Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Young Broadcasting Latest Bankruptcy Casualty

Earlier today TV station company Young Broadcasting filed for bankruptcy in the Southern district of New York, raising the ytd default rate to 5.19% by notional outstanding, and 4.37% by number of issuers. The company owed $370 million of secured debt and $640 bonds at the time of filing. The bankruptcy was not a big surprise as last month the company decided to skip a $6 million interest payment on its 8.75% notes due 2014, and subsequently missed another $4.5 million interest payment due on its secured credit facility.

The company's attempts to negotiate an out of court deal with bondholders failed, after the bondholder group, consisting of CapRe, Highland, Par Four and AIG (aka taxpayers) could not agree on a consensual plan.

The immediate reason for the bankruptcy was Moelis and Co.'s failure to find a buyer for Young's largest TV station, San-Francisco based KRON-TV, thereby preventing the company from getting much needed last minute liquidity.

Young has hired Sonnenschein as legal counsel and UBS as financial advisor.

Bondholders will soon be equity owners of 11 TV stations across the US, among them most prominent KRON 4 in SF, News 10 in Albany, WBAY TV in Green Bay, KLFY 10 in Lafayette, WLNS 6 in Lansing and KWQC in Davenport.
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Stressing The System And The TARP Repayment Race

The administration's draconian enforcement of bonus cuts for "distressed banks" has made Lloyd Blankfein and a slew of Wall Street executives hold their breath until they get the details of Geithner's stress test in order to immediately repay their portion of TARP (although it is unclear if Warren Buffett will dump another billion or so into Goldman at this point). So what will be the likely metrics for the stress test and which banks will be able to pass the test, in order to be on their merry way to TARP repayment?

The rumored stress tests that may be utilized include:

i) tangible common versus assets
ii) tangible common versus risk weighted assets
iii) Tier 1 capital versus weighted assets

The complications arise when one considers the follwing facts:
  • Flow of credit to the economy is flat, as bank balance sheets are not growing and new loan originations are down 50%


  • Tier 1 capital is at all time highs while tangible common equity (TCE) is at all time lows (gating factor for balance sheet flexibility)

  • Banks that can not pass the stress test and can not raise private capital will receive government preferred stock that can convert to common equity to preserve lending in a worse than expected economic envionrment.
  • As the testing will initially apply to banks with more than $100 billion in assets, it is likely to extend to all banks that have TARP funding eventually. The initial cutoff was only established to keep the regulatory intervention manageable as the > $100 billion banks hold three quarters of the banking system's assets.
What do the probable stress tests imply?

Three tests are performed, one of which will likely be the version implemented by the administration.

i) Tangible common plus reserves plus pre-provision earnings less cumulative losses as a percentage of assets;
ii) The same as i but using risk weighted assets (RWA) as a denominator;
iii) The same as ii but using Tier 1 capital in the numerator;

The chart below presents the banking universe against each of the test scenarios and compares the ranking versus Q4 Non Performing Assets (NPA) and current P/Tangible Book.

Cumulative loss assumptions are: 25% for construction, 23% for credit cards (9% losses for 2.5 years), 14% for home equity, 12% for consumer excluding credit cards, 9% for first lien mortgages, 6.5% for commercial mortgages, 5.5% for commercial (C&I), 4% for all other loans and 1% for undrawn commitments. Peak unemployment is assumed at 9.5% and peak to trough housing price decline is at 40%.

Results: Banks which test better on average are trust banks such as a Bank of New York and Northern Trust, JPM and PNC due to big marks on acquired books (firesale purchases), and First Horizon, Comerica, City National and KeyCorp due to high tangible common. Banks testing poorly and have high NPAs include Citi, Zions Bancorp, SunTrust, Fifth Third and Huntington Bancshares; also U.S. Bancorp and BB&T do poorly on stress tests however that may be due to NPAs being below industry averages.



Instead of presuming what the tests will look like, it is possible to do a passive risk assesment in the form of a Texas ratio, or simply the ratio of NPA (loans and real estate) to TCE and Loan Loss Reserves.

As the result charts indicate the correlation between the Texas ratio underperformers and the at risk banks per the potential stress test, is very high. Worst scoring (highest risk) on the test are HBAN, C, STI, FITB and MI, while CMA, PNC, JPM, WFC and KEY score as lowest risk.



