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Author Topic: Bear Stearns exposed as a bank saddled with toxic sub-prime debt  (Read 494 times)

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Offline marasmius

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  • Telegraph.co.uk

    Bear Stearns exposed as a bank saddled with toxic sub-prime debt

    By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
    Last Updated: 12:52pm GMT 15/03/2008

    Big American finance houses have collapsed before. Continental Illinois required a $4.5bn (£2.25bn) bail-out in 1984 after coming to grief in Texas as the oil boom deflated.
    The giant hedge fund Long Term Capital Management was saved by a club of banks in 1998 under the guidance New York Federal Reserve. The fund blew up after Russia's default, which ravaged its portfolio of Danish, Italian and Spanish bonds.
       
    On both occasions the US economy was in rude good health. The damage was quickly contained.

    The implosion of Bear Stearns is more dangerous.

    A host of other banks, broker dealers, and hedge funds have played the same game, deploying massive leverage at the top of the credit bubble to eke out extra yield. Dozens of them are saddled with the same toxic debt - sub-prime property, credit cards, auto loans, and mountains of unsold paper from the merger boom.

    This time the market for default insurance is flashing bright red warning signals across the entire spectrum of US finance.

    The swap spreads on Lehman Brothers rocketed to 465 yesterday, mirroring the moves in Bear Stearns debt days before. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac - the venerable agencies created by Roosevelt that underpin 60pc of the $11 trillion mortgage market - had a heart attack on Monday. Their bonds were in free-fall, threatening to set off another cascade of bank writedowns.

    These are not sub-prime outfits. They sit at the apex of the US mortgage credit industry. Hence the dramatic move by the Fed this week to offer a $200bn lifeline, agreeing to accept Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issues as collateral.

    Had the Fed delayed, many traders believe Wall Street would have plunged through resistance levels risking a full-fledged crash.

    The 'monoline' bond insurers - MBIA, Ambac, and others - that guarantee most of the $2,600bn market for US municipal bonds have seen their shares collapse by 90pc since the Autumn.

    They are still battling to raise enough to capital to save their 'AAA' ratings. Should they fail, the insured bonds will be downgraded in lockstep. Pension funds would be forced to liquidate huge holdings. As New York Governor Eliot Spitzer said before his own liquidation, such an outcome is too dreadful to contemplate.


    You have to go back to the banking crisis of the Great Depression to find a moment when the financial system as a whole seemed so close to the precipice.


       







    Offline gladius_veritatis

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    Bear Stearns exposed as a bank saddled with toxic sub-prime debt
    « Reply #1 on: March 15, 2008, 03:38:45 PM »
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  • The system is not "close to the precipice": it has already gone over the cliff.  We are simply waiting for the loud "THUD" which comes with impact on the ground below.
    "Fear God, and keep His commandments: for this is all man."