Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Paulson: Current Turmoil Could Last up to 2 Years

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This article is a great summary of the dichotomy in our market. A lot of economic issues that are very unsettling in the background but the market rallies on hopes of 50 basis point rating cut. In fact I am going to cut and paste it verbatim below up to the paragraph about the market reaction. When you read the article it is almost hilarious about how serious all the topics are in the preceding 7 paragraphs and then it ends with "However, equities rallied strongly as investor hopes continued to rise that the Federal Reserve would be forced to make interest rate cuts by as much as 50 basis points next week in a bid to stop the economy sliding into a sharp economic downturn."

Note for those who don't know - Paulson was the heads of very respected Goldman Sachs (GS) before being called to the White House, so if anyone has a clue in Washington it's him. Other interesting points - head of Europe central bank calling for regulation of 'unregulated entities' (read hedge funds) and US credit agencies have been called to a special meeting in Washington... where is this info in the US Financial Press? I know, I know... "not hot", "not interesting"... only Bernanke and his white horse is hot.

No quick end to turmoil, says Paulson

By Eoin Callan and Jeremy Grant in Washington and Tony Barber in Brussels

Published: September 11 2007 22:31 | Last updated: September 11 2007 22:31

The crisis of confidence in credit markets is likely to last longer than previous financial shocks of the past two decades, Hank Paulson, Treasury secretary, warned on Tuesday.

He said the uncertainty in credit markets would last longer than the turmoil that followed the Asian crisis and the Russian default of the 1990s or the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s.

Mr Paulson was speaking in Washington as Jean-Claude Trichet, the European Central Bank president, warned that it was time for global financial authorities to tackle unregulated entities whose activities had contributed to the latest upheavals.

The comments came as it emerged that credit ratings agencies have been called to a special meeting in Washington by the umbrella body for the world’s securities regulators to explain how they rate structured financial products based on mortgage assets.

Like Mr Trichet, Mr Paulson said the complexity and global distribution of the securities at the heart of the credit crisis would prolong it. “We expect this period of turbulence to go on for a while,” he said.

Mr Paulson said he had been an investment banker at Goldman Sachs during the “Russian default, Asian crisis . . . and Latin American credit crisis” and expected this bout of uncertainty in credit markets was “going to take longer” to resolve.

US authorities expect that the uncertainty over valuing subprime mortgages could last for up to two years as many such loans reset to higher rates.

However, equities rallied strongly as investor hopes continued to rise that the Federal Reserve would be forced to make interest rate cuts by as much as 50 basis points next week in a bid to stop the economy sliding into a sharp economic downturn.

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The article continues from there....

Mr Paulson said the likely duration of the turmoil reflected the difficulties of financial services companies in valuing complex assets tainted by mortgage-backed securities.

“The reason it is going to take longer today [than in previous crises] is that we are more globalised,” he said. US mortgages had been “sliced and diced” and were turning up at Landesbanken – state-run regional banks in Germany.

“Secondly, it is the level of complexity,” he said, adding that he had met daily with bankers trying to value asset-backed commercial paper and other products.

“When they are confident they understand the products, confidence will return,” he said.

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Anyhow, back to rallying on the rainbows and unicorn scenario....

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