So what does all this mean for odds of which bank will be the first to be bathing in champagne? Most likely candidates are BK, MS and JPM, as these companies have high Tier 1 ex-TARP ratios (assuming 8% as a threshold). Other potential banks that could crawl out of the bonus grave include STT, NTRS, BBT and CYN. Furthermore, funding could be a consideration, but as bank are growing deposits twice as fast as loans since Lehman and compliments of $150 billion in TLGP, funding would only be an issue for smaller banks. Banks below the threshold line are very unlikely to pay off TARP for the foreseeable future, meaning Vikram will likely be collecting $1 bonuses for many years to come.


With gratitude to GS for charts/data
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It's Official - Stanford Is Next Ponzi

The SEC has charged Robert Allen Stanford with "fraud of shocking magnitude that has spread its tentacles throughout the world." Mario Puzo's next book is already in the works. This makes the Cosa Nostra look like amateur hour.

Apparently the charge relates to $8 billion of CDs sold.

Some amazing facts presented in the SEC complaint below:


SEC Charge - Free Legal Forms Sphere: Related Content

RBS Bonuses Decimated To Total Of $250 Million For Whole Firm

Developing Story:

Wow, this is just scary. If this happened in the U.S. you would see riots on Wall Street.

Royal Bank of Scotland to see bonuses drop from 2.5 billion pounds to 175 million total.
There will be no cash payments for future RBS bonuses, and will instead take form of bond payments to be made in 3 annual payments. Lastly, there will be a clawback. Sphere: Related Content

California CDS Cheap As State Likely To Default

California seems poised for imminent financial collapse and it is anyone's guess how far the impact of a state default could propagate. California CDS offered at 355 seem cheap, especially when one considers that the one year default prob per the spread is 17.7% at a 80% recovery rate and drops to 9% if one assumes 60% recovery. Of course the question is whether the federal govt will bail out Cali, and just how an event of default will be defined for General Obligation securities, although all signs point to a test very soon in the future. Either way, it is very likely the CDS will soon retest recent wides of 455.

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Secondary Hedge Fund Interest Buying Frenzy

Last week's mindnumbing expression of unbridled market optimism is spilling over into the hedge fund interest secondary market. Barely any offers over the past week, and many large, juicy bids. Fully anticipate complete inversion in this picture in the next day or so.

Major demand indications as follows:
  • Canyon Cayman: $15 million
  • Taconic Offshore: $10 million
  • King Street: $10 million
  • Level Global Overseas: $20 million
  • GoldenTree Offshore: $10 million
  • Horseman Global: $2 million
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Early Tuesday Readings

  • IG11: 206/208; S&P Fut below 800
  • Trump files for bankruptcy (Bloomberg)
  • Sirius XM gets $530 million investment from Liberty Media (Bloomberg)
  • California, almost broke, nears brink (NYT)
  • New York manufacturing drops to record low level (Bloomberg)
  • Eastern European banks drop to six-year low (Bloomberg)
  • Goodbye Dubai (Smashing telly)
  • Bailed out banks charge taxpayers highest fees in FDIC bond sales (Bloomberg)
  • Fraud bigger than Madoff (Independent)
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Monday, February 16, 2009

Late Monday Readings

  • Futures hammered (Bloomberg)
  • The timeline of Geithner's impromptu bank rescue plan (Washington Post)
  • California in limbo with no budget, 20% of state workers to be let go shortly (Reuters)
  • Automaker bankruptcy looms (WSJ)
  • Yet... GM, UAW talks make headway (Reuters)
  • James Saft - Nationalization by autumn (Reuters)
  • Japan finance minister to resign after drunk press conference incident (FT)
  • John Malone to bail out Sirius (Bloomberg)
  • Antigua terrified of Stanford investigation implications (Reuters)
  • Real estate price on Hong Kong's Peak drop 30.5% (Bloomberg)
  • The new Russian Top 20 billionaires (Moscow Times)
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Moody's To Downgrade Banks With Eastern European Exposure

As we discussed a week ago, things in Eastern Europe are going from bad to worse and are dragging neighboring countries into the hole. Moody's just announced that Austrian, Swedish and other banks with Eastern European subsidiaries may face rating downgrades due to deteriorating economic conditions.

