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11:09 PM EST – Carlyle Capital Liquidating Assets – But Why?

Posted by AGORACOM at 10:11 PM on Sunday, March 16th, 2008

“Quality Diversified Assets, Steady Current Income”. Sure sounds good…too bad diversity was nothing more than $22 Billion in residential mortgage backed securities.

—————

Just announced on CNBC World. Carlyle Capital is liquidating. I’ll update this post as more info comes out.

UPDATE:

Here is the full story. However, if you take a close look at the numbers, it doesn’t make sense:

1] The fund held some $22 billion in U.S. AAA-rated residential mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

2] Carlyle Capital said on Thursday it has defaulted on $16.6 billion of debt.

3] Carlyle Capital faced margin calls of $97.5 million caused by the decline in the value of its mortgaged assets. That was on top of the $400 million it was already facing.

4] Carlyle Capital has received default notices from its remaining two lenders, who have now taken possession of substantially or all of its securities.

If you have $22 billion in AAA securities and only $16.6 billion in debt, wouldn’t you make a measly $497.5 million in margin calls?

CONCLUSION

The question is a slightly rhetorical one for those of you that have followed this blog – but it just goes to show you that AAA isn’t worth anywhere AAA. The question is, what is it really worth and which AAA-bloated bank is the next to have lenders come knocking.

Regards,
George

10:10 PM EST – Gold Passes $1,030 On Bear Stearns Collapse

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:17 PM on Sunday, March 16th, 2008

No surprise here but gold is running on the Bear Stearns collapse..the chart above is courtesy of Kitco and should continue to update itself throughout the night. As such, depending on when you are reading it, the price of gold will be higher or lower than $1,030.

This is going to be one hell of a ride for gold and gold juniors. Here is a list of the metals companies represented by AGORACOM. It will take you no more than 10 minutes to read through the summary descriptions of each and find one or more that are best suited for your portfolio.

For those of you that are new to the gold dynamic and it’s connection to both the Bear Stearns collapse (micro) and the sub-prime issue (macro), here is a quick tutorial.

THE MICRO VIEW

An excerpt from this Reuters article:

The dollar sank to a record low against the euro on Monday (Asian markets) as investors said the acquisition of Bear by JPMorgan showed the seriousness of the problems faced by U.S. financial markets.

“Flight-to-quality buying is boosting gold as the market is losing faith in the dollar,” said Tatsuo Kageyama, analyst at Kanetsu Asset Management in Tokyo.

The market is completely bearish on the dollar. The market is also very pessimistic about the dollar’s outlook.

THE MACRO VIEW

You are going to need about an hour of reading but make the time and go through all of my recent posts in the Gold $1,000 category. Yes, I created a category for it.

Finally, you should also give the following blog post a quick read.

Regards,
George

Ben Bernanke Quote After Sub-Prime Takes Down Bear Stearns

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:00 PM on Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Good evening to you all. If you have not heard, Bear Stearns has officially gone under. Technically, they were acquired for $2/share (NOT-A-TYPO), so they didn’t actually announce a bankruptcy….unless you consider the fact that it was trading at $70 on Monday!

What does Ben Bernanke have to say? I’ve got one quote from him back on May 17, 2007 and another one tonight…Ok I actually made up the one from tonight but it is a pretty educated guess into how he is going to respond to this.

May 17, 2007 (from Forbes.com article)

The subprime mess is grave but largely contained, said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke Thursday, in a speech before the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. While rising delinquencies and foreclosures will continue to weigh heavily on the housing market this year, it will not cripple the U.S. economy, he said. The speech was the Chairman’s most comprehensive on the subprime mortgage issue to date.

“Given the fundamental factors in place that should support the demand for housing, we believe the effect of the troubles in the subprime sector on the broader housing market will likely be limited,” Bernanke said.

March 16, 2008

I continue to believe the troubles in the subprime sector on the broader housing market will likely be limited to every bank and neighborhood in the country. So, unless you have a savings account or you own a home, you should be just fine.”

