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The Financial Tsunami - Part 4
Asset Securitization - The Last Tango
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By F. William Engdahl
1-23-8
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- Endgame: Unregulated Private Money
Creation
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- What had emerged going into the new
millennium after the 1999 repeal of Glass-Steagall was an
awesome transformation of American credit markets into what
was soon to become the world's greatest unregulated private
money creation machine.
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- The New Finance was built on an
incestuous, interlocking, if informal, cartel of players,
all reading from the script written by Alan Greenspan and
his friends at J.P. Morgan, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and
the other major financial houses of New York. Securitization
was going to secure a "new" American Century and its
financial domination, as its creators clearly believed on
the eve of the millennium.
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- Key to the revolution in finance in
addition to the unabashed backing of the Greenspan Fed, was
the complicity of the Executive, Legislative and Judicial
branches of the US Government right to the Supreme Court. In
addition, to make the game work seamlessly, it required the
active complicity of the two leading credit agencies in the
world-Moody's and Standard & Poors.
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- It required a Congress and Executive
branch that would repeatedly reject rational appeals to
regulate over-the-counter financial derivatives, bank-owned
or financed hedge funds or any of the myriad steps to remove
supervision, control, transparency that had been
painstakingly built up over the previous century or more. It
required that the major government-certified rating agencies
give their credit AAA imprimatur to a tiny handful of poorly
regulated insurance companies called Monolines, all based in
New York. The monolines were another essential part of the
New Finance.
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- The interlinks and consensus behind
the massive expansion of securitization among all these
institutional players was so clear and pervasive it might
have been incorporated as America New Finance Inc. and its
shares sold over NASDAQ.
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- Alan Greenspan anticipated and
encouraged the process of asset securitization for years
before his actual nurturing of the phenomenal real estate
bubble in the beginning of the first decade of the new
Century. In a pathetic attempt to deny his central role
after the fall, Greenspan last year claimed that the problem
was not mortgage lending to sub-prime customers but the
securitization of the sub-prime credits. In April 2005, he
sung a quite different hymn to sub-prime securitization.
Addressing the Federal Reserve System's Fourth Annual
Community Affairs Research Conference, the Fed chairman
declared,
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- "Innovation has brought about a
multitude of new products, such as subprime loans and niche
credit programs for immigrants. Such developments are
representative of the market responses that have driven the
financial services industry throughout the history of our
country. With these advances in technology, lenders have
taken advantage of credit-scoring models and other
techniques for efficiently extending credit to a broader
spectrum of consumersThe mortgage-backed security helped
create a national and even an international market for
mortgages, and market support for a wider variety of home
mortgage loan products became commonplace. This led to
securitization of a variety of other consumer loan products,
such as auto and credit card loans."
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- That 2005 speech was about the time
he later claimed to have suddenly realized securitization
was getting out of hand. In September 2007 once the crisis
was full force, CBS' Leslie Stahl asked why he did nothing
to stop "illegal or shady practices you knew were taking
place in sub-prime lending." Greenspan replied, "Err, I had
no notion of how significant these practices had become
until very late. I didn't really get it until late 2005 and
2006" (emphasis added-w.e.)
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- As far back as November 1998, only
weeks after the near-meltdown of the global financial system
through the collapse of the LTCM hedge fund, Greenspan had
told an annual meeting of the US Securities Industry
Association, "Dramatic advances in computer and
telecommunications technologies in recent years have enabled
a broad unbundling of risks through innovative financial
engineering. The financial instruments of a bygone era,
common stocks and debt obligations, have been augmented by a
vast array of complex hybrid financial products, which allow
risks to be isolated, but which, in many cases, seemingly
challenge human understanding."
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- That speech was the clear signal to
Wall Street to move into asset-backed securitization in a
big way. After all, hadn't Greenspan just demonstrated
through the harrowing Asia crises of 1997-98 and the
systemic crisis triggered by the August 1998 sovereign debt
default that the Federal Reserve and its liquidity spigot
stood more than ready to bailout the banks in event of any
major mishap? The big banks were, after all, clearly now,
Too Big To Fail-TBTF.
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- The Federal Reserve, the world's
largest and most powerful central bank with what was
arguably the world's most liberal market-friendly Chairman,
Greenspan, would back its major banks in the bold new
securitization undertaking. When Greenspan said risks "which
seemingly challenge human understanding," he signaled that
he understood at least in a crude way that this was a whole
new domain of financial obfuscation and complication.
Central bankers traditionally were known for their pursuit
of transparency among banks and conservative lending and
risk management practices by member banks.
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- Not 'ole Alan Greenspan.
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- Most significantly, Greenspan
reassured his Wall Street securities underwriting friends in
the Securities Industry Association audience that November
of 1998 that he would do all possible to ensure that in the
New Finance, the securitization of assets would remain for
the banks alone to self-regulate.
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- Under the Greenspan Fed, the foxes
would be trusted to guard the henhouse. He stated:
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- "The consequence (of the banks'
innovative financial engineering-w.e.) doubtless has been a
far more efficient financial systemThe new international
financial system that has evolved as a consequence has been,
despite recent setbacks, a major factor in the marked
increase in living standards for those economies that have
chosen to participate in it.
