Market Action

October 15, 2007

The Web is alive with commentary on the plan to create a super-SIV, which would hold about $80-billion in non-sub-prime ABS, finance with commercial paper and be guaranteed by the super-major banks – notably Citigroup, which took a beating today on credit concerns.

The Wall Street Journal has used the word “Bailout” in describing this plan; James Hamilton at Econbrowser asks:

The reality is that someone must absorb a huge capital loss. The question we should be asking from the point of view of public policy is, Who should that someone be?

My answer is: the shareholders of Citigroup.

Accrued Interest has taken a more nuanced view:

if the assets are valued correctly, a significant loss will still be realized by the sellers, because even very strong non-resi ABS have widened significantly in recent months. The losses might only be like 1-2% of par, … We’ll see how well the assets are indeed valued. Call me highly skeptical.

SivieMae will supposedly have a limited life, although I’m skeptical on that as well, perhaps as short as 1-year.

Here we have some banks, particularly Citigroup, who were using off-balance sheet vehicles to increase their leverage. … Those that choose to stay away from the SIV structures were still dragged down by the liquidity crunch.

Now squint your eyes a little and what do you see? One bank paying another bank a fee to avoid reporting their complete assets and liabilities on their balance sheet.

I find it rather surprising that this move should arouse so much interest, frankly. $80-billion in financing is a big deal, but not an incredible deal. What interests me much more about the deal is the banks motivations. Liquidity guarantees are charged to the banks’ risk-weighted assets at a 10% CCF. If the banks actually have to implement those guarantees – either directly or through buying the commercial paper – then it gets charged at a 100% CCF.

Naked Capitalism notes:

Citi can provide funding for however many days and weeks until the conduit is functioning, but it seems highly unlikely that this entity will be up and running before Citi starts feeling squeezed.

I have previously speculated as to the adequacy of the 10% number, suggesting that:

perhaps something like … “10% on the first capital-equivalent, 15% on the next, 20%…” might permit the market to operate efficiently while keeping the number of lines under control.

However, Citigroup’s Tier 1 Capital Ratio has declined to 7.4% in 3Q07, from 8.6% in 1Q06. That’s a hell of a drop, and it has occurred even as Shareholders equity increased from $114.4-billion to $127.4-billion. Note that HSBC had a Tier 1 ratio of 9.3% at June 30, 2007, while Bank of America was at 8.64% at year-end and 8.52% at the half. Bank of America, it will be recalled, recently purchased LaSalle Bank as part of the ABN AMRO deal for USD 21-billion. Bank of America has issued a press release stating:

consortium of leading global banks today announced an agreement in principle to create and provide liquidity support to a master conduit to enhance liquidity in the market for asset-backed commercial paper and medium-term notes issued by structured investment vehicles (“SIVs”).

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) and several other financial institutions have reached an agreement in principle to create a single master liquidity enhancement conduit (“M-LEC”). Once established, M-LEC will agree, for a set period of time, to purchase qualifying highly-rated assets from certain existing SIVs that choose, in their sole discretion, to take advantage of this new source of liquidity. Access to such liquidity is intended to allow participating sellers to meet pending redemptions and facilitate asset-backed commercial paper rollovers.

Now: why?

All the comment so far is to the effect that this is a bail-out of Citigroup. Is it? Is it really?

Citigroup’s Tier 1 ratio is low for a global bank, but it not yet anywhere close to the point where they have to make room for extra Fed Inspectors. Given Citigroup’s exposure to the SIV market of about $100-billion, they clearly have the most to gain from a re-normalization in ABCP … but are they really afraid of financing or are they afraid of spreads?

I’m not going to stick my neck out too far here. I haven’t studied the market in detail, I’m not hearing the gossip. But I will suggest that there’s a reasonable chance that the consortium is pulling a JPMorgan.

We all remember, of course, the Panic of 1907. In the denouement to that crisis, Morgan stuck it to a fellow banker, purchasing a big whack of stock extremely cheaply – and I’m afraid I cannot remember the name of the company off-hand. I don’t think it was the US Steel deal; US Steel had to be bullied into buying whichever it was they bought. This was Morgan’s bank buying common equity in something else, a railroad, perhaps, if memory serves. At any rate, once Morgan had become convinced the world was not going to end, he got down to the serious business of sticking it to the competition.

