Archive - Mar 23, 2009 - Story
So You Want 14x Free Leverage?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 20:21 -0500
And yes, as reader Mike points out, it is 14x, not 12x (as ZH also erroneously assumed). The administration's 6x definition of leverage is really debt to equity. In their example where a PPIP participant invests $6 in equity, he ultimately purchases $84 in assets, or a total effective notional leveraging of 14x. (14x upside, 1x downside: taxpayer footing the difference.
So You Want 14x Free Leverage?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 20:21 -0500
And yes, as reader Mike points out, it is 14x, not 12x (as ZH also erroneously assumed). The administration's 6x definition of leverage is really debt to equity. In their example where a PPIP participant invests $6 in equity, he ultimately purchases $84 in assets, or a total effective notional leveraging of 14x. (14x upside, 1x downside: taxpayer footing the difference.
Kitchen Sink 2.0
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 18:26 -0500Some midday sanity from Goldman's Bob Savage. Zero Hedge does not necessarily agree with some of the assumptions/conclusions here.
The doubters about the US PPIP and TALF are significant. Most point to three issues:
The bulls on CNBC
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 18:10 -0500Right now, the CNBC hoi polloi are crowing about March closing out at potentially the best monthly performance since October 2002. As usual, there's nothing to back up this piercing analysis other than various interviews with floor traders who are profiting off the vol on the major indices. Of course, come mid-April when Q1 numbers are released the doom and gloom will come back with a vengeance.
It's almost like CNBC was formed purely to supply Jon Stewart with material on slow days on CSPAN.
The Annotated Geithner Op-Ed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 18:00 -0500Reader Lookout has done a great job of not only editorializing Geithner's earlier WSJ opinion piece for junior high school English grammar but also explaining in simple English the message that Geithner is trying to convey between the lines. For anybody still confused of what all the hoopla is about this is a must read.
Is JP Morgan Buying A Private Jet Hangar?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 16:36 -0500Not if you believe Reuters, but where there is smoke there is usually fire. According to an earlier report by ABC News, the house of Dimon was fully intent on shaming Vik's Cititanic and his meager attempt to buy one lowly Dassault Falcon, by purchasing not only two Gulfstream 650 jets but also a hangar in which to house these new acquisitions at Westchester airport! The total cost: $138 million.
More bad news in good numbers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 16:21 -0500Existing home sales number were released this morning and on the surface, it seemed to be a solid win for the US - about time right? MoM existing home sales were priced into markets about a -0.9% clip but the numbers came out at 5.1% in the green. The NAR's numbers are pretty solid drivers for the USD and these numbers were being carefully watched as January clocked in at a buzz-killing -5.9% MoM.
However, the deeper story painted is not a promising sign.
Karl Will, Global Head of JP Morgan Tech M&A Quits
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 16:10 -0500In yet another sign of how Wall Street is appreciating Obama's recent foray into compenstation decisions, Karl Will, head of JPM global tech M&A, is leaving the company, joining two other recent senior level departures, Brian McCarth, former co-head of global healthcare investment banking and Eric Rabinowitz, a VP in the same group, both of whom ended up at TARP non-beneficiary Oppenheimer.
The Finanzmarktstabilisierungsergänzungsgesetz
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 15:08 -0500On March 20, the German parliament adopted the Finanzmarktstabilisierungsergänzungsgesetz bill (FMStErgG in short), or the Bank Nationalization Act, which allows the government to expropriate shareholders of systematically relevant banks in distress in order to take a more proactive role in their restructuring.
MGM Mirage's Troubles Just Keep Growing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 14:30 -0500The latest sucker punch against what has become the Las Vegas Strip Pinata comes from MGM Mirage's very own partner in the CityCenter development, Dubai World, and specifically the Infinity World subsidiary. The latter claims MGM has defaulted on the terms of their JV, and has filed a lawsuit against the casino operator in Delaware Chancery.
GS: 2009 Outlook: Bearish On CRE; REITs Could Re-test Recent Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 14:04 -0500Goldman has been really pounding the REIT space. Which, of course, skeptics will say simply means their prop desk (or what is left of it) is buying REIT assets hand over fist. Or maybe they just really hate the space.
GS: 2009 Outlook: Bearish On CRE; REITs Could Re-test Recent Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 14:04 -0500Goldman has been really pounding the REIT space. Which, of course, skeptics will say simply means their prop desk (or what is left of it) is buying REIT assets hand over fist. Or maybe they just really hate the space.
Loan BWIC Due At Noon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 13:40 -0500Brokers are using the latest governmental market intervention rally to generate interest in a $261 million loan BWIC due today at noon. As TALF 3.0 is likely to include purchasing any and all Term Loans, this may be a good deal.
Top ten loans in the BWIC list below:
Loan BWIC Due At Noon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 13:40 -0500Brokers are using the latest governmental market intervention rally to generate interest in a $261 million loan BWIC due today at noon. As TALF 3.0 is likely to include purchasing any and all Term Loans, this may be a good deal.
Top ten loans in the BWIC list below:
Blogging Treasury's Attempts At Disclosure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/23/2009 13:09 -0500One of few counselors to Geithner who have not resigned Gene Sperling and counsel Matthew K. Baker are joined by Muffie Benson-Perella.
Gains which "are hoped to be made" will be shared with the private investor...Losses which are hoped to not be made, will be footed by the taxpayer.
Life would be different if credit markets were "functioning"
"A problem of great scale and complexity" Indeed. "Will be a long road as we tweak these solutions and try other solutions": TALF 3.0 thru 17.3 coming soon