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- It is important to remember--when we
contemplate the regulatory interface with the new
international financial system--the system that is relevant
is not solely the one we confront today. There is no
evidence of which I am aware that suggests that the
transition to the new advanced technology-based
international financial system is now complete. Doubtless,
tomorrow's complexities will dwarf even today's.
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- It is, thus, all the more important
to recognize that twenty-first century financial regulation
is going to increasingly have to rely on private
counterparty surveillance to achieve safety and soundness.
There is no credible way to envision most government
financial regulation being other than oversight of process.
As the complexity of financial intermediation on a worldwide
scale continues to increase, the conventional regulatory
examination process will become progressively
obsolescent--at least for the more complex banking systems.
(emphasis added-w.e.)
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- One might naively ask, why then
surrender all those powers like Glass-Steagall to the
private banks far beyond possible official regulatory
purview?
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- Again in October 1999, amid the
frenzy of the dot.com IT stock market bubble mania, a bubble
which Greenspan repeatedly and stubbornly insisted he could
not confirm as a bubble, he once again praised the role of
financial derivatives and "new financial
instrumentsreallocating risk in a manner that makes risk
more tolerable. Insurance, of course, is the purest form of
this service. All the new financial products that have been
created in recent years, financial derivatives being in the
forefront, contribute economic value by unbundling risks and
reallocating them in a highly calibrated manner. He was
speaking of securitization on the eve of the all-but certain
repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act.
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- The Fed's "private counterparty
surveillance" brought the entire international inter-bank
trading system to a screeching halt in August 2007, as panic
spread over the value of the trillions of dollars in
securitized Asset Backed Commercial Paper and in fact most
securitized bonds. The effects of the shock have only begun,
as banks and investors slash values across the US and
international financial system. But that's getting ahead of
our story.
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- Deregulation, TBTF and Gigantomania
among banks
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- In the United States, between 1980
and 1994 more than 1,600 banks insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) were closed or received
FDIC financial assistance. That was far more than in any
other period since the advent of federal deposit insurance
in the 1930s. It was part of a process of concentration into
giant banking groups that would go into the next century.
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- In 1984 the largest bank insolvency
in US history threatened, the failure of Chicago's
Continental Illinois National Bank, the nation's seventh
largest, and one of the world's largest banks. To prevent
that large failure, the Government through the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation stepped in to bailout
Continental Illinois by announcing 100% deposit guarantee
instead of the limited guarantee FDIC insurance provided.
This came to be called the doctrine of "Too Big to Fail"
(TBTF). The argument was that certain very large banks,
because they were so large, must not be allowed to fail for
fear of the chain-reaction consequences it would have across
the economy. It didn't take long before the large banks
realized that the bigger they became through mergers and
takeovers, the more sure they were to qualify for TBTF
treatment. So-called "Moral Hazard" was becoming a prime
feature of US big banks.
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- That TBTF doctrine was to be extended
during Greenspan's Fed tenure to cover very large hedge
funds (LTCM), very large stock markets (NYSE) and virtually
every large financial entity in which the US had a strategic
stake. Its consequences were to be devastating. Few outside
the elite insider circles of the very large institutions of
the financial community even realized the doctrine had been
established.
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- Once the TBTF principle was made
clear, the biggest banks scrambled to get even bigger. The
traditional separation of banking into local S&L mortgage
lenders, large international money center banks like
Citibank or J.P. Morgan or Bank of America, the prohibition
on banking in more than one state, one by one were
dismantled. It was a sort of "level playing field" but level
for the biggest banks to bulldoze over and swallow up the
smaller and create cartels of finance of unprecedented
scope.
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- By 1996 the number of independent
banks had shrunk by more than one-third from the late 1970s,
from more than 12,000 to fewer than 8,000. The percentage of
banking assets controlled by banks with more than $100
billion doubled to one-fifth of all US banking assets. The
trend was just beginning. The banks' consolidation was a
direct outgrowth of the removal of geographic restrictions
on bank branching and holding company acquisitions by the
individual states, formalized in the 1994 Interstate Banking
and Branch Efficiency Act. Under the rubric of "more
efficient banking" a Darwinian survival of the biggest
ensued. They were by no means the fittest. The consolidation
was to have significant consequences a decade or so later as
securitization exploded in scale beyond the banks' wildest
imagination.
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- J.P.Morgan blazes the trail
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- In 1995, well into the Clinton-Rubin
era, Alan Greenspan's former bank, J.P. Morgan, introduced
an innovation that was to revolutionize banking over the
next decade. Blythe Masters, a 34-year old Cambridge
University graduate hired by the bank, developed the first
Credit Default Swaps, a financial derivative instrument that
ostensibly let a bank insure against loan default; and
Collateralized Debt Obligations, bonds issued against a
mixed pool of assets, a kind of credit derivative giving
exposure to a large number of companies in a single
instrument.
