Showing posts with label Lehman Vol spike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lehman Vol spike. Show all posts

Friday, 11 July 2008

Another deleveraging scenario this summer? Markets for the week ending 10-Jul

Market Update: Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell into a bear market
The benchmark index for American equities plunged to a two-year low on Tuesday, bringing the loss since its October record to 20 percent.
Shares have been declining for five straight weeks, and a drop in the index of another 12 percent would match the average retreat of 11 bear markets since 1946.

Reasons suggesting another deleveraging scenario this summer:
- Nervous investors sell bonds, driving prices down; Traditional bond managers may start losing their clients if they have another poor quarter.
- Hedge-fund managers may find prime brokers cutting off funding if their positions deteriorate.
- Bank loans have been contracting at an annualised rate of 8% over the past 13 weeks to June 25th.
- Fundamentals for the corporate-bond market have worsened since last August.
- Expectations for corporate profits are being revised down, as margins come under pressure from slower growth and higher commodity prices.
- Headline inflation is well above target, so central banks are unlikely to ride to the rescue with interest-rate cuts, preferring to tighten monetary policy.


? Sell Signal : Financials
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, speculations runs rife
- Rising borrowing costs spurred concern that America's biggest sources of home-mortgage financing may not be able to fund their businesses.
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fell to their the lowest since 1992.
With $5.2 billion more owed than its assets were worth in the first quarter, Freddie Mac would be technically insolvent under fair value accounting rules.
Implications:Until investors see what write-offs are going to be and second-quarter earnings of financial companies, they're not interested in buying at any price.
Word on the street is that it's been far too early to buy and the loan-loss reserves need to stabilize before investors return to the markets.

Worth noting:
Lehman-LEH put volume & volatility Spike; LEH down 12%
LEH is recently down $2.54 to $17.20. LEH call option volume of 15,588 contracts compares to put volume of 41,549 contracts.
LEH July option implied volatility is at 188, August is at 170; above its 26-week average of 75, suggesting larger risk.

Earnings announcements:
JPM : 17-Jul
MER : 17-Jul
Citigroup : 18-Jul

Eric Tan, London