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What is the market telling us about the outlook for Lehman Brothers (LEH)? 

On the credit markets, the company’s CDS spreads for its senior debt was trading last week at around 400 bps, very close to the peak reached during the Bear Stearns (BSC) crisis and trending higher.  This is indicative of “stress,” although not yet of extreme distress (i.e., elevated likelihood of default).  Clearly, if it were not for Lehman’s access to the Fed’s discount window, these spreads would have been much wider, or, quite possibly, LEH could have failed by now.

The equity market is sending a different message: The stock, at about $12.4, results in a P/B of  0.36, which probably indicates that the firm is beyond the point of no return.  The equity market is telling us that LEH will likely not be able to continue as a going concern. 

In Roger Lowenstein’s excellent book When Genius Failed, he recounts an incident when John Meriwether disclosed to a friend that LTCM was down 50%, and his friend told him, “You’re finished,” the friend’s argument being that, if a fund has gone down that much, people believe it can go down all the way; trust is gone, margins will be called, redemptions will come in, and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.  The same principle holds true for a financial institution, and that is the predicament that Lehman Brothers is in today, even with access to the discount window. 

Joining the credit picture and the equity picture, it emerges that the market does not seem to be incorporating an imminent collapse, but that likely there is no medium-term viability for the firm as a going concern.  In other words, the expectations seem to anticipate that there will be an orderly, gradual unwinding of Lehman Brothers supported by the Fed promise (or actual supply) of liquidity, where shareholders likely get wiped out (or close to it), and senior lenders are likely to recover most of their money.      

Fundamental analysis 

I certainly believe more in what the market is saying about LEH than what Dick Fuld, Bernanke, or Paulson are saying.  In Lehman’s case, I am, however, more pessimistic than the market.   

I think there is a good chance that the unwind might be less orderly and end up with a classic run on the bank and bankruptcy for the institution (with a 60% likelihood). 

In my view, the lack of viability is clear from these factors: 

  • the very low price-to-book value of 0.36

  • the 83% fall in price since October
  • the fact that it is the smallest of the bulge-bracket investment banks
  • the fact that they have the most relative exposure to domestic fixed-income markets of the bulge market firms in general and residential mortgages in particular (with about $60 billion of commercial and residential real estate, as of May 30, 2008, including about $12 billion of Alt-A toxic garbage—a business they got into in the late nineties with the acquisition of BNC), and the most absolute dollar exposure to commercial real estate
  • recklessly high levels of leverage (even after finally reducing leverage in the last quarter to about 25 to 1, which is still way too much), as all other such firms have, and a lot of assets in Level III, valued at over 1.7 times equity

More importantly, there is the embarrassing loss of face from management mistakes and the revelation of lack of candor and questionable accounting practices from the firm’s management.  This is really what has wounded the institution mortally. There is no recovery from this.   

Consider the following: 

