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Overview
The credit derivatives market is roughly 30 times the size of the subprime
mortgage market - and potentially even more at risk in the coming years. In
the previous article, The Subprime Crisis Is Just Starting, we explored
the roots of the subprime crisis, demonstrated how mortgage securitizations
work, and then used this knowledge to show why 2008 could be a much more dangerous
year for the subprime mortgage markets - and the global financial system -
than 2007. In this article, we show how the same fundamental - and quite human
- motivations that created the subprime market crisis also imperil the $35
trillion global credit derivatives market.
Assumptions and Extraordinary Personal Profits
Let's consider the simple heart of what credit derivatives are all about.
A major investor has the opportunity to make an attractive-looking investment
that involves taking a risk. For instance, a bank or insurance company sees
an opportunity in lending to a corporation, but they are concerned about the
financial safety of the corporation. They would prefer to keep most of the
positive returns from the investment, but not take the risk of the company
defaulting.
So, as the employee of a company that creates financial derivatives (a credit
swap in this case), what you do is promise - for a fee - to take the risk for
them. Your company makes assumptions about how bad the risk will be, and based
on those assumptions, you determine that this trade is profitable for your
employer. You then personally take a nice chunk of those profits in your next
bonus as a reward for having been smart enough to get your company into this
lucrative transaction. And because this upfront booking of expected profits
from these transactions is so lucrative, not only do you get an enhanced bonus
-- but so do the other members of your group, your supervisor, their supervisor,
and the president and other senior officers of the firm.
Now, this is not to say that you and the other members of your group have
entirely assumed the risk away. You make some allowance for the possibility
that out of all these contracts that you're entering into, you may have to
actually make some payments. To cover the possibility of losses, you set aside
a reserve, or buy a credit derivative from another company to cover, or both.
The key to your bonus this year is the particulars of the assumptions that
your group makes about what those expected losses will be in the future. The
lower the assumption for expected losses, then either the greater your profits
in a given transaction, or the more competitive your bid, and the greater your
chances of beating out competitors who are seeking the same "lucrative" business.
For example, if your firm is being paid $12 million to guarantee payment of
a $500 million loan for ten years, and your group assumes there is a 4% chance
of having to pay out $250 million on that guarantee, then your expected losses
are $10 million - and your firm's expected profit is $2 million. This is shown
in the top chart below, "Making Money With Credit Derivatives".

However, let's say that your group comes back and re-examines those assumptions.
You find that if you make fairly minor and quite reasonable appearing changes
to two of your assumptions, the potential loss on the derivative drops from
an expected $250 million down to $225 million. Make two other minor changes
in other assumptions that are also each individually reasonable, and the chances
of that loss occurring drop from 4% down to 3.5%. As shown above in "Making
A FORTUNE With Credit Derivatives", rerun the numbers with a 3.5% chance of
losing $225 million - and your expected losses drop to $7.9 million, while
your profits just doubled, going from $2 million to $4.1 million!
Now, it quickly becomes clear to any reasonable person that if you can double
the profits your firm recognizes on a transaction by keying in four small assumptions
changes on a computer model, each of which sounds individually reasonable,
and the end result of those changes is to double the bonus you get paid this
year - then the key to making some serious personal money is making the right
assumptions! Something that is equally plain to your peers at competitive firms.
The Vital Role Of Competition
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Ah, competition! Competition is where the process starts to get interesting
over time. Competition for credit derivatives business, for these easy profits,
means that you and others in your company have powerful personal incentives
to make aggressive assumptions about how low credit losses will be, and to
validate your co-workers assumptions as well. If your assumptions are not aggressive
enough, you don't win any business, you don't earn bonuses, your bosses don't
earn bonuses, and you are quickly out of a job.
The institutional culture then very quickly becomes that if you want to keep
your job - you and the other members of your group make aggressive assumptions.
If you want to make big bonuses - you make very aggressive assumptions
about how low the losses will be on the credit derivatives, which then translates
into increased business for you. And yes, other people will need to sign off
on your group's assumptions - but they are in the same institutional culture
as you are, with their own personal reward systems that are based on the company
making money. Also keep in mind that even the internal (theoretical) watchdogs
are put in place by senior management, who have their own incentive structure,
which is based on the company making lots and lots of money this year.
