Archive for the Bill Ackman Category

When Dinallo met Buffett: the monoline breakup plan

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, Bond insurance, Municipal bonds, mbia on February 19, 2008 by Chris McCann

When Dinallo met Buffett: the monoline breakup plan
from: http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2008/02/15/10941/when-dinallo-met-buffett-the-monoline-breakup-plan/

Bond insurer MBIA hit back on Thursday at Pershing Square’s Bill Ackman – the hedge fund manager who has made a fortune shorting the monolines. Outsiders seem to be finding value in the bond insurer business too.MBIA’s testimony to the US House capital markets subcommittee is available here. It seems that a lot has been redacted from the copy Reuters got hold of on Thursday. MBIA takes issue with a number of flaws in Ackman’s model. But it’s not a very clear-cut trouncing.

It’s slightly disingenuous too of MBIA to imply that “serious analysts” disagree with Ackman. As Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism points out:

This posture conveniently ignores that rating agency Egan Jones and several Wall Street analysts have posted even more dire loss forecasts than Ackman.

Whatever its flaws, Ackman’s model has thrown up a number of truths: lest we forget the multi-billion dollar slew of abortive recapitalization attempts?

And even while MBIA’s testimony might indicate that insolvency isn’t quite on the horizon, it doesn’t address the more pressing issue at hand: are these AAA institutions?

But forget all of that, because the ball might just well and truly be out of the monoline’s court.

NY Governor Eliot Spitzer also gave testimony to the House committee. As the FT reported Spitzer has given the bond insurance companies five days. If an in-house market-led solution isn’t sorted by then, they’ll be broken up. Insurance superintendent Eric Dinallo elucidates:

We have been actively discussing all of the options with the bond insurers and, if necessary, we will consider allowing the bond insurers to split themselves into two companies. One would have the municipal bond policies and any other healthy parts of the business. And there is no reason to believe that this cannot be a healthy business. The other would have the structured finance and problem parts of the business.

We would ensure that the funds paid by municipal governments would go to support their insurance, and not pay for the problems in structured finance. We believe that this plan could produce enough capital to preserve the ratings of and provide protection for the municipal bonds.

And who is waiting in the aisle?

It was to ensure a safety net for the municipal bonds that over the Martin Luther King Day weekend in January we asked Berkshire Hathaway to price the entire municipal bond portfolio of the three largest bond insurers. Earlier this month, Berkshire sent its proposal to the three companies. I believe that there may be other investors who would be interested in investing in the municipal side of the business.

Galling Actions of MBIA and Ambac

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, Moody's, S&P, mbia on February 17, 2008 by Chris McCann

Galling Actions of MBIA and Ambac

In the Desperate Actions Department, MBIA to urge curbing short sellers.

MBIA Inc (MBI) plans to urge lawmakers and regulators to curtail what the bond insurer calls “the unscrupulous and dangerous market manipulation activities of short sellers,” according to a copy of written testimony obtained by Reuters.

The testimony, prepared for a February 14 hearing before a subcommittee of the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services, specifically mentions Bill Ackman, founder of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management. Ackman has been vocal about its short position in the bond insurers.

But MBIA’s testimony does not limit its criticism to short-sellers.

Rating agencies, which are considering stripping MBIA of the top ratings crucial for its business, have damaged the market’s confidence in the financial guarantors, the testimony said.

Rating agencies may need to revamp their rating systems, MBIA said. The bond insurer said it and other industry leaders should work with the agencies to “to redesign their systems.”

Lawmakers must support capital raising efforts of the bond insurers, because failure could have “far reaching effects on the U.S. and global economies,” MBIA wrote.

MBIA Clearly Desperate

For starters anyone blaming shorts is in trouble. It is an act of desperation that has a 100% failure rate for as long as I can remember. Any company baling shorts deserves to have shareholders walk away. It is an implicit admission of failure. Companies that execute well, welcome shorts. The shorts provide fuel for driving the market higher.

What’s galling is the request for taxpayer money for the sole purpose of bailing out the company doing the asking. This is not about “far reaching effects on the U.S. and global economies” this is a request for a government handout.

In Buffett’s Kiss of Death I noted Warren Buffet’s offer to reinsure 800 billion dollars in municipal bonds. The offered was declined. It was declined because the monolines are not telling the truth about what the rest of their business is worth. The answer is tens of billions of dollars in the hole.