We can’t confirm he’s actually made this official statement but if I know the “don’t worry, be happy” Fed Chairman, this will be pretty close

Regards,
George

More Fed “Emergency Measures” … Yaaaawwwwnn

Posted by AGORACOM at 7:53 PM on Sunday, March 16th, 2008

The US Federal Reserve Board continues to run the Die Hard Playbook right into the hands of inflation and de-valuing of the US Dollar. They’re level of predictability has driven them to the point of becoming boring…but I still have to report on it…so here it is.

Tonight, the U.S. Federal Reserve cut to its lending rate to financial institutions to 3.25 percent from 3.50 percent, effective immediately, and created another lending facility for big investment banks to secure short-term loans. Go here to read the full story.

Now, in an incredible feat of clairvoyance and prophetization (I don’t care if it’s not a word), I am going to predict the following:

  • Further $US Weakness
  • Higher Gold Prices
  • Higher Oil Prices

I’m scary. Cue the music from The Omen.

Regards,
George

It’s Official – New York Spot Gold Price Closes At $1,002.50

Posted by AGORACOM at 8:09 PM on Friday, March 14th, 2008

Good evening to you all. After close to a year of pounding the table on $1,000 gold, it has arrived. I could write an essay on the what, why, when but sometimes you just have to sit back and enjoy the view. The chart above says it all.

Where does gold go from here? Let’s talk about that tomorrow.

In the meantime, for those of you who want a fast and entertaining education on the gold markets, check out my archive of $1,000 gold posts.

Congrats to Jean-Francois Tardif, John Embry, Eric Sprott, Bill Murphy, GATA, Peter Grandich and Rob McEwen for being proven right after pounding the table on $1,000 gold for much longer than me. Thanks for the education.

Regards,
George

Bear Stearns Is Crashing On News Of Emergency Funding – Gold Firmly Breaks $1,000

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:09 AM on Friday, March 14th, 2008

This news is breaking so fast that I am resorting to rapid fire bullet points in reverse chronological order: I will also be using some bullet points from “The Big Picture” blog, that is also rapid fire posting.

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11:40 Holy Cow! TheStreet.com reports someone traded 55,000 Bear Stearns $30 puts On Tuesday . The stock was trading at $65 per share at the time.

The options expire on March 20, so that left only 10 days for some event to occur that would cause these puts to go into the money and have some value.

While BS management and board members were claiming liquidity rumors were “ridiculous” somebody else knew othewise. Joe investor gets screwed again.

….

11:31 – Can anybody on Wall Street be trusted? Here is the timeline of Bear Stearns lies throughout the week. Unbelievable how they misled everybody to the bitter end…including live statements on CNBC!

……..

11:24 – Standard & Poor’s statement yesterday that “banks may be done with with the bulk of write-downs linked to bad home loans” shows once again that S&P is completely out to lunch. Considering these guys didn’t see it coming in the first place and responsible for so many “AAA” ratings, does anyone else think this is more a case of being conflicted that stupid?

…….

11:08 – U.S. consumer sentiment hits 16-year low

…..

11:03 – Want an example of good anecdotal evidence …getting a gold quote is difficult with all provider sites SLOWWWW…I wonder why?

….

11:00 Gold hit a high of $1,007, now trading at $1,004
……

10:41: If you are wondering what a non-recourse, back-to-back financing is, pull up a chair. Talk about buddies rubbing each other’s backs:

JPM gets to go the the Discount Window and borrow all the greenbacks they want; Then they loan that to Bear. In the event that Bear defaults, the NY Fed cannot go back to recover from JPM — hence, non-recourse.

….

10:34 Jim Rogers short on all investment banks was bang on.

(more…)

Jim Rogers Call To “Abolish The Fed” A Sound Idea

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:57 AM on Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Jim Rogers, co-founder of the Quantum Fund along with billionaire investor George Soros, expressed his unequivocal view on the Fed’s $200 Billion bailout plan – abolish the Federal Reserve.

