Posted in American Economy, Banks, Credit Crunch, Dollar, Wall Street on September 22nd, 2008
U.S. investment bankers have almost disappeared off the face of the Earth. The so-called Masters of the Universe only have themselves to blame, of course.
Last week a “flight to safety” of investors in America’s $3.5 trillion Treasury money market was only halted by Secretary Henry Paulson’s swift action in nationalising the banking sector’s bad debts.
Read The Great Harvard Sausage Scandal 2008 over at Syntagma.
Today we hear that the two surviving giant American investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, have turned themselves into “holding banks”, which will allow them to beg on the streets for any deposits we the people may have remaining after their Attila the Hun rampage through our domestic balance sheets. They will also gain access to Government funds designed to bail out the banks.
In common parlance, Goldman and Morgan and the other stricken titans are signing on the dole.
Read the rest of the article.
Posted in Loans, Money, Monoline Insurers, Mortgages, Stock Market, Sub-prime loans, Wall Street, Warren Buffet on February 13th, 2008
Legendary investor, Warren Buffett — the Sage of Omaha — in a move he says is designed to make money, has offered to take on $800 billion of the liabilities of U.S. municipal bonds.
The offer goes to three “monoline†bond insurers, Ambac Financial, MBIA and Financial Guaranty Insurance. One has already rejected the deal, and he is still awaiting reponses from the other two, although one of them is making favourable noises.
The move breathed new life into global stock markets yesterday. The monolines are seen as the second line of defence against the sub-prime mortgage fiasco by propping up banks’ balance sheets in the event of a repayment meltdown.
Traditionally, the bond insurers concentrate on municipal risk, but they too got caught up in the collective madness of sub-prime lending for the same reason respectable banks did : greed for perceived easy money.
However, the monolines are now short of capital and are being hit by downgrades from the rating agencies.
T J Marta, fixed income strategist at RBC Capital Markets, said it was a coup for bond insurers, which could help them avoid “the doomsday scenarioâ€.
Posted in FTSE100, Investing, IRAs, S&P500, Shares, Standard & Poor's, Stock Market, Wall Street on June 6th, 2007
Last week the S&P500 hit an all-time high, throwing off years of sluggish performance.
To underline that, just compare the S&P with Britain’s FTSE100. Over most of the past seven years, the Footsie has steamed ahead of its U.S. equivalent. In the last five years the UK index has leapt 50 percent compared with 12 percent in American markets. Over the past three years, the S&P500 has returned 30 percent set against 64 in the UK.
Since 2000, the U.S. index has fallen overall by 8 percent compared with a gain of 32 percent by the Footsie.
Peter Seilern of Seilern Investment Management responds, “People talk about the trade deficit which is no worse than many eurozone countries. And if you look at valuations, the S&P500 is trading at about 18 times earnings, which is neither cheap nor expensive. America has a culture of enterprise and some of the best managed companies in the world.”
Cormac Weldon, head of U.S. equities at Threadneedle, says, “There are now sound reasons for investors to reassess their allocation to the U.S. market.”