Now MBIA is asking taxpayers to pony up money just to keep their failed business model in business. If this was really about saving the Muni market they would accept Buffett’s offer. This is really about keeping the gravy train going for MBIA officers.

Dunton and Chaplan wrecked their company and deserve salaries of $0. They should be asking forgiveness from shareholders. Instead they are asking for a handout that will cost tens of billions of dollars, just so they can keep their personal gravy trains rolling.

Ambac and MBIA Blame Rating Agencies

Yahoo!Finance is reporting Bond Insurers to Blame Rating Agencies.

The troubled bond insurance industry is being hobbled by uncertainty surrounding the credit rating process, Ambac Financial Group Inc. Chairman Michael A. Callen is expected to tell a U.S. House panel on Thursday.

“Ambac and the industry’s next critical step is to restore confidence. This requires stable and predictable credit ratings,” Callen says in prepared remarks to be delivered Thursday before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets.

Rival MBIA Inc. in its prepared testimony, takes a harsher tone. The company blames rating agencies for the current market disruption and suggests rating systems “may need to be revamped.”

“Instability of decision making by the rating agencies has damaged the market’s confidence in the financial guarantors, thereby destabilizing the broader financial markets,” the testimony said.

Callen said the problems facing bond insurers have been overstated. Ambac, he said, currently has the financial resources to “comfortably meet” all of its existing obligations, even under the most dire market conditions.

“Almost no one questions the ability of Ambac to make good on obligations to holders of Ambac guaranteed debt,” Callen said.

Instead, he said the biggest challenge for Ambac is dealing with the uncertainty caused by rating agencies’ decision to review their ratings on the company.

“We therefore see the current issues facing the financial guarantors not as a question of ability to meet obligations, but rather a challenge to maintain the stability of ratings that have supported our business in the past and that will support it going forward,” Callen said.

Any business that depends on an AAA credit rating to stay in business is in a failed business model. Numerous people have said that. I can’t take credit for it. What’s worse, however, is they willingly jeopardized their credit rating by wandering off into uncharted territory insuring things they knew nothing about and now need handouts to stay in business.

Ambac Asks For Handout

I agree with Ambac and MBIA that the rating agencies are at fault. In fact, It’s Time To Break Up The Credit Rating Cartel. But it was greed, not the ratings agencies that got the monolines in trouble.

In the meantime, both Ambac and MBIA companies should be downgraded from AAA or AA to something like B immediately. Buffett will be more than happy to pick up the pieces when that happens. And the sooner that happens the better off the municipal bond market will be.

What this all boils down to is Ambac is asking for a handout. In Ambac’s case they want a handout of a rating they do not deserve and most likely never did.

Budget Constraints Hit Department Of Commerce

With a hat tip to Randy, here’s an interesting message from the Department Of Commerce.

Due to budgetary constraints, the Economic Indicators service (http://www.economicindicators.gov) will be discontinued effective March 1, 2008.

Economic Indicators.gov is brought to you by the Economics and Statistics Administration at the U.S. Department of Commerce. Our mission is to provide timely access to the daily releases of key economic indicators from the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Super Duper Senior Bonds

In the truth is much stranger than fiction department, UBS is offering “super duper senior bonds”.

UBS highlighted a new structuring technique for Alt-A hybrid deals, which involves carving out ultra high-quality bonds out of the super senior triple-A classes and calling them super duper senior bonds.

“Many investors are reluctant to buy MBS backed by Alt-A collateral including super senior paper, as they fear credit losses,” UBS analysts wrote.

In a hypothetical super duper triple-A deal, the bonds have twice the credit enhancement of the super senior triple-A bond and four times the credit support of the straight triple-A bond. After running the structure through hypothetical scenarios, UBS determined that the super duper senior Alt-A hybrids offer great value relative to prime jumbo super senior hybrids and agency hybrids, and virtually eliminate the credit component.

Some market participants, however, were not as delighted with the prospect of the new structure. “I don’t think it will be anything big,” one trader said. “I don’t think anyone is overwhelmed by it.”

Every day the news gets stranger and more desperate. It’s hard to keep up with it all.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Mike Shedlock / Mish is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com to learn more about wealth management for investors seeking strong performance with low volatility.

