Beiträge von GOLD_Baron

    Bear, Lehman, Merrill, Goldman Traded as Junk, Derivatives Show 8o


    By Caroline Salas


    July 31 (Bloomberg) -- On Wall Street, Bear Stearns Cos., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., are as good as junk.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…=avimage&iid=igcTuo_3e8cU]


    Bonds of U.S. investment banks lost about $1.5 billion of their face value this month as the risk of owning the securities increased the most since at least October 2004, according to Merrill indexes. Prices of credit-default swaps based on the debt imply that their credit ratings are below investment grade, data compiled by Moody's Investors Service show.


    The highest level of defaults in 10 years on subprime mortgages and a $33 billion pileup of unsold bonds and loans for funding acquisitions are driving investors away from debt of the New York-based securities firms. Concerns about credit quality may get worse because banks promised to provide $300 billion in debt for leveraged buyouts announced this year.


    ``The market is being driven by fear,'' said Mark Kiesel, who oversees $80 billion of corporate debt at Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world's biggest bond fund.


    [...]


    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…d=afHmD6FZ2Wpw&refer=home

    Sowood loses more than $1 billion in July 8o


    Facing margin calls, hedge fund firm sells portfolio to Citadel


    By Alistair Barr, MarketWatch
    Last Update: 8:02 PM ET Jul 30, 2007


    SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Sowood Capital Management LP, a hedge fund firm that had more than $3 billion in assets, told investors on Monday that its Alpha funds lost more than half their value this month amid turmoil in credit markets.


    http://www.marketwatch.com/new…%2D8CEB%2D69434D00A30A%7D

    Mortgage Foreclosures Rise 58 Percent in First Half


    By Kathleen M. Howley


    July 30 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. foreclosures rose 58 percent in the first half of 2007 from a year earlier, led by California and Florida, as more homeowners fell behind on their monthly mortgage payments, RealtyTrac Inc. said.


    Lenders sent notices of default, scheduled auctions or repossessions to 573,397 properties in the January to June period, the Irvine, California-based seller of foreclosure data said in a report today. California foreclosures surged 170 percent to 104,572, the highest in the nation, and Florida gained 77 percent to 64,250.


    Homeowners with adjustable-rate loans who are seeing their payments jump are finding it harder to avoid foreclosure by selling or refinancing their properties as the U.S. housing slump worsens. The inventory of homes for sale, measured in the time it would take to sell them all, was 8.8 months in June, matching the prior month as the highest since 1992, the National Association of Realtors said last week.


    ``Foreclosure activity shows no sign of slowing down,'' James Saccacio, RealtyTrac's chief executive, said in the report.


    The results today reflect a new methodology by RealtyTrac. The company for the first time reported on what it calls ``unique addresses,'' or properties that have had at least one foreclosure- related legal filing. In previous reports, RealtyTrac had only reported the number of legal filings, which could have resulted in properties being double and triple counted.


    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…hsAzoAes&refer=realestate

    Sorge um Banken lähmt die Börsen


    An der Börse geht die Angst um: Die Krise auf dem US-Immobilienmarkt hat erstmals auch ein deutsches Kreditinstitut erfasst - die Mittelstandsbank IKB. Ihr Aktienkurs fällt dramatisch, auch andere Finanztitel geben nach - und ziehen den Dax nach unten.


    [...]
    "Mit Nervosität warten die Märkte nun auf die Deutsche Bank - sie wird am Mittwoch über den Verlauf des zweiten Quartals berichten. Nach Ansicht von Analysten hat der Branchenprimus zwar weiter von den lebhaften Kapitalmärkten profitiert. Vor allem getrieben von einem starken Handelsergebnis hat er wohl rund ein Fünftel mehr als im Vorjahr verdient.


