PrefLetter: Two New Recommendation Classes

September 8th, 2008

The September issue of PrefLetter will be prepared as of the close on September 12 and eMailed to subscribers prior to the opening on September 15.

Two new classes of recommendations will be included:

  • Fixed-Reset: My disdain for Fixed-Reset issues as currently priced is well known, but some people like them! Clearly, some of these issues will be better investment choices than others. Now that the asset class has been added to HIMIPref™, a recommendation from this class of preferred share will be included with the other recommendations.
  • Short-Term: I do not usually recommend short-term issues for preferred share portfolios, due in part to the fact that the relatively low level of price volatility gives little opportunity for trading; also due to the idea that the recommendations are for long-term buy-and-hold investors. However, there is public demand for short-term issues. While I will not create a specific asset class for these issues, I will henceforth recommend at least one issue from the combined OpRet / SplitShare indices that would otherwise be ineligible for recommendation due to shortness of term. Note that by “short-term”, I generally mean (as is usual in the bond world) “less than five years”.

Fixed-Reset Issues Added to HIMIPref™

September 8th, 2008

As promised, Fixed-Reset issues have been added to the HIMIPref™ database.

Additionally, a new HIMIPref™ sub-index has been added, the Fixed-Reset Index.

Minor, but annoying programming changes were required in order to add these issues. Each Floating-Rate issue requires what is currently a hard-coded schedule, specifying the base index to be used for the issues and the calculations required to obtain the projected floating-rate. This has been an easy matter in the past, since there have not been many new floaters added and since those that have been added have fit comfortably into extant classifications (e.g., Ratchet Rate, Canada Prime, max 100% of index, min 50% of index). Fixed-Resets, however, have a spread specified in terms of basis points; in order to specify the future floating rate for the current ten issues, nine different spreads neede to be hard coded.

Therefore, HIMIPref™ users must download the new executable in the usual way. Don’t forget to back up user files prior to installation!

There is a possibility that I might isolate the hypervariable sections of code and place them in a new web-service, with calculations and descriptions to be downloaded on the fly. This would mean that the front-end could stay constant; to add a new floating rate specification I would simply recode and reinstall the service on server-side, invisibly to users. However, I have not yet determined that this concept is practically possible or, if possible, whether or not it will simply lead to spaghetti code making future enhancements possible. Until I’ve made a decision, users will simply have to re-download and re-install the front-end every time the issuers come up with a new spread!

Critchley Sounds Cautionary Note on Fixed-Resets

September 8th, 2008

As noted by Assiduous Reader Tobyone in the comments to a prior post, Barry Critchley of the Financial Post has published a column with a cautionary note regarding this structure: Banks Big on Reset Preferred Shares:

Over the past six months, five of the chartered banks — the Big Six less the Royal Bank–have raised more than $2-billion by way of reset preferred shares, a security they hadn’t previously sold to the public.

But the security has been around for a long time, given that BCE, for example, issued a pile of them.

The Royal Bank announced a new issue today just to ruin his column.

However, it is not strictly correct that BCE issued a pile of them. The BCE issues were reset at a proportion of five year Canadas determined by the board; the floating-rate side were ratchet-rate preferreds that could (and currently are) paying 100% of prime.

Critchley notes the inflation-mitigating effect of this structure:

In a high-inflation world, that new feature allows investors to be offered market-type rates. That feature is better than what existed with the fixed-rate perpetuals where there was no ability in a high-inflation world for investors to receive market rates.

I noted the inflation-mitigating effect of this structure in the previous post on this topic, Harry Koza Likes Fixed-Resets. Naturally, I will grant “that feature is better”. Of course it is. What else am I gonna say? The question is not whether the feature is good or not, but how good is it and how much are we paying for it?

Mr. Critchley continues:

Investors giving up yield compared with buying a fixed-rate non-reset pref share: “In essence, you are paying a premium (in terms of a lower current yield) in exchange for inflation protection down the road that won’t likely materialize unless it is clearly in favour of the issuer,” he noted. “The only thing you know for sure is that you are taking long-term credit risk with a very uncertain compensation that is currently well below fixed-rate issues.”

Exactly my point.

Update, 2008-9-9: The source for the quotations in the column was the screen-name scomac, writing in Financial WebRing Forum.

New Issue: RY Fixed-Reset 500+193

September 8th, 2008

Royal Bank has announced:

a domestic public offering of $225 million of Non-Cumulative, 5 year rate reset Preferred Shares Series AJ.

