La patata caliente de las hipotecas "subprime"

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Se acabó el crédito fácil

Ahora toca pagar entrada, aunque sólo sea del 5% del valor de compra. El mayor prestamista privado de hipotecas de EEUU deja de ofrecer hipotecas sin entrada.

Reuters
Countrywide Financial ends no down-payment lending
Friday March 9, 6:36 pm ET


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Countrywide Financial Corp. (NYSE:CFC - News), the largest U.S. mortgage lender, on Friday told its brokers to stop offering borrowers the option of no-money-down home loans, according to a document obtained by Reuters.


Loans financing 100 percent of a home's value are among those that have led to a sharp rise in delinquencies at U.S. mortgage lenders. Such mortgages below "prime" quality have resulted in losses, sales and even closures at more than two dozen mortgage lenders, analysts say.

"Please get in any deals over 95 LTV (loan-to-value) today!" Countrywide said late on Friday in an urgent e-mail to brokers. "Countrywide BC will no longer be offering any 100 LTV products as of Monday, March 12."

Countrywide joins other large lenders that will require homeowners to have at least a 5 percent stake in their homes, including Washington Mutual Inc. (NYSE:WM - News) and General Electric Co.'s WMC Mortgage. Fremont General Corp. (NYSE:FMT - News) last month stopped making "piggyback" loans that are often used to make up 100 percent LTV loans, and last week stopped lending altogether amid pressure from regulators.

The surge in delinquencies, due to loose underwriting standards and a cooling housing market, has alarmed financial markets in part because it has happened so quickly. The bulk of delinquencies is coming from loans made last year that are as little as one month old, making 2006 perhaps the worst ever in terms of mortgage credit quality, according to analysts at UBS Securities.

Countrywide Chief Financial Officer Eric Sieracki this week said the Calabasas, California-based company will survive the downturn in subprime mortgage credit quality since it has not been forced to sell loans into a turbulent market.

Monoline lenders such as Fremont and New Century Financial Corp. (NYSE:NEW - News), which focus on subprime mortgages rather than a broader line of lending, have to sell their loans to maintain cash flows. They are going through "a very dark time," Sieracki said at a Raymond James Financial conference in Orlando, Florida.

Countrywide is the largest subprime lender, with $38.5 billion originated in 2006, according to trade publication Inside B&C Lending. But the volume makes up less than 10 percent of the total $468.2 billion originated by Countrywide last year, Sieracki said.

The general pullback in credit to riskier borrowers will take a toll on the overall economy, economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said in a research note this week.

More cautious lending could cut annual new home purchases by 200,000 units in "a relatively conservative scenario," the economists wrote. Higher defaults and foreclosures of existing loans will dump more supply on the market, they added.
 

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El mini "credit crunch" no va a ser tan mini. Se estima que la adopción de criterios más extrictos eliminará este año más de un millón de préstamos hipotecarios en EEUU:

Stricter lending seen barring 1 mln US home buyers
Fri Mar 9, 2007 6:28pm ET


NEW YORK, March 9 (Reuters) - Tougher lending standards stemming from the shakeout in the beleaguered subprime mortgage industry could prevent up to 1.1 million U.S. homebuyers from getting mortgages this year, a Bear Stearns analyst told investors on Friday.

Banks and mortgage companies would sharply scale back lending to two groups: subprime and "Alt-A" borrowers, said Dale Westhoff, Bear Stearns' head of mortgage-backed research.

Consumers with low income and/or spotty credit histories are considered subprime borrowers, while Alt-A borrowers are typically those who fall short of being prime because they lack adequate income documentation.

Westhoff estimated a 30 percent, or $180 billion, contraction in the subprime sector in 2007 from 2006, and forecast a 25 percent, or $100 billion, decline in Alt-A loan production from last year.

"This implies a purchase contraction of 1.1 million borrowers," said Westhoff who was speaking at Bear Stearns mortgage conference here. "That's a non-trivial number."

In the latest move by a financial institution to tighten lending standards, Countrywide Financial Corp. (CFC.N: Quote, Profile , Research), the largest U.S. mortgage lender, on Friday told its brokers to stop offering borrowers the option of no-money-down home loans, according to a document obtained by Reuters.

There is about $10 trillion in U.S. residential mortgage debt outstanding, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

Banks and lenders had relaxed their mortgage standards to court risky but lucrative borrowers at the tail end of the recent housing boom.
 
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March 11, 2007
News Analysis
Crisis Looms in Mortgages
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
On March 1, a Wall Street analyst at Bear Stearns wrote an upbeat report on a company that specializes in making mortgages to cash-poor homebuyers. The company, New Century Financial, had already disclosed that a growing number of borrowers were defaulting, and its stock, at around $15, had lost half its value in three weeks.

What happened next seems all too familiar to investors who bought technology stocks in 2000 at the breathless urging of Wall Street analysts. Last week, New Century said it would stop making loans and needed emergency financing to survive. The stock collapsed to $3.21.