    Die Analysten erwarten aber vor allem nähere Informationen zu den Auswirkungen der US-Immobilienkrise auf die Deutsche Bank. Ihr Risikovorstand (Chief Risk Officer), Hugo Bänziger, hatte allerdings schon Anfang des Monats darauf verwiesen, dass man die Anzeichen für die Probleme auf dem Subprime-Markt frühzeitig gesehen und Konsequenzen gezogen habe."
    [...]



    [URL=http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,497271,00.html]http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,497271,00.html[/URL]

    Corporate Bond Risk Surges by Record as Subprime Losses Spread


    By Hamish Risk


    July 30 (Bloomberg) -- The risk of owning corporate bonds surged by a record as losses on U.S. subprime mortgages at Germany's IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG triggered concerns of global market contagion.


    Contracts on 10 million euros ($13.8 million) of debt included in the iTraxx Crossover Series 7 Index of 50 European companies increased as much as 60,000 euros to 504,000 euros, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The CDX North American Investment-Grade Index rose $16,000 to $97,000, Deutsche Bank AG prices show.


    Investors are fleeing corporate credit in the fastest selloff in seven years, Barclays Capital said today. The rout that began in mid-June when two Bear Stearns Cos. hedge funds almost collapsed spread worldwide as Blackstone Group LP stepped in last week to support Sydney-based Basis Capital Fund Management Ltd. and ABN Amro Holding NV's co-owned Absolute Capital Group Ltd. froze investor accounts.


    `` It's pure fear,'' said Gary Jenkins, a partner at London-based hedge fund Synapse Investment Management, which manages $650 million of debt assets. ``It's fear of the unknown, fear of hedge funds unwinding, fear of knock-on effects of the subprime meltdown.''


    Jenkins said the iTraxx Crossover Index is more likely to double to 1,000 euros than return to the level of about 200 euros at the start of June. Investors use credit-default swaps to speculate on the ability of companies to repay debt. An increase indicates worsening perceptions of credit quality.


    Investment Grade


    The iTraxx Europe Series 7 Index of 125 companies with investment-grade credit ratings including Europe's major banks jumped 16,000 euros to 72,000 euros, JPMorgan prices show, the biggest increase since the index started three years ago.


    Credit-default swaps on Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank, Germany's biggest bank, rose 10,000 euros to a record 60,000 euros, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc prices. The contracts cost 10,000 euros at the start of June.


    IKB, a Dusseldorf-based bank that focuses on small and medium-sized companies, said in a statement today it was scrapping a 280 million-euro earnings forecast as ``massive uncertainty'' in the markets threatened access to funding. State-owned KfW Group, which holds a 38 percent stake in IKB, said it will cover the company against potential losses. IKB said it's replacing Chief Executive Officer Stefan Ortseifen with Guenther Braeunig, a management board member at KfW.


    ``Subprimemania is spilling into the real economy,'' said Jochen Felsenheimer, head of credit derivatives strategy at UniCredit SpA in Munich. ``IKB's statement was an end for those who believed this is a derivatives linked problem only.''


    Markets Roiled


    Fallout from the subprime mortgage rout is roiling markets around the world as rising risk premiums mean companies face having to pay higher interest on their borrowings. Investor confidence in high-risk, high-yield loans fell to the lowest in at least nine months today as the iTraxx LevX Index of credit- default swaps on loans to 35 European companies dropped 0.25 to 94.50, according to Deutsche Bank.


    ``There's a lot of pain out there, and there's a lot of risk aversion,'' said Abdul K. Hussain, a portfolio manager at Dubai-based hedge fund Mashreq Capital DIFC Ltd., which manages $250 million in fixed-income assets. ``You can't go through the volatility we've seen in the past week without seeing longer term repercussions.''


    Credit-default swap contracts based on 10 million euros of IKB debt, which traded at 15,000 euros a month ago, were at 95,000 euros today, according to Royal Bank of Scotland. The contracts were at 120,000 euros on July 27.


    IKB's shares fell the most in at least a decade, dropping 19 percent to 17.65 euros at 1:20 p.m. in Frankfurt. The stock fell 33 percent this month on anticipation the company could be hurt by the subprime market.


