|
I have some good news and some bad news. The good news is that that market
neutral strategy illustrated through the blog research is working like a charm
(I will be posting some results soon). The market has been on a massive bullish
tear, to the dismay of market bears. Well, the new strategy works and it allows
us to profit from both bullish and bearish moves. I have transformed my personal
portfolio to the market neutral strategy. The bad news is that the problems
that caused those of us who know how to count to be bearish are still abound
and have apparently been conspired into the bin of ignorance.
Accounting boards, banks, media and sell side analysts in general appear content
to ignore the facts, change the way we count losses (after all, losses are,,,
well,,, losses. Right???!!!), and generally sweep the banking problems under
the rug in anticipation of bubbling our way out of the problem or at least
concealing it long enough through accounting shenanigans to allow accounting
profits to somehow paper over economic losses. Good luck with that. Underlying
fundamentals are still deteriorating, albeit potentially at a slower pace,
as share prices are literally flying through the roof. Those who are in the
market and are bullish or not market neutral are, in my opinion, playing with
fire. It is gambling to buy stock just because the stocks prices are going
up. I know it feels good when the prices go higher after you buy the stock,
but the underlying fundamentals are atrocious and if one were to get caught
in a nasty correction, one could not have said it was "impossible to see coming".
This is exactly the same scenario that played out in the dot.com bubble. Bulls
were justified because share prices went higher, not because underlying values
increased. When reality hit (and it always does hit, that's whey they call
it reality) folks were literally wiped out.
I will anecdotally illustrate some of that fire investors are playing with
in the banking sector. While I was browsing through the extremely interesting,
if not controversial Zerohedge.com blog, I came across this video of Elizabeth
Warren, who heads the Congressional Oversight Committee's investigation of
the banks. I will like my readers to listen to it then continue reading this
post.

Wells Fargo and over $100 billion of economic losses????
In the case of Wells Fargo, we have applied high LTV ARM loss rates to calculate
the losses on HELOCs (which comprises of total 1-4 family junior lien mortgages
and line of credit) since the direct HELOC data was not available for WFC.
The total losses in these loans are expected to skyrocket as can be seen from
the raw, and unbiased NY Fed and FDIC call sheet data (see The
Re-Release of the Open Source Mortgage Default Model and Green
Shoots are Being Fertilized by Brown Turds in the Mortgage Markets). It
is a small wonder why the Treasury failed to use this government data to run
the bank stress tests, for if they did the outcome would have been far different,
and decidedly much more negative. We have taken a conservative approach in
valuing the loan losses due to which the total loan losses in the HELOCs alone
would be 56.4% or US$62.1 billion.
We have segregated the total HELOC loans as owner occupied and non-owner occupied
based on the proportion mentioned in the FDIC data derived spreadsheet for
each respective states. Than, applying the default rate assumption made in
this sheet for High Risk ARM (owner occupied - 65% & non-owner occupied
- 95%) we calculated the total default rate for each state.
Further, we applied the recovery rate based on the current LTV to arrive at
the total charge-off in the next two years.
The total losses are expected to jump to US$187.4 billion in the adverse case
in the coming two years. Wells Fargo's current Tangible Common Equity (TCE)
stands at 3.28%, which is significantly lower than the prescribed limit of
4%. According to our estimate, the bank's TCE would fall to 1.56% at the end
of 2010 after adjusting for accounting and economic losses. Considering the
massive anticipated losses in the next two years, Wells Fargo's capital would
fall short by US$34.3 billion and not US$13.7 billion as shown by the SCAP
result (see America,
You have been outright lied to! Bamboozled! Swindled! Hoodwinked! The Worst
Case Scenario, Welcome
to the Big Bank Bamboozle!, and The
Real Stress Test Results) to maintain a TCE ratio of 4% in the pessimistic
case. As Wells Fargo has raised US$8.6 billion capital it would still be required
to raise additional US$25.65 billion as a safeguard against a deeper economic
downturn or a recovery marred by another negative dip, OR a recovery hampered
by lingering unemployment OR a recovery contrained by floundering property
sector OR a recovery pulled down by mediocre growth.
Here is the Wells Fargo Eyles test, Texas Ratio and Tangible Equity trends
using FDIC and NY Fed data as fed though our forensic model, incorporating
off balance sheet entity risk.

Wells share price is up nearly 400% since March while nearly every compreshensive
credit metric (if calculated using real, unbiased data in a real, unbiased
fashion) forecasts a very, very different outcome.