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- Their attraction was that it was all
off the bank's own books, hence away from the Basle Accord's
8% capital rules. The goal was to increase bank returns
while eliminating the risk, a kind of "having your cake and
eating it too," something which in the real world can only
be very messy.
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- J.P.Morgan thereby paved the way to
transform US banking away from traditional commercial
lenders to traders of credit, in effect, into securitizers.
The new idea was to enable the banks to shift risks off
their balance sheets by pooling their loans and remarketing
them as securities, while buying default insurance, Credit
Default Swaps, after syndicating the loans for their
clients. It was to prove a staggering development, soon to
hit volumes measured in the trillions for the banks. By the
end of 2007 there were an estimated $45,000 billion worth of
Credit Default Swap contracts out there, giving bondholders
the illusion of security. That illusion, however, was built
on bank risk models of default assumptions which are not
public and, if like other such risk models, were wildly
optimistic. Yet the mere existence of the illusion was
sufficient to lead the major banks of the world,
lemming-like, into buying mortgage bonds collateralized or
backed by streams of mortgage payments from unknown credit
quality, and to accept at face value a Moody's or Standard &
Poors AAA rating.
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- Just as Greenspan as new Fed chairman
turned to his old cronies at J.P. Morgan when he wanted to
grant a loophole to the strict Glass-Steagall Act in 1987,
and as he turned to J.P. Morgan to covertly work with the
Fed to buy derivatives on the Chicago MMI stock index to
artificially manipulate a recovery from the October 1987
crash, so the Greenspan Fed worked with J.P. Morgan and a
handful of other trusted friends on Wall Street to support
the launch of securitization in the 1990's, as it became
clear what the staggering potentials were for the banks who
were first and who could shape the rules of the new game,
the New Finance.
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- It was J.P. Morgan & Co. that led the
march of the big money center banks beginning 1995 away from
traditional customer bank lending towards the pure trading
of credit and of credit risk. The goal was to amass huge
fortunes for the bank's balance sheet without having to
carry the risk on the bank's books, an open invitation to
greed, fraud and ultimate financial disaster. Almost every
major bank in the world, from Deutsche Bank to UBS to
Barclays to Royal Bank of Scotland to Societe Generale soon
followed like eager blind lemmings.
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- None however came close to the
handful of US banks which came to create and dominate the
new world of securitization after 1995, as well as of
derivatives issuance. The banks, led by J.P. Morgan, first
began to shift credit risk off the bank balance sheets by
pooling credits and remarketing portfolios, buying default
protection after syndicating loans for clients. The era of
New Finance had begun. Like every major "innovation" in
finance, it began slowly.
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- Very soon after, the new securitizing
banks such as J.P. Morgan began to create portfolios of debt
securities, then to package and sell off tranches based on
default probabilities. "Slice and dice" was the name of the
new game, to generate revenue for the issuing underwriting
bank, and to give "customized risk to return" results for
investors. Soon Asset Backed Securities, Collateralized Debt
Securities, even emerging market debt were being bundled and
sold off in tranches.
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- On November 2, 1999, only ten days
before Bill Clinton signed the Act repealing Glass-Steagall,
thereby opening the doors for money center banks to acquire
brokerage business, investment banks, insurance companies
and a variety of other financial institutions without
restriction, Alan Greenspan turned his attention to
encouraging the process of bank securitization of home
mortgages.
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- In an address to America's Community
Bankers, a regional banking organization, at a conference on
mortgage markets, the Fed chairman stated:
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- The recent rise in the homeownership
rate to over 67 percent in the third quarter of this year
owes, in part, to the healthy economic expansion with its
robust job growth. But part of the gains have also come
about because innovative lenders, like you, have created a
far broader spectrum of mortgage products and have increased
the efficiency of loan originations and underwriting.
Ongoing progress in streamlining the loan application and
origination process and in tailoring mortgages to individual
homebuyers is needed to continue these gains in
homeownershipCommunity banking epitomizes the flexibility
and resourcefulness required to adjust to, and exploit,
demographic changes and technological breakthroughs, and to
create new forms of mortgage finance that promote
homeownership. As for the Federal Reserve, we are striving
to assist you by providing a stable platform for business
generally and for housing and mortgage activity. (emphasis
mine-w.e.)
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- Already on March 8 of that same year,
1999, Greenspan addressed the Mortgage Bankers' Association
where he strongly pushed real estate mortgage backed
securitization as the wave of the future. He told the
bankers there,
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- "Greater stability in the supply of
mortgage credit has been accompanied by the unbundling of
the various aspects of the mortgage process. Some
institutions act as mortgage bankers, screening applicants
and originating loans. Other parties service mortgage loans,
a function for which efficiencies seem to be gained by
large-scale operations. Still others, mostly with stable
funding bases, provide the permanent financing of mortgages
through participation in mortgage pools. Beyond this, some
others slice cash flows from mortgage pools into special
tranches that appeal to a wider group of investors. In the
process, mortgage-backed securities outstanding have grown
to a staggering $2.4 trillion, automated underwriting
software is being increasingly employed to process a rapidly
rising share of mortgage applications. Not only does this
technology reduce the time it takes to approve a mortgage
application, it also offers a consistent way of evaluating
applications across a number of different attributes, and
helps to ensure that the down-payment and income
requirements and interest rates charged more accurately
reflect credit risks. These developments enabled the
industry to handle the extraordinary volume of mortgages
last year with ease, especially compared to the strains that
had been experienced during refinancing waves in the past.