    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…d=a4CHnE.bPy6s&refer=home

    UNERWARTETER CHEFWECHSEL


    US-Immobilienkrise erfasst deutsche Mittelstandsbank


    Die Krise auf dem US-Immobilienmarkt hat erstmals auch ein deutsches Kreditinstitut mit Wucht erfasst: Die Mittelstandsbank IKB wechselt nach Bonitätsproblemen ihren Chef aus und senkt ihre Prognosen deutlich. Weltweit werden Banken nervös und schränken ihre Kreditvergabe ein.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.spiegel.de/img/0,1020,929233,00.jpg]


    Frankfurt am Main/Hamburg - Es war das dickste Minus im ganzen MDax Chart zeigen: Die Aktien der Mittelstandsbank IKB stürzten am Vormittag regelrecht ab. Gegen 10 Uhr verloren sie 15,7 Prozent gegenüber dem Schlusskurs vom Freitag.


    Der Konzern hatte mitten in der Nacht eine Gewinnwarnung ausgegeben und dies mit der US-Hypothekenkrise begründet. Die bisherige Ergebnisprognose für das Geschäftsjahr 2007/2008 von 280 Millionen Euro könne nicht aufrechterhalten werden. "Das Ergebnis wird aus heutiger Sicht deutlich niedriger ausfallen." Der Schock an den Finanzmärkten war umso größer, als die Bank erst vor zehn Tagen ihre Gewinnprognose nach Bekanntgabe der Zahlen für das erste Quartal bestätigt hatte.


    Außerdem wurde der Chef der IKB ausgetauscht: Stefan Ortseifen sei als Mitglied und Sprecher des Vorstands ausgeschieden. Neuer Vorstandschef sei das KfW-Vorstandsmitglied Günther Bräunig, teilte die IKB mit.


    Die Krise war offenbar ernst. In der Mitteilung hieß es, wegen der Probleme am US-Immobilienmarkt und der damit einhergehenden Verunsicherung sei die Bonität der IKB gefährdet gewesen. Die KfW, die 38 Prozent der IKB besitzt, musste einschreiten. Sie habe "die notwendigen Maßnahmen getroffen", um die Bonität der IKB zu sichern, hieß es. Die KfW leiste "damit einen wesentlichen Beitrag zur Stabilisierung des Marktes".


    Banken geben Druck an Hedgefonds weiter


    Die Probleme am US-Hypothekenmarkt belasten die Börsen seit Monaten. Mehr als 50 amerikanische Finanzierer sind Bankrott gegangen oder haben sich selbst verkauft. Am härtesten hat es Institute getroffen, die sich auf Kreditnehmer mit niedriger Bonität konzentriert haben - das sogenannte Subprime-Geschäft.


    Auch der US-Hypothekenfinanzierer American Home Mortgage Investment, der vor allem Kunden mit höherer Kreditwürdigkeit bedient, ist inzwischen betroffen: Die Banken forderten mehr Bar-Sicherheiten, teilte American Home Mortgage mit. Deshalb verschob das Unternehmen nach einer Mitteilung vom Freitagabend Dividendenausschüttungen.


    In den USA waren auch mehrere Hedgefonds in Schwierigkeiten geraten, die auf dem Subprime-Markt spekuliert hatten. Zwei Fonds der Bank Bear Stearns hatten praktisch ihren gesamten Wert eingebüßt. Mehrere Investmentbanken haben einem Bericht der "Financial Times" zufolge nun Konsequenzen gezogen. Auf Grund gestiegener Kreditbedenken hätten sie die Anforderungen an die Margen der Hedgefonds-Kunden erhöht.


