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And Who or What the Hell is Titlos PLC Anyhow?

Marla Singer's picture




As Zero Hedge readers are no doubt aware, we have spent a great deal of time exploring the many complex and creative structures employed by financial institutions to avoid (not evade, mind you) regulatory burdens.  This is never more true than in dealing with capital or borrowing requirements defined by one or another sovereign or regulatory entity.  As an example, Basel I requirements, or related capital and reserve requirements, provide significantly reduced capital requirements on certain assets when insured against default via Credit Default Swaps.  This means that the regulator is giving banks that buy protection a gift in the form of reduced capital requirements and therefore increased leverage.  We explored this in the context of AIGFP's "Foreign Regulatory Capital Portfolio" of CDS products last year in "Is The Fed Facing Margin Calls From European Banks?" but it is becoming increasingly obvious that the lessons learned therein apply equally to sovereigns like, say, Greece.

There we observed:

Taken together we read the thrust of this section to mean that a number of European banks, seeking to limit their regulatory capital requirements under Basel I (read: seeking to increase their leverage) bought swap protection on their assets from AIG.  These obligations still sit with AIG and, in the event credit markets sink materially, AIG is likely to take losses on these instruments.

Not surprisingly, this particular species of regulatory arbitrage (from Basel I to U.S. [non]regulation of CDS contracts) is but one in a long line of methods to permit entities that range from large banks to moderately sized central banks to avoid (again, not evade) complying with onerous regulations like borrowing limits.  Of course, we just highlighted a more recent example this afternoon in "Is Titlos LLC (Special Purpose Vehicle) The Downgrade Catalyst Trigger Which Will Destroy Greece?".  (Is it unsavory for us to wonder why no investor managed to realize that "Titlos," at least in its latin form, bears the secondary definition "an inscription, giving the accusation or crime for which a criminal suffered"?)  In this connection, we are intensely interested in hearing from readers if they can identify any of Titlos' (short for "Total Loss?") noteholders.  Likely, they can be identified when they begin standing on the ledges of tall buildings.

In the instant case, a dedicated Special Purpose Vehicle (you thought they vanished after Enron, did you?) is formed to permit a series of complex transactions that end up having the ultimate effect of throwing several billion Euro at Greece to avoid, among other things, bumping the retirement age for public employees up a year or two, courtesy of a series of (probably very upset) investors- all without technically tripping the letter of European deficit limits.

Really, and in a world where NOL carry forwards can count towards Tier I capital, this sort of thing should surprise exactly no one.  In this context, the next time someone claims that nothing about sovereign debt incidents could possibly be catching, it might be wise to point out to them that just a wider public appreciation for the starkly routine use of SPVs by sovereigns in this way could cause significant damage.

While AIGFP (in retrospect) can even seem like a very small "unregulated, off balance sheet" tangle when held up against the likes of Fannie and Freddie, the widespread use of the AIGFP methodology is significant.  This is not new news.  When the Joint Economic Committee chaired by Robert Bennett released a report on the "Economics of the Debt Limit" in 2003, the phrase "accounting maneuvers" didn't even have the good graces to hold off until the second paragraph to make an appearance.  Back in December that phrase had morphed into "extraordinary accounting tools."  Whatever one calls it, what seems obvious is that a hot, bright beam of sunshine is about to fall on the "extraordinary accounting tools" of a number of sovereigns.

Of course, some noteholders have probably taken advantage of the fact that, despite public protestations against any Greek "bailout," debt instruments like the Greek bonds might be used as collateral to borrow from the ECB at sub-one-percent rates.  They might be in for a rude surprise, as if the ratings on these instruments slip below Moody's A3 or so they are disqualified as sufficient ECB collateral.  (It isn't immediately clear to us what remedy the ECB might have, or if eligibility is only determined at the time of collateral pledge, but these sorts of details make for excellent, and perhaps unprecedented, speculation).

