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Is the subprime mortgage market collapsing before our eyes, or did we avoid
a disaster as Bear Stearns stepped up to the plate with $3.2 billion to help
its ailing funds? As we will see from the data, the problems in the subprime
world are not over. The Fat Lady has not sung. But will the problems in this
market contaminate the rest of the liquidity-driven markets? Is the party over?
Not according to the high-yield markets. In this week's letter, we look at
what could be the real problem in the next half of the year.
Iran Out of Gas
But before we touch on the credit world, I want to briefly look at a development
in the oil markets which I find intriguing. Dr. Woody Brock, in a recent paper
on oil prices, wrote a rather interesting sentence, to wit, that Iran would
not have net oil to export in 2014. I found that rather remarkable. Woody is
very serious and sober-minded even for an economist, not given to rash analysis,
but this was certainly a new idea to me. I knew they were importing most of
their gasoline, as they do not have a great deal of refining capacity. As it
turns out, there is much more to the story.
I have said for years that I expect Iran to be the new friend of the US sometime
next decade, as the regime is not popular and the country is growing younger.
(Think China, once an implacable enemy.) I thought that the impetus would be
the lack of freedom and knowledge of how the world is better off coming from
the internet, but it turns out that it may be a desire for more freedom combined
with economic problems which help bring about regime change, much as in Russia
last century.
How could a country with the third (or second, depending on which source you
quote) largest oil reserves in the world not be churning out ever more black
gold? The answer, as it almost always is for such problems, turns out to be
governmental and not economic in nature. Let's start out with a few facts.
Oil provides more than 70% of the revenues of the government of Iran. The
rise in oil prices has been a bonanza for the regime, allowing them to subsidize
all sorts of welfare programs at home and mischief abroad. And one of the chief
subsidies is gasoline prices.
Gasoline costs about $.34 cents a gallon in Iran, or 9 cents a liter. You
can fill up your Honda Civic for $4.49. In the US it costs almost $40 (The
price has risen since the chart below was made). In neighboring Turkey it costs
almost $95. Look at the two charts below from the recent Foreign Policy Magazine.
Notice that Iran is spending 38% of its national budget (almost 15% of GDP!)
on gasoline subsidies!

Chart two:

And this situation is likely to get worse. Let's look at a rather remarkable
peer-reviewed study done for the National Academy of Sciences by Roger Stern
of Johns Hopkins University late last year. Stern's analysis is somewhat political,
in that he is critical of current US Iranian policy, but this is just one of
several studies which show the same thing (http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/0603903104v1):
"A more probable scenario is that, absent some change in Irani policy ...
[we will see] exports declining to zero by 2014-2015. Energy subsidies, hostility
to foreign investment, and inefficiencies of its state-planned economy underlie
Iran's problem, which has no relation to 'peak oil.'"
Iran earns about $50 billion a year in oil exports. The decline is estimated
at 10-12% annually. In less than five years, exports could be halved and then
disappear by 2015, predicted Stern.
Of course, you can go to a dozen web sites, mostly Iranian, which demonstrate
that Iranian production will be double (or pick a number) by that time. The
problem is, they all assume rather large sums of investment in the Iranian
oil fields. Two projects which are "counted on" to be producing oil in 2008
have yet to be funded or started, as negotiations have broken down. Iran seems
incapable of getting a deal actually done with a willing partner.
Part of this is a caused by the Iranian constitution, which does not allow
for foreign ownership of oil reserves or fields. Instead, they try to negotiate
to pay for investing in oil production. Called a buyback, any investment in
an oil field is turned into sovereign Iranian government debt with a return
of 15-17%. This is a very unpopular program at home, coming under much criticism
from local government officials. Any deal that gets close to getting done comes
under attack from lawmakers as being too good for foreign investors, so nothing
is getting done.
Why not just fund the development themselves? They could, but the mullahs
have elected to spend the money now rather than make investments which will
not produce revenues for 4-6 years or more. They are investing around half
the money needed just to maintain production, around $3 billion a year.
Let's look at a quote from Mohammed Hadi Nejad-Hosseinian, Iran's deputy oil
minister for international affairs: "If the government does not control the
consumption of oil products in Iran ... and at the same time, if the projects
for increasing the capacity of the oil and protection of the oil wells will
not happen, within 10 years, there will not be any oil for export." That's
from their guy, not a Western academic.