The bank will issue 9 million Preferred Shares Series AJ priced at $25 per share and holders will be entitled to receive non-cumulative quarterly fixed dividends for the initial period ending February 24, 2014 in the amount of $1.25 per share, to yield 5.0 per cent annually. The bank has granted the Underwriters an option, exercisable in whole or in part, to purchase up to an additional 3 million Preferred Shares at the same offering price.

Subject to regulatory approval, on or after February 24, 2014, the bank may redeem the Preferred Shares Series AJ in whole or in part at par. Thereafter, the dividend rate will reset every five years at a rate equal to 1.93% over the 5-year Government of Canada bond yield. Holders of Preferred Shares Series AJ will, subject to certain conditions, have the right to convert all or any part of their shares to non-cumulative floating rate preferred shares Series AK (the “Preferred Shares Series AK”) on February 24, 2014 and on February 24 every five years thereafter.

Holders of the Preferred Shares Series AK will be entitled to receive a non-cumulative quarterly floating dividend at a rate equal to the 3-month Government of Canada Treasury Bill yield plus 1.93%. Holders of Preferred Shares Series AK will, subject to certain conditions, have the right to convert all or any part of their shares to Preferred Shares Series AJ on February 24, 2019 and on February 24 every five years thereafter.

The offering will be underwritten by a syndicate led by RBC Capital Markets. The expected closing date is September 16, 2008.

Issue: Royal Bank of Canada Non-Cumulative 5-Year Rate Reset Preferred Shares, Series AJ

Size: 9-million shares (=$225-million) + greenshoe 3-million shares (=$75-million) exercisable before closing.

Dividend: 5.00% until first exchange date; 5-year Canadas +193bp thereafter, reset every exchange date. Series AK (the floater) pays 90-day bills +193bp, reset quarterly.

Exchange Date: 2014-2-24 and every five years thereafter.

Redemption: Series AJ (the reset) redeemable every exchange date at $25.00. Floater redeemable every exchange date at $25.00 and at $25.50 at all other times.

Closing: 2008-9-16

Fannie & Freddie Plan Released: Treasury Follows PrefBlog's Plan!

September 7th, 2008

A WSJ article states:

The Treasury said its senior preferred stock purchase agreement includes and upfront $1 billion issuance of senior preferred stock with a 10% coupon from each GSE, quarterly dividend payments, warrants representing an ownership stake of 79.9% in each firm going forward, and a quarterly fee starting in 2010.

A press conference was held by Treasurey Secretary Paulson and FHFA Director Lockhart, with a press release issued by Treasury:

[Paulson said] Their statutory capital requirements are thin and poorly defined as compared to other institutions.

… but did not report his resignation.

[Lockhart said] To promote stability in the secondary mortgage market and lower the cost of funding, the GSEs will modestly increase their MBS portfolios through the end of 2009. Then, to address systemic risk, in 2010 their portfolios will begin to be gradually reduced at the rate of 10 percent per year, largely through natural run off, eventually stabilizing at a lower, less risky size.

Treasury has taken three additional steps to complement FHFA’s decision to place both enterprises in conservatorship. First, Treasury and FHFA have established Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements, contractual agreements between the Treasury and the conserved entities. Under these agreements, Treasury will ensure that each company maintains a positive net worth. These agreements support market stability by providing additional security and clarity to GSE debt holders – senior and subordinated – and support mortgage availability by providing additional confidence to investors in GSE mortgage backed securities. This commitment will eliminate any mandatory triggering of receivership and will ensure that the conserved entities have the ability to fulfill their financial obligations. It is more efficient than a one-time equity injection, because it will be used only as needed and on terms that Treasury has set. With this agreement, Treasury receives senior preferred equity shares and warrants that protect taxpayers. Additionally, under the terms of the agreement, common and preferred shareholders bear losses ahead of the new government senior preferred shares.

Lockhart also disclosed some startling news:

While conservatorship does not eliminate the common stock, it does place common shareholders last in terms of claims on the assets of the enterprise.

Similarly, conservatorship does not eliminate the outstanding preferred stock, but does place preferred shareholders second, after the common shareholders, in absorbing losses.

Amazing! Common shareholders take first loss, preferred shareholders take second loss. Who would have thunk it?

Preferred stock investors should recognize that the GSEs are unlike any other financial institutions and consequently GSE preferred stocks are not a good proxy for financial institution preferred stock more broadly. By stabilizing the GSEs so they can better perform their mission, today’s action should accelerate stabilization in the housing market, ultimately benefiting financial institutions. The broader market for preferred stock issuance should continue to remain available for well-capitalized institutions.