East European banks, which are mainly subsidiaries of financial institutions such as Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG and Swedbank AB, are likely to come under “downward pressure” which may also weaken their parent companies, Moody’s wrote in a report released today in London.
Zero Hedge previously discussed the extensive exposure that banks have in Eastern Europe, which according to estimates could amount to a total of €1.3 trillion. Banks from Austria, Italy, France, Belgium, Germany and Sweden account for 84% of Western European bank loans in Eastern Europe.



According to Bloomberg, “the downturn in eastern Europe will be more severe as a consequence of many countries’ dependence” on capital flows from west Europe banks, Moody’s analysts led by Reynold Leegerstee wrote in the report.
Of European countries, Austria is by far the most threatened:
Austria, whose banking system is “most exposed” to central and eastern Europe, has two of the biggest lenders in the region. RZB made 79 percent of its 2007 pretax profits in eastern Europe, including Russia and Ukraine through its Raiffeisen International Bank Holding AG unit, and Erste Group Bank AG earned 65 percent of its pretax profits in countries including Romania, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Erste, which said last week that full-year profit probably slumped about 26 percent, is in talks with the Austrian government to get 2.7 billion euros ($3.4 billion) in state aid. RZB, which owns a 69 percent stake in Raiffeisen International, which is active in 18 eastern European countries, is also in talks with the Austrian state and has asked for 1.75 billion euros.
It has been foolish to assume that the convergence that "Western" and "Eastern" European countries have been undergoing over the past 20 years, could be hidden under the rug to prevent all the ugly side effects of convergence from spilling over (LTCM deja vu anyone? yes, it is a stretch, but oddly ironic nonetheless). This is merely yet another glaring example of what happens when all the good things about globalization, that conventional wisdom takes for granted, go terribly wrong.
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Trump Entertainment To File Chapter 33 Early Tuesday

The board of Trump Entertainment, absent the lovely Ivanka Trump, is currently meeting to prepare a bankruptcy filing early tomorrow morning according to the WSJ. This filing will be the charm for the Donald, who on Friday did the noble and brave thing by resigning from the board days ahead of bankruptcy, as TRMP has filed for bankruptcy twice before, and emerged most recently in 2005.

While the listed bondholders on Trump's 8.5% notes are predominantly mutual funds, specifically Northeast Investors, Franklin Mutual, John Hancock and Putnam, it would be criminal if there were no vulture hedge fund investors among the bondholders who got played the last two times the Donald filed, and are now just waiting to get equity control of the company and rub it in Trump's face. Unfortunately, they will also be getting 3 casinos in Atlantic City, where monthly gaming revenues have been dropping at a rate suggesting in 5 years there will be exactly 4 retired slot machine gamblers in all of AC. Sphere: Related Content

Ultra Luxury Watches the Next Shoe To Plunge

A little over two years ago, Los Angeles-based private equity group Leonard Green acquired luxury watch distributor Tourneau, best known for its 57th street and Madison flagship New York store, in a $355 million going private transaction, which represented a then 12.5x multiple of its $28 million EBITDA. As part of the transaction, Leonard Green invested over $220 million of equity, and raised $130 million of debt. Looking at recent trends in luxury watch sales, it is safe to assume that if the equity invested in Tourneau is not currently worthless, then it will be very soon. It is also likely that GE Capital and TCW, which provided the debt financing, are also looking at losses on their investment.

Makers of luxury watches are staring at at an abyss, as marginal demand from U.S. bankers and Hong Kong tycoons has disappeared. The luxury watch industry business model has historically been one of roll ups, not so much organic growth, as until the hyperbolic wealth creation over the past decade (and current destruction), there was limited demand for $5,000 timepieces. Swiss export watch sales have more than doubled from CHF 700 million in 1998 to over CHF 1.4 billion in 2008. Assuming a full deleveraging cycle eliminates the excesses of the past decade, it is easy to see sales plummet rapidly by as much as 50% over the next several years



The conglomerate nature of the business is obvious when one considers that only 5 major companies own the majority of luxury Swiss watch brands in the world (excluding Rolex which is a one trick pony):



Now, as the marginal purchasers disappear, Swiss watch makers are left scratching their heads how to maintain the top line growth and prevent the bottom line collapse. One good indication of the sad state of the market is listening to what these companies themselves have to say:

"October was very difficult. November is very difficult, in line with October, no worse no better. We anticipate a bad Christmas. 2009 will be very difficult." (Bulgari CEO Francesco Trapani )
"I am not expecting an overall increase in the watch market next year. But I am not expecting a sharp drop either. I think it should be just sluggish. Stable to slightly negative. Asia used to be stronger, it is still pretty steady, but growth rates have come down from last year, but it is still growing pretty well." (LVMH CEO Jean-Christophe Babin)
“Since October, the real economy has begun to experience dramatic repercussions from the financial crisis. Demand for luxury goods...has fallen dramatically and Richemont is currently facing the toughest market conditions since its formation
20 years ago. Given the current economic climate and the uncertainties facing us, we see no cause for optimism. We must assume that there will be no significant recovery in the foreseeable future.”
(Richemont Q309 trading statement, 19 Jan.09)

"Last year was an absolute record. We expect a decline this year and in 2010. As watch export data shows, we all suffered a decline in sales in the last two months." (Rolex CEO Bruno Meier)

"In addition to an unfavourable base effect, this decline clearly illustrates the curb on growth suffered by the industry as a result of the world economic climate. The annualised variation slowed to 8.7%, falling below the 10% mark for the first time in more than three years. At a monthly level the industry had not experienced a decline since March 2005." (Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry, November 08 commentary)

What do the statistics say: the drop is already being felt. While 2008 overall was a strong year, with Swiss watch exports growing 6.7% relative to 2007, mostly due to H1 strength, December demonstrated a substantial drop in export sales, down 7.6% from a year prior. Furthermore, the bulk of watch sales has been concentrated in the gold and platinum category, and the highest priced segment of the market (watches over CHF3,500) has yet to demonstrate a drop. This ultra-luxury segment has averaged 25% growth since 2006, compared to 1% for the CHF250-500 category and flat for the CHF500-3,000 segments.


Curiously, Swiss watchmakers are hoping the decoupling theory plays out as the U.S. accounts for only 19% of watch sales, while Asia is an impressive 46%. If recent Chinese import data is any indication, the bottom will fall out of the watch market with a vengeance.



While December 2008 finally demonstrated a drop in export sales in the US, Hong Kong, China, Singapore and Spain, the rest of the market, especially Japan, France, Italy and Germany, has yet to exhibit the drop that will inevitably occur.


The next chart indicates that the tide is only now just turning in the luxury watch sector, which, as a true lagging indicator, will present significant pain to public luxury watch makers such as Richemont, LVMH and Bulgari.


Of course, it is premature to declare luxury watches a dead concept. There will always be people willing to shelve out a lot of cash for that one unique collector's piece (regardless of what maintenance costs may end up being over the long run). And to see the fanatical dedication of an entire community of watch lovers, one should just observe the lengthy forums at http://www.timezone.com/. Regardless, for conglomerates which have already rolled up the market, with few profitable private brands left outstanding, growth through acquisitions will be complicated, while relying on organic growth at this point will be foolish. Thus, as investors we would be very cautious about bullish positions in such stocks as LVMH, Bulgari and Richemont (Zero Hedge has no positions in these securities).

The one industry which will undoubtedly suffer are undiversified distribution outlets, of which Tourneau is a prime example. As consumers trade down, very few if any will be willing to give the middlemen a 20% markup simply for holding inventory and providing brand legitimacy, as more and more vetted direct vendor operations arise.

In retrospect it is amusing to see just what the P&L assumptions embedded in the Tourneau acquisition were. Not surprisingly, sales were supposed to rise arithmetically in perpetuity as the company generated more and more free cash flow. Instead, it is likely that working capital at the company has ballooned, as Tourneau has been unable to unload inventory, having to fund the deficit with increasing amounts of debt, which has likely eradicated any invested equity value.



As the credit cycle turns, more and more tangential offshoots of the uncontrollable spending spree will be impacted. What is true for luxury watches, will easily apply to such market top-tick gimmicks as ultra premium Vodka, gold plated iPhones, $300 bottle service at trendy night clubs, and many more artifacts of a conspicuous consumption economy that is now unwinding with a bang.
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Jefferies In Trouble, Receives Madoff Subpoena

Looks like the list of independent investment banks may soon be one less. U.S. Trustee Irving Picard, who is liquidating the Bernie Madoff estate, has issued a subpoena to middle-market advisory boutique Jefferies. As Jefferies is mostly a high yield trading platform it is a little odd that it is the the first company to feel the wrath of the trustee. The 2004 examination order was sent on February 13 and made available by New York bankruptcy court today. The scope of the investigation was not disclosed in the subpoena form. The subpoena was also distributed to the IRS, SEC Attorney General's office and the SIPC. As the liquidation case picks up it is likely that many more such subpoenas are disseminated.