The analyst’s untimely call, coupled with a failure among other Wall Street institutions to identify problems in the home mortgage market, isn’t the only familiar ring to investors who watched the technology stock bubble burst precisely seven years ago.

Now, as then, Wall Street firms and entrepreneurs made fortunes issuing questionable securities, in this case pools of home loans taken out by risky borrowers. Now, as then, bullish stock and credit analysts for some of those same Wall Street firms, which profited in the underwriting and rating of those investments, lulled investors with upbeat pronouncements even as loan defaults ballooned. Now, as then, regulators stood by as the mania churned, fed by lax standards and anything-goes lending.

Investment manias are nothing new, of course. But the demise of this one has been broadly viewed as troubling, as it involves the nation’s $6.5 trillion mortgage securities market, which is larger even than the United States treasury market.

Hanging in the balance is the nation’s housing market, which has been a big driver of the economy. Fewer lenders means many potential homebuyers will find it more difficult to get credit, while hundreds of thousands of homes will go up for sale as borrowers default, further swamping a stalled market.

“The regulators are trying to figure out how to work around it, but the Hill is going to be in for one big surprise,” said Josh Rosner, a managing director at Graham-Fisher & Company, an independent investment research firm in New York, and an expert on mortgage securities. “This is far more dramatic than what led to Sarbanes-Oxley,” he added, referring to the legislation that amowed the WorldCom and Enron scandals, “both in conflicts and in terms of absolute economic impact.”

While real estate prices were rising, the market for home loans operated like a well-oiled machine, providing ready money to borrowers and high returns to investors like pension funds, insurance companies, hedge funds and other institutions. Now this enormous and important machine is sputtering, and the effects are reverberating throughout Main Street, Wall Street and Washington.

Already, more than two dozen mortgage lenders have failed or closed their doors, and shares of big companies in the mortgage industry have declined significantly. Delinquencies on loans made to less creditworthy borrowers — known as subprime mortgages —recently reached 12.6 percent. Some banks have reported rising problems among borrowers that were deemed more creditworthy as well.

Traders and investors who watch this world say the major participants — Wall Street firms, credit rating agencies, lenders and investors — are holding their collective breath and hoping that the spring season for home sales will reinstate what had been a go-go market for mortgage securities. Many Wall Street firms saw their own stock prices decline over their exposure to the turmoil.

“I guess we are a bit surprised at how fast this has unraveled,” said Tom Zimmerman, head of asset-backed securities research at UBS, in a recent conference call with investors.

Even now the tone accentuates the positive. In a recent presentation to investors, UBS Securities discussed the potential for losses among some mortgage securities in a variety of housing markets. None of the models showed flat or falling home prices, however.

The Bear Stearns analyst who upgraded New Century, Scott R. Coren, wrote in a research note that the company’s stock price reflected the risks in its industry, and that the downside risk was about $10 in a “rescue-sale scenario.” According to New Century, Bear Stearns is among the firms with a “longstanding” relationship financing its mortgage operation. Mr. Coren, through a spokeswoman, declined to comment.

Others who amow the industry have voiced more caution. Thomas A. Lawler, founder of Lawler Economic and Housing Consulting, said: “It’s not that the mortgage industry is collapsing, it’s just that the mortgage industry went wild and there are consequences of going wild.

“I think there is no doubt that home sales are going to be weaker than most anybody who was forecasting the market just two months ago thought. For those areas where the housing market was already not too great, where inventories were at historically high levels and it finally looked like things were stabilizing, this is going to be unpleasant.”

Like worms that surface after a torrential rain, revelations that emerge when an asset bubble bursts are often unattractive, involving dubious industry practices and even fraud. In the coming weeks, some mortgage market participants predict, investors will learn not only how lax real estate lending standards became, but also how hard to value these opaque securities are and how easy their values are to prop up.

Owners of mortgage securities that have been pooled, for example, do not have to reflect the prevailing market prices of those securities each day, as stockholders do. Only when a security is downgraded by a rating agency do investors have to mark their holdings to the market value. As a result, traders say, many investors are reporting the values of their holdings at inflated prices.

“How these things are valued for portfolio purposes is exposed to management judgment, which is potentially arbitrary,” Mr. Rosner said.

At the heart of the turmoil is the subprime mortgage market, which developed to give loans to shaky borrowers or to those with little cash to put down as collateral. Some 35 percent of all mortgage securities issued last year were in that category, up from 13 percent in 2003.

Looking to expand their reach and their profits, lenders were far too willing to lend, as evidenced by the creation of new types of mortgages — known as “affordability products” — that required little or no down payment and little or no documentation of a borrower’s income. Loans with 40-year or even 50-year terms were also popular among cash-strapped borrowers seeking low monthly payments. Exceedingly low “teaser” rates that move up rapidly in later years were another antiestéticature of the new loans.