This is interesting. Is Treasury preparing for a pre-packaged Chapter 11 at some time in the future?

Lockhart concluded:

Because the GSEs are Congressionally-chartered, only Congress can address the inherent conflict of attempting to serve both shareholders and a public mission. The new Congress and the next Administration must decide what role government in general, and these entities in particular, should play in the housing market. There is a consensus today that these enterprises pose a systemic risk and they cannot continue in their current form. Government support needs to be either explicit or non-existent, and structured to resolve the conflict between public and private purposes. And policymakers must address the issue of systemic risk.

In the weeks to come, I will describe my views on long term reform. I look forward to engaging in that timely and necessary debate.

Several reports are attached:

REPORTS

From the Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement:

In exchange for entering into these agreements with the GSEs, Treasury will immediately receive the following compensation:

  • $1 billion of senior preferred stock in each GSE
  • Warrants for the purchase of common stock of each GSE representing 79.9% of the common stock of each GSE on a fully-diluted basis at a nominal price


The following covenants apply to the GSEs as part of the agreements.

o Without the prior consent of the Treasury, the GSEs shall not:

  • Make any payment to purchase or redeem its capital stock, or pay any dividends, including preferred dividends (other than dividends on the senior preferred stock)
  • Issue capital stock of any kind
  • Enter into any new or adjust any existing compensation agreements with “named executive officers” without consulting with Treasury
  • Terminate conservatorship other than in connection with receivership
  • Sell, convey or transfer any of its assets outside the ordinary course of business
    except as necessary to meet their obligation under the agreements to reduce their portfolio of retained mortgages and mortgage backed securities

  • Increase its debt to more than 110% of its debt as of June 30, 2008
  • Acquire or consolidate with, or merge into, another entity.

Fannie & Freddie: Announcement this Evening?

September 7th, 2008

Events surrounding a potential bail-out of Fannie & Freddie, which started picking up speed after Friday’s close, appear to be nearing a crescendo.

The New York Times reports (hat tip: Financial Webring Forum) that Freddie Mac overstated capital:

The methods used to bolster that cushion have caused serious concerns among the companies’ regulator, outside auditors and some investors. For example, while Freddie Mac’s portfolio contains many securities backed by subprime loans, made to the riskiest borrowers, and alt-A loans, one step up on the risk ladder, the company has not written down the value of many of those loans to reflect current market prices.

Executives have said that they intend to hold the loans to maturity, meaning they will be worth more, and they need not write down their value.

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have also inflated their financial positions by relying on deferred-tax assets — credits accumulated over the years that can be used to offset future profits. Fannie maintains that its worth is increased by $36 billion through such credits, and Freddie argues that it has a $28 billion benefit.

But such credits have no value unless the companies generate profits. They have failed to do so over the last four quarters and seem increasingly unlikely to the next year. Moreover, even when the companies had soaring profits, such credits often could not be used. That is because the companies were already able to offset taxes with other credits for affordable housing.

This sounds totally disingenuous to me. These accounting concerns are old news; the regulators would not be in least surprised to find them on the books, they’d just pretend it was horrible startling news.

Time Business & Economics columnist Justin Fox muddies the waters with disinformation:

But what about the shareholders? It seems only fair that if the government has to step in to take over the companies, shareholders should lose everything. Except that there’s a big complication: Lots of small and mid-sized banks in the U.S. have, with encouragement from regulators, built up big holdings in Fannie and Freddie preferred stock, which they use to satisfy their capital requirements. If Fannie and Freddie preferred shares become worthless, a lot of banks will become insolvent.

However, there is one redeeming feature to that post: he quotes his source, who did not say that. :

However, the government made Fannie and Freddie preferred stock a “permissible” investment to create a sufficiently large market for these securities.

Of course, making the stock “permissible” didn’t necessarily make it attractive, so regulators had to pull another trick. Under the risk-based capital rules, national banks may carry agency preferreds at a 20 percent risk weighting (pdf file), while state-chartered banks and OTS-regulated savings associations must apply a 100 percent risk weighting. This means that banks only have to hold 1.6% or 8% capital against their investments (or should we say ‘speculation’?) in Fannie and Freddie preferred stock.

Thomas Kirchner is long FNM. He manages the Pennsylvania Avenue Event-Driven Fund [PAEDX], which is long and short various FNM and FRE securities. He is a former FNM employee.

