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""Not (Yet) a 'Minsky Moment'"" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-12-27 17:01:56

Charles W. Calomiris the Henry Kaufman professor of financial institutions at Columbia's business school has an at VoxEU in which he argues that the trouble we are seeing in the ascribe markets is not yet a (in very simplistic terms the inform at which an overlevered and highly speculative lending setting goes into contraction leading to a collapse of asset prices). The post summarizes an (!) which I confess I have not yet construe but intend to. The post is schizophrenic. The first move gives a very good overview of how we got where we are and includes a discussion of collateralized debt obligations a topic too often neglected despite the size of that merchandise. Calomiris change surface describes "LSS trades" and their role in the asset backed commercial paper market. I felt a bit chagrined to be learning about this for the first time but entangle a bit better when punched "LSS trades" into Bloomberg. Google and the Financial Times. Nothing on Bloomberg. 15 references on Google (two of which were Calomiris' work) and only one on the FT. And only Calomiris gave the ABCP connection. After such a come up informed start it was jarring to have him furnish eight reasons why things really are not bad at all and no counter-argument. The goes from analysis to advocacy while trying to maintain a posture of objectivity. Had Calomiris given both sides of the argument and taken a position in his concluding remarks the piece would undergo been more convincing. But many of the eight reasons are a stretch and one is intellectually dishonest undermining the credibility he established in the set-up (my objections come after his post). The conjoin certainly reads as if Calomiris subscribes to the AEI party line. From VoxEU: The Subprime troubles caused a liquidity shock but there is little reason to believe that a substantial change state in credit give under the current circumstances will magnify the shocks and turn them into a recession. We have not (yet) arrived at a Minsky moment. The late Hyman Minsky developed theories of financial crises as macroeconomic events. The economic logic he focused on starts with unrealistically high asset prices and buildups of leverage based on momentum effects myopic expectations and widespread overleveraging of consumers and firms. When asset prices collapse the negative wealth effect on aggregate demand is amplified by a “financial accelerator”; that is collapsing credit feeds and feeds on falling aggregate demand ascribe. A severe economic decline is the outcome. Many bloggers refer to this as a "Minsky moment" (see Minsky 1975 for the real thing.)I am sympathetic to the view that “Minsky moments” can happen (indeed. I have written numerous studies that furnish some give to that affirm). But in my view the correct application of the Minsky model to the current data indicates that we are not facing a Minsky moment – at least not yet. This column which draws on a much longer that analysis I have posted at the AEI summarises my reasoning. At the moment it is not obvious that housing or other asset prices are collapsing or that leverage is unsustainably large for most firms or consumers. That is not to say that the economy ordain avoid a slowdown or possibly even a recession. My main cerebrate is not on forecasting changes in housing prices or consumption per se which are very hard to guess. I am interested in assessing the likelihood that financial weakness will substantially magnify aggregate demand shocks through a “financial accelerator” (otherwise known as a ascribe crunch). The current liquidity shockWe are currently experiencing a liquidity shock to the financial system initiated by problems in the subprime mortgage market which spread to securitisation products more generally - that is mortgage-backed securities asset-backed securities and asset-backed commercial paper. Banks are being asked to change magnitude the amount of assay that they absorb (by moving off-balance pelt assets onto the fit sheet) but the related losses that the banks undergo suffered are limiting somewhat the capacity of banks to absorb those risky assets. The result is a reduction in aggregate risk capacity in the financial system as losses force those who are used to absorbing risk to change off or close out their positions. The financing of many risky activities unrelated to the core out mortgage market shock has been reduced relative to their pre-shock levels. There are at least temporarily lots of "innocent bystanders" that are affected due to the aggregate scarcity of equity capital in financial intermediaries relative to the risk that needs reallocating. The housing finance sector shock that started the current problems was small relative to the economy and financial system (estimated losses on subprime mortgages range from $200 billion to $400 billion). It was magnified because of the increased and imprudent use that has been made of subprime mortgage-backed securities in the creation of other securitisation conduits and because of the connection of the instruments issued by those conduits to short-term asset-backed commercial paper. From 2000 to 2005 the percentage of non-conforming mortgages that became securitised increased from 35% to 60% and the volume of non-conforming origination also rose dramatically. Subprime mortgage originations rose from $160 billion in 2001 to $600 billion in 2006. And many of these securitised mortgages became re-securitised as backing for collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). As of October 2006. 39.5% of existing CDO pools covered by Moody’s consisted of MBS of which 70% were subprime or second-lien mortgages. Why did subprime issuance boom from 2002 to 2006? Foreclosure rates for subprime mortgages actually peaked in 2002 but remarkably that experience led to a sharp acceleration in the volume of subprime originations because the 2002-2003 foreclosures did not produce large losses. Losses from foreclosure were low in the liquid and appreciating housing merchandise and ratings agencies wrongly concluded that the forward-looking risks associated with subprime foreclosure were low. Instead ratings should have recognised that this was an unusual environment and that there was substantial assay implied by high foreclosure rates. Despite CDOs’ increasing reliance on subprime mortgage-backed securities and the observably low quality of these assets (i e. high subprime foreclosure rates). CDO pools issued large amounts of highly rated debts backed by these assets. The CDO problem became magnified by the creation of additional layers of securitisation involving the leveraging of the “super-senior” tranches of CDOs (the AAA-rated tranches issued by CDO conduits). These so-called leveraged super-senior conduits or “LSS trades,” were financed in the asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) market. Some banks structured securitisations that levered up their holdings of these super-senior tranches of CDOs by more than 10 times so that the ABCP issued by the LSS conduits was based on underlying organiser equity of only one-tenth the amount of the ABCP borrowings with additional ascribe and liquidity enhancements offered to assure ABCP holders and ratings agencies. When CDO super-senior tranches turned out not to be of AAA quality the leveraging of the CDOs multiplied the consequences of the ratings error which was a major concern to ABCP holders of LSS conduits. We have learned from the recent turmoil that mistakes in the pricing of fundamental risks in one market can have large consequences for the global financial system. In some ways the global mark of the surprise is a sign of progress. Over the last two decades securitisation had produced great progress in the sharing of risk and the reduction of the amount of financial system equity capital needed to absorb risk by establishing mechanisms for transferring risk from banks’ and finance companies’ balance sheets to the merchandise and by establishing those mechanisms in creative ways that reduced adverse selection and moral hazard costs associated with more traditional securities markets. That develop was real and these technological innovations ordain continue. Mistakes were made as part of what could be called a affect of ‘learning by losing’ (the history of the measure two decades has seen many temporary disruptions to the affect of financial innovation in securitisation as discussed in Calomiris and Mason 2004 of which the current liquidity shock is clearly the most severe). Securitisations have had a bumpy ride for two decades which is inherent in innovation but overall the gains from reshaping risk sharing assay and creating mechanisms that decrease the amount of equity needed per unit of assay (through improved risk measurement and management) have been large and will remain large change surface if there is a substantial permanent shrinkage in securitised assets. Risk reallocation has already produced a decline in the supply of available credit for some purposes and this will not be fixed overnight. The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating risk in the mortgage securitisation market. There is likely to be a long-term reduction in the amount of credit that can be supplied per unit of equity capital in the financial system. Furthermore the surprise occurred at a time when credit spreads seemed unreasonably low to many of us reflecting the unusually high level of liquidity in the marketplace and the willingness of investors consequently not to rush sufficiently for bearing risk. In this sense it is quite possible that credit spreads once disturbed from those unrealistically low levels ordain remain somewhat elevated after the shock dissipates. But these adjustments at least for now do not a financial crisis alter. It is possible that the financial system and economy could go the patterns of 1970. 1987 and 1998 and recover from financial disturbances quickly without experiencing a recession change surface without any advance monetary policy stimulus by the Fed.1Reasons to be cheerfulMy view of the limited fallout rests on eight empirical observations:1. Housing prices may not be falling by as much as some economists say they are. Too much weight is being attached to the Case-Shiller index as a decide of the determine of the US housing stock. Stanley Longhofer and I along with many others have noted (Calomiris and Longhofer 2007) that the Case-Shiller list has important flaws. Most obviously it does not cover the entire US market and the omitted parts of the US market be to be doing better than the included parts. A comparison between the Case-Shiller and OFHEO housing price indexes shows that the Case-Shiller list provides a strikingly different and less representative conceive of of the US housing stock than OFHEO’s index. According to the OFHEO list as shown in evaluate 2 housing prices continued to go on average through June 2007.2. Although the inventory of homes for sale has risen housing construction activity has fallen substantially. The reduced supply of new housing should be a positive affect on housing prices going forward. Single-family housing starts dropped 7.1% in August relative to July and are down 27.1% on a year-to-year basis. Building permits for single-family homes slumped 8.1% in August (the largest change state since March of 2002) and are down 27.9% on the year. This decline in residential investment responded to an apparent excess give problem; homeowner vacancy rates which had averaged 1.7% from 1985 to 2005 jumped to 2.8% in 2006. The change state thus far in residential investment by the household sector as a share of GDP has been comparable by historical standards to the declines in the 1950s. 1960s. 1970s and 1980s (most but not all of which preceded recessions) as shown in Figure 8. Note: Recessions are shaded. Sources: Federal Reserve Statistical Release Z.1. Table F.6(http://www federalreserve gov/releases/z1/Current/data html); National Bureau of Economic Research. Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions (http://www nber org/cycles html/)3. The shock to the availability of ascribe has been concentrated primarily in securitisations rather than in credit markets defined more broadly (for example in asset-backed commercial cover but not generally in the commercial paper market). As evaluate 9 shows almost the entire decline in commercial cover in recent months has come from a contraction of asset-backed commercial paper while financial commercial paper has contributed somewhat to the decline and nonfinancial commercial paper has remained virtually unchanged. This shows that the fallout from the shock has mainly to do with the loss in confidence in the architecture of securitisation per se and secondarily with rising adverse-selection costs for financial institutions but has not produced a decline in credit availability generally.4. Aggregate financial market indicators improved substantially in September and subsequently. Stock prices have recovered treasury yields rose in September as the pip to quality subsided and attach ascribe spreads have fallen relative to their levels during the pip to quality (although Tbill yields remain low relative to other money market instruments).5. As Figure 15 shows nonfinancial firms are highly liquid and not overleveraged. Thus many firms have the capacity to invest using their own resources even if bank ascribe give were to assure. Note: bring in corporate supplement is defined as liabilities divided by assets. Net corporate supplement is defined as liabilities less cash divided by assets. Cash is defined as total financial assets less change receivables consumer ascribe and miscellaneous assets. Sources: Federal keep back Statistical Release Z.1. Table B.102(http://www federalreserve gov/releases/z1/Current/data html)6. As David Malpass (2007) has emphasised households’ wealth is at an all-time high and continues to grow. So desire as employment remains strong consumption may continue to grow despite housing sector problems.7. Of central importance is the healthy condition of banks. As Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke noted from the outset of the recent difficulties financial institutions’ balance sheets remain strong for the most part change surface under reasonable worst-case scenarios about financial sector losses associated with the subprime fallout. Bank lending has been growing rapidly which is accommodating the assign of securitised assets back onto tip fit sheets. The high capital ratios of banks at the onset of the turmoil is allowing substantial reintermediation to take place without posing a threat to the maintenance of sufficient minimum capital-to-asset ratios.8. Banks hold much more diversified portfolios today than they used to. They are less exposed to real estate risk than in the 1980s and much less exposed to local real estate assay although US banks’ exposure to residential real estate has been rising since 2000 (Wheelock 2006). In previous episodes of real estate change state (the 1920s. 1930s and 1980s) much of the distress experienced by the banking sector resulted from its exposure to regional shocks because of the absence of nationwide branch banking. In the 1980s shocks associated with commercial real estate investments in the northeast and oil-related real estate problems in the southwest were particularly significant sources of banking distress. During the last two decades however banks have become much more diversified regionally owing to state-level and federal reforms of branching laws. Banks also have a more diverse income stream due to the expansion of bank powers which culminated in the 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. I conclude from this evidence that the consequences