by Eleua » Tue Jul 17, 2007 8:57 pm
It depends on how much leverage the fund had. If they were levered up 13X, the numbers would make sense.
There is more to this story to come.
Once the BSC hedge funds mark to market, all the other funds out there in CDO land will have to do the same. This may cause a cascading default or liquidation across the industry.
What is important isn't the amount lost by BSC, but that the CDOs being marked to a theoretical model era has come to an end.
They will have to mark to a market, which will be much more problematic during a down cycle in housing.
Example:
If everyone in Ballard had their retirement dreams held in the prices of the homes there, and everyone agreed that Ballard homes are all worth $1M each, then they can all act like they have a cool $1M ready for their golden years. Suddenly, the bank that is holding the note for some crazy musician decides they have too much risk and try to foreclose/call the loan, they have to sell the house. If the house only gets a bid of $600K, and the bank was on the hook for $800K, the musician loses 100% and the bank loses 25%. No big deal in the big picture.
The stink comes from all the other banks that have notes in Ballard. They just looked at 'shugy's house and hit the panic button. Now, they don't want to continue to fund homes in Ballard at the $1M price. They will only fund at the $600K price, but if there is a stampede, then they can only fund at $250K.
Can you see the problem here?
Mark to model was institutional fraud. Those days are over, but they were responsible for the enormous tidal wave of liquidity that fueled this madness to begin with. With that over, the contraction will continue and that will make the mark to market even worse.
The excitement over the BSC funds is very, very justified.
Lastly, we don't know the extent of the immediate damage to BSC or MER.