The rapid rise in the amount borrowed against a property’s value shows how willing lenders were to stretch. In 2000, according to Banc of America Securities, the average loan to a subprime lender was 48 percent of the value of the underlying property. By 2006, that figure reached 82 percent.

Mortgages requiring little or no documentation became known colloquially as “liar loans.” An April 2006 report by the Mortgage Asset Research Institute, a consulting concern in Reston, Va., analyzed 100 loans in which the borrowers merely stated their incomes, and then looked at documents those borrowers had filed with the I.R.S. The resulting differences were significant: in 90 percent of loans, borrowers overstated their incomes 5 percent or more. But in almost 60 percent of cases, borrowers inflated their incomes by more than half.

A Deutsche Bank report said liar loans accounted for 40 percent of the subprime mortgage issuance last year, up from 25 percent in 2001.

Securities backed by home mortgages have been traded since the 1970s, but it has been only since 2002 or so that investors, including pension funds, insurance companies, hedge funds and other institutions, have shown such an appetite for them.

Wall Street, of course, was happy to help refashion mortgages from arcane and illiquid securities into ubiquitous and frequently traded ones. Its reward is that it now dominates the market. While commercial banks and savings banks had long been the biggest lenders to home buyers, by 2006, Wall Street had a commanding share — 60 percent — of the mortgage financing market, Federal Reserve data show.

The big firms in the business are Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank and UBS. They buy mortgages from issuers, put thousands of them into pools to spread out the risks and then divide them into slices, known as tranches, based on quality. Then they sell them.

The profits from packaging these securities and trading them for customers and their own accounts have been phenomenal. At Lehman Brothers, for example, mortgage-related businesses contributed directly to record revenue and income over the last three years.

The issuance of mortgage-related securities, which include those backed by home-equity loans, peaked in 2003 at more than $3 trillion, according to data from the Bond Market Association. Last year’s issuance, reflecting a slowdown in home price appreciation, was $1.93 trillion, a slight decline from 2005.

In addition to enviable growth, the mortgage securities market has undergone other changes in recent years. In the 1990s, buyers of mortgage securities spread out their risk by combining those securities with loans backed by other assets, like credit card receivables and automobile loans. But in 2001, investor preferences changed, focusing on specific types of loans. Mortgages quickly became the favorite.

Another change in the market involves its trading characteristics. Years ago, mortgage-backed securities appealed to a buy-and-hold crowd, who kept the securities on their books until the loans were paid off. “You used to think of mortgages as slow moving,” said Glenn T. Costello, managing director of structured finance residential mortgage at Fitch Ratings. “Now it has become much more of a trading market, with a mark-to-market bent.”

The average daily trading volume of mortgage securities issued by government agencies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, for example, exceeded $250 billion last year. That’s up from about $60 billion in 2000.

Wall Street became so enamored of the profits in mortgages that it began to expand its reach, buying companies that make loans to consumers to supplement its packaging and sales operations. In August 2006, Morgan Stanley bought Saxon, a $6.5 billion subprime mortgage underwriter, for $706 million.

And last September, Merrill Lynch paid $1.3 billion to buy First Franklin Financial, a home lender in San Jose, Calif. At the time, Merrill said it expected First Franklin to add to its earnings in 2007. Now analysts expect Merrill to take a large loss on the purchase.

Indeed, on Feb. 28, as the first fiscal quarter ended for many big investment banks, Wall Street buzzed with speculation that the firms had slashed the value of their numerous mortgage holdings, recording significant losses.

As prevailing interest rates remained low over the last several years, the appetite for these securities only rose. In the ever-present search for high yields, buyers clamored for securities that contained subprime mortgages, which carry interest rates that are typically one to two percentage points higher than traditional loans. Mortgage securities participants say increasingly lax lending standards in these loans became almost an invitation to commit mortgage fraud. It is too early to tell how significant a role mortgage fraud played in the rocketing delinquency rates — 12.6 percent among subprime borrowers. Delinquency rates among all mortgages stood at 4.7 percent in the third quarter of 2006.

For years, investors cared little about risks in mortgage holdings. That is changing.

“I would not be surprised if between now and the end of the year at least 20 percent of BBB and BBB- bonds that are backed by subprime loans originated in 2006 will be downgraded,” Mr. Lawler said.

Still, the rating agencies have yet to downgrade large numbers of mortgage securities to reflect the market turmoil. Standard & Poor’s has put 2 percent of the subprime loans it rates on watch for a downgrade, and Moody’s said it has downgraded 1 percent to 2 percent of such mortgages that were issued in 2005 and 2006.

Fitch appears to be the most proactive, having downgraded 3.7 percent of subprime mortgages in the period.

The agencies say that they are confident that their ratings reflect reality in the mortgages they have analyzed and that they have required managers of mortgage pools with risky loans in them to increase the collateral. A spokesman for S.& P. said the firm made its ratings requirements more stringent for subprime issuers last summer and that they shored up the loans as a result.