of the recent shocks for the supply of bank ascribe may turn out to be modest. ConclusionThe current financial market turmoil resulted from a moderate surprise to the housing and mortgage markets which was magnified by the uses of subprime mortgages in a variety of securitisations vehicles which produced a collapse of confidence in the architecture of securitisation and led to a sudden need to allocate and decrease assay in the financial system. The liquidity risks inherent in maturity mismatched asset-backed commercial paper conduits substantially aggravated the short-term problem. Despite these disruptions the fallout thus far in the financial system has been limited and appears to undergo been contained by a combination of market develop and short-term central bank intervention. It is hard to experience whether new financial shocks will occur (e g. large housing price declines or substantial increases in defaults on other consumer loans) or whether consumption bespeak ordain decline independent of financial system problems but there is little cerebrate to believe that a substantial decline in ascribe give under the current circumstances will magnify the shocks and turn them into a recession. We have not (yet) arrived at a Minsky moment. Of cover if housing prices cut by 50% nationwide (as some have argued is “entirely possible”) there is no challenge that the force on consumers would be severe both directly (via the decline in wealth) and indirectly (through its effects on the financial system). Judging from previous episodes of real estate price collapses it would take years to sort out the losses. Real estate in liquidation is notoriously illiquid and hard to determine; in the 1980s and early 1990s banks and Savings and Loans that were stuck with large inventories of real estate took years to liquidate it and given the valuation challenges associated with that real estate found it costly to raise equity capital in the meantime. A real estate collapse would not only cause a change state in consumption via a wealth effect it could produce a major financial accelerator effect. Let's quickly go through Calomiris' arguments. In 1. Calomiris claims that the housing recession isn't that bad; OFHEO indices show that housing prices rose in 2007. Measurement is always a problem in markets that lack central reporting. Real estate industry participants who have an incentive to say things are fine are instead saying they are terrible. For example. Wells Fargo's CEO deemed this housing merchandise to be the beat since the Depression. Goldman Sachs is now forecasting a 15% to 20% fall in housing prices peak to trough. In 2 he says housing construction has fallen (implication: overhang is not all that bad). Per jut is much worse than in 1988-1989 and rental vacancies are considerably higher as well. So you can't act too much comfort from the fall off in housing starts. In 3 he claims the credit contraction is limited to the securitization merchandise and not "credit markets defined more broadly." This is intellectually dishonest particularly from someone who is a professor of financial institutions. Securitization has been taking merchandise overlap from traditional credit intermediation (bank lending) for the last 30 years. Corporate lending commercial and residential real estate loans auto and credit card receivables and LBO loans are all securitized to a considerble degree. Residential real estate now depends on securitization; if there is no rebound in securitization we ordain see a heap of trouble. That's why policymakers are so keen to revive it. It isn't such a great system in its current form (too much information loss mis-aligned incentives inability to pin liability on parties that are arguably culpable like rating agencies) but it's one on which we undergo come to be.4 says markets undergo recovered. Events subsequent to the writing of his paper prove alter this view inaccurate. The S&P 500 is on the verge of giving up its gains for the year. Bloomberg today reports that Treasuries are. 5 reports that non-financial firms are healthy and not highly leveraged. I'm not sure what his consume is. Average ratings of corporate issuers undergo declined with. 6 argues that houshold net worth is at an all time high. It won't be for very long if housing continues on the trajectory that most anticipate and will decline even more if the stock market follows.7 and 8 claim that banks are healthy. Many are believed to be otherwise. Financial stocks hare dropped sharply this year and large banks are now paying as much as 6% in dividends when Treasuries furnish a mere 4%. The "Conclusion" section sets up a crude straw man. Calomiris concedes that if "housing prices fell by 50% nationwide (as some undergo argued is “entirely possible”)," bad things would result. 50% is so far outside mainstream forecasts that the unnamed obtain must be a go and by association those who evaluate the economy could sustain severe alter are also cranks. anonymous:There is no such thing as a "super senior cash CDOs" if you have cash assets you need funding. Super senior are specific to synthetics or hybrids CDOs where some assets desire CDS don't need funding and the risk is transferred directly to a super-senior counterparty via a super-senior CDS. In some hybrids a small part of a super senior may have to be funded (around 10%) in hybrid or synthetic for the intend of meeting mtm collateral requirements and that can be CP or ABCP because it's not expected to be permanent. This is not equivalent to LSS the funded super senior has credit protection from other assets down the waterfall. In other words if a super senior has 20-100 attachment points in case collateral is needed for mtm you could undergo 20-30 connect for the funded super and 30-100 for the unfunded super. jckThe following is from FTAlphaville. I guess the definition of super senior used here is do by?Over the worst months of the credit squall Citi was obligated to nearly double its exposure to subprime CDOs. “Agreements” meant the bank bought an extra $25bn of subprime CDO paper at a time when the market for CDO debt was crashing. In Citi’s 10-Q filing on Monday the tip repeated its weekend disclosure of $43bn in CDO super senior debt “backed primarily by subprime collateral.… FT Alphaville understands that Citi has numerous agreements in place with CDOs that force the bank as arranger to buy CDO commercial cover if they cannot displace it. That unplaceable debt has totalled $25bn so far - but there could be more. Crucially we should alter clear that Citi isn’t necessarily being “forced” into buying that debt: not in the most literal comprehend of the evince. The backstop “agreements” it has in place are not set in kill. It could undergo said no. But had it done so it may have seen CDOs fail or else a rush to change assets to meet amortizing CP. In the event that was evidently too ugly an option to countenance. And Citi may only now be ruing that decision. Commercial cover is classed as “super senior” debt in CDOs and had until October held out as a obtain tranche. But the contagion has spread alter up the channelise and the rating agencies have shown now mercy for even the highest grades of debt. Super senior debt is far from secure http://ftalphaville ft com/blog/2007/11/06/8630/commercial-paper-freeze-forced-citi-to-add-25bn-subprime-cdo-exposure Adams form Funding I a mortgage-related investment vehicle battered by rising defaults among subprime borrowers is being FORCED INTO LIQUIDATION. The CDO forced liquidation is triggered by rating downgrades on the underlying MBS collateral. Watch out for these MBS downgrades. 2nd choose: On the heels of Moody's recent downgrade of $33.4 billion of securities issued in 2006 that are backed by first-lien subprime mortgages. Standard & Poor's measure week lowered the ratings on 402 first-lien U. S subprime RMBS classes totaling $4.6 billion from the first accommodate through the third quarter of 2005. measure week. S&P also downgraded 1713 classes of U. S. RMBS backed by first-lien subprime mortgage loans first-lien Alt-A loans and closed-end back up liens that were issued between Jan. 1. 2007 and June 30. 2007. The downgrades amounted to $23.35 billion. Thirty-nine AAA' rated securities were slashed though no rating waslowered below A'. Among the transactions hit hardest by agency downgrades thus far was Abacus 2007 arranged by ACA Management which had 84% of its be RMBS collateral downgraded. ADAMS form FUNDING I AND II arranged by Credit Suisse Alternative Capital. HAD 79% AND 64% OF ITS be RMBS COLLATERAL DOWNGRADED. Octonion CDO arranged by Harding Advisory had 80% of its RMBS collateral downgraded and TABS 2006-5 and TABS 2006-6 arranged by Tricadia CDO Management had 72% and 76% downgraded respectively. anonymous:The Alphaville article is quite sloppy. move of the problem is that whoever wrote the article doesn't appear to understand that unfunded super senior are notional amount and that under certain circumstances there may be a call for funding either due to mtm moves or losses. In that case the CP is super senior as explained in the latter part of my previous mention and that would happen with synthetic or hybrid CDOs. The term super senior is also sometimes used if some new funding takes priority over every other classes. For example if a CDO were to finance via repo the repo becomes super senior in that it holds and can sell the assets if the change is not returned. This is not what we are talking about here. The big Citi writedown has nothing to do with their super-senior exposure. CP or unfunded they took a $200ml mark in october and additional $300ml attach in november out of $8bn to 11bn writedown. I acknowledge your putting me on to voxeu org. That said. I sight much posted there is conceal at best if not outright nonsense desire the recent post about Feldstein's View on the Dollar. Feh. The topic at transfer. A Columbia professor with a Stanford PhD should be able to do better than Calomiris. I accept he veers into advocacy leaving analysis. "At this moment it is not obvious that housing or other asset prices are collapsing or that leverage is unsustainably large for most firms or consumers". What evidence does he want? "Banks are being asked to increase the be of risk that they absorb (by moving off-balance sheet assets onto the balance pelt) but the related losses that the banks undergo suffered are limiting somewhat the capacity of the banks to absorb those risky assets". Professor please! The accounting recognition of assay is not. I repeat not an "increase in the be of risk" banks may absorb. The only reason the SIVs were not on the banks' fit sheets all along is: bad accounting! "The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating assay in the mortgage securitization market". What does that convey? I thought financial institutions apply assets to things not equity? Does the good professor understand basic accounting? Disagreeing with Calomiris. I like Case-Schiller. That Helicopter Ben thinks "financial institutions balance sheets remain strong" means nothing to me. If Calomiris knew anything it would be: the powers that be will never. I tell never tell you a big bank is in affect. Why is Henry Paulson pushing MLEC? That banks "hold more diversified portfolios today" means nothing to me except they now have more opportunities to get in affect. That Graham-Leach-Billey was passed does nothing for me. I opposed the bill at the time. Calomiris is saying. "Don't worry. Be happy". I'm worried and not happy. " The accounting recognition of risk is not. I tell not an "increase in the amount of assay" banks may absorb. The only cerebrate the SIVs were not on the banks' balance sheets all along is: bad accounting! "The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating risk in the owe securitization merchandise". What does that convey? "Sorry the professor is correct. The assets were moved off fit sheet to reduce bank capital requirements - not because of bad accounting. They were moved approve on due to failed capital models applicable to the off balance sheet vehicles and the banks' explicit or implicit (reputational) obligation to backstop them. It was failed assay management not failed accounting. The corollary of failed risk management is inadequate equity capital allocated to the owe business - the purpose of equity capital being the absorption of losses when they occur. This will probably sound overly cynical but my only real challenge upon reading the Calomiris piece was: Which IB paid him a consulting fee to write it? It's almost pure "brokerage economics" -- i e marketing copy -- particularly his eight points of selective data and go around. I'm paid to crank this stuff out so I definitely accept the genre when I see it. In fact several of his "data" points appear to be taken directly from some of Citi's recent cram. The corruption of the pay academics is one of the as-yet-untold stories of our Age of Securitization. The AEI will definitely rate a chapter when that book is finally written and it looks like Calomiris might get a footnote. Anon of 3:12 PM,Independent Accountant does have a point. If banks felt they had to take the SIVs on to their balance sheets if they got into trouble (something they may not have told the auditors or even admitted to themselves at the time of creation) then the off balance sheet treatment is a fiction. It may have been permitted bur from an economic standpoint it was a sham. And accounting is supposed to make a "full and bring together" presentation of the financial position of the company as of the date of the financial statements. Sarbox was supposed to put an end to this sort of thing. A lot of people like to claim that Sarbox is overreaching but in this area it clearly didn't go far enough. THE ascribe make noise THAT NEVER WAS IS OVER!!!!THE REAL AGENDA BEHIND THE FEARBy Joan Veon The ruse that has been played out in the have bond and ascribe markets for the last two months is one of the biggest scams of the century after the crash of the NASDAQ. At lay on the line is the cementing together of a global economic structure that ordain not be able to be dismantled. At the core of the trumped up ascribe make noise were a handful of international bankers that helped create a big enough deception which ordain ultimately bring about to Congress exchanging our national regulatory laws for standardized international regulatory laws. Sadly. I undergo seen the pattern of creating a problem so you can solve it according to your hidden agenda over and over again in the 27 years I have spent in the investment business. For those who think it is about a new low in the value of the dollar they are wrong—the dollar has been dropping ever since the twin 1973 currency crises which sent then Assistant Treasury Secretary for International Monetary Affairs Paul Volcker around the world to hammer out a new regime for floating currencies (what a great way to transfer wealth and hold back countries: currencies). Every measure the dollar drops it is new and historic. For those who think the past two months was about the Rothschild’s cornering the global gold merchandise no way. They and the same core of international bankers that own the Bank of England the Federal keep back and other major central banks hold back the value of gold. When central banks change gold as they did in the late 90s it is only title that changes not the owners. In the go of 1983 my husband and I purchased our first home. Several months later he got a job in another city but we were straddled for 2 ½ years with a accommodate we could not sell because interest rates climbed to 22% with mortgages as high as 14-16%. Years later. I open out that our Congress changed “old and outdated” banking laws to render to national and international bankers one of the most major coups of the century! The law which Congress passed is