Here's The Bomb That Might Blow A Hole In Bank Of America...*
Image: Corey Nachman, Business Insider
The bank raised $5 billion by selling preferred stock and options to Warren Buffett—diluting common shareholders in the process. And now, as previously promised, it has sold half its stake in China Construction Bank for $8 billion.
These moves are good news for the bank's employees and shareholders, as well as for the U.S. taxpayer, which will be on the hook if Bank of America's management flies the company into a mountain.
But many analysts believe that Bank of America will need to raise a lot more capital before it gets back on sound footing.
These analysts believe that Bank of America is still overstating the value of some of the assets on its balance sheet. When the company is finally forced to recognize the real values of these assets, this theory goes, the bank will once again have to fill a major capital hole.
Last week, we described the general concerns of one analyst, who is focused on a specific portion of Bank of America's humongous balance sheet: The company's portfolio of residential mortgages and home equity loans.
Below, we put some numbers on this possible exposure. Based on the analysis below, in this one asset category alone, Bank of America could be under-reserved by tens of billions of dollars. And that doesn't include its ongoing litigation exposure.
OVERVIEW
As we described last week, the analyst we spoke to is concerned that the performance of Bank of America's whole loans (mortgages and home equity loans) will ultimately mirror the performance of a national pool of "securitized" mortgage loans that were made during the housing bubble.
(The analyst is not a "short-seller." But he wants to preserve his anonymity so Bank of America and others won't be mad at him.)
Bank analysts have much more detail on the performance of the industry-wide securitized loan pool than they do on the individual banks' whole loans. And the analyst thinks it is fair to use the performance of the securitized loan portfolio as a proxy for the banks' whole loan portfolios.
The embedded losses in the national securitized loan portfolio are much higher than the losses Bank of America and other big U.S. banks have reported thus far on their whole loan portfolios. And the analyst believes that the banks are using the leeway given them by U.S. accounting rules to make the whole loan portfolios look better than they actually are. (Presenting a rosy view of loans allows the banks to avoid taking write-offs and, thus, avoid having to raise additional capital and further diluting their shareholders.)
Specifically, a recent analysis of the industry-wide portfolio of securitized loans by Amherst Securities breaks them down as follows:
TOTAL SECURITIZED LOANS: 4.6 million loans worth $1.2 trillion
This is made up of:
- ALWAYS PERFORMING LOANS: 2.2 million loans worth $606 billion, 51% of total principal
- NON-PERFORMING LOANS (in default): 1.4 million loans worth $370 billion, 31% of total principal
- "RE-PERFORMING" LOANS (loans that were in default that are now performing, at least temporarily): ~900,000 loans worth $204 billion, 17% of total principal
So, in other words, of all the securitized loans outstanding, 49% (~$600 billion) are troubled, of which 31% (~$370 billion) are in default.
And there are two other points to keep in mind about the securitized loan pool:
- The "recovery rate" on Non-Performing non-prime loans is only 36% (this is the portion of the original money owed that the lender gets back after foreclosure)
- A net 2% of the "Re-Performing loans" become "non-performing" again each month (based on the May-June rate).
Assuming the industry-wide whole loan pool looks similar to the securitized pool—which the analyst I've talked to thinks is a fair assumption, given that they were both originated late in the housing bubble when home prices were high—we should eventually expect to see similar performance on the banks' whole loan portfolios.
Image: Elite Houses
How much exposure does Bank of America have to residential real-estate loans? How is Bank of America saying these loans are performing? How much has the bank reserved for possible loan losses? Is it possible there are tens of billions of dollars of "embedded" losses hidden on the balance sheet?
These are the questions Bank of America analysts have to ask, even though Bank of America is not providing enough information to determine definitive answers.
As of June 30, per Bank of America's financial statements, here's what Bank of America's residential whole loan portfolio looked like:
- Total residential loans: $413 billion (Composed primarily of $265 billion of first and second mortgages and $132 billion of home-equity loans—the latter of which are generally junior to the first mortgages and, thanks to plummeting house prices, may no longer have any actual "home equity" backing them up).
- Total non-performing loans (per Bank of America): $19 billion, or 5% of the portfolio
- Total provisions for loan losses: $21 billion, or 5% of the portfolio
In other words, Bank of America has classified 5% of its loan portfolio as "non-performing" and reserved $21 billion to cover the expected losses from these and other loans that go bad.
So how does that compare to the performance of the securitized loan portfolio described above?
It looks downright fantastic!
In the securitized portfolio, 31% of the loans are "non-performing," versus only 5% of Bank of America's. And another 17% of the securitized loans are "re-performing," many of which will slip back into non-performing.