Meeting with Wall Street analysts last week, Terry McGraw, chief executive of McGraw-Hill, the parent of S.& P., said the firm does not believe that loans made in 2006 will perform “as badly as some have suggested.”

Nevertheless, some investors wonder whether the rating agencies have the stomach to downgrade these securities because of the selling stampede that would amow. Many mortgage buyers cannot hold securities that are rated below investment grade — insurance companies are an example. So if the securities were downgraded, forced selling would ensue, further pressuring an already beleaguered market.

Another consideration is the profits in mortgage ratings. Some 6.5 percent of Moody’s 2006 revenue was related to the subprime market.

Brian Clarkson, Moody’s co-chief operating officer, denied that the company hesitates to cut ratings. “We made assumptions early on that we were going to have worse performance in subprime mortgages, which is the reason we haven’t seen that many downgrades,” he said. “If we have something that is investment grade that we need to take below investment grade, we will do it.”

Interestingly, accounting conventions in mortgage securities require an investor to mark his holdings to market only when they get downgraded. So investors may be assigning higher values to their positions than they would receive if they had to go into the market and find a buyer. That delays the reckoning, some analysts say.

“There are delayed triggers in many of these investment vehicles and that is delaying the recognition of losses,” Charles Peabody, founder of Portales Partners, an independent research boutique in New York, said. “I do think the unwind is just starting. The moment of truth is not yet here.”

On March 2, reacting to the distress in the mortgage market, a throng of regulators, including the Federal Reserve Board, asked lenders to tighten their policies on lending to those with questionable credit. Late last week, WMC Mortgage, General Electric’s subprime mortgage arm, said it would no longer make loans with no down payments.

Meanwhile, investors wait to see whether the spring home selling season will shore up the mortgage market. If home prices do not appreciate or if they fall, defaults will rise, and pension funds and others that embraced the mortgage securities market will have to record losses. And they will likely retreat from the market, analysts said, affecting consumers and the overall economy.

A paper published last month by Mr. Rosner and Joseph R. Mason, an associate professor of finance at Drexel University’s LeBow College of Business, assessed the potential problems associated with disruptions in the mortgage securities market. They wrote: “Decreased funding for residential mortgage-backed securities could set off a downward spiral in credit availability that can deprive individuals of home ownership and substantially hurt the U.S. economy.”
 

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Buen artículo del NY Times dando una idea general del mercado de cédulas hipotecarias en EEUU y los problemas actuales. Pronto sabremos más del efecto de las subprime ya que en un par de semanas los bancos de Wall Street empiezan a declarar resultados del primer trimestre (con la excepción de Merrill, su año fiscal empieza el 1 de Diciembre). Lehman suele ser el primero, seguido de Bear Sterns, Goldman y MS.

Si la caída de las punto.com resultó en una debacle para los departamentos de análisis de los bancos (cortesía de Mr Spitzer) y enron hundió a los auditores, yo creo que toda esta movida puede hacer daño a las casas de ratings, sobre todo si los problemas se extienden a otros créditos. S&P y Moody's han ganado mucho dinero poniendo ratings a todo tipo de CDOs y securitizaciones.
 

Miss Marple

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Me equivocaba con las fechas de anuncio de resultados en Wall Street. Goldman empieza mañana; Lehman y Bear Sterns miércoles y jueves, y MS la próxima semana.
Los últimos problemas con New Century y demás hipotecas de riesgo probablemente no se vean reflejados este trimestre. Los analistas esperan resultados positivos excepto Goldman (que el año pasado tuvo un subidón espectacular en el primer trismestre), pero hablan de 7%, ya no 30 o 40% como estos últimos años. Al del titular se le ha ido la pinza un poco, este trimestre va a ser aún bueno, pero todos los bancos están preocupados y nadie espera que los resultados a final de año superen 2006.

Surprise! Wall Street Poised for Another Year of Record Profits
 

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Next: The real estate market freeze
As a result of the collapse of the subprime mortgage market, lenders will -- gasp! -- once again require down payments, filling the market with unsold homes and driving down prices.

Latest Market Update
March 12, 2007 -- 15:00 ET

By Bill Fleckenstein

The unraveling of the housing market, the magic bullet that "fixed" our unraveled equity bubble, is the news. Slowly, the popular press is waking up to what I've been discussing for many months now.

Dropping like subprime flies
Essentially, the subprime mortgage industry -- which lends to consumers with credit issues -- is gone. Alt A lenders, those one rung up the ladder creditwise, will be next. Together, they comprise approximately 40% of the market. If you were to go down the list of what were once the top 25 subprime lenders, you'd see that only a handful are still standing at this point. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency recently enacted rules that, in essence, require lenders who provide mortgages using federally guaranteed depositor funds to behave in a somewhat intelligent fashion. Subprime lender Fremont General (FMT, news, msgs), by its own admission, owes its demise in part to that rule change.

