TD Securities Analysis Link Added to Blogroll

April 17th, 2008

I’ve made a few additions to the blogroll lately – usually I don’t mention them – and there’s one that needs to be explained.

I’ve added TD Securities Public Currency and Research to the list, largely in the hopes that more of this research will be made public.

Read it, don’t read it, your choice, but remember the basic rules about dealer research:

  • The data is excellent
  • The ideas are interesting
  • The actual value of specific trade recommendations is dubious

I’ve also added a link to the Gummy Stuff website, which contains a plethora of utilities that are very useful for retail investors.

NA.PR.M Settles Slightly Below Par

April 16th, 2008

The new issue of National Bank 6.00% Perpetuals, announced March 31 and reported to have experienced brisk demand settled today, trading 412,080 shares in a range of 24.80-95, closing at 24.86-93, 10×25.

I have not seen an announcement regarding the greenshoe, but this is exercisable for 30 days after closing. The TSX website reflects the advertised 6-million-share ($150-million) size of the offering.

Comparables at the close are:

NA.PR.M and Comparables, 4/16
Issue Quote Dividend YTW CurvePrice
NA.PR.K 24.66-78 1.4625 5.93% 24.82
NA.PR.L 20.92-30 1.2125 5.80% 21.66
NA.PR.M 24.86-93 1.50 6.07% 25.44
BMO.PR.L 24.75-77 1.45 5.91% 25.33

Giant JPMorgan Preferred Issue in the States

April 16th, 2008

In news certain to make Assiduous Reader madequota (who hates new issues) glad that he’s north of the border, JPM has come out with a $6-billion fixed-floater:

The non-cumulative securities priced to yield 419 basis points more than U.S. Treasuries due in 2018 and pay a fixed rate of 7.9 percent for 10 years. If not called, the debt will begin to float at 347 basis points more than the three-month London interbank offered rate, a borrowing benchmark, currently set at 2.73 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Writedowns have reduced JPMorgan’s Tier 1 capital ratio, which regulators monitor to assess a bank’s ability to absorb loan losses, to 8.3 percent from 8.4 percent. That compares with ratios of 7.5 percent at Wachovia Corp. and 7.1 percent at Citigroup Inc. as of Dec. 31.

The minimum for a “well-capitalized” rating from regulators is 6 percent. The assets are calculated by weighing each type relative to its chance of default

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the fourth-largest securities firm, sold $4 billion of preferred shares on April 1 that pay a coupon of 7.25 percent and are convertible to stock when Lehman shares reach $49.87. Citigroup, which has reported subprime losses of $24 billion and raised more than $30 billion in capital since November, pays 8.13 percent for preferred stock it sold in January. Bank of America Corp. is paying 8 percent on perpetual preferred shares sold the same month.

April 16, 2008

April 16th, 2008

The latest report of nefarious skullduggery involves the possibility that banks have under-reported the yields paid on interbank borrowing to avoid looking desperate, resulting in a quote for LIBOR that understates the true rate. Naked Capitalism republishes an extract from the WSJ article; the British Bankers’ Association has threatened to ban any bank caught misquoting rates.

Speaking of the BBA, they have recently released a response to proposals for increased/changed regulation … most of it is UK-specific, but they have strong views on the funding of a central deposit insurer:

We are strongly of the view that a pre-funded deposit protection scheme is inappropriate for UK market. We believe that there should be greater appreciation of the limited ability of deposit protection schemes to save a troubled bank and the impracticality of devising a scheme large enough to cope with the failure of a large UK institution.

We have significant concerns over the competitiveness impacts on the UK financial sector of moving to a pre-funded deposit protection scheme. The costs of moving to a pre-funded scheme would be significant and would have a harmful effect on banks’ competitiveness and their ability to lend to business and individuals alike. The industry has already sustained a significant cost increase from the removal of coinsurance and, subject to further consideration of the issues involved, would be prepared to take on the additional costs of a move to gross payments.