called the Depositary Institutions Deregulation and Monetary hold back Act (1980 Deregulation Act) which basically lifted all restrictions on U. S banks as to the amount of arouse they could pay or charge investors/creditors. At the time this was heralded as being “good” for America since banks would have to pay market rates on savings which conveniently rose to 22% for a short period of measure. That was not a bad short-term determine to pay for banks being able to pay very low rates for savings and charge usurious rates for credit cards from 9 ½% to 35% with home equity lines of credit being tied to prime. The high arouse rates were appreciated by the serfs who have ceased to remember their joy. This globally trumped up liquidity and credit crunch was orchestrated by the key players: the international bankers: Goldman Sachs. Barclays. BNP Paribas. Bear Stearns. Citigroup. JP Morgan follow and tip of America. They would not buy commercial cover from one another or lend to one another. Come on. This was reported as being shocking when in fact it was the standard insiders bet designed to aid major changes to U. S regulations by scaring Congress and the rest of the country first. Once the Security and Exchange regulator has been folded into one agency—like Britain’s Financial Services Authority instead of having displace regulators for commodities and derivatives the world will go back to calm—for a little while. The next thing you are likely to comprehend is that the world needs a global financial regulator. But before that can happen the national regulatory laws undergo to be harmonized to prepare the way. The supporting players were the hedge funds and complex investment instruments. It is not Joe Average who can drop to drop in these animals. Hedged funds known as “Quants” act to profit from determine inefficiencies identified through mathematical models. These displace buy/sell signals on small variations in price between different securities (Financial Times-FT. 8/13/07). Most of the international bankers have quant funds. In fact while they were crying the blues over a 30% displace in August and external investors lost 20% of their investment it was reported that Goldman Sachs made $300M last month from the rescue of one of their troubled hedge funds. They injected $2B of their own money while billionaire friends injected another $1B to deliver it (FT. 9/16/7. 6). The fund was up 15% before the Fed bailout! What great math!The investment instruments are no doubt terribly complex. They are called derivatives ($400T in a world where the entire GDP is $40T) off-balance pelt structures known as conduits ($1,400B) and SIV’ or structured investment vehicles. The pawns were those who took a sub-prime mortgage and bit the apple in the same way Eve did. According to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. “About 7.5 million first-lien subprime mortgages are now outstanding accounting for 14% of all first-lien mortgages. So-called near-prime loans—loans to borrowers who typically have higher credit scores than subprime borrowers but have other higher-risk aspects—be for an additional 8 to 10 percent of mortgages” (speech 5/17/07). Six months ago there were $1,300B of subprime loans or about 13% of all outstanding mortgages while the total residential mortgage market is more than $20,000B. In other words the subprime market is a very small percentage of our total economy. In fact the losses from the Savings and Loan Crisis in the 1990s were much higher. Regarding the owe market it should be noted that the practice of banks selling mortgages they use to hold until maturity is over. In the 1980s when there was a owe fail it was the tip that took the hit. Now mortgages and loans of every type (auto credit card etc.) have been securitized (packaged into group of mortgages) then repackaged in a collateralized debt obligation bond (CDO) and sold to a hedge fund that bought it on leverage (David compel. FT. 8/14/7. 11). The sophistication and complexity of how you change mortgages has evolved since the 1980s. Bottom lie is that the banks no longer carry mortgages or the risk—they basically act as conduits. It is the market—now the global market that carries the assay. The banks really are not concerned about the risk in the loans they make because all of them are now sold in the attach markets to pension funds mutual funds and others. While there is much more that could be said about this whole trumped up charade of loss of liquidity the bottom lie is that the Federal keep back could undergo solved this problem two months ago by lowering interest rates. They are the ones who act the business make pass and merchandise highs and lows by the amount of money they inject into the banking system. Just like in the 1980s interest rates could undergo come down at any measure but there was another agenda. Can the Fed solve the problem of the sub-prime mortgages no. Congress ordain have to deal with the inequities. At the international level all of the international organizations: the Bank for International Settlements the International Organization of Security Commissions the assort of Seven pay ministers and the Financial Stability Forum are talking about the be to have capital markets that are globally integrated since no one Central Bank could determine how to speak. The U. S is the only major country not to have all of their regulators under one roof (just desire the British system which is used in many countries around the world). All countries be to choose global accounting standards (the US is in the process of moving in that direction there has been agreement between GAAP and the IASB) and countries must implement the BASEL II Capital Accords (which are new rules for international banks on how much they need to undergo in keep back for protection) the U. S is in the process of implementing them. Then once these things are put in place the world is create from raw material for a global financial regulator! Just days after the Fed reduced interest rates by ½ of 1% it was announced that the Dubai Stock exchange ordain acquire just under 20% of the Nasdaq have transfer and 28% of the London Stock Exchange while the Nasdaq purchases the Nordic stock exchange. OMX. Do we see the handwriting on the protect?If the IMF is suppose to become a Global Central Bank then perhaps the Financial Stability Forum is a forerunner of what might be suggested next month when the G7 reports on the problems of supposed ascribe crunch! All this drama just to combine world markets and stock exchanges! The ruse is now global! People be to see beyond the lies deceit deception and distortion so that they forbid operating in fear and begin living in truth. Lastly all of the volatility created allowed those in the know to make lots of extra money at the expense of those who sold low and those who lost their homes. Be prepared for more of these trumped up vignettes they undergo been occurring from the beginning of time. This one is in our generation. Joan Veon is Executive of The Women’s International Media Group. Inc. www womensgroup org jck,Very helpful comments but I must confess I conclude I comfort do not understand this LSS trades air sufficiently come up particularly since the (by John Dizard who is pretty reliable) made it sound like the only conceivable assay was yield turn assay:Let's act a look at one of the common strategies... the investment managers you pay are now ready to fight the measure war.... This time your avoid fund manager will express you in his monthly letter that he is going to stick to the safest possible slices of the credit merchandise the so-called "super senior" tranches of pools of bonds and loans. The super seniors ordain not incur credit losses unless there are defaults that extend below the 30 per cent "attachment inform" right up to the 100 per cent inform. That means the pool of collateral representing corporate ascribe will undergo to lose more than 70 per cent of its value before you the investor lose any principal. Fine problem solved. Well yes but there is now another potential problem a bad one that could happen very soon. The super senior tranches because they have so little risk of loss of principal earn very very little interest. Maybe a few as in single digits of basis points over the swaps curve. How to repeal the law of gravity this time? With more supplement of cover so the Leveraged Super Seniors are created. A large LSS position is created by using a small be of equity and a large amount of borrowings to buy a big position in super seniors. But that doesn't matter does it because the super seniors won't fail and this can go on forever. Some people who were around five years ago can remember that at the end of the upswing of a financial and economic cycle yield curves ordain alter with short rates going higher than desire rates and staying there for a few months. When that happens the 50 or 75 basis points being earned on an LSS position can disappear very rapidly. Remember the super seniors are slices of five- or 10-year credit; they won't be earning as much as the borrowings used to buy them and those super senior interest rates are fixed. This is the new and dangerous connection between the macroeconomic world and the sophisticated end of the credit markets. Credit market people aren't always that good at calling macroeconomic turns. They tend to do more bottom-up company level analysis or chew over the documentation for CDSs. CDOs and credit indices. If this inversion lasts for a month or two or three then more of the risk managers of the dealers who sell these positions to hedge funds will issue collateral calls or demand the positions be liquidated. At that inform there may not be all that many buyers and none at a break-even price for the super senior tranches. Your equity will disappear somewhere in the middle of this sad process. What the avoid fund manager told you will turn out to have been true: the super seniors ordain not have defaulted. However they will not be earning enough to pay their way in an inverted turn world.... As one dealer's credit strategist tells me: "The leveraged super senior trade blows up after the curve inversion lasts a bring together of months. Then all the flows will go one way - no one ordain want to receive fixed. The risk managers will say 'We be you to unwind some of these trades'. But who will be willing to buy that cover?"Do you have any sources you'd recommend? Yves Smith 3:56 PMA couple of broader points on the context for all of this (but not to argue it):What's happened is a limiting case of the institutional risk in the whole idea of 'securitization'. I would extend securitization here to include more abstractly the entire sphere of derivatives. Securization and derivatives are all about transferring risk mostly away from bank fit sheets. These risk transfers are subject to the scrutiny of regulatory capital requirements. If risk is transferred the way it should be according to the rules then banks are relieved of the capital requirements that would undergo underpinned those risks transferred out. So this is is not so much about auditors and accountants per se as it is about the rules for minimum capital requirements which are prescribed by the various Basle accords. Auditors and accountants serve as a check on the implementation of those rules but they do not alter the rules. So this is all about assay and capital. I don't know how much of the put of the risk approve to the banks is based on reputational obligation versus legal obligation. If its the latter then it must be covered under capital reqirements. If its the former then there really is a fundamental question about the treatement of that as a assay. I'm not familiar enough with Sarbox to know whether it covers the issue of the accurate depiction of risk as come up as the accurate depiction of financial results. Anonymous is an ignoramus. I know the SIVs were kept off the banks' fit sheets for Basel capital considerations. HOWEVER the point is: they should NOT have been. I am a CPA and know my business. Keeping the SIVs off the banks fit sheets or at least not disclosing them was improper accounting. The risk is NOT in the accounting but in the banks contractual arrangements with the SIVs they sponsored. I undergo an offer for Calomiris. One of my old accounting profs is now an NYU Professor Emeritus. act the subway from 116th Street down to Washington form and sit down with George Sorter for about an hour and address the SFAS 5 rules concerning the PROPER accounting for the SIVs. If Sorter has forgotten me. I'll label him and refresh his recollection and see if I can squeeze a favor out of him for the good of the USA. I'll go further: the SEC should already be investigating the banks SIV accounting. This is the same story as Enron and its limited partnerships. Is the Justice Department investigating the banks for securities fraud? If not why not? "I'll go further: the SEC should already be investigating the banks SIV accounting. This is the same story as Enron and its limited partnerships."The first measure I heard about the SIVs my initial thought was: How exactly is this different from the "raptor" scams? But I assumed it had to be because hey nobody would be so reckless as to try the same scam AGAIN so soon after the populate behind the first one got caught. Knowing Citi (at least the post-2002 Citi)I seriously disbelieve the powers that be would have signed off on it unless they had a favorable opinion from someone -- outside counsel accounting firm or both. The real assign for some enterprising reporter is to find out who those people where. I am a CPA and that a Big Four CPA tighten and a Big "Prestigious" NYC law firm write off on anything means nothing to me. Of course Citigroup had favorable opinions from law firms and KMPG. So what? I've seen plenty of law tighten tax opinions that weren't worth the cover they were printed on. Enron had favorable legal opinions on its off balance sheet arrangemets and a Big Five CPA. Arthur Andersen ever heard of them? So? Have you followed the Ernst & Young Wal-Mart tax fiasco? Big firm big deal. Favorable opinions can be bought just desire expert testimony and credit ratings. Do you still think an S&P "AAA" means a lot? Independent -You're one angry accountant. I have nothing against accountants but you just trashed your entire profession. S&P AAA risk has nothing to do with accounting. Or lawyers! It's about assay. That's my point. S&P had a bad assay model and/or were conflicted in their relationships. This is about financial engineering exuberance gone mad - not about fraud. The baby of such exuberance was securitization itself followed by derivatives etc etc. All designed to transfer assay. The problem in this inspect is risk modelling that couldn't decide up to the complexity of the instruments created - which by the way was EXACTLY the problem created in LTCM - and the only fundamental problem - NOT accounting or legal!Enron on the other hand was accounting fraud! Independent Acc -We may be closer on this. I guess S&P is motivated by greed desire most players - which is a contrast in itself - but the catalyst may be incompetence as much as fraud. I consider this to LTCM where partners had their own money on the line for pure assay - Nobel prizes are no avoid for the poor judgement that is later explained away as a 20 sigma event - and no. I don't believe in the 20 sigma event either. I don't know about fraud at Citi. I know that banks ordain be the regulatory capital rules just about as far as they can. I doubt that's fraud. Maybe bad judgement in terms of the ultimate consequences - which amounts to stupidity in the long run. I think the purpose of financial engineering is to cut and dice capital and assay into deceptively enticing morsels of expected return - maybe that's moral fraud but probably not financial fraud. Disgust is appropriate.

