Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Re-Remics: Financial Folly?


The WSJ reports:
The popular deals are known as "re-remic," which stands for resecuritization of real-estate mortgage investment conduits. The way it works is that insurers and banks that hold battered securities on their books have Wall Street firms separate the good from the bad. The good mortgages are bundled together and create a security designed to get a higher rating. The weaker securities get low ratings.


Regulators are pushing back, saying the transactions don't have enough substance and stand to benefit bankers and ratings firms...U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) raised concerns about the mounting number of re-remics, saying, "The credit-rating agencies could be setting us up for problems all over again."

The process of securitization allows diversification: you can take a pool of assets, called collateral, and then assign various priority to the cash flows of these assets (which are basically bonds). Diversification is generally a good thing. The most senior is rated AAA, and when done appropriately, has an extremely low default rate. Then there are AA, A or BBB pieces, and sometimes a mezzanine piece rated BB or B (ie, junk). The least senior piece is simply equity, and the issuer generally retains an interest in the most junior set of residual cash flows. is mainly one of diversification.

Many firms specialize in holding AAA debt, and it often is efficient to move this from the loan issuers, to other institutions. Now we know everyone screwed up with rating mortgage AAA bonds, they assumed housing prices would not fall. It was not a subtle mistake only perceptible via reverse engineering a complex security or copula.

The continued resistance to anything similar to what blew up before highlights the adage about generals are always fighting the last war. Many people lost money on mortgages. Those mistakes will not happen again in that asset class for a generation. Yet, regulators and regulators are finely attuned to anything with mortgage securitization.

I remember when I worked at Moody's and someone was telling me that since the 1990 Commercial Real Estate debacle, defaults in this asset class were well below average across the board for the subsequent decade. In the aftermath of that crisis, newly issued Commercial Real Estate Asset Backed securities did very well, because everyone was especially cognizant of the risk factors involved: investors, ratings agencies, regulators, issuers, even borrowers. A similar thing happened in railroads after the Penn Central railroad defaulted in the early 1970s.

It would be wise to focus not on mortgages, which have enough skepticism, but rather the current 'low risk' investments. Things related to energy, or health care, seem highly risky because they have done relatively well, and regulations could drastically change profitability within those sectors. A good rule of thumb in debt is whatever sector did worst in the last recession, will perform above average in the next.

FX Path

FX Path


EUR/GBP - Bearish Correction in Steep Uptrend

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 09:20 AM PDT

EUR/GBP Daily ChartPrice action on EUR/GBP, a daily chart of which is shown, has made a minor bearish correction within a steep overall uptrend. This occurs after price hit an approximate 6-month high around 0.9300 with a clear shooting star candle (a bearish indication) earlier in the week. As of Wednesday (9/30/2009), the bearish retracement has descended down to a strong support/resistance level in the 0.9075 price region before bouncing back up. For more technical analysis on this currency pair, please click here for Wednesday’s (9/30/2009) Chart of the Day.

- James Chen, CTA, CMT

* I will be key speaker at FXstreet.com's International Traders Conference in Barcelona, Spain in October 2009 - for more information, please go to: www.traders-conference.com .

* For information on my book, Essentials of Foreign Exchange Trading (Wiley), please click here.

* Follow my intraday forex updates on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JamesChenFX


The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Hourly perspective for majors

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 06:47 AM PDT

Eur/Usd technical perspective

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 04:55 AM PDT

Pair is back up, fighting the 1.4680 zone. Seems we are getting into a comfortable consolidation zone under 1.4700 and basing in the 1.4550 strong static support level, also 50% retracement of the last daily upleg. Pair should not easily overcome 1.4680 1.4720 resistances, so expect some downside movement from here, with immediate supports around 1.4640 and 1.4610, 38.2% of the rally. If under, next key support lie at the 1.4515, and then 1.4440 strong zone. Above 1.4720, last resistance comes around 1.4760 zone.