Federal Reserve Vs Our Computation - Loan Loss Estimates
Our Analysis
Methodology to compute loan loss rate: Real estate 1-4 family mortgage
loans
Real estate 1-4 family mortgage loans comprise prime loans and Alt-A loans.
Since the complete breakdown of loans into prime and Alt-A is not known for
Wells Fargo, we have assumed the default rate of Alt-A loans in the US. Thereafter,
we adjusted this default rate to factor in the prime real estate 1-4 family
mortgage loans. We computed the net loss rate for two years (2009 and 2010)
based on the Alt-A default rate to arrive at the overall default rate. We then
applied the recovery rates, based on the decline in the housing prices and
LTV, to calculate the total loss rate. We assumed the loss rate to be 20% lower
than the loss rate of the Alt-A loan in each state as some proportion of the
loans could be prime loans. The S&P Case-Shiller Index has declined around
18.9%, 29.3% and 29.2% since 2005, 2006 and 2007, respectively, as majority
of these loan value have been wiped out completely due to the severe correction
in prices while the LTV still remains very high. Based on the current LTV,
we have assumed the recovery rate to derive the loss rate for 2009 and 2010.
The total impaired loans would thus have a loss rate of 31.2% in the coming
two years while loss rate in the real estate 1-4 family first mortgage would
be 20.1%. The Federal Reserve loss rate of 7-8.5% is far too optimistic to
give a true picture.
| Real estate 1-4 family first mortgage |
| Impaired Loans |
Current LTV |
Overall Defaults
rates |
Recovery rate:
Case-Shiller - LTV |
Loss rate for 2009
and 2010 |
| California |
128% |
34.8% |
12.0% |
30.6% |
| Florida |
124% |
38.6% |
12.0% |
34.0% |
| New Jersey |
108% |
36.6% |
21.4% |
28.8% |
| Arizona |
146% |
36.5% |
12.0% |
32.1% |
| Other |
112% |
40.2% |
19.4% |
32.4% |
| Total Impaired Loans |
31.2% |
| All other loans |
| California |
125% |
22.4% |
12.0% |
15.8% |
| Florida |
122% |
29.2% |
12.0% |
20.6% |
| New Jersey |
105% |
23.3% |
21.4% |
14.7% |
| Virginia |
110% |
25.7% |
16.7% |
17.1% |
| New York |
87% |
22.6% |
35.0% |
11.8% |
| Pennsylvania |
111% |
27.0% |
16.7% |
18.0% |
| North Carolina |
85% |
31.8% |
35.0% |
16.5% |
| Texas |
91% |
31.5% |
28.2% |
18.1% |
| Georgia |
104% |
30.4% |
21.4% |
19.1% |
| Arizona |
139% |
28.6% |
12.0% |
20.2% |
| Other |
110% |
28.6% |
12.0% |
20.2% |
| Real estate 1-4 family first mortgage |
20.1% |
Wells Fargo acquired home equity loans from Wachovia, which carries the highest
default risk as its portfolio largely comprises second lien mortgages. The
value of the home equity portfolio is US$128.9 billion.
| Home equity portfolio |
US$ mn |
| Core portfolio |
| California |
31,784 |
| Florida |
12,067 |
| New Jersey |
8,086 |
| Virginia |
5,653 |
| Pennsylvania |
5,129 |
| Other |
56,342 |
| Total core portfolio |
119,061 |
| Liquidating Portfolio |
| California |
3,835 |
| Florida |
492 |
| Arizona |
233 |
| Texas |
179 |
| Minnesota |
122 |
| Other |
5,001 |
| Total liquidating portfolio |
9,862 |
| Total core and liquidating portfolios |
128,923 |
The value of Wells Fargo's pick-a-pay portfolio (home loans) is US$93.2 billion
of which US$39.7 billion or 42.6% is impaired loans. The principal balance
of the impaired loans is US$61.6 billion. This loan has the highest probability
of risk and could result in complete writedown. Currently, the LTV in majority
of the states is above 100%, with California and Arizona having the highest
- 161% and 152%, respectively. Despite writing down US$21.9 billion, the carrying
value at these two states hovered around 100%, implying high risk.