When an Enemy is Self-Destructing, Stand Aside
Iran produced over 6 billion barrels of oil before the revolution in 1979.
They now produce around 4 billion barrels a year. They are currently producing
about 5% below their quota, which shows they are at their limits under current
capacity. And production at their old fields is waning. The world recovery
rate is about 35% from oil fields. Iran's is an abnormally low 24-27%. Normally,
you pump natural gas back into an aging field (called reinjection) in order
to get higher yields. Iran has enormous reserves of natural gas. Seems like
there should be a solution.
However, if the National Iranian Oil Company (NOIC) sells it natural gas outside
of Iran, it turns a profit. If it sells it in the country, then it can only
get the lower, dramatically subsidized price. Guess which it chooses. Even
so, internal natural gas demand is growing by 9% a year.
Not surprisingly, at 34 cents a gallon gasoline demand is rising 10% a year.
This week, the government moved to ration supplies to about 22 gallons a month,
which does not go far in the large cars preferred by younger Iranians. There
have been riots, with people chanting "Death to Ahmadinejad." They take their
right to plenty of cheap gas seriously. There is also widespread smuggling.
Ten barrels of gasoline (easily hauled in a pickup) taken into Turkey yields
about $3,000 in profit in a country with about that much GDP per person. Let's
end with this section from Stern:
"Our survey suggests that Iran's petroleum sector is unlikely to attract investment
sufficient to maintain oil exports. Maintaining exports would require foreign
investment to increase when it appears to be declining. Other factors contributing
to export decline are also intensifying. Demand growth for subsidized petroleum
compounds from an ever-larger base. Growth rates for gasoline (11-12%), gas
(9%), and electric power (7-8%) are especially problematic. Oil recovery rates
have declined, and, with no remedy in sight for the gas reinjection shortage,
this decline may accelerate.
"Depletion rates have increased, and, if investment does not increase, depletion
will accelerate. If the regime actually proceeds with LNG exports, oil export
decline will accelerate for lack of reinjection gas. In summary, the regime
has been incapable of maximizing profit, minimizing cost, or constraining explosive
demand for subsidized petroleum products. These failures have very substantial
economic consequences.
"Despite mismanagement, the Islamic Republic's real oil revenues are nearly
their highest ever as rising price compensates for stagnant energy production
and declining oil exports. Despite high price, however, population growth has
resulted in a 44% decline of real oil revenue per capita since the 1980 price
peak. Moreover, virtually all revenue growth has been applied to pet projects,
loss-making industries, etc. If price were to decline, political power sustained
by the quadrupling of government spending since 1999 may not be sustainable.
Yet we found no evidence that Iran plans fiscal retrenchment or any scheme
to sustain oil investment.
"Rather, the government promises 'to put oil revenues on every table,' as
if monopoly rents were not already the entree. Backing this promise is a welfare
state built on the Soviet model widely understood as a formula for long-run
economic suicide. This includes the 5-year plans, misallocation of resources,
loss-making state enterprises, subsidized consumption, corruption, and oil
export dependence that doomed the Soviet experiment. Therefore, the regime's
ability to contend with the export decline we project seems limited."
Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of mullahs. If gasoline subsidies are 40%
of the national budget now, what will they be in 7 years at a growth of 10%
a year? Can rationing work? No, but it can slow the economy.
Stern concludes that Iran may need nuclear power as their energy supply is
dwindling. I find this conclusion rather preposterous, since if they wanted
more energy, all they would have to do is allow foreign investment or invest
more of their own money in their own fields. If the developed world will simply
apply firm sanctions, Iran will have to reconsider its nuclear program, as
their ability to finance mischief will erode as the mullahs divert their resources
to domestic needs in order to maintain their dwindling popularity.
The cost of their current policies cannot be lost on the youth and educated
people of the country. There is almost 14% unemployment among college graduates.
Iran looks to me like Russia did in 1988. They were in the process of self-destruction,
although few recognized it at the time. Iran is a matter of time.