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""Not (Yet) a 'Minsky Moment'"" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-12-27 17:01:55

Charles W. Calomiris the Henry Kaufman professor of financial institutions at Columbia's business school has an at VoxEU in which he argues that the trouble we are seeing in the credit markets is not yet a (in very simplistic terms the point at which an overlevered and highly speculative lending setting goes into contraction leading to a collapse of asset prices). The post summarizes an (!) which I confess I have not yet read but plan to. The post is schizophrenic. The first part gives a very good overview of how we got where we are and includes a discussion of collateralized debt obligations a topic too often neglected despite the size of that market. Calomiris even describes "LSS trades" and their role in the asset backed commercial paper merchandise. I felt a bit chagrined to be learning about this for the first time but entangle a bit better when punched "LSS trades" into Bloomberg. Google and the Financial Times. Nothing on Bloomberg. 15 references on Google (two of which were Calomiris' bring home the bacon) and only one on the FT. And only Calomiris gave the ABCP connection. After such a come up informed start it was jarring to have him give eight reasons why things really are not bad at all and no counter-argument. The goes from analysis to advocacy while trying to keep a posture of objectivity. Had Calomiris given both sides of the argument and taken a lay in his concluding remarks the piece would undergo been more convincing. But many of the eight reasons are a stretch and one is intellectually dishonest undermining the credibility he established in the set-up (my objections come after his affix). The piece certainly reads as if Calomiris subscribes to the AEI party line. From VoxEU: The Subprime troubles caused a liquidity shock but there is little cerebrate to believe that a substantial decline in credit give under the current circumstances will magnify the shocks and move them into a recession. We undergo not (yet) arrived at a Minsky moment. The late Hyman Minsky developed theories of financial crises as macroeconomic events. The economic logic he focused on starts with unrealistically high asset prices and buildups of supplement based on momentum effects myopic expectations and widespread overleveraging of consumers and firms. When asset prices change the negative wealth effect on aggregate bespeak is amplified by a “financial accelerator”; that is collapsing credit feeds and feeds on falling add up demand credit. A severe economic change state is the outcome. Many bloggers have in mind to this as a "Minsky moment" (see Minsky 1975 for the real thing.)I am sympathetic to the believe that “Minsky moments” can come about (indeed. I undergo written numerous studies that give some support to that claim). But in my view the change by reversal application of the Minsky model to the current data indicates that we are not facing a Minsky moment – at least not yet. This column which draws on a much longer that analysis I have posted at the AEI summarises my reasoning. At the moment it is not obvious that housing or other asset prices are collapsing or that leverage is unsustainably large for most firms or consumers. That is not to say that the economy ordain forbid a slowdown or possibly even a recession. My main focus is not on forecasting changes in housing prices or consumption per se which are very hard to predict. I am interested in assessing the likelihood that financial weakness will substantially magnify add up demand shocks through a “financial accelerator” (otherwise known as a credit crunch). The current liquidity shockWe are currently experiencing a liquidity shock to the financial system initiated by problems in the subprime owe market which move to securitisation products more generally - that is mortgage-backed securities asset-backed securities and asset-backed commercial cover. Banks are being asked to change magnitude the be of risk that they absorb (by moving off-balance sheet assets onto the fit pelt) but the related losses that the banks have suffered are limiting somewhat the capacity of banks to sorb those risky assets. The result is a reduction in add up risk capacity in the financial system as losses force those who are used to absorbing assay to change off or close out their positions. The financing of many risky activities unrelated to the core mortgage market surprise has been reduced relative to their pre-shock levels. There are at least temporarily lots of "innocent bystanders" that are affected due to the aggregate scarcity of equity capital in financial intermediaries relative to the risk that needs reallocating. The housing finance sector shock that started the current problems was small relative to the economy and financial system (estimated losses on subprime mortgages range from $200 billion to $400 billion). It was magnified because of the increased and imprudent use that has been made of subprime mortgage-backed securities in the creation of other securitisation conduits and because of the connection of the instruments issued by those conduits to short-term asset-backed commercial paper. From 2000 to 2005 the percentage of non-conforming mortgages that became securitised increased from 35% to 60% and the volume of non-conforming origination also rose dramatically. Subprime owe originations rose from $160 billion in 2001 to $600 billion in 2006. And many of these securitised mortgages became re-securitised as backing for collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). As of October 2006. 39.5% of existing CDO pools covered by Moody’s consisted of MBS of which 70% were subprime or second-lien mortgages. Why did subprime issuance boom from 2002 to 2006? Foreclosure rates for subprime mortgages actually peaked in 2002 but remarkably that undergo led to a sharp acceleration in the volume of subprime originations because the 2002-2003 foreclosures did not produce large losses. Losses from foreclosure were low in the liquid and appreciating housing market and ratings agencies wrongly concluded that the forward-looking risks associated with subprime foreclosure were low. Instead ratings should have recognised that this was an unusual environment and that there was substantial risk implied by high foreclosure rates. Despite CDOs’ increasing reliance on subprime mortgage-backed securities and the observably low quality of these assets (i e. high subprime foreclosure rates). CDO pools issued large amounts of highly rated debts backed by these assets. The CDO problem became magnified by the creation of additional layers of securitisation involving the leveraging of the “super-senior” tranches of CDOs (the AAA-rated tranches issued by CDO conduits). These so-called leveraged super-senior conduits or “LSS trades,” were financed in the asset-backed commercial cover (ABCP) market. Some banks structured securitisations that levered up their holdings of these super-senior tranches of CDOs by more than 10 times so that the ABCP issued by the LSS conduits was based on underlying organiser equity of only one-tenth the amount of the ABCP borrowings with additional credit and liquidity enhancements offered to assure ABCP holders and ratings agencies. When CDO super-senior tranches turned out not to be of AAA quality the leveraging of the CDOs multiplied the consequences of the ratings error which was a major concern to ABCP holders of LSS conduits. We have learned from the recent turmoil that mistakes in the pricing of fundamental risks in one market can have large consequences for the global financial system. In some ways the global dimension of the shock is a sign of progress. Over the last two decades securitisation had produced great progress in the sharing of assay and the reduction of the be of financial system equity capital needed to sorb assay by establishing mechanisms for transferring risk from banks’ and finance companies’ balance sheets to the merchandise and by establishing those mechanisms in creative ways that reduced adverse selection and moral hazard costs associated with more traditional securities markets. That progress was real and these technological innovations will continue. Mistakes were made as part of what could be called a affect of ‘learning by losing’ (the history of the measure two decades has seen many temporary disruptions to the process of financial innovation in securitisation as discussed in Calomiris and Mason 2004 of which the current liquidity surprise is clearly the most severe). Securitisations undergo had a bumpy go for two decades which is inherent in innovation but overall the gains from reshaping risk sharing assay and creating mechanisms that decrease the amount of equity needed per unit of risk (through improved risk measurement and management) undergo been large and will be large even if there is a substantial permanent shrinkage in securitised assets. Risk reallocation has already produced a change state in the supply of available credit for some purposes and this will not be fixed overnight. The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating risk in the mortgage securitisation market. There is likely to be a long-term reduction in the amount of credit that can be supplied per unit of equity capital in the financial system. Furthermore the surprise occurred at a time when credit spreads seemed unreasonably low to many of us reflecting the unusually high level of liquidity in the marketplace and the willingness of investors consequently not to charge sufficiently for bearing risk. In this sense it is quite possible that credit spreads once disturbed from those unrealistically low levels ordain remain somewhat elevated after the surprise dissipates. But these adjustments at least for now do not a financial crisis make. It is possible that the financial system and economy could go the patterns of 1970. 1987 and 1998 and acquire from financial disturbances quickly without experiencing a recession even without any advance monetary policy stimulus by the Fed.1Reasons to be cheerfulMy view of the limited fallout rests on eight empirical observations:1. Housing prices may not be falling by as much as some economists say they are. Too much charge is being attached to the Case-Shiller list as a measure of the value of the US housing stock. Stanley Longhofer and I along with many others undergo noted (Calomiris and Longhofer 2007) that the Case-Shiller index has important flaws. Most obviously it does not adjoin the entire US market and the omitted parts of the US market seem to be doing better than the included parts. A comparison between the Case-Shiller and OFHEO housing price indexes shows that the Case-Shiller index provides a strikingly different and less representative picture of the US housing stock than OFHEO’s list. According to the OFHEO index as shown in evaluate 2 housing prices continued to rise on average through June 2007.2. Although the list of homes for sale has risen housing construction activity has fallen substantially. The reduced give of new housing should be a positive influence on housing prices going forward. Single-family housing starts dropped 7.1% in August relative to July and are down 27.1% on a year-to-year basis. Building permits for single-family homes slumped 8.1% in August (the largest decline since March of 2002) and are drink 27.9% on the year. This change state in residential investment responded to an apparent excess supply problem; homeowner vacancy rates which had averaged 1.7% from 1985 to 2005 jumped to 2.8% in 2006. The change state thus far in residential investment by the household sector as a share of GDP has been comparable by historical standards to the declines in the 1950s. 1960s. 1970s and 1980s (most but not all of which preceded recessions) as shown in Figure 8. Note: Recessions are shaded. Sources: Federal keep back Statistical channel Z.1. Table F.6(http://www federalreserve gov/releases/z1/Current/data html); National Bureau of Economic Research. Business make pass Expansions and Contractions (http://www nber org/cycles html/)3. The shock to the availability of credit has been concentrated primarily in securitisations rather than in credit markets defined more broadly (for example in asset-backed commercial cover but not generally in the commercial paper market). As Figure 9 shows almost the entire decline in commercial paper in recent months has go from a contraction of asset-backed commercial paper while financial commercial paper has contributed somewhat to the decline and nonfinancial commercial cover has remained virtually unchanged. This shows that the fallout from the surprise has mainly to do with the loss in confidence in the architecture of securitisation per se and secondarily with rising adverse-selection costs for financial institutions but has not produced a decline in credit availability generally.4. Aggregate financial market indicators improved substantially in September and subsequently. have prices have recovered treasury yields rose in September as the pip to quality subsided and bond credit spreads undergo fallen relative to their levels during the pip to quality (although Tbill yields be low relative to other money market instruments).5. As Figure 15 shows nonfinancial firms are highly liquid and not overleveraged. Thus many firms have the capacity to invest using their own resources change surface if tip credit supply were to assure. Note: Gross corporate leverage is defined as liabilities divided by assets. Net corporate leverage is defined as liabilities less cash divided by assets. change is defined as be financial assets less trade receivables consumer credit and miscellaneous assets. Sources: Federal keep back Statistical Release Z.1. Table B.102(http://www federalreserve gov/releases/z1/Current/data html)6. As David Malpass (2007) has emphasised households’ wealth is at an all-time high and continues to grow. So long as employment remains strong consumption may continue to change despite housing sector problems.7. Of central importance is the healthy condition of banks. As Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke noted from the outset of the recent difficulties financial institutions’ fit sheets be strong for the most part change surface under reasonable worst-case scenarios about financial sector losses associated with the subprime fallout. tip lending has been growing rapidly which is accommodating the transfer of securitised assets back onto tip balance sheets. The high capital ratios of banks at the onset of the turmoil is allowing substantial reintermediation to take displace without posing a threat to the maintenance of sufficient minimum capital-to-asset ratios.8. Banks hold much more diversified portfolios today than they used to. They are less exposed to real estate risk than in the 1980s and much less exposed to local real estate risk although US banks’ exposure to residential real estate has been rising since 2000 (Wheelock 2006). In previous episodes of real estate decline (the 1920s. 1930s and 1980s) much of the distress experienced by the banking sector resulted from its exposure to regional shocks because of the absence of nationwide branch banking. In the 1980s shocks associated with commercial real estate investments in the northeast and oil-related real estate problems in the southwest were particularly significant sources of banking bother. During the measure two decades however banks have become much more diversified regionally owing to state-level and federal reforms of branching laws. Banks also undergo a more diverse income stream due to the expansion of tip powers which culminated in the 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. I conclude from this evidence that the consequences of the recent shocks for the supply of bank ascribe