The Price of Gold and CDO
Structured Products
Greg Silberman CFA, CA(SA)
Profession: Portfolio Manager and Research Analyst
Company: Ritterband Investment Management LLC
e-Mail: greg@goldandoilstocks.com
Website: blog.goldandoilstocks.com
A repricing of the risk inherent
in Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO) is underway
with significant implications for the price of Gold.
Here’s the
Problem!
Years and years of monetary inflation have completely
desensitized us to risk. From a national, corporate
or even individual level, the availability of cheap
debt has conditioned us to borrow without abandon.
And nowhere has the debt binge been more apparent
than in the housing market. Low mortgage rates
have been a boon for homebuyers and created an
insatiable demand for structured products from
yield hungry investors. Eager to oblige, Wall Street
has been having a feast making loans to homebuyers
then packaging them up and selling them to pension
funds, hedge funds and large insurers. The fees
have been MASSIVE.
When you package
up individual loans into a product (called a
CDO but with many name variations) you are able
to pick and choose the exact payout you want
to achieve. Add in some AAA rated mortgages,
mix in BBB+ paper and stir in Toxic Junk bonds
(bound to default) and voilà you have an
instrument with very specific yields and cash flows.
Ofcourse there
are bands as to what constitutes for example
a BBB- Investment Grade Bond. And all the structurer
has to do is use the loosest defined Bond to
comply. Compliance is overseen by ratings agencies
that help banks put the products together. It’s
a cozy lucrative arrangement and its complicated
stuff. One of the highest paying jobs on Wall
Street is for Correlation Traders. Quants who
make sure the underlying paper behaves according
to their promise.
And then there’s
the leverage. And boy is there leverage! Payouts
can be magnified by up to 10x using synthetics
or derivatives that link to even more mortgage
pools.
The party was going great until interest rates
started to rise and housing began to fall.

Chart 1 - Centex homebuilder and 10 year Bonds
(bottom) breaking support - CDO reaction 1 week
later
Last week the
financial world was awoken by the harsh reality
that hey, maybe these mortgages are not going
to perform as originally planned. Maybe the risk
of default is a lot higher than originally thought
GULP! Bear Sterns announced a $3.2Bn ‘loan’ to
bail out two of its troubled hedge funds doing
exactly what I detailed above.
Based on the banking indexes sharp fall on Friday,
this problem may be a little more widespread than
that.
Chart
2 - Banking index (top) reacting to CDO news; price
of gold trending lower (bottom)
Earlier this month we detailed how higher
interest rates would benefit the price of gold.
That is, in the long-term the fundamentals for
Gold are incredibly bright, but there will be
short term pain. The reason is that Gold has
been bid up along with all other assets under
the current wave of liquidity. A repricing of
CDO risk would likely curtail the issuance of
these instruments and cause a sharp contraction
in liquidity with a commensurate drop in ALL
asset classes – if last week is an indication,
the speed of this deflation would be mind blowing
and completely overwhelming. However, Gold’s
Credit rating has been and always will remain
sterling. When investors realize the
incredible DANGER in front of us, they will return
to Gold in droves!
More commentary and stock
picks follow for subscribers…
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Greg Silberman CA(SA), CFA
greg@goldandoilstocks.com
I am an investor and newsletter writer specializing
in Junior Mining and Energy Stocks.
Please visit my website for a free trial to my newsletter.
Click here: http://blog.goldandoilstocks.com
This article is intended solely for information
purposes. The opinions are those of the author
only. Please conduct further research and consult
your financial advisor before making any investment/trading
decision. No responsibility can be accepted for
losses that may result as a consequence of trading
on the basis of this analysis. |