Illinois
Is Illinois Worse Off Than Greece with a Little LTCM and Bear Stearns Thrown In? In Case You Didn’t Know…
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/23/2010 14:10 -0500What does Illinois have in common with Bear Stearns, Ambac Financial, LTCM and Greece? Come on fellas, let's roll the dice. I've got some pension money in case I come up snake eyes...
Illinois: Higher Default Risk than Iceland
Submitted by asiablues on 07/15/2010 05:58 -0500It's official. Illinois, the fifth most populous state in the U.S., has overtaken Iceland in the default risk category. Will other U.S. states follow?
61% Underfunded Illinois Teachers Pension Fund Goes For Broke, Becomes Next AIG-In-Waiting By Selling Billions In CDS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 14:47 -0500“If you were to have faxed me this balance sheet and asked me to guess who it belonged to, I would have guessed, Citadel, Magnetar or even a proprietary trading desk at a bank.” So begins a story by Alexandra Harris of the Medill Journalism school at Northwestern, which, however, does not focus on some exotic product-specialized hedge fund, or some discount window (taxpayer capital) backed prop desk (hedge fund) at a TBTF bank, but instead at the 61% underfunded, $33.7 billion Illinois Teachers Retirement System (TRS), which just happened to lose $4.4 billion in 2009 (a year when, courtesy of America's conversion from capitalism to socialism, the market rose 60%), and 5% in2008. Yet underperformance can be explained. What can not, is that the TRS has now become a shadow AIG. As Harris notes "TRS is largely on the risky side of the contracts, selling and writing OTC derivatives, including credit default swaps, insurance-like contracts that guarantee payment in the event of a default, that were blamed in part for the 2008 collapse of Lehman Bros. and bailout of insurance giant American International Group Inc., or AIG." Demonstrating just how far the fund is willing to go in the "for broke" category, knowing full well that if it repeats AIG's implosion, the government will likely bail it out, is the disclosure that a stunning 81.5% of the fund's investments are considered risky - this means it is the fourth-riskiest investment portfolio for a pension fund in the U.S! All it will take is another Flash Crash-like event, or a liquidity crunch, and the 355,000 "full-time, part-time and substitute public school teachers and administrators working outside the city of Chicago" will likely end up with a big, fat donut in their retirement portfolios courtesy of some deranged lunatic, portfolio manager, situated externally at a bank like Goldman Sachs, who in taking a page straight out of Obama's bailout nation, has decided there is no such thing as risk. And to those naive enough to think the TRS is the only such fund which has now gone all-in on "no risk and infinite return", wait until such stories start emerging about every single massively underfunded pension and fully insolvent fund in the US.
Big Trouble In Little Chi-Town: Illinois Downgraded From AA- To A+ By S&P On Liquidity Issues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2009 11:17 -0500The rating agencies have decided to once again remind the world of their pathetic, and decades behind the curve existence. The most recent act: downgrading Illinois From AA- to A+ with a negative outlook. From the report: "The downgrade reflects what we view as the state's deteriorating
liquidity and financial position," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Robin
Prunty. "Illinois failed to address its fiscal 2009 deficit, which was carried
into fiscal 2010. Similar to many other states, revenues are performing below
originally forecast levels."




