Archive for December, 2007

NYSE Sets 2008 ‘Circuit Breakers’

Monday, December 31st, 2007

NYSE Sets 2008 ‘Circuit Breakers’

By a WALL STREET JOURNAL Staff Reporter
December 31, 2007 6:22 p.m.

NEW YORK — The New York Stock Exchange announced its first-quarter 2008 “circuit-breaker” trigger levels that would halt trading for certain large market declines.

Circuit-breaker levels are set quarterly as 10%, 20% and 30% of the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s average closing values of the previous month, rounded to the nearest 50 points.

(Meanwhile, there was no announcement on program-trading “collars” since that market mechanism was discontinued in November 2007.)

The first two circuit-breaker triggers were set at the same level as currently; the third was set at a slightly lower trigger point than currently:

 Level 1 Halt: In first-quarter 2008, a 1,350-point drop in the DJIA before 2 p.m. EST will halt trading for one hour; for 30 minutes if between 2 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.; and have no effect if at 2:30 p.m. or later unless there is a level 2 halt.

 Level 2 Halt: A 2,700-point drop in the DJIA before 1 p.m. will halt trading for two hours; for one hour if between 1 p.m. and 2:00 p.m.; and for the remainder of the day if at 2 p.m. or later.

 Level 3 Halt: In the event of a 4,000-point decline (down from the previous quarter’s 4,050-point trigger), the market would close for the day, regardless of the time.



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•  Luxembourg, Norway Top Economic-Activity List

•  Midday Tidbits

Blog Posts About This Topic

•  NYSE Announces First-Quarter 2008 Circuit-Breaker  mondovisione.com

•  Hill Country in BizBash New York  bizbash.com

 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB11991429769

7960053.html?mod=hps_us_at_glance_markets

Monday, December 31st, 2007

Highland Capital Management, a Dallas-based asset management firm known best for its hedge funds, is raising its first private equity partnership that will seek to take controlling positions in distressed securities, according LBO Wire. The firm is seeking to raise $1 billion for Highland Restoration Capital Partners LP, which will invest mainly in the bank loans of U.S. mid-market companies with revenue ranging from $250 million to $1 billion, though it has a sweet spot of $500 million. www.hcmlp.com

http://www.pehub.com/article/articledetail.php?articlepostid=9523

12/31/07: BNS $93.85 a barrel, WTI $95.98

Monday, December 31st, 2007

light, sweet crude for February delivery settled two cents lower at $95.98 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange fell 3 cents to $93.85 a barrel.


PRESS TV

Crude Oil Increases Amid Iranian Plan to Start Nuclear Reactor
Bloomberg - 10 hours ago
31 (Bloomberg) — Crude oil rose as Iranian plans to start its first nuclear reactor next year heightened the risk of confrontation with the US Iran,
Crude Oil Rises as Iran Prepares to Start First Nuclear Reactor Bloomberg
Oil falls on US home-sales data, weaker dollar MarketWatch
Fresh investments, demand may push up crude this year Economic Times
RTT News - Bloomberg
all 213 news articles »


KVAL

Brent Crude Futures Climb
Wall Street Journal - 10 hours ago
The upward price trend for Brent crude oil remained firmly intact Monday, said Glen Ward, an energy broker at ODL Securities based in London.
OIL FUTURES: Nymex Crude Ends Flat For Day, Up 57% For Year CattleNetwork.com
Crude oil prices mixed to end year OIL Marketer
Oil Traders Eye $100 Crude Next Year The Associated Press
San Francisco Chronicle - The Associated Press
all 401 news articles »

COMMODITIES
   

Oil Futures Fall in Thin Trade,
End Year Higher by Nearly 60%

By GREGORY MEYER
December 31, 2007 3:42 p.m.

NEW YORK – Crude-oil futures closed out a roaring 2007 in subdued fashion Monday, ending flat in thin volume on the last trading day of the year.