 


Majors’s sentiment for today

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 04:31 AM PDT

Here is majors sentiment for today:

Eur/Usd: Bullish

Gbp/Usd: Bullish

Usd/Chf: Bearish

Usd/Jpy: Bearish

Eur/Gbp: Bearish


Starting the day

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 04:29 AM PDT

Hi everybody, and welcome back! I have a terrible cold these days, part because of a sudden return of winter to Buenos Aires, part maybe because I’m a bit over excited on coming to the ITC! Really for me will be a hell of an experience also, travelling alone, away from my girls. They are still too young, I had travelled in the past, not since I become a mom. Life changes a lot! Anyway, forex! forex! not me! As we talk last night in the Daily Wrap Up Webinar, here at FXstreet.com  at 22:30 GMT, gold remains the forex market leader. Where gold goes, there goes dollar. Back above $1000/oz, rising almost 10 dollars in the last 24 hours, and dragging greenback down across the board. Data around the world since past Asian session has been quite positive, except maybe for Europe inflation readings, supporting greenback falling trend. But don’t you there to talk about deflation in the euro zone ok? Anyway, we have GDP and ADP in the U.S. in a couple of hours, so market will wait also for that, to see where are we heading from here. Here is the link for today's calendar:  

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/

Have a great day!

 

I will be one of the key speakers in Barcelona, October.  Here is the link if you want to know more about it: http://www.traders-conference.com 


Forex Crunch Forex Daily Outlook – September 30th 2009

Forex Crunch Forex Daily Outlook – September 30th 2009


Forex Daily Outlook – September 30th 2009

Posted: 30 Sep 2009 12:30 AM PDT

A very busy day expects forex traders today. In the US, the ADP Non-Farm Payrolls and GDP stand out. There are very important figures from all parts of the world. Let’s see what’s on the menu today:

Australian Building Approvals disappointed and fell by 0.1% instead of rising. Also last month’s figure was revised downwards. On the other hand, Australian Retail Sales rose more than expected, fueling the Aussie’s drive. In it’s neighbor, New Zealand, the NBNZ Business Confidence rose neatly to 49.1 points (from 34.2).

After Angela Merkel won the German elections, also on improving economic conditions, German Unemployment Change is expected to be on the rise again. This will significantly impact EUR/USD, which is looking for a direction.

Also note the all-European CPI Flash Estimate which is expected to fall by 0.2%, but might surprise after Germany’s prices began picking up. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet will be speaking later today.

In Switzerland, the KOF Economic Barometer is expected to turn positive, giving another boost to the Swiss Franc, aiming for parity.

ADP Non-Farm Employment Change is improving, like the NFP. This time it’s predicted to show a loss of 200K jobs, better than last month’s 298K loss.

US Final GDP is expected to be revised downwards, showing a contraction of 1.2% in the second quarter rather than 1%. The third release of GDP will confirm a year long recession. Will it change in Q3 results?

FOMC member Dennis Lockhart will speak today. After saying that the real unemployment rate is actually 16%, his words might move the markets. Also speaking today: FOMC members Donald Kohn and Daniel Tarullo.

The Canadian economy returned to growth last month and rose by 0.1%. This trend is expected to continue, with a second month of growth, this time of 0.4%.

Japanese Tankan Manufacturing Index will be released near midnight GMT, and will surely move the Yen. It’s expected to show another improvement, from -48 to -32. Note that the Tankan Manufacturing Index fell short of expectations in the previous months.

Japanese Retail Sales are expected to stay in the negative zone, falling by 2.4% for a second month in a row.