Mr. Kirchner in turn cites the OCC Publication “Activities Permissable for a National Bank”:

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Perpetual Preferred Stock. A national bank may invest in perpetual preferred stock issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac without limit, subject to safety and soundness considerations. OCC Interpretive Letter No. 931 (March 15, 2002).

It should be noted that there is nothing in the cited document to support the assertion of 20% risk weight … PrefBlog’s Assiduous Readers, however, will have read my post Fannie Mae Preferreds: Count Towards Bank Capital? in which some support for the 20% risk-weight figure was unearthed.

Naked Capitalism linked to a John Dizard column in the Financial Times:

Last week I wrote about these preferreds; my position was that if or, rather, when the Treasury had to recapitalise the GSEs with new, senior preferred issues, it would be a really good idea from the taxpayers’ point of view to leave the old preferreds in place while wiping out the value of the outstanding common stock.

… which is not inconsistent with the solution I see as best, but his original column was not very specific:

Still, to the point raised by Peters and the other cautionary voices, there are answers. First, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac need to be nationalised, in the sense that the federal government injects capital in the form of preferred equity and direct credit support, wiping out the existing common. I believe it is critical that that takeover leaves the privately held preferred stock of the government-sponsored enterprises in place. Preserving the value of GSE preferred issues is very much in the taxpayers’ interest, as it makes possible the recapitalisation of the rest of the banking system.

Very interesting, but just macro-style generalities.

However, the Wall Street Journal has reported:

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart are expected to release details of the planned conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac at an 11 a.m. press conference in downtown Washington.

More when I know more …

Update: See Fannie & Freddie Plan Released: Treasury Follows PrefBlog’s Plan!

September 5, 2008

September 5th, 2008

James Hamilton of Econbrowser passes on a debunking of Shadowstats … I confess, I have not examined the issues raised very closely, but this is the sort of thing I like to see. The internet has offered looney-tunes a pulpit, which is generally a bad thing; on the other hand, it makes this kind of thinking more visible and susceptible to criticism.

You can tell where my sympathies lie, despite my professed ignorance regarding this particular issue! Assiduous Readers will remember the forecast of the end of the world last February, narrowly averted when it was shown that Armageddonists can’t read balance sheets or do arithmetic.

Accrued Interest reviews the GSE situation and sets up a straw-man proposal:

What if the Treasury agreed to guaranty the principal (not the interest) on a preferred stock offering.

The preferreds would be callable after 5 years, with the call becoming automatic if the GSEs share price reaches some milestone. The idea would be that if the GSEs are able to issue common equity, then they would be forced to call the tax-payer backed preferred and issue their own securities of some variety.

The Treasury could charge some fee in exchange for the guaranty.

Here are the advantages of such a plan. First, it could be implemented right away, allowing for stability in the mortgage market and likely a decline in mortgage lending rates. Second, its probably a cheaper plan for tax payers when compared with other options.

Unfortunately, this kind of solution has a number of problems. First, it creates all kinds of moral hazard, as common equity holders wind up benefiting from the tax payers risk.

Second, this plan doesn’t move us any closer to a more permanent solution to the problem of macro risk and the GSEs.

Well, I don’t like the plan either! I continue to feel that nothing should happen until the GSEs either fall below their regulatory minimum capital (a la IndyMac), or become unable to finance themselves in a normal commercial manner (a la Bear Stearns). Then Treasury steps in and backstops a rights issue of senior preferred shares convertible into common at a dollar, possibly with a provision that no dividend be paid on the existing and suddenly junior preferreds until some specified capital ratios are met.

Any GSE bail-out will be politically divisive enough; to take action before the last minute will simply exacerbate the attention paid to side issues while increasing the potential for future moral hazard without providing a solution that is necessarily any more effective.

And what to do now? Start drafting legislation that turns the GSEs into regular banks. And start weaning the American mortgage market off fully open mortgages with a 30-year term. That’s the root of the problem.

But stay tuned! After the markets closed, the WSJ said Treasury is Close to Finalizing Plan to Backstop Fannie, Freddie. There are no details, but speculation is rampant on, for instance, Accrued Interest, Bloomberg and Dealbreaker.

Jian Wang of the Dallas Fed writes an interesting review on VoxEU: Understanding exchange rates as asset prices and comes to a conclusion that is consistent with my understanding of the FX markets and markets in general:

In a seminal paper, Richard Meese and Kenneth Rogoff (1983) found that economic fundamentals – such as the money supply, trade balance and national income – were of little use in forecasting exchange rates, at least over short to medium time horizons. They compared existing models to an alternative in which fundamentals are excluded and any exchange rate changes are purely random. They found the “random walk” model to be just as good.