  • Until the Bear Stearns crisis in March, the firm seemed to be weathering the crisis well, like Goldman Sachs. This was surprising, considering their high domestic fixed-income and mortgage exposure.  This could be driven by (1) excellent risk management or (2) being less than forthcoming in writing down assets. It would have been easier for Lehman’s management to pull off the latter than at Citi, UBS, Merrill, or Morgan Stanley, because its CEO has been on the job for over 20 years and had much more leverage over the board and any internal checks and balances than the CEO’s in the other institutions.  In the other institutions, particularly the ones where the CEO was eventually replaced, the new CEO has all the incentives, for obvious reasons, to write down bad assets as soon as possible and seek to move on.   The suspicion increased with the tremendous lack of quality of Lehman’s Q1 2008 earnings, where substantial gains resulted from marking to market its liabilities (a bizarre result of a rule that allows a firm to recognize accounting gains resulting from a deterioration in its credit profile), and (so it seems); where they have not appropriately written down sub-investment-grade structured securities; and where they, inappropriately it seems, wrote up Level III assets.  Only under extreme scrutiny of their statements by a short seller with a strong reputation, David Einhorn, the company admitted that it needed to raise more capital and recorded its first-ever loss since its IPO over 20 years ago.
  • The company was increasing its leverage all the way up until the Bear Stearns collapse. For example, in the first quarter Lehman added over $80 billion in assets, and, amid falling mortgage markets, it increased by about $2 billion its holdings of Alt-A loans (mortgages made to borrowers who are less than prime and cannot provide evidence of their income). “We saw a great opportunity,” Lehman’s then-CFO Erin Callan said on March 18.  This is a clear sign that they completely misread the markets and thought that doubling down and window dressing would get them through this crisis.
  • The firm increased its dividend when it needed to bolster its capital position at the beginning of the year.  By this time, they must have known better; was this was an attempt to show defiance and mislead the market?  Again, a serious misread of the severity of the crisis: They did not seem to realize that this was the real McCoy.
  • Lehman was aggressive in tapping the Fed's “lender of last resort” facility for broker dealers. In fact, Lehman was so “creative,” that in March they created a $2.8 billion “Freedom CLO” out of leveraged loans that couldn't be readily sold to investors (such as for the buyouts of payment processor First Data Corp. and power producer TXU Corp.) for the express purpose of meeting the Fed rating requirements for collateral. That the Fed went along and accepted this junk as high investment-grade collateral is shocking.
  • Last month, at the same time it admitted that it will likely need to raise new capital, Lehman decided to use precious capital to (in my opinion) manipulate its stock price by buying its own shares.  Some analysts in the market saw this as a positive sign.  This is unbelievable. It is very easy to show “confidence” in the future of the firm with other people’s money.  If Dick Fuld were to step up and put a substantial portion of his net worth in the stock of the company, then I would agree that that would be a positive indication; however, he has not done so.
  • At a time when it needed to conserve capital, Lehman very recently invested $1 billion in R3, a hedge fund started by employees who departed the firm to form it, which is based at Lehman Brothers’ facilities, and which has bought $4 billion of assets from Lehman.  This is eerily reminiscent of Enron.  If all of these are arms-length transactions, how can Lehman justify investing $1 billion in a hedge fund under its current conditions?
  • It seems that the firm may have employed deplorable tactics last month, doing what appeared to be selective disclosure of material information through the leaking of an “internal memo” about its reduction of leverage.  Such practice would be against SEC regulations.

What could tip Lehman over? 

At this point, Lehman has no option but to continue to deleverage itself, although this raises doubts about the assets that were not sold.  Is this an approach of selling what they can and keep what they cannot sell?  

Lehman has no real trade-sale alternatives: BoA (BAC) and JPMorgan (JPM) have already done large and potentially disastrous acquisitions. Goldman (GS) is too smart to fall for it.  

It is also very doubtful that Lehman would be able now to tap into the equity markets, with investors having poured over $300 billion into financials and licking their wounds.  The New Jersey investments division, which was one of the key investors in Lehman’s most recent, $6 billion, equity injection, closed last month, has lost well over 50% of its investment (they came in at $28). 

I have great intellectual respect for Bill Gross of PIMCO, so I was surprised last week when he apparently indicated that there were no concerns about Lehman’s solvency as long as the Fed window is made available.  The problem is that the Fed window is not unconditional and may be withdrawn.  The company does have substantial liquidity, but solvency is a different question; the fact that the Fed has opened the discount window does nothing for Lehman’s solvency, which only exists if the market value of assets exceeds the market value of liabilities.   

The collapse of IndyMac (IMB), which was a federally insured savings bank, and therefore had access to the discount window, proves that even with this access, a collapse is possible.  The Fed, in theory, should only provide liquidity to solvent entities. If it becomes obvious that the company is insolvent (for example, because of a bank run, as was the case with IndyMac), the Fed may stop throwing money at a black hole.  Nouriel Roubini recently, brilliantly, explained how such a collapse could happen (read his 6/27 piece, “the delusional complacency that the “worst is behind us” is rapidly melting away…and the risk of another run against systemically important broker dealers”).  If LEH counterparties believe that the company is insolvent, then they should fear that the Fed could stop providing the “last resort” loans.