MEET BILL ACKMAN, HEDGE FUND MANAGER

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, Moody's, S&P, mbia on February 3, 2008 by Chris McCann

from:
http://www.earthtowallstreet.com/2008/02/meet-bill-ackman-hedge-fund-manager-by.html

MEET BILL ACKMAN, HEDGE FUND MANAGER, by VFRTXN 2-02-08

If you have no clue who Bill Ackman is you should because he is a smart pit bull kind of guy who has his bite tight against the truth and his money is locked around the necks of MBIA AND AMBAC and he has no bias toward each, other than the truth he is shorting against them and that truth is the rating agencies are sugar coating the reality of their financial structure and soundness. The regulators are playing games and he is betting that when the truth hits he will profit from the lies and these insures will not get enough backing. He has already caught the management team of one of these companies in an apparent lie about losses. Watch the video and you will hear what he has to say about what he has found.
Watch this video for a reality check. You decide how you feel about the future. I am in self imposed therapy right now and on break. I might be on break but I can’t stop digging for the truth. You ask yourself if it sounds like some one is lying to the American public and trying to cover this thing up.
Why have I been a bear so long? Because the cold winters truth is not even out yet as the FED plays game with sugar coating the coming future and the media plays hoopla with rate cuts that mean nothing in the long run if these bond insures go belly up and then also later to be found lying on top of it the whole time which to me sounds like a good possibility. They are either lying are acting real dumb about how much money they have lost or both, then again maybe it’s so bad they have no clue where they stand. The rate cuts will not mean a thing for a long time to come if the truth does not come out within the next two weeks on MBIA and AMBAC and Moody’s and S&P better get it right. That’s all we need in tomorrows headlines is to find the rating agencies mis judged or made drastic mistakes accessing these two companies properly. Did I say I am on break for the next two weeks at least?
I am going with Bill Ackman and his opinion because he has his money backing his thoughts and study of the situation.
Love always,
V.

Bill Ackman on MBIA Ambac; bond insurers, Bloombrg TV, 1/10/08

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, Moody's, S&P, mbia on February 1, 2008 by Chris McCann

Pershing Square Capital Founder Says Ambac, MBIA May Lose $11.6B Each

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, mbia on February 1, 2008 by Chris McCann
From:
http://www.transworldnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=34882&cat=8

Pershing Square Capital Founder Says Ambac, MBIA May Lose $11.6B Each

Atlanta, GA 1/30/2008 10:26 PM GMT (FINDITT)

 

William “Bill” Ackman, the founder of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management told regulators on Wednesday that Ambac and MBIA face combined losses of over $23 billion from bonds they’ve insured.

Ackman, 41, also said that the two companies, which are the biggest U.S. bond insurers, should be forced to stop paying dividends.

Ambac (NYSE: AMB) faces losses of $11.61 billion from asset-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations it insured. MBIA (NYSE: MBI) faces at least $11.63 billion of losses from these obligations, plus additional losses from reinsurance that may no longer be valid.

The losses were calculated using a model supplied by an unnamed investment bank, and the findings were sent in a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission, New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo, and Ambac and MBIA’s state regulators.

MBIA closed down $2.02, or 13 percent, at $13.96 in New York Stock Exchange trading. Ambac dropped $2.08, or 16 percent, to $10.85. Both companies have lost more than 80 percent of their market value in the past year.

Pershing Square Capital’s Ackman Says Stop Ambac, MBIA Dividends

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, mbia on February 1, 2008 by Chris McCann

From:
http://www.huliq.com/48926/pershing-square-capital039s-ackman-says-stop-ambac-mbia-dividents

Pershing Square Capital’s Ackman Says Stop Ambac, MBIA Dividents

Pershing Square Capital Management’s founder Bill Ackman told regulators in a letter today that the two biggest U.S. bond insurers face combined losses of over $23 billion from bonds they’ve insured, and should be forced to stop paying dividends.
Reuters broke the news about and hour ago.

Yesterday Ambac Financial Group, Inc. declares quarterly dividend and MBIA will have the conference call and earnings reports tomorrow.

In a release to investors Ambac Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE: ABK) (Ambac) yesterday announced that its Board of Directors declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.07 per share of common stock. “The dividend is payable on March 5, 2008 to stockholders of record on February 11, 2008.”

