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1 To 3 Years Of Securities Recalls Aka Forced Squeeze To Go

Tyler Durden's picture




After numerous posts on this blog discussing speculation of assorted forced buy ins, it seems that this phenomenon is quite factual and quite pervasive among the asset management community. As Zero Hedge has noted previously, forced buy-ins are a critical issue as it leaves shorts at the mercy of their securities lenders and repo desks (most of which are TARP recipients and thus beneficiaries of higher stock prices) which generically have the option of recalling lent out shares at a moment's notice, and thus creating artificial purchasing pressure: i.e. a forced short squeeze. According to Securities Industry News, in a recent survey by Callan Associates, over half of the respondents said they are undergoing a "controlled unwind" with their securities lending desks (aka State Street, BoNY, and Northern Trust).

Firms participating in securities lending programs are trying to reduce their risks and push for greater disclosure of what happens to cash given as collateral, according to a survey released this week by Callan Associates, a San Francisco-based investment consulting firm.

About half of the respondents to the Callan survey said they are undergoing a process called “controlled unwind” to reduce the risks in their existing securities lending programs and minimize current and future losses. Properly executed, an unwind involves recalling securities out on loan without incurring any financial loss or restricting either the number of transactions or the types of securities lent.

Almost all the respondents are using their current custodian or securities lending provider for the unwind and most believe it will take one to three years to complete, said Callan.

More than half of the 44 respondents who said they wanted to make changes to their securities lending programs rank fine-tuning their cash collateral reinvestment guidelines as their top priority. This reflects a common concern among respondents about losses coming from the reinvesting of cash used as collateral against the securities that are lent out.

 

The firm surveyed 72 fund and plan sponsor organizations of which public and corporate funds comprised the majority of survey respondents. About 54 percent of the respondents were mid-sized funds that hold from $1 billion to $9 billion in fund assets. Nineteen percent of the respondents were small funds with less than $1 billion. The remaining respondents were split between “mega” funds with more than $25 billion in assets and large funds with between $10 billion and $24 billion in assets.

Bottom line - in a market where an unknown but significant amount of trading is based on widely permitted and pervasive advanced looks compliments of the exchanges, ECNs and the regulators, and the balance consists of artificial buying from rolling buyins, only the most insane, or foolhardy or both, believe they can trade with any hope of short or long-term success.




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Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:24 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:27 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:43 | Link to Comment Lou629
Lou629's picture

If all you're concerned about is the return of

 principal, but certainly not for any return on it.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:58 | Link to Comment Gordon_Gekko
Gordon_Gekko's picture

If you consider purchasing power (which, I might add, is the primary purpose of savings/"money"), even the principal won't be returned.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:58 | Link to Comment Gordon_Gekko
Gordon_Gekko's picture

Gold.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 20:51 | Link to Comment billgates
billgates's picture

Gold is as risky investment as stocks.  The price is as volatile, and the liquidity/usefulness of it is questionable.  A little bit of gold is not a bad thing, but too much is as dangerous as too much equity.  

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 02:58 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 03:20 | Link to Comment We Are Legion
We Are Legion's picture

Dude... it's metal.

 

Try eating it.

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 13:53 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 07:16 | Link to Comment erich
erich's picture

"if it were of little
value all governments would have sold off all
gold stocks long ago.....methinks the lady doth
protest too much...."

 

You babble on, sister.  The government does NOT make mistakes!  :-)

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:17 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:18 | Link to Comment VegasBD
VegasBD's picture

Forgot login. That was me. Like it matters tho?  =)

What do you think that 10k you put in savings will buy you in 10 years? Its about purchasing power and store of value. Dollars wont keep either.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 21:58 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 22:03 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 10:52 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:30 | Link to Comment Gilgamesh
Gilgamesh's picture

Thank you for finding this; putting numbers to so far adhoc reports   Quite a picture being painted against anyone not 'long only.'

