Posts tagged ambac

Columbus Day 2008: Paulson’s $700 billion plan has changed- Drastically. Best day in stock History

Forget Prozac, the market needs lithium.  After last week’s worst week, today marked the best day in Wall Street’s history and the biggest one-day percentage gain since 1933.  Stocks rallied all across the board.  The Dow closed up 936 points, or over 11%, to $9,387, and the Nasdaq and S&P also gained over 11% each.  Morgan Stanley (MS) traded like an OTC today, gaining 86% from its close of $9.68 on Friday after Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group invested in it $9 billion.  Will it stick?  Maybe.  Countries all across the globe are now jointly focused on fixing their banks to stave off a worldwide recession, so if this doesn’t work, what will?

 

By the way, sometime over the weekend the plan changed from “buying toxic mortgage-backed assets” to “let’s follow Great Brittan because they seem to know how to deal with this crisis, so let’s pump money into a few good banks like they’re doing over there across the pond”.  So that’s what we’re doing.  And the figure is now $250 billion instead of $700 or $850 or whatever it ended up being once al the rum and wooden arrow makers across the nation were settled up.  

 

The credit markets were closed today because of the holiday, but they open back up tomorrow.  Analysts are now looking to see if the interbank lending rates, or the rates banks charge each other to borrow each other’s money (think what needed to happen but didn’t when people ran IndyMac) will come down so that banks will again lend to each other.  Until banks again start covering each other, no one who missed one electric bill will be able to get a loan.     

 

The only stocks I’m ahead in right now are Radian Group (RDN), MBIA (MBI), and Syncora (SCA); the rest are one big hemorrhage.  Moody’s still hasn’t lifted their threat of downgrade of Ambac (ABK).  But to stay positive after such a positive day, at least I’ll be able to average down.  And average down I definitely will!    

 

Word that a second stimulus package may be on its way may have also helped boost the markets today.  Crude oil followed the rest of the market today, closing up $4.14 to $81.84. 

 

The #1 movie in America is Beverly Hills Chihuahua.  

 

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Monday September 29, 2008: BAILOUT REJECTED! TMA reverse-splits. Citibank (C) buys Wachovia (WB).

Holy Moly, who saw that one coming?!  The House of Representatives voted down the bailout 228 to 205, and it’s being blamed on a “too-partisan” speech made by the Democratic speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.  Whether her speech was partisan or not, someone’s head had to roll. 

 

Hindsight is 20/20, and looking back to last night, there was a clear signal the bill wasn’t going to pass: after an initial positive response, the Asian markets began to slide into red.  Real money movers always know things ahead of time, and the Asian markets’ slip was a sure signal that our bill was not going to pass. I should have seen it, and maybe subconsciously I did, but it seemed too unbelievable that the bailout would not pass given its enormity and all the long days and weekends Congress had put into it.  But as we’ve seen with IndyMac, Fannie and Freddie, and Washington Mutual, nothing is too big to fail. 

 

Lawmakers are headed back to the drawing board to draft up a new version of the plan, but won’t meet again until Wednesday because tomorrow is Rosh Hashanah.

 

I’m more of an observer now than an active player.  I’m in too deep to do anything except wait, so all I can really focus on is the day to day with the stocks I own and the stocks that those stocks are absorbing.  Citigroup (C) bought Wachovia (WB) today for $2.2 billion, or $1 per share. 

 

Two funny computer errors happened today: Thornburg Mortgage (TMA) put through a 10:1 reverse stock split this morning, but not before they multiplied the share price by 10.  So during today’s premarket, it looked like I had 3K extra in my account!  But the quirk was soon fixed and so was the overinflated share price.  By close, TMA was down to $1.15, which would have been 11.5 cents on Friday before the reverse split.  To buy back the preferred shares, Thornburg needs to raise more capital.  You’re welcome, TMA.   

 

Another blip came to Wachovia’s share price today.  At one point, it listed on Google finance at $500!  Message boarders were going nuts, and that error put the financial sector up 7% and made it look like the only sector in the green.  But that error was also soon fixed, and everyone who owns WB fell back into reality. 

 

One last computer oddity happened at the New York Stock Exchange today: because of a glitch, the morning bell never rang.  Mary Caraccioli said she’s never seen that happen.

 

People are still sweating a Moody’s downgrade to Ambac (ABK).  I really hope not.  Of all problems that could happen, that one tops my concern.  Just about a month ago, I was up over 100% on ABK and now I’m in the red.  If a Moody’s downgrade comes, it’ll destroy Ambac, especially after today.     