What we don't yet know is the degree of credit-related insanity, which we'll only discover when the tide goes out -- the criminal investigation of New Century Financial (NEW, news, msgs) being one example of the rot that has already been revealed. We also don't yet know the ramifications for the dark-matter universe in collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), credit default swaps (CDSs) and other derivatives-related exotica. But I think it's safe to say that the surprises will be negative -- and large.

This credit collapse is an unequivocally important event. Because, as I've been writing, the ability of anybody with a pulse to get a loan for any amount is what drove the real estate market, and the real estate market is what drove the economy. Sometime in the next three to six months, the real-estate market will basically just freeze up. Of course, inventories are going to explode and prices will eventually drop rather dramatically as a vicious cycle feeds on itself.

The down payment makes a comeback
Since the pendulum swung as far as it could in the direction of reckless lending, which the whole bubble was about, it will now swing back toward the quaint notion of folks being lent only the amount of money they can reasonably be expected to pay back. And, the lenders will want their loans to have a margin of safety, in the form of down payments.

Sadly, it doesn't take a large imagination to conjure up how underwater many people will be, and how difficult it will be to sell houses -- or purchase them, for that matter -- as lending standards change. Thus, I believe the ingredients for the "next time down" are now at hand.
 

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UPDATE 5-Countrywide says subprime turmoil may harm results
Mon Mar 12, 2007 3:57 PM ET



(Recasts first three paragraphs, adds details, updates shares)

By Jonathan Stempel and Dan Wilchins

NEW YORK, March 12 (Reuters) - Countrywide Financial Corp. <CFC.N>, the largest U.S. mortgage lender, said on Monday that foreclosures rose to a five-year high and turmoil in the subprime market may hurt earnings, and its shares fell.

The increase in foreclosures is the latest sign of stress in the mortgage lending sector, which is struggling with mounting losses and rising defaults.

Subprime lenders including New Century Financial Corp. <NEW.N>, which make loans to people with poor credit histories, have been particularly hard hit. More than two dozen have quit the industry in the last year.

Countrywide said the foreclosure rate rose to 0.70 percent from January's 0.69 percent and last February's 0.47 percent.

It also said 4.71 percent of loans were at least 30 days past due, the same as in January and up from 4.29 percent last February. The rate matched the second-highest level over the last five years.

Calabasas, California-based Countrywide is the fourth-largest subprime lender. "Nonprime" loans in February fell 10 percent from a year earlier to $2.59 billion. Overall mortgage lending rose 10 percent to $34.57 billion.

"We are more concerned that the weakness has spread to other sectors of the residential mortgage market," wrote Wachovia Capital Markets LLC analyst Jim Shanahan. He lowered Countrywide to "underperform" from "market perform."

Countrywide Chief Operating Officer David Sambol said the company has undertaken a "further tightening of underwriting guidelines."

Sambol said Countrywide should benefit as weaker competitors exit the market, but it "may experience short-term earnings volatility" during the shakeout. The company said it added 326 employees last month, bringing the total to 55,311.

Countrywide sells many of the loans it makes, and said its residual exposure for nonprime loans was $402 million on Dec. 31, or 0.2 percent of assets.

Shares of Countrywide fell 94 cents, or 2.6 percent, to $35.16 in late trading on the New York Stock Exchange. They earlier fell to $34.60, their lowest level since Oct. 19.

EARNINGS IMPACT

Credit Suisse analyst Moshe Orenbuch said first-quarter earnings would fall by 60 cents per share if Countrywide wrote off its subprime residuals and sold no subprime loans in the quarter.

Spokesman Rick Simon did not immediately return a call and e-mail seeking comment. Analysts on average expect quarterly profit of 98 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates. The company services $1.33 trillion of mortgage loans.

Countrywide on Friday told brokers to stop offering no-down-payment mortgages, according to a document obtained by Reuters. Other lenders have made similar changes.

Irvine, California-based New Century, the largest independent subprime lender, last week stopped making new loans. On Monday, it said it doesn't have enough cash to repay its lenders, raising bankruptcy speculation.

According to UBS analysts, lax underwriting standards made 2006 perhaps the worst year ever for mortgage credit quality.

Countrywide shares have fallen by more than one-fifth from their Feb. 2 record high of $45.19.

For more about the subprime mortgage crisis, please see [nN07265694]. (Additional reporting by Sonya Balasubramanyam in Bangalore and Christian Plumb in New York)
 

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Pues Goldman se destapa con un 29% de subida de beneficios en el primer trimestre (los analistos esperaban -4%), después del subidon del año pasado. Wall Street sigue de fiesta, y los problemas derivados de las hipotecas sub-prime no llegan aquí.
Los bancos de inversión estiman que han cubierto sus riesgos al 100% usando derivados. La patata caliente está en algún sitio, pero no está claro aún quien la tiene ahora...

Goldman Profit Rises to Record on Gains From Trading
 

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Las subprimas hipotecarias están de moda, no se habla de otra coa, así que ya es hora que demos un repaso algo más a fondo sobre este tema.