We note that in the US scheme, operated by the FDIC, the pre-fund was created for the purposes of closure and/or failure of a large number of small entities operating in that market. It is not set up to resolve problems in a bank the size of Northern Rock nor does the US system necessarily need a pre-fund to operate. Consumer confidence is driven by expectations that money can be retrieved in a crisis. We believe it would be impractical to build up a UK fund of sufficient size to deliver his. The United States ex-ante scheme of $49bn, built up over many years and in relation to circa $4 trillion insured deposits, is approximately equivalent to Northern Rock’s retail deposit base prior to the run. So unless it is a small institution that is in distress there would not be enough in the fund to head off a run.Whilst a pre-funded scheme would provide a ready pool of liquidity in the event of a bank default there are other more efficient means of delivering liquidity for prompt payout.

FDIC insurance is backed by the “full faith and credit of the United States Government”. We believe that a similar arrangement whereby the UK government provides support for an FSCS deposit scheme which borrows funds only when required provides the most effective balance for achieving a credible scheme in the eyes of the consumer whilst minimising costs to the industry.

In an update to my post Is Crony Capitalism Really Returning to America, I confessed to some confusion regarding the rationale for brokerages having such enormous chunks of sub-prime on their books:

Taking the last point a little further, I will highlight my confusion as to why the brokerages are taking such enormous write-downs on sub-prime product. This has never made a lot of sense to me

. The WSJ (via Naked Capitalism) has provided a much more venal rationale than the one I suggested at the time:

In August 2006, one Merrill trader fought back when managers pushed to have the firm retain $975 million of a new $1.5 billion CDO named Octans….

The result was a heated phone conversation with Merrill’s CDO co-chief, Harin De Silva, who was out of the office. Mr. De Silva urged the trader to accept the securities….The alternative was to let the deal fall apart, which would leave Merrill holding the risk of all the securities that would have backed the CDO.

In the end, Mr. Roy’s group took the $975 million of securities on the firm’s books….a step that helped the firm hold its top rank in CDO underwriting and led to an estimated $15 million in fee revenue…

Pressures rose in early 2007 as the housing bubble lost air. Merrill set out to reduce its exposure, in an effort referred to innocuously as “de-risking.”

It could have sold off billions of dollars’ worth of mortgage-backed bonds that it had stockpiled with the intention of packaging them into more CDOs. But with the market for such bonds slipping, Merrill would have had to record losses of $1.5 billion to $3 billion on the bonds, says a person familiar with the matter.

Instead, Merrill tried a different strategy: quickly turn the bonds into more CDOs.

Doing so was no longer a profitable enterprise….Still, executives believed that so long as all they retained on their books were super-senior tranches, they would be shielded from falls in the prices of mortgage securities….

In the first seven months of 2007, Merrill created more than $30 billion in mortgage CDOs, according to Dealogic, keeping Merrill No. 1 in Wall Street underwriting for this type of security.

The call for comments, Financial stability and depositor protection: strengthening the framework. At issue are the following notes regarding UK deposit insurance:

1.48 On 1 October 2007, the FSA changed the FSCS compensation limit applying to deposits so that 100 per cent of an eligible depositor’s losses up to £35,000 are covered. The FSA proposes that this limit will continue to be applied per person per bank, and without any co-insurance below the limit. The FSA intends to consult on a review of the FSCS limits in all sectors and other changes to the compensation scheme. The Authorities will also work with the financial sector to explore alternative ways for individuals to cover amounts above the threshold, as the Treasury Select Committee has recommended.

4.42 The Authorities have considered the possibility of making depositors a preferential class of creditor, (i.e. to introduce depositor preference), but the likely adverse consequences of this for other creditors in insolvency proceedings and for banks generally, in terms of increased costs of credit, shorter loan periods and increased demand for collateral, appear to make this undesirable in the UK context. It is therefore proposed that the claims of the FSCS and depositors (whose claims are not settled by the FSCS) will continue to rank alongside the claims of other ordinary unsecured creditors. While a bank liquidator will have a duty to assist the FSCS to effect a repaid payout (i.e. to process depositor information at an early stage), the funding for any payout to depositors would be provided by the FSCS.