One key benefit of the new technology has been an increased
ability to manage risk (sic). Looking forward, the increased
use of automated underwriting and credit scoring creates the
potential for low-cost, customized mortgages with
risk-adjusted pricing. By tailoring mortgages to the needs
of individual borrowers, the mortgage banking industry of
tomorrow will be better positioned to serve all corners of
the diverse mortgage market. (emphasis mine-w-e-)."
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- But only after the Fed punctured the
dot.com stock bubble in 2000 and after the Greenspan Fed
dropped Fed funds interest rates drastically to lows not
seen on such a scale since the 1930's Great Depression, did
asset securitization literally explode into a multi-trillion
dollar enterprise.
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- Securitization-the Un-Real Deal
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- Because the very subject of
securitization was embedded with such complexity no one, not
even its creators fully understood the diffusion of risk,
let alone the simultaneous concentration of systemic risk.
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- Securitization was a process in which
assets were acquired by some entity, sometimes called a
Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) or Special Investment Vehicle
(SIV).
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- At the SIV the diverse home
mortgages, let's say, were assembled into pools or bundles
as they were termed. A specific pool, say, of home mortgage
receivables, now took life in the new form of a bond, an
asset backed bond, in this case a mortgage backed security.
The securitized bond was backed by the cash flow or value of
the underlying assets.
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- That little step involved a complex
leap of faith to grasp. It was based on illusory collateral
backing whose real worth, as is now dramatically clear to
all banks everywhere, was unknown and unknowable. Already at
this stage of the process the legal title to the home
mortgage of a specific home in the pool is legally
ambiguous, as I pointed out in Part I. Who in the chain
actually has in his or her physical possession the real,
"wet signature" mortgage deed to the hundreds and thousands
of homes in collateral? Now lawyers will have a field day
for years to come sorting out Wall Street's brilliant
opacities.
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- Securitization usually applied to
assets that were illiquid, that is ones that were not easily
sold, hence it became common in real estate. And US real
estate today is one of the world's most illiquid markets.
Everyone wants out and few want in, at least not at these
prices.
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- Securitization was applied to pools
of leased property, to residential mortgages, home equity
loans, on student loans, credit card or other debts. In
theory all assets could be securitized as long as they were
associated with a steady and predictable cash flow. That was
the theory. In practice, it allowed US banks to skirt
tougher new Basle Capital Adequacy Rules, Basle II, designed
explicitly in part to close the loophole in Basle I that let
US and other banks shove loans wholesale into off-the-books
special entities called Special Investment Vehicles or
SIVs.
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- Financial Alchemy: Where the fly hits
the soup
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- Securitization, thus, converted
illiquid assets into liquid assets. It did this, in theory,
by pooling, underwriting and selling the ownership claims to
the payment flows, as asset-backed securities (ABS).
Mortgage-backed securities were one form of ABS, the largest
by far since 2001.
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- Here's where the fly hit the soup.
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- With the US housing market beginning
back in 2006 in sharp downturn and rates on Adjustable Rate
Mortgages (ARMs) moving sharply higher across the United
States, hundreds of thousands of homeowners were being
forced to simply "walk away" from their now un-payable
mortgages, or be foreclosed on by one or another party in
the complex securitization chain, very often illegally, as
an Ohio judge recently ruled. Home foreclosures for 2007
were 75% higher than in 2006 and the process is just
beginning, in what will be a real estate disaster to rival
or likely exceed that of the Great Depression. In California
foreclosures were up an eye-popping 421% over the year
before.
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- That growing process of mortgage
defaults in turn left gaping holes in the underlying cash
payment stream intended to back up the newly issued Mortgage
Backed Securities. Because the entire system was totally
opaque, no one, least of all the banks holding this paper,
knew what was really the case, what asset backed security
was good, or what bad. As nature abhors a vacuum, bankers
and investors, especially global investors, abhor
uncertainty in financial assets they hold. They treat it
like toxic waste.
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- The architects of this New Finance,
based on the securitization of home mortgages, however,
found that bundling hundreds of disparate mortgages of
varying credit quality from across the USA into a big MBS
bond wasn't enough. If the Wall Street MBS underwriters were
to be able to sell their new MBS bonds to the well-endowed
pension funds of the world, they needed some extra juice.
Most pension funds are restricted to buying only bonds rated
AAA, highest quality.
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- But how could a rating agency rate a
bond which was composed of a putative spream of mortgage
payments from 1,000 different home mortgages across the USA?
They couldn't send an examiner into every city to look at
the home and interview its occupant. Who could stand behind
the bond? Not the mortgage issuing bank. They sold the
mortgage immediately, at a discount, to get it off their
books. Not the Special Purpose Vehicle, they were just there
to keep the transactions separate from the mortgage
underwriting bank.No something else was needed. Deux Maxima!
in stepped the dauntless Big Three (actually Big Two) Credit
Raters, the rating agencies.