| Pick-a-pay-portfolio |
Impaired loans |
| |
Unpaid principal
balance |
Current LTV % |
Carrying value |
Carrying value to
current value |
| California |
42,216 |
152.0% |
26,907 |
98.0% |
| Florida |
6,260 |
129.0% |
3,779 |
79.0% |
| New Jersey |
1,750 |
101.0% |
1,271 |
74.0% |
| Texas |
475 |
76.0% |
336 |
54.0% |
| Arizona |
1,642 |
161.0% |
987 |
99.0% |
| Other states |
9,306 |
110.0% |
6,397 |
77.0% |
| Total |
61,649 |
|
39,677 |
|
Methodology to compute loan loss rate: Real estate 1-4 family junior lien
mortgage
Real estate 1-4 family junior lien mortgage comprises home equity line of
credit (HELOC) and second/junior lien mortgage. Home equity carries a very
high risk of default due to high LTV and being second lien mortgage. We segregated
the loans into owner occupied and non-owner occupied based on the state-wise
proportion published by FDIC. Thereafter, applying the respective default rate
of each category we arrived at the weighted average default rate.
To determine net charge-offs, we have considered the recovery rate based on
historical recovery rates applied in conjunction with the current LTV. The
table below gives the recovery rates used to determine net charge-offs.
| |
Current LTV |
Recovery rate |
Basis |
| Greater than |
120% |
12.0% |
(recovery rates during 1990-1991, lowest since 1976) |
| Greater than |
110% |
16.7% |
|
| Greater than |
100% |
21.4% |
(average recovery rate since 1976) |
| Greater than |
90% |
28.2% |
|
| Less than |
<90% |
35.0% |
(highest recovery rate since 1976) |
Source: FDIC and Boombustblog.com Analysis
We estimated the current LTV for home equity loans based on the housing price
decline calculated using the Case-Shiller Index of each state and LTV at origination
to determine the current LTV. Impaired loans have a two-year loss rate of 67.5%,
while other loans have a loss rate of 56.4%. We have assumed impaired loans
to have a 0% recovery rate in each of the states. The non-impaired home
equity loans would have a loss rate of 56.4% for 2009 and 2010, while the Federal
Reserve's estimated loss rate is 21-28% for the same period.
Real estate 1-4 family
junior lien mortgage |
High Risk Subprime ARM Loans
(Low FICO and high LTV) |
| |
Current LTV |
Owner
Occupied |
Non- Owner
Occupied |
Default
rate |
Recovery
Rate |
Loss
Rate |
| Impaired Loans |
|
65.0% |
95.0% |
|
|
|
| California |
128% |
93.7% |
6.3% |
66.9% |
0% |
66.9% |
| Florida |
124% |
88.7% |
11.3% |
68.4% |
0% |
68.4% |
| New Jersey |
108% |
91.5% |
8.5% |
67.6% |
0% |
67.6% |
| Arizona |
146% |
91.9% |
8.1% |
67.4% |
0% |
67.4% |
| Other |
112% |
91.0% |
9.0% |
67.7% |
0% |
67.7% |
| Total Impaired Loans |
67.5% |
| All other loans: |
| California |
128% |
93.7% |
6.3% |
66.9% |
12% |
58.9% |
| Florida |
124% |
88.7% |
11.3% |
68.4% |
12% |
60.2% |
| New Jersey |
108% |
91.5% |
8.5% |
67.6% |
21% |
53.1% |
| Virginia |
111% |
91.1% |
8.9% |
67.7% |
17% |
56.4% |
| New York |
90% |
92.0% |
8.0% |
67.4% |
28% |
48.4% |
| Pennsylvania |
111% |
90.0% |
10.0% |
68.0% |
17% |
56.6% |
| North Carolina |
86% |
88.3% |
11.7% |
68.5% |
35% |
44.5% |
| Texas |
89% |
91.6% |
8.4% |
67.5% |
35% |
43.9% |
| Georgia |
105% |
88.5% |
11.5% |
68.5% |
21% |
53.8% |
| Arizona |
146% |
91.9% |
8.1% |
67.4% |
12% |
59.3% |
| Other |
112% |
91.0% |
9.0% |
67.7% |
17% |
56.4% |
| Home equity portfolio |
56.4% |
| Loan Charge-off in 2009 |
Pessimistic Case |
Base Case |
Optimistic Case |
Assumptions |
| Commercial |
2.44% |
2.14% |
1.84% |
In the US, commercial and industrial loan charge-off was
1.76% in December 2008. The Federal Reserve has pegged this charge-off
between 2.5% and 4%. |
| Other real estate mortgage |
2.20% |
1.80% |
1.40% |
Total real estate charge-off stood at 1.75% in Dec 2008. |
| Real estate construction |
5.62% |
5.12% |
4.62% |
Construction and land development charge-off stood at 5.12%
in the US in 4Q 08. |
| Lease financing |
0.89% |
0.74% |
0.47% |
In the US, lease financing charge-off was 0.62% in 4Q 08. |
| Real estate 1-4 family first mortgage |
12.03% |
