Tuesday, November 06, 2007

The End Of Innocence

The funny thing about reality is that it hits first, then dawns later. Picture this: US home loan borrowers, many of them sub-prime, en masse, exhausted their ability to pay and defaulted on their loans. In many cases, they simply walked – and are still walking- away from their homes. An already depreciating US housing market accelerated its decline when millions of defaulting sub-prime homes flooded the market. For the lenders and buyers of the Collateralized Debt Obligations, (“CDOs”) their “assets” became non-performing loans and didn’t look that good on the Balance Sheet.

In practical terms the CDO values were being written down, or even written off. Hedge funds who had ought these high interest bearing CDOs and borrowed money against them, from banks at lower rates, faced margin calls from the banks, jittery at holding assets that were sliding in value. In order to pay the margin calls, the hedge funds had to sell their performing assets. Imagine their surprise when they discovered that their performing assets were insufficient to cover the margin calls. So much for “managing risk”.

Now that Wall Street was losing money, who better to turn to than the Politician-In-Chief and the US Federal Reserve? True to form, he made some utterances about “educating” borrowers (uh.. huh…..nobody had the temerity to suggest he might wish to “educate” the lenders and the institutional investors who fell over themselves to buy this CDO shit) and then got out of the way while the Fed cut interest rates – belatedly- first in September 2007 from 5.25% to 4.75%; and then on 1st November 2007 from 4.75% to 4.25%.

And some of the reasons given for this cut? To make it cheaper to borrow money in the US and therefore to lend support to the US consumer in the critical Christmas shopping period. Oh please……………

Oh yeah, it’s also supposed to make it cheaper for businesses to borrow money. But that’s another story.

© 2007 Sanjeev Aaron Williams & Cashwerks All Rights Reserved

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