    "Die Finanzierungsregeln für Hedgefonds werden verschärft", sagte Gerald Lucas, Investmentberater bei der Deutschen Bank, der "Financial Times". Diese Verschärfung werde den Anteil von Kreditfinanzierung bei Firmenübernahmen verringern. Ein Vertreter einer weiteren, nicht genannten Investmentbank äußerte sich ähnlich. :baby:


    Der Zeitung zufolge könnten Teile der Hedgefonds-Branche durch diese Maßnahme unter Druck geraten. Denn der Schritt komme zu einer Zeit, in der sich einige Anbieter aufgrund der Marktbewegungen einem Abschwung entgegen sähen.


    [URL=http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,497172,00.html]http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,497172,00.html[/URL]

    WAS LATEST MARKET MELTDOWN 'THE BIG ONE'?


    July 29, 2007 -- THIS is the question everyone on Wall Street has been asking, so let's not pussyfoot around it: Was this week's convulsive market action a correction, or a prelude to something more serious. Is this the big one?


    By "big one" people are referring to a meltdown in the multi-trillion-dollar derivatives market - a financial crisis that would rival the Asian contagion a decade ago. Such an event would send interest rates higher in the short-term - sending stocks and housing careening lower.


    It would also blow out dozens of hedge funds and would likely only come to an end when some player - a bank, Wall Street powerhouse or some other entity deemed "too big to fail" has to be bailed out by the Fed or Uncle Sam.


    The stock market is channeling the possibility of a severe credit collapse. It's the reason why equity prices from Seoul to Paris were rocked this week, even though there is no housing recession in those markets, or in much of the world outside the United States. It's why the Blackstone Group, a private-equity firm whose lifeblood is credit has lost 22 percent of its value since going public just one month ago.


    Yes, there are very serious concerns that this may indeed be "the big one." What's most disturbing is that the brightest minds on Wall Street - veterans of other financial panics and credit seizures - readily admit it's virtually impossible to see the forest for the trees.


    Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates - a venerable hedge fund manager who shuns the spotlight and the charity circuit - has one of the most solid records you'll ever find. He told investors on Friday that he and his colleagues embarked on an extensive study a few months ago to determine the extent of the derivatives risk.


    Their conclusion: "no one has a clue." According to Dalio's calculations, derivatives exposure has risen more than fourfold in the last five years to a staggering $400 trillion. Yes, that's $400 trillion with a T, or 30 times the entire gross domestic product of the U.S.


    That's why the smart money took their cash off the table this week. Sure, the markets may snap back and vault to new records just like they did this spring. But with the extent of the risks out there so opaque, it may not be worth the gamble.


    http://www.nypost.com/seven/07…business_terry_keenan.htm

    American Home Mortgage says faces margin calls


    NEW YORK, July 29 (Reuters) - American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. (AHM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said its lenders are demanding it put up more cash after the mortgage lender wrote down the value of its loan and security portfolios significantly.


    The company said in a statement released late Friday that as a result of the margin calls from lenders, it has delayed paying dividends on its common stock, and plans to delay payments on its preferred shares.


    Margin calls can create severe difficulty for a company that depends on funds from its lenders to finance loans, and can force the company to sell assets or seek other financing.


    If the company cannot generate enough money to satisfy its lenders, in the worst case scenario it can be forced to reorganize its debt or file for bankruptcy.


    On July 19, rumors that a bank had withdrawn one of American Home Mortgage's credit facilities pushed the company's shares 20 percent lower. The company told analysts that rumor was false.


    American Home Mortgage's shares closed on Friday at $10.47, their lowest level since April 2003.


    American Home Mortgage is a real estate investment trust that makes prime and "near prime" loans. It has made many loans known as "alternative-A" loans, which usually require little documentation from borrowers, and are riskier for the lender than standard prime loans.


    Mortgage lenders have broadly faced earnings pressure as delinquencies and defaults have risen.


    Melville, New York-based American Home Mortgage said delaying paying dividends will allow the company to keep cash on hand until it better understands the impact of market conditions on its balance sheet and liquidity. (Reporting by Dan Wilchins)


    http://www.reuters.com/article…KN2934026720070729?rpc=44

    Subprime could create global crisis, economist says


    World is one "Bear-like' event away from liquidity freeze, Zandi warns


    By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
    Last Update: 4:07 PM ET Jul 26, 2007


    WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market could spiral out of control into a global financial crisis, economist Mark Zandi said Thursday.


