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Sunday, December 20, 2009

Snowstorm Forces Store Closures

by Calculated Risk on 12/20/2009 09:05:00 AM

From the WaPo: Storm forces many stores to close, shoppers to stay home

Across the region, shopping centers began closing at midmorning and, by late afternoon, almost every major mall in the region had closed.
...
Retailers say they hope to make up for the lost day of sales Sunday. But the record-setting storm and its timing were a depressing blow for businesses struggling to survive a tough economy.

A snowstorm on the Saturday before Christmas is one of the worst things that can happen in a recession, said Marshal Cohen, senior analyst for NPD Group, a consumer research firm. "It is the busiest day of the year now gone awry."
And more on the storm from the NY Times: Winter Arrives Early, Blanketing Washington and East Coast
With winter officially starting on Monday, one to two feet of snow were expected to fall by Sunday morning from Virginia to New England, where blizzard warnings were posted for coastal areas.

“This is one of the bigger ones,” said Kevin Witt, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in the Baltimore-Washington forecast office in Sterling, Va.

Mr. Witt said that when the gusty snow ended late Saturday night into Sunday morning it could rank among the top 10 winter snowstorms.
Best to all!

Saturday, December 19, 2009

OpEd on AIG: Show Us the E-Mail

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 09:06:00 PM

Eliot Spitzer, Frank Partnoy and William Black write in the NY Times: Show Us the E-Mail

A.I.G. was at the center of the web of bad business judgments, opaque financial derivatives, failed economics and questionable political relationships that set off the economic cataclysm of the past two years. When A.I.G.’s financial products division collapsed — ultimately requiring a federal bailout of $180 billion — those who had been prospering from A.I.G.’s schemes scurried for taxpayer cover. Yet, more than a year after the rescue began, crucial questions remain unanswered. Who knew what, and when? Who benefited, and by exactly how much? Would A.I.G.’s counterparties have failed without taxpayer support?

The three of us, as experienced investigators and prosecutors of financial fraud, cannot answer these questions now. But we know where the answers are. They are in the trove of e-mail messages still backed up on A.I.G. servers, as well as in the key internal accounting documents and financial models generated by A.I.G. during the past decade. Before releasing its regulatory clutches, the government should insist that the company immediately make these materials public. By putting the evidence online, the government could establish a new form of “open source” investigation.
...
We would like to understand whether the leaders of A.I.G. understood that they were approaching a financial Armageddon ... We would like to see how A.I.G. was able to pay huge bonuses to its officers based on the short-term income ... We would also like to know what regulators knew, and what they did with the information they had obtained.
It is amazing that we still don't have these answers - especially about the regulators, with an explanation of how the new process would have caught the AIG problems.
Cartoon Eric G. LewisBut this does give me an excuse to repeat Eric's great AIG cartoon!

Click on cartoon for larger image in new window.

Cartoon from Eric G. Lewis

FDIC Bank Failure Update

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 06:22:00 PM

A few graphs and some predictions ... the first graph shows bank failures by week in 2009:

FDIC Bank Failures Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Note: Week 1 on graph ended Jan 2nd.

There have been 140 bank failures this year, and there are only a few days left to close banks in 2009.

Based on history, I think the FDIC is done for the year.

This sets the over-under line for 2010 at 140 (assuming no more failures). Will there be more bank failures in 2010 than in 2009? I'll definitely take the over (more failures in 2010 than in 2009).

FDIC Bank Failures The second graph shows bank failures by year since the FDIC was started.

The 140 bank failures this year was the highest total since 1992 (181 bank failures). Next year will probably be much higher ... although I doubt we will see as many failures as in 1988 or 1989 (470 and 534 failures respectively).

The third graph is of bank failures by number of institutions and assets, from the December Congressional Oversight Panel’s Troubled Asset Relief Program report. (ht Catherine Rampell):

FDIC Bank Failures Note: This is through Nov 30th for 2009.

From the report (page 45):

Figure 11 shows numbers of failed banks, and total assets of failed banks since 1970. It shows that, although the number of failed banks was significantly higher in the late 1980s than it is now, the aggregate assets of failed banks during the current crisis far outweighs those from the 1980s. At the high point in 1988 and 1989, 763 banks failed, with total assets of $309 billion.167 Compare this to 149 banks failing in 2008 and 2009, with total assets of $473 billion.168
Note: This is in 2005 dollars and this includes the failure of WaMu in 2008 with $307 billion in assets that didn't impact the DIF.

So my (easy) predictions: 1) The FDIC is done for 2009 (140 bank failures is the final count), 2) There will be more bank failures in 2010, and 3) there will be less failure in 2010 than the peak of the S&L crisis.

