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Goldman Junk Article

 Goldman, Merrill Almost `Junk,' Their Own Traders Say (Update2)
 2007-03-02 10:08 (New York)


     (Adds stock index performance in 12th paragraph, and
 earnings in 16th paragraph.)

 By Shannon D. Harrington
     March 2 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill
 Lynch & Co. and Morgan Stanley, which earned a record $24.5
 billion in 2006, suddenly have become so speculative that their
 own traders are valuing the three biggest securities firms as
 barely more creditworthy than junk bonds.
     Prices for credit-default swaps linked to the bonds of the
 New York investment banks this week traded at levels that equate
 to debt ratings of Baa2, according to Moody's Investors Service.
 For Goldman, Morgan Stanley and Merrill that's five levels below
 the actual Aa3 rating on their senior unsecured notes and two
 steps above non-investment grade, or junk.
     Traders of credit derivatives are more alarmed than stock
 and bond investors that a slowdown in housing and the global
 equity market rout have hurt the firms. Merrill since 2005 has
 financed two mortgage lenders that subsequently failed and bought
 a third, First Franklin Financial Corp., for $1.3 billion.
     ``These guys have made a lot of money securitizing mortgages
 over the years in a mortgage boom time,'' said Richard Hofmann,
 an analyst at bond research firm Credit Sights? Inc. in New York.
 ``The question now is what is the exposure to credit risk and
 what are the potential revenue headwinds if they're not able to
 keep that securitization machine humming along.''
     Credit-default swaps on the debt of Goldman, the world's
 biggest securities firm, have risen to $32,775 per $10 million in
 bonds, up from $21,500 at the start of the year, according to
 prices compiled by London-based CMA Datavision. The price touched
 $35,000 on Feb. 28, the highest since June 2005. 
     Spokesmen and spokeswomen for Goldman, Lehman, Merrill and
 Morgan Stanley declined to comment. A spokeswoman for Bear
 Stearns didn't immediately return calls for comment.

                       Conceived to Protect

     Morgan Stanley and Goldman were among the top five traders
 of credit-default swaps in 2005, a group that represented 86
 percent of the market, according to a September Fitch Ratings
 report. Lehman, Merrill and Bear Stearns were among the top 12.
     Credit-default swaps that trade at such wide gaps below
 actual ratings tend to rally, said David Munves, director of
 Moody's credit strategy research group.
     The contracts were conceived by Wall Street to protect
 bondholders against default and pay the buyer face value in
 exchange for the underlying securities should the company fail to
 adhere to debt agreements. An increase in price indicates a
 decline in the perception of creditworthiness; a drop means the
 opposite.
     Contracts tied to Morgan Stanley, Merrill, Lehman Brothers
 Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. also are at 19-month highs.

                          Rising Prices

     Morgan Stanley credit swaps have risen $10,000 to $32,775
 this year, CMA data show. Contracts on Merrill jumped $16,500 to
 $33,000. For Lehman, they are up $12,440 to $34,440, and the
 swaps on Bear Stearns have climbed $12,080 to $33,830.
     By contrast, Deutsche Bank AG in Frankfurt, Germany, is
 trading near a record low at 9,800 euros, according to data
 compiled by Bloomberg. And, a Standard & Poor's index of
 investment bank stocks has fallen 6.29 percent this year.
     The increases were larger than an index that measures credit
 risk for investment-grade companies in North America. The cost of
 protecting $10 million in debt included in the Dow Jones CDX
 North America Investment Grade Index has risen $1,250 to $34,750
 this year, according to Deutsche Bank prices.
     Lehman and Bear Stearns credit swaps traded as if their debt
 were rated four levels lower than their A1 rankings. High-yield,
 high-risk notes, or junk bonds, are rated below Baa3 at Moody's
 and lower than BBB- at S&P.

                           More Bearish

     Credit-default swap investors are more bearish than
 bondholders, data from Moody's Market Implied Ratings service
 shows. As of Feb. 28, the bonds of Goldman and Morgan Stanley
 were trading as if the debt were rated a step below Moody's
 official rating. Goldman has $171.6 billion in bonds outstanding,
 according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Morgan Stanley has
 $168.5 billion.
     Last year was the best ever for the five biggest Wall
 Street firms, whose combined profit rose 33 percent to $132.5
 billion.
     Subprime mortgages, loans taken out by homebuyers with poor
 or limited credit histories, typically charge rates at least two
 or three percentage points above safer, so-called prime loans.
 They made up about a fifth of all new mortgages last year,
 according to the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association.

                         Subprime Turmoil

     At least 20 lenders have shut down, scaled back or been sold
 this year. Countrywide Financial Corp., the biggest U.S. mortgage
 lender, yesterday said borrowers were at least 30 days past due
 at the end of last year on almost a fifth of the subprime loans
 that it serviced for others.
     ``There's been a little bit of a reappraisal of the
 financial sector, with a strong desire to get away from subprime
 exposure,'' said Scott Mac Donald?, director of research at Aladdin
 Capital Management LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, which manages
 $16.5 billion in assets.
     Merrill equity analysts two days ago cut their
 recommendations on Goldman, Lehman and Bear Stearns shares as
 well as that of European banks Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse
 Group to ``neutral from ``buy because they said earnings will
 probably decline next month as investors become wary.
     Bear Stearns's stake in non-investment grade retained
 mortgage securities, or what its keeps from packaging loans into
 bonds, represents about 13 percent of the firm's ``tangible''
 equity, according to Credit Sights?.
     For Lehman, it's 11 percent. Goldman, Morgan Stanley and
 Merrill don't disclose how much of their total retained
 securities are rated below investment grade, or junk. Overall,
 their exposure is in ``the low- to mid-teens,'' Credit Sights?
 said.

                       Disclosure `Lacking'

     ``Disclosures are kind of lacking,'' Hofmann at Credit Sights?
 said in an interview. ``They don't tend to break out the subprime
 piece of their retained interest.''
     Losses also may come from the banks' trading in mortgage
 bonds and derivatives tied to them, the firm said. An index of
 derivatives based on 20 mortgage securities rated BBB- and
 created in the second half of last year has fallen by more than a
 third since last month.
     Companies with similar gaps between their actual rankings
 and ratings implied by credit-default swap levels have
 outperformed their peers 87 percent of the time over a one-year
 horizon, he said. Because an active credit swaps market has
 existed for less than a decade, that percentage is based on only
 37 observations, Munves at Moody's said.
    At the same time, the same companies had an above-average
 risk of being downgraded, with about 22 percent of them having
 their ratings cut, he said.
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Page last modified on March 02, 2007, at 06:35 PM