5.53 The Treasury Select Committee has identified two disadvantages of a ‘pay as you go’ approach to financing the FSCS:

April 15, 2008

April 15th, 2008

There are reports that Citigroup’s sale of LBO debt is not going as planned, with investors picking off debt from the deals they know best, rather than buying the complete package holus-bolus.

And the SIV-unwinding proceeds apace. Bloomberg reports that State Street bought $850-million in assets from its sponsored conduits; Assiduous Readers will remember that PrefBlog reported on August 28 that State Street had the highest exposure to conduits of its American and European peers. However, they’ve experienced a strong first quarter:

“During the first quarter, we strengthened our regulatory capital position with strong net income of more than $500 million and the issuance of $500 million of tier-1 qualified regulatory capital.”

Their 8-K filed today discloses (page 32 of the PDF) that their Tier 1 Capital Ratio of 12.35% would decline to 10.15% if all their ABCP conduits were to be consolidated. They have a considerable investment portfolio devoted to AAA tranches of sub-prime – fortunately, mostly well seasoned, with a high degree of credit enhancement.

Credit enhancement is a good thing, with bank repossessions of houses doubling over 2007 levels! Meanwhile, Naked Capitalism highlights a story about increased corporate bankruptcies … some firms were dancing pretty close to the edge even in those halcyon days of easy money and have now been pushed off, as I suggested September 20.

Derivative indices have come in for some heavy criticism:

“The indices are just trading on their own account with no relationship whatsoever to an underlying cash market that’s ceased to exist,” Jacques Aigrain, chief executive officer of Zurich-based Swiss Reinsurance Co., said at a March 18 insurance conference in Dubai.

“The last thing the securitization market needs is another no-cash-upfront instrument that people can use to knock the markets about with,” said Andrew Dennis, the London-based head of the asset-backed debt syndication group for UBS AG of Zurich.

The latest version for AAA rated subprime mortgage bonds slumped by 43 percent since it began trading in August, according to Markit, as rising U.S. home loan delinquencies triggered a surge in the cost of credit-default swaps. That implies a 53 percent loss on the underlying mortgages, according to Schultz, almost four times the 13.75 percent rate predicted by Wachovia.

The cost to protect $10 million of AAA commercial mortgage securities jumped 10-fold during one six-month period to $100,000 a year, based on the first CMBX index from Markit. That implies about 13 percent losses on the underlying loans, more than four times the 2.8 percent forecast in the event of a recession by JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst Alan Todd in New York.

“ABX, CMBX, any kind of X you like, are totally uncorrelated to any kind of underlying market,” Swiss Re’s Aigrain said at the Dubai conference.

Indices without an option of forcing delivery (of something! anything!) are evil. Assiduous Readers will remember that I pointed out the discrepency between the cash market and the index-marked market in my review of the IMF report as well as the earlier Goldman Sachs paper.

There was finally a day of decent volume for preferreds, but price moves were pretty insignificant.