We argue that exchange rate movements may be driven by both a permanent long-term trend and some transitory noise. These noisy terms can drive exchange rates away from their long-run levels in the short run. As time passes, exchange rates gradually move back to their long-run levels, exhibiting long-horizon predictability. In several models, such as the monetary model and the Taylor rule model in Engel and West (2005), the short-term noise is related to a fundamental that isn’t observable – the risk premium for holding a currency, for example.

Not much price action today, on reasonable volume. All eyes were on the stock market!

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 N/A N/A
Fixed-Floater 4.57% 4.34% 65,758 16.42 6 +0.4525% 1,119.4
Floater 4.36% 4.42% 51,043 16.48 2 +0.2742% 902.4
Op. Retract 4.93% 4.22% 127,499 3.08 14 +0.0907% 1,054.5
Split-Share 5.34% 5.84% 52,627 4.34 14 -0.0524% 1,045.1
Interest Bearing 6.35% 6.94% 52,382 5.22 2 -1.4082% 1,112.2
Perpetual-Premium 6.18% 5.57% 61,195 2.23 1 -0.0395% 1,004.9
Perpetual-Discount 6.03% 6.09% 188,537 13.75 70 -0.0011% 883.4
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BSD.PR.A InterestBearing -2.9381% Asset coverage of 1.6+:1 as of August 29 according to Brookfield Funds. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 7.50% based on a bid of 9.25 and a hardMaturity 2015-3-31 at 10.00.
SLF.PR.E PerpetualDiscount -2.0451% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.04% based on a bid of 18.68 and a limitMaturity.
PWF.PR.E PerpetualDiscount -1.6603% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.00% based on a bid of 23.10 and a limitMaturity.
IAG.PR.A PerpetualDiscount -1.1721% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.22% based on a bid of 18.55 and a limitMaturity.
CM.PR.G PerpetualDiscount +1.1472% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.48% based on a bid of 21.16 and a limitMaturity.
BAM.PR.K Floater +1.3333% On volume of 36 – count ’em, 36 – shares.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BAM.PR.O OpRet 393,310 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 7.38% based on a bid of 22.92 and optionCertainty 2013-6-30 at 25.00. Compare with BAM.PR.H (6.19% to 2012-3-30), BAM.PR.I (5.32% TO 2013-12-30) and BAM.PR.J (6.43% to 2018-3-30) … well … looks to me like they finally found their level and this is the inventory blow-out special!
L.PR.A Scraps (would be OpRet, but there are credit concerns) 210,112 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 8.26% based on a bid of 22.40 and a softMaturity 2015-7-30 at 25.00. Assiduous Reader adrian2 gets his wish and the Loblaws issue – very poorly received when issued in June – makes it on the board despite its less-than-stellar credit. I’d say that, as above, after two-plus months of trying, the underwriters have found a level where this thing will sell … and that they’re under the gun to get it off the shelf well before bank year end in October.
TD.PR.M OpRet 128,110 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 3.82% based on a bid of 26.16 and a softMaturity 2013-10-30 at 25.00.
NA.PR.K PerpetualDiscount 27,294 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.19% based on a bid of 23.85 and a limitMaturity.
TD.PR.R PerpetualDiscount 25,300 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.70% based on a bid of 24.84 and a limitMaturity.
TD.PR.O PerpetualDiscount 17,670 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.78% based on a bid of 21.28 and a limitMaturity. Look at this, compared with TD.PR.R! You can pick up both yield and upside, credit neutral, by giving up coupon!

There were seventeen other index-included $25-pv-equivalent issues trading over 10,000 shares today.

Harry Koza Likes Fixed-Resets

September 5th, 2008

Harry Koza titled his G&M column of today Back to the 70s: We haven’t seen spreads this wide since Carter, in which he states (emphasis added):

tapping the market right after their third-quarter earnings in late August with five-year rate reset preferred share issues (TD, Scotiabank, BMO and CIBC).

Those are interesting. You get a nice dividend for the first five years, ranging from 5 per cent for TD and Scotiabank, to BMO at 5.2 per cent and CIBC at 5.35 per cent. At the end of five years, the dividend resets at a juicy spread over whatever a five-year Government of Canada bond yields at that time – the CIBC one resets at 218 basis points over Canadas. Of course, they are redeemable on every five-year anniversary date as well, so if the current historically wide yield spreads have reverted to precredit crunch levels by then (which, to my jaundiced view of the current credit conflagration, is no better than an even money bet) and the bank can refinance cheaper, they will call them away from you, and you’ll have to reinvest elsewhere, possibly at lower yields.

