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     Feb 20, 2008
Page 3 of 5
CREDIT BUBBLE BULLETIN
The breakdown of Wall Street alchemy

Commentary and weekly review by Doug Noland

$4.9bn. That is largely the result of a change in methodology. Last time AIG did not mark its exposure to where the cash bonds were trading - instead it made an adjustment for where it believed the CDS should trade. Now, it has effectively acknowledged there is not good enough market data on the CDS, so it has reverted to pricing off the cash bonds… The trouble is, the AIG numbers are only marked as at November 30. Its $63bn of exposure to subprime CDOs is likely to have taken a further hit since then."

February 14 - Financial Times (Aline van Duyn and Michael Mackenzie): "A collapse in confidence in a $330bn corner of the debt market has left US municipalities and student loan providers facing spiralling interest rate costs. The implosion of the so-called




auction-rate securities market - amid worries that bond insurers guaranteeing much of this debt could face rating downgrades - is the latest incarnation of the credit crisis. The market, heavily used by municipal borrowers and backed by triple-A rated guarantees from bond insurers such as Ambac and MBIA, was until now used as a safe harbour for investors. The interest rates on such bonds reset either weekly or monthly and a lack of interest from investors can trigger a sharp rise to compensate holders. The market's sudden slump has pushed interest rates as high as 20% for entities from the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey to a hospital. 'The auction securities market is falling apart,' said David Cooke, chief financial officer at Park Nicollet Heath Services in Minneapolis."

February 13 - The Wall Street Journal (Liz Rappaport and Randall Smith): "The credit crunch that has so far caused more than $100 billion of losses for big Wall Street investment firms now extends to students in Michigan, and it could soon hit many other borrowers, ranging from California museums to the prestigious Deerfield Academy prep school in Massachusetts. Yesterday, the Michigan Higher Education Student Loan Authority, a state agency, said…that 'due to the current and unprecedented capital-markets disruption' it will stop making loans under the state's Michigan Alternative Student Loan, or MI-Loan, program. More than 100 Michigan colleges and universities participate in the program. In the past few days, problems have mounted for many borrowers as an obscure -- but important -- corner of the credit market called auction-rate securities has gone into a deep freeze. Borrowers ranging from student-loan authorities to municipalities to big bond funds depend on this market to raise money for making loans and funding projects. They do so by selling securities whose interest rates are reset every week as they change hands in auctions arranged by Wall Street firms like Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Moody's… estimates the size of this market at $325 billion to $360 billion. In recent days, the money managers and other investors who typically buy auction-rate securities have been balking, out of fear the credit turmoil is spreading."

February 13 - Bloomberg (Martin Z. Braun): "A wave of bonds sold by US municipal borrowers with rates set through periodic auctions failed to attract enough buyers in recent days as banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. that run the bidding wouldn't commit their own capital to the debt. Rates on $100 million of bonds sold by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, with bidding run by Goldman, soared to 20% yesterday from 4.3% a week ago… Presbyterian Healthcare in Albuquerque and New York state's Metropolitan Transportation Authority also had failures, officials said. Investor demand for the securities has declined on waning confidence in the credit strength of insurers backing the debt, and on reluctance by dealers to submit bids and risk ending up with too many of the bonds… It's the beginning of the end for the auction-rate market,' said Matt Fabian… with… Municipal Market Advisors. 'Banks have stopped supporting the market.'"

February 13 - Dow Jones: "Failed auctions of mostly municipal debt totaled approximately $6 billion Tuesday, with Citigroup the lead underwriter on the bulk of the sales… Auction-rate securities, a type of bond that investors can re-sell at regularly scheduled auctions, have been knocked by the turmoil in credit markets… The failed auctions Tuesday follow at least six others, sparking concerns that this once safe corner of the credit markets is the next area to crumble. When an auction fails, the holders of the securities are paid a premium until the paper can be sold."

February 11 - Bloomberg (Thomas R. Keene and Mark Pittman): "Subprime fires have found 'new dry brush to burn,' according to UBS AG strategists, who compare turmoil in the auction-rate securities market with last year's crisis in structured investment vehicles. 'It's like SIV stress all over again in that a business that made the banks very little money comes back as a black hole of the balance sheet that could steal critical capital away from the engines of profits that the banks so sorely need at present,' writes William O'Donnell…"

February 15 - Financial Times (Henny Sender): "Leading banks are being advised that it would be cheaper to walk away from big buy-out deals than incur further losses on their funding commitments, increasing the chances that more private equity transactions will collapse. This advice from lawyers contrasts with the conventional wisdom that banks would risk serious damage to their reputations if they were to drop out of deals… 'It is the tipping point argument,' said a senior partner at one of the biggest private equity firms, who asked not to be named. 'The banks have so many issues with their balance sheets that they are considering a new policy.' However, such a change could have a dramatic impact on the markets. 'If you want to come up with news that could make the Dow drop another 500 or 1,000 points, this would be it,' said one lawyer specialising in private equity for a New York law firm."