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 5.12% 5.17% 27,663 15.20 2 +0.0000% 1,088.4
Fixed-Floater 4.77% 5.20% 63,560 15.27 8 +0.3722% 1,048.1
Floater 5.01% 5.05% 67,669 15.44 2 +1.1311% 832.3
Op. Retract 4.85% 3.41% 85,355 3.32 15 -0.0150% 1,047.2
Split-Share 5.38% 6.00% 86,859 4.08 14 +0.0710% 1,029.8
Interest Bearing 6.16% 6.12% 64,909 3.89 3 +0.3055% 1,100.1
Perpetual-Premium 5.91% 5.59% 201,602 4.81 7 -0.0562% 1,017.7
Perpetual-Discount 5.65% 5.67% 286,676 13.65 63 -0.0703% 922.1
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
RY.PR.A PerpetualDiscount -1.5370% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.52% based on a bid of 20.50 and a limitMaturity.
HSB.PR.D PerpetualDiscount -1.0989% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.60% based on a bid of 22.50 and a limitMaturity.
PWF.PR.F PerpetualDiscount +1.0204% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.78% based on a bid of 22.77 and a limitMaturity.
BNA.PR.C SplitShare +1.0698% Asset coverage of just under 2.7:1 as of March 31, according to the company. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 7.25% based on a bid of 19.84 and a hardMaturity 2019-1-10 at 25.00. Compare with BNA.PR.A (6.57% to 2010-9-30) and BNA.PR.B (8.45% to 2016-3-25).
LFE.PR.A SplitShare +1.1707% Asset coverage of 2.4+:1 as of March 31, according to the company. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.42% based on a bid of 10.37 and a hardMaturity 2012-12-1 at 10.00.
BAM.PR.G FixFloat +1.4174%  
BAM.PR.B Floater +1.5385%  
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BNS.PR.J PerpetualDiscount 115,900 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.44% based on a bid of 23.93 and a limitMaturity.
BCE.PR.A FixFloat 74,550 Nesbitt crossed 18,000 at 23.90, then 50,000 at 24.05.
RY.PR.K OpRet 71,625 Anonymous bought 10,000 from Nesbitt at 25.30, then 10,000, then 19,900 at the same price, but not necessarily the same anonymous! Then, anonymous bought 12,000 from RBC at 25.30. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 0.34% based on a bid of 25.26 and a call 2008-5-15 at 25.00.
BMO.PR.K PerpetualDiscount 59,300 Scotia crossed 50,000 at 22.90. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.82% based on a bid of 22.90 and a limitMaturity.
CM.PR.A OpRet 58,315 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of -1.63% based on a bid of 25.85 and a call 2008-5-15 at 25.75.

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

AO.PR.A & AO.PR.B On TSX Delisting Review

April 15th, 2008

The TSX has announced that it is:

reviewing Algo Group Inc.’s Common Shares (Symbol: AO), Convertible Redeemable Retractable Third Preferred Shares Series I (Symbol: AO.PR.A) and 6% Cumulative Redeemable Convertible Second Preferred Shares Series I (Symbol: AO.PR.B) with respect to meeting the continued listing requirements. The Company has been granted 90 days in which to regain compliance with these requirements, pursuant to the Remedial Review
Process.

Algo is not having a nice time. The most recent financials on SEDAR show a working capital deficiency and a shareholders’ equity deficiency. Their recent press release was a tale of woe:

Algo Group Inc. (TSX : AO) announced that it has recently sold certain assets of its W. Green Jeans division and as a consequence ceased operations in this division. The sale was completed with 4453166 Canada Inc., a company controlled by Mr. Warren Green. The proceeds were used by the Company to reduce the loan with its primary lender. Mr. Green, previously the Company’s Vice President, Sportswear, has terminated his employment with the Company.
At the outset of 2008, due to an administrative reorganization of Algo, the services of the Company’s Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Ken Labelle, were terminated. Additionally, due to the administrative reorganization and Algo’s financial situation, Algo was not in a position early in the year to have its auditors commence the audit fieldwork required in order to complete its annual audit. As a result, the audit of Algo’s consolidated financial statements will not be completed by March 31, 2008 and, as such, Algo will not be in a position to file its audited consolidated financial statements, related audit report and MD&A by the March 31, 2008 filing deadline applicable to reporting issuers in Canada.

AO.PR.A and AO.PR.B are not tracked by HIMIPref™

FSV.PR.U Put on Credit Review – Developing by DBRS

April 15th, 2008

This is a USD denominated cumulative perpetual (see SEDAR, company search “FirstService”, Document type “Security holders documents – English”, dated June 27, 2007) issued as a stock dividend in June, 2007.

