Archive - Oct 2011
October 26th
Freddie CEO Leaving Company: To Get $3.9 Million For Receiving $14.5 Billion In Bailout Cash Over His Tenure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 15:01 -0500
If you are a CEO in America, what is the surest way to get at least $4 million in compensation in two years? Why to burn $14.5 billion of course. Such is the sad plight of mortgage zombie Freddie Mac CEO Ed Haldeman, who as Politico reports, is set to depart the company after just two years of joining. So what is Mr. Haldeman's claim to fame over those 8 quarters? Why nothing short of collecting $14.5 billion in "Treasury Draws" over the two years. What is a draw? The technical definition: "Represents the draw requested based on Freddie Mac’s net worth deficit for the quarter presented. Commencing in 2Q 2011, the draw request represents the company’s net worth deficit at quarter end rounded up to the nearest $1 million." In other words, this is the minimum amount of money that the Treasury had to donate to the nationalized mortgage giant for it to continue pretending it is viable. As the chart below demonstrates, the total "draws" received under Haldeman's tenure amounts to $14.5 billion. This excludes the Q3 number which will be made clear next week. Something tells us with this abrupt departure, the number may be higher to quite higher than expected. But regardless: a job well done Ed. As Politico reports: "Haldeman joined Freddie Mac in 2009 and received $3.9 million in compensation last year, according to Forbes. He intends to remain as CEO until a succession plan is in place. “Ed Haldeman has brought strong leadership to Freddie Mac,” said FHFA acting director Edward DeMarco. “I appreciate his commitment to leadership stability during the upcoming transition." And now you know how to make millions in America and be part of the 1%.
Which Way Wednesday - EFSF'd Up Edition
Submitted by ilene on 10/26/2011 14:47 -0500Even if Europe fixes their mess and China does whatever it is China does to paint their numbers for another few years, it will only serve to swing the spotlight back on this dinosaur of a Nation that is little more than a shell of its former self.
THe WWF FaRCE 2011 (WiLL iT EVeR eND?)
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 10/26/2011 14:43 -0500The World Wide Financial Farce...
Buy The Rumor, Sell The News
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 14:12 -0500Europe is playing havoc with this old trading strategy. By only having rumors and never having news they keep the markets in permanent buy the rumor mode. The china story is at best old news. Italy's austerity credibility is sorely lacking, but the best news is the Merkozy wants to meet the bankers. It feels like aliens landing on a planet and saying take me to your leaders. Seems like we are long past short covering and this is people getting long on rumors and plans. Everything I read tells me they are trying but that there are no solutions that are sure to work and some will ruin the entire system if they are tried and fail.
From Paulson's 3 Page TARP Termsheet To The Euro Council's 3 Page "Bailout" Statement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 13:46 -0500Fresh from the European Council presses comes the complete 3 whopping page statement to bailout the Eurozone (not to be confused with Hank Paulson's 3 page TARP termsheet). There is nothing at all here, but for those who need a paperweight, feel free to print 200 copies and staple them together or something.
Italy Concedes To Full Blown Austerity: To Raise Retirement Age From 65 To 67 By 2026
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 13:32 -0500Don't anyone say Italy is not willing to tackle austerity with the determination of a rabid dog: retirement age to be raised by 2 years in 15 years, and an epic €5 billion to be raised from privatizations.
Full Remarks By Unelected European Council President Herman Von Rompuy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 13:18 -0500As expected, nothing has been resolved. Everything to be pushed back to some other indefinite time. The only actual agreement, ironically deals, with a date so far in the future, the EUR will likely no longer even exist: 'Agreement has been reached that banks should be required, by 30 June 2012, to have 9 % of the highest quality capital. This figure should take into account a marking down for sovereign bond holdings against current market prices (as of 30 September 2011)."
More Headines
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 13:10 -0500The horror, the horror:
- EU-27 RELEASES STATEMENT AFTER BRUSSELS SUMMIT
- EU-27 SAYS COMMISSION MUST URGENTLY EXPLORE BANK GUARANTEES
- EU SAYS BANKS SHOULD FIRST FIND PRIVATE SOURCES TO RAISE FUNDS
- EU SAYS STATE AID RULES ON BANKS SHOULD BE PROPORTIONAL
- EU SAYS MID-TERM BANK FUNDING MUST HEAD OFF CREDIT CRUNCH RISK
Eurozone Summit Webcast Resumes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 13:07 -0500To anyone who still has the energy to be lied to over and over by a bunch of corrupt, broke, pathologically lying bureucrats, feel free to tune in.