Bernanke ARM OK, Head "Explodes"?

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 12:49:00 PM

Bernanke misspoke in the recent TIME magazine interview:

TIME: Do you have a mortgage?

Bernanke: Oh, yes, we refinanced.

TIME: Oh, perfect. When?

Bernanke: About 5%. A couple of months ago.

TIME: Good time.

Bernanke: Yes. We had to do it because we had an adjustable rate mortgage and it exploded, so we had to.

TIME: So, did you get a fixed rate at 5%? I think this might be the most valuable piece of information. (Laughter.)

Bernanke: Thirty years fixed rate at a little over 5%.
Bernanke did have an adjustable rate mortgage, but it did not "explode".

First, Dr. Bernanke is the Fed Chairman and "exploding" ARMs are a very important mortgage issue. So I think this topic is relevant and newsworthy (and Bernanke mentioned it).

Second, "explode" has a very clear meaning when discussing mortgages; it means that the borrower's mortgage payment has increased sharply. An ARM can "explode" for two reasons:

1) The interest rate can reset to a much higher level. This isn't much of a concern right now because the most common indexes like LIBOR are at very low levels and most loans are resetting lower.

2) The loan can recast. From Tanta on resets and recasts:
"Reset" refers to a rate change. "Recast" refers to a payment change. ... "Recast" is really just a shorter word for "reamortize": you take the new interest rate, the current balance, and the remaining term of the loan, and recalculate a new payment that will fully amortize the loan over the remaining term.
Neither applied to Bernanke. From the WSJ: Looking a Little Deeper at Bernanke’s Floating Rate Mortgage
The Fed chairman was in an adjustable rate mortgage with a rate that started at 4.125% in 2004 and adjusted after five years to a rate that would be 2.25 percentage points above one-year Libor, which as of the first reset date in June was a little more than one and a half percent. That suggest his costs wouldn’t be exploding now, as the interview suggested. In fact, they’d be going down.
So Bernanke refinanced into a loan with a higher interest rate and with a larger mortgage payment for the security of a fixed rate. This suggests he thinks fixed mortgage rates have bottomed (otherwise he could have paid less on his mortgage, at a 3.75% interest rate, and then refinanced next year). He did not "have to do it".

"Snowmaggedon" for Northeast Retailers

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 10:01:00 AM

From the WaPo: For retailers, snow would pile on

Retailers can stop accusing the economy of holding back holiday sales. Now they can blame it on the weather.

The mighty blizzard expected to descend on the Northeast today comes on the last Saturday before Christmas, typically the busiest day of the year for retailers. But with as much as a foot of snow forecast from North Carolina to New Jersey, retailers are worried that their customers will spend the Super Saturday shoveling rather than shopping. One meteorologist predicts that could result in a retail snowmaggedon.
Blame it on the weather!

Senate Passes Unemployment Extension

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 08:40:00 AM

The Senate passed another extension of unemployment benefits and Cobra insurance premiums this morning as part of the Defense spending bill. This bill had already passed the House.

In addition to the defense spending, the bill contained an extension of the date for qualification for existing tiers of unemployment benefits to Feb. 28th 2010 (previously only those losing benefits by Dec 31, 2009 qualified). Also the Cobra insurance premium subsidy was extended for two months.

This issue will be revisited early next year for those losing benefits after February.

From the WSJ: Senate Sends Defense Bill to Obama

Mortgage Insurers Loosen Standards Slightly

by Calculated Risk on 12/19/2009 12:11:00 AM

From the WSJ: Down-Payment Standards Eased

Earlier this month, MGIC removed New Orleans, Dover, Del., Akron, Ohio, and four other areas in Ohio from its list of restricted markets. ...

Under the looser requirements, a borrower with a credit score of 680 or higher in New Orleans, for instance, can finance up to 95% of a home's value. Before the change, a borrower who wanted to finance that much of a home's value would have needed a credit score of at least 700.

In September, Genworth Financial Inc. winnowed its list of declining and distressed markets to five states: Arizona, California, Florida, Michigan and Nevada.
The changes are small. As the article notes, this is due to slightly improved markets and an attempt to regain market share from the FHA.

I wonder if this is related - just two weeks ago: Wisconsin Regulator Approves MGIC Regulatory Cap Waiver Thru 2011 (ht jb)
Mortgage insurance giant MGIC Investment Corp. (MTG) announced, Thursday, that the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance for the State of Wisconsin approved the company’s revised business plan and agreed to waive minimum regulatory capital requirements until Dec. 31, 2011.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Unofficial Problem Bank List increases to 551

by Calculated Risk on 12/18/2009 09:30:00 PM

This is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources.