 

The Dow, which opened down over 100 points in seeming anticipation, dropped 777 points today- the greatest one-day decline in its history and even greater than the drop after September 11, 2001- to close the say at $10,365.  However to see the glass 1/10 full, this was the 17th worst daily drop percentage-wise, so not quite the worst.  Crude oil fell $10.52 to close at $96.36.   

 

The Sydney Morning Herald reported tonight that “online broking portal Etrade ground to a virtual halt this morning [Tuesday September 30] as it struggled to cope with massive trading volumes.”  Is this a hint of more blood to come?  Damn sure it is!

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Sunday September 28, 2008: Consensus in Congress. Will Moody’s still downgrade Ambac? Will Wachovia beat the “Credit Crunch”?

Early this morning, Congress finally agreed on the wording of the bailout.  CNNMoney.com reported the following provisions attached to the way the money is spent:

 

*The $700 billion would be disbursed in stages, with $250 billion made available immediately for the Treasury’s use.  (After the initial $250 million, an additional $100 million can be released by the President.  If after that more money is needed, Congress can re-vote on release of the remaining $350 million.)

 

*Curbs will be placed on the compensation of executives at companies that sell mortgage assets to Treasury. Among them, companies that participate will not be allowed to offer golden parachutes to executives; they will not be able to deduct the salary they pay to executives above $500,000.

 

*An oversight board will be created. The board will include the Federal Reserve chairman, the Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, the Federal Home Finance Agency director and the Housing and Urban Development secretary.

 

*Allow for the Treasury to receive the option to take ownership stakes in participating companies under certain circumstances.

 

*Treasury may establish an insurance program – with risk-based premiums paid by the industry – to guarantee companies’ troubled assets, including mortgage-backed securities, purchased before March 18, 2008.

 

Congress wanted to get the bill together before the opening of the Asian markets tonight.  The Nikkei 225 opened $10 lower than Friday’s close, but then began a slightly hesitant ascent.  How the bill’s finalization will affect our market’s opening tomorrow, or if anymore bankruptcies or downgrades will occur, is still up in the air.  My guess is that there will be a sigh of relief across all sectors tomorrow but any real change will only happen after the bill is signed, sealed and the money is delivered. 

 

Will Ambac (ABK) avoid a Moody’s downgrade before the relief comes through, and when the relief comes through, will it help ABK?  Message boarders seem to think the price of ABK will skyrocket tomorrow, and the very late-day increase in ABK’s share price on Friday may have hinted belief that a weekend deal would in fact help ABK come Monday.  But the “Moody Monster” is still lurking in the woods.  Analysts are blaming a lot of the financial crisis on these ratings agencies for rating companies way higher than they deserved, therefore needing to make drastic corrective downgrades.  On March 20, 2001, Frank Raiter, Standard & Poor’s former top mortgage official, said he was asked by S&P to rate a real estate investment he had never even reviewed.  He told Bloomberg that he was told to “just guess” because the S&P was in competition with other ratings companies (possibly Moody’s?) for fees on a $484 million deal.  It’s good that ratings are being revealed as little more than smoke and mirrors, but people still take ratings seriously, and a Moody’s downgrade of Ambac would devastate the company and its stock price.     

 

And will the news of consensus on Capitol Hill save Wachovia (WB) from going bust before another bank picks up its fractions?  Or will we remember Wachovia as the last big victim of the “credit crunch”?  We’ll have to wait to see… 

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Sunday September 21, 2008: “Paulson’s Monster” needs $700 trilllion. Moody’s questioned.

“Paulson’s Monster”, as it’s being called, has now proposed the need for $700 billion of taxpayer dollars, raising the US debt limit to $11 trillion, to spin off the bad sectors of the financials into its own entity.  Paulson claims his plan will “minimize” the cost to the taxpayer in the long run, but who can really be sure?  As part of the plan, Paulson said that he was currently in talks with other countries for help.  He wouldn’t disclose which countries.       

 

Back in Ratings land, one ABK message boarder claimed that the Feds raided Moody’s on Friday looking for connections between the ratings company and hedge funds.  No link was provided, and given that any Joe Schmo can go on a Google Finance board and post whatever he or she pleases, it could very well be completely fabricated.  However, a Bloomberg article titled “Berkshire’s Bond Insurer, Moody’s Stake Face Probe”, reports that one such link may in fact come to light:

 

“Billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. faces a probe by Connecticut’s attorney general for possible conflicts created by owning almost 20 percent of credit ratings company Moody’s Corp. while also running a new municipal bond insurer. 