February 15 - The Wall Street Journal (Diya Gullapalli): "The freeze-up in the little-known but important 'auction rate' debt market is starting to create big problems for leveraged closed-end funds and their investors. Closed-end funds are a cousin of mutual funds that issue a fixed number of shares and essentially trade like stocks. To boost returns for common shareholders, many closed-end funds employ leverage, which essentially involves borrowing at short-term interest rates and investing the proceeds in higher-yielding assets. That approach, however, is now coming under extreme pressure, as the auction-rate securities market many of the funds tap for borrowing has seized up. In recent days, hundreds of such auctions have failed amid the broader credit crunch. Besides closed-end funds, the lack of trading is also hurting big borrowers like student-loan authorities and municipalities."

February 15 - Financial Times (Aline Van Duyn and Michael Mackenzie): "Eliot Spitzer, New York governor, yesterday gave bond insurers three to five business days to find fresh capital, or face a potential break-up by state regulators who want to safeguard the municipal bond markets."

February 14 - Dow Jones (Michael Wilson): "The cost of holding corporate debt, as measured by the spread over risk-free government bonds, has risen to levels not seen since the last global downturn, according to new research from Deutsche Bank. The Markit iBoxx corporate bond index, which tracks the price of corporate cash bonds and is considered the conventional measure of the price of corporate credit, now trades at around 165 bps over risk-free assets. These spreads are at the widest levels since the bear market peak of 2002, when the index traded at 175 bps… However, the iBoxx index has only existed for around a decade. To see further into the past, Deutsche Bank also used Moody's historical spread data, which span several decades, in place of iBoxx spreads. The bank found that the price of investment grade credit has now reached its highest level in the last 70 or 80 years."

February 11 - Bloomberg (Abigail Moses): "Banks are driving the cost of protecting corporate bonds from default to the highest on record as they seek to hedge against losses on collateralized debt obligations, according to traders of credit-default swaps. Contracts on the benchmark Markit iTraxx Crossover Index soared 17 bps to 547… according to JPMorgan Chase & Co… 'Banks have taken losses, spreads are going wider and they are just cutting positions,' said Andrea Cicione, a senior credit strategist at BNP Paribas… 'Lenders are probably reducing risk positions in a deteriorating credit environment by unwinding CDOs.'"

February 12 - Bloomberg (Patricia Kuo): "Citigroup Inc. and seven other top investment banks may need to write down at least $15.1 billion on unsold loans and bonds for leveraged buyouts in their first quarter earnings, according to Bank of America Corp. analysts. As prices of high-yield debt continue to fall this year, banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch & Co. may have more writedowns for $157 billion of loans and bonds than they did in the third-quarter, analysts led by…Jeffrey Rosenberg wrote…"

February 12 - Financial Times (David Oakley): "A growing number of leveraged loans backing private equity buy-outs are in danger of breaching covenants or defaulting, according to research by Standard & Poor's. These companies are carrying much more debt than they should, a sign of potential trouble, particularly in the event of a US recession or more turbulence in the markets, says the rating agency. Analysts say loans backing private equity buy-outs are the most likely casualties as the economic outlook darkens because any fall in earnings will raise debt-to-equity ratios, which could lead to the breaking of covenants and defaults."

February 14 - New York Times (David Jolly): "UBS offered no hope for a near-term turnaround in its business after it posted a huge fourth-quarter loss on Thursday and warned that 2008 would be a difficult year. UBS, the largest Swiss bank and the largest in Europe in terms of assets, reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $11.3 billion after it wrote off $13.7 billion in soured United States investments, mostly on subprime loans. It also said it had lost $2 billion on so-called Alt-A mortgages… One worrying sign that things could worsen is the disclosure that UBS has additional exposure of $26.6 billion in Alt-A mortgages."

February 14 - Financial Times (David Oakley and Gillian Tett): "European companies are increasingly being forced to turn to the dollar markets to raise funding as the credit crunch makes it almost impossible for them to launch deals in the euro-denominated market. A gap between the two markets has opened up with US investment grade issuance at a record high for a January, while Europe slumped to a record low, according to

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