Full subpoena here. Sphere: Related Content

February 16 Links

  • Latest: S&P Futures down 10.3 bps, Yen at 91.83
  • GM told by administration to address bankruptcy option as part of Feb 17 report (WSJ)
  • Krugman on the biggest Ponzi of the past 10 years, the U.S. itself (NYTimes)
  • The beginning of Treasury capitulation (WSJ)
  • First satellite collision, now nuclear subs (Yahoo)
  • Ritholtz' cyclical S&P Chart (Ritholtz)
  • HSBC in need of up to $30 billion in additional capital (FTAlphaville)
  • Trade relations slow as risky counterparties cut (Naked Capitalism)
  • Should China devalue the Yuan (China Financial Markets)
  • Some more data on FDIC bank failures (Calculated Risk)
  • Don't piss of dictators - Putin is likely to extend Mikhail Khodorkovsky's jail sentence in perpetuity (WSJ)
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Biggest CDS Movers: Friday 13

Large scale under the radar derisking occuring in Japan.


In G-7 risk, virtually everything wider

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If Sirius Files, Karmazin Fired Creditors Threaten

A group of disgruntled Sirius creditors has threatened to fire Mel Karmazin and other senior execs if the company does not cut a deal with EchoStar or John Malone (who has offered to provide bridge financing) and instead files for bankruptcy. Edward Weisfelner, a lawyer with Brown Rudnick was quoted as saying:

"Creditors believe that a precipitous bankruptcy filing will not be in their best interests. Our group is concerned that management not use the threat of bankruptcy as a negotiating tool. Creditors will act quickly and definitively if they perceive that management is acting in their own interest and not in the best interest of the estate. The board of directors should carefully consider the ramifications."
Additionally, following in Lazard's footsteps, the creditors have threatened to ask for the appointment of an independent trustee. The company is expected to file for bankruptcy tomorrow so this is likely merely last minute posturing. The bondholder group is rumored to hold a mere $173 million of Sirius' over $3 billion in total debt, so it unlikely that they will have much if any leverage in ongoing negotiations. Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Game Over for GM?

Just out on Bloomberg

*ADMINISTRATION WON'T NAME AN `AUTO CZAR, PEOPLE FAMILIAR SAY
*GEITHNER, SUMMERS TO HEAD PANEL ON U.S. AUTO RESTRUCTURING

Link to full NYT article.

pretty much means Chapter 11 most likely done deal. At least Rattner's wife's DWI news will be burried for ever. Sphere: Related Content

Volkswagen Soap Opera Continues: New Disclosure May Lead to Recoveries for Hedge Funds, Pain for Porsche

Luxury automaker Porsche, which in October briefly became the world's largest hedge fund after it disclosed stock and derivative holdings in fellow car maker Volkswagen, prompting a massive short squeeze, and propelling Volkswagen to the status of largest company in the world by market capitalization, may be in some deep trouble after brand new disclosures by Porsche CFO Holger Härter.

For those uninitiated in the hate fest that transpired on October 28, Financial Ninja has done a good analysis of the events on that day:

This morning Volkswagen (VOW) was worth more than Exxon Mobile (XOM) as common shares rocketed up as much as 93% on a short squeeze.



Porsche, in an attempt to take over the carmaker has engineered a shortage of common shares by gobbling up as much as 75% of the company via options. The counter parties to these options went long the actual stock to hedge their exposure, leaving the shorts scrambling for shares to buy back.

Volkswagen Overtakes Exxon as Most Valuable Company (Update1): “Volkswagen AG became the world's biggest company by market value after Porsche SE announced plans to raise its stake in the German carmaker to 75 percent, triggering demand from short-sellers.

Volkswagen rose as much as 485.01 euros, or 93 percent, to 1,005.01 euros and was up 55 percent as of 11:10 a.m. in Frankfurt trading. Wolfsburg, Germany-based Volkswagen has risen more than fivefold this year and at its intraday peak was valued at 296 billion euros ($370 billion), more than Exxon Mobil Corp.'s $343 billion market value at yesterday's closing price in New York, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Porsche, the maker of the 911 sports car, has accumulated Volkswagen shares since 2005 in an effort to protect ties to its largest supplier. Porsche said Oct. 26 that it aims to increase its holding from 42.6 percent. That prompted some short-sellers to buy from a shrinking pool of stock to end their bets. BaFin, Germany's financial-market regulator, said today that it's monitoring trading in Volkswagen shares following the gains.