Bear (or Rather Canary?) Stearns
It is hard to know where to start when trying to analyze the current problems
in the subprime mortgage markets, there are just so many points that beg to
be made. So, not necessarily in order of importance, let's look at a few items.
First, as Dennis Gartman so frequently states, there is never just one cockroach.
If you see one, you know there are more in the wall. Bear Stearns is just the
first. They may be the canary in the coal mine which warns us of more problems
to come.
Will the problem in the subprime market spread to other areas of the debt
market? The answer depends on what you mean by spread.
A quick review. Subprime mortgages are bought by investment banks and re-packaged
as Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (RMBS). These securities, which can
contain thousands of loans, are split up into varying groups, or tranches,
and each tranche is given a rating by one or more rating agencies, typically
Moody's, S&P, or Fitch. The highest-rated levels get the first monies paid
back into the fund, the next level is next in line, on down to the bottom rung
which is last in line to get repaid and first in line to get shot if there
are losses in the mortgage revolution. The bottom rung is called the equity
tranche, also called toxic waste by those in the industry.
Let's look at a chart of an index of BBB-rated tranches, which is typically
the mid-level tranche. They have dropped 42% since January. This is not a pretty
chart, but it tells the story. (www.markit.com)
Some BBB tranches from 2006 are down as much as 60% already.

If you looked at a chart of the high-yield bond index, it is only off a point
or so, which suggests that the problem is not spreading into other major bond
categories, or at least not yet. In fact, we should take comfort in this, but
looking into the index does raise an eyebrow. The index is composed of 100
high-yield bonds. My assistant, Majed, looked at all 100 issues and found that
roughly 60% had negative free cash flow per share. While that is not unusual
for growth companies, a lot of those names are old-line corporations, with
large debt-to-equity ratios. This is definitely not a low-risk market, but
it only pays 320 basis points over US government debt. You can look at the
various stocks in the index for yourself at http://www.markit.com/information/affiliations/cdx.
This week Bear Stearns felt it necessary to inject $1.6 billion in loans into
two of its hedge funds that deal in the higher-risk portion of the subprime
mortgage market. These funds are down 23% at least. Merrill Lynch moved to
seize some of the assets it had as collateral for loans and put them to the
market. Prices offered on the better grades were a shock, and there was no
bid on most of the securities. Not low bids, but no bids. Merrill decided to
not press the sale.
Mark to Model or Mark to Market?
Here's the problem. There is not an active market in these securities, so
the various funds and banks use a "model" to decide what price they should
use when toting up their assets. But if these securities are actually sold,
then now you have a market price, and you have to mark to market rather than
use the price based on your model.
As an illustration, let's say an institution had to sell a $1 million chunk
of a $20 million BBB tranche. Before that sale, other funds and institutions
owning that same tranche could price it at the model price, i.e., what their
accountants or bankers said they were worth. Nothing sinister here, just people
making their best guesses. Typically, a fund will take three such guesses from
outside firms and go with the average, but each fund or bank will have its
own rules.
But if that institution sells their tranche for a 20% loss, then now there
is a market price established for everyone who owns that same tranche. Losses
passed all around. As an aside, a group of hedge funds has written the SEC
asking the agency to be on the lookout for investment banks who would buy bad
loans in order to keep them from defaulting and leading to losses in the banks'
derivative portfolios. As you might imagine, these funds are short these derivatives
and want to see large losses at the banks.
But this stuff is rated, right? It should all sort out. Not to panic.
Let's go to the latest issue of Bloomberg Markets magazine. In an explosive
article called "The Rating Charade" (kudos to Richard Tomlinson and David Evans
for a well-done piece), they discuss a Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO)
issued by Credit Suisse in 2000 (well before the current subprime crisis!)
and composed of mortgages, loans, and other debt. Cutting to the chase, all
three rating agencies rated the five tranches. 95% was rated investment grade.
The unrated tranches went completely bust, the two mezzanine tranches (rated
BBB and A!) lost everything as well. Those losses combined for $47 million.
The AAA tranche lost almost 25%, although those investors did have insurance,
so they got their money back, as MBIA took the $73 million loss in the AAA
tranche. A total of $120 million in losses in a $340 million CDO, with 95%
of it rated as investment grade. Ouch.