In a free market, where all the employees and senior management of all the
financial firms want their piece of this lucrative action, the first thing
that happens is that the firms with aggressive assumptions keep the
firms with conservative assumptions from getting any business. And then, because
we have competition going on here, in the next stage of the cycle, the very
aggressive assumptions firms take the business from the merely aggressive
assumption firms. Then in the next cycle, the people making the very, VERY
aggressive assumptions take the business away - and the bonuses away -
from the merely very aggressive assumptions makers.
To understand this process - you have to understand just how much money there
is to be made by playing the game by its own rules, which may have very little
to do with maximizing long-term shareholder value. Personal bonuses can be
millions per year (with far higher payouts for hedge fund managers). As an
individual who is in the right place at the right time - you can make more
money in one good year than a doctor or airline pilot will make in a career.
Except there is none of this medical school, or being on call, or flying over
the Pacific Ocean business involved, there's just sitting at a desk and manipulating
some numbers while working the phone. As a corporation you can mint profits
by the billions and tens of billions, without going through that messy business
of actually building things, or selling toilet paper, or drilling for oil in
two miles of ocean or such.
A Real World Case Study: Subprime Mortgage Derivatives
Where does this take us? What happens when firms compete to make ever more
aggressive assumptions in the pursuit of some of the most extraordinary profit
levels in the history of business, in nearly unregulated markets? As it so
happens, we have a pretty good case study that is still unfolding for us right
now, in a real world derivatives market that is tiny in comparison to the overall
credit derivatives market. In the case of the subprime mortgage derivatives
market, by the time the very, VERY aggressive assumption makers had
bested the very aggressive assumption makers, hundreds of billions of
dollars of mortgage loans were being routinely extended to people:
1. With poor credit histories of repaying their prior loans;
2. Who put no equity into their homes;
3. Whose self-reported and sometimes unverified incomes barely qualified at
the initial teaser rate; and
4. Who had no known means to come up with the additional money when the mortgage
reset upwards from the teaser rate to the real rate.
Of course, you don't need an MBA or PhD in finance to understand the problems
with the loans above. That said, there are ways to make very good money through
lending to subprime type borrowers - but you need a way to deal with the foreclosure
losses other than just assuming that the losses won't occur, or that when the
musical chairs ends and everyone sits down, it will be the other firms who
are left standing.
Because, it just so happens that home buyers of limited means with bad credit
and no savings often can't pay their mortgages when the payments skyrocket,
and this leads to quite real losses that puncture all the levels of assumptions
and risk passing. And these real losses do end having to be borne by investors
after all, with implications that are still shaking the overall financial system.
(This subject is covered in detail in the article "The Subprime Crisis Is
Just Starting".)
Sure, there were red flags everywhere - obvious, glaring unmistakable warning
signs. But no one really cared. Indeed the investment banks were ignoring their
own due diligence reports, because it was a party where enormous personal wealth
was being "earned" - and paid out in entirely real and spendable bonuses -
so long as you played your role in the game aggressively, with no rewards for
those who doubted.
(Eminently respectable senior executives from the most prestigious financial
institutions in the world might very well strenuously object to the content
of this article, and insist they have very tight internal controls that make
this treatment ludicrous. The credit derivatives market is a complex place,
with a huge array of different types of derivatives, and there is more to the
internal setups than we can cover in this simple article. That said, when you
hear some eminently respectable senior executive on TV speaking of standard
deviations and assuring you that you have nothing to worry about - do keep
in mind that such assurances are being delivered "buck naked" so to speak.
The subprime crisis really is in process, the mistakes made were not "Black
Swans" but of the simple human greed variety, and as in the story "The Emperor's
New Clothes", the lack of clothing is difficult to deny.)
A Key Difference: The Number Of Assumptions
We need to keep in mind that there is an important difference between the
smallish subprime mortgage derivatives market and the much larger credit derivatives
markets. Mortgages are dirt-simple in comparison to the complexities that are
involved with corporate credit analysis. With a mortgage, you have a house,
you should have a pretty good idea of the value of the house (or so lenders
thought), you have an individual borrower with an income stream and a source
for that income, and you have a credit history. Put all those together and
you have a reasonable idea about whether that individual can pay their loan,
and put a thousand people like that in a pool, and you should have a very good
idea about the likelihood of repayment. Yes, there are many complications in
mortgage derivatives structures (as I cover in my books on the subject), and
all sorts of "fun" investor challenges with prepayments and tranching and convexity
and the like, but the underlying product is not all that difficult to understand.