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- The ABS Rating Game
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- Never ones to despair when confronted
by new obstacles, clever minds at J.P. Morgan, Morgan
Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Bear
Stearns and a myriad of others in the game of securitizing
the exploding volumes of home mortgages after 2002, turned
to the Big Three rating agencies to get their prized AAA.
This was necessary because, unlike issuance of a traditional
corporate bond, say by GE or Ford, where a known, physical
bricks 'n mortar blue-chip company with a long-term credit
history stood behind the bond, with Asset Backed Securities
no corporation stood behind an ABS. Just a lot of promises
on mortgage contracts across America.
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- The ABS or bond was, if you will, a
"stand alone" artificial creation, whose legality under US
law has been called into question. That meant a rating by a
credit rating agency was essential to make the bond
credible, or at least give it the "appearance of
credibility," as we now realize from the unraveling of the
present securitization debacle.
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- At the very heart of the new
financial architecture that was facilitated by the Greenspan
Fed and successive US Administrations over the past two
decades and more, was a semi-monopoly held by three de facto
unregulated private companies who operated to provide credit
ratings for all securitized assets, of course for very nice
fees.
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- Three rating agencies dominated the
global business of credit ratings, the largest in the world
being Moody's Investors Service. In the boom years of
securitization, Moody's regularly reported well over a 50%
profit on gross rating revenues. The other two in the global
rating cartel were Standard & Poor's and Fitch Ratings. All
three were American companies intimately tied into the
financial sinews of Wall Street and US finance. The fact
that the world's rating business was a de facto US monopoly
was no accident. It was planned that way, as a main pillar
of the financial domination of New York. The control of the
credit rating world was for the US global power projection
almost tantamount to US domination in nuclear weapons as a
power factor.
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- Former Secretary of Labor, economist
Robert Reich, identified a core issue of the raters, their
built-in conflict of interest. Reich noted, "Credit-rating
agencies are paid by the same institutions that package and
sell the securities the agencies are rating. If an
investment bank doesn't like the rating, it doesn't have to
pay for it. And even if it likes the rating, it pays only
after the security is sold. Get it? It's as if movie studios
hired film critics to review their movies, and paid them
only if the reviews were positive enough to get lots of
people to see the movie."
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- Reich went on, "Until the collapse,
the result was great for credit-rating agencies. Profits at
Moody's more than doubled between 2002 and 2006. And it was
a great ride for the issuers of mortgage-backed securities.
Demand soared because the high ratings had expanded the
market. Traders didn't examine anything except the ratingsa
multibillion-dollar game of musical chairs. And then the
music stopped."
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- That put three global rating
agencies-Moody's, S&P, and Fitch-directly under the
investigative spotlight. They were de facto the only ones in
the business of rating the collateralized
securities-Collateralized Mortgage Obligations,
Collateralized Debt Obligations, Student Loan-backed
Securities, Lottery Winning-backed Securities and a myriad
of others-for Wall Street and other banks.
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- According to an industry publication,
Inside Mortgage Finance, some 25% of the $900 billion in
sub-prime mortgages issued over the past two years were
given top AAA marks by the rating agencies. That comes to
more than $220 billion of sub-prime mortgage securities
carrying the highest AAA rating by either Moody's, Fitch or
Standard & Poors. That is now coming unwound as home
mortgage defaults snowball across the land.
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- Here the scene got ugly. Their model
assumptions on which they gave their desired AAA seal of
approval was a proprietary secret. "Trust us"
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- According to an economist working
within the US rating business, who had access to the actual
model assumptions used by Moody's, S&P and Fitch to
determine whether a mortgage pool with sub-prime mortgages
got a AAA or not, they used historical default rates from a
period of the lowest interest rates since the Great
Depression, in other words a period with abnormally low
default rates, to declare by extrapolation that the
sub-prime paper was and would be into the distant future of
AAA quality.
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- The risk of default on even a
sub-prime mortgage, so went the argument, "was historically
almost infinitesimal." That AAA rating from Moody's in turn
allowed the Wall Street investment houses to sell the CMOs
to pension funds, or just about anybody seeking "yield
enhancement" but with no risk. That was the theory.
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- As Oliver von Schweinitz pointed out
in a very timely book, Rating Agencies: Their Business,
Regulation and Liability, "Securitizations without ratings
are unthinkable." And because of the special nature of asset
backed securitizations of mortgage loans, von Schweinitz
points out, those ABS, "although being standardized, are
one-time events, whereas other issuances (corporate bonds,
government bonds) generally affect repeat players. Repeat
players have less incentive to cheat than 'one time
issuers.'"
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- Put the other way, there is more
incentive to cheat, to commit fraud with asset backed
securities than with traditional bond issuance, a lot more.
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- Moody's, S&P's unique status
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- The top three rating agencies under
US law enjoy an almost unique status. They are recognized by
the Government's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as
Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations
(NRSROs). There exist only four in the USA today. The
fourth, a far smaller Canadian rater, is Dominion Bond
Rating Service Ltd. Essentially, the top three hold a quasi
monopoly on the credit rating business, and that, worldwide.