More than headline grabbing, Rogers’ view is based on very sound logic. Though we all know the Fed is not going to be abolished anytime soon, he will probably use today’s interview on CNBC Europe to tell the world “I told you so” if the US economy goes as he expects. So far, he’s been dead on nails by calling for climbing oil, a falling US dollar and climbing agricultural prices. Read this post from November 14th in which I reported his calls on these very items.

HIGHLIGHTS

I strongly recommend you watch the video above but for those of you that are short on time, here are the noteworthy points:

  • In the 1970s, the Fed printed money to avert a recession, boosting inflation and then forcing interest rates to more than 20 percent to keep a lid on price rises.
  • “No country in the world has ever succeeded by debasing its currency,” he said. “That’s what this man is trying to do. He’s trying to debase the currency as a way to revive America. It has never worked in the long term or the medium term.”
  • Investment Banks should be allowed to fail.
  • “If you bail out every investment bank that gets in trouble, that’s not capitalism, that’s socialism for the rich”
  • He has a short position on all investment banks. Fannie Mae is the weakest. (Eric Sprott said the same thing a couple of days ago…this is the second time Jim Rogers has echoed someone at Sprott within 2 business days. Here is the first time.)
  • A recession may be a good way to clean up the economy, while trying to prevent one may cost more and actually worsen the recession.

I can’t poke a hole in any of these points. The Fed is making a valiant effort to save the US economy for – most likely – political reasons, but you can’t fight this credit crisis, which is essentially a string of colossal errors made by individuals, banks and funds. This is too big of a mess to clean up … but it isn’t big enough to get even worse. By printing more money, the Fed is doing just that.

Gold $2,000 is starting to look a little more plausible.

Regards,
George

Was Eric Sprott “Bank Collapse” Referring To Bear Stearns?

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:59 AM on Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

“Turmoil in global credit markets may lead to the collapse of a North American bank, pushing bullion prices up to $2,000 an ounce as investors seek a haven in gold.”

“There are probably 10 companies that are broke that are still trading — banks and financial institutions.”

These were just a couple of comments made by Eric Sprott in this March 10th Bloomberg story in which he also called for $2,000 gold.

On March 11th, just hours after the US Fed $200 Billion injection announcement, Marketwatch ran the following headline:

FED ACTION MAY HAVE TARGETED BEAR STEARNS

The article goes on to discuss the fact that the Fed action may have been partly directed at helping out Bear Stearns, a brokerage firm that bet heavy on bundling mortgages and re-packaging them into mortgage backed securities. Success served to commit the firm even deeper into the cash cow, which also made it vulnerable when the sub-prime markets turned.

Rumors abounded on Monday that Bear Stearns was in deep trouble as it stock fell more than 10% and credit-default swaps traded at 610 basis points over Treasurys on Monday, up 400 basis points from Friday.

Naturally, Bear Stearns denied it was in any trouble but when credit swaps increase by 400 basis points in one trading day, the jig is most likely up.

Had the Fed not come to the rescue, would Eric have had his day?

Both the Bloomberg and Marketwatch articles are a must read – but my next step is to try and get Eric Sprott on an “Expert’s Corner” interview to discuss this topic even further.

Eric, if you are reading this, please give me a call!

UPDATE:

Jim Rogers, co-founder of the Quantum Fund along with billionaire investor George Soros, echoed Sprotts’ short call on US financial institutions.  He made the call this morning, less than 48 hours after the Sprott call.  I point this out because this is the second time in 4 months that Rogers has echoed a big call made by someone at Sprott within 48 business hours. Here is the first time.

If Jim Rogers, Eric Sprott and JF Tardif haven’t met, they need to get acquainted.  Should I make introductions?

Regards,
George

Bernanke Is Not Saving The Day, Just Delaying D-Day

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:33 AM on Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

 

As you already know by now, the US Federal Reserve today announced that it would inject $200 Billion into the banking system in exchange for debt that includes mortgage-backed securities. This is an unprecedented move in an effort to stave off a a credit crisis of epic proportions.

This is not to be confused with the Term Auction Facility announced in December to loan funds to banks in exchange for – amongst other things – mortgage debt. Today’s move includes the actual securities (whose value we’ll discuss in a minute) that were created by bundling a bunch of crappy mortgages. If you need a lesson on this, please take a minute to review the following cartoon but educational illustration of how sub-prime really works.