*UPDATE: A sharp reader points out that the definition of "non-performing" is different for the securitized loans versus the bank loans, so this is comparing apples and oranges. (My mistake--I'm sorry.). The comparable level of "non-performing" loans on an apples-to-apples basis would be 15% or 20% for Bank of America (depending on whether you focus on first mortgages only--20%--or include home-equity loans). Some other factors do mitigate this and make BOFA's situation worse, so the general conclusion is the same. See the addendum below for all the arcane details.
What scares the analyst I spoke to is his belief that much of Bank of America's loan portfolio may actually be just as bad if not worse than the securitized portfolio, despite what Bank of America is telling everyone.
In other words, the analyst thinks that 35% or more of Bank of America's loans might end up going into default, versus the 5% 15%-20% the bank says are in default today.
So how much would Bank of America have to take in losses if the analyst is right? (Or, put differently, how much would Bank of America have to increase its loan-loss provisions by to account for the likely performance of these loans?)
This analysis is very complex, even with the data available, and it involves several different types and classes of loans (first mortgages, second mortgages, home-equity loans, accruals, non-accruals, etc.). To keep things relatively simple, I'm going to take a very broad-brush approach. Doing this involves some technical inaccuracies, but it gets us to basically the same place.
Assuming Bank of America's loans mirror those in the securitized portfolio, here's a look at what the numbers might look like:
- Total residential loans: $413 billion
- Total non-performing: 31%, or $128 billion (vs. ~$19 billion currently, using the bank definition of "non-performing"--$60 billion or so, if you use the securitization methodology )
- Total re-performing: 17%, or $70 billion
In other words, if the securitized pool proves a reasonable proxy for Bank of America's loans, about 35% Bank of America's $413 billion of residential real-estate loans, or ~$145 billion, might eventually be in trouble—the non-performing percentage, plus a portion of the "re-performing."
(Of course, this "proxy" concept is a rough analysis. But without having detailed performance data on Bank of America's loans like we have on the securitized loans, it's impossible to get a clear picture of the situation.)
The next question is what sort of "recovery" Bank of America might get from these loans—and, therefore, what its loan-loss provisions should be.
As you'll recall, the "recovery rate" for non-performing loans in the securitized pool—the loans that go to foreclosure—is a dismal 36%. Loans that are permanently modified with a principal reduction, meanwhile (according to my analyst's estimate) might be expected to have a new carrying value of about 70% of the original loan amount.
If Bank of America's resolution of its potentially troubled loans were accomplished via foreclosure or principal writedowns, and its recovery rates mirrored those in the securitized loan pool, Bank of America might end up losing about 50% of the value of these loans.
So, what is Bank of America's exposure under this scenario?
A lot more than is currently reserved.
Possibly many tens of billions of dollars more.
BOTTOM LINE
It's possible that the analyst I've spoken with is wrong and that Bank of America's whole loans are vastly superior to the loans in the securitized pool—and, therefore, that its loan loss provisions are conservative.
It's also possible that the housing market and economy will soon start to recover in earnest and that lots of non-performing and "re-performing" loans will quickly become fully performing again.
But it's also possible that the housing market and economy will continue to deteriorate, in which case the performance of the securitized loan pool—and Bank of America's loans—might get even worse.
And it's possible that the analyst's logic is sound and that Bank of America will ultimately have to face the reality that the losses embedded in its whole loan portfolio are VASTLY higher than it has currently admitted and that it needs a lot more capital to offset them.
And this is only Bank of America's residential loans were talking about—we haven't even gotten to the commercial real-estate loans, consumer credit loans, European exposure, derivatives, and other exposures on the company's $2.2 trillion balance sheet. Or the potentially enormous liabilities associated with the mortgage-underwriting behavior of Bank of America's subsidiary, Countrywide, for which the company seems to be hit with a new lawsuit every other day.
So it's no wonder that some analysts are persuaded that Bank of America needs to raise more capital.
ADDENDUM:
Here are some more specifics on the status of Bank of America's mortgage portolio:
The bank has a total of $60 billion of loans that are "troubled"--15% of its overall $413 billion portfolio. This includes loans that are 30-89 days past due ($12 billion) and loans that are 90+ days past due ($49 billion). These troubled loans are composed of both first mortgages ($56 billion) and home-equity loans ($4 billion). Of the total first mortgages on the bank's balance sheet, nearly 20% are past due. Of the total home-equity loans, only 3% are past due.
The delinquent percentage on the HELOCs is surprisingly low. The analyst we spoke to speculates that this is because homeowners are using the HELOCs as a source of ready cash, and they don't want to lose access to it. So they are staying up to date on the HELOCs even as they go delinquent on their first mortgages. This makes the analyst concerned that the HELOCs are a much bigger risk to Bank of America than the low delinquency percentage would suggest. Many of them are likely junior to first mortgages on houses whose value has plummeted, so they may not be backed up by any equity in the houses.