After ranging more than $2, light, sweet crude for February delivery settled two cents lower at $95.98 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange fell 3 cents to $93.85 a barrel.

For the year, Nymex crude turned in an eye-popping performance: up 57.2%. That’s the largest annual percentage gain for the front-month contract since 2002, when Nymex crude climbed from $19.84 a barrel to $31.20.

“The percentage is massive,” said Peter Donovan, a vice president at Vantage Trading on the Nymex floor. “The dollar increase is even more massive.”

Since oil reached an all-time nominal intraday high of $99.29 a barrel on Nov. 21 it has traded above $85 a barrel, still more than the highs of any prior year. Because of global demand growth, a weaker dollar, global security concerns and steady production quotas from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, among other factors, many traders aren’t ruling out higher prices in 2008.

“There is potential for a dip, but overall the trend is still up,” said Tom Bentz, an analyst and broker at BNP Paribas Commodity Futures in New York. “At some point we will see $100 oil. It’s just a matter of time.”

On Monday, however, the market moved indecisively as traders squared positions before year-end. January contracts for heating oil and gasoline expired, and strength in those products supported crude, analysts said.

Worries about global politics drove prices as high as $96.78 a barrel early in the session, after Iran, the world’s fourth-largest oil exporter, announced it will start operating its first nuclear power plant next summer. As well, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said over the weekend that his country will press on with cross-border raids on Kurdish rebels based in Iraq, which exports several hundred thousand barrels a day across the border with its northern neighbor.

Prices then dove as low as $94.73 a barrel as the dollar gained against the euro, making dollar-denominated oil more expensive for buyers with other currencies. Assisting the greenback was a report by the National Association of Realtors that showed existing U.S. home sales rose by 0.4% last month.

“The dollar roared back. That’s why we fell out of bed,” said Michael Cambria of Eagles Futures on the Nymex floor.

The NAR also reported the median price of a previously owned home fell 3.3% to $210,200 in November from $217,300 in November 2006. Some saw this figure as a proxy for weakening oil demand ahead.

“As the price of your house devalues, you start to be more conservative about spending,” said David Beavers, a broker at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago.

Volumes were light before Tuesday’s New Year’s Day holiday, when markets will be closed. When traders return Wednesday, focus is expected to shift to the latest U.S. oil inventory data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, due at 10:30 a.m. EST Thursday.

Analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires on average foresee a 1.8 million-barrel draw in crude inventories, the the seventh straight weekly decline. They predict gasoline stockpiles to rise by 1.6 million barrels, distillate stockpiles to fall by 300,000 barrels and refinery use to rise by 0.4 percentage point to 88.5% of capacity.

“Although trading volume will not likely return to normal until next week, there should be plenty of news later this week to crank up volatility considerably as Thursday’s EIA stats could provide some bullish impetus,” said Jim Ritterbusch, president of Galena, Ill.-based energy trading advisory firm Ritterbusch and Associates, in a note to clients.

January heating oil rose 74 points, or 0.3%, to settle at $2.6444 a gallon. January reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, rose 1.61 cents, or 0.7%, to $2.4758 a gallon.

Write to Gregory Meyer at greg.meyer@dowjones.com

Credit Crisis? Just Wait for a Replay

Friday, December 28th, 2007

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/28/business/28norris.html?hp 

 

High & Low Finance

Credit Crisis? Just Wait for a Replay

Published: December 28, 2007

What if it’s not just subprime?

Skip to next paragraph

 

As 2007 ends, it seems that the financial world shakes every time a company reveals some new exposure to the disastrous world of subprime mortgage lending.

But just how different was subprime lending from other lending in the days of easy money that prevailed until this summer? The smug confidence that nothing could go wrong, and that credit quality did not matter, could be seen in the many other markets as well.

That was particularly true in the corporate loan market. Loans were cheap, and anyone worried about losses could buy insurance for almost nothing. It was not an environment that encouraged careful lending.

