Ambac's Announcement is a Joke; Disagreeing with Whitman on Monolines [View article]
Tillson you're amazing...Get a clue, and do yourself a favor and cover your shorts...short interest is not what it was...Perhaps you need to review everything before you start posting. Please read on :
NEW YORK, March 11 (Reuters) - U.S. bond insurers' losses are likely much lower than what the troubled firms have reported when marking their holdings to market prices, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday.
Shares of bond insurers like MBIA Inc (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Ambac Financial Group (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research), which guarantee payments on roughly $2.4 trillion of debt securities, have fallen precipitously on worries about billions of dollars of claims on mortgage-related bonds they may have to pay out.
In the last six months, Ambac shares have fallen 79.4 percent and MBIA shares have slid 81 percent.
But Moody's approach to rating the guarantors involves trying to determine the "real economic loss" the firms will sustain, as opposed to mark-to-market losses, Moody's analyst Ted Collins said in response to a question on a conference call.
Such loss estimates are "lower than the mark to market that's being recorded," Collins said.
Accounting firms are putting increasing pressure on financial firms to mark their holdings to observable market prices. That has frustrated some firms, which argue that volatile short-term prices can exaggerate actual losses.
If the losses the bond insurers face turn out to be less than expected, that could provide some relief for investors.
Insurers like Ambac have had to write down the value of billions of dollars of credit derivatives, but these write-downs may not necessarily translate into actual losses.
As a result, some players are still confident the firms have enough capital and available funds to pay expected claims.
once again shorts sellers , don't get caughts with your shorts down.. Satrt covering them while you can, and stop the cynicism.
-
Mar 11 18:28 pm
|Rating:
0
0
All Comments by beachtango »Ambac's Announcement is a Joke; Disagreeing with Whitman on Monolines [View article]
Tillson you're amazing...Get a clue, and do yourself a favor and cover your shorts...short interest is not what it was...Perhaps you need to review everything before you start posting. Please read on :
NEW YORK, March 11 (Reuters) - U.S. bond insurers' losses are likely much lower than what the troubled firms have reported when marking their holdings to market prices, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday.
Shares of bond insurers like MBIA Inc (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Ambac Financial Group (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research), which guarantee payments on roughly $2.4 trillion of debt securities, have fallen precipitously on worries about billions of dollars of claims on mortgage-related bonds they may have to pay out.
In the last six months, Ambac shares have fallen 79.4 percent and MBIA shares have slid 81 percent.
But Moody's approach to rating the guarantors involves trying to determine the "real economic loss" the firms will sustain, as opposed to mark-to-market losses, Moody's analyst Ted Collins said in response to a question on a conference call.
Such loss estimates are "lower than the mark to market that's being recorded," Collins said.
Accounting firms are putting increasing pressure on financial firms to mark their holdings to observable market prices. That has frustrated some firms, which argue that volatile short-term prices can exaggerate actual losses.
If the losses the bond insurers face turn out to be less than expected, that could provide some relief for investors.
Insurers like Ambac have had to write down the value of billions of dollars of credit derivatives, but these write-downs may not necessarily translate into actual losses.
As a result, some players are still confident the firms have enough capital and available funds to pay expected claims.
once again shorts sellers , don't get caughts with your shorts down.. Satrt covering them while you can, and stop the cynicism.