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- The only US law regulating rating
agencies, the Credit Agency Reform Act of 2006 is a
toothless law, passed in the wake of the Enron collapse.
Four days before the collapse of Enron, the rating agencies
gave Enron an "investment grade" rating, and a shocked
public called for some scrutiny of the raters. The effect of
the Credit Agency Reform Act of 2006 was null on the de
facto rating monopoly of S&P, Moody's and Fitch.
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- The European Union, also reacting to
Enron and to the similar fraud of the Italian company
Parmalat, called for an investigation of whether the US
rating agencies rating Parmalat has conflicts of interest,
how transparent their methodologies were (not at all) and
the lack of competition.
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- After several years of "study" and
presumably a lot of behind-the-scenes from big EU banks
involved in the securitization game, the EU Commission
announced in 2006 it would only "continue scrutiny" (sic) of
the rating agencies. Moody's and S&P and Fitch dominate EU
ratings as well. There are no competitors.
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- It's a free country, ain't it?
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- The raters under US law were not
liable for their ratings despite the fact that investors
worldwide depend often exclusively on the AAA or other
rating by Moody's or S&P as validation of creditworthiness,
most especially in securitized assets. The Credit Agency
Reform Act of 2006 in no way dealt with liability of the
rating agencies. It was in this regard a worthless paper. It
was the only law dealing with the raters at all.
-
- As von Schweinitz pointed out, "Rule
10b-5 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 is probably
the most important basis for suing on the grounds of capital
market fraud." That rule stated "It shall be unlawful for
any personto make any untrue statement of a material fact."
That sounded like something concrete. But then the Supreme
Court affirmed in a 2005 ruling, Dura Pharmaceuticals,
ratings are not "statements of a material fact" as required
under Rule 10b-5. The ratings given by Moody's or S&P or
Fitch are rather, "merely an opinion." They are thereby
protected as "privileged free speech," under the US
Constitution's First Amendment.
-
- Moody's or S&P could say any damn
thing about Enron or Parmalat or sub-prime securities it
wanted to. It's a free country ain't it? Doesn't everyone
have a right to their opinion?
-
- US courts have ruled in ruling after
ruling that financial markets are "efficient" and hence,
markets will detect any fraud in a company or security and
price it accordinglyeventually. No need to worry about the
raters then
-
- That was the "self-regulation" that
Alan Greenspan apparently had in mind when he repeatedly
intervened to oppose any regulation of the emerging asset
securitization revolution.
-
- The securitization revolution was all
underwritten by a kind of "hear no evil, see no evil" US
government policy that said, what is "good for the Money
Trust is good for the nation." It was a perverse twist on
the already perverse saying from the 1950's of then General
Motors chief, Charles E. Wilson, "what's good for General
Motors is good for America."
-
- Monoline insurance: Viagra for
securitization?
-
- For those CMO sub-prime securities
that fell short of AAA quality,there was also another
crucial fix needed. The minds on Wall Street came up with an
ingenious solution.
-
- The issuer of the Mortgage Backed
Security could take out what was known as Monoline
insurance. Monoline insurance for guaranteeing against
default in asset backed securities was another spin-off of
the Greenspan securitization revolution.
-
- Although monoline insurance had begun
back in the early 1970's as a guarantee for municipal bonds,
it was the Greenspan securitization revolution which gave it
its leap into prominence.
-
- As their industry association stated,
"The monoline structure ensures that our full attention is
given to adding value to our capital market customers." Add
value they definitely did. As of December 2007, it was
reliably estimated that the monoline insurers, who call
themselves "financial guarantors," eleven poorly
capitalized, loosely regulated monoline insurers, all based
in New York and regulated by that state's insurance
regulator, had given their insurance guarantee to enable the
AAA rated securitization of over $2.4 trillion worth of
Asset Backed Securities. (emphasis mine-f.w.e.).
-
- Monoline insurance became a very
essential element in the fraud-ridden Wall Street scam known
as securitization. By paying a certain fee, a specialized
(hence the term monoline) insurance company would insure or
guarantee a pool of sub-prime mortgages in event of an
economic downturn or recession in which the poor sub-prime
homeowner could not service his monthly mortgage payments.
-
- To quote from the official website of
the monoline trade association, "The Association of
Financial Guaranty Insurers, AFGI, is the trade association
of the insurers and re-insurers of municipal bonds and
asset-backed securities. A bond or other security insured by
an AFGI member has the unconditional and irrevocable
guarantee that interest and principal will be paid on time
and in full in the event of a default." Now they regret ever
having promised that as sub-prime mortgage resets, growing
recession and mortgage defaults are presenting hyperbolic
insurance demands on the tiny, poorly capitalized monolines.
-
- The main monoline insurers were
hardly household names: ACA Financial Guaranty Corp., Ambac
Assurance, Assured Guaranty Corp. BluePoint Re Limited,
CIFG, Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, Financial
Security Assurance, MBIA Insurance Corporation, PMI Guaranty
Co., Radian Asset Assurance Inc., RAM Reinsurance Company
and XL Capital Assurance.
