Tuesday, February 03, 2009

MOTU VERSUS THE FREE MARKET

The disparity between what a financial institution thinks a particular bond is worth and what the market thinks is staggering (from the NYT):
The wild variations on the value of many bad bank assets can be seen by looking at one mortgage-backed bond recently analyzed by a division of Standard & Poor’s, the credit rating agency.

The financial institution that owns the bond calculates the value at 97 cents on the dollar, or a mere 3 percent loss. But S.& P. estimates it is worth 87 cents, based on the current loan-default rate, and could be worth 53 cents under a bleaker situation that contemplates a doubling of defaults. But even that might be optimistic, because the bond traded recently for just 38 cents on the dollar, reflecting the even gloomier outlook of investors.

I think it's time we ditch the notion that the MOTU know what they are doing and seriously consider nationalization.

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