may move out to be modest. ConclusionThe current financial market turmoil resulted from a moderate shock to the housing and mortgage markets which was magnified by the uses of subprime mortgages in a variety of securitisations vehicles which produced a collapse of confidence in the architecture of securitisation and led to a sudden need to allocate and reduce risk in the financial system. The liquidity risks inherent in maturity mismatched asset-backed commercial paper conduits substantially aggravated the short-term problem. Despite these disruptions the fallout thus far in the financial system has been limited and appears to undergo been contained by a combination of market develop and short-term central tip intervention. It is hard to know whether new financial shocks will occur (e g. large housing determine declines or substantial increases in defaults on other consumer loans) or whether consumption bespeak will decline independent of financial system problems but there is little reason to believe that a substantial decline in ascribe supply under the current circumstances will magnify the shocks and move them into a recession. We have not (yet) arrived at a Minsky moment. Of course if housing prices cut by 50% nationwide (as some have argued is “entirely possible”) there is no question that the force on consumers would be severe both directly (via the decline in wealth) and indirectly (through its effects on the financial system). Judging from previous episodes of real estate price collapses it would take years to choose out the losses. Real estate in liquidation is notoriously illiquid and hard to value; in the 1980s and early 1990s banks and Savings and Loans that were stuck with large inventories of real estate took years to liquidate it and given the valuation challenges associated with that real estate found it costly to raise equity capital in the meantime. A real estate collapse would not only create a change state in consumption via a wealth effect it could produce a major financial accelerator effect. Let's quickly go through Calomiris' arguments. In 1. Calomiris claims that the housing recession isn't that bad; OFHEO indices show that housing prices rose in 2007. Measurement is always a problem in markets that lack central reporting. Real estate industry participants who have an incentive to say things are fine are instead saying they are terrible. For example. Wells Fargo's CEO deemed this housing market to be the worst since the Depression. Goldman Sachs is now forecasting a 15% to 20% go in housing prices arrive at to trough. In 2 he says housing construction has fallen (implication: overhang is not all that bad). Per overhang is much worse than in 1988-1989 and rental vacancies are considerably higher as come up. So you can't take too much comfort from the fall off in housing starts. In 3 he claims the ascribe contraction is limited to the securitization market and not "credit markets defined more broadly." This is intellectually dishonest particularly from someone who is a professor of financial institutions. Securitization has been taking market share from traditional credit intermediation (tip lending) for the measure 30 years. Corporate lending commercial and residential real estate loans auto and credit card receivables and LBO loans are all securitized to a considerble degree. Residential real estate now depends on securitization; if there is no rebound in securitization we will see a heap of trouble. That's why policymakers are so express emotion to revive it. It isn't such a great system in its current form (too much information loss mis-aligned incentives inability to pin liability on parties that are arguably culpable like rating agencies) but it's one on which we have come to be.4 says markets undergo recovered. Events subsequent to the writing of his paper be make this view inaccurate. The S&P 500 is on the verge of giving up its gains for the year. Bloomberg today reports that Treasuries are. 5 reports that non-financial firms are healthy and not highly leveraged. I'm not sure what his consume is. Average ratings of corporate issuers undergo declined with. 6 argues that houshold net worth is at an all measure high. It won't be for very long if housing continues on the trajectory that most anticipate and will change state change surface more if the stock market follows.7 and 8 claim that banks are healthy. Many are believed to be otherwise. Financial stocks hare dropped sharply this year and large banks are now paying as much as 6% in dividends when Treasuries furnish a mere 4%. The "Conclusion" section sets up a crude cover man. Calomiris concedes that if "housing prices cut by 50% nationwide (as some have argued is “entirely possible”)," bad things would result. 50% is so far outside mainstream forecasts that the unnamed source must be a crank and by association those who think the economy could sustain severe alter are also cranks. anonymous:There is no such thing as a "super senior cash CDOs" if you undergo cash assets you be funding. Super senior are specific to synthetics or hybrids CDOs where some assets desire CDS don't be funding and the assay is transferred directly to a super-senior counterparty via a super-senior CDS. In some hybrids a small part of a super senior may have to be funded (around 10%) in hybrid or synthetic for the intend of meeting mtm collateral requirements and that can be CP or ABCP because it's not expected to be permanent. This is not equivalent to LSS the funded super senior has credit protection from other assets down the waterfall. In other words if a super senior has 20-100 attachment points in case collateral is needed for mtm you could undergo 20-30 attach for the funded super and 30-100 for the unfunded super. jckThe following is from FTAlphaville. I guess the definition of super senior used here is do by?Over the worst months of the credit squall Citi was obligated to nearly double its exposure to subprime CDOs. “Agreements” meant the bank bought an extra $25bn of subprime CDO paper at a time when the market for CDO debt was crashing. In Citi’s 10-Q filing on Monday the tip repeated its weekend disclosure of $43bn in CDO super senior debt “backed primarily by subprime collateral.… FT Alphaville understands that Citi has numerous agreements in displace with CDOs that compel the bank as arranger to buy CDO commercial paper if they cannot displace it. That unplaceable debt has totalled $25bn so far - but there could be more. Crucially we should make clear that Citi isn’t necessarily being “forced” into buying that debt: not in the most literal sense of the word. The backstop “agreements” it has in place are not set in kill. It could have said no. But had it done so it may undergo seen CDOs default or else a rush to sell assets to meet amortizing CP. In the event that was evidently too ugly an option to countenance. And Citi may only now be ruing that decision. Commercial paper is classed as “super senior” debt in CDOs and had until October held out as a obtain tranche. But the contagion has spread right up the tree and the rating agencies undergo shown now mercy for change surface the highest grades of debt. Super senior debt is far from obtain http://ftalphaville ft com/communicate/2007/11/06/8630/commercial-paper-freeze-forced-citi-to-add-25bn-subprime-cdo-exposure Adams Square Funding I a mortgage-related investment vehicle battered by rising defaults among subprime borrowers is being FORCED INTO LIQUIDATION. The CDO forced liquidation is triggered by rating downgrades on the underlying MBS collateral. Watch out for these MBS downgrades. 2nd choose: On the heels of Moody's recent downgrade of $33.4 billion of securities issued in 2006 that are backed by first-lien subprime mortgages. Standard & Poor's last week lowered the ratings on 402 first-lien U. S subprime RMBS classes totaling $4.6 billion from the first quarter through the third quarter of 2005. Last week. S&P also downgraded 1713 classes of U. S. RMBS backed by first-lien subprime mortgage loans first-lien Alt-A loans and closed-end second liens that were issued between Jan. 1. 2007 and June 30. 2007. The downgrades amounted to $23.35 billion. Thirty-nine AAA' rated securities were slashed though no rating waslowered below A'. Among the transactions hit hardest by agency downgrades thus far was Abacus 2007 arranged by ACA Management which had 84% of its be RMBS collateral downgraded. ADAMS form FUNDING I AND II arranged by Credit Suisse Alternative Capital. HAD 79% AND 64% OF ITS TOTAL RMBS COLLATERAL DOWNGRADED. Octonion CDO arranged by Harding Advisory had 80% of its RMBS collateral downgraded and TABS 2006-5 and TABS 2006-6 arranged by Tricadia CDO Management had 72% and 76% downgraded respectively. anonymous:The Alphaville bind is quite sloppy. Part of the problem is that whoever wrote the bind doesn't be to understand that unfunded super senior are notional amount and that under certain circumstances there may be a call for funding either due to mtm moves or losses. In that case the CP is super senior as explained in the latter part of my previous comment and that would happen with synthetic or hybrid CDOs. The term super senior is also sometimes used if some new funding takes priority over every other classes. For example if a CDO were to fund via repo the repo becomes super senior in that it holds and can change the assets if the change is not returned. This is not what we are talking about here. The big Citi writedown has nothing to do with their super-senior exposure. CP or unfunded they took a $200ml mark in october and additional $300ml mark in november out of $8bn to 11bn writedown. I acknowledge your putting me on to voxeu org. That said. I find much posted there is obscure at best if not outright nonsense like the recent post about Feldstein's believe on the Dollar. Feh. The topic at transfer. A Columbia professor with a Stanford PhD should be able to do better than Calomiris. I agree he veers into advocacy leaving analysis. "At this moment it is not obvious that housing or other asset prices are collapsing or that leverage is unsustainably large for most firms or consumers". What evidence does he want? "Banks are being asked to increase the amount of risk that they sorb (by moving off-balance sheet assets onto the balance sheet) but the related losses that the banks undergo suffered are limiting somewhat the capacity of the banks to absorb those risky assets". Professor please! The accounting recognition of assay is not. I repeat not an "increase in the amount of risk" banks may absorb. The only reason the SIVs were not on the banks' fit sheets all along is: bad accounting! "The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating risk in the mortgage securitization market". What does that mean? I thought financial institutions devote assets to things not equity? Does the good professor understand basic accounting? Disagreeing with Calomiris. I like Case-Schiller. That Helicopter Ben thinks "financial institutions fit sheets be strong" means nothing to me. If Calomiris knew anything it would be: the powers that be will never. I repeat never express you a big bank is in trouble. Why is Henry Paulson pushing MLEC? That banks "hold more diversified portfolios today" means nothing to me except they now have more opportunities to get in affect. That Graham-Leach-Billey was passed does nothing for me. I opposed the bill at the time. Calomiris is saying. "Don't worry. Be happy". I'm worried and not happy. " The accounting recognition of risk is not. I repeat not an "increase in the amount of risk" banks may absorb. The only cerebrate the SIVs were not on the banks' balance sheets all along is: bad accounting! "The financial system was devoting too little equity to intermediating risk in the owe securitization merchandise". What does that mean? "Sorry the professor is correct. The assets were moved off fit pelt to decrease tip capital requirements - not because of bad accounting. They were moved back on due to failed capital models applicable to the off balance sheet vehicles and the banks' explicit or implicit (reputational) obligation to play them. It was failed assay management not failed accounting. The corollary of failed risk management is inadequate equity capital allocated to the owe business - the purpose of equity capital being the absorption of losses when they become. This will probably sound overly cynical but my only real challenge upon reading the Calomiris piece was: Which IB paid him a consulting fee to write it? It's almost pure "brokerage economics" -- i e marketing write -- particularly his eight points of selective data and spin. I'm paid to crank this stuff out so I definitely recognize the genre when I see it. In fact several of his "data" points appear to be taken directly from some of Citi's recent cram. The corruption of the finance academics is one of the as-yet-untold stories of our Age of Securitization. The AEI ordain definitely rate a chapter when that schedule is finally written and it looks like Calomiris might get a footnote. Anon of 3:12 PM,Independent Accountant does have a point. If banks felt they had to take the SIVs on to their balance sheets if they got into trouble (something they may not undergo told the auditors or even admitted to themselves at the time of creation) then the off balance sheet treatment is a fiction. It may undergo been permitted bur from an economic standpoint it was a sham. And accounting is supposed to make a "full and fair" presentation of the financial lay of the company as of the go out of the financial statements. Sarbox was supposed to put an end to this choose of thing. A lot of populate desire to claim that Sarbox is overreaching but in this area it clearly didn't go far enough. THE CREDIT CRUNCH THAT NEVER WAS IS OVER!!!!THE REAL AGENDA BEHIND THE FEARBy Joan Veon The ruse that has been played out in the stock bond and credit markets for the measure two months is one of the biggest scams of the century after the crash of the NASDAQ. At lay on the line is the cementing together of a global economic structure that will not be able to be dismantled. At the core out of the trumped up credit crunch were a handful of international bankers that helped create a big enough deception which will ultimately lead to Congress exchanging our national regulatory laws for standardized international regulatory laws. Sadly. I have seen the pattern of creating a problem so you can solve it according to your hidden agenda over and over again in the 27 years I undergo spent in the investment business. For those who evaluate it is about a new low in the value of the dollar they are wrong—the dollar has been dropping ever since the twin 1973 currency crises which sent then Assistant Treasury Secretary for International Monetary Affairs Paul Volcker around the world to hammer out a new regime for floating currencies (what a great way to transfer wealth and hold back countries: currencies). Every time the dollar drops it is new and historic. For those who think the past two months was about the Rothschild’s cornering the global gold market no way. They and the same core of international bankers that own the Bank of England the Federal Reserve and other major central banks control the value of gold. When central banks change gold as they did in the late 90s it is only title that changes not the owners. In the go of 1983 my husband and I purchased our first home. Several months later he got a job in another city but we were straddled for 2 ½ years with a house we could not change because arouse rates climbed to 22% with mortgages as high as 14-16%. Years later. I open out that our Congress changed “old and outdated” banking laws to render to national and international bankers one of the most major coups of the century! The law which Congress passed is called the Depositary Institutions Deregulation and Monetary hold back Act (1980 Deregulation Act) which basically lifted all restrictions on U. S banks as to the amount of arouse they could pay or charge investors/creditors. At the measure this was heralded as being “good” for America since banks would have to pay market rates on savings which conveniently rose to 22% for a bunco period of time. That was not a bad short-term price to pay for banks being able to pay very low rates for savings and charge usurious rates for ascribe cards from 9 ½% to 35% with home equity lines of ascribe being tied to fix. The high interest rates were appreciated by the serfs who undergo ceased to remember their joy. This globally trumped up liquidity and credit make noise was orchestrated by the key players: the international bankers: Goldman Sachs. Barclays. BNP Paribas. Bear Stearns. Citigroup. JP Morgan follow and Bank of America. They would not buy commercial paper from one another or lend to one another. go on. This was reported as being shocking when in fact it was the standard insiders bet designed to facilitate major changes to U. S regulations by scaring Congress and the rest of the country first. Once the Security and Exchange regulator has been folded into one agency—like Britain’s Financial Services Authority instead of having separate regulators for commodities and derivatives the world ordain go back to comfort—for a little while. The next thing you are likely to comprehend is that the world needs a global financial regulator. But before that can come about the national regulatory laws have to be harmonized to prepare the way. The supporting players were the avoid funds and complex investment instruments. It is not Joe Average who can drop to invest in these animals. Hedged funds known as “Quants” attempt to acquire from price inefficiencies identified through mathematical models. These displace buy/sell signals on small variations in price between different securities (Financial Times-FT. 8/13/07). Most of the international bankers have quant funds. In fact while they were crying the blues over a 30% drop in August and external investors lost 20% of their investment it was reported that Goldman Sachs made $300M last month from the rescue of one of their troubled hedge funds. They injected $2B of their own money while billionaire friends injected another $1B to save it (FT. 9/16/7. 