Following their announcement of the sale of their security division, DBRS has announced it:

has today placed the Pfd-3 (low) rating of FirstService Corporation’s (FSC or the Company) Preferred Share issue Under Review with Developing Implications.

The action follows FSC’s statement that it intends to use the proceeds from the recently announced divestiture of its integrated security division, together with existing funds and available capital, to finance organic growth and acquisitions in its commercial real estate, residential property management, and property improvement services divisions.

DBRS will also focus on FSC’s financial intentions, as we seek to gain comfort that credit metrics will remain appropriate for the current rating category within the context of the growth strategy and changing business profile. Prior to the divestiture, the Company’s debt balance was $331 million ($550 million lease-adjusted) at December 31, 2007 versus $230 million ($430 million lease-adjusted) at March 31, 2007, as a result of strong acquisition activity in its real estate services areas (total of $132 million in the first nine months of F2008). This has led debt-to-EBITDA for LTM ending December 31, 2007 to increase to 2.4 times (x) from 2.0x in F2007. (Corresponding lease-adjusted debt-to-EBITDAR has increased to 3.2x from 2.9x.)

FSV.PR.U is not tracked by HIMIPref™

Bank Regulation: The Assets to Capital Multiple

April 15th, 2008

I have been fascinated with the IMF Global Financial Stability Report that was recently reviewed on PrefBlog … particularly Figure 1.17:

imf_117.jpg

The IMF comments:

Some banks have rapidly expanded their balance sheets in recent years, largely by increasing their holdings of highly rated securities that carry low risk weightings for regulatory capital purposes (see Box 1.3 on page 31). Part of the increase in assets reflects banks’ trading and investment activities. Investments grew as a share of total assets, and wholesale markets, including securitizations used to finance such assets, grew as a share of total funding (Figure 1.16). Banks that adopted this strategy aggressively became more vulnerable to illiquidity in the wholesale money markets, earnings volatility from marked-to-market assets, and illiquidity in structured finance markets. Equity markets appear to be penalizing those banks that adopted this strategy most aggressively (Figure 1.17).

The variation in multiple for the banks listed is ENORMOUS. The new derisive nickname for UBS is Union Bank of Singapore … but what are the implications for Canadian banks?

First, let’s gather up the ratios for these banks:

Assets to Risk-Weighted-Assets Ratios for Canadian Banks
  RBC BNS TD BMO CIBC
Risk-Weighted Assets 241,206 234,900 163,230 179,487 128,267
Total Assets 632,761 449,422 435,200 376,825 347,734
Assets:RWA 2.6 1.9 2.7 2.1 2.7

All the numbers are within the range for most banks – as reported by the IMF – but there are some fascinating differences that I might write about at another time.

Clearly, however, these differences can be significant and there is a clear indication that UBS was “gaming the system” by loading up with AAA assets that had no risk weight but – regardless of their investment merit – had, shall we say, considerable mark-to-market risk.

OSFI attempts to control such gaming by the imposition of an Assets-to-Capital multiple:

Institutions are expected to meet an assets to capital multiple test on a continuous basis. The assets to capital multiple is calculated by dividing the institution’s total assets, including specified off-balance sheet items, by the sum of its adjusted net tier 1 capital and adjusted tier 2 capital as defined in section 2.5 of this guideline. All items that are deducted from capital are excluded from total assets. Tier 3 capital is excluded from the test.

Off-balance sheet items for this test are direct credit substitutes1, including letters of credit and guarantees, transaction-related contingencies, trade-related contingencies and sale and repurchase agreements, as described in chapter 3. These are included at their notional principal amount. In the case of derivative contracts, where institutions have legally binding netting agreements (meeting the criteria established in chapter 3, Netting of Forwards, Swaps, Purchased Options and Other Similar Derivatives) the resulting on-balance sheet amounts can be netted for the purpose of calculating the assets to capital multiple.