-
- A cautious reader might ask the
question, "Who insures these eleven monoline insurers who
have guaranteed billions indeed trillions in payment flows
over the past five or so years of the ABS financial
revolution?"
-
- No one, yet, was the short answer.
They state, "Eight AFGI member firms carry a Triple-A claims
paying ability rating and two member firms carry a Double-A
claims paying ability rating." Moody's, Standard & Poors and
Fitch gave the AAA or AA ratings.
-
- By having a guarantee from a bond
insurer with an AAA credit rating, the cost of borrowing was
less than it would normally be and the number of investors
willing to buy such bonds was greater.
-
- For the monolines, guaranteeing such
bonds seemed risk-free, with average default rates running
at a fraction of 1 per cent in 2003-2006. As a result,
monolines leveraged their assets to build their books, and
it was not being uncommon for a monoline to have insured
risks 100 to 150 times the size of its capital base. Until
recently, Ambac had capital of $5.7 billion against
guarantees of $550 billion.
-
- In 1998, the NY State Insurance
Superintendent's office, the only regulator of monolines,
agreed to allow monolines to sell credit-default swaps
(CDSs) on asset-backed securities such as mortgage backed
securities. Separate shell companies would be established,
through which CDSs could be issued to banks for mortgage
backed securities.
-
- The move into insuring securitized
bonds was spectacularly lucrative for the monolines. MBIA's
premiums rose from $235m in 1998 to $998m in 2007. Year on
year premiums last year increased 140%. Then along came the
US sub-prime mortgage crisis, and the music stopped dead for
the monolines, dead.
-
- As the mortgages within bonds from
the banks defaulted - sub-prime mortgages written in 2006
were already defaulting at a rate of 20 per cent by January
2008-the monolines were forced to step in and cover the
payments.
-
- On February 3, MBIA revealed $3.5
billion in writedowns and other charges in three months
alone, leading to a quarterly loss of $2.3 billion. That was
likely just the tip of a very cold iceberg. Insurance
analyst Donald Light remarked, "The answer is no one knows,"
when asked what the potential downside loss was. "I don't
think we will know to perhaps the third or fourth quarter of
2008."
-
- Credit ratings agencies have begun
downgrading the monolines, taking away their prized AAA
ratings, which means a monoline could no longer write new
business, and the bonds it guarantees no longer would hold a
AAA rating.
-
- To date, the only monoline to receive
downgrades from two agencies - usually required for such a
move to impact on a company - is FGIC, cut by both Fitch and
S&P. Ambac, the second largest monoline, has been cut to AA
by Fitch, with the other monolines on a variety of different
potential warnings.
-
- The rating agencies did "computer
simulated stress tests" to decide if the monolines could
"pay claims at a default level comparable to that of the
Great Depression." How much could the monoline insurers
handle in a real crisis? They claimed, "Our claims-paying
resources available to back members' guaranteestotals more
than $34 billion."
-
- That $34 billion was a drop in what
will rapidly over the course of 2008 appear to be a
bottomless bucket. It was estimated that in the Asset Backed
Securities market roughly one-third of all transactions were
"wrapped" or insured by AAA monolines. Investors demanded
surety wraps for volatile collateral or that without a long
performance history.
-
- According to the Securities Industry
and Financial Markets Association, a US trade group, at the
end of 2006 there was a total of some $3.6 trillion worth of
Asset Backed Securities in the United States, including of
home mortgages, prime and sub-prime, of home equity loans,
credit cards, student loans, car loans, equipment leasing
and the like. Fortunately not all $3.6 trillion of
securitizations are likely to default, and not all at once.
But the AGFI monoline insurers had insured $2.4 trillion of
that mountain of asset backed securities over the past
several years. Private analysts estimated by early February
2008 that the potential insurer payout risks, under
optimistic assumptions, could exceed $200 billions. A
taxpayer bailout of that scale in an election year would be
an interesting voter sell.
-
- Off the books
-
- The entire securitization revolution
allowed banks to move assets off their books into
unregulated opaque vehicles. They sold the mortgages at a
discount to underwriters such as Merrill Lynch, Bear
Stearns, Citigroup, and similar financial securitizers. They
then in turn sold the mortgage collateral to their own
separate Special Investment Vehicle or SIV as they were
known. The attraction of a stand-alone SIV was that they and
their potential losses were theoretically at least, isolated
from the main underwriting bank. Should things ever, God
forbid, run amok with the various Asset Backed Securities
held by the SIV, only the SIV would suffer, not Citigroup or
Merrill Lynch.
-
- The dubious revenue streams from
sub-prime mortgages and similar low quality loans, once
bundled into the new Collateralized Mortgage Obligations or
similar securities, then often got an injection of Monoline
insurance, a kind of financial Viagra for junk quality
mortgages such as the NINA (No Income, No Assets) or "Liars'
Loans," or so-called stated-income loans, that were
commonplace during the colossal Greenspan Real Estate
economy up until July 2007.