Will It Save The Day Or Delay The Inevitable?

Too early to tell in absolute terms but I am going to vote this is a mere delay of the inevitable. Why? Take a close look at quotes from around the web from people much smarter than you and me. Believe me when I tell you that I looked for quotes from both sides of the equation:

``This is the most significant step the Fed has taken so far,” said David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. “This relieves some of the pressure” in the credit markets, he said. (Bloomberg).

“They’re trying to put out fires to the best extent they can,” said David Greenlaw, chief fixed-income economist at Morgan Stanley in New York, who is a former researcher at the Fed Board of Governors. (Bloomberg).

“This will assist some of the big banks,” said Walter Gerasimowicz, head of Meditron Asset Management, which manages $1 billion. “But it won’t bring the light at the end of the tunnel. The housing-market problems will take at least all of this year to settle, and until that happens, the banks aren’t going to be relieved fully.’ (Bloomberg).

“This morning’s announcement by the Fed helps the brokers and their fixed-income hedge fund clients who were struggling with funding,” Brad Hintz, an analyst at Bernstein Research, wrote in a note to investors. (Marketwatch)

“The good news is this will help brokers and banks; the bad news is it will do nothing to help the Housing market, or stop the decline in House prices.” (The Big Picture)

HELP FOR BANKS. NADA FOR HOMEOWNERS

How do you read these quotes? Personally, they all came across as the Fed solution being one that merely band-aids the solution, rather than solving it.

Moreover, it seems pretty clear that the Fed is acting to protect banks, not individual homeowners at risk of losing their homes. To this end, Marketwatch has a great article claiming the move was made to stave off a serious and imminent danger at Bear Stearns. This is a must read article but here are a couple of excerpts:

“Bear’s stock dropped 11% on Monday on concern that its borrowing costs are rising. For a brokerage firm, which relies on steady access to financing, such disruptions can restrain its businesses and leave it at a disadvantage to financially stronger rivals.”

“The Federal Reserve’s actions today may have been strongly influenced by Bear Stearns’ problem,” (Dick Bove, Analyst at Punk Ziegel & Co.).

When I add it all up, the following three conclusions come to my mind:

  1. Nobody thinks this is a solution to the credit crisis.
  2. This Fed solution is aimed at helping troubled banks, not homeowners.
  3. The Fed had no choice as the collapse of a major financial institution was imminent.

On a final note, the fact that Gold did not experience a major setback serves as further evidence that the Fed has done nothing more than delay the inevitable. Given gold’s rise over the last several months, major profit taking should have been taking place in response to this $200 Billion solution. It is trading at $US 974.00 as I write.

Regards,
George

Write-Downs To Hit $400 – $600 Billion. The Axeman Cometh And He’s Not Accepting Visa. Gold Coins Only Please

Posted by AGORACOM at 9:09 PM on Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Back on November 27th I wrote a story titled “The Worst Is Yet To Come For US Financials“. The story was accompanied by the following mortgage reset chart courtesy of Bank of America:

The “don’t worry, be happy” crowd at CNBC and other financial media refused to report on the true size of this debacle and chose to amplify “self-interested commentators that are itching for the US Federal Reserve and Congress to bail them out” (from Information Arbitrage).

Nonetheless, me and many bloggers who are not conflicted by the mainstream stuck to our guns and continued to do our best to warn investors of what we could see coming over them hills.

Well it’s officially over the hill and coming straight for us, with this Bloomberg story quoting both Goldman Sachs and UBS AG that credit losses will hit $400 – $600 billion respectively.

If you think the answer is simply cutting interest rates, then you are new to the blog and I forgive you. Please read my January 3rd post titled “Checkmate Coming For US Fed“. In fact, read all my posts in my $1,000 Gold Category.

The Axeman cometh, there is no stopping it now. All you can do is pay him off with gold coins in your pocket. Don’t have any? Get some. They’re still cheap at just $US 985/oz.

Regards,
George