Rubicon Associates is headed by a Chartered Financial Analyst with over 20 years of experience in the investment management industry focused on the analysis, investment and management of fixed income and preferred stock portfolios. Over the years, he has analyzed and invested in both public and... More
I read this and I don't know whether to laugh or put my head down in bewildered amazement. Didn't these same asset types nearly kill two of the three companies listed. I mean, really?
NEW YORK, June 15 (IFR/Reuters) - Credit Suisse (CS) beat out six other broker-dealers on Friday to win pieces of three different CDOs of RMBS from the Fed's Maiden Lane III portfolio. Separately, Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAC) won one CDO, and Citigroup (C) beat out six competitors to win US$1.44bn of another CDO.
Credit Suisse won US$2.8bn worth of CDOs: Davis Square Funding, series II, III, and V. Bank of America Merrill Lynch won the US$896m Davis Square Funding IV CDO. And lastly, Citigroup won the US$1.44bn West Coast Funding I, LTD.
On Wednesday, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, the brokerage unit of Bank of America Merrill Lynch, won nearly US$2bn worth of CDOs known as Altius I Funding and Altius II Funding, which were originally created in 2005. They are backed by residential mortgage bonds.
The Fed bank acquired the assets in the portfolio known as Maiden Lane III in the 2008 government rescue of U.S. insurer American International Group Inc. It acquired the Maiden Lane I assets from Bear Stearns around the time of its takeover. The original loans totaled just over US$53bn.
The New York Fed will continue to sell assets remaining in the Maiden Lane I and III portfolios "as market conditions warrant and if the sales represent good value for the public," it said, adding there is no fixed time frame for the sales
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I certainly smirked when I read this, nice instablog. I agree it seems as if destiny is set to repeat itself. However, if the underlying assets are of the appropriate quality and correct credit risk and other risk management principles have been adhered to and correctly executed when assessing the loans and the quality of the underlying assets then there shouldn't be a problem. But as the sub-prime crisis showed risk management and quality control are the last thing on a banker's mind when there are sales to be made.
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Voluntarily Entering The (Iron) Maiden Lane 2 comments
I read this and I don't know whether to laugh or put my head down in bewildered amazement. Didn't these same asset types nearly kill two of the three companies listed. I mean, really?
From Reuters:
Disclosure: I am long C, BAC.
Instablogs are blogs which are instantly set up and networked within the Seeking Alpha community. Instablog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors, in contrast to contributors' articles.
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