10.13% |
11.03% |
Computed based on state-wise loan rate. |
| Real estate 1-4 family junior lien mortgage |
16.19% |
28.18% |
15.19% |
Computed based on state-wise loan rate. |
| Credit card |
15.47% |
14.00% |
12.28% |
Wells Fargo charge-off on credit card stood at 10.13% in
1Q 09. Furthermore, Federal Reserve assumptions for the same stood at 9%-10%. |
| Other revolving credit and installment |
4.00% |
3.50% |
3.00% |
Wells Fargo's charge-off on revolving credit and installment
stood at 3.1% in 1Q 09. |
| Foreign |
0.68% |
0.58% |
0.48% |
Our assumption is based on regression analysis. The charge-off
on foreign loan stood at 0.4% at the end of 4Q 08. |
Total losses based on the 1Q 2009 outstanding loan balance
| Pessimistic Case |
| Loan Portfolio (US$ million) |
Outstanding
Balance 1Q
2009 |
Loan losses
in 2009 and 2010 |
| Commercial and commercial real estate: |
| Commercial |
191,711 |
9,355 |
| Other real estate mortgage |
104,934 |
4,617 |
| Real estate construction |
33,912 |
3,812 |
| Lease financing |
14,792 |
264 |
| Total commercial and commercial real estate |
345,349 |
18,049 |
| Consumer: |
| Real estate 1-4 family first mortgage |
242,947 |
51,643 |
| Real estate 1-4 family junior lien mortgage |
109,748 |
62,958 |
| Credit card |
22,815 |
7,059 |
| Other revolving credit and installment |
91,252 |
7,300 |
| Total consumer |
466,762 |
128,960 |
| Foreign |
31,468 |
926 |
| Total Loans |
843,579 |
147,934 |
| Securities |
1Q 2009 |
Total |
| Available for Sale |
223,581 |
13,652 |
| Trading Account |
46,497 |
| VIEs & QSPEs exposure as on December 31, 2008 |
1,902,631 |
25,800 |
| Total Loan Losses |
187,386 |
Federal Reserve loan loss computation
| Federal Reserve Computation (US$ billion) |
Loan losses
in 2009 and 2010 |
As % of loans |
| First Lien Mortgages |
32.4 |
11.9% |
| Second/Junior Lien Mortgages |
14.7 |
13.2% |
| Commercial and Industrial Loans |
9 |
4.8% |
| Commercial Real Estate Loans |
8.4 |
5.9% |
| Credit Card Loans |
6.1 |
26.0% |
| Securities (AFS and HTM) |
4.2 |
NA |
| Trading & Counterparty |
NA |
NA |
| Other |
11.3 |
NA |
| Total Loan Losses |
86.1 |
|
| Capital to be raised |
13.7 |
|
Capital to be raised - Impact on TCE
| Capital to be raised US$ million |
Min Tangible Equity
Capital Ratio |
Pessimistic
Case |
Base
Case |
Optimistic
Case |
| 2.25% |
10,635 |
9,461 |
8,250 |
| 2.50% |
14,009 |
12,865 |
11,684 |
| 2.75% |
17,383 |
16,270 |
15,119 |
| 3.00% |
20,757 |
19,674 |
18,553 |
| 3.25% |
24,131 |
23,078 |
21,988 |
| 3.50% |
27,505 |
26,482 |
25,422 |
| 3.75% |
30,879 |
29,886 |
28,857 |
| 4.00% |
34,253 |
33,290 |
32,291 |
| 4.25% |
37,627 |
36,694 |
35,726 |
| 4.50% |
41,001 |
40,098 |
39,160 |
| 4.75% |
44,375 |
43,502 |
42,595 |
| 5.00% |
47,749 |
46,906 |
46,029 |
Wells Fargo's current Tangible Common Equity (TCE) stands at 3.28%, which
is significantly lower than the prescribed limit of 4%. According to our projection,
the bank's TCE would fall to 1.56% at the end of 2010 after adjusting for accounting
and economic losses of US$187.4 billion in the adverse case. (According to
the Federal Reserve stress test, losses in the next two years would total US$86.1
billion, which is much lower than our assumption). Furthermore, resources other
than capital available to absorb losses totaled US$60.4 billion, marginally
higher than the Federal Reserve estimate of US$60.0 billion. Though the Federal
Reserve resources available to absorb losses are similar, the loan losses estimate
does not match. This is mainly due to Wells Fargo's huge off-balance sheet
exposure of US$1.9 trillion in 1Q 08, up from US$1.79 trillion in 4Q 08, and
home equity loan exposure of US$128.9 billion. Considering the massive anticipated
losses in the next two years, Wells Fargo's capital would fall short by US$34.3
billion and not US$13.7 billion as shown by the SCAP result to maintain a TCE
ratio of 4% in the pessimistic case. To increase the TCE to 4% in the optimistic
case, Wells Fargo would have to raise US$32.9 billion to endure the recessionary
pressure.