NOTE: This was compiled prior to the bank failures today.

Changes and comments from surferdude808:

The OCC released its actions for November, which contributed to an increase in the number of institutions and aggregate assets on the Unofficial Problem Bank List. The list includes 551 institutions with aggregate assets of $305 billion, up from 539 institutions with assets of $298 billion last week.

Removals this week include the three failures Friday – SolutionsBank ($511 million), Republic Federal Bank National Association ($433 million), and Valley Capital Bank, National Association ($40 million).

This week, 15 institutions with total assets of $8.1 billion were added to Unofficial Problem Bank List. Large additions include Riverside National Bank of Florida, Fort Pierce, FL ($3.5 billion); First Community Bank, National Association, Sugar Land, TX ($855 million); Beach First National Bank, Myrtle Beach, SC ($646 million); and First Bank Richmond, National Association, Richmond, IN ($637 million).

Two weeks ago, we removed Riverside National Bank, First National Bank of the Rockies, and First National Bank of Griffin and, last week, we removed Beach First National Bank, when the OCC terminated their Formal Agreements. As mentioned then, the OCC may replace the terminated Formal Agreement with another action; hence, this week these four banks come back on the list as they are now under a Consent Agreement.
The list is compiled from regulator press releases or from public news sources (see Enforcement Action Type link for source). The FDIC data is released monthly with a delay, and the Fed and OTC data is more timely. The OCC data is a little lagged. Credit: surferdude808.

Note: The FDIC announced there were 552 bank on the official Problem Bank list at the end of Q3. The difference is a mostly a matter of timing - some enforcement actions haven't been announced yet, and others may be pending.

See description below table for Class and Cert (and a link to FDIC ID system).

For a full screen version of the table click here.

The table is wide - use scroll bars to see all information!

NOTE: Columns are sortable - click on column header (Assets, State, Bank Name, Date, etc.)





Class: from FDIC
The FDIC assigns classification codes indicating an institution's charter type (commercial bank, savings bank, or savings association), its chartering agent (state or federal government), its Federal Reserve membership status (member or nonmember), and its primary federal regulator (state-chartered institutions are subject to both federal and state supervision). These codes are:
  • N National chartered commercial bank supervised by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
  • SM State charter Fed member commercial bank supervised by the Federal Reserve
  • NM State charter Fed nonmember commercial bank supervised by the FDIC
  • SA State or federal charter savings association supervised by the Office of Thrift Supervision
  • SB State charter savings bank supervised by the FDIC
  • Cert: This is the certificate number assigned by the FDIC used to identify institutions and for the issuance of insurance certificates. Click on the number and the Institution Directory (ID) system "will provide the last demographic and financial data filed by the selected institution".

    Bank Failure #140: First Federal Bank of California, Santa Monica, California

    by Calculated Risk on 12/18/2009 08:04:00 PM

    One Forty arrives
    Sun sets on First Federal
    Death by Option ARMs

    by Soylent Green is People

    From the FDIC: OneWest Bank, FSB, Pasadena, California, Assumes All of the Deposits of First Federal Bank of California, Santa Monica, California
    First Federal Bank of California, a Federal Savings Bank, Santa Monica, California, was closed today by the Office of Thrift Supervision, which appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver....

    As of September 30, 2009, First Federal Bank of California had approximately $6.1 billion in total assets and $4.5 billion in total deposits. ...

    The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $146.3 million. ... First Federal Bank of California is the 140th FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the seventeenth in California. The last FDIC-insured institution to be closed in the state was Imperial Capital Bank, La Jolla, earlier today.
    That makes seven today ...

    Bank Failure #139: Imperial Capital Bank, La Jolla, California

    by Calculated Risk on 12/18/2009 07:46:00 PM

    Zero capital
    Imperial imperiled
    Taxpayers rescue

    by Soylent Green is People

    From the FDIC: City National Bank, Los Angeles, California, Assumes All of the Deposits of Imperial Capital Bank, La Jolla, California
    Imperial Capital Bank, La Jolla, California, was closed today by the California Department of Financial Institutions, which appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. ...

    As of September 30, 2009, Imperial Capital Bank had approximately $4.0 billion in total assets and $2.8 billion in total deposits. ...

    The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $619.2 million. .... Imperial Capital Bank is the 139th FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the sixteenth in California. The last FDIC-insured institution closed in the state was Pacific Coast National Bank, San Clemente, on November 13, 2009.