As it happens, Greece is probably just the most egregious technical offender- if one is to believe the many allegations (some pretty credible) of GDP manipulation by the jurisdiction going back as far as fiscal memory will bear.  The basic format of Titlos is common.  So common that the formation documents are boilerplate samples pulled from what looks like mortgage CDO shelves.  Zero Hedge has acquired copies of company #6810180 [Titlos'] formation documents for your perusal.  Leading off the Memorandum of Association is:

The Company's objects are:

To invest in or acquire, whether directly or indirectly, mortgage loans secured on residential or other properties within the United Kingdom or elsewhere, or in securities (of any type) secured on, derived from, linked to or other referable or related to (whether directly or indirectly) any such loans, and to issue securities in payment or part payment for any real or....

Well, you get the idea.  Could it be that Greece's Central Bank floated what amounts to a regulation avoiding (not evading, mind you) loan for €5 billion or so with an off the shelf CDO entity?  The irony threatens to throw one into anaphylactic shock.  But then, it seems pretty clear when one examines the director's histories for the SPV's organizers.  We stopped counting after the 50th instance of some derivation of the word "mortgage" therein.  Granted, this isn't surprising for a trustee (Wilmington Trust SP Services) that...

...operates as a securities and structured finance management specialist, providing business finance and administration of asset security for special purpose vehicles.

But it is interesting that the issuers elected to use such a firm in the first place.  We said "interesting," you will note, and not "surprising."




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Mon, 02/15/2010 - 16:29 | Link to Comment bugs_
bugs_'s picture

"Special Purpose Vehicle" should trigger several
"Mark Markopolos" style red flag audit cyborgs.

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 04:23 | Link to Comment carbonmutant
carbonmutant's picture

All Special Purpose Vehicles should be subject to recall.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 16:32 | Link to Comment credittrader
credittrader's picture

We have been toying with how the RegArb 'uncertainty' has been impacting sovereign risk over the last year or so...lots of talk of the EU banks themselves buying Sovereign protection as an 'ugly' basis hedge on their Super-Senior RegArb trades. Certainly helps explain the sheer size and consistency of net notionals rising in DTCC data for sovereigns even as risk was being compressed like crazy last year!

Marla - nice job on this!

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 21:46 | Link to Comment ZeroPower
ZeroPower's picture

I enjoy your posts, thanks.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 16:34 | Link to Comment MsCreant
MsCreant's picture

The sub-prime sovereigns and their liar loans.

Same as the housing/mortgage industry in the US, writ large. If we get this template in our head, we will be surprised by nothing that is getting ready to be uncovered.

ZH, thanks for all you do.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:40 | Link to Comment Dirtt
Dirtt's picture

Like holding a Vaseline-covered watermelon out at sea.  Hard for me to imagine that they let it get so out of control.  But when Paris Hilton was getting paid $1 million per to stiff parties around the world and when NYC unveiled the $1000 hamburger....well anyway.

 

When they lose the grip I think we'll be able to fit them into neat categories.  The ones that flee.  The ones that fall on their sword.  The ones that are pushed onto said sword.  The ones that get away with murder.

 

And last but not least.  The ones that are fed to the lions...a plethora of Grand Juries

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:10 | Link to Comment Careless Whisper
Careless Whisper's picture

Lloyd is a savvy businessman.

GoldmanSachs is America's Most Innovative Company.

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 02:04 | Link to Comment Problem Is
Problem Is's picture

"The sub-prime sovereigns and their liar loans."

It Is A Symbiotic Relationship

For every liar loan, there exists a usurious lender...

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 16:58 | Link to Comment Comrade de Chaos
Comrade de Chaos's picture

my bet that the note holders are SWISS, FRENCH and GERMAN entities. I saw a 40-40-20 breakdown somewhere. 

at any rate, the EU plunge team has been working overtime in the last 12 weeks:

 

http://www.economist.com/markets/indicators/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15503310

 

Swiss took the initiative, probably to make sure that piping will be cleared from stoppages after the Greek fiesta. 

