MBIA: Can Litigation Create Shareholder Value? [View article]
Tom, there are other factors at word besides the litigation.. Such as the large losses on MBIA OldCo's ABS CDO portfolio that have not been recognized as impairments and are in excess of statutory surplus.
Reading MBIA's published "CDO Strategy" on their website would lead one to believe they were not so hapless as to guarantee billions of dollars of deals that turned so horrifically bad. I'm sure ML will cite the in-depth description of the arduous due diligence performed by MBIA before wrapping a CDO. Nowhere in that document does it state that low premium rates mean less due diligence is feasible, and no where does it say that it does less scrutiny of deals with longstanding partners.
MBIA's paid 2nd-lien claims in '08 relative to '09 reserves show the farce here. Transformation amounted to looting precarious insurance sub and leaving it definitively undercapitalized to try to establish a legally distinct firm to write new business.
Ambac's approach (direct ownership of NewCo by OldCo, not like MBIA where National is owned by an intermediate holding co which is held by MBIA HoldCo) is more equitable.
Insolvency at OldCo accelerates debt and would force HoldCo into bankruptcy. 5/12 should be interesting and you do make good points -- I have no position but am watchign closely.
Good luck.
On May 04 08:04 AM Tom Armistead wrote:
> Most of the suits mention an implied warranty of good faith and fair > dealing. Obviously any legal victories based on such a doctrine would > totally destabilize Walll Street. One more thing to worry about. >
MBIA: Can Litigation Create Shareholder Value? [View article]
Reading MBIA's published "CDO Strategy" on their website would lead one to believe they were not so hapless as to guarantee billions of dollars of deals that turned so horrifically bad. I'm sure ML will cite the in-depth description of the arduous due diligence performed by MBIA before wrapping a CDO. Nowhere in that document does it state that low premium rates mean less due diligence is feasible, and no where does it say that it does less scrutiny of deals with longstanding partners.
MBIA's paid 2nd-lien claims in '08 relative to '09 reserves show the farce here. Transformation amounted to looting precarious insurance sub and leaving it definitively undercapitalized to try to establish a legally distinct firm to write new business.
Ambac's approach (direct ownership of NewCo by OldCo, not like MBIA where National is owned by an intermediate holding co which is held by MBIA HoldCo) is more equitable.
Insolvency at OldCo accelerates debt and would force HoldCo into bankruptcy. 5/12 should be interesting and you do make good points -- I have no position but am watchign closely.
Good luck.
On May 04 08:04 AM Tom Armistead wrote:
> Most of the suits mention an implied warranty of good faith and fair
> dealing. Obviously any legal victories based on such a doctrine would
> totally destabilize Walll Street. One more thing to worry about.
>