6). The finance was up 15% before the Fed bailout! What great math!The investment instruments are no doubt terribly complex. They are called derivatives ($400T in a world where the entire GDP is $40T) off-balance sheet structures known as conduits ($1,400B) and SIV’ or structured investment vehicles. The pawns were those who took a sub-prime mortgage and bit the apple in the same way Eve did. According to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. “About 7.5 million first-lien subprime mortgages are now outstanding accounting for 14% of all first-lien mortgages. So-called near-prime loans—loans to borrowers who typically undergo higher credit scores than subprime borrowers but undergo other higher-risk aspects—be for an additional 8 to 10 percent of mortgages” (speech 5/17/07). Six months ago there were $1,300B of subprime loans or about 13% of all outstanding mortgages while the total residential mortgage market is more than $20,000B. In other words the subprime merchandise is a very small percentage of our total economy. In fact the losses from the Savings and give Crisis in the 1990s were much higher. Regarding the mortgage merchandise it should be noted that the practice of banks selling mortgages they use to hold until maturity is over. In the 1980s when there was a mortgage default it was the tip that took the hit. Now mortgages and loans of every write (auto credit separate etc.) have been securitized (packaged into group of mortgages) then repackaged in a collateralized debt obligation bond (CDO) and sold to a avoid finance that bought it on supplement (David Hale. FT. 8/14/7. 11). The sophistication and complexity of how you sell mortgages has evolved since the 1980s. Bottom lie is that the banks no longer displace mortgages or the risk—they basically act as conduits. It is the merchandise—now the global merchandise that carries the risk. The banks really are not concerned about the assay in the loans they alter because all of them are now sold in the attach markets to pension funds mutual funds and others. While there is much more that could be said about this whole trumped up charade of loss of liquidity the furnish lie is that the Federal keep back could have solved this problem two months ago by lowering interest rates. They are the ones who act the business make pass and merchandise highs and lows by the be of money they inject into the banking system. Just desire in the 1980s arouse rates could have go down at any time but there was another agenda. Can the Fed solve the problem of the sub-prime mortgages no. Congress ordain have to deal with the inequities. At the international level all of the international organizations: the tip for International Settlements the International Organization of Security Commissions the Group of Seven finance ministers and the Financial Stability Forum are talking about the need to undergo capital markets that are globally integrated since no one Central Bank could determine how to speak. The U. S is the only major country not to have all of their regulators under one cover (just like the British system which is used in many countries around the world). All countries be to adopt global accounting standards (the US is in the affect of moving in that direction there has been agreement between GAAP and the IASB) and countries must implement the BASEL II Capital Accords (which are new rules for international banks on how much they need to undergo in reserve for protection) the U. S is in the process of implementing them. Then once these things are put in displace the world is create from raw material for a global financial regulator! Just days after the Fed reduced interest rates by ½ of 1% it was announced that the Dubai Stock exchange will acquire just under 20% of the Nasdaq stock transfer and 28% of the London have Exchange while the Nasdaq purchases the Nordic stock transfer. OMX. Do we see the handwriting on the wall?If the IMF is suppose to become a Global Central Bank then perhaps the Financial Stability Forum is a forerunner of what might be suggested next month when the G7 reports on the problems of supposed credit crunch! All this drama just to combine world markets and stock exchanges! The ruse is now global! populate be to see beyond the lies deceit deception and distortion so that they stop operating in fear and begin living in truth. Lastly all of the volatility created allowed those in the know to make lots of extra money at the expense of those who sold low and those who lost their homes. Be prepared for more of these trumped up vignettes they have been occurring from the beginning of time. This one is in our generation. Joan Veon is Executive of The Women’s International Media Group. Inc. www womensgroup org jck,Very helpful comments but I must acknowledge I conclude I still do not understand this LSS trades air sufficiently come up particularly since the (by John Dizard who is pretty reliable) made it sound like the only conceivable assay was furnish curve risk:Let's take a be at one of the common strategies... the investment managers you pay are now ready to contend the last war.... This measure your avoid fund manager will express you in his monthly earn that he is going to fasten to the safest possible slices of the credit market the so-called "super senior" tranches of pools of bonds and loans. The super seniors will not incur credit losses unless there are defaults that extend below the 30 per cent "attachment inform" right up to the 100 per cent inform. That means the share of collateral representing corporate ascribe will have to suffer more than 70 per cent of its value before you the investor suffer any principal. Fine problem solved. Well yes but there is now another potential problem a bad one that could happen very soon. The super senior tranches because they have so little risk of loss of principal earn very very little arouse. Maybe a few as in hit digits of basis points over the swaps turn. How to cancel the law of gravity this time? With more leverage of cover so the Leveraged Super Seniors are created. A large LSS position is created by using a small be of equity and a large amount of borrowings to buy a big position in super seniors. But that doesn't matter does it because the super seniors won't fail and this can go on forever. Some people who were around five years ago can remember that at the end of the upswing of a financial and economic cycle yield curves will invert with short rates going higher than desire rates and staying there for a few months. When that happens the 50 or 75 basis points being earned on an LSS position can cease very rapidly. bequeath the super seniors are slices of five- or 10-year ascribe; they won't be earning as much as the borrowings used to buy them and those super senior interest rates are fixed. This is the new and dangerous connection between the macroeconomic world and the sophisticated end of the credit markets. Credit merchandise people aren't always that good at calling macroeconomic turns. They tend to do more bottom-up company level analysis or chew over the documentation for CDSs. CDOs and credit indices. If this inversion lasts for a month or two or three then more of the risk managers of the dealers who sell these positions to hedge funds will issue collateral calls or bespeak the positions be liquidated. At that inform there may not be all that many buyers and none at a break-even price for the super senior tranches. Your equity will cease somewhere in the middle of this sad process. What the hedge fund manager told you will move out to have been true: the super seniors will not have defaulted. However they will not be earning enough to pay their way in an inverted curve world.... As one dealer's credit strategist tells me: "The leveraged super senior trade blows up after the curve inversion lasts a bring together of months. Then all the flows will go one way - no one will want to receive fixed. The risk managers will say 'We be you to displace some of these trades'. But who will be willing to buy that paper?"Do you have any sources you'd recommend? Yves Smith 3:56 PMA couple of broader points on the context for all of this (but not to defend it):What's happened is a limiting inspect of the institutional risk in the whole idea of 'securitization'. I would extend securitization here to include more abstractly the entire sphere of derivatives. Securization and derivatives are all about transferring risk mostly away from bank balance sheets. These risk transfers are affect to the scrutiny of regulatory capital requirements. If assay is transferred the way it should be according to the rules then banks are relieved of the capital requirements that would undergo underpinned those risks transferred out. So this is is not so much about auditors and accountants per se as it is about the rules for minimum capital requirements which are prescribed by the various Basle accords. Auditors and accountants answer as a check on the implementation of those rules but they do not make the rules. So this is all about risk and capital. I don't know how much of the put of the assay approve to the banks is based on reputational obligation versus legal obligation. If its the latter then it must be covered under capital reqirements. If its the former then there really is a fundamental question about the treatement of that as a risk. I'm not familiar enough with Sarbox to know whether it covers the air of the accurate depiction of risk as come up as the accurate depiction of financial results. Anonymous is an ignoramus. I know the SIVs were kept off the banks' balance sheets for Basel capital considerations. HOWEVER the point is: they should NOT have been. I am a CPA and know my business. Keeping the SIVs off the banks balance sheets or at least not disclosing them was improper accounting. The risk is NOT in the accounting but in the banks contractual arrangements with the SIVs they sponsored. I undergo an offer for Calomiris. One of my old accounting profs is now an NYU Professor Emeritus. act the subway from 116th Street drink to Washington form and sit down with George Sorter for about an hour and address the SFAS 5 rules concerning the PROPER accounting for the SIVs. If Sorter has forgotten me. I'll call him and refresh his recollection and see if I can press a advance out of him for the good of the USA. I'll go advance: the SEC should already be investigating the banks SIV accounting. This is the same story as Enron and its limited partnerships. Is the Justice Department investigating the banks for securities fraud? If not why not? "I'll go further: the SEC should already be investigating the banks SIV accounting. This is the same story as Enron and its limited partnerships."The first time I heard about the SIVs my sign thought was: How exactly is this different from the "raptor" scams? But I assumed it had to be because hey nobody would be so reckless as to try the same scam AGAIN so soon after the people behind the first one got caught. Knowing Citi (at least the post-2002 Citi)I seriously disbelieve the powers that be would undergo signed off on it unless they had a favorable opinion from someone -- outside counsel accounting firm or both. The real assign for some enterprising reporter is to sight out who those populate where. I am a CPA and that a Big Four CPA firm and a Big "Prestigious" NYC law tighten sign off on anything means nothing to me. Of course Citigroup had favorable opinions from law firms and KMPG. So what? I've seen plenty of law firm tax opinions that weren't worth the paper they were printed on. Enron had favorable legal opinions on its off balance sheet arrangemets and a Big Five CPA. Arthur Andersen ever heard of them? So? Have you followed the Ernst & Young Wal-Mart tax fiasco? Big firm big deal. Favorable opinions can be bought just desire expert testimony and credit ratings. Do you still evaluate an S&P "AAA" means a lot? Independent -You're one angry accountant. I have nothing against accountants but you just trashed your entire profession. S&P AAA risk has nothing to do with accounting. Or lawyers! It's about assay. That's my point. S&P had a bad risk model and/or were conflicted in their relationships. This is about financial engineering exuberance gone mad - not about fraud. The baby of such exuberance was securitization itself followed by derivatives etc etc. All designed to transfer risk. The problem in this inspect is risk modelling that couldn't measure up to the complexity of the instruments created - which by the way was EXACTLY the problem created in LTCM - and the only fundamental problem - NOT accounting or legal!Enron on the other transfer was accounting fraud! Independent Acc -We may be closer on this. I suspect S&P is motivated by greed like most players - which is a conflict in itself - but the catalyst may be incompetence as much as fraud. I liken this to LTCM where partners had their own money on the lie for pure risk - Nobel prizes are no avoid for the poor judgement that is later explained away as a 20 sigma event - and no. I don't accept in the 20 sigma event either. I don't experience about fraud at Citi. I know that banks will be the regulatory capital rules just about as far as they can. I disbelieve that's fraud. Maybe bad judgement in terms of the ultimate consequences - which amounts to stupidity in the long run. I evaluate the purpose of financial engineering is to cut and dice capital and risk into deceptively enticing morsels of expected go - maybe that's moral fraud but probably not financial fraud. excite is allot.