Corporate derivatives are an entirely different ball game. With corporations
you need to assess complex financial structures. You need to look at the industry
as a whole, assess the relative competitive standing of the company, look at
foreign competition, examine comparative growth rates, subjectively evaluate
management capabilities, and dive into the footnotes for clues as to pension
and health-care exposure, as well as including a wide array of other risks
and factors. All of which require using assumptions. Now, as we saw earlier
in this article, assumptions are where the money is made when it comes to derivative
securities. When we compare the corporate credit derivatives market to the
subprime mortgage derivatives market -- there is far more room to make money
through making aggressive assumptions with corporate derivatives.
The Second Biggest Assumption: Recessions
There are a couple of credit derivatives assumptions that have the potential
to dwarf the others. We will start with the lesser of the two mega-assumptions
that have to be made, and that is: do you price for the possibility of a recession?
You know your profits are going to be far, far higher if you don't include
the possibility of recession. Indeed it might be difficult to get business
at all if you build the possibility of a serious recession into your credit
derivatives pricing.
And how much business can you get if you price for the chance of a recession
but your competitor does not? Can you stay in the credit derivatives business
at all?
It is when we assume the possibility of a recession, let's say in 2008, that
the situation truly becomes worrisome. As we saw with subprime mortgages, there
are problems with taking profits based on assumptions when real losses can
occur. If you're looking at $20, $50 or $200 billion in real losses on mortgage
derivatives, then that money really needs to come out of the capital bases
of the companies that have purchased the derivatives for profit. The entire
financial system cannot successfully pass the risks off through ever more "sophisticated" financial
modeling, until the risks have been assumed away altogether. Rather, the real
losses have to be really borne by someone in the system, with real pain if
the losses exceed the reserves. That is the basic, common sense point that
was being nearly universally ignored by the major financial firms in the subprime
market. This basic principle is what is causing the decimation of the capital
bases of such companies as Bear Stearns, Citibank and Merrill Lynch, and their
needing to find additional investors.
Do you believe that such a financial system - one that refused to consider
what would happen when a marginal home buyer inevitably had their rate
reset within one year - would prudently pass up huge amounts of fee
income in a far larger market, to make sure that their corporate credit derivatives
business could withstand the possibility (but not certainty) of a recession
over the next few years? Which firm do you think would get the derivatives
business: the one that charged whopping fees because they made conservative
assumptions that fully priced in the next recession, or the equally prestigious,
world famous firms that charged much lower fees by ignoring the possibility
of recession? What do you think the individual employees did if incorporating
recession assumptions meant getting no business and losing their job, whereas
ignoring the possibility of recession led to promotions and multimillion dollar
bonuses?
The Biggest Assumption: Systematic Risk
Our second mega-risk assessment is the truly dangerous one: do you include
in your wildest assumptions the possibility that every derivatives contract
which you are underwriting is not independent but may all go into a recession
simultaneously? And what happens to the capital base of your employer at that
point?
Let's go back to our initial example of taking a $12 million fee for guaranteeing
$500 million in corporate debt, where you think there is a 4% chance of losing
$250 million. The idea, as with any insurance product (which is what credit
derivatives essentially are), is that you sell that same guarantee on 500 companies,
and you ultimately have to pay out on 20 of the 500 companies (4%). You pay
out $5 billion - but you take in $6 billion from the 500 fees of $12 million
each, plus you get the investment earnings on the $6 billion until the payouts
occur, so the whole business is (theoretically) lucratively profitable.
Now the problem is that this model assumes that each company is an independent
risk. Kind of like insuring 50 homes against the chance that an electrical
fault will cause one house to burn. But what if the problem is not an electrical
fire, but a wildfire burning out of control, and the homes you are insuring
are on a bone-dry hillside in Southern California? The risks are no longer
independent, and instead of losing on just one insurance contract - you lose
on 20 out of the 50 contracts.
The credit derivatives equivalent of the wildfire scenario is "imagine what
happens if a recession hits the entire economy, rather than just one company".