Update: I am remembering two different versions of the same incident. Geisst claims that “Morgan agreed to rescue Moore & Schley if it would sell him its holdings in Tennessee Coal & Iron at $45-million, considerably less than the market price…. US Steel acquired the stock, Moore & Schley and the Trust Company of America were saved, and the steel trust became larger and more influential than ever. … Almost all were in agreement that the deal found remarkably little resistance given that Morgan made at least a $650 million profit”. The story in Bruner & Carr is more complex, and has US Steel resisting the importunities to take over TC&I. For sources, see The Panic of 1907

So how about this scenario? The ABCP market could really use a helping hand, and this consortium is going to provide it. A decline in spreads will benefit Citigroup. And note, from BofA’s press release:

Once established, M-LEC will agree, for a set period of time, to purchase qualifying highly-rated assets from certain existing SIVs that choose, in their sole discretion, to take advantage of this new source of liquidity. Access to such liquidity is intended to allow participating sellers to meet pending redemptions and facilitate asset-backed commercial paper rollovers.

We know, from the continuing decline in US ABCP that I have been gleefully documenting every Thursday for the past month or so, that there are some US conduits that are on the ropes. And Canadian conduits, of course, are on the mat, but there’s no indication as yet whether these conduits will be eligible to sell assets to the consortium.

I suggest that the following hypothesis at least be considered: the consortium is willing to extend itself to bail out the non-bank conduits. With every expectation of making an obscene profit from the deal.

As support for this idea, I’ll go back to the Naked Capitalism post:

That takes us to the problem of the assets that will go into the MLEC. As the New York Times tells us:

To maintain its credibility with investors from whom it would raising money, the conduit will not buy any bonds that are tied to mortgages made to people with spotty, or subprime, credit histories. Rather, it will buy debt with the highest ratings — AAA and AA — and debt that is backed by other mortgages, credit card receipts and other assets.

Huh? The market is objecting to the crappy assets in the SIVs, not the better quality ones. It would seem more logical to take the lousy assets, issue a guarantee, and seek funding for them, and let the banks keep the good assets in existing SIVs, which ought to be marketable once the dodgy assets are excised. The banks are on the hook for the SIVs, anyhow, since they are having to fund the SIVs via backup credit lines, so any mechanism that enables them to get third party funding advances the ball.

My point exactly. Everybody’s screaming bail-out here, worried about Citigroup’s finances and deeply suspicious of Treasury’s involvement … but the actual structure looks a lot more like a vulture fund than anything else to me – with, perhaps, Citigroup as weak sister, but still a member of the family … especially as it benefits so directly from tighter spreads on ABCP in general.

I’ll look up the details on the 1907 Morgan thing shortly.

Good volume in prefs today; perpetuals continued to slide.

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 4.73% 4.68% 654,375 15.91 1 0.0000% 1,043.7
Fixed-Floater 4.88% 4.76% 102,267 15.84 7 +0.0998% 1,039.5
Floater 4.51% 4.20% 73,604 10.73 3 -0.0134% 1,040.8
Op. Retract 4.86% 4.07% 76,215 3.13 15 -0.1042% 1,027.8
Split-Share 5.16% 4.86% 84,464 4.26 15 -0.0308% 1,044.7
Interest Bearing 6.26% 6.36% 56,608 3.64 4 +0.4626% 1,056.5
Perpetual-Premium 5.68% 5.48% 95,634 8.81 17 -0.2495% 1,012.0
Perpetual-Discount 5.42% 5.46% 325,647 14.73 47 -0.2831% 928.9
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
W.PR.H PerpetualDiscount -3.2573% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.77% based on a bid of 23.76 and a limitMaturity.
NA.PR.L PerpetualDiscount -1.6431% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.61% based on a bid of 21.55 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.W PerpetualDiscount -1.5183% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.32% based on a bid of 23.35 and a limitMaturity.
ELF.PR.G PerpetualDiscount -1.5078% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.90% based on a bid of 20.25 and a limitMaturity.
PWF.PR.E PerpetualDiscount -1.2092% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.55% based on a bid of 24.51 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.C PerpetualDiscount -1.1312% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.34% based on a bid of 21.85 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.E PerpetualDiscount -1.1111% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.35% based on a bid of 21.36 and a limitMaturity.
ELF.PR.F PerpetualDiscount -1.0634% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.72% based on a bid of 23.26 and a limitMaturity.
BSD.PR.A InterestBearing +1.5021% Asset coverage of just under 1.8:1 as of October 12, according to Brookfield Funds. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 7.09% (mostly as interest) based on a bid of 9.46 and a hardMaturity 2015-3-31 at 10.00
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BMO.PR.K PerpetualDiscount 399,385 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.39% based on a bid of 24.50 and a limitMaturity.
BNS.PR.N PerpetualDiscount 114,300 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.32% based on a bid of 24.80 and a limitMaturity.
MFC.PR.C PerpetualDiscount 111,014 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.23% based on a bid of 21.66 and a limitMaturity.
BNS.PR.L PerpetualDiscount 45,788 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.34% based on a bid of 21.17 and a limitMaturity.
GWO.PR.H PerpetualDiscount 38,603 RBC crossed 32,000 at 22.95. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.34% based on a bid of 22.90 and a limitMaturity.