“One of the biggest risks with the herd mentality approach to shorting is that a lot of money can be made on the outset,” said Ed Oliver, a senior business consultant at Spitalfields Advisors, a London-based firm specializing in securities lending. “But you can end up losing the whole of it when you try to close the position. There's no limit.”

Stock On Loan

Volkswagen's surge came as 23 of the 29 other stocks in the country's benchmark DAX Index fell on investor concern that a slowdown in the global economy is accelerating. About 12.9 percent of Volkswagen's common stock was on loan as of Oct. 23, mostly for short sales, the highest proportion of any company on the DAX, according to London-based Data Explorers.

Stuttgart, Germany-based Porsche added to an earlier 35 percent stake and said two days ago that it holds options for another 31.5 percent.

“Porsche heads for a domination agreement and triggers a short-squeeze,” Horst Schneider, an HSBC Holdings Plc analyst in Dusseldorf, Germany, wrote in a report yesterday, in which he upgraded Volkswagen's common shares to “neutral” from
“underweight.” The stock “will be more driven by covering of short positions rather than by fundamental valuations.”

Porsche's Intent

Until Oct. 26, Porsche had said it was aiming only for a stake exceeding 50 percent, and Chief Executive Officer Wendelin Wiedeking said at the Paris Motor Show early this month that a stake of as much as 75 percent would be “not realistic” because of market turmoil.

Short sales have largely been undertaken by investors betting on a decline in Volkswagen's common stock, which hold voting rights, or its underperformance relative to the preferred shares, which carry no votes, according to analysts.

The common shares, which outnumber the preferred equity almost three to one, are the only gainers this year on either the DAX or the nine-member Bloomberg Europe Autos Index. In contrast, Volkswagen's preferred stock has dropped 62 percent, including a 14 percent decline yesterday, to 37.89 euros.

Volkswagen has been one of the greatest shorts of hedge funds, and it's been an absolute, absolute disaster,” Emmanuel Roman, co-chief executive officer of GLG Partners Inc., said at a conference in London on Oct. 23. “It's been very painful.” GLG didn't participate in short-selling trading of the carmaker's common shares, he said.”

BaFin, which has long been criticized for doing nothing in reviewing allegations of Porsche's market manipulation, recently had the heat turned up on it, after billionaire Adolf Merckle committed suicide as a result of huge Volkswagen short-related losses, and may finally be forced to investigate what really happened in the days leading to October 28.

At first sight it is glaringly obvious that Porsche did not act in good faith during the sequence of events disclosing its stake accumulation especially considering the resultant profits to the company - in 2008 Porsche generated a €1 billion profit from car sales and €6.8 billion from Volkswagen option trades.

Porsche has long contended that its option trades in Volkswagen were driven by "industrial logic as it built a stake in Europe's largest carmaker." However at its January 31 shareholder meeting, CFO Holger Härter made a disclosure that can dramatically weaken this position and make the legal claims of complaining hedge funds strong enough to potentially lead to civil and criminal claims against the company. Härter said at the shareholder meeting that Porsche "has also arranged share options to generate liquidity. The underlying shares were referring to Dax companies and not Volkswagen." The company, acting as a full-blown hedge fund, made €400 million placing bets on several German blue-chip shares, in addition to the €6.8 billion from Volkswagen. It will be a very tough sell to BaFin that the company's finance division was speculating in one set of companies (i.e., the Dax) but innocently trading massive amounts of VOW options with no manipulative intentions.

If hedge funds are successful at proving manipulation, which this disclosure may have made significantly easier, Porsche could be on the hook for a full refund of the option proceeds, in addition to further civil disgorgement and/or criminal liabilities. While the luxury carmaker is currently in swimming financial health with a huge cash war chest thanks to the options trades, any regulatory escalation could result in a rapid and dramatic downfall of the company which has a €10 billion term loan maturity in March, as banks may run away from a debtor that may be liable for a €7 billion cash outflow. And if the dominos really collapse and Adolf Merckle's suicide is found to be a result of the alleged stock market manipulation, the life of Porsche CEO Wendelin Wiedeking may get really ugly fast.

