Tuesday, July 10, 2007

S&P, Moody's to Downgrade Subprime Securities - World Stocks Falter

Well, it's about time. How long has it been since we've known about the risks? Months and months. Finally, the two credit ratings organizations are coming around:

"Credit ratings on 612 classes of residential mortgage-backed securities backed by U.S. subprime collateral have been put on CreditWatch with negative implications, S&P said. Beginning in the next few days, the agency said most of these classes will be downgraded."

"That covers about $12.078 billion in rated securities, or 2.13% of the $565.3 billion in U.S. RMBS rated by S&P between the fourth quarter of 2005 and the fourth quarter of 2006, the agency noted."

Meanwhile, in a related story:

"Moody's cut ratings on 399 subprime residential mortgage-backed securities, or RMBS, and said that it may downgrade another 32 because of higher than expected delinquencies on the underlying home loans."

I don't know how many more securities there are that are at risk, but I would bet there are more. Any literate investor should have known for weeks of the great risk associated with subprime mortgage securities; the looming interest rate reset will be devastating. Here's the simple picture:

"A lot of debt will be downgraded to junk status. A lot of that debt will have to be sold at fire-sale prices. A lot of pension funds and hedge funds that once thrived on the high returns they could get from investing in subprime junk will now lose a lot of money."

"S&P's announcement is a death warrant for the subprime industry. No longer will mortgage brokers be able to help buyers lie their way into a home. Fewer stressed homeowners will be able to refinance their mortgage, thus extending and exacerbating the housing bust."

Unwinding this tangled mess is taking time; along the way, it will affect more than just the mortgage industry. Of course it has already hurt the homebuild sector. Higher foreclosure rates have contributed to a rising supply of homes; also, looser loans standards helped fuel a housing boom which assisted in creating future projections that were grossly inflated.
And the subprime mortgage fiasco has not and will not be kind to the banking industry. Depending on who's holding what, investors could be rewarded greatly for making the right bets.

Another sector that could feel the hurt is retail. Fewer homeowners refinancing mean less being spent at home depot or at the mall. We've already seen home depot's hurt. Bed Bath and Beyond has also lowered it's expectations in the last few weeks. The housing downturn might be blamed as the number one reason, but subprime is not far behind. And as the noose tightens around lending standards, the infusion of cash that has helped fuel earnings in retail will evaporate.

Today, just one day after flirting with a record close, the Dow faltered by more nearly 150 points. Following the Dow decline, Asian markets
followed suit. Something will act as the catalyst initiating a world-wide economic slowdown. It could be subprime, it could be something else. All that needs to happen is for a spark to start the wheel spinning. The next couple weeks should give us a decisive answer.

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