Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Houston, We Have A Problem

As is now apparent, the fancy re-packaging of sub-prime loans into Collateralized Debt Obligations were credit derivatives and other forms of “Off Balance Sheet” Financing, responsible for the creeping and embarrassing disclosures of previously undisclosed losses of staggering amounts, now to be recorded on Bank Balance Sheets.

“Off Balance Sheet Financing” is precisely that – it is not recorded on the Balance Sheet as either a Current or Long Term Liability. But the cash flow from the CDO (so long as it was performing well), would be recorded as revenue in the Income & Expense Statement.

How it ended up as “Off Balance Sheet Financing” was as a result of “risk assessment”. That assessment was pursuant to a computer program, that could easily be adjusted to operate within optimistic parameters, thereby giving an impression of manageability and liquidity in order to ensure the sale of the CDOs (to “sophisticated investors”). It’s not as bizarre as it sounds: ask any major bank and financial institution and they’ll tell you just how heavily they rely on computer models to purportedly assess risk.

Since these CDOs were based on notoriously credit un-worthy individuals, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist or a computer program to figure out that the moment a colossal wall of defaults sets in, your fancy credit derivative is effectively, un-saleable (and your computer program not worth the software it’s written on).

At that point, you have a major cash flow problem.

Interestingly, Factoring is also described as “Off Balance Sheet Financing”. More on that in the next posting.

© 2007 Sanjeev Aaron Williams & Cashwerks All Rights Reserved

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