Category Archives: Investment banks

More on CDO Financing (and Why We Haven’t Seen More Hedge Fund Distress)

One thing that has been a bit mysterious to me is that, given the nervousness among prime brokers who have been financing collateralized debt obligations and evidence that these lenders are tightening credit considerably, why haven’t more hedge funds gotten in trouble by being forced to liquidate or at least partially liquidate? The Lex column […]

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Who is Carrying the CDO Risk? Look to the Dealers

With the holiday news slowdown, we thought we’d use the opportunity to focus on good posts on other sites. One by Christopher Whalen at Seeking Alpha, “Collateral Debt Obligations: Mark-to-Dealer,” addresses some topics near and dear to our heart, namely, whether there is systemic risk and if so, where will it manifest itself? Whalen’s views […]

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Another Subprime Mortgage Hedge Fund Halts Redemptions

Bloomberg reports that a Key Biscayne based brokerage firm, United Capital Markets, barred redemptions on its hedge funds that invested in subprime mortgages. This isn’t Bear Stearns redux. The firm presented the problem as simply investor jitters. Bloomberg reports that the fund suffered modest losses (5%, if you believe the valuations, which given press about […]

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Bear Update du Jour

The Wall Street Journal provides a pre-holiday Bear recap, “After Blowup, Bear to Revamp Risk Control” (reproduced in full below). The high points: 1. Bear is bringing its asset management unit under tighter control of its parent and implementing stronger risk controls. Apparently the stringent practices of its trading floor weren’t observed in the asset […]

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Bear Giveth as Well as Taketh Away (Treasury Edition)

While we’re have a cliche fest, an ill wind blows nobody good, and it looks like that Bear Stearns hedge fund debacle had some unexpected upside, namely, producing a flight to quality, meaning Treasuries, sparking a rally. I’m sure you could have said the same of past crises (just for starters, the 1997 emerging markets […]

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Was Bear Stearns’ Hedge Fund Intervention a Bad Idea?

John Gapper, in a Financial Times comment, “How Bear Stearns Put Itself First,” argues that even though Bear Stearns’ decision to step in to manage the unraveling of its two troubled hedge funds was self-interested, it was also bad for the hedge fund industry and for the CDO market. I don’t agree with Gapper, and […]

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Bear Stearns To Report Hedge Fund Results Late

In “Bear Stearns Investors Await Tally on Losses,” the Wall Street Journal reports that investors in the two troubled Bear Stearns hedge funds won’t get end of May results until July 16. While this delay is probably crazy-making for fund holders, Bear is no doubt erring on the side of conservatism. Recall that the High-Grade […]

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More Backstory on the Bear Stearns Hedge Funds Meltdown

I’m a bit late to this article from Friday’s Financial Times, “Bear Stearns assured investors on leverage,” which gives some new information on the formation of the Enhanced Leverage Fund, the one that went into crisis first, and how it went pear shaped. Cioffi had the bad luck to not only have some trades fall […]

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Bear Hires Lehman Vice Chair Jeff Lane to Head Asset Management Division

In a move intended to restore confidence, Bear Stearns has sidelined former asset management head Richard Marin (he remains as an advisor) and has brought in Jeffrey Lane, vice chairman of Lehman, as his replacement. Ousting Marin was pretty much required, and on paper Lane has the right stuff (Lehman is a serious bond player, […]

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Schizophrenia in the Financial Times on CDOs, Subprimes, and General Woefulness

OK, schizophrenia is a bit too strong a word, but it got your attention, right? “Dissonance” is closer to the mark, and differing points of view in a plugged-in, market-savvy paper like the Financial Times is an interesting sight to behold. Both stories address the same general topic, namely, whether the current mess in subprimes […]

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More CDO Factoids: Who Owns ‘Em, Why They Are Hard to Value

Barry Ritholtz gave some helpful tidbits about CDOs on his blog, The Big Picture. The source is the Bloomberg magazine (unfortunately only for those with terminals can subscribe). From Ritholtz (quoting Bloomberg); “Worldwide sales of CDOs—which are packages of securities backed by bonds, mortgages and other loans—have soared since 2003, reaching $503 billion last year, […]

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Martin Wolf on the Workings of the Finance Brain

Apologies for being a tad late on this item, an article by the Financial Times’ lead editorial writer Martin Wolf, “Risks and rewards of today’s unshackled global finance.” Power went down in parts of Manhattan today, which put a crimp in my schedule. So I will be briefer than I might otherwise be. I was […]

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