Monday, November 30, 2009

Dubiety* about Dubai

*Word of the Day

The request for re-scheduling payment of principal on a maturing Islamic bond caused some screeching by the bears who are trying to start a bigger fire on fears of "what else" ?

First, what is Dubai ? Dubai is a sheikdom within the United Arab Emirates which itself is a federation of seven independent emirates. In classical terms, it's a city-state run by a monarch. How big is it ? Dubai has about 1,000,000 people, but only 20% are citizens. The rest are ex-patriates and guest workers. Where did I find out this information ? Not from any news reports or newspapers stories. They lazily don't tell us. I went to the US State Department website.

Dubai created a number of development companies to manage its hotels, tourism and port businesses. The company in trouble is a real estate company. Gosh, it's such a shock that a real estate company in a formerly "hot" location would get into trouble in a global recession.

What is an Islamic bond ? I don't know, but from poor descriptions in the press, I get the impression it's like a sale-leaseback, where the property/assets are sold to some legal entity, and the seller (borrower) pays rent, not interest explicitly, to the lenders. After some time, the seller buys the property/assets back. So an Islamic bond seems like a sale-leaseback coupled with a fixed price repurchase agreement. The analogous structure was rather common in the US until the mid 1970s until new accounting rules offset its legal and security benefits.

What does this highlight ? The economic risk in ANY debt that requires a large payment of principal at maturity ( a "balloon") is MUCH higher that any debt that requires small payments over time, like a home mortgage or a sinking fund bond. If the maturity happens to fall in a period of economic stress, the likelihood of trouble in re-paying that bond hugely increases. That's why the junk bond market gets hit so hard in recessions, yet recovers so fast when the ability to refinance resumes. Analytically, you can see that the correlation of risk & reward to the economy for balloon debt is much higher than for debt that amortizes slowly.

The bond markets started to prefer bonds with fixed balloon maturities in the 1970s. They were wrong. What made trading easier incurred more economic risk which was not compensated in interest rates. The old ways were better. Bring back sinking fund bonds and mortgage bonds.

OK, I am rambling. Yup. But the Dubai debt rescheduling is the screech of a mouse. No big deal at all. It's about like Las Vegas - another city in a desert - defaulting on a global scale. Smaller, even, as oil-rich Abu Dhabi is backing the Dubai banking system. Those banks probably own a majority of the debt at risk. Thus, it's even less that a default by Las Vegas, It's like the default of a few casinos. Hmmmm ... gosh, that's already happening in Las Vegas. Yawwwwwwn.

Actions

I'm cautiously making some speculative buys. I picked up some S&P calls on Friday and some HBC calls, too. I'm phasing this speculation in to see how this panic unfolds. I think it will be over in a few days. On Friday the US jobs numbers comes out. I expect a good number and then a rally to new recovery highs.

Word of the Day

"Dubiety" - noun [$10]
Dubiety means 1. a feeling of doubt; 2. a doubtful matter
Sentence: The debt rescheduling by a major Dubai company is causing a return of dubiety over any heavily leveraged nations.

NOTE: did you notice that poetic title, with its alliteration, assonance, consonance and internal rhyme ?

32 comments:

Bud said...

good morning Bman !!!!



all i want for xmas is a stronger dollar............oh well

Bud said...

yeah i f'ng noticed the cute title.................you know what else i noticed????


a bunch of thumping tosh

Bud said...

this dubai world default has potentially horrific consequences.......ummmm.......or as you like to call it


rich man's panic 2010......the global version




PS...........what else is out there ???

Bud said...

tiger woods ................lmaooooooooooooooooooooo




wife beating drunk

Bud said...

uhhh Bman.......what papers are you reading ???


i only been reading the wsj and the ft..............and both had those rather simple rudimentary facts about dubai in their articles

Bud said...

Bman did you read dr bernanke over the weekend ??


i agree with him..............but the knaves in dc are on a mission

mfl59 said...

Tiger Woods.....comedy....

lmaoooooooooooooooooooooooo

Bunkerman said...

yes, I know - the articles were poor (FT was better)... I went online to find out more re Dubai.

I read BBC news online, too.

Sometimes the Economist (I subscribe tot eh magazine, but don't read it much.)

Bunkerman said...

I didn't read Bernanke, but agree with what I saw in summaries of him.

Congerss should keep its hands off the Fed. Very dangerous.

maverick said...

uhmmm... I think you mean husband beater..Elin

Frosty said...

what a great week...one winner after another...NAILED IT NAILED IT NAILED...thanks Mike.

Frosty said...

X...GS upgrade...they read Mike's email...I think so.

Frosty said...

chicago PMI employment index report of 41.9 from 38.3...the helmet is mine...all mine...my own helmet.

Bunkerman said...

just heard on Blabberg that there is only $22 billion of foreign currency debt in Dubai, the rest is local.

I think I'll buy some more calls today.

Bunkerman said...

that news on Dubai plus the good PMI number is the trigger for me today.

mfl59 said...

anyone have a definition for data sculpting? or fitting data to fit one's thesis?

Frosty said...

painting horns on a doe I see...may I suggest cleaning the fog from your scope sir.

Frosty said...

delhomme, eli manning and hasselbeck walk into a bar........

Spin-em said...

Tiger not drunk...so hes a hot head who got caught cheating snakes out on hydrant tree when he gets called out...so pissed at himself he goes off... spinpinion

does it in public...sort of a cry for help....sounds like the summer all over again....Tiger...you will be sorely missed

Bud said...

well well well


no more 'you people' comments from frosty ??? smart...... i guess that's a 'surrender'.......another one in the W column for me


'callin off the dogs'

Frosty said...

Sal...are you familiar with Sunny Leone...fine lookin dothead indeed...do you think it tastes like curry chicken sir, $1.98lb.

Frosty said...

FEMALE ALERT..RUN SAL RUN...that was easy, I think so.

Frosty said...

Bunky...what is the fine for hunting doe out of season sir...thx in advance.

Bunkerman said...

not sure, frosty, being the law-abiding person I am.

Bud said...

Bman what is the best way for me to get exposure to the VIX?


VIX calls ? do you trade them....or have ever ?

mfl59 said...

Bud how can we wait until Saturday for the greatest football game of the year to date? Rutgers-W Virginia kicks off at noon...

Bud said...

my apologies ace..............ray rice phenomenal last nite..........they guy can play in the nfl no doubt.........i was wrong about him


'the house that ray rice built'

Bunkerman said...

have never traded them.

but IF one wanted exposure, the calls would do it.

Bunkerman said...

VIX calls - I think taht's a fifth level derivative

derivative of a dirivative ... five times.

Bunkerman said...

let's see ... VIX is based on volatility in SPX calls, I think.

SPX - 1
calls - 2
volatilty - 3
calls on vol. - 4

fourth level derivative.

what a scam !

mfl59 said...

It takes a real man to admit a mistake...kudos Bud...I'll make a note in my journal...

Bud said...

'5thlevel derivative'



lmaoooooooooooooooooooooooooooo