“The severity of the subprime debacle may be only a prologue to the main act, a tragedy on the grand stage in the corporate credit markets,” Ted Seides, the director of investments at Protégé Partners, a hedge fund of funds, wrote in Economics & Portfolio Strategy.

“Over the past decade, the exponential growth of credit derivatives has created unprecedented amounts of financial leverage on corporate credit,” he added. “Similar to the growth of subprime mortgages, the rapid rise of credit products required ideal economic conditions and disconnected the assessors of risk from those bearing it.”

There are differences, of course, and they may be critical in averting a crisis. To start, there are virtually no defaults in corporate lending now, and even if Moody’s is accurate in its forecast that defaults will quadruple in 2008, the default rate on speculative loans and bonds would still be below the long-term average. That hardly sounds like a crisis.

And there is no reason to think that fraud was a big factor in the corporate loan market, as it seems to have been in subprime.

But the history of junk bonds provides a warning that defaults start to rise a few years after credit gets very easy. By that standard, says Martin Fridson of the research firm FridsonVision, a new wave of defaults is overdue. Already, even without defaults, he says, about a tenth of high-yield bonds are trading at distress levels — levels that provide yields of at least 10 percentage points more than Treasuries.

If a recession does occur, one can easily foresee a wave of defaults in junk bonds and their bank-loan cousins, leveraged loans. With highly leveraged structures supported by some of those loans, the surprises could be greater. It is sobering to realize that the issuing of leveraged loans set a record in 2007, even though the market contracted sharply late in the year.

If this was the year that many readers — not to mention financial reporters — learned what C.D.O., M.B.S. and SIV stood for, 2008 could be the year of C.D.S. and C.L.O. (For those who came in late, those abbreviations from 2007 are shorthand for collateralized debt obligations, mortgage-backed securities and structured investment vehicles. The new ones are credit default swaps and collateralized loan obligations — a special kind of C.D.O. backed by corporate loans.)

We have learned in the last month that credit insurers took big risks in backing C.D.O.’s and other exotic things. Some are scrambling to raise more capital to stay in business. One, ACA, may well go out of business.

But if the credit insurers turn out to have had inadequate reserves, what are we to make of the credit default swap market? Mr. Seides calls it “an insurance market with no loss reserves,” and points out that $45 trillion in such swaps are now outstanding. That is, he notes, almost five times the United States national debt.

Many of those swaps cancel each other out — or will if everyone meets their obligations. The big banks say they run balanced books, in which they sell insurance to one customer and buy insurance on the same borrower from another customer. But if some customers cannot pay what they owe, this could be another shock for bank investors. As it is, financial stocks have underperformed other stocks by record amounts this year.

One of the more remarkable facts about the subprime crisis is that total losses to the financial system may be about equal to the amount of subprime loans that were issued. On the face of it, that appears absurd, since many such loans will be paid off, and those that default will not be total losses. But, Mr. Seides said in an interview, “the financial leverage placed on the underlying assets was so high” that the losses multiplied, as the profits did when times were good.

“When there is more leverage” and things go wrong, he said, “there are more losses.”

The corporate credit market is vastly larger than the subprime market, and there are plenty of dubious loans outstanding that probably could not be refinanced in the current market. If some of those companies run into problems, defaults could soar and fears about C.L.O. valuations and C.D.S. defaults could spread long before there are large actual losses on loans.

There are other areas of potential weakness in 2008. Commercial real estate is one area where some see disaster looming. Others worry that some emerging markets could run into big problems because many borrowers there have taken out loans denominated in foreign currency and could be devastated if local currencies lose value.

It was the greatest credit party in history, made possible by a new financial architecture that moved much of the activities out of regulated institutions and into financial instruments that emphasized leverage over safety. The next year may be the one when we learn whether the subprime crisis was a relatively isolated problem in that system, or just the first indication of a systemic crisis.

Meet Floyd Norris at nytimes.com/norris.