Let's say that recession does hit, it's a bad one, and because you are guaranteeing
the performance of 500 companies all of whom already have financial issues
during a time of semi-prosperity (the corporate equivalent of subprime),
200 of those companies fold instead of 20 during a time of financial turmoil.
Because it turns out that the risk of failure is not truly independent after
all; there is a correlation of risks during a major economic downturn. Now
at $350 million a shot (greater individual losses per incident, as we are in
a recession), that is a $70 billion loss for your firm. Which just went bankrupt.
As did your firm's competitors. Since you and your competitors can't pay your
claims, those companies who relied on your $70 billion in claims paying off
- and your four largest competitor's $280 billion in claims - find out that
they are not going to be paid. Which means they have to take the total $350
billion in losses. Which they can't withstand either. So down the tubes they
go. Followed by the companies behind them, as the titans of the financial world
turn into falling dominos (if you want to understand why the Fed consistently
and aggressively intervenes at the first sign of derivatives troubles, this
is why).
I've been trying to keep things very simple and basic in this primer, but
the issues associated with correlation and systematic risk are at the heart
of the most sophisticated financial concerns about whether credit derivatives
decrease financial risk - or increase risks for the entire financial system.
One key issue is - how can you properly reserve for a potential $70 billion
loss when you are collecting only $6 billion in fees? The simple answer is
- you can't. The only way you could do so would be to drastically increase
your fees, and then transfer most of the risk to other parties. Which would
price you out of the marketplace. So in practice, all that pricing for systematic
risk does is remove you from the business, as you can't compete with firms
that aren't pricing for correlated risk.
Even if you could get the pricing to work, however, there is a more fundamental
limitation. Let's say you had no competition, and you could double your fees,
and you used the extra $6 billion to buy credit derivatives for your derivatives
portfolio from another firm, so that any losses above $5 billion were covered
by them (assuming your firm could handle the first $5 billion in losses). Now
we assume again there is a vicious recession, your losses reach $70 billion,
you take the first $5 billion in hits, then go to your counterparty for the
rest of the $65 billion - and from where exactly do they come up with
$65 billion?
This goes to the core of the derivatives dilemma. Everyone can make all the
assumptions they want, and merrily pass the risk along to the next counterparty,
and book their profits and bonuses for so long as the music lasts - but what
happens when the music stops? What happens when return once more gives way
to risk as has happened time and again in the financial world? We have an example
right in front of us now with the subprime mortgage debacle, and despite everyone
having assumed that they had passed the risk along - when the music stopped,
the risks were real, and the losses had to actually be borne.
Indeed, we unfortunately have two very good examples of what happens when
systematic correlated risks meet credit derivatives, when it comes to MBIA
and Ambac. Until recently, these two bond insurance companies were bullet-proof
financial titans, with the unquestioned, gold-plated "AAA / Aaa" ratings to
prove it. Armed with ample layers of capital, these two firms could by themselves
essentially protect the creditworthiness of the entire nation against recession
and even depression - on paper, according to assumptions used
by the rating agencies and the rest of the financial system. Then, in the real
world, they actually ran into correlated risks in one obscure corner of their
overall portfolios of guarantees, when it turned out that if too many subprime
borrowers started to default at the same time, it depressed housing values.
Which turned out (quite predictably) to simultaneously increase foreclosure
rates while increasing losses per foreclosure.
Now, so long as the risks are independent, then MBIA and Ambac could have
easily shrugged off increased losses in a few securities or even a few dozen
securities. But, with correlated risks hitting tens and hundreds of billions
of dollars of securities simultaneously - the "bullet-proof" capital base for
a AAA rated insurance giant can turn into vapor in a matter of months. Something
that the market has already incorporated into the pricing of these firm's stocks
and debt, even while the rating agencies maintain the AAA façade to
keep domino effects from imperiling the municipal bond and other markets.
Where Assumptions Meet Reality
Now here's the thing. The subprime mortgage market is tiny compared to the
overall corporate market. A corporate market which has credit derivatives interwoven
throughout. Let's say in this day of highly leveraged companies, that a real
recession does hit and it takes down something like $2 or $5 trillion worth
of book value along with it. Those would be real losses. Staggering losses
that dwarf what we have seen with subprime mortgages.