That’s it for a long day. Happy forex trading!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Why Capital Regulations did Not Cause the Mortgage Crisis

I still read many different takes on what caused the subprime housing bubble. The least compelling to me is the capital regulations. Mortgages were historically the lowest loss rates of any asset class, for the entire dataset anyone looked at. Think of a capital regulation as a rule enforced by government. If the rule is binding, this merely makes the activity more expensive, as when you amortize the cost of getting caught smoking pot (including potential career repercussions, which vary considerably by profession). Many rules we think are unnecessary are worked around, as for instance, ProShares has many stocks that allow you 3-to-1 leverage, which is technically illegal if done directly (it violates Reg-T for retail brokerage accounts). There are shares that allow you to be short, which for 401ks is otherwise illegal, but now legal.

Now, generally, the government allows you to do many things you can do, but shouldn't. Moderation in all things is a good rule, and what prevents most people from excess is discipline. People generally don't do things to excess because it causes various hangovers, real and metaphorical. So, if the government assigned a low capital ratio to mortgages, this did not cause banks to invest in mortgages in excess unless they also believed these were of low risk. It was a common mistake. So common, in fact, I think it strains credulity to think the regulation was extremely important. There were enough investors and companies not bound by US banking regulations involved to note this was bigger than them.

The fact that I can drink a bottle of Scotch every night is no reason to blame the government if I choose to do so.

FX Path

FX Path


AUD/USD - Consolidating within Uptrend

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 08:30 AM PDT

AUD/USD Daily ChartAfter hitting a 13-month high close to the 0.8800 resistance last week, price action on AUD/USD, a daily chart of which is shown, has consolidated horizontally just above a key uptrend support line extending from the March lows. This currency pair is still very much entrenched in a clear uptrend, and the directional bias still appears to be to the upside. The key upside resistance level to watch for is the noted 0.8800 resistance. For more technical analysis on this currency pair, please click here for Tuesday’s (9/29/2009) Chart of the Day.

- James Chen, CTA, CMT

* I will be key speaker at FXstreet.com's International Traders Conference in Barcelona, Spain in October 2009 - for more information, please go to: www.traders-conference.com .

* For information on my book, Essentials of Foreign Exchange Trading (Wiley), please click here.

* Follow my intraday forex updates on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JamesChenFX


Forex Crunch Forex Daily Outlook – September 29th 2009

Forex Crunch Forex Daily Outlook – September 29th 2009


Forex Daily Outlook – September 29th 2009

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 12:30 AM PDT

American CB Consumer Confidence and a lot of British figures dominate the scene today. Will EUR/USD recover from the plunge it made this week? Let’s see what’s up for today.

Note: After a ten day vacation, I’m glad to back, and I’;m catching up what I’ve missed in the forex scene.

Swiss UBS Consumption Indicator scored 0.66, less than last month’s 0.75 points.

In Europe, German Import Prices rose by 1.3%, almost double the expectations of 0.7%. This adds to the rising CPI. Is Europe getting out of deflation? Later in Europe, Consumer Confidence is expected to stay at -21, similar to last month.

In Britain, Current Account is predicted to show a deficit of 7.7 billion, less than last month’s 8.5 billion. Net Lending to Individuals is expected to turn positive, and print 0.3 billion, after it fell last month. Mortgage Approvals are predicted to remain almost unchanged, at 51K.

The more interesting figure is the final GDP, which is predicted to be revised upwards, to a fall of 0.6%, less than the previous read of 0.7%. Some countries have posted growth in the second quarter. Britain is currently behind.

The most important British figure for today is very important: CBI Realized Sales are expected to rise from -16 to -15. Where is GBP/USD going?

And at night, GfK Consumer Confidence is expected to be quite stable and quite negative, at -24.

In the US, S&P/CS Composite-20 HPI is expected to show an improving situation in home prices: an annual average of a 14.3% fall is expected, continuing a positive trend.

Later in the US, CB Consumer Confidence is expected to move forward, rising from 54.1 to 57 points, also continuing the positive trend.

In Japan, Prelim Industrial Production usually impacts the Yen. After rising by 2.1%, it’s expected to rise by 1.9% this time.

That’s it for today. After returning from my vacation, I’m back with the regular writing schedule.