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Welcome to Call to Decision
World's
Largest Bond Insurers Collapsing!
by Martin
D. Weiss Ph.D.
01-21-08
Martin
here with an urgent update on the rapidly unfolding credit crack-up:
Ambac
and MBIA, the two largest bond insurers in the world, are careening
toward collapse.
Barring
a miraculous rescue, their demise could promptly deliver a massive
blow to the U.S. bond market ... severely damage America's already
shaken big banks ... and largely trash the net worth of millions of
investors.
Yet,
strangely, except for investors who owned Ambac and MBIA shares
themselves — and who have now driven those shares into the gutter
— few are paying attention.
And
fewer still are taking appropriate defensive action.
Look. If
this crisis were just a theoretical possibility, like it was when I
first wrote about the fatal fallacy of bond insurance years ago, I
might understand the stubborn complacency of most investors.
But
now it's here, staring them in the face: Just this past
Friday, soon after the closing bell in New York, the watershed
event happened: Ambac lost its triple-A rating!
Fitch
slashed Ambac's rating by two notches to AA, downgraded the
long-term rating of Ambac's parent company by three notches, and
said more cuts could be on the way.
Since
the ratings of insured bonds are tied directly to the ratings of
the insurer, Fitch was also forced to take action on the 137,000
bonds that are covered by Ambac, setting off a veritable ratings
massacre in the market for municipal and mortgage-backed
bonds.
Similarly
...
If I
were still one of the only ones talking about the collapse of bond
insurance, I could also understand the complacency of most
investors.
But
now, based on the current market price of credit swaps (bets on
future defaults), Wall Street itself believes
that the chance Ambac and MBIA will avoid
bankruptcy is less than one in three.
And
still most investors aren't paying attention!
Next,
Brace Yourself for the Other
Shoes That Could Soon Be Falling
First,
the other two leading rating agencies — Moody's and S&P —
are likely to follow Fitch's lead and also downgrade Ambac. In fact,
on Thursday, Moody's already warned it could do so very soon.
Second,
the other major bond insurers, such as MBIA and FGIC, will get
smacked with downgrades.
Third,
the ratings massacre now taking place in Ambac-insured bonds will
spread to $2.3 trillion worth of municipal bonds, mortgage-backed
bonds, plus asset-backed bonds packed with credit card and auto
loans.
Fourth,
$45 trillion in the world's fastest-growing type of
derivative — credit default swaps — will be in jeopardy. Indeed,
according to Friday's Wall Street Journal ("Default
Fears Unnerve Markets") ...
"The
turmoil on Wall Street is beginning to rock a foundation of the
financial system: the ability of institutions to make good on
their many trades with one another.
"Today,
a struggling bond insurer, ACA Financial Guaranty Corp., will ask
its trading partners for more time as it scrambles to unwind more
than $60 billion of insurance contracts it sold to financial firms
but can't fully pay off, according to people familiar with the
matter. The contracts were intended to protect Wall Street firms
from losses on mortgage securities and other debt they own.
"The
problem is that the insurer itself is teetering — with
repercussions across the financial world. Some of its trading
partners, called counterparties, already are writing off billions
of dollars because of its inability to pay ...
"This
has investors and regulators worried that, through such swaps,
some market players could spread their own problems to the wider
financial system ...
"The
issue is raising broader concern among regulators and investors
over what Wall Street calls 'counterparty risk,' the danger that
one party in a trade can't pay its losses. ...
"Few
envisioned a little-known bond insurer like ACA causing so much
instability."
But
despite this rude awakening described in the Journal, Wall
Street is not asking the obvious next question: If
little-known ACA could cause so much trouble, what kind of damage
would be caused by the collapse of Ambac and MBIA, which are far
larger?
Fifth,
virtually all credit ratings, whether tied to
bond insurers or not, will come under intense scrutiny. The reasons
are twofold:
- Deteriorating
finances: If you're running a bank, a hedge fund or a
major brokerage firm, and most of your trading partners get
swiftly downgraded, your credit rating will also have to be
slashed.
- Declining
investor confidence in the accuracy of the ratings themselves: If
you're an investor and you see thousands of ratings falling like
flies, you're going to seriously doubt the accuracy of every
rating under the sun.
Investors will say: "Either Fitch, Moody's and S&P must
announce across-the-board downgrades by redefining their rating
scales ... or we'll do it for them by assuming each and
every rating they issue is greatly inflated."
Sixth,
the crisis could spread to hundreds of trillions in
other derivatives beyond credit swaps.
My
Recommendations
Don't
wait! The collapse of bond insurers, bond ratings and
credit swaps is moving quickly. And it's accelerating.
Don't
underestimate its magnitude! This is not an
isolated crisis. It could have an impact that's at least as
large as the housing bust or the recession.
Don't
let anyone talk you out of protective immediate action! That
can include ...
- Hedging
against sharp declines in the U.S. with inverse ETFs that are
specifically designed to go up when the stocks or
sectors they're tied to go down ...
- Moving
a substantial portion of your money to other asset classes like
gold or foreign currencies, and above all ...
- Greatly
reducing your exposure to most U.S. stocks and bonds.
For more
specific forecasts and instructions, be sure to join us tomorrow in
our online teleconference.
Remember:
Beware of those who might try to dismiss our warnings as "gloom
and doom." Instead, just look at the facts. Then make up your
own mind.
And for
a handy guide, take a moment to review the shocking facts — and
explicit instructions — I have provided in recent weeks ...
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