Insurers' Day of Reckoning

Minyan Peter
  Feb 25, 2008 10:15 am

Insurers' Day of Reckoning
 
Plan postpones the inevitable.
 

 
A hurricane comes through your town and levels your house. A few weeks later, you receive a letter from your insurance company telling you that unless you buy some of its stock, it won’t be able to pay your insurance claim. What do you do?

As far fetched as this question may feel, this is, in principle, what’s behind the bailout of the monoline insurance companies. Unless their biggest CDS counterparties step up with more capital, the insurance companies won’t be able to make good on their CDS and the banks will be forced to take write-downs.

How this all plays out remains to be seen, but I would suggest that until additional capital comes into the financial services system from organizations other than other financial services companies, I am afraid that all that is happening is the further leveraging of an already leveraged and highly interdependent financial system.

Now there are those who suggest that creating a “good bank/bad bank” out of the insurance companies will create the opportunity for the incremental outside capital that I suggest is so much in need. And in general I would agree. Adding capital to the “good” municipal business would put that business on more solid footing. But what about the “bad” CDO business?

A review of history suggests that there was really no such thing as a good bank/bad bank strategy – only a good bank/dead bank strategy. For one to live, the other had to die. And to be clear, looking back in time, no matter how the good and bad eggs were unscrambled, the banks’ equity holders (and some holding company lenders) ultimately lost it all.

So until losses are taken, I continue to believe there is a day of reckoning to come for the monoline insurance companies. And, more sadly, I sense the same day of reckoning for those multinational banks who are stepping up to help. For rather than spreading risk beyond the financial system, it appears that every bailout effort seeks to concentrate it more and more onto the balance sheets of world’s largest banks.

And, while I truly wish it weren’t the case, because of the financial system’s interdependence, we continue to postpone the inevitable.
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Comments (3) See All Comments »
02-25-2008, 10:44 am
Here's how i view the monoline plan, in a simple example. Let's say
there are 5 cars in the world and 2 car insurance companies. We think
the car insurance companies don't have enough money to pay claims.
Neither
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02-25-2008, 10:45 pm
These large banks in some cases are holding the countrys 401K plans for companies, with peoples entire life savings, with NO way to withdraw it without 10% penalty + taxes.

So happens when they start failing??
Read More
02-25-2008, 10:55 pm
Move out to other institutions with less exposure and SIPC coverage. SIPC covers only $500K, if assets are more split between several institutions. & Make sure your money mkt funds are not exposed to CDOs and other junk. If you are not very sure
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