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California Fails to Close Budget Gap, Faces "Financial Armageddon"

In what could be the final blow to California's crumbling economy as it faces a $42 billion budget deficit, the WSJ reports that a vote to reach a complex plan to close the budget was unsuccessful by 1 vote.

Many Republicans are unwilling to raise taxes to deal with the state's historic deficit, but at least three GOP votes were needed in each house for the two-thirds majority required to pass the budget.

"My guess is everybody's arm is getting twisted," said Sen. Dave Cox, a Republican who had been among the Democrats' best hopes for a deal. "My answer is no, and I'm not looking for additional information. I've made my decision."

After Predator hunter Dutch (aka Schwarzenegger) had said that he would start laying off 10,000 state employees if a deal was not reached by Friday as the state is facing "financial Armageddon", he later backed off on these threats as it seemed a deal was imminent. However, turns out late last night things went from bad to worse as no decision was forthcoming in the California state Assembly, and members were being held hostage until a decision is reached.

The lack of Republican votes in the Senate pushed the session into the early morning hours of Sunday. Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, a Democrat, locked down her chamber about 3:30 a.m., forcing lawmakers to remain.

"We're short a Republican vote over there [in the Senate]," Ms. Bass said. "Somebody that committed backed away. That means we're not going anywhere.
Sorry, guys."

After meeting all night and into midmorning, the Assembly called a three-hour recess at 10 a.m. but members were ordered not to leave the building. A half-hour later the Senate also recessed until 1 p.m., but allowed members to leave.

Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, also a Democrat, said the Senate deadlock was causing some in the Assembly to have second thoughts about the unpopular plan.

Republican Assemblyman Chuck DeVore said the package didn't "go far enough to reform government, to reduce redundant agencies and reduce waste, fraud and abuse. We are asking the taxpayers of California for too much of their hard-earned money in an attempt to cover over a problem of our own making," he said.

Democrats have decried the $15.1 billion in cuts in the budget-balancing package, more than half of which would come from education, while Republicans are unhappy about $14.4 billion in temporary tax increases.
Seems Arnie has cornered himself and his state in a plan that is unpopular with both parties, and every day of delays brings his state closer to a full blown default.
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Sunday Readings

Along the lines of our expectations, Naked Capitalism has a good piece on whether Eastern Europe will trigger a Financial Meltdown

Rolfe Winkler's take on the paradox of the Stimulus package (OptionArmageddon)

Debris falling in Texas from crash satellites (MSNBC)

Nouriel Roubini -Nationalize the Banks! (Washington Post)

On the psychopathy of investment bankers (Epicurean Dealmaker)

G-7 avoids discussion of currency crisis, Yen gains again (Bloomberg)

Last ditch effort to avoid bankruptcy as GM, UAW talks resume (WSJ)

Overoptimisitc real estate agents to feel the full force of public anger next (NYT) Sphere: Related Content

China Escalates Treasury Purchasing Debate

The topic of whether China has decided it has had enough of U.S. Treasuries, or is just posturing, has gained significant traction recently. The latest development comes from Luo Ping, an official at the China Banking Regulatory Commission, who said holding U.S. government bonds "is not the only option for investing reserves." According to Bloomberg:

U.S. debt is one option in addition to gold and other government debt, Luo, head of the training center at the banking regulator, was quoted as saying in an interview with [China News Service] late yesterday. If the U.S. government issues too much debt in its efforts to revive the economy, all Treasury holders will suffer losses, he added, the Chinese-language report said.
This comes on the heels of his prior announcement that there are few alternatives to holding U.S. debt, exacerbating the potential diplomatic ramifications. While conventional wisdom is that any change in the Chinese status quo with regard to Treasury purchases would be Mutually Assured Destruction, the increasing amount of chatter coming out of high up individuals discussing displeasure with this status quo should not be simply dismissed.

Ironically, this statement comes on the heels of Israel's disclosure that it plans on selling sovereign bonds abroad to finance its projected $7.4 billion deficit this year, and a day after Germany was unable to find enough buyers for the most recent issue of 10-Year Bunds. While China will likely not cease purchasing government securities altogether, it will definitely have an abundance of upcoming supply to choose from, making Geithner's job all that more difficult as he embarks on the most comprehensive Treasury issuance campaign in recent history. Sphere: Related Content