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  • Have Moody’s and S & P Seen the Light? (Part 1) [View article]
    Terry McGraw, CEO of McGraw Hill, and owner of defendant Standard & Poor’s, says that at the peak in 2006, the industry was prepared for a worst case scenario of a 15% draw down in real estate prices over 18 months on the local level. Instead, it got a 50% national plunge that is now two years old and aging. It didn’t help that a Moody’s analyst wrote an e-mail saying he would rate paper issues by “cows.” In the race for market share, Moody’s, S & P, and Fitches’ competitively devalued the meaning of “AAA” so that even the most toxic subprime sludge came out highly rated. With their seals of approvals, the agencies became the facilitators-in-chief of the over lending and over borrowing that made the crash a mathematical certainty. The hedge funds that made billions wisely ran their own in-house ratings departments which thought otherwise. They fell down on their knees, thanking God that inflated “independent” ratings led to wild over valuation of debt securities and set up some of the greatest shorts of the century. There is no Hell hot enough to make ratings agencies adequately pay for their deliberate misdirection of trusting investors. As for the hedge funds, their new short play is the one rating agency that is still publicly traded, Moody’s (MCO).
    Oct 07 08:14 am |Rating: +2 -3 |Link to Comment
  • Gold Rises, the Dollar Falls: Is This Really a Good Thing? [View article]
    sdi Of course you knew it was going to happen like this. After churning around just below the old high, and sucking in as many profit takers and short sellers as possible, gold blasted through to a new high for the year of $1,038. Never mind that the triggering event is complete balderdash, a story in Britain’s Independent newspaper asserting that the Middle East is holding secret global talks to price crude in the yellow metal or other currencies (click here ). It didn’t hurt that Australia cut its interest rates by 0.25%, the first G-20 country to do so. There probably isn’t enough gold in the world to finance more than a few weeks of global oil production. Total gold holdings would only fill two Olympic sized swimming pools. But never let the truth get in the way of a good trade. The confirming moves couldn’t be more ubiquitous, with the Canadian, New Zealand, and Australian dollars all up big, commodities strong, and silver also going ballistic. Regular readers will all recognize these as old friends of mine, core longs that I have been strongly recommending since the beginning of the year. I have been trying to get investors into gold since it was at $800. If you aren’t in gold by now, I can only tear my own clothes and flagellate myself for my abject failure to convince you of gold’s merits. US government debt is exploding, and with foreigners holding a large part of our paper, the only way to get out of this mess is to devalue the dollar. It’s like Obama invited China’s president Hu Jintao to dinner at an expensive Upper East Side restaurant, fakes a sudden case of food poisoning, leaving him with a big fat bill. Next stop $1,200, then $1,500, then the old inflation adjusted high of $2,400. If you want me to help you get set up to trade futures in any of this stuff, please email me at madhedgefundtrader@yah... If you want to know where to buy physical gold and silver in size, or coins with the tightest spreads over spot, check with the experts at www.millenniummetals.net by clicking here.
    Oct 07 08:08 am |Rating: +2 -7 |Link to Comment
  • One Easy CDS Fix [View article]
    How about this idea? There is an easier, cheaper, and faster way to solve the banking crisis which no one is talking about on Capitol Hill. If collateralized debt obligations (CDO’s) are the problem, just get rid of them! Desecuritize them! Just convert them back into the underlying loans. There are $1.4 trillion in CDO’s outstanding backed by Alt-A and subprime loans in the form of 3,700 individual securitizations of perhaps 3.7 million loans. Over 68% of the loans backing these bonds are current. Mark to market rules are forcing the banks to carry this paper on their balance sheets at 50%-80% discounts. The problem is that mark to market is a meaningless accounting fiction when there is no market. If you break up these securities and place the underlying loans back on the banks’ balance sheets, the good mortgages can be valued at 100% of face, and those behind in their payments or in default can be discounted to maybe 70% because they are still secured by the value of the homes. This would boost the value of the entire asset class from the current 20-50 cents up to 90 cents on the dollar. Restored balance sheets would enable banks to resume lending. Of course it would be a massive admin job unwinding the rats’ nests behind some of these securities, but Heaven knows there is abundant subprime and Alt-A expertise available for hire these days. Just sift through the ashes of Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns. It is a workable plan, and therefore is unlikely to ever see the light of day.
    Mar 30 12:16 pm |Rating: +1 -1 |Link to Comment
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