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:36 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:38 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:45 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:18 | Link to Comment e1even1
e1even1's picture

that's what it says to me. not that we can bet on any type of info provided in a survey. i mean, these funds might lie even when the truth would actually serve their purpose.

their timeline might also be a misdirect. even so they say they're doing it to "reduce the risks in their existing securities lending programs and minimize current and future losses." which, if true, could mean that they want to lock in some of this bounce while they can. that could seriously aggravate any correction or worse.

any overload of long term equity exposure is tenuous in this environment. i think we can at least give them credit for having learned that, late.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:55 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 21:44 | Link to Comment nickbarbon
nickbarbon's picture

That's exactly how it works. It only remains to add that the cash collateral reinvestment vehicles a) are non-mark-to-market so the global tally of investment losses from the crisis is much higher than reported, b) were gating their clients and thus not allowing them to reallocate away from stocks since all their stocks were lent out - some hefty lawsuits already filed because of this, and c) represented 60% of the buyer base for consumer ABS and 80% of SIV liabilities, so the crisis didn't properly become one until the multi-trillion USD sec lending cash reinvest base stopped buying.

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 03:03 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 07:18 | Link to Comment erich
erich's picture

Yes, coherency here is in short supply.

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 07:53 | Link to Comment GetShorty
GetShorty's picture

One of the three does have a MTM fund that has been carrying a loss for 6-7 quarters running.  Since this is a MTM collateral fund, the "recovery" is a moving target.  As credit spreads tightened in the recent quarter the loss narrowed quite a bit.  If spreads blow out again, the loss will widen.  Further, recovery improves as the bonds mature.

The few lawsuits that I have read appear to be based on unfair and inconsistant treatment (allowing some to withdraw and gating others), and/or actions inconsistant with stated investment policy (buying longer-dated bonds to goose returns).

I know of one lawsuit that settled, but don't know the terms.  My guess is that the custody bank named in the lawsuit was made mostly whole and the client/plan sponser took what was left of his ball and went home.

Interestingly, one of the banks noted on its Q2 call, that about half of the clients that previously suspended their securities lending program had indeed returned.  Not quite sure how to interpret this yet.

 

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:45 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 20:54 | Link to Comment billgates
billgates's picture

depends how you invest.  If you are buying your own stocks...maybe not that much.  But if you are investing in funds like the majority of Long term passive investors it could have a substantial effect. 

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 17:52 | Link to Comment Miles Kendig
Miles Kendig's picture

So, is what we are observing free market capitalism?  I and many others have every reason to conclude that our markets are anything but a reflection of free market capitalism at work.  Reminds me of a classic RICO case.  Only in this case the government, regulators, lawmakers, law enforcers and yes, market fabricators are all willing participants.  Only a sucker would participate.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:00 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:02 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:25 | Link to Comment lizzy36
lizzy36's picture

Can anyone provide color, with respect to whether this has happened in such a coordinated fashion at anytime in the last 11 years?

TD, what are they unwinding that will take up to 3 years?

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 03:26 | Link to Comment We Are Legion
We Are Legion's picture

When it involves billions of dollars, anything that ends quick ends ugly.

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:40 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 18:56 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:19 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 19:19 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 20:29 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 07/27/2009 - 20:59 | Link to Comment bbtrader
bbtrader's picture

For this recent rally, prices have been run up the last 5 minutes of every hour - this has been what's kept the market going

Any attempts of wanting to sell this market off (like the 10 a.m. ET hour today when volume was noticeably high), buying comes in and maintains this steady move up

Tue, 07/28/2009 - 03:06 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 06:46 | Link to Comment bbtrader
bbtrader's picture

Sure looks that way...if there's little volume in the way of selling then there's not much required to keep prices afloat

The SPY, QQQQ, IWM, all had rather high volume the 10 am hour in an attempt to sell off but volume usually is very light midday so buyers stepped in and pushed it right back the remainder of the day

You're right, any significant supply would start to push this market down but technically the trend is still to the upside so the psychology is to buy weakness, and that's what's happening now

I think a convincing break of the 50-day to the downside would invite a large amount of attention but only if volume is high

I suggest looking at a daily chart of the XLF; prior to the start of this recent rally, it was about to break down below the 50-day (very bearish), on a Friday; then the following Monday, before the open, Meredith Whitney made her bullish comments about GS and the banks, and look what happened, the entire market rallied

 

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 21:30 | Link to Comment deadhead
deadhead's picture

off topic to this thread, but I am relieved by this just posted b'berg story that our Treasury Secretary has (once again) reassured our Chinese lending overlords that we are serious about deficit reduction.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aGKZviKKdfB0

Mon, 07/27/2009 - 21:39 | Link to Comment Anonymous
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