There were seventeen other index-included $25.00-equivalent issues trading over 10,000 shares today.

Update: I have updated the reference to Morgan in the body of the post.

Issue Comments

Reset Percentage for IQW.PR.D Announced

Quebecor has announced:

the fixed dividend rate for its Series 3 Cumulative Redeemable First Preferred Shares (TSX:IQW.PR.D) (the “Series 3 Preferred Shares”) will be equal to 150% of the yield on five-year non-callable Government of Canada bonds to be determined on November 9, 2007.

150%! Given that 5-year Canadas are now yielding about 4.40%, that implies that – in the absence of market movement in the next three weeks – the reset rate will be 6.6%, or $1.65, an increase from the current level of $1.538.

It appears that Quebecor would really prefer its IQW.PR.D holders to continue to elect fixed-rate, and not to exercise their right to convert to the ratchet-rate issue … which may be expected to pay 100% of prime for the next five years, given their recent downgrade to ‘deep junk’.

The rate will be set November 9. I’ll post more then; but for now it looks as if fixed-rate is the way to go on this pair.

Publications

Research : Perpetual Misperceptions

There are a number of misperceptions held among otherwise sophisticated investors regarding perpetual preferred shares. Now that the October edition of Canadian Moneysaver has been published, I can release this article, which attempts to address two of them, published in their September edition.

Look for the research link!

Update, 2007-10-15: An assiduous commenter asks how much the numbers would have changed without rebalancing … so I’ve done the calculation.

Effect of Rebalancing
Index Performance
March 30 – July 31, 2007
Index With Rebalancing Without Rebalancing
PerpetualPremium -3.56% -4.54%
PerpetualDiscount -8.76% -9.14%

The difference is not as much as my correspondent suspected! Raw data (showing the returns for the period March 30-July 31) has been uploaded for reader inspection for both the PerpetualDiscount and PerpetualPremium indices.

The relatively small difference between the rebalanced and non-rebalanced indices illustrates the point that there is a very sharp point of inflection between “Premium” and “Discount” perpetuals; once that point is crossed, duration changes significantly and the price reaction to yield changes becomes much more like one group than the other, with very little “grey area” between the two camps.

Update, 2007-10-15, later: The immediately preceeding paragraph is nonsense. Sorry!

Update, 2009-1-29: Assiduous Reader PN writes in and says:

I have found your PrefBlog website to be an extremely useful source of information on preferred shares. I have recently delved back into the preferred share market after concentrating on common shares over the last 25 years.

I am continuing to debate the pros and cons of perpetual discounts vs. 5-year fixed resets. In this regard I found your “Perpetual Misconceptions” article in the September 2007 edition of the Canadian Moneysaver to be very useful. I liked Table 1 so much that I reproduced it as a Excel Spreadsheet so I could compute implied future yields for different x and y values (where the resultant return is x% and the current perpetual return is y%). In doing so I discovered a slight discrepancy in the calculation of the discount factors in your Table 1. For a 2% return you have
calculated the discount factor after year 1 as 1.00-.02= .9800 rather than 1/(1.02)=.9804 The small error is continually compounded for years 2 to 20. I was wondering why you choose not to use the generally accepted mathematical formula for discount rates?

I have attached a spreadsheet based on two sets of calculations: the first is based on the generally accepted mathematical formula and the second is based on your computations for Table 1. You can see the results are only very slightly different for the 2% and 5% rates you have chosen and would not affect any of the conclusions you have drawn in your article.

My question is a very minor point and I am sure you must have a good reason for your calculation of the discount factors. I am just wondering what was your reasoning was?

Well, PN, there’s a very simple answer to your question: I am an idiot.

I cannot, at this point, remember anything much about the preparation of this article; what may have happened is that a rough draft of the table made it into the final product without thorough checking; the checking being performed in a cursory fashion because, as you say, the errors are small and the conclusion robust. Let’s just pretend that we’re seeking a total return of 2.04% and that that figure is cited on the table title, shall we?

