On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 5:22 PM, John Gulick <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I still don't get exactly how the hedge funds got tied up with credit
> derivatives and made mega-profits from the credit derivatives.
>


Considering the number and diversity of the hedge fund universe, I don't
think we can identify one simple mechanism common to all (apart from the
general truism that each and every single one of them existed so they can
make money by gaming the system in one way or another, which makes them
fraudulent enterprises by design).

We can however identify some patterns (or MOs).
(1) some hedge funds sold insurance in the form of CDSes they never intended
to (and didn't have the ability to) pay out. This was a pure swindle of
their own investors: the managers simply collect the premiums in the good
times, and shut the fund down when things turn bad.
http://www.econbrowser.com/archives/2005/11/hedge_fund_risk.html
----------------------------------------------snip

CDP stands for "Capital Decimation Partners", a hypothetical fund created by
Professor Lo in order to illustrate the potential difficulty in evaluating a
fund's risk if all you had to go on was a decade of stellar returns. The
strategy whereby CDP would have amassed a hypothetical fortune was amazingly
simple-- it simply sold put options on the S&P 500 stock index (SPX). [...]
But what about the person who sold you that put? They have now assumed all
of your downside risk. Lo's Capital Decimation Partners would use its
capital to meet the margin requirements (which guarantee to the exchange
that CDP could in fact make the payments to the buyer of the put), and roll
over the proceeds to make even bigger bets. Essentially it was thus using
leverage to turn the relatively small proceeds from selling these puts into
a huge return on the capital invested.
Of course, if you play that game long enough, eventually the market will
make a big enough move against you that your capital used to meet margin
requirements gets completely wiped out, giving you a long-run guaranteed
return on your investment of -100%. But over the 1992-99 period, Lo's
hypothetical fund dodged that bullet and ended up turning in a whopping
performance.




(2) Some hedge funds sold fake insurance products basically intended to help
companies cook their books. See for e.g.:
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/06/ubs-cds-lawsuit-harbinger-of-things-to.html
----------------------------------------------snip

The short form of this sorry tale is that as losses mounted on this dodgy
CDO, Paramax stopped putting up collateral as required in the contract and
UBS sued. Where this gets interesting is that Paramax countersued, arguing
that they had been reluctant to go into the deal and UBS had given them
assurances that they would be lenient in marking losses to market.

What surprises me is that Morgenson doesn't make more hay about what seem to
be an obvious fraud perpetrated upon the investors. UBS used a hedge fund
group with only $200 million in equity to insure a $1.3 billion deal, and
the hedge fund did do via a special purpose entity with only $4.6 million in
equity.




(3) some funds used derivatives to help banks circumvent regulatory
constraints. AIG in particular did this on a massive scale:
http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/2008/09/30/how_the_us_save.html
----------------------------------------------snip

The K-10 annex of AIG's last annual report reveals that AIG had written
coverage for over US$ 300 billion of credit insurance for European banks.
The comment by AIG itself on these positions is: "…. for the purpose of
providing them with regulatory capital relief rather than risk mitigation in
exchange for a minimum guaranteed fee". AIG thus helped to organise
regulatory arbitrage on a gigantic scale.




(4) at the moment of course the big game for financiers is to steal some
government bailout money for themselves. Some of their tactics are repugnant
even by the low ethical standards of the financial world, see for e.g. where
a fund manager is arguing that his losses amount to a human rights
violation:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/4365547/Hedge-funds-use-human-rights-laws-to-make-money.html
----------------------------------------------snip

Earlier this month, hedge funds RAB Special Situations and SRM Global Master
Fund, were part of an action in the High Court arguing that the
nationalisation of Northern Rock had deprived them of their property (the
value of Northern Rock shares they owned) and was therefore in breach of the
Human Rights Act.





-raghu.

--
Did you hear about the dyslexic Satanist? He sold his soul to Santa.
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