However; the founder of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management Bill Ackman in a letter to U.S. regulators says “Ambac Financial Group Inc faces losses of $11.61 billion from asset-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations it insured.”

“MBIA Inc (MBI.N: Quote, Profile, Research) faces at least $11.63 billion of losses from these obligations, plus additional losses from reinsurance that may no longer be valid,” Ackman said in Reuter’s news story.

In an open letter to Ambac and MBIA’s state regulators, as well as officials at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Ackman said that it has completed a complete analysis of securities in Ambac’s and MBIA’s portfolio, based on data from a bank that it believes are reasonable.

But Pershing makes no representations regarding the accuracy and completeness of the data, Ackman wrote.

Ackman said the data and the valuation models that Pershing used were posted publicly at:

Yousendit.com

Pershing Square, which is short MBIA and Ambac, welcomes suggestions from market participants, Ackman said. The letter refers to the model as the “Open Source Model.” (Reporting by Dan Wilchins; Editing by Brian Moss, Leslie Gevirtz)

Ackman Devoured 140,000 Pages Challenging MBIA Rating

Posted in Ambac, Bill Ackman, Moody's, mbia on February 1, 2008 by Chris McCann

 from:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a7.NpGwa19TY&refer=home

Ackman Devoured 140,000 Pages Challenging MBIA Rating (Update2)
By Christine Richard and Katherine Burton

Enlarge Image/Details

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — It was the $109,000 photocopying bill that hedge fund manager William Ackman says made him realize how much he’d read and underlined before betting against bond insurer MBIA Inc. in 2002.

His law firm charged him for copying 725,000 pages of financial statements and other documents, 140,000 of them about MBIA, to comply with a subpoena. Following New York and U.S. probes of his trading and reports, Ackman persisted in challenging MBIA’s AAA credit rating for more than five years, based on his own research.

Ackman may soon be proved right. MBIA, the largest provider of insurance against defaults in the global credit market, today reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $2.3 billion because of the declining value of mortgage-related securities it guaranteed. The independent research firm CreditSights Inc. this week said MBIA’s credit rating may be downgraded. Ackman had warned that MBIA was magnifying its risks by backing instruments such as those based on loans to the least creditworthy homebuyers.

“It’s in the nature of a shareholder activist to be persistent,” says Ackman, now 41. “I’ve been persistent because it’s an important issue. People are obsessive about stupid things. They are persistent about important things.”

In the MBIA documents, Ackman says he saw that the insurer was guaranteeing untested asset-backed securities. He also found a reinsurance transaction that allowed the company to downplay a loss. MBIA agreed in January 2007 to pay $75 million to settle U.S. regulators’ inquiries into that deal.

$2,000 Bet on SAT

Ackman peppered rating companies and regulators with letters, e-mails and presentations criticizing MBIA’s credit rating. He also got then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who was investigating Ackman’s activities, to probe MBIA.

Shares of MBIA, based in Armonk, New York, rose $1.54, or 11 percent, to $15.50 at 4:26 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock is down 78 percent in the past year.

In high school Ackman bet his father $2,000 that he would get a perfect score on the verbal portion of the SAT college- entrance exam. He says his dad called off the wager the morning of the test for fear he would lose the bet, though Ackman ended up scoring wrong on one answer.

Betting against MBIA and the No. 2 bond insurer, New York- based Ambac Financial Group Inc., helped Ackman’s New York-based fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, to return 22 percent net to investors last year. He says he plans to give his personal gains on the bond insurers to Pershing Square’s charitable foundation.

Speaking Publicly

“He has spoken out publicly about it, approached regulators, talked to the media,” says David Einhorn, 39, head of New York-based Greenlight Capital LLC, who also has wagered against MBIA. “He’s not more right today than he was five years ago that MBIA was never AAA.”

Yesterday, in a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission and to New York Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo, Ackman said MBIA and Ambac may each lose $11.6 billion on guarantees of mortgage-linked debt and other securities. He posted a list of the securities the two companies guaranteed on the Internet, along with a model supplied by an unnamed investment bank, so investors could do their own forecasts of what the insurers might lose.

In 2003, as the New York attorney general’s probe was under way, Ackman fired off a memo to MBIA posing 146 questions he says the company never answered. The first was, “Why did you have me investigated?”

