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  • Ultimately, Who Benefits from Too-Big-To-Fail [View article]
    A review of FRB staff studies reveals a 1994 review of Merger Performance Studies in Banking, 1980-93, and an Assessment of whether bank mergers actually yielded any effeciency gains.

    www.federalreserve.gov...

    Conclusions? "findings indicate consistently that bank mergers do not generally result in gains in efficiency or general operating performance."
    Oct 26 15:47 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Ultimately, Who Benefits from Too-Big-To-Fail [View article]
    "Given the technological advances that were occurring in the 1990s, it is very possible that much of the productivity experienced across all industries had more to do with a secular movement in technology as opposed to efficiencies realized by managerial acumen."

    We have a winner!! Give the man a Kewpie Doll. The FDIC promoted bank mergers for 2 decades because they thought that larger banks had lower loss ratios. They never tried to claim that larger banks were more efficient because all of American industry was experiencing productivity improvement.

    TooBigToFail has refuted the loss ratio concept but now someone is trying to ascribe broad productivity gains to merger activity? Except for monopolistic situations, mergers have traditionally been shown to have ineffective results across industries. Banking is no exception.
    Oct 21 15:59 pm |Rating: +5 0 |Link to Comment
  • Debunking the 'Too Big to Fail' Myth Once and for All [View article]
    "Indeed, some very smart people say that the big banks aren't really focusing as much on the lending business as smaller banks."

    One of the few real nuggets in the article. Unfortunately there is also some real dreck like:

    "The Obama administration could break the "too bigs" up in a heartbeat if it wanted to, and then justify it after the fact using PCA or another legal argument."

    The thought that the government could easily, or effectively, fix the TBTF problem is really delusional.
    Oct 14 17:06 pm |Rating: +1 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Should You Invest in Banking Stocks? [View article]
    The biggest banks, C, JPM, GS, and BAC, have much higher exposure to derivatives than the rest of the banking industry. The recent ruling in the Lehman bankruptcy that throws out the counterparty netting provision of the ISDA master derivative agreement substantially increases the risk exposure of those agreements and those banks.
    Sep 29 15:57 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Are Banks Being Naughty Again with Derivatives? Could Be Good [View article]
    "Of the $600 trillion in derivatives market, the amount at risk is currently about $555 billion, a less shocking number, but still a large amount"

    The OCC, in its second quarter, 2009 report on bank derivative activities, reported that net current credit exposure, the primary metric the OCC uses to measure credit risk in derivatives activities, DECREASED $140 billion, or 20 percent, to $555 billion.

    While the fact that a significant decrease occurred is important it should also be noted that the OCCs metric reflects counterparty netting where the bank has a legally enforceable bilateral netting
    agreement, a common provision in the ISDA master agreement that most derivative contracts are based on. In that event contracts with negative values may be used to offset contracts with positive values with the same counterparty. This assumption is explicitly counter to the recent landmark ruling in the Lehman bankruptcy which throws out that provision.
    Sep 29 15:28 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Bank of America's Gain, Taxpayers' Loss, Part 2 [View article]
    "My argument, on the other hand, is that it’s more like buying a homeowner’s policy when there’s a 50% chance that your house has asbestos"

    Thanks for the update. I don't agree with the gov't negotiator but I can understand the reasoning. This will all make more sense when the negotiator accepts a plum job with BAC next year.
    Sep 28 20:18 pm |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • Derivatives Datapoint of the Day [View article]
    Notional amounts are highly irrelevant to risk exposure of an individual company OR to systemic risk. This is because for certain types of derivatives the actual risk may be 1-2% of the notional amount (fixed rate/floating rate swaps) while for other derivatives the actual exposure may be as much as 60-70% of the notional amount (the protection side of certain Credit Default Swaps). The types of derivatives are much more important than the notional amounts. Anyone who argues that increasing notional exposure increases systemic risk is missing the point.


    On Sep 28 02:17 PM Roger Knights wrote:

    > "Notional amounts are completely irrelevant."
    >
    > To risk exposure, maybe. But that's not what Felix was talking about.
    >
    >
    > And Karl Denninger (I think it was him) has argued recently that
    > increasing notional exposure increases systemic risk, because if
    > one major participant goes bankrupt, the market for all derivatives
    > seizes up and all participants are impacted. This, I think, is what
    > Felix is worried about.
    Sep 28 17:39 pm |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Derivatives Datapoint of the Day [View article]
    Derivative exposure is made much more important by the recent ruling in the Lehman bankruptcy that throws out a material provision of the ISDA master agreement.

    www.financeasia.com/ar...