Here Come The Eurozone Summit Headfake Headlines
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 12:59 -0500It begins:
- EURO ZONE PLANS TO LEVERAGE EFSF BAILOUT FUND "SEVERAL FOLD", FINANCE MINISTERS TO DECIDE DETAILS IN NOVEMBER -- DRAFT EURO ZONE SUMMIT STATEMENT
- DRAFT EURO ZONE STATEMENT MAKES NO MENTION AT THIS STAGE OF ITALY'S REQUIRED BUDGET STEPS
- NO AMOUNTS SET FOR BANK RECAPITALIZATIONS
In other news, there will be absolutely nothing actionable following today's "ground-breaking" summit. There will also be nothing at all after the Cannes statement. Or any time after. Why? Simple - there is nothing that Europe can propose in a universe in which 2+2=4 that resolves its problems.
Idiot Market Jumps On 12 Hour Old News Of Yet Another Chinese Euro Bailout, Since Refuted
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 12:46 -0500Sigh...
Last Treasury Auction Before US Breaches 100% Debt To GDP Prices Quietly And Without Surprises
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 12:22 -0500
There is little if anything one can say about today's 5 Year auction. It priced at 1.055%, just above the record low 1.015% in September, and well inside the WI 5 Year trading at 1.08%, at a solid 2.90 Bid To Cover, compared to the 2.82 six auction average. The internals were boring, with Indirects taking down 49.3% of the auction, compared to the 40.5% LTM average, Directs declined modestly to 10.4% (in line with the 11.2% average), and Dealer take down unchanged from September at 40.3%. However, one massively notable thing about this auction is that it is the last one, probably ever, in which the US debt/GDP ratio is still under 100% following the auction. Adding today's $35 billion to yesterday's $35 billion in Two year bonds, brings total US debt to $15.010 trillion, with GDP still at $15.013 trillion (granted this number may be revised tomorrow), resulting in a debt to GDP ratio of 99.99%. Tomorrow's historical $29 billion in 7 Year bonds will take America into that uncharted territory of triple digit debt to GDP. But yes, the formal settlement of all bonds will not occur until Halloween, so we can celebrate on several days America's historic transition one step closer to insolvency.
Glimmers of Housing Hope In Mortgage Applications Data
Submitted by ilene on 10/26/2011 12:17 -0500We're always more interested in the trend, and whether that trend is showing signs of change.
Presenting Whitney Tilson's Performance Since Inception Relative To The S&P
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 11:50 -0500
Pardon our ignorance, but shouldn't a value-focused hedge fund that has been in operation for 7 years, and has nearly daily TV and media exposure, outperform the S&P net of fees? Actually, scratch that, shouldn't any hedge fund still in existence after 7 years, outperform the S&P?
Open Europe Summarizes What To Expect From Today's European Summit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2011 11:27 -0500One of the premier Euroskeptic think tanks chimes in with, as expected, a rather bleak outlook on what to expect from today's Summit which is just now starting: "The hope for a “comprehensive plan” to save the eurozone, as originally touted by the eurozone leaders, looks to be a lost cause. The best outcome we can hope for today looks to be a broad political agreement, with technical details left to be sorted at a later date. Given previous experiences with technical changes (notably the second Greek bailout package and the Finnish collateral deal) it is definitely possible that the deal could be watered down, for example with investors being offered greater guarantees over their involvement in the second Greek bailout or with the bank recapitalisation actually turning out to be less stringent than expected....No matter what the details look like, the insurance plan is fundamentally flawed, given that guarantees may not be viable when they are most needed and 20% wouldn’t be enough to calm markets any way... there’s massive irony here, as Europe is now falling back on massively complex ‘Anglo-Saxon’ financial instruments to help save the eurozone. Putting these at the heart of an already complex, diverse and flawed monetary union is far from desirable.