PN has won a complimentary issue of PrefLetter.

PrefLetter

October, 2007, Edition of PrefLetter Released!

The October edition of PrefLetter has been released and is now available for purchase as the “Previous edition”.

Until further notice, the “Previous Edition” will refer to the October, 2007 issue, while the “Next Edition” will be the November, 2007 issue, scheduled to be prepared as of the close November 9 and eMailed to subscribers prior to market-opening on November 12.

PrefLetter is intended for long term investors seeking issues to buy-and-hold. At least one recommendation from each of the major preferred share sectors is included and discussed.

Market Action

October 12, 2007

There’s no commentary today, I’m afraid! What with PrefLetter production, seeing whether the IIF had anything interesting to say, admitting that I cannot time the markets and so on, I’m just running out of time!

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 4.71% 4.66% 681,528 15.94 1 0.0000% 1,043.7
Fixed-Floater 4.89% 4.76% 104,131 15.85 7 -0.3002% 1,038.5
Floater 4.51% 4.20% 75,432 10.73 3 -0.0134% 1,041.0
Op. Retract 4.86% 3.99% 76,085 3.20 15 +0.0058% 1,028.9
Split-Share 5.15% 4.84% 84,493 4.27 15 -0.0135% 1,045.0
Interest Bearing 6.29% 6.37% 56,439 3.63 4 -0.0248% 1,051.6
Perpetual-Premium 5.66% 5.45% 95,481 8.25 17 -0.0404% 1,014.5
Perpetual-Discount 5.40% 5.44% 321,718 14.77 47 -0.0440% 931.5
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BNS.PR.K PerpetualDiscount -1.6601% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.34% based on a bid of 22.51 and a limitMaturity.
PWF.PR.K PerpetualDiscount -1.6264% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.54% based on a bid of 22.38 and a limitMaturity.
FFN.PR.A SplitShare -1.1538% Asset coverage of 2.5+:1 as of September 28 according to the company. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.84% based on a bid of 10.48 and a hardMaturity 2014-12-01 at 10.28.
POW.PR.D PerpetualDiscount -1.1384% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.56% based on a bid of 22.58 and a limitMaturity.
BCE.PR.I FixFloat -1.0077%  
PWF.PR.H PerpetualPremium +1.1327% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.71% based on a bid of 25.00 and a call 2012-1-19 at 25.00.
RY.PR.E PerpetualDiscount +1.6471% Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.27% based on a bid of 21.60 and a limitMaturity.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BNS.PR.N PerpetualDiscount 584,870 New issue settled today; it did better than I thought it would, closing at 24.81-82, 20×124. This may be due to the fact that it was the first of the recent bank 5.25% perps to be announced; together with the fact that BNS issues are relatively scarce, a fair amount of the new issue may have found its way into ‘real money’ accounts. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.31% based on a bid of 24.81 and a limitMaturity.
BCE.PR.I FixFloat 71,169 Scotia crossed 70,000 at 24.75.
PWF.PR.I PerpetualPremium 66,316 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.51% based on a bid of 25.46 and a call 2012-5-30 at 25.00.
PWF.PR.L PerpetualDiscount 38,650 DS crossed 35,000 at 23.62. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.40% based on a bid of 23.62 and a limitMaturity.
BNS.PR.M PerpetualDiscount 33,900 Nesbitt bought 11,500 from DS at 21.35. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 5.29% based on a bid of 21.35 and a limitMaturity.

There were nine other index-included $25.00-equivalent issues trading over 10,000 shares today.

HIMI Preferred Indices

HIMIPref™ Preferred Indices : November 2001

All indices were assigned a value of 1000.0 as of December 31, 1993.

HIMI Index Values 2001-11-30
Index Closing Value (Total Return) Issues Mean Credit Quality Median YTW Median DTW Median Daily Trading Mean Current Yield
Ratchet 1,593.5 1 2.00 4.07% 17.4 79M 4.05%
FixedFloater 1,888.0 9 2.00 4.26% 16.5 257M 5.53%
Floater 1,490.2 5 1.80 3.66% 17.4 46M 3.81%
OpRet 1,505.5 33 1.18 4.08% 2.1 104M 5.88%
SplitShare 1,536.3 8 1.87 5.74% 5.5 98M 6.26%
Interest-Bearing 1,750.6 8 2.00 6.81% 2.5 175M 7.78%
Perpetual-Premium 1,146.8 6 1.49 5.41% 5.7 111M 5.71%
Perpetual-Discount 1,323.5 10 1.49 5.56% 14.4 269M 5.62%