Ironically, as the authorities work on rules to handle the liquidation of large or systemic broker dealers and work to bring the credit derivative market under a clearing house mechanism, this could increase the likelihood of a Lehman failure as the financial system will be better ready to withstand it.  

The Fed and particularly the Treasury have been indicating concern with moral hazards and may soon be ready to have a sacrificial lamb to establish their hawkish credentials.

Disclosure: Short LEH

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This article has 20 comments:

  •  
    Can't agree with you more, especially since I understand that a lot of the toxic garbage mortgages have yet to hit the LEH books! I know of a guy in DC who owns a property in Va (700K) and a property in DC (Condo) (500k). He got a no-doc loan 80% first from LEH for both and a 10% second (wells fargo, I understand this is a well run bank!!) and the sellers kicked in the remaining 10% (were they smart to get out or what). The guy has bad credit and NO JOB!
    Of course everyone got their fees and the taxpayer holds the garbage....

    These guys need to go down to show that the system is not entirely corrupt
    2008 Jul 15 11:30 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    some interesting comments there, so by your reasoning LEH currently has a big loan from the Fed discount window right now?
    2008 Jul 15 12:04 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Enter your comment herecome on - the equity market these days are a hotbed of utter fear, panic, depression, rumour spreading and naked shorting, above all. the prices there are absolutely set by emotions now - not rational considerations. therefore, to claim that the equity market was telling a point of no return as agoing concern is preposterous, to say the least. by that logic, a few hundred very sound companies will be out of business by next year - just because the stock prices indicate it?!
    unlike bear the powers that be won't allow leh to fail and the 400BP spread is a gift from heaven for anyone who is selling credit protection at that rate.
    i won't touch any bank or broker here , not even for a rally but i would run for the hills to cover any shorts here. the risk-reward isn't favourable for shorts here anymore - so why not taking the profits rather than seeing them slip away again?
    2008 Jul 15 12:04 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    R3 = Enron2

    Good observation.
    2008 Jul 15 12:23 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    No wonder people are in a panic with egregiously damaging articles like this appearing. I only hope the SEC can do something to stop unabridged egomaniacs like yourself who won't be happy until you've destroyed our entire economy.
    2008 Jul 15 07:06 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Oh get bent, says you. Everyone is entitled to express their opinion--it's this little thing called the First Amendment. There are plenty of people with the opposite view to balance things out.
    2008 Jul 15 07:51 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Let's end the use of the euphemism "moral hazard". How silly! It is just plain old larceny, theft, stealing; and the citizens, you and me, are the victims.
    2008 Jul 15 10:56 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Enough of these idiotic comments like 'says you' that somehow people uttering the truth about these criminal enterprises (the banks) are responsible for their demise.

    What color is the sun in your world? If we all think happy thoughts the market will go up. Yeah.

    Stop listening to morons on television and start shorting or buying puts. Markets move in two directions, don't limit yourself to only one.
    2008 Jul 15 11:08 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Says You ~

    Yeah, right, if you write it then everyone believes it and the economy is destroyed. Wake up, you fool. Leverage IS destroying the economy - this is the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. It's caused by excessive speculation, leverage and greed, and not buy short sellers or those who are waking people up by using their First Amendment rights.

    Go back to believing in Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and God.
    2008 Jul 16 12:31 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    great article!

    having worked in major financial MNC I know top management only look after their own skin!

    Fed has done so bad in handling this situation is comical. Watching the congressional hearing yesterday gives a real picture of confidence - lack of it - in the Fed and CEOs.