José Luis Escrivá, economista Jefe del grupo BBVA definía en un acertado artículo en el diario económico Expansión en la página 57 de la edición del sábado 19 de marzo de este año de esta forma, esto tan poco conocido hasta hace bien poco de las subprimas.

Los créditos hipotecarios en EEUU se dividen en prime y subprime. En una escala de calificación entre 300 y 850 puntos, los créditos subprime son aquellos con una calificación menor a 620 puntos.(.../...)las hipotecas subprime representan alrededor del 20%s del total de las hipotecas originadas en EEUU.

Como vemos son hipotecas de calidad baja, que mientras todo va bien, se van pagando, pero que evidentemente cuando llegan los problemas son las primeras que caen. Muchas de estas hipotecas se daban al 100%s del valor de la casa y a personas de ingresos mucho más bajos de lo que sería deseable para este tipo de aventuras.

El problema es que la jovenlandesesidad hipotecaria se ha disparado en este segmento y esto ha disparado todas las luces de alarma. La crisis inmobiliaria tenía que empezar a notarse en este tipo de cosas y aquí la tenemos. El primero en reconocerlo fue el banco HSBC hace algunas fechas, diciendo que sus hipotecas en EEUU empezaban a dar algunos problemas de jovenlandesesidad, luego fueron otros bacos y ahí empezó el calvario de las compañías de financiación dedicadas a este segmento.

José Luis Escrivá comenta en su artículo que ya venía esto de largo pues desde 2006, al menos 30 originadoras de subprime habían cerrado. Pero faltaba la más grande, New Century, que a partir de esos comentarios de los bancos empezó a bajar y a bajar, hasta que en pocos días ha llegado a una situación de quiebra tras perder casi todo su valor en bolsa.

Esto comentaba ayer mismo el Wall Street Journal sobre el tema de la jovenlandesesidad, ¿es tan preocupante como dicen?:

Según cifras de la firma de datos First American LoanPerformance, en California, la tasa de préstamos subprime impagos se ha cuadruplicado en el último año, para abarcar a uno de cada ocho créditos. Durante el último mes, asimismo, las firmas que se especializan en créditos subprime se han topado con serios problemas o han tenido que cerrar sus puertas a una tasa de dos por semana.

Caramba, parece que una de cada ocho hipotecas en problemas es una cifra como para preocuparse.

Sigamos con los comentarios del Wall Street Journal:

El escenario que más inquieta a los economistas es que, ante la creciente cesación de pagos, los inversionistas y prestamistas le cierren el grifo a todo tipo de deudores, tanto buenos como malos. Es el tipo de "contracción del crédito" que, en el pasado, ha causado recesiones.(.../...)

Aun así, la menor oferta de crédito para la gente que está en el nicho de las hipotecas subprime podría tener un impacto por sí mismo. A medida que algunos compradores de viviendas tienen más dificultades para conseguir dinero y más créditos entran a ejecuciones hipotecarias, la menor demanda y la mayor oferta podrían deprimir aún más los precios, profundizando la caída del mercado inmobiliario en EE.UU.

En esencia aquí está el quid de la cuestión. Como dice el WALL Street Journal el peligro es que se produzca una contracción del crédito, con razón o sin ella, a veces estas cosas suceden por motivos meramente psicológicos. Llevamos meses diciendo que la gran liquidez que existe en el mercado y que se manifestaba por las recompras de acciones propias y las compras de unas compañías a otras era la clave de todo. Luego quedó claro que el mercado lo tiene muy asumido como demuestra el hecho de lo nervioso que se pone cuando sube el yen porque es signo que se corta el carry trade o endeudamiento en divisas con bajos tipos para invertir en otras con tipos más altos. Pues bien si algo puede cortar el grifo de la liquidez es algo así.

José Luis Escrivá defiende en su artículo y yo creo que con razón que seguramente la bajada de estos días previos haya venido por aquí, yo lo creo también, e igualmente opina que de momento no se ve nada de eso. En cualquier caso creo que esto es el verdadero temor de fondo de las bolsas, y es importante que lo conozcamos porque a fin de cuentas la bolsa es psicología y se mueven con las filias y fobias de los operadores que compran y venden en ella. Si la psicología ha hundido una compañía como New Century en pocos días y ha descapitalizado a Wall Street por un nivel equivalente a todas las recompras de acciones propias del año 2006, en las pocas sesiones de crisis, la psicología es capaz de cualquier cosa. Datos o sucesos económicos que hagan pensar que la jovenlandesesidad de las subprimas se pasa al mercado prime podrían causar fuertes bajadas, y al contrario datos o sucesos económicos que muestren lo contrario, como por ejemplo una recuperación del sector inmobiliario despejarán miedos e incertidumbres.

No viene mal para centrarnos un poco que observemos datos históricos de jovenlandesesidad.