Still, they are worth a look for taxable income investors. Good credits, decent yield, five-year term. Gee, I almost want to buy some myself.

Five-year term? I’m sure that is how they’re being sold, but I will continue to refer to them as having a “pretend-5-year-term”. If they turn out to be awful investments, they will turn out to be very-long-term instruments.

In a a discussion on FWR the point was made:

Won’t the fact that the issuer may call if there is inflation be a good thing? as unlike a perpetual, all things being equal it keeps the price closer to issue price.

Well, first I’ll make the point that these fixed-reset issues are perpetual. They simply have a dividend that resets. The credit risk is perpetual.

But what will happen if there is inflation? We can expect the Government of Canada 5-year bond yield and 90-day T-bill yield to increase to provide some kind of real yield; and then there will be a credit spread (of varying size) to be added to that. So, yes, one must agree: fixed-reset perpetuals offer a degree of protection against inflation-risk that is not present with “straight” (fixed dividend) perpetuals.

We’re investors, however. The question, as always, is not “Is there risk?” but rather “How much risk, of what particular kinds, is there and how much am I getting paid to take it?”. Given that straight perpetuals now yield about a point – maybe a bit more – over the initial fixed-reset rate, we can say we’re being paid 100 basis points (annually!) to take on that inflation risk.

Some investors may think that’s not enough. Some investors may think it’s very generous. I feel that central banks, globally, learned their lessons very well in the 1970s and that at the present time the Bank of Canada can be trusted to take their inflation mandate seriously (and that politicians can be trusted not to change the mandate).

Is this a guarantee? Am I therefore recommending a 100% holding in straight perpetuals? Of course not. There are no guarantees in either life or investing … inflation risk is forever with us (to some degree or another) and the question is: how do we set up a total portfolio that will allow us to achieve our goals in the face of a wide spectrum of risks – including, but not limited to, inflation.

While I will not condemn the Fixed-Reset Asset class completely – I will not condemn any asset class completely, everything has a price – I will suggest that perpetual preferreds are not the most logical choice of inflation hedge, even if they reset.

Fixed-Resets have attracted a wide variety of views, which I have endeavored to present on PrefBlog:

Make your own minds up and don’t – ever – make any bets you can’t afford to lose.

Update: As stated above, inflation is a risk. But so is deflation:

Other economists anticipate a calamitous deflation. Albert Edwards, economist strategist at Société Générale, the Paris-based investment bank, says an apocalyptic deflation will hit the global economy next year, cutting through equity assets “like Freddy Krueger.”

Michael Mandel, a PhD economist who writes for BusinessWeek magazine, predicts the rapid withering of inflation. “A year from now, will we be talking about galloping inflation or a plunge into deflation?” he asks. “I think the odds favour deflation or, at least, lower inflation. Producer price inflation in the traditional service industries is now only 0.6 per cent on a year-over-year basis – and the majority of the [U.S.] economy is services, not manufacturing. [This measure] is the best gauge of inflation that we have.”

There’s always more than one risk! Deflation will, of course, boost straight perpetuals – at least by the amount of their discount, at least until the first call date.

September 4, 2008

September 4th, 2008

I posted a little while ago about Central Banks and the Eligibility Premium … today there was a dramatic illustration (maybe!) about the suddenly enormous importance of access to central bank lending facilities in a Bloomberg story on European bank risk:

The Frankfurt-based central bank will cut 12 percent from the value of asset-backed securities it accepts as collateral, ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said at a press conference today, an increase from as little as 2 percent previously. Hard- to-value assets will have an additional premium of 5 percent, Trichet said. Unsecured bank bonds will have a 5 percent haircut. The new rules apply from Feb. 1, 2009.

Credit-default swaps on the Markit iTraxx Financial index of subordinated debt of 25 European banks and insurers climbed 9 basis points to 174, the highest since April 1, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. prices at 3:02 p.m. in London.

I am by no means convinced that this is direct cause and effect; and I am by no means convinced that the CDS market has any connection with reality; but both possibilities are subject to discussion!

Moody’s has discovered another CPDO programming error:

Moody’s Investors Service said it may cut the ratings of 854 million euros ($1.2 billion) of constant proportion debt obligations after disclosing a second error in the way it assesses the securities.

Moody’s review was “prompted by the identification of a coding error in a model used for monitoring CPDOs,” the New York-based firm said in a statement today. Moody’s will probably downgrade the affected CPDOs by one or two levels, it said.