 

Moody’s gave its top rating last week to Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp., created in December as existing bond insurers struggled to maintain their AAA ratings. A favorable rating for Berkshire by New York-based Moody’s, or a lower rating for competitors including MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc., may give Buffett’s company an advantage.”

 

So maybe there is truth in rumor. 

 

In other news, Barclays is the proud new owner of Lehman Brothers’s investment banking and trading businesses.  The $1.75 billion deal approved yesterday is a definite bargain as compared to the one Barclays would have had to strike last week for Lehman’s entire assets before bankruptcy.      

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Friday September 19, 2008: Biggest 2-day rally in 38 years. ALL short selling banned.

Whoa mama.  I was definitely wrong about the profit-taking.  The US market rallied harder in the last two days than it has in 38 years- longer than I’ve been alive!  Lehman Brothers, now on the OTC board as LEHMQ, gained 313% on rumors that it would sell parts of itself to foreign banks.  Barclays is back in the running.  In just the last two days of trading, I made up almost all of what I had lost in the last week and a half. 

 

The SEC banned ALL short selling- regular and naked alike- of 799 financials for the next 10 days.  The United Kingdom temporarily halted short selling yesterday, and the US did the same.  This is a huge step from just banning naked shorting; this is a total ban on betting that stocks will lose value, essentially disqualifying half of the game.  Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer, both New York Senators, proposed the ban.  Critics say this ban will warp the market, making it seem as if the financial stocks are worth more than they are.  But when naked shorting was banned in July, the effect lasted long after the ban was lifted.  In fact, it lasted right up until last week when AIG teetered and fell and dragged the entire sector along with it.  So in a market that is so emotionally driven, a little banning may do the trick to snap the depression (no pun intended).

 

Henry Paulson, our Treasury Secretary, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed the idea to spin all bad parts of financial institutions into its own entity- a black hole of badness.  This idea reminds me of that story I had to read in high school about the utopian society that was only a utopia because of the little girl who lived in a cage in the basement of someone’s house.  Remember that one?  I was never big on reading, so titles slip my mind.  I just remember the girl in the cage and the annual field trip every schoolkid would take to see the girl in the dirty dark cage dungeon as a reminder of why they lived as perfectly as they did.  I wonder if part of the Paulson and Bernanke plan will have the American people visiting the dark entity once a year.  Oh wait, now I get it.  We will be visiting once a year- at tax time.  Seems these two guys kept up on their high school reading. 

 

Meanwhile in Ratings Land, Moody’s threatened to downgrade Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI), which dropped ABK 42% and another 27% in afterhours, and MBI 8% and another 8% in afterhours.  The ABK message boards caught fire, and it seems Moody’s may catch some of it by Monday, if not sooner. 

 

Do you know the name of that book yet?  Maybe it was a short story. 

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Thursday August 28, 2008: MBI and ABK blow up! Revisions to economy’s growth, Oil reserves will be released after Gustav

Yertle, my 7,000 year old turtle, woke me up this morning grinding her shell against my bedroom furniture she’s a little too big to fit under, and because it was already light out, my efforts to fall back asleep failed.  So, I got up and of course got onto Etrade to watch the premarket.  Expecting to see all zeros in the % change column in my watch list, you can imagine my surprise when most were green.  I had never realized that the premarket watch list reflected the closing price from the afterhours the night before, and because good news came out about MBIA (MBI), it blew up over night and took a lot of its fellow bondsmen with it, including ABK, PMI, SCA, TMA, and RDN.   

 

Yertle’s not really 7,000 years old; actually I have no idea how old she is.  She could be 7,000, she could be 70.  All I know is that I’ve had her for 12 years and she’s about the same size as when my friend first handed her down to me, which leads me to believe she’s probably older than anyone would guess and that I’ll have to will her to someone when I die. 

 

Europe and Japan are reportedly headed towards their own recessions, but Bloomberg reported that our economy- possibly fueled by exports to these struggling regions- grew faster in the second quarter than originally calculated.  This boosted today’s market big time.  Trading is thought to have been the biggest contributor to the growth of the economy in the quarter, and a bigger contributor than it has been in 30 years.  Well no kidding!  Everyone knows to get in at the bottom!