    With a "high level of angst" in the financial markets about who will take the losses from more than $1 trillion in risky mortgages, we could be just one hedge-fund collapse away from a global liquidity crisis, said Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com.


    A global meltdown is not likely, but the risks are growing, Zandi emphasized in a conference call with reporters following the release of a new study on subprime debt that concludes that the housing crisis could be deeper and last longer than investors now believe. Read the latest data on home sales.


    And it could spread. "Mounting mortgage delinquencies and defaults now pose the most serious threat to the global financial system and economy," Zandi said in his report.


    "If there is a fault line in the global financial system, it runs through the U.S. housing and mortgage markets," he said.


    Zandi's comments came as U.S. financial markets reeled from a growing credit crunch, centered not in the subprime arena, but in the leveraged corporate debt market.


    On Thursday, Tyco became the latest multinational company to pull a deal because the buyers have fled. U.S. stock markets plunged Thursday, while U.S. Treasurys benefited from a flight to quality. See Market Snapshot.


    Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, an old Wall Street hand himself, tried to reassure markets with a mid-afternoon televised pep talk. Lenders and borrowers should exercise more "discipline," he said, and he repeated his view that any problems in the subprime market would be "largely contained."


    But Zandi and others say the problems are only beginning.


    In a note to clients on Wednesday, Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius said the housing correction could be less than half over, if history is any guide.


    "The dramatic deterioration in the mortgage market suggests at least the possibility that the credit crunch in the mortgage finance industry could become as bad as in the bad old days of the 1970s and 1980s," Hatzius wrote.


    Zandi used another historical comparison: the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s.


    "Unlike the financial crisis of a decade ago, however, global capital would likely flow away from U.S. markets, not to them, as the genesis for the crisis lies within the U.S. financial system."


    After Bear Stearns was forced to write off the value of two large hedge funds that had invested heavily in securities backed by subprime debt, it could take just one more "Bear-like event" for the financial system to freeze up,


    "If there's another major hedge fund that does stumble, that could elicit a crisis of confidence and a global shock," Zandi said. The potential "is quite high," he said. He gave it a one-in-five chance.


    Zandi said global financial conditions have been supported by strong growth and substantial liquidity, supercharged by "unprecedented risk tolerance." But that's changing. Global liquidity is drying up, with central banks tightening. And risk is being re-priced.


    "The credit window is now closed," wrote strategist Barry Ritholtz in his blog.


    As for the U.S. housing market, Zandi expects a lot more pain, but not a recession.


    Here are some highlights of his forecast, based on a study using anonymous data collected by consumer credit agency Equifax:


    *


    Home prices will fall 10% from the peak nationally, more in the bubble regions in California, Florida, Nevada, Arizona and Washington, D.C.
    *


    Home sales could bottom later this year, home construction could bottom early next year, and house prices could bottom late next year. It'll be 2010 before the housing market could be termed "normal."
    *


    About 17% of total mortgage debt is at risk, totaling about $2.5 trillion in subprime, Alt-A and jumbo debt. About $1.4 trillion is at serious risk of default. Investors will lose about $113 billion as $460 billion worth of mortgages default.
    *


    About 20% of the subprime loans written in the last half of 2006 will fail, with the peak of the defaults not coming until 2011. A "significant number" of these borrowers never made a single payment.
    *


    More than 2.5 million first mortgages will default this year and next year. Subprime borrowers will experience significant financial distress.
    *


    The U.S. economy will grow less than 3% annualized through the middle of 2009. A healthy job market should prevent a recession, although the jobless rate will likely rise to 5% from 4.5% by the end of the year.
    *


    Consumer spending has already slowed and will slow further.