Their last whoopsee was discussed on PrefBlog on May 21. CPDOs in general have been introduced to Assiduous Readers in connection with disputes over credit quality.

Pity poor Lehman! I confess I haven’t been following the story very closely as it twists in the wind, but given that its Price/Book Ratio is reported as 0.49 with an Enterprise Value of NEGATIVE 210-billion [a misprint?], my suspicion is that it has a lot of highly illiquid assets that investors are assigning a value far below the value management thinks they’re worth. So … they’re going to try to spin them off:

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. may shift about $32 billion of commercial mortgages and real estate to a new company that will be spun off in a move similar to the good-bank-bad-bank model used in the 1980s banking crisis, two people briefed on the discussions said.

The bad bank, nicknamed Spinco for now, would have about $8 billion of equity coming from Lehman, the people said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the plan is one of several under consideration. Spinco would borrow the remaining $24 billion from Lehman or outside investors.

Korea Development Bank has been in discussions to buy a 25 percent stake in Lehman for $6 billion, according to the people familiar with the talks. That would replace most of the capital Lehman would put into the bad bank.

The OSC has a survey on product suitability (hat tip: Financial Webring Forum). Assiduous Readers now have their long desired chance to tell the regulators that investments should be sold to the public only if they go up. The committee has indicated that anonymous submissions will not only be read, but actually be taken seriously.

Sadly, there is no corresponding survey regarding Advisor Suitability. Force publication of composite performance – publish it on the regulatory website, disk storage of all that data is cheap enough – and most problems disappear instantly.

On a happier note, I’ve decided I like commodity crashes better than financial crises:

The Standard & Poor’s/TSX Composite Index fell 2.5 percent to 12,814.14 in Toronto. Canada’s equity benchmark, which derives about two-thirds of its value from energy, materials and financial stocks, has fallen 7 percent in three days and is 15 percent below its June 18 record.

Even after today’s slight loss, PerpetualDiscounts are up 25bp on the month-to-date, a lack of correlation much more to my tastes than was the case during the dark days of July.

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 N/A N/A
Fixed-Floater 4.59% 4.36% 63,992 16.40 6 +0.0472% 1,114.4
Floater 4.37% 4.43% 51,870 16.46 2 -0.9039% 899.9
Op. Retract 4.94% 4.27% 123,141 3.15 14 -0.1786% 1,053.5
Split-Share 5.34% 5.81% 53,117 4.34 14 +0.0037% 1,045.6
Interest Bearing 6.26% 6.67% 50,245 5.24 2 -0.3549% 1,128.1
Perpetual-Premium 6.17% 5.54% 61,148 2.23 1 -0.1578% 1,005.3
Perpetual-Discount 6.03% 6.09% 190,213 13.76 70 -0.0274% 883.4
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BAM.PR.K Floater -1.8325%  
HSB.PR.D PerpetualDiscount -1.6315% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.23% based on a bid of 20.50 and a limitMaturity.
BAM.PR.J OpRet -1.4675% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.43% based on a bid of 23.50 and a softMaturity 2018-3-30 at 25.00. Compare with BAM.PR.H (6.19% to 2012-3-30), BAM.PR.I (5.45% to 2013-12-30) and BAM.PR.O (7.39% to 2013-6-30). Look at those last two comparators! I love it! There’s nearly a two-point yield pick-up to shorten term six months!
CM.PR.H PerpetualDiscount -1.3179% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.51% based on a bid of 18.72 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.W PerpetualDiscount -1.1192% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.09% based on a bid of 20.32 and a limitMaturity.
BNS.PR.L PerpetualDiscount +1.1352% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.82% based on a bid of 19.60 and a limitMaturity.
CIU.PR.A PerpetualDiscount +1.0471% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.01% based on a bid of 19.30 and a limitMaturity.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
TD.PR.P PerpetualDiscount 133,600 Nesbitt crossed 100,000 at 23.25, then bought 15,000 from anonymous and 11,000 from Desjardins at the same price. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.73% based on a bid of 23.17 and a limitMaturity.
BAM.PR.O OpRet 33,505 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 7.39% based on a bid of 22.90 and optionCertainty 2013-6-30 at 25.00. See above for comparators … the recent frequent appearance of this issue in the volume highlights suggests to me that the underwriters are – slowly! – getting this off their books at this yield.
BNS.PR.O PerpetualDiscount 30,600 Anonymous bought 10,000 from CIBC at 24.89. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.70% based on a bid of 24.87 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.D PerpetualDiscount 22,215 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.05% based on a bid of 18.78 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.E PerpetualDiscount 20,460 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 6.06% based on a bid of 18.74 and a limitMaturity.