Where is the money going to come from to pay for those losses? In theory,
the way this works from an academic economics perspective is that you have
all these hordes of incredibly intelligent people, each of whom is working
for well-capitalized institutions, and they all backstop each other. They do
so first by using that supposedly awesome collective intelligence to keep mistakes
from being made in the first place. Next, the theory is that there will be
multiple layers of protection available if there's a problem, to absorb any
damage.
Unfortunately what we saw actually happen in the real world with mortgage
derivatives was just the reverse of the theory. The multiple layers of the
so-called "smartest person in the room" became multiple layers of people making
steadily worse (and more obvious) mistakes in the pursuit of short-term profits
until the situation not just predictably - but inevitably - collapsed upon
them.
On top of that, far from the firms backstopping each other, in the real world
we have a cascading series of credit losses that spread from one firm to another,
as tens of billions of dollars in actual subprime losses multiplied out to
become much larger hits to values of securities portfolios, nearly bringing
down the industry together.
Which again brings up the question of what happens if a real recession hits
the $35 trillion credit derivatives market?
The Questions We Need To Ask
The question that we need to be asking ourselves is if a recession does really
kick into gear in 2008 - will the credit derivatives market survive? If it
doesn't - just how bad will the damage be? This is a very serious question,
given how much damage the much smaller subprime mortgage service crisis has
caused.
We may not know for sure whether any disaster scenario is going to happen
-- but I think we all have to agree that there is a significant chance that
it just... might happen. Now let's further stipulate that the very essence
of financial prudence, of wisdom, of protecting your savings is to be prepared
for very real possibilities. If you're not sure, but you think something just
might happen in the next year which could devastate your life savings - I think
most of us feel a responsibility to try to protect ourselves, if we can. Which
takes us to perhaps the most important part of this article -- how can we be
prepared?
Taking Actions
First, you need to very seriously think about cutting your ownership of financial
assets. The type of disaster scenario we are talking about could devastate
stock and bond markets for a generation. If you are investing for retirement
and your portfolio gets taken down by just such a scenario, then you may never
have the chance to replace it. For these reasons, there is a powerful, powerful
case for moving a substantial portion of your assets into tangible assets.
Good examples of tangible assets include gold, silver, commodities, real estate,
farmland and energy.
The next thing you should very seriously think about is whether crisis leads
to opportunity, in ways that go well beyond a simple strategy of only buying
tangible assets. John Paulson saw the crisis that was coming in subprime mortgages,
researched and educated himself on this area (which had not been his field
of expertise), and he turned the crisis into a $3-$4 billion personal payday
in 2007. If you're not a hedge fund manager like Paulson, you may not have
the tools that he used to turn a market crisis into personal billions. That's
OK, because Paulson didn't start with the tools either. He started with educating
himself, learning about a new area, until he came up with a novel way to profit
from disaster. A method that wasn't in the financial textbooks, and that he
didn't find by reading a financial columnist in the paper.
You have more tools than you may think, some of which may surprise you. Tools
which can give you the opportunity to turn financial disaster into personal
net worth. There are ways you can use those tools to turn the destruction of
the currency into perhaps the greatest real wealth-building opportunity of
your life, on a long-term and tax-advantaged basis. But, if you want this to
happen -- you will need to start with learning. You are going to have to educate
yourself, and work to not just understand, but to master some of the financial
forces and methods in play here. You will have to learn how to turn the destruction
of paper wealth into real wealth. With Turning Inflation Into Wealth being
the first key step. My best wishes to you for turning this challenge into an
extraordinary personal opportunity.
Do you know how to Turn Inflation Into Wealth? To
position yourself so that inflation will redistribute real wealth to you,
and the higher the rate of inflation - the more your after-inflation net
worth grows? Do you know how to achieve these gains on a long-term and tax-advantaged
basis? Do you know how to potentially triple your after-tax and after-inflation
returns through Reversing The Inflation Tax? So that instead
of paying real taxes on illusionary income, you are paying illusionary taxes
on real increases in net worth? These are among the many topics covered in
the free "Turning Inflation Into Wealth" Mini-Course. Starting simple,
this course delivers a series of 10-15 minute readings, with each reading
building on the knowledge and information contained in previous readings.
More information on the course is available at InflationIntoWealth.com.
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