    http://custom.marketwatch.com/…%2DBA2A%2DEC4A8F61D2E4%7D

    Börsianer gehen erschöpft ins Wochenende ;)


    Nach einer Berg- und Talfahrt haben sich die europäischen Aktienbörsen fast ausschließlich mit Kursverlusten ins Wochenende verabschiedet. Auch die Stimmung an den US-Akienmärkten bleibt mies - warme Worte des US-Finanzministers linderten die Angst vor der Krise am Immobilienmarkt kaum.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.spiegel.de/img/0,1020,930067,00.jpg]


    [URL=http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,496986,00.html]http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/0,1518,496986,00.html[/URL]

    Zitat

    Aber wiederholt sich dieses Szenario nicht seit geraumer Zeit mit schon nahezu schnöde gewordener Regelmässigkeit? Wie oft schon ging es scheinbar um die Wurst, ums letzte Gefecht der FED etc.?


    Zitat

    Für einen massiven Anstieg des Goldes vom gegenwärtigen Stand aus braucht es nach wie vor eine totale Panikstimmung auf den Finanzmärkten, also weit mehr als Subprime-Fiasko etc. Solange man täglich Billionensummen mit Gewinn auf dem Währungsmarkt verschieben kann, scheint mir diese Zeit noch nicht gekommen. Gold ist da noch ein Zwergerl dagegen, wenn auch eines mit sehr grossen Ohren und vor allem ohne Pinocchio-Nase. Vorerst (muss nicht so bleiben) nichts Neues beim Gold - es korreliert weiter mit den anderen Märkten, vor allem mit den Aktienmärkten wie schon seit geraumer Zeit.


    Diese Einschätzung teile ich auch. Man sollte sich nicht wegen jedem Rücksetzer hier verrückt machen lassen und auch nicht immer die Schuld bei einem virtuellen PPT suchen, welches auch nur eine Personifizierung eines "Trader-Teams" in diesem Board darstellt - ich denke es steckt wesentlich mehr dahinter.


    Im GEC-Thread, zum Glück existiert der (!), werden momentan Diskussionen geführt, wo ich den ein oder anderen aus diesem Thread auch gerne mal lesen würde. Wahrscheinlich reicht einigen aber die widersprüchliche Analyse des Tagesgeschehens. Schade.


    Das Daimler keinen Käufer für Chrysler findet finde ich die TOP-Story der Woche, weil hinter dieser Transaktion noch viel mehr steckt als das Geschäft ansich. Es sagt über die Beschaffenheit der Finanzmärkte mehr aus, als hier einige denken. Gold wird nicht stetig ansteigen wie sich das hier alle wünschen. Bei einem Trigger-Event ist Sense mit nachkaufen. Da geht es dann ab - deswegen akkumulieren wenn man kann: egal ob bei 600, 650 oder 700. Das sind mittel- bis langfristig alles Schnäppchen. Einige Minen gibt es mittlerweile geschenkt und damit meine ich Geschenk (Properties, Cashbestand, Mine & Produktionsanlage sind mehr Wert als die MK!)...


    Nice weekend, gentleman!


    Mich nicht, denn es gehört zu einem größeren Plan(spiel), was man zunächst verstehen sollte.


    Nein, ich verstehe nur nicht warum hier einige immer noch Prognosen abgeben, die sie einen Tag später wieder relativieren und am darauffolgenden Tag schon wieder. Als ich im März von 800 USD beim POG für Mai sprach wurde ich ausgelacht - zu Recht natürlich! Aber dieses Geschwalle manchmal hier ist unerträglich (die Meinung teilen übrigens auch andere). "Heute geht es bis 676 dann sollte der Rebound kommen" - folgender Tag: "Gold findet bei 661 einen Boden". Witzig vor allem: woher haben diese Personen die Zahlen? Aus der Glaskugel? LOL Wer es nicht verstehen will, diese Kritik einfach überlesen! ;)


    Du weißt wie ich es gemeint habe - vor allem nicht böse! ;) :)