<http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-petruno15may15,0,3804524.column>

The Risk in Hiding Behind a Hedge
Tom Petruno
Market Beat
May 15, 2005

In the TV reality show "The Biggest Loser," overweight contestants get
serious about trimming down and getting healthy. The fun for viewers
is in trying to pick the ultimate loser/winner.

Wall Street lately has been focused on its own version of "The Biggest
Loser." This game entails trying to guess which hedge fund has made
enough bad trading bets to wipe itself out and cause a domino effect —
perhaps toppling a major bank or brokerage.

Fear of a large-scale financial failure loomed over markets last week,
helping to send stocks lower and drive more investors into the
perceived safety of Treasury bonds.

It has become convenient in recent years to blame hedge funds for
every market hiccup or anomaly. And why not: There are about 8,000 of
these funds out there, and they exist to exploit investment
opportunities in any and all securities. They can move fast, and they
often use leverage, or borrowing, to get more bang for their bucks.

What also makes them easy to blame is that they are mostly secretive
about their trading, and they're largely unregulated. If something is
awry in markets, Wall Street figures hedge funds must be at least
partly responsible.

Worries about excessive risk taking at the funds have been background
noise in the markets since June, when the Federal Reserve began
raising short-term interest rates. Bad things have been known to
happen to highly leveraged investors when the central bank is
tightening credit.

Concerns about a blowup came to a head May 5, when credit rating firm
Standard & Poor's downgraded General Motors Corp.'s debt to junk,
citing concerns about the automaker's eroding earnings outlook. The
story on Wall Street trading desks was that some hedge funds were big
holders of GM bonds, or dealt in so-called derivative securities tied
to those bonds, and so were slammed as the debt tumbled in value.

Since then, markets have grown more skittish about hedge funds'
participation in all sorts of transactions that may have looked like
winners a year ago but that now seem illadvised.

The funds have long been active players in the market for credit
derivatives. These are contracts by which investors trade risk with
each other. For example, credit default swaps allow investors to buy
or sell insurance against the chance of a company's defaulting on its
bonds.

Swaps have become a big business: The notional value of default swaps
outstanding was $8.4 trillion at year's end, up from $631 billion in
mid-2001, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Assn.

Notional value is the hypothetical underlying sum on which a swap's
payment obligations are computed. It doesn't mean that's what the
players are on the hook for. Nonetheless, the growth of swaps tells us
that a lot of risk trading has been going on via the derivatives
market.

On its face, risk trading isn't a bad thing, of course. It allows some
investors to lower the risk in their portfolios while allowing others
to take on more risk when they believe that the returns justify it.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan in the past has lauded derivatives for
making the global financial system more sound, not less so, by
spreading risk more broadly (as opposed to keeping it concentrated in,
say, major banks).

But on both sides of a derivatives transaction, the investors are
making certain assumptions about the best- and worst-case scenarios
for the economy, interest rates and other factors that affect the
transaction.

That's where trouble can arise: If investors' worst-case scenario
underestimates what actually could (or does) go wrong, the transaction
can be a bomb for one or both players.

Then the problem becomes who owes whom — and if one party can't pay,
does that create a chain reaction of missed payments that snakes
through the financial system?

This risk isn't mere science fiction. In September 1998, turmoil in
global financial markets left the giant hedge fund Long-Term Capital
Management on the brink of failure. The assumptions it had made in its
complex derivative trades proved grossly inaccurate.

As the fund's losses mounted, regulators including the Fed saw that
the portfolio's heavy use of leverage from banks and brokerages meant
that its failure could cause a domino effect across Wall Street. Under
the Fed's aegis, Long-Term Capital Management's creditors engineered a
bailout that gradually unwound the portfolio, averting a financial
crisis.

In a speech May 5 — the same day of the downgrade of GM's debt —
Greenspan talked at length about derivatives, financial risk and the
lessons from Long-Term Capital Management.

His conclusion was that regulators, banks and brokerages learned
plenty from that near-failure, and that they have a better handle
today on the risks inherent in derivatives and on hedge funds'
involvement in those transactions.

But Greenspan also acknowledged that the sheer growth in the variety
of derivatives since 1998 meant that the financial markets were, to
some extent, in uncharted territory.

"The rapid proliferation of derivatives products inevitably means that
some will not have been adequately tested by market stress," he said.

David Brownlee, a bond fund manager at NL Capital Management in
Montpelier, Vt., put it more colloquially. "I've been managing bond
money for 26 years, and I don't understand a lot of these [new]
derivatives," he said.

Hence, the possibility of a derivatives meltdown induced by hedge fund
failures no longer seems as farfetched as it might have seemed a few
months ago — particularly because markets have become so disjointed in
recent weeks, wreaking havoc with many big investors' assumptions.

Last week, for example, the price of oil plunged 6.5% from Monday's
closing level through Friday. An investor might naturally assume that
would be good for the stock market. Instead, the Dow Jones industrial
average slumped 2.4% in the same period, ending the week at 10,140.12.

Nervous over GM's outlook and other issues, investors continued to
push up yields on junk bonds last week. The average yield on 100 junk
issues tracked by KDP Investment Advisors ended the week at 7.81%, up
from 7.62% on Monday and the highest since June.

By contrast, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note slid to 4.12% by
Friday from 4.28% on Monday.

These may look like small shifts. But for hedge funds and other
traders that make money by betting that market moves will be
correlated in predictable ways, even mildly disjointed markets can be
a nightmare.

They also can present opportunities. Bill Gross, the Newport Beach
bond market guru who manages the Pimco Total Return bond fund, said
late last week that he had been buying some of the shorter-term bonds
of Ford Motor Credit Co., the financing arm of the automaker, which
S&P also downgraded to junk on May 5.

With yields north of 7.5% on bonds maturing in two years or less,
Gross said he considered the return to be worth the risk.

"We've started to dip in," he said.

At the same time, Gross said, there's ample reason to be concerned
that other shocks loom in the financial system, as tighter credit
exposes ill-conceived investment bets.

"I think there's more unwinding to go," he said.


-- 
"C'mon Mr. Krinkle, tell me why" [Primus]

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