As I have written since the fall of last year, these bonds are bought by various
institutions because of the ratings from the credit agencies. And it is not
just European and Asian institutions. Let's make a short list of some US pension
funds that buy the equity (toxic waste) portion of CDOs: The New Mexico Investment
Council ($222 million and another authorized $300 million for 3% of its total
fund), the General Retirement System of Detroit ($38.8 million), the Teachers
Retirement System of Texas ($62.8 million), Calpers ... the list is evidently
long. 7% of all the equity tranches sold in the US in the past decade were
purchased by US pension funds, endowments,s and religious organizations.
So, why did they buy them? Let's be clear. They were looking for higher returns,
and they took comfort in the ratings. Some of these CDO-rated tranches paid
10% over LIBOR. That is a huge difference and roughly double the return for
similarly rated debt. The equity portions offered as much as 20%. Bear Stearns
said in a marketing meeting that "The outside agencies that oversee these structures
are the rating agencies." I will bet you a few dollars against a donut that
similar statements were made by other investment banks.
But what do the rating agencies say? Fitch: "It's not accurate. We don't provide
any oversight." Moody's: "It's a common misperception. All we're providing
is a credit assessment and comments." S&P: "We disagree. We rate the transactions
that issuers bring to us based on our published criteria."
(A lot of these "investments" were made as principle-protected notes. That
means, as an example, that an investment bank would couple a 12-year zero-coupon
bond with the equity CDO tranche. The pension fund will not lose money if the
equity tranche blows up, but will make nothing on its asset for 12 years. Not
a good deal. But don't get me started on principle-protected notes. That's
one of my pet peeves.)
The rating agencies all have disclaimers which read something like this: "You
should not make an investment based on our ratings." That is of course laughable,
as the only reason that anyone buys these investments is the ratings. It is
going to be interesting to see what the courts say, as you can be sure of one
thing: this is going to end up in court.
How large are the losses we are talking about? They could be quite large.
From the Bloomberg article:
"As foreclosures increase, the subprime-backed securities in CDOs begin to
crumble. Subprime mortgage securities make up about $100 billion of the $375
billion of CDOs sold in the U.S. in 2006, according to data from Moody's and
Morgan Stanley. Seventy-five percent of global CDO sales are in the U.S. Moody's
reported in March that about half of the CDOs sold in the U.S. last year contained
subprime debt. On average, 45 percent of the contents of those CDOs consisted
of subprime home loans, Moody's said.
"In a certain class of CDOs, the concentration of subprime is even higher.
S&P and Fitch estimate that subprime mortgage securities make up more than
70 percent of the debt in so-called mezzanine asset-backed CDOs, a type of
CDO that repackages bonds, mostly mortgage debt, with low credit ratings. Investors
bought $59.5 billion of these CDOs in 2006, according to Morgan Stanley. On
average, as with all CDOs, more than 90 percent of the value in them is rated
investment grade."
The Center for Responsible Lending estimates that 2.2 million borrowers who
got subprime loans since 1998 either have lost or will lose their homes through
foreclosure over the next few years. This includes one of every five borrowers
who got subprime loans in 2005-06, a default rate unmatched in the history
of the modern mortgage market.
You can go to your Bloomberg quote machine and pull up residential subprime
structured finance deals. What you find is one RMBS that was issued in 2006
that already has over 54% of its loans more than 60 days delinquent and 17%
of them in foreclosure. Think the buyers of that equity tranche stand a snowball's
chance of getting anything?
Has this security been re-rated? No, because the ratings agencies say they
cannot re-rate something until they know for certain there are losses. They
can't act on suspicion. However, I do remember them putting out warning notices
for various bonds and corporate offerings prior to re-rating. I would think
those are coming.
$250 Billion in Subprime Losses?
The problem is that if these offerings lose their investment grades, many
institutions will be forced to sell, as they are limited by their charters
to only invest in rated paper. But who will buy until the smoke clears? It
will get ugly. This will end in tears.