According to the press release, on May 9, 2009, Wells Fargo raised US$8.6
billion capital by issuing 392.15 million shares at US$22 per share. This diluted
the earnings by around 8.4%. However, in the pessimistic case scenario, the
bank would still be required to raise additional US$25.65 billion as a safeguard
against a deeper recession.
|
Reggie
Middleton
Reggie Middleton, LLC
Perpetual Interests, LLCTM
http://boombustblog.com/
Who am I?
Well, I fancy myself the personification of the free thinking
maverick, the ultimate non-conformist as it applies to investment and analysis.
I am definitively outside the box - not your typical or stereotypical Wall
Street investor. I work out of my home, not a Manhattan office. I build my
own technology and perform my own research - in lieu of buying it or following
the crowd. I create and follow my own macro strategies and am by definition,
a contrarian to the nth degree.
Since I use my research as a tool for my own investing
to actually put food on my table, I can stand behind it as doing what it is
supposed too - educate, illustrate and elucidate. I do not sell advice, I am
not a reporter hence do not sell stories, and I do not sell research. I am
an entrepreneur who exists just outside of mainstream corporate America and
Wall Street. This allows me freedom to do things that many can not. For instance,
I pride myself on developing some of the highest quality research available,
regardless of price. No conflicts of interest, no corporate politics, no special
favors. Just the hard truth as I have found it - and believe me, my team and
I do find it! I welcome any and all to peruse my blog, use my custom hacked
collaborative social tools, read the articles, download the files, and make
a critical comparison of the opinion referencing the situation at hand and
the time stamp on the blog post to the reality both at the time of the post
and the present. Hopefully, you will be as impressed with the Boom Bust as
I am and our constituency.
I pay for significant information and data, and am well
aware of the value of quality research. I find most currently available research
lacking, in both quality and quantity. The reason why I had to create my own
research staff was due to my dissatisfaction with what was currently available
- to both individuals and institutions.
So here I am, creating my own research for my own investment
activity. What really sets my actions apart is that I offer much of what I
produce to the public without charge - free to distribute and redistribute,
as long as it is left unaltered and full attribution is given to the author
and owner. Why would I do such a thing when others easily charge 5 and 6 digits
annually for what some may consider a lesser product? It is akin to open
source analysis! My ideas and implementations are actually improved and
fine tuned when bounced off of the collective intellect of the many, in lieu
of that of the few - no matter how smart those few may believe themselves to
be.
Very recently, I have started charging for the forensics
portion of my work, which has freed up the resources to develop the site to
deliver even more research for free, particularly on the global macro and opinion
front. This move has allowed me to serve an more diverse constituency, which
now includes the institutional consumer (ie., investment turned consumer banks,
hedge funds, pensions, etc,) as well as the newbie individual investor who
is just getting started - basically the two polar opposites of the investing
spectrum. I am proud to announce major banks as paying clients, and brand new
investors who take my book recommendations and opinions on true wealth and
success to heart.
So, this is how I use my background and knowledge in new
media, distributed computing, risk management, insurance, financial engineering,
real estate, corporate valuation and financial analysis to pursue, analyze
and capitalize on global macroeconomic opportunities. I have included a more
in depth bio at the bottom of the page for those who really, really need to
know more about me.
Visit his blog Boom
Bust Blog.
Copyright © 2007-2009 Reggie Middleton
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