Under this test, total assets should be no greater than 20 times capital, although this multiple can be exceeded with the Superintendent’s prior approval to an amount no greater than 23 times. Alternatively, the Superintendent may prescribe a lower multiple. In setting the assets to capital multiple for individual institutions, the Superintendent will consider such factors as operating and management experience, strength of parent, earnings, diversification of assets, type of assets and appetite for risk.

BMO is to be commended for disclosing its Asset-to-Capital multiple of 18.39, but I don’t see this number disclosed for any of the others. So … it will have to be done roughly, using the total assets from the table above, over the total regulatory capital:

Assets to Risk-Weighted-Assets Ratios for Canadian Banks
  RBC BNS TD BMO CIBC
Total Assets 632,761 449,422 435,200 376,825 347,734
Total Regulatory Capital
Tier 1 + Tier 2
27,113 23,874 23,117 20,203 18,713
Very Rough
Assets-to-Capital
Multiple
(internal check)
23.3
(23.3)
18.8
(18.6)
18.8
(19.0)
18.7
(18.6)
18.6
(18.5)
Reported
Total Capital
Ratio
11.2% 10.2% 14.2% 11.3% 14.6%
The internal check on the Assets-to-Capital multiple is the Assets-to-RWA multiple divided by the Total Capital Ratio. Variance will be due to rounding.

Well! This is interesting! According to these very, very rough calculations, RBC has an Assets-to-Capital multiple of 23.3:1, which is both over the limit and well above its competitors. This may be a transient thing … there was a jump in assets in the first quarter:

RBC: Change in Assets
From 4Q07 to 1Q08
Item Change ($-billion)
Securities +6
Repos +12
Loans +8
Derivatives +7
Total +33

I have sent the following message to RBC via their Investor Relations Page:

I would appreciate learning your Assets-to-Capital multiple (as defined by OSFI) as of the end of the first quarter, 2008, and any detail you can provide regarding its calculation.

I have derived a very rough estimate of 23.3:1, based on total assets of 632,761 and total regulatory capital of 27,113

Update, 2008-04-17: RBC has responded:

Thank you for your question about our assets to capital multiple (ACM). In keeping with prior quarter-end practice, we did not disclose our ACM in Q1/08 but were well within the OSFI minimum requirement. Our ACM is disclosed on a quarterly basis (with a 6-7 week lag) on OSFI’s website. We understand this should be available over the next few days. Below is an excerpt from the OSFI guidelines outlining the calculation of the ACM. We hope this helps.

Update, 2008-6-4: From the FDIC publication, Estimating the Capital Impact of Basel II in the United States:

April 14, 2008

April 14th, 2008

On March 31 I indicated my approval of the idea that the Fed should have discretion over the conduct of monetary policy; in Econbrowser, Prof. James Hamilton has pointed out that discretion should have boundaries:

And this is where I feel that Robert Reich raises an excellent point:

the Fed can expose taxpayers to hundreds of billions of dollars of potential losses without a single appropriation hearing, as it did recently when it allowed Wall Street’s major investment banks to exchange tainted mortgage-backed securities for nice clean loans from the Treasury. And the Fed can do amazing things– like decide one big bank, JP Morgan, is going to take over another, Bear Stearns, backed by $29 billion of taxpayer money.

Reich is exactly correct– the Fed’s recent behavior does expose U.S. taxpayers to a risk of default on these assets. While some may argue that the Treasury is exposed to risks in the current situation no matter what the Fed does, it seems to me that this decision is ultimately a matter for fiscal policy. And just as I don’t want Congress deciding how much money to print, I don’t want the Fed deciding how much taxpayer money is appropriate to pledge for purposes of promoting financial stability.