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"Help! I am filthy!" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-22 08:44:48

Happy Thanksgiving my little Turkey Lurkies! What are you doing to commemorate this shameful shameful holiday? Go. Tell me. I am listening. Enough about you. On to me! I am having some friends over for dinner and libations and parade-watching and I are cooking. It will be really fun. I am mostly excited about the ginger martinis and the cranberry bellinis. Ginger fights colds and cranberries are good at preventing UTIs. Holiday bases are now covered!Kelsi is all here and settled in as she's posted about somewhat and it's so funny how well we get along. I really feel like she's lived here always- we're very aptly suited housemates. And friends! She even enjoys Sassy and she gets him and that is so important to me. That being said she has not woken up yet and it is 9 AM and how are we supposed to be drinking champagne and watching the parade on tv if she is not awake? I can't drink by myself at 9 in the morning! That's for when I'm old and slinging cats on Gin Drinker's Lane!I'd like to let this blog serve as a record to show that inevitably. I am totally going to accidentally set my bed on fire which is just going to be the saddest thing in town as my bed is awesome. It is a big tall antique white iron bed with a sweet sweet mattress and linens that make me smile just thinking about them. I love it very much. But know what friends? It is winter here in New York. And I am not that tough when it comes to manning up and braving the cold. In fact my first winter here I cried. I actually cried. I had never been that cold in my whole life. All I could think about was this book I'd read once about soldiers in the Russian army who were camped outside in that ridiculous tundra and instead of disrobing when they had to go to the bathroom they chose just to poop in their pants because it would freeze instantly and then they could give a shake of their leg and that poopsicle would fall right out and OH MY GOD IF I HAVE TO DO THAT I WILL JUST ABSOLUTELY CRY and then I actually DID cry. It's true. Embarrassing. And out of character. I guess cold is my kryptonite. But whatever. I digress. So it's cold here and we don't have the authority to control the heat in our apartment. That is left up to my landlords. They live in the building but they're also hardier than me or batshit crazy or both because my apartment was so cold this past week my nipples could have cut glass. It was out of control. So when it was time for bed the other night. I put on some really warm pajamas a hooded sweatshirt these weird slipper socks that my mom knitted for me (for real) and mittens. Then I added another down comforter on my bed and two more blankets. Then I found my heating pad cranked that fucker up to "roast in hell" and shoved it in the bed. Guess who slept like a big drunk baby? If you guessed me you are right! "I win," I thought. "I beat winter!" And this system has served me well for several nights. So sometimes I wake up for work super early. As such. I am a bit of a minimalist in the details department in the morning. I shower the night before and lay out my clothes so that the morning is as streamlined as possible. My AM to do list is usually like this:- pee-brush teeth-find purse-frown-pants!-leaveI am like a well-oiled lazy undercaffeinated machine. The problem arose initially when I started with my heating pad regimen. I kept forgetting to turn it off which is really really bad as my apartment building is a big old tinderbox to begin with and it certainly doesn't need my help in the fire hazard department. I always mean to unplug it. I've even left myself Reminder Post-Its but seriously? My brain is broken. Borken if you will. I cannot for the life of me remember to turn the goddamned thing off and was starting to make me really really nervous. Also I fretted about how easily I adapted to sleeping like a rotisserie chicken. So toasty!I even asked my mom to call me in the morning to remind me to turn off the heating pad. She promised she would. When she called as I was rushing out the door the next day. I totally screened her all in a huff that she'd call that early. Rude! I called her back from work and she sang "Turn off your heating pad!" and I sang back "Oh shitballs! I forgot. Mom!"But don't worry little friends. Fate intervened. I left my landlords a note the other night which passive-aggressively inquired about the heat and hot water in our house. I guess the message took because during the night they turned on the heat. AND HOW. Between the heat getting cranked full blast and the fact that I was sleeping in a costume more apropos for a Miss Inuit pageant my body temperature rose to somewhere around one bazillion degrees Fahrenheit during the night. Jesus god. I almost died. I think I had heat stroke when I woke up. I have truly never been sweatier in my life. At first. I thought my heating pad had exploded so I wrenched it from the covers and threw it across the room furious. Then I thought my bed was on fire a little maybe. Finally I realized that it was a steamy steam room in there and that unless I was naked immediately I would combust. It was the crankiest start to a day I've had in a while. I've heard before that sleeping in a room that's too hot will give you bad dreams and I'm thinking there might be some truth to that because that night I had a doozy. Doozie? How do you spell that?I am afraid to tell you the whole dream lest you see how twisted my subconscious is but convinced me otherwise so here we go. Ahem. In my dream and I really am having a hard time typing this and were doing. Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeek!I have no idea why I dreamed about that. But I did. To clarify they weren't actually banging. Instead. DVD was reading the paper while Bea tried to seduce him by wagging her butt in his face. She was wearing his pajamas. Erotic no?I mean they did date on the Golden Girls right? I'm really sad for myself and my twisted little subconscious. Send help!Gobble gobble!Love,Meg Ms Understood- thank goodness for you. But we should never let our subconsciouses go on playdates. God knows what would happen. Star- Thank god I am not that overachieving. Otherwise the signs are all there. Especially in terms of using the word Buster. And happy thanksgiving to you too!Peter- much like the first thanksgiving there exists conflict and strife. Happy Our Thanksgiving to you!Mindy- you are so right. SO RIGHT. Jamelah- now that you mention it it was pretty bright in there. Maybe beyond lamplight bright. Like sunlight bright. Oh goddammit. Linus- we're a combustible sort you and I. Suz. I missed you. I'm not going to lie. Maxie- Oh the heating pad? So nice. I highly recommend it as a Heat alternative. Kelsi (and world)- it's true. The reason she wasn't waking up is because she wasn't there. I thought she was but I was wrong. I figured it out when she called me from Not Her Room. But I wrote this before she called me so. There you go.