Index Constitution, 2001-11-30, Pre-rebalancing

Index Constitution, 2001-11-30, Post-rebalancing

Issue Comments

FAL.PR.A / FAL.PR.B / FAL.PR.H Upgraded by DBRS

DBRS has announced:

DBRS has today upgraded the ratings of Xstrata plc, Xstrata (Schweiz) AG, Xstrata Capital Corporation A.V.V., Falconbridge Limited, and Xstrata Finance (Canada) Limited (collectively Xstrata or the Company) to A (low). The rating action results from the Company’s strengthening financial profile over the last twelve months, with Xstrata’s financial profile now brought in line with its business profile (which was strengthened substantially last year with the Falconbridge, Cerrejón and Tintaya acquisitions).

DBRS expects high commodity prices (driven by strong market demand/supply fundamentals) to allow the Company to continue generating strong cash flows from operations. Going forward, DBRS expects the Company to use its strong cash flows to finance its expansionary capex program, its acquisition program and possibly to continue to reduce its debt levels. The Company’s credit metrics are expected to remain at current levels for the mid term.

Falconbridge Preferreds continues to be rated P-2(low) by S&P.

As previously reported, Falconbridge’s dividends are “eligible”.

PrefLetter

October PrefLetter is in Preparation!

The markets have closed and the October edition of PrefLetter is now being prepared.

PrefLetter is the monthly newsletter recommending individual issues of preferred shares to subscribers. There is at least one recommendation from every major type of preferred share; the recommendations are taylored for “buy-and-hold” investors.

The October issue will be eMailed to clients and available for single-issue purchase with immediate delivery prior to the opening bell on Monday. I will write another post on the weekend advising when the new issue has been uploaded to the server … so watch this space carefully if you intend to order “Next Issue” or “Previous Issue”!

Reader Initiated Comments

Reflections on a Bull

My bullish correspondent has been busy and gleefully siezed on my comment yesterday that:

There was good volume in the preferred share market today … and continued declines in the perpetual sector which, quite frankly, I am at a loss to understand.

rate, the steepening in the past three weeks is stupendous. This is really strange!

and says that he is interested in my comments on his view that:

this is due to  the Commercial paper/subprime scare ….

Well, for what it’s worth, Mr. Bull, I think you’re right. I think we are seeing the confluence of a lot of factors:

  • Retail is avoiding assets that they don’t understand – and retail, in general, doesn’t understand preferred shares very well.
  • Retail is avoiding volatile assets – and perpetuals have certainly been showing volatility in the past six months.
  • Retail is avoiding asset classes in which they have recently been burnt – there were a lot of new issues last spring, much of it probably sold to unsophisticated investors who watched the market prices tank before they’d even received their monthly statement
  • Retail is avoiding asset classes which have not performed well in recent memory – performance of preferreds in general and perpetuals in particular has not been stellar for the past year or so
  • Retail is attempting to time the market. They are waiting for the bottom, therefore they will wait until they’re sure that prices are going up, therefore, probably, they will miss most of any rally that happens.

But, Mr. Bull, I want you to pay particular attention to my caveat: For what it’s worth.

  • How can any of the above statements be proven? If I were to say that relatively high spreads recently were due to the Tri-Lateral Commission acting under the orders of the Illuminati, how would you prove me wrong?
  • What predictive value does any of those statements have? They explain everything, cannot be falsified, and predict nothing.

I think we can agree that spreads are relatively high. And given this view, I will agree that a rational investment allocation model – for instance, one that says that the proportion of preferreds in a portfolio will be within a certain range – should probably be on the over-allocation side while long corporate bonds should be on the under-allocation side.

But the world is chaotic. We can formulate a beautiful asset allocation strategy … and tomorrow little green men from Mars will arrive with the secret of unlimited safe energy, requiring only extract of squid’s brain to run, which will give rise to a bull market in seafood and bear markets almost everywhere else.

So I make a deliberate attempt to avoid calling the market. Not because I don’t think I’m smart enough, but because there are too many random factors, too many of Colin Powell’s Unknown Unknowns, to make such an exercise a useful expenditure of time. Instead, I concentrate on weighing small differences between the various preferred share issues … up, down, I don’t care what the market does, as long as I do a nickel better, I’m happy. I can compare apples to apples, and give you good advice as to which one will be better. I cannot compare apples to squid’s brains.

If anybody tells you differently … find out why. Chances are, they’ve got great explanations and poor results.

Update: As if by magic, Accrued Interest has posted on this theme today.