Chris Shenfield's Comments Chris Shenfield's Comments RSS Syndication from SeekingAlpha.com http://seekingalpha.comuser/31863/comments If There's a Recovery Underway, How Come No One Is Shipping Anything? http://seekingalpha.com/article/176504/comments?source=feed#comment-803448 803448 Sun, 13 Dec 2009 02:20:44 -0500 Should You Invest in Banking Stocks? http://seekingalpha.com/article/163767/comments?source=feed#comment-694841 694841 Mon, 28 Sep 2009 22:46:27 -0400 Regions Financial: Sitting on a $22.8 Billion Sink Hole? http://seekingalpha.com/article/156139/comments?source=feed#comment-630074 630074
The Fair Value Estimates reported on banks balance sheets is based upon the interpretation by auditing firms of the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157 (see first note on the 10Q RF page in your post). The use of FAS 157 has caused a downward impact on valuations and on the cyclical nature of valuation and liquidity. In an environment where one bank, due to liquidity issues, is required to dispose assets at unnaturally low prices to improve liquidity in the short-term, other banks are subsequently required to impair their own securities to reflect the new lower price point set by the distressed bank. This circle of impairment is self-perpetuating, despite no change in the risk underlying the security. As asset pricing degrades, this impairs institutions’ ability to provide liquidity to the markets due to capital constraints. That lack of liquidity further erodes pricing, accelerating the decline in liquidity pricing, and around and around we go.

FAS 157 essentially validates the use of low quality price reference sources over fundamental economic valuation methods that have proven effective and reliable for many years. For example, if a loan to finance a car wash has been producing a steady stream of income for the past five years, with predictible annual increases, the "real" value is and has long been accurately developed by taking that income stream and capitalizing it at an appropriate rate of return based on existing interest rates to come up with the valuation. However, FAS 157 requires banks to value the loan based upon how much that loan would fetch in the secondary market today, even though the bank has no intention of selling the loan (why should they, since they are earning a steady stream of reliable income). When the secondary market is weak, the only banks selling similar loans are distressed banks who must sell. Of course they sell at much lower prices than the economic valuation determining by capitalizing the income stream. Now the good bank is required to write down its performing car wash loan and set aside a loan loss reserve even though this does not reflect a true impairment of value. In short, the banks are obliged to use price quotes that are supported by little market evidence, which lack prices reflective of actual transactions, or that include expectations of transactions with truly distressed sellers.

All of this reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of how banks operate. Paulson realizes this. He understands that these FAS 157 "Fair Value Estimates" are rubbish, and that the true value of these assets is much higher. ]]>
Fri, 14 Aug 2009 12:35:33 -0400
The Fair Value Estimates reported on banks balance sheets is based upon the interpretation by auditing firms of the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157 (see first note on the 10Q RF page in your post). The use of FAS 157 has caused a downward impact on valuations and on the cyclical nature of valuation and liquidity. In an environment where one bank, due to liquidity issues, is required to dispose assets at unnaturally low prices to improve liquidity in the short-term, other banks are subsequently required to impair their own securities to reflect the new lower price point set by the distressed bank. This circle of impairment is self-perpetuating, despite no change in the risk underlying the security. As asset pricing degrades, this impairs institutions’ ability to provide liquidity to the markets due to capital constraints. That lack of liquidity further erodes pricing, accelerating the decline in liquidity pricing, and around and around we go.

FAS 157 essentially validates the use of low quality price reference sources over fundamental economic valuation methods that have proven effective and reliable for many years. For example, if a loan to finance a car wash has been producing a steady stream of income for the past five years, with predictible annual increases, the "real" value is and has long been accurately developed by taking that income stream and capitalizing it at an appropriate rate of return based on existing interest rates to come up with the valuation. However, FAS 157 requires banks to value the loan based upon how much that loan would fetch in the secondary market today, even though the bank has no intention of selling the loan (why should they, since they are earning a steady stream of reliable income). When the secondary market is weak, the only banks selling similar loans are distressed banks who must sell. Of course they sell at much lower prices than the economic valuation determining by capitalizing the income stream. Now the good bank is required to write down its performing car wash loan and set aside a loan loss reserve even though this does not reflect a true impairment of value. In short, the banks are obliged to use price quotes that are supported by little market evidence, which lack prices reflective of actual transactions, or that include expectations of transactions with truly distressed sellers.