    I've been buying puts IBs and banks since March and well what can say! When you think things can't get worse it takes another wallop.

    stock price of LEH is at 1999 levels - can shorting do this?
    2008 Jul 16 01:37 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    And fraud. "Moral hazard" is too vague, I agree. I like "Hurricane Ponzi" (analyst said it was by far the most fraud she's seen in her whole career).
    2008 Jul 16 01:38 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    That Lehman or any of these publicly traded companies can run themselves into the ground and then turn around and "go private" is a crime. The people who run these companies should be indicted for malfeasance and theft. The shareholders, in good faith, put money into the company which is then essentially stolen by the people running the company and then when the company goes down the government comes in and takes on all the problems and those in high positions in the company cut and run...or with more chutzpah steal the company from the shareholders.


    On Jul 15 11:30 AM narayan23 wrote:

    > Can't agree with you more, especially since I understand that a lot
    > of the toxic garbage mortgages have yet to hit the LEH books! I know
    > of a guy in DC who owns a property in Va (700K) and a property in
    > DC (Condo) (500k). He got a no-doc loan 80% first from LEH for both
    > and a 10% second (wells fargo, I understand this is a well run bank!!)
    > and the sellers kicked in the remaining 10% (were they smart to get
    > out or what). The guy has bad credit and NO JOB!
    > Of course everyone got their fees and the taxpayer holds the garbage....

    >
    >
    > These guys need to go down to show that the system is not entirely
    > corrupt
    2008 Jul 16 04:08 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Reading all these negative comments indicates that we are at the moment of capitulation.
    The most successful investors get rich by taking advantage of the fears of others.
    2008 Jul 16 08:34 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    To all my detractors, there is a difference between opinion and an outright attack, which is how I read it. You are the ones living in fairyland if you can't see that this kind of negativity currently has a bad effect on the economy. I know you're all so smart that you can figure everything out, and make buckets of money from someone elses misery and/or incompetence, but it's the regular sheep who read this stuff, and immediately run to the bank to demand their cash because they think the bank is going to fail.

    If you're cool with that, then get ready for a lower standard of living.
    2008 Jul 16 09:06 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    its just turned into vegas only slower with a new"conservative socialism" formula to help the scammers & self serving crooks make legacy fortunes for their families.dont believe anybody & think for yourself.
    2008 Jul 16 09:11 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    A question about the market today 16 July 2008. Is it legal for the US Government buy stocks in financial company's? If not could someone explain why the financial stocks are up big today?

    Thanks
    Dave
    2008 Jul 16 11:14 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Good analysis the direction is real and finality likely. I sure would do business with them other than buy their light fixtures - if unencumbered.
    2008 Jul 16 04:04 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I guess all you shorties must have covered your shorts by now!
    2008 Jul 17 01:40 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Who would want to buy LEH and why?
    2008 Jul 19 01:29 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Everyone can comment pessimistically after the fact. How about investors start to comment 30 % of the banks in the US will be bankrupt and insolvent like Indymac next month, because they don't have enough equities and enough money to pay back to all of their depositors. Please remember that all the bank run down cases in this world also happened because of rumour in banking confidence not only finacial situation on banks' balance sheets. Tomorrow you just spread this rumour through CNN and CNBC and convince people to believe your comment, I believe you will see how many people will go queuing at their banks and try to withdraw their money. Perhaps, one day investors around the world will comment and create a rumour on US govornment will be moratorium and insolvent on US tresury bonds. Everything is possible if all of you try to create bad sentiment in your own believes to your own country. When that day come, 30% of the US population may have to work for garment and shoes factories and supply the products to Chinese and Indian customers. Moreover, Arabians, Asians and all foreigners will be the owners of US banks, financial institutions and properties, Do you want this dream come true ? Go ahead, please create more rumour on US banks and bearish sentiment on US economy. Sooner or later you 'll see it. Last but not least, as of today is Mr. Bottle still shorting LEH ? Wow ! you are so brave.
    2008 Jul 20 02:55 PM | Link | Reply