La jovenlandesesidad de las subprimas aunque alta en este momento no está ni de lejos en su máximo histórico, ni siquiera reciente. La jovenlandesesidad de este segmento estuvo mucho más alta a primeros de los 2000. Pero atención a esto, la jovenlandesesidad de las subprimas que andaba tranquila empezó a dispararse al alza a primeros de los 2000 justo antes del pinchazo de la burbuja, y empezó a bajar fuertemente...¿adivinan cuando?...pues efectivamente a primeros del 2003, cuando la bolsa se dio la vuelta. Como vemos un indicado con sospechosas coincidencias con las bolsas. Ahora está en constante ascenso desde el año pasdo sin que las bolsas le hayan seguido hasta ahora, pero no deja de se todo esto realmente inquietante.

En cuanto a la jovenlandesesidad del mercado prime que obviamente es la clave. La jovenlandesesidad está en constante descenso desde los años 90, cuando llegó a casi el 3,5 %s. Registro un modesto ascenso en la época en que se disparó la jovenlandesesidad subprime, pero nada grave en absoluto, aunque desde luego a tener en cuenta.

Actualmente la jovenlandesesidad prime que había llegado a alrededor del 1,5 %s en el 2005, ha subido siguiendo a distancia a la subprime al 2 %s que sigue siendo a pesar de la subida una cifra muy baja y muy poco preocupante. De hecho a pesar de este repunte sigue siendo la jovenlandesesidad más baja desde 1990 que es la base de datos a la que he tenido acceso, por lo que de momento y a pesar de la crisis de las subprimes se está realmente lejos de que el contagio al mercado prime que es el importante sea grave. Desde luego hay subida de la jovenlandesesidad pero se estaba en un nivel tan bajo, que no hace demasiado daño, al menos por el momento.

Con esto lo que quiero decir es que con los datos actuales, que haga daño el mercado de subprimas está claro que lo puede hacer, pero con cifras actuales la posibilidad de una crisis por contracción del crédito parece lejana.

Fuente: Carpatos
 

saquetas de Goldman

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Alt-A loans

Subprime mortgage woes may be spreading
Losses are creeping up on so-called Alt-A home loans


SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Problems in the subprime mortgage business may be spreading to other parts of the home loan market.
Losses are creeping up on so-called Alt-A loans, which are considered less risky than subprime mortgages, but may have lower credit quality than "prime" loans.
That's sparked concern among investors in companies such as IndyMac Bancorp, Impac Mortgage holdings, Countrywide financial and even General Motors.
Subprime mortgages are offered to lower-income borrowers with spotty credit records. The sector has descended into crisis recently as rising interest rates and stagnant home prices have left more borrowers struggling to meet monthly payments.
Alt-A loans were originally designed for borrowers with clean credit records, but with other issues that often meant they provided fewer documents or even no documents showing what they earned. These loans were attractive to mortgage investors because they offered higher yields than traditional "prime" home loans, but were underpinned by the cleaner credit records of the borrowers.
The popularity of Alt-A mortgages exploded in recent years. A record $400 billion of these loans were originated in 2006. They accounted for 13.4% of all mortgages offered last year, up from 2.1% in 2003, according to industry publisher Inside Mortgage Finance.
But as the Alt-A business grew, more of these loans were offered to less creditworthy borrowers, creating what Mark Adelson, head of structured finance research at Nomura Securities International, calls "Alt-B" products.
"The Alt-A market has absorbed and disguised a portion of the subprime space," he said. "You can debate how to define these loans, but many have ended up being an Alt-A product with subprime deficiencies."
Surging house prices earlier this decade are partly to blame, Adelson said.
When buyers realized they couldn't afford the home they wanted, they took out alternative mortgages that helped them pay the higher price. Alt-A mortgages requiring few documents - often called stated-income loans -- allowed buyers to inflate their earnings and get a bigger loan, he explained.
"In the past few years, Alt-A loans were made to weaker and weaker borrowers and the sector expanded downward along credit spectrum," he said. "In doing that, you draw up into the Alt-A space some of the problems that are affecting the subprime space."
Indeed, losses on Alt-A loans were already creeping up at the end of last year: 2.38% of Alt-A loans were at least 60-day delinquent in December, according to First American LoanPerformance, a unit of real estate data specialist First American. That's the highest level since February 2004 and up from 0.93% in August 2005.
Data on Alt-A mortgages that have been packaged up and sold as mortgage-backed securities show the growing popularity of low-documentation and stated-income loans.
More than 80% of Alt-A mortgages that were securitized in 2006 were low-documentation, stated-income loans, according to Inside Mortgage Finance. That's up from 68% in 2005.
Data from LoanPerformance tell a similar story: 58% of all mortgages originated in the fourth quarter of 2006 were low-documentation loans. That was up from 21% at the start of 2000.
In California, which has seen some of the biggest gains in home prices this decade, 86% of all mortgages offered in the fourth quarter were low-documentation loans. That's up from 29% in early 2000, LoanPerformance data show.
Stocks hit
Concerns like these have hit the shares of Alt-A specialists.
IndyMac, the largest Alt-A mortgage lender, has slumped 32% so far this year. Impac, a smaller rival, is down almost 40%.
Michael Perry, chief executive of IndyMac, said earlier this month that the company's stricter underwriting standards have helped it avoid the heavy losses experienced in the subprime sector.
Still, he said he was disappointment with the outlook for 2007 and noted that IndyMac would keep costs under control to compensate.
Countrywide Financial shares have fallen 14% this year. About 15% of the company's mortgage origination in 2006 was Alt-A loans, lower than some rivals, according to Inside Mortgage Finance.
More than three quarters of the loans IndyMac originated last year were Alt-A mortgages. Over 90% of Impac's loans were Alt-A in 2006, Inside Mortgage Finance reported recently.
Even General Motors, the largest carmaker in the world, has been hit by Alt-A concerns. The company's mortgage finance business, Residential Capital Group, was the third-largest Alt-A originator in 2006. Almost half of all the mortgages the business originated last year were Alt-A loans, according to Inside Mortgage Finance.
GM Chief Executive Rick Wagoner admitted at the Geneva auto show on Wednesday that loans to high-risk customers have hurt the automaker's former financing unit, according to the Wall Street Journal.
GM shares are up more than 5% so far this year. However, the stock has dropped more than 15% since the middle of February.
Alistair Barr is a reporter for MarketWatch in San Francisco.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/sto...-33EA-41AB-BAF7-116BBF929245}&ref=patrick.net
 