There were seventeen other index-included $25-pv-equivalent issues trading over 10,000 shares today.

CDS Recovery Locks

September 4th, 2008

Well, the primer on plain vanilla Credit Default Swaps is getting a little messy, so here’s a dedicate post to recovery locks.

There was a good discussion in the Derivatives chapter of the BIS Quarterly Review of June 2006:

Under certain circumstances, a shortage of deliverable debt can drive up the price of such paper beyond the level that might otherwise be justified by the expected size of repayment. In the case of Delphi, the settlement price of 63.5% (and an average CDS recovery price of 53.5%) was considerably higher than the settlement prices of other firms from the same sector or than rating agencies’ estimates of the ultimate recovery rates on Delphi’s debt.

The Delphi auction underlined the importance of recovery risk for pricing CDSs. Several products have emerged that permit investors to trade this risk separately from default risk (see box). The prices of such products could provide a benchmark against which deliverables could be priced following a credit event, perhaps leading to a more efficient settlement process.

Fixed recovery CDSs In a standard CDS contract, the protection seller is exposed to recovery rate risk upon default of the reference entity in the contract. A fixed recovery CDS eliminates the uncertainty on the recovery rate by fixing a specific recovery value for the CDS contract. In the event of the reference entity’s default, the protection seller makes a cash settlement equal to 100 minus the contract’s fixed recovery rate. If the fixed recovery rate is set to zero, the instrument is referred to as a zero recovery CDS.

Recovery locks

A recovery lock is a forward contract that fixes the recovery rate irrespective of what the secondary market price for the bond is. A recovery lock is documented as a single trade.
Recovery swaps or digital default swaps. In practice, a recovery lock can be structured using two separate trades: a fixed recovery CDS and a plain vanilla CDS. For example, the purchase of a recovery lock at 44% can be seen as two separate transactions, the first one selling protection on a standard CDS, and the second one buying protection through a fixed recovery CDS on the same reference entity at 44%. If the CDS spreads for both transactions happen to be identical, then the premium payments on the transactions will net to zero. If the reference entity defaults, the recovery buyer will take delivery of the defaulted debt and pay 44% of the face value of the bond to the counterparty in the transaction. If the premium payments are not identical for the two transactions, the notional amount for which the recovery is purchased can be adjusted to ensure that there are no interim cash flows in the absence of the reference entity’s default. The paired transaction described here is referred to as a recovery swap or digital default swap. A recovery swap, unlike a recovery lock, is documented as two separate trades.

It wasn’t just Delphi that highlighted the issue, there was a problem with Dana:

Dana Corporation filed for bankruptcy on March 3, 2006. The auto parts maker had about $2 billion in bonds outstanding. However, there was more than $20 billion of CDS outstanding in notional amount referencing the company. This ignited some concerns about a possibility of a short squeeze, as most single-name CDS contracts require physical settlement (i.e., delivery of a bond). Indeed, prices of Dana bonds started to climb from the low 60s reached in late February, one week before the filing (see the chart below). The bond prices soared above 80 on days leading up to the ISDA-led CDS index auction on March 31.

A template contract is available from ISDA.

There was a report dated August 14, however, that the recovery lock market is very thin:

In their latest research report, Bank of America analysts say there are many risks involved in the recovery lock market. They maintain they are not suitable for all investors. Particularly, recovery locks are a relatively new and untested market. They also say recovery locks have significantly less liquidity than regular CDS, such as a smaller size, wider bid-offer premium and fewer dealers making markets. Since recovery locks trade on reference entities that have suffered significant spead widening over the past year, it indicates a greater degree of protection buying and potential for a one-way market, they say. Recovery locks may also be more difficult and more expensive to roll than regular CDS. Also, they say it may be harder to monetize profits in a recovery lock relative to CDS.

This is a problem with all structured products. Typically, you buy (or sell) a structured product because there’s nothing else available that does precisely what you want. Trouble is, this becomes a much more specialized market by definition, and the market will be thin – sometimes very thin indeed. This doesn’t necessarily make the product a bad one, but remember Rule #1: Never invest in anything you’re not prepared to hold forever.

Update, 2008-9-9: An interesting nuance has arisen as a result of the Fannie/Freddie Fiasco: the structured preferred share issue RPB.PR.A has a recovery lock of 40% on its GSE exposure … which might be triggered even though actual recovery will be close to, if not equal to, 100%