"The highest default rates on home loans in a decade have reduced prices of
some bonds backed by mortgages to people with poor or limited credit by more
than 50 cents on the dollar and forced New York-based Bear Stearns Cos. to
offer $3.2 billion to bail out a money-losing hedge fund. Almost 65 percent
of the bonds in indexes that track subprime mortgage debt don't meet the ratings
criteria in place when they were sold, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
"That may just be the beginning. Downgrades by S&P, Moody's and Fitch
would force hundreds of investors to sell holdings, roiling the $800 billion
market for securities backed by subprime mortgages and $1 trillion of collateralized
debt obligations, the fastest growing part of the financial markets." (Bloomberg)
How much could the losses be? It depends on who you ask, but estimates of
$150 billion or more are quite common. Institutional Risk Analytics, a Hawthorne,
California-based company that writes computer programs for accounting firms,
says 25% of the face value of CDOs is in jeopardy, or $250 billion. But no
one really knows. It is all guesswork, except that everyone seems to agree
it will be large.
The rating agencies use various models to come up with their ratings. But
a recent study suggests that if you "take the 300 bonds that are used in the
ABX indexes, the benchmarks for the subprime mortgage debt market, 190 fail
to meet the credit support standard, according to data released in May by trustees
responsible for funneling interest payments to debt investors.
"Most of those, representing about $200 billion, are rated below AAA. Some
contain so many defaulted loans that the credit support is outweighed by potential
losses. Fifty of the 60 A rated bonds fail the criteria, as do 22 of the 60
AA rated bonds and three of the 60 AAA bonds.
"All but five of 120 securities in BBB or BBB-rated portions of the mortgage-backed
securities would have failed S&P's criteria, according to data compiled
by Bloomberg."
Bottom line: no one knows how large the losses will be. Right now the "hope" is
that they are spread out among hundreds or thousands of various funds, institutions,
and agencies, and thus there will be no major failures or systemic risk.
So while it may not directly affect other types of bond offerings, it is definitely
going to affect the appetite for risk, which in the long run is a good thing,
as deals were getting done that were questionable. Nothing helps concentrate
the mind like the prospect of a hanging, said Judge Roy Bean. And nothing helps
you focus on risk like a serious loss in your portfolio.
We will continue this theme next week, as this letter is getting long and
it is getting late. There is obviously a whole lot more to say, but this is
one game that is going to take a long time to play out. It won't be like breaking
an egg. It will be more like watching ice cream melt.
July 4, Lewis and Clarke, and Fishing
Next week it is the 4th of July. I will be at the Ballpark so I can stay late
and watch the fireworks. I really do like fireworks displays, and the Rangers
do it right. If they could just do it with their pitching. Well, in a sense,
I guess they do. The other teams light up the scoreboard on us.
In the past few weeks I have read a biography of Thomas Jefferson and just
finished the outstanding biography of Meriwether Lewis called Undaunted
Courage, by Stephen Ambrose. I highly recommend it. (You can find it
at www.Amazon.com)
In reading about Jefferson, I was once again amazed at the bitter partisanship
that developed among the Founding Fathers so few years after the birth of the
nation. While we deplore the partisanship in today's Washington, it is really
rather tame when compared to the early 1800s.
I finished the Lewis biography flying back from Calgary over Montana, where
Lewis and Clarke walked into the wilderness with 30 men to find a route to
the Pacific. To read the description of the land in its pristine state is truly
remarkable. The hardships they endured, coupled with the disease and pain,
is amazing. But just as inspiring is to read of their joys and triumphs and
friendship. It is also interesting to note in both the Lewis and Jefferson
biographies that the seeds of the subprime excesses were clearly present in
abundance at the founding of our country. While the buffalo herds are gone,
the spirit of speculation is alive and well.
In two weeks I am flying to La Jolla with my youngest son. Paul McCulley is
going to meet me, and we will charter a boat and go into the Pacific at 10
pm at night so we can get to where the albacore are hopefully running the next
morning. I have never done anything like that and look forward to it. I am
a lousy fisherman, but I enjoy the company. Maybe I can actually catch something.
Then the next weekend I go to Maine (again with Trey) where we will take a
float plane into a lake and fish for the weekend with David Kotok and friends.
Martin Barnes and Barry Ritholtz will be there as well. Good friends and lots
of wine. How much better can it get?
It is time to hit the send button. Have a great week, and remember the men
who risked their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor to found our
nation and bring liberty and freedom to the world.
Your thinking about the past analyst,
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