-
- According to the Mortgage Brokers'
Association for Responsible Lending, a consumer protection
group, by 2006 Liars' Loans were a staggering 62% of all USA
mortgage originations. In one independent sampling audit of
stated-income mortgage loans in Virginia in 2006, the
auditors found, based on IRS records that almost 60% of the
stated-income loans were exaggerated by more than 50%. Those
stated-income chickens are now coming home to roost or far
worse. The default rates on those Liars' Loans, which is now
sweeping across the entire US real estate market, makes the
waste problems of Tyson Foods factory chicken farms look
like a wonderland.
-
- None of that would have been possible
without securitization, without the full backing of the
Greenspan Fed, without the repeal of Glass-Steagall, without
monoline insurance, without the collusion of the major
rating agencies, and the selling on of that risk by the
mortgage-originating banks to underwriters who bundled them,
rated and insured them as all AAA.
-
- In fact the Greenspan New Finance
revolution literally opened the floodgates to fraud on every
level from home mortgage brokers to lending agencies to Wall
Street and London securitization banks to the credit rating
agencies. Leaving oversight of the new securitized assets,
hundreds of billions of dollars worth of them, to private
"self-regulation" between issuing banks like Bear Stearns,
Merrill Lynch or Citigroup and their rating agencies, was
tantamount to pouring water on a drowning man. In Part V we
discuss the consequences of the grand design in New Finance.
-
- * F. William Engdahl is the author of
A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New
World Order (Pluto Press) and Seeds of Destruction: The
Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation,
"http://www.globalresearch.ca/" www.globalresearch.ca. The
present series is adapted from his new book, now in writing,
The Rise and Fall of the American Century: Money and Empire
in Our Era. He may be contacted through his website,
"http://www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net"
www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.
-
- Greenspan, Alan, Consumer Finance,
Remarks at the Federal Reserve System's Fourth Annual
Community Affairs Research Conference, Washington, D.C.,
April 8, 2005, in
"http://www.federalreserve.gov/BoardDocs/speeches/2005/20050408/default.htm"
www.federalreserve.gov/BoardDocs/speeches/2005/20050408/default.htm
- Greenspan, Greenspan Defends Low
Interest Rates Interview CBS 60 Minutes, September 16, 2007,
in
"http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/09/13/60minutes/main3257567.shtml"
www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/09/13/60minutes/main3257567.shtml
- Greenspan, The Markets, Excerpts From
Greenspan Speech on Global Turmoil, reprinted in The New
York Times, November 6, 1998.
- Greenspan, Alan, Remarks by Chairman
Alan Greenspan:The structure of the international financial
system,
- at the Annual Meeting of the
Securities Industry Association, Boca Raton, Florida,
November 5, 1998.
- Greenspan, Alan, Measuring Financial
Risk in the Twenty-first Century, Remarks Before a
conference sponsored by the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Washington, D.C., October 14, 1999, in
"http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1999/19991014.htm"
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1999/19991014.htm.
Here Greenspan states, "...to date, economists have been
unable to anticipate sharp reversals in confidence.
Collapsing confidence is generally described as a bursting
bubble, an event incontrovertibly evident only in
retrospect. To anticipate a bubble about to burst requires
the forecast of a plunge in the prices of assets previously
set by the judgments of millions of investors, many of whom
are highly knowledgeable about the prospects for the
specific investments that make up our broad price indexes of
stocks and other assets.
- Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, History of the 80s, Volume I: An Examination of
the Banking Crises of the 1980s and Early 1990s, in
"http://www.fdic.gov/bank/historical/history/vol1.html"
www.fdic.gov/bank/historical/history/vol1.html, p.1.
- Greenspan, Alan, Mortgage markets and
economic activity, Remarks before a conference on Mortgage
Markets and Economic Activity, sponsored by America's
Community Bankers, Washington, D.C., November 2, 1999, in
"http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1999/19991102.htm"
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1999/19991102.htm.
- Greenspan, Alan, Remarks to Mortgage
Bankers' Association, Washington, D.C., March 8, 1999.
- Reich, Robert, Why Credit-rating
Agencies Blew It: Mystery Solved, October 23, 2007, Robert
Reich's Blog, in "http://robertreich.blogspot.com/2007/10/they-mystery-of-why-credit-rating.html"
robertreich.blogspot.com/2007/10/they-mystery-of-why-credit-rating.html.
- Von Schweinitz, Oliver, Rating
Agencies Their Business, Regulation and Liability, Unlimited
Publishing LLC, Bloomington, Ind., 2007, pp. 35-36.
- Ibid. pp. 67-97.
- Association of Financial Guaranty
Insurers, Our Claims-Paying Ability, in "http://www.afgi.org/who-fact.htm"
www.afgi.org/who-fact.htm.
- McNichols, James P., Monoline
Insurance & Financial Guaranty Reserving, in "http://www.casact.org/pubs/forum/03fforum/03ff231.pdf"
www.casact.org/pubs/forum/03fforum/03ff231.pdf.
- Dorfman, Dan, Liars' Loans Could Make
Many Moan, The New York Sun, Dec. 20, 2006.
courtesy of rense.com |