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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: 20 Canadian ABCP Trusts File Bankruptcy
Good Grief! Really really bad. No one need guess the
terrible implications for a vast middle class. ac
This story has been brewing since
last summer (see Global Credit Crisis Canadian Style). However
bailout plans have now blown up as deadline after deadline for
coming up with a solution has been missed.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.c....
20 Canadian ABCP Trusts File
Bankruptcy
as the contagion continues to spread ..
The Québec
Pension Plan (Caisse) and the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan are on
the hook for some $33 billion in ABCP as are 40 other trustholders,
mining companies, paper companies, etc all of which thought they
were buying short term easily marketable notes.
This story has been brewing since last summer (see Global Credit
Crisis Canadian Style). However bailout plans have now blown up as
deadline after deadline for coming up with a solution has been
missed.
With the Bank of Montreal Missing Margin Calls earlier this month,
what had to happen did: ABCP players to seek bankruptcy protection.
The committee working to untangle $33-billion of frozen commercial
paper plans to ask an Ontario judge Monday to grant bankruptcy
protection to the 20 trusts that issued the paper, as it works to
restructure them.
Investors ranging from major corporations to provincial and
territorial governments and private individuals have been stuck
holding the paper since last August, when the U.S. subprime mortgage
crisis tossed financial markets into a tailspin, causing the market
for Canadian third-party asset-backed commercial paper to come to a
screeching halt.
Three days after it nosedived, a group of major players, led by the
Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, announced a plan to
restructure the market. It involved converting the short-term paper
into longer-term debt. To give the group time to hammer out the
details and put the plan in place, the players agreed to a
standstill period that essentially froze the market.
The committee, which has missed self-imposed deadlines, failed to
unveil its final plan to investors yesterday, even though an
agreement that was helping to keep the market frozen was to expire
at midnight. A committee spokesman said they remained confident that
the market would not descend into chaos.
The committee plans to file an application in Ontario Superior Court
to put each of the 20 trusts under the protection of the Companies'
Creditors Arrangement Act, a law that's normally used by companies
that are trying to restructure under bankruptcy protection. CCAA
prevents creditors from seizing assets and halts lawsuits against
the company.
As the restructuring drags on, it's still not clear exactly how much
money Canadian investors will recoup. While the committee had hoped
that those who hold the long-term notes until they expire would
receive most of their value back, it's believed that investors who
need to sell the paper quickly once the market's unfrozen could lose
one-third or more.
Delays Cause More Pain
I proposed last summer the plan dump its ABCP assets as soon as
possible to get what they could. Instead the plan was frozen in a
bureaucratic boondoggle in which they hoped to convert short term
paper in to long term paper. Now, seven agonizing months later, the
plan seeks a different solution: bankruptcy.
On the Expect Everything To Be Worse Than Expected principle, if
losses are held to 33% I will be amazed. However if by some magic
they are, then the losses might have been as little as 15%, seven
months ago.
The Psychology Of Suspended Redemptions looms large simply because
so many hedge funds and asset managers refusal to accept reality
until margin calls or bankruptcy forces the issue.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
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