by TJ_98370 » Tue Feb 12, 2008 2:53 pm
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Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) -- The risk of bond insurers MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc. defaulting rose after billionaire Warren Buffett offered to assume responsibility for $800 billion of municipal debt, excluding subprime-linked securities......
.....Buffett is attempting to take advantage of bond insurers as they seek to raise capital and avoid downgrades to their AAA credit ratings. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. plans to insure municipal debt for 1.5 times the premium charged by the bond insurers to take on the guarantee and will put up $5 billion of capital, he said in an interview with CNBC television.
``It's taking away their cash cow and leaving them with the toxic waste,'' said Tim Backshall, chief strategist at Credit Derivatives Research LLC in Walnut Creek, California......
.......``Buffett is trying to get hold of the most secure section of financial guarantee market for a modest price,'' David Roche, who runs London-based research firm Independent Strategy, said in a note to investors. ``But it does not really solve the problem of credit defaults in structured finance or the danger of counterparty failure if the monolines go belly up.''......
.......The cost of protecting corporate bonds from default reached a record for a third day. Credit-default swaps on the benchmark Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index soared 7.5 basis points to 143 and traded at 136 basis points at 11:07 a.m. in New York, according to Deutsche Bank AG.
Traders speculated credit losses will widen after American International Group Inc. said faulty accounting caused a bigger- than-expected drop in its holdings......
.....AIG, the world's largest insurer by assets, said auditors found ``material weakness'' in the way it accounted for credit- default swaps and that the value of its investments fell $4.88 billion, four times more than previously disclosed for October and November.
``We're in kind of uncharted territory for accountants in a lot of these products,'' said Ricardo Kleinbaum, a credit analyst at BNP Paribas SA in New York. ``Internally, all financials are grappling with this issue of how to value.''.....
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Accounting flaws at the American International Group significantly understated the insurance giant's losses on complex financial instruments linked to mortgages and corporate debt, A.I.G. said on Monday, raising new questions about the deteriorating health of financial companies.
The disclosure stunned Wall Street and raised concern that other companies could report similar problems related to instruments known as credit default swaps. The news sent A.I.G. stock tumbling 12 percent, or $5.94, to $44.74, its lowest level in a year.
"We are going to see more and more problems come to light like this," Lynn E. Turner, a former chief accountant at the Securities and Exchange Commission, told The New York Times. "This is an indication that these large financial institutions do not have the risk management systems in place to give us accurate data."
In a securities filing, A.I.G. said it would take a $4.88 billion charge related to a decline in the value of credit default swaps. That is roughly five times the charge the company suggested it would take in early December.....
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