 

My car got towed today because I was on the wrong side of the street for street sweeping, and it wasn’t until I got to the tow lot that I realized I had my debit instead of my credit card.  So I got back on my bike, rode back home, got the card, rode back to the tow lot, and paid them $117.47 (on top of the $40 ticket this fair City slid under my wiper) to bail my car out of car prison.  If it wasn’t for MBI and Ambac (ABK), which came out of the cut today with a 41% gain sometime between the tow fiasco and when I finally sat back down to look at everything, I would have been way more pissed.  Street sweeping.  Please!  Five seconds after the zambonie passes, trash is back on the street.  What a joke. 

 

The stars align once in a while in the financials sector, and today was one of those days.  Thursday August 14 was the last time it happened.   Today’s massive gains were a combination of the revised economy numbers, MBIA’s good news, and the Bloomberg report that “Crude oil fell more than $2 a barrel after the International Energy Agency (IEA) said it would tap strategic stockpiles, if needed, because of Tropical Storm Gustav.”  Forecasters are now predicting Gustav will turn Category 3 and is headed straight to Louisiana.  Oil crashed at 11AM because of the IEA’s announcement, then took a bit of a bounce around noon, but the damage was already done.  The Dow gained 212 to end the day at $11,715, oil lost $2.56 to end the day at $115.59, my stocks pulled in $1,700, and so probably ended the week’s rally.  No doubt the profit takers will enter the market tomorrow.   

 

 

 

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Friday August 15, 2008: Bond insurers continue to rally, Ambac (ABK) hits $6

Both MBIA and ABK were upgraded afterhours last night, so their share prices soared in afterhours trading, leaving no possibility of getting more ABK on the cheap!  I put in a limit order to buy 100 more shares, but it didn’t take, so I bumped my order down to 75 shares at a higher price and the order took.  Prices always seem to fall after a hot stock’s early morning surge, but I got punchy and bought in.  Luckily by the end of the day, my buy-in price started looking pretty cheap.  ABK broke the $6 mark, then fell to close the day at $5.63- up 23% on the day. 

 

Shares of Silver State Bancorp (SSBX) fell 25% today on news that their second quarter loss was miscalculated and was actually larger than reported.  Ouch.  Google message boarders think the bank will go bust.  Its 52-week high is $19 and SSBX is currently trading at just 62 cents.  My very scientific calculation of dividing the current share price by the 52-week high yields the tiny fraction 0.0326, which tells me, in a very scientific way, that this thing is at least a decent bet and at most a real money-maker.  I’ll keep my $77 worth of shares until the real bottom is reached, then maybe average down.      

 

When starting this experiment, I set two goals for myself: to have a $1000 day, which happened yesterday, and to hit $10,000 by October.  Today I hit the second goal two months early, thanks mostly to the bond insurers PMI, ABK, MBI, RDN, and SCA.  So what now?  Let it ride!  I honestly wasn’t sure $10,000 would ever happen.  But it did.  So what’s the next goal?  I like base 10. 

 

The Dow moved sideways today to close the day up 44 points to $11,659.   Oil closed down $1.24 today to $113.77 on news that world demand is down.  Wasn’t demand in developing countries reportedly way up a month ago?  Wasn’t that the reason oil was at $140 a barrel?  Gee, things sure can change in a month!  Please, it’s all speculation. 

Whoo hoo, Friday!  I’m headed out of Massachusetts for the first time in a while. 

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Wednesday August 6, 2008: Freddie tanks, Ambac soars, Oil goes Bear!

Freddie Mac reported its fourth straight loss, which is a loss three times as great as analysts predicted, and is planning to cut its shareholder dividend payout by at least 80%.  FRE opened down over 20%, made up some ground throughout the day, then took another nosedive after lunch to end the day down 19%.  On the other hand, Ambac Financial (ABK) reported second quarter net earnings of $823.1 million ($2.80 per share), $650 million more than this time last year.  ABK’s premarket hit a new 3-month high, and it closed the day up 23%. 

 

FRE was no doubt the market mover today, but by 12:30PM the shock on some of the other stocks seemed to have worn off and NCC, RDN, RF, SCA, and WM all joined ABK on team green.  I passed out on the couch for a couple hours and woke up to find the Dow, MBI, MTG, and PMI also on team green but C back in the red.   Trader. 

 

PMI reports earnings tomorrow, and so does Centerline Holding Company (CHC), a stock I have hesitated on getting into because of its low trading volume but nonetheless has been doing well.  It gained nearly 19% today to $1.76 per share with a 52-week high of $16. 

 

The Dow closed up 40 points to end this strange rollercoaster ride of a day at $11,656.  Oil officially slipped into bear country today closing down another 59 cents to $118.58, over 20% off its all-time high just one month ago.  The dollar hit a seven month peak!  I closed up $150.    

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