 

p.s. no pun intended anyone, it seems we all are in the same... shitboat.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 16:59 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:16 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 17:36 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 17:40 | Link to Comment putbuyer
putbuyer's picture

In the US, you know the femanazi's would be lawyering that all over the place.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 17:49 | Link to Comment Simple
Simple's picture

hey chi chi get the yayo..

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 17:54 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:09 | Link to Comment Miles Kendig
Miles Kendig's picture

YeeHaw!  Ride them, hard.  With the facts.  I suspect that if the ECB refuses to accept these instruments as collateral the Fed will.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 17:58 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:24 | Link to Comment marctmiller
marctmiller's picture

it's kinda creepy... you know what youre considering in a namesake when you create that llc.   what gives?

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:25 | Link to Comment ratava
ratava's picture

Your toxic junk, not surprising at all.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:31 | Link to Comment Dirtt
Dirtt's picture

What did he say about "stray dogs" and "stray cats"....

Political Action Committee PAC

Special Purpose Vehicle SPR

 

hmmm.Okay now I know what POTUS meant.  Question. Which is the stray cat and which is the stray dog?  Or have we moved down the ladder to stray rats and stray mongoose?

 

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 18:46 | Link to Comment marctmiller
marctmiller's picture

stray horse and cow.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 19:15 | Link to Comment Joe Sixpack
Joe Sixpack's picture

"...you thought they [SPVs] vanished after Enron, did you?"

 

Hardly. Don't forget the extinct (one can only hope) SIV.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 22:12 | Link to Comment ZeroPower
ZeroPower's picture

GAAP (and the IFRS) looked into SPVs after Enron and did make some changes. More commonly called SPEs and VIEs (Variable Interest Entities), they have some new rules as well as the 2 'new-name' off-b/s entities which are the (not so) new incarnation of an SPV.

 

Same feces, different pile.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 19:19 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 19:30 | Link to Comment DaveyJones
DaveyJones's picture

I'll never be your beast of regulatory burden. my bank is broke and it's a hurtin

 

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 19:39 | Link to Comment Missing_Link
Missing_Link's picture

Poor Greece.  About to get run the f**k over by a Special Purpose Vehicle.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 19:44 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 02/16/2010 - 01:57 | Link to Comment MsCreant
MsCreant's picture

If only they could get out of the way and let it run over the US Government's Sacks, instead. Now THAT would be a special purpose.

I said somewhere else that you need bait and a net to catch a squid. What a sting operation, be a needy lil country, up on your debt to GDP ratio, down on your luck. GS pops the proposal, and you tape the whole shebang, get all the angles, and then spring the trap and jail them all.

You'd need the CIA or something to pull it off... Oh wait...never mind.

It is hopeless.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:01 | Link to Comment Careless Whisper
Careless Whisper's picture

anaphylactic shock

dayum, you're good.

Anaphylaxis:  The term comes from the Greek words ανα ana (against) and φ?λαξις phylaxis (protection).

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:10 | Link to Comment Marla Singer
Marla Singer's picture

They don't pay me the big bucks [for nothing].

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:06 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 21:52 | Link to Comment ZeroPower
ZeroPower's picture

A shame all finansiers are classified as such by the sheeple. I smell a hint of jealousy.

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:58 | Link to Comment assumptionblindness
assumptionblindness's picture

Creative Accounting=Accounting Irregularities=Special Purpose Vehicles=FRAUD!!  

Fraud Discovery=Systemic Risk=Taxpayer Bailout   Wash, rinse, repeat....

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 20:59 | Link to Comment gookempucky
gookempucky's picture

All the while the NYSE ALLEY RATS are wearing their Dow 10,000 RALLY CAPS

Pro bono publico

 

Nice stuff marla-keep up the good work

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 21:23 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 21:58 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 22:20 | Link to Comment Marla Singer
Marla Singer's picture

I was mostly teasing you. See the smiley at the end: :) ?

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 22:21 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 23:04 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 23:26 | Link to Comment gookempucky
gookempucky's picture

 ECB won't want to make any fuss about the quality of the collateral it already holds

It is getting to that point in time that there is no collateral of any kind--the entire world financial system is total carnival. 