Goldman Closes Sale of $1 Billion Manhattan Building (Update6)

Thursday, December 27th, 2007
                     705,000,000  
UST 2-Year 12/26/2007
3.250 12/31/2009

 http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/rates/index.html

Goldman Closes Sale of $1 Billion Manhattan Building (Update6)
By Sharon L. Lynch and Arif Sharif

Dec. 26 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Whitehall Fund and a partner completed the $1.15 billion acquisition of 230 Park Ave. in Manhattan, nine months after agreeing to the sale.

Goldman and Manhattan-based Monday Properties announced on March 28 that they had reached a deal to buy the Helmsley Building, adjacent to New York’s Grand Central Station, from Istithmar World Real Estate, a property fund owned by Dubai’s government. Istithmar said in an e-mail today that the deal had closed.

The purchase was the latest in a series of $1 billion-plus sales of New York office buildings, with the best space now selling for more than $1,000 a square foot. Investors paid record high prices for Manhattan offices this year and the volume of transactions reached a record $42.5 billion through the end of September, broker Cushman & Wakefield Inc. reported.

“Whitehall, in my mind, is one of the smarter private equity funds in the real estate market,” said Phil Rosen, a real estate attorney with Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP in New York. “They will make a New York acquisition only if it is strategically a good buy.”

Most investment property sales of $1 billion or more have historically closed within 30 to 60 days of the deal being struck, and sometimes faster in 2006 and early 2007, said Rosen.

Credit Standards

“The private equity players have slowed down their acquisition pace,” as investors have lost their appetite for bonds based on commercial mortgages, limiting financing options, he said.

Goldman Sachs spokeswoman Gia Morón said the company declined to comment on the deal.

Private equity buyers accounted for 64 percent of New York City’s office building transactions in the year through November 30, according to Cushman. Real estate fund managers raised $59 billion through the beginning of October, putting them on track to beat last year’s record of $72 billion, according to Private Equity Intelligence Ltd., a U.K.-based research firm.

While Istithmar intended to hold the building for longer, “market conditions created an unusual opportunity” for the sale, Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, chairman of Dubai World, Istithmar’s parent, said in the statement announcing the transaction. Istithmar bought the Helmsley tower in November 2005 for $705 million.

Alan Rogers, chief executive officer of Istithmar World Real Estate, told CNBC in an interview that he expects to make more U.S. acquisitions in 2008.

“By the end of the second quarter next year we will have an idea where this market is going,” Rogers said. “I actually think there will be some interesting buying opportunities.”

Helmsley

The 1929 Helmsley tower, a gilded brick and limestone structure that straddles Park Avenue, was built as the headquarters for the New York Central Railroad and named the Helmsley Building by former owners Harry and Leona Helmsley. Leona Helmsley, dubbed “the Queen of Mean” by New York’s tabloid press for her treatment of staff, sold the building in 1998 for $250 million. She died four months ago leaving a $4 billion estate, including $12 million willed to her Maltese dog, Trouble.

Dubai is attempting to reduce reliance on the Gulf region’s oil wealth and diversify its economy by investing in businesses from clothing retailer Barneys New York to the Port of Dakar in Senegal. Last month, Istithmar sold 280 Park Avenue for $1.35 billion.

Istithmar

Since its founding in 2003, Istithmar has bought New York properties including 450 Lexington Ave. and the Knickerbocker Hotel at 6 Times Square. In November 2007, it bought London’s Adelphi building for $567 million as part of a plan to capitalize on surging demand for hotel rooms and office space in major Western cities.

Dubai World’s businesses include port operator DP World Ltd. In August, it agreed to pay $5 billion for a 9.5 percent stake in MGM Mirage and half of the casino company’s CityCentre project.