All of this reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of how banks operate. Paulson realizes this. He understands that these FAS 157 "Fair Value Estimates" are rubbish, and that the true value of these assets is much higher. ]]>
The New Bull Market Fallacy http://seekingalpha.com/article/156115/comments?source=feed#comment-629645 629645 John Keynes]]> Fri, 14 Aug 2009 09:27:25 -0400 John Keynes]]> Bove Sees the Light on Banks? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155587/comments?source=feed#comment-627641 627641 online.wsj.com/article...]]> Wed, 12 Aug 2009 23:27:40 -0400 online.wsj.com/article...]]> Bove Sees the Light on Banks? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155587/comments?source=feed#comment-627256 627256 I think this trend will continue. There is still money to be made in beaten down bank shares. Selected regional banks will be next to follow Citi's lead. Just wait and watch.]]> Wed, 12 Aug 2009 16:13:30 -0400 I think this trend will continue. There is still money to be made in beaten down bank shares. Selected regional banks will be next to follow Citi's lead. Just wait and watch.]]> Are You Sure You Really Want to Chase XLF? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155153/comments?source=feed#comment-624143 624143 Mon, 10 Aug 2009 19:34:48 -0400 Are You Sure You Really Want to Chase XLF? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155153/comments?source=feed#comment-623992 623992 Mon, 10 Aug 2009 18:25:39 -0400 Are You Sure You Really Want to Chase XLF? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155153/comments?source=feed#comment-623650 623650 Mon, 10 Aug 2009 14:22:01 -0400 Are You Sure You Really Want to Chase XLF? http://seekingalpha.com/article/155153/comments?source=feed#comment-623630 623630 Mon, 10 Aug 2009 14:10:14 -0400 Why the Bear Market Bottom Is Not Yet In http://seekingalpha.com/article/146984/comments?source=feed#comment-612298 612298 ]]> Sun, 02 Aug 2009 23:32:25 -0400 ]]> Why We're Not Buying This Market http://seekingalpha.com/article/140431/comments?source=feed#comment-526609 526609
On Jun 01 12:51 AM Shareholders Unite wrote:

> Squares, we agree to a certain extent. The rally so far was justified,
> at 6500, a severe depression was priced in (we're not THAT pessimistic),
> but much more upside is not justified. Unless we really see much
> more fundamental improvement, we can't really see the rally get past
> 1000 on the S&P anytime soon. We do not think it's likely that
> we'll see that much fundamental improvement, for the reasons stated
> in the article. But we have no crystal ball..]]>
Mon, 01 Jun 2009 12:27:45 -0400
On Jun 01 12:51 AM Shareholders Unite wrote:

> Squares, we agree to a certain extent. The rally so far was justified,
> at 6500, a severe depression was priced in (we're not THAT pessimistic),
> but much more upside is not justified. Unless we really see much
> more fundamental improvement, we can't really see the rally get past
> 1000 on the S&P anytime soon. We do not think it's likely that
> we'll see that much fundamental improvement, for the reasons stated
> in the article. But we have no crystal ball..]]>
Why We're Not Buying This Market http://seekingalpha.com/article/140431/comments?source=feed#comment-525825 525825 What this means is regardless of whether you characterize the present market as "irrational" based on a dire economic prediction (as this article seems to do) or as a strong rally based on real prospects of improving fundamentals (see www.minyanville.com/ar...), Mr. Market is the final arbiter of stock prices. I go with the latter and have been buying this rally aggressively based on my view that prices move first, then fundamentals.
]]>
Sun, 31 May 2009 22:18:10 -0400 What this means is regardless of whether you characterize the present market as "irrational" based on a dire economic prediction (as this article seems to do) or as a strong rally based on real prospects of improving fundamentals (see www.minyanville.com/ar...), Mr. Market is the final arbiter of stock prices. I go with the latter and have been buying this rally aggressively based on my view that prices move first, then fundamentals.
]]>
8 Charts for Trading Financials http://seekingalpha.com/article/136688/comments?source=feed#comment-498412 498412

On May 10 11:51 PM Squares7 wrote:

> I agree with Marco that there could be a lot more upside to financials,
> including these banks charted. There seems to be a lot of skepticism
> and criticism, bordering on anger, among the commentators, mostly
> centered on general distrust of the bank's financial statements and
> disagreement with the government's role in propping up these institutions.
> My response is that after years of successful investing, I've learned
> one thing--don't fight the tape. There is a huge amount of momentum
> here. Failure to break UPSIDE resistance doesn't indicate anything
> more than a pause. It's only breaking resistance on the downside
> that would indicate reversal. I have ridden Citigroup from $1.25
> and Bank of America from $5 up to their present prices, and its been
> a great ride because I've learned to never sell a losing stock. Just
> raise your trailing stop losses and enjoy the momentum while it lasts.
> It could continue for quite awhile.]]>
Sun, 10 May 2009 23:53:07 -0400

On May 10 11:51 PM Squares7 wrote:

> I agree with Marco that there could be a lot more upside to financials,
> including these banks charted. There seems to be a lot of skepticism
> and criticism, bordering on anger, among the commentators, mostly
> centered on general distrust of the bank's financial statements and
> disagreement with the government's role in propping up these institutions.
> My response is that after years of successful investing, I've learned
> one thing--don't fight the tape. There is a huge amount of momentum
> here. Failure to break UPSIDE resistance doesn't indicate anything
> more than a pause. It's only breaking resistance on the downside
> that would indicate reversal. I have ridden Citigroup from $1.25
> and Bank of America from $5 up to their present prices, and its been
> a great ride because I've learned to never sell a losing stock. Just
> raise your trailing stop losses and enjoy the momentum while it lasts.
> It could continue for quite awhile.]]>
8 Charts for Trading Financials http://seekingalpha.com/article/136688/comments?source=feed#comment-498411 498411

On May 10 11:29 PM Marco Hickey wrote:

> Alan you're right I failed to draw in the support lines, but I clearly
> stated that they need to break above with the help of the market,
> and nobody knows what could happen in the next days to come. I never
> intended the charts to be bullish, nor am I bullish as stated I am
> taking profits (sold nearly 60% of my financial positions Friday).
> I agree with twotraps, it's a momentum game now and until these stocks
> indicate the trend is down, I'll hold onto some of my position in
> financials.
>
> And to answer moron's question about taking the stress test results
> at face value... No, I simply stated what the Fed is "expecting".
> I certainly have no idea of what these banks will lose as most of
> the banks don't even know what to expect! The rally could continue
> IMO based on: how much money is on the side lines, and the fact there
> is absolutely no clarity.
>
> And, yea I certainly bought what AIG said, that's how I've paid off
> my car loans, and 100% of my college bills with the money I made
> in September and October buying PUTS on all the major banks...<br/>
>
> Simply a momentum game for now... I'll be buying more put protection
> when the momentum changes.. But in the last 8 weeks, being a bear
> wouldn't have worked too well.
>
> On May 10 08:32 PM Alan Young wrote:]]>
Sun, 10 May 2009 23:51:53 -0400

On May 10 11:29 PM Marco Hickey wrote:

> Alan you're right I failed to draw in the support lines, but I clearly
> stated that they need to break above with the help of the market,
> and nobody knows what could happen in the next days to come. I never
> intended the charts to be bullish, nor am I bullish as stated I am
> taking profits (sold nearly 60% of my financial positions Friday).
> I agree with twotraps, it's a momentum game now and until these stocks
> indicate the trend is down, I'll hold onto some of my position in
> financials.
>
> And to answer moron's question about taking the stress test results
> at face value... No, I simply stated what the Fed is "expecting".
> I certainly have no idea of what these banks will lose as most of
> the banks don't even know what to expect! The rally could continue
> IMO based on: how much money is on the side lines, and the fact there
> is absolutely no clarity.
>
> And, yea I certainly bought what AIG said, that's how I've paid off
> my car loans, and 100% of my college bills with the money I made
> in September and October buying PUTS on all the major banks...<br/>
>
> Simply a momentum game for now... I'll be buying more put protection
> when the momentum changes.. But in the last 8 weeks, being a bear
> wouldn't have worked too well.
>
> On May 10 08:32 PM Alan Young wrote:]]>
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