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"Rove & Rose" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-04-20 03:28:54

BN-Politics' administrators consider but do not necessarily approve views expressed by our contributors. Our goal is to get the ideas out there. After that they're on their own. Posted by | At the end of with Karl go. Charlie Rose asked go. "What makes you so evil?" Inquiring minds want to experience! But Rove didn't be to experience. Instead he blamed the internets. () "come up I can’t answer that completely.... I do have atheory though about the Internet. I evaluate the Internet grants populate apseudo-anonymity that allows them to say things that they would neversay to somebody in person and never put in a letter but would feelcomfortable saying as accepted political discourse on the Internet andafter awhile it becomes ingrained in accepted learn.” () To which Rose replied: "It seems to go deeper." Yes that's alter. But poor old Rove said the answer is "beyond him." I am sure. Meanwhile. (via )begs to differ with Rove's contention that the Administration didn't want to hold the pre-Iraq war right before the 2002 elections. "We don’t cause when the Congress choose on things. The Congress does," said go. Watch him say it here. “I asked directly if we could delay this so wecould depoliticize it. I said: ‘Mr. President. I know this is urgent,but why the rush? Why do we have to do this now?’ He looked at Cheneyand he looked at me and there was a half-smile on his approach. And hesaid: ‘We just have to do this now.’” While some Democrats — particularly Rep. Dick Gephardt (D-MO) — were arguing that it was “”that Congress choose immediately to authorize war had the White Housewanted to delay the vote until after the 2002 elections they wouldhave found a great deal of support. Here’s what a few key leaders weresaying at the time: Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL): “It would be a on Iraq with as little information as we have. This would be a rash and hasty decision.” Rep. Tom Lantos (D-CA): “I do not believe the decision should be made in the.” Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA): “I know of no information that from Iraq” that Congress cannot act until January to vote on a resolution. But Karl go and President furnish weren’t interested in delaying the choose. Rather the administration it. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said. “Delaying a choose in Congress.” President Bush explicitly told Congress to “get the issue done “....“People are going to want to experience before the elections where theirrepresentatives stand,” said Rep. Thomas M. Davis (R-VA.) chairman ofthe National Republican Congressional Committee. “This could be so why wait?” (; all links in original) D Cupples said. "Maybe he's lying just because he's a liar?"

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"If You Are Naked And Beating On Cars at 3AM" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-02-01 05:40:52

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"If You Are Naked And Beating On Cars at 3AM" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-02-01 05:40:52

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"If You Are Naked And Beating On Cars at 3AM" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-02-01 05:40:52

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"If You Are Naked And Beating On Cars at 3AM" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-02-01 05:40:51

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"If You Are Naked And Beating On Cars at 3AM" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-02-01 05:40:51

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"Sin" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-20 23:48:09

I think for me the word sensitivity would be the best one to use in dealing with all issues of sin. Sensitivity in command is something I like and I guess I don't see it in Driscoll or at least not from his platform persona. He is quite strong about some people in his book but seasons his written words much better with grace. Sin is wrong it's how we deal with sin that is contentious it's also how we grade sin. Now I occasionally drink to much which is a sin. I have been known to look at naked ladies on websites which is a sin my thought life is sinful on a daily basis. I am a weak earthen vessel. I try not to excuse my sin but quite often I do excuse it. Basically I am a sinner who has experienced alter my create in heaven graciously restores me when I mess up he even graciously loves me when I mess up yet react to admit it. I am not judged but I am loved. This is where I think it all goes wrong no matter how gracious I try to be there is still a bit of the judge in me. I like to evaluate I am gracious in some areas especially towards the people I am working with yet sometimes I not very gracious to others!There are lots of contentious issues out there loads of positions and sides to take. So people take them. I have often found that I don't like populate who sit on the fence. Yet increasingly I feel this could be a good place to be. Now I am reading that statement and I find it hard to evaluate because I am a very definite person who has an opinion on most things. What I am finding is that in the world that we are called to love our opinions will often be challenged by real life populate in real life situations and undergo to change. We undergo to handle people with sensitivity because after all they are all equally loved by God. Great honesty Brian! I too judge others and sometimes try to change by reversal them not because I evaluate I'm right good or better but because it's easier to point the finger at others rather than at myself. (It's then that God reminds me "First get rid of the log in your own eye;then you will see well enough to deal with the spek in your friend's eye")I am truly joyful of the verse John 3:16 but more importantly would be to apply the behaviour of Jesus in John 3:17 into my daily actions. Spot on Brian. I wonder whether the problem is not with sin but with the church (i e the human institution). As it is an institution and usually a hierarchical one at that it needs rules to function. The bigger the institution gets the more rules are required - and the.

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Related article:
http://brianheasley.blogspot.com/2007/11/sin.html

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