I agree very much that Congress has a quite proper role in determining the magnitude of the fiscal risk that the Fed opts to assume. Congress’s statutory limit on the quantity of debt that the Treasury can issue is something I have previously derided as political circus. But a statutory limit on the non-Treasury assets that the Fed is allowed to hold might make sense. Perhaps the outcome of a public debate on this issue would be a decision that the Fed needs the power to lend to private borrowers even more than the $800 billion or so limit that it would run into from completely swapping out its entire portfolio. Indeed, Greg Ip speculates on the possibility that the Fed could “ask Treasury to issue more debt than it needs to fund government operations.” Surely that would be something that should require congressional approval. Or perhaps after deliberations, Congress would decide that the business of swapping Treasury debt for private sector loans is one that is better run by the Treasury rather than the Federal Reserve.

Another bank, Wachovia, is cutting its dividend and raising capital, while Deutsche is flogging its LBO debt in an effort to delever … in competition with Citigroup’s efforts, mentioned April 11 to unload $12-billion worth.

A very quiet day for preferreds.

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 5.14% 5.18% 28,002 15.20 2 +0.1428% 1,088.4
Fixed-Floater 4.79% 5.23% 61,964 15.22 8 +0.0694% 1,044.2
Floater 5.06% 5.10% 68,483 15.34 2 +0.3607% 823.0
Op. Retract 4.85% 4.07% 82,547 3.27 15 -0.1465% 1,047.3
Split-Share 5.38% 6.01% 87,290 4.08 14 -0.1779% 1,029.1
Interest Bearing 6.18% 6.21% 65,707 3.89 3 +0.0005% 1,096.8
Perpetual-Premium 5.91% 5.51% 206,484 4.81 7 -0.1835% 1,018.3
Perpetual-Discount 5.65% 5.67% 288,611 13.66 63 -0.0090% 922.7
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
PWF.PR.F PerpetualDiscount -2.4665% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.83% based on a bid of 22.54 and a limitMaturity.
BNA.PR.B SplitShare -1.4634% Asset coverage of just under 2.7:1 as of March 31, according to the company. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 8.46% based on a bid of 20.20 and a hardMaturity 2016-3-25 at 25.00. Compare with BNA.PR.A (6.57% to 2010-9-30) and BNA.PR.C (7.38% to 2019-1-10).
PWF.PR.I PerpetualPremium -1.1792% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.82% based on a bid of 25.14 and a call 2012-5-30 at 25.00.
SLF.PR.C PerpetualDiscount -1.0140% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.48% based on a bid of 20.50 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.A PerpetualDiscount +1.1170% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.43% based on a bid of 20.82 and a limitMaturity.
SLF.PR.A PerpetualDiscount +1.1463% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.43% based on a bid of 22.06 and a limitMaturity.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
PWF.PR.H PerpetualDiscount (for now!) 107,910 Nesbitt crossed 15,000 at 25.05, then 40,000 at the same price. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.71% based on a bid of 25.01 and a call 2012-1-9 at 25.00.
TD.PR.Q PerpetualPremium 73,300 TD crossed 70,000 at 25.10. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.59% based on a bid of 25.03 and a call 2017-3-2 at 25.00.
BMO.PR.H PerpetualDiscount 29,125 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.72% based on a bid of 23.36 and a limitMaturity.
CU.PR.B PerpetualPremium 21,400 Three trades! CIBC crossed 10,000, then sold 2,000 to Nesbitt, then crossed 9,400, all at 25.40. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.79% based on a bid of 25.41 and a call 2012-7-1 at 25.00.
TD.PR.R PerpetualDiscount 18,480 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.67% based on a bid of 24.97 and a limitMaturity.

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

RY Files Innovative Tier 1 Capital Prospectus

April 14th, 2008

I was going to leave this one alone, but I see that some concern is being expressed in the comments to April 11.

Royal Bank has announced:

that it has filed a preliminary prospectus with securities commissions across Canada for the issuance of Innovative Tier 1 capital of the bank.

RBC Capital Trust, a subsidiary of Royal Bank of Canada, will issue RBC TruCS Series 2008-1. RBC Capital Trust is a closed-end trust established under the laws of Ontario. RBC Capital Markets acted as lead agent on the issue.

The capital will be issued for general corporate purposes.