    The International Swaps and Derivatives Association master agreement governing most derivatives transactions says that a counterparty does not need to make payments if the other party suffers an event of default and, needless to say, bankruptcy is classed as such an event.

    The court ruling would prevent the solvent counterparty from avoiding its out of the money obligation to an insolvent counterparty. This could significantly increase the potential obligations of a major derivative holder.
    Sep 28 17:22 pm |Rating: +2 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Bank of America's Gain Is Taxpayers' Loss [View article]
    I hope you're wrong. It's hard to believe that even an inept government bureaucrat would be that poor a negotiator.
    Sep 24 13:52 pm |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
  • Who Watches over the New York Fed?  [View article]
    "the majority of views should be separate from Wall Street and ensure that Wall Street's actions are serving the interests of the entire economy"

    I would agree with this conclusion. The problem is getting financial expertise on the Board and not political noise. My first reaction to seeing Denis Hughes on the board is negative. What does a journeyman electrician and union organizer know about the operation of a central bank.
    Jul 09 14:54 pm |Rating: +1 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Not Buying This Rally [View article]
    "The leadership sectors of banking, insurance, REITS, retail and casinos have all started to roll over, and look like they are going lower."

    This is a pretty broad statement. GSE mortgage REITs have, for the last six months been blessed with a license to print money. Current financing spreads, which are not likely to change soon, are an ideal environment for these companies.
    May 22 11:17 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • A Bull Market That Few Are Buying [View article]
    Wobatus -- don't feel bad. I got three negative votes for barely suggesting there might be some internal contradictions in Momintn's post. He probably has multiple sign-ins.


    On May 13 05:47 PM wobatus wrote:

    > OK, my 2 (thus far) negative recommenders, how is what i said wrong?
    >
    >
    > Bear Stearns was just an investment bank. Same with LEH. Same with
    > Merrill. None of them were hypbrid commercial/investment banks, yet
    > they were the poster boy "fails."
    >
    > What did Morgan Stanley and Goldman do? become banks proper.
    >
    > How were Merrill and BSC "saved"? Shotgunned into mergers with banks.
    >
    >
    > Not saying this helped said banks.
    >
    > But all the i-banks are gone. None of them were post-Glass-Steagall
    > hybrids, but none exist as investment banks any more.
    >
    > And banks that had nothing to do with investment banking also tanked.
    >
    >
    > So repealing Glass Steagall didn't cause their downfall. The answer
    > to these questions, what caused the collapse, isn't "Glass-Steagall
    > was repealed." There were a lot of factors.
    >
    > Further, there are investment bank/commercial bank hypbrids in other
    > countries besides the U.S.
    >
    > I agree that commercial banks or that side of business, with insured
    > deposits and now explicit government backstops, needs effective regulating.
    > I just don't know that saying you can't do both is the be all answer.
    > Does that imply that our i-banks can just be cowboy risk mongers?
    >
    >
    > In any event, if you have pure investment banks and pure commercial
    > banks both failing, and in fact representing the most glaring examples,
    > it is hard to say repeal of Glass Steagall caused the problem. <br/>
    May 14 00:17 am |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • Putting the REIT Maturity Crunch into Perspective [View article]
    You didn't put RWT on your list. They raised $283 million at the end of January, almost all of which was invested, in the first quarter, in discounted senior mortgage securities. They didn't pay down debt and most of the debt on their balance sheet is non-recourse. They have no current maturities. The interest yield on their mortgage portfolio for the first quarter was 38% of amortized cost. I doubt they are the only REIT like that.
    May 14 00:04 am |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • A Bull Market That Few Are Buying [View article]
    Interesting comment considering that the Glass-Steagall repeal bill was signed by President Clinton.


    On May 10 10:10 AM Momintn wrote:

    > The biggest mistake of all was made years ago by allowing commercial
    > banks to become investment banks. Once you allow banks who are regulated
    > by the government to trade in risky classes of investment products,
    > then anyone could have foreseen the consequence of where we are today.
    > And instead of holding these decision makers responsible and doing
    > a proper investigation for possible fraud thereby at least removing
    > them from their executive position, these same men are regarded as
    > advisors to our most highly-elected office. If our government can
    > investigate someone's sexual acts, you would think they could investigate
    > the people who caused this demise of our stock markets and our economy.
    May 12 13:10 pm |Rating: +2 -2 |Link to Comment
  • FDIC Regulation: Reason for Alarm  [View article]
    The primary problem in both the Wachovia and WaMu situations was the FDICs practice of negotiating secretly with the same potential acquirors that Wachovia and WaMu were openly pursuing. This display of bad faith by a protected governmental entity made it impossible for either bank to complete a transaction to protect its investors.
    May 07 14:04 pm |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
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