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Las cifras de jovenlandesesidad y retraso del 4o trimestre en EEUU, calentitas del horno. Dudosos (un mes de retraso) en todas las hipotecas (no sólo subprime): 4,95%
Prime: 2,57%, subprime: 13,33%.
Ejecuciones hipotecarias: prime: 0,5%; subprime: 4,53%.

Subprime va a ser una masacre, yo creo que lo veremos subir hasta el 25%. La cuestión es el efecto que pueda tener en prime.

U.S. Subprime Mortgage Delinquencies at 4-Year High of 13.33%
 

Eddy

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La estrella de ayer fue New Century.

Hoy tenemos otro candidato: Accredited Home Lending (LEND), que cae hoy un 65%:

La Lista de Chindler

Hagan sus apuestas: el que acierte el próximo muerto se puede forrar jugando a la baja (mi candidato: CFC)


Roubini: en realidad, cerca del 50% de las hipotecas que se concedieron el año pasado son "sub-prime" en uno u otro sentido.

Que se tapone esta vía de financiación supondrá una caída adicional en el mercado inmobiliario.

Roubini
 

Crash

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Actualización al post del forero chelimo de Cárpatos. Parece que antes del cierre ha cambiado ligeramente su opinión, ahora un poco más negativa:

17:10 Datos de jovenlandesesidad trimestral.

La jovenlandesesidad sube para todos los tipos de préstamos, al 4,95%s en el cuarto trimestre desde 4,67%s DEL TRIMESTRE anterior, como vemos no es una maravilla pero tampoco una tragedia.

La jovenlandesesidad de las famosas subprimas hipotecarias sube al 14,44%s desde el 13,22 %s anterior, un nivel que empieza a ser respetable.


17:16 jovenlandesesidad de subprimas

He estado revisando la tabla de jovenlandesesidades que les he comentado antes en el artículo de ambiente de mercado, ya con los datos del cuarto trimestre oficiales publicados y la jovenlandesesidad de las subprimas está a solo medio punto porcentual de estar al nivel máximo anterior de 2001 cuando la bolsa se cayó....no es un buen asunto este...está peor de lo que pensaba...


17:34 ¿Qué pasa?

Pues que el dato de jovenlandesesidad que he comentado antes ha preocupado a todo el mundo, empieza a ser demasiada jovenlandesesidad en las subprimas y esto ha acelerado las ventas de bancos en Wall Street ha mandado a los índices abajo y nos ha contagiado a todos. Subprimas, la nueva palabra de moda.
 

Miss Marple

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Un interesante artículo de Bloomberg que explica lo que son las CDO (Collateralised Debt Obligations, el derivado de crédito que más ha crecido en los últimos años y que está detrás de una buena parte de la marea de liquidez) y los altos riesgos que presentan hoy en día.
Este ha sido el principal mecanismo para pasar la patata caliente de las hipotecas sub-prime y su patata gemela, los prestamos sub-investment grade que han financiado el reciente boom de LBO (compras apalancadas) y Private Equity (capital-riesgo).
Habla de KKR, y trae a colación a Drexel y Michael Milken... ¡Los '80 han vuelto! Come back relleniton Gekko, all is forgiven!
Según se desprende del artículo, la patata caliente le va a caer a la Universidad de North Carolina.
CDOs May Bring Subprime-Like Bust for LBOs, Junk Debt