 

http://www.housingwire.com/2010/02/15/cmbs-delinquencies-and-special-servicing-hit-record-highs/?utm_source=rss

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 22:37 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Mon, 02/15/2010 - 22:38 | Link to Comment doolittlegeorge
doolittlegeorge's picture

so Goldman doing God's work reminds me of the movie Hannah and Her Sisters where Woody Allen (aka "the hypochondriac") proclaims "He's Catholic" and his father starts screaming at him for "believing in Jesus Christ."   I mean it's hard to believe Faust was written almost 200 years ago and yet here he is allowing himself to be "the conjurer" yet again.  Perhaps it will end well with the "enlightened moment" mistaken by Mephistopholes as selfish and allowing for Faust to rise to heaven.  More than likely, tho, God will see this act for what Satan most surely does:  truly and never meant to be anything other than selfish.  The question remains, then.  Why sell your immortal soul to begin with?  What could one possibly gain selfishly and deceitfully in this world that one cannot attain in the next?  The fact of a contract?   Something "signed, sealed and delivered"?  Ah, the "deal."  Now we're beyond 200 years ago and moving right up to 2000 years ago.  Why believe in Jesus Christ you ask?  Because someone ratted him out to the Romans not realizing he would be destroying himself in so doing.  Of course this isn't suppose to be "news" given the history of the 20th century.  Indeed an entire nation was created at the end of a War--for what purpose tho?  To do God's work?  Or someone elses?  Please do tell so true: is it for me or is it for you?

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 23:07 | Link to Comment Yardfarmer
Yardfarmer's picture

Let the brother in humble circumstances take pride in his eminence and the rich man be proud of his lowliness, for he will disappear "like the flower of the field". When the sun comes up with its scorching heat it parches the meadow, the field flowers droop, and with that the meadow's loveliness is gone. Just so will the rich man wither away amid his many projects. Happy "fat tuesday"

Mon, 02/15/2010 - 23:21 | Link to Comment Cui Bono
Cui Bono's picture

SPV...My Special Purpose?

This music really speaks to me....

 

Thanks Marla & ZeroHedge!

Yet again, stellar work.

Very happy to see the Omnibudsperson come online too..  Cui Bono

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 01:24 | Link to Comment agrotera
agrotera's picture

best accounting class i had was a class that concentrated purely on cases where accounting principles were used for fraud--I've been meaning to get in touch with the instructor to see what content he has added to his class lately, and see if he is a fan of ZH since there is quite a treasure trove of topics here for him to choose.  I also wonder if the instructor has expanded his reach to illustrate our government's use of SPV's and SPE's in his class, just as Enron and Worldcom were part of his topics of discussion years ago? hmmmm. It has been decried as useless, sarbannes-oxley could be used to put some people in jail here in the states, that is, if our whole government wasn't bought and paid for by our own "central bank" which is a privately held corporation aka federal reserve (sorry for the broken record routine friends)

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 10:24 | Link to Comment ZeroPower
ZeroPower's picture

My b-school has that too..was it Earnings Management ?

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 11:04 | Link to Comment agrotera
agrotera's picture

yea for the central bankers who audit the class...

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 04:27 | Link to Comment mr brincq
mr brincq's picture

cheap, cheap one dollar....I make very special price for you.....what a mess...but as long as it is special it is good right?

Tue, 02/16/2010 - 06:00 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 02/16/2010 - 09:31 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Tue, 02/16/2010 - 13:47 | Link to Comment gookempucky
gookempucky's picture

Marla for those less fortunate- last night during your project Mayhem update a most elemental visual was on the screen page for ZH--most energizing-most perpetual and illustration genius. A reprint would be most apropo.

Titled

PRANA

Simplicity in the end is always the greatest clarity

 

 

 

Thu, 02/18/2010 - 13:16 | Link to Comment Anonymous
Sun, 02/21/2010 - 22:29 | Link to Comment Anonymous
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