`Emperor Has No Clothes’

“No one wanted to believe that a AAA-rated company was doing what it was doing,” says Roger Siefert, a forensic accountant Ackman hired in 2003. “We were treated like the little boy saying `the emperor has no clothes.”’

Chuck Chaplin, MBIA’s chief financial officer, says in an interview that Ackman’s criticism reflects misperceptions of the bond insurer’s business. He disputes Ackman’s estimates of MBIA’s losses and says the trader is benefiting more from lucky timing than smart analysis.

“He was at the right place at the right time,” Chaplin says. “The past six months turned out to be a good time to be short business sectors with mortgage-market exposure, and as it turned out, the bond insurers ended up being one of them.”

Martin Whitman, the 83-year-old chairman of New York-based Third Avenue Management LLC, dismissed Ackman’s criticism of MBIA in a December interview on CNBC.

“Mr. Ackman is a slick salesman who doesn’t know much about insurance,” Whitman said. Whitman’s firm owned more than 10 percent of MBIA’s stock, he said in the interview.

Advertising Commissions

Ackman earned undergraduate and business degrees from Harvard. His father, Lawrence Ackman, recalls that his son and another student worked one summer selling advertising for the “Let’s Go” travel guides and earned unusually high commissions of $15,000 to $20,000.

“The next year they reduced the commission rates and ruined it for all future students,” Lawrence Ackman says.

Straight out of business school, Ackman started his first hedge fund, Gotham Partners, with fellow student David Berkowitz. In the mid-1990s, Gotham tried to buy Rockefeller Center. During the talks, Ackman, then 28, says he got a call from Donald Trump.

Call From Trump

“He said to me, `Bill, Goldman Sachs is stealing Rockefeller Center and we’ve got to sit down and try to work something out,”’ Ackman says. The two never agreed to work together.

In July 1996, a group led by Goldman Sachs and David Rockefeller, the philanthropist and former chief of Chase Manhattan Corp., took control of the complex for $1.2 billion in cash and assumed debt. Gotham made a profit selling a stake in the property to Goldman, Ackman says. Trump didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Ackman took an interest in MBIA after asking a credit- market trader which companies didn’t deserve AAA ratings, he says. In a report entitled, “Is MBIA Triple-A?” he argued that the company had insufficient reserves to cover potential losses and was guaranteeing increasingly risky debts.

He disclosed taking a short position in MBIA, in which an investor sells borrowed stock, expecting to repurchase it later at a lower price and return the shares to the owner. Ackman also bought credit-default swaps, financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to speculate on a company’s ability to repay debt. The swaps would rise in value if doubts about MBIA grew.

Spitzer Investigation

Late in 2002, Ackman published his MBIA findings on Gotham’s Web site. Ron MacDonald, the head of reinsurance at MBIA until 1999, read the report early in 2003 and e-mailed Ackman praising it, MacDonald says.

Ackman learned in January 2003 from a Wall Street Journal reporter that Spitzer was investigating whether Gotham had engaged in manipulative trading on MBIA and other companies and that the newspaper would publish an article the next day. The SEC later started its own probe.

“This is going to be a good thing,” Ackman says he told friends that evening. “I’m going to meet Eliot Spitzer.” He says he saw it as an opportunity to turn the tables and present his concerns about MBIA.

Spitzer was investigating not only Ackman’s position in MBIA, but also his trading in two other companies, Pre-Paid Legal Services and Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp., or Farmer Mac. Spitzer, now the New York governor, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Turning the Tables

Ackman and Siefert, the forensic accountant, drew investigators’ attention to the reinsurance deal that led to the $75 million settlement a year ago. The transaction covered MBIA for losses related to the 1998 bankruptcy of a Pennsylvania hospital group.

Meanwhile, Ackman made a series of presentations to Moody’s Investors Service Inc., the New York-based credit rating company, challenging the bond insurer’s top credit grade. In 2005, he wrote to Moody’s warning that it was risking its own credibility by keeping MBIA at AAA.

“I apologize for putting you and Moody’s on the spot,” Ackman wrote. “I have simply lost patience, and it is 2 in the morning.” A Moody’s spokesman said no one was available to comment.

Ackman says he recently received notification that the SEC had ended its investigation of him without any finding of wrongdoing. The letter arrived only after he wrote to the SEC chairman and the agency’s four commissioners demanding it.