Istithmar World Real Estate, a unit of Dubai World-owned Istithmar PJSC, plans to merge with Nakheel PJSC, another property company owned by its parent that is developing three palm tree- shaped islands and an island cluster in the shape of a world map off Dubai’s coast.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sharon L. Lynch in New York at sllynch@bloomberg.net ; Arif Sharif in Dubai at asharif2@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: December 26, 2007 17:06 EST

One-Size-Fits-All Solution

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Op-Ed Contributors

A One-Size-Fits-All Solution

Published: December 26, 2007

WHILE the causes of the mortgage crisis are myriad, a central problem was that many borrowers took out loans that they did not understand and could not afford. Brokers and lenders offered loans that looked much less expensive than they really were, because of low initial monthly payments and hidden, costly features.

Skip to next paragraph

Related

Op-Ed Contributors: Mortgage Meltdown (December 26, 2007)

Families commonly make mistakes in taking out home mortgages because they are misled by broker sales tactics, misunderstand the complicated terms and financial tradeoffs in mortgages, wrongly forecast their own behavior and misperceive their risks of borrowing. How many homeowners really understand how the teaser rate, introductory rate and reset rate relate to the London interbank offered rate plus some specified margin, or can judge whether the prepayment penalty will offset the gains from the teaser rate?

While disclosure alone is unlikely to help, there’s another option.

In retirement policy, behavioral research has led Congress to promote “opt out” plans under which employers sign workers up for retirement benefits unless the worker chooses not to participate. This policy has significantly improved people’s retirement savings.

Why not have an opt-out home mortgage plan, based, for example, on a 30-year, fixed-rate loan, with sound underwriting and straightforward terms?

Eligible borrowers would be offered a standard mortgage (or set of mortgages) and that’s the mortgage they would get — unless they choose to opt out in favor of another option, after honest and comprehensible disclosures from brokers or lenders about the risks of the alternative mortgages. An opt-out mortgage system would mean borrowers would be more likely to get straightforward loans they could understand.

But given lender incentives to hide true costs from borrowers, we need to give the opt-out plan some bite. Under our plan, lenders would have stronger incentives to provide meaningful disclosures to those whom they convince to opt out, because if default occurs when a borrower opts out, the borrower could raise the lack of reasonable disclosure as a defense to bankruptcy or foreclosure. If the court determined that the disclosure would not effectively communicate the key terms and risks of the mortgage to the typical borrower, the court could modify or rescind the loan contract.

This approach would allow lenders to continue to develop new kinds of mortgages, but only when they can explain them clearly to borrowers. To avoid the next mortgage crisis, we should use behavioral insights to make it harder for lenders to put borrowers where they will make predictable and consequential mistakes.

Michael S. Barr is a professor of law at the University of Michigan. Sendhil Mullainathan is a professor of economics at Harvard. Eldar Shafir is a professor of psychology at Princeton.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/26/opinion/26barr.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

“A whole generation of financial technology set to be consigned to the scrap heap”

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Letter from the Editor

Staggering to the finish line

Financial markets have staggered towards the year end. The big banks continue to clean up their balance sheets by writing down subprime related exposure - Morgan Stanley took an eye watering $9bn hit, although chief executive John Mack managed to cling on to his job. Central banks have also done their bit to reduce tensions in the interbank market, with very large interventions designed to ensure there are no accidents between now and January.

Their generosity is likely to come under more scrutiny in 2008, particularly since there is some evidence that public inflation expectations are rising. Next year also seems likely to bring more signs that cyclical phenomena, from aerospace orders to corporate defaults, will deteriorate. How severe this process is remains much debated - the ever helpful Alan Greenspan puts the odds of recession at 50:50. But one thing seems clear. Even if the slowdown is shallow, a whole generation of financial technology, including complex securitisation techniques, looks set to be consigned to the scrap heap.

Patrick Foulis, Deputy Editor of Lex

http://www.ft.com/lex/best 

A Bull in China

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

A Bull in China: Investing Profitably in the World’s Greatest Market (Hardcover)
by Jim Rogers (Author)

     
 

 

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