This is pretty emphatic language (“will issue” … “acted as lead agent” … “will be issued”) so there doesn’t appear to be much doubt.

In the analysis of RY’s capital structure at year-end, it was found that RY’s Tier 1 capital was 15% comprised of Innovative Tier 1 Capital, which is the limit allowed by OSFI. Innovative Tier 1 Capital has been briefly discussed on PrefBlog … basically, it’s a preferred share dressed up in bonds’ clothing to seduce the unwary. Spreads have widened considerable during the credit crunch, and I now see the that the TruCS with a pretend-maturity of Dec 31/2015 are quoted at 282bp-272bp over Canadas, a huge increase over the 60-ish bp spread in February 2007.

Due to the nature of RY’s capital structure, I’m a bit surprised that they’re issuing the Innovative Tier 1 rather than preferred shares … but if we assume they can do a new deal at 300 over Canadas for a pretend-10-year term, that would be about 6.55%. If we assume that they would have to offer 5.8% for a preferred, that’s an interest equivalent of 8.12% and given the fragility of the market, a mere 5.8% is by no means assured.

For the nonce, Assiduous Readers may presume that this pseudo-bond issuance decreases – very, very slightly – the chance that speculation regarding a RY preferred issue will come to fruition.

Update: Here are the details on 1Q08 capital structure

RY Capital Structure
October, 2007
& January, 2008
  4Q07 1Q08
Total Tier 1 Capital 23,383 23,564
Common Shareholders’ Equity 95.2% 97.9%
Preferred Shares 10.0% 9.9%
Innovative Tier 1 Capital Instruments 14.9% 14.9%
Non-Controlling Interests in Subsidiaries 0.1% 0.1%
Goodwill -20.3% -22.8%
Note that the definition of “Goodwill” has not only changed from Basel 1 to Basel 2, but there are some exciting new categories of Tier 1 Capital deductions as well, which have been included in the “Goodwill” shown here

Principal #1 of the OSFI Draft Guidelines states:

Principle #1: OSFI expects FRFIs to meet capital requirements without undue reliance on innovative instruments.
Common shareholders’ equity (i.e., common shares, retained earnings and participating account surplus, as applicable) should be the predominant form of a FRFI’s Tier 1 capital.

1(a) Innovative instruments must not, at the time of issuance, make up more than 15% of a FRFI’s net Tier 1 capital. Any excess cannot be included in regulatory capital.
If, at any time after issuance, a FRFI’s ratio of innovative instruments to net Tier 1 capital exceeds 15%, the FRFI must immediately notify OSFI. The FRFI must also provide a plan, acceptable to OSFI, showing how the FRFI proposes to eliminate the excess quickly. A FRFI will generally be permitted to include such excesses in its Tier 1 capital until such time as the excess is eliminated in accordance with its plan.
1(b) A strongly capitalized FRFI should not have innovative instruments and perpetual non-cumulative preferred shares that, in aggregate, exceed 25% of its net Tier 1 capital. Tier 1-qualifying preferred shares issued in excess of this limit can be included in Tier 2 capital.
1(c) For the purposes of this principle, “net Tier 1 capital” means Tier 1 capital available after deductions for goodwill etc., as set out in OSFI’s MCCSR or CAR Guideline, as applicable.

An Advisory dated January 2008 states:

After taking into account the fundamental characteristics of tier 1 capital and reviewing guidance in other jurisdictions, OSFI has decided to increase this limit to 30%. The maximum amount of innovative tier 1 instruments that can be included in the aggregate limit calculation continues to be 15% of net tier 1.

RBC’s extant Innovative Tier 1 Capital does not have any interesting dates coming up. RY.PR.K has its soft-retraction coming up in August … but these are currently in Tier 1 capital in the “preferred” category, having been grandfathered from the old rules.

So what’s up? It would seem that there’s another shoe left to drop.

Update, 2008-04-21: They are issuing $500-million with a pretend-10-year maturity, at Canadas + 310bp