets by
announcing a
90pc
write-down
on its £550m
holdings of
US mortgage
debt, an
admission
that it
AAA-rated
securities
are
virtually
worthless....The
decision by
National
Australia
Bank to make
drastic
provisions
on its US
mortgage
debt could
have
ramifications
in the US
itself. It
opted for a
100pc
write-off on
a clutch of
"senior
strips" of
collateralized
debt
obligations
(CDO) worth
£450m - even
though they
were all
rated AAA.
(Ambrose
Evans
Pritchard,
"Australia
faces worse
crisis than
America", UK
Telegraph)
This is a
huge story
with grave
implications
for
America's
struggling
banking
system. No
wonder the
establishment
media is
avoiding it
like the
plague. If
AAA rated
CDOs are
worthless,
then some of
the biggest
financial
institutions
in the
country will
be packed
off to the
boneyard
feet-first.
The original
article
appeared in
the Business
Spectator
and was
titled "NAB
will shock
Wall
Street", by
Robert
Gottliebsen.
"Shock" is
an
understatement.
This is more
like a meat
cleaver
crashing
down on a
butcher
block.
Schwook!
This is a
must-read
for anyone
who is
following
the meltdown
in the
financial
markets.
Here is an
extended
excerpt from
Gottliebsen's
article:
"The
National
Australia
Bank's
decision to
write off 90
per cent of
its US
conduit
loans will
have
dramatic
repercussions
around the
world. Wall
Street will
be deeply
shocked when
they
understand
the
repercussions
of what NAB
has done. It
is clear
global banks
have nowhere
near
provided for
their
exposures to
US housing
loans which
in the words
of John
Stewart are
experiencing
a
“meltdown”.
We are now
way beyond
sub-prime.
NAB says
that it is
suffering a
55 per cent
loss on
American
housing
loans – an
event that
has never
happened in
the history
of a
developed
country in
recent
memory. This
is an
unprecedented
event and
means that
the cost of
bailing out
the US
financial
system is
now far
beyond the
highest
estimates. A
US recession
is now
locked in,
but more
alarmingly,
55 per cent
loan losses
point to the
possibility
of a
depression.
It means the
cost of
bailing out
housing
exposures to
the two
mortgage
insurers
will be so
great that
it will
leave no
room to bail
out anything
else and
there are
several US
banks that
are now in
big trouble.
NAB says
that the
dislocation
in the
residential
market is
separate
from the
corporate
market, but
the flow on
is
inevitable."
( The
Business
Spectator,"NAB
will shock
Wall
Street")
The conduits
are
off-balance
sheets
operations
run by the
banks which
contain
hundreds of
billions of
dollars of
bonds which
are now
essentially
worthless.
So far, many
of the banks
have not
accurately
reported the
losses from
these
operations
hoping that
the housing
market will
stabilize
and the
value of the
bonds will
rebound. The
action taken
by the
National
Australia
Bank is a
"game-changer";
it's like
the Grim
Reaper
swooping
down on Wall
Street and
lopping-off
the top of
every big
investment
bank in
downtown
Manhattan.
Gottliebsen
again:
"The global
banks have
been marking
to market
the assets
they held on
their
balance
sheet, but
the vast
amounts held
in so called
'conduit
trust
accounts'
have not
been written
down because
they were
not
marketable.
NAB wrote
them down
when they
saw the bad
mortgages....US
banks have
written down
$450 billion
in bad
housing
loans. The
revelation
from NAB
means that
they will
now
certainly
need to take
provisions
to $1,000
billion. But
write-downs
of $1,300
billion and
perhaps even
more are on
the cards."
(Business
Spectator,
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/NAB-will-shock-Wall-Street-GV4M7?OpenDocument&src=sph
)
Tuesday's
"sucker
rally" in
the stock
market was
just the
convulsive
writhing of
a dying
bull. It
won't last.
Once the bad
news sinks
in;
investors
will pull up
stakes,
equities
will fall,
and banks
will
crumble. The
big-hand
just inched
a little
closer to
midnight.