Overall, 15% of Bank of America's loans are in some form of delinquency, which would be categorized as "non-performing" in the securitized pool of loans discussed above. (Under the bank's definition of non-performing, only 5% are non-performing.) On top of this percentage, however, the bank also has the HELOCs, which the analyst believes are far flimsier than they appear. And the analyst is also concerned that we don't have a clear picture of the rate at which Bank of America's loans move from one bucket to another (in other words, loans that were delinquent becoming temporarily "re-performing").
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on Aug 31, 6:31 AM said:
Not that BofA isn't the worst of the worst- it is. But what about Wells (another warren buffett special)? I believe they're holding about $100 billion in CA second mortgages on their books at par right now when that particular paper is worth $0 (no creditor will see a nickel on a HELOC they made when a CA house that was once selling for $700k which now sitting in the $300s)
on Aug 31, 6:44 AM said:
Insider trading and crony capitalism at its worst.
on Aug 31, 8:02 AM said:
The truth of the matter is that my good friend Warren Buffet invested in this bank and he seems to think they're pretty sound. Now, I don't know about you, but I'm not about to tell ol' Warren here that he's wrong. Seems to have done ok for himself.
[Laughter]
Now, now... alright. Ok. Now, what I will say is this: This is America. And this is Bank of America. If they can't stand on their own two legs then we will help them out. If they need one hundred billion dollars, they they'll get one hundred billion dollars. If they need more, I'll give them some more.
My uncle Onyango once told me: "Baracky my little lad, the thing you got to know about this place is that...." and then he kind of fell asleep. But, what he was trying to say was that the government has unlimited resources, available for anybody: citizen or not, individual or corporation, as long as you vote the right way.
Thanks for your time [smiles], and remember: you can donate to my campaign through my website. www.tellthemwhattheywanttohear.gov.
BHO
on Aug 31, 8:15 AM said:
how can the government prosecute any of these dirtballs when they're just doing their bidding anyways?
Showing top 5 of 18 replies. View All
Furthermore, Buffett, the insider's insider, just dumped $5 billion into BAC. That means that the fix is in, and QE3 money will be used to buy BAC's junk MBS at full face value. We've seen this movie before, it was called, "Buffett buys $5 billion in preferred Goldman Sachs stock right before a bailout is announced". In case you forgot, the movie ends with Buffett making billions of dollars.
On a related point, I'd love to go long on a 'Blodget / BI minions' short portfolio ... I'm confident I can make a lot of money on that trade ...
How is this justified under accounting rules or sarbanes- oxley?
on Aug 31, 6:54 AM said:
So once again the whores of wall St. will use those "earnings" numbers to award themselves with riches come bonus time and then act all surprised in 6 months when they go bust because they're undercapitalized (of course your undercapitalized- you keep extracting all the available capital as bonuses leaving an empty shell of a company)
(URL) on Aug 31, 6:40 AM said:
Take a look at the chart I have posted showing the 9-month cycle. You will see that we are in the 6th move within the major movement. The clock is ticking....
One question no one has discussed is how much of the DoA mortgages came from the acquisition of Countrywide. My guess is 90% if not more. This is even more powder for BofA's guns in asking the Fed to backstop the loans since the Countrywide acquisition was ostensibly done at the Fed's request.
Visit one of the tent cities around the country and ask them what they think about another bailout. Better yet, tell a U.S. Marine that he's going to have to give up his GI bill education so that we can bail out another financial institution because their fraud caught up with them.
on Aug 31, 8:00 AM said:
Lately even the MSM has run front-page stories about federal waste in spending on e.g. Homeland Security, the Federal Reserve $1.4 TRILLION bailout out foreign banks, commentary on how "stimulus" has hugely benefitted banks while delivering little/nothing to non-elites (i.e. ordinary Americans); where's the reaction/outrage?
The sad fact is that the vast majority of Americans is too busy just trying to get by -- there's no time/energy left at the end of the day to take effective political action.
People who read BI, ZH and Naked Capitalism are an insignificant minority and, no matter how great our alarm about the way the country is being run, there are too few of us to have any political impact.
Banks, multi-national corporations and public sector unions are far better organized and funded, and they aren't going to fight the system -- they ARE the system.
Folks who live in tent cities probably don't vote.
"It's also possible that the housing market and economy will soon start to recover in earnest and that lots of non-performing and "re-performing" loans will quickly become fully performing again." -- Try again?
"But it's also possible that the housing market and economy will continue to deteriorate, in which case the performance of the securitized loan pool--and Bank of America's loans--might get even worse." -- Bingo
"And this is only Bank of America's residential loans were talking about--we haven't even gotten to the commercial real-estate loans, consumer credit loans, European exposure, derivatives, and other exposures on the company's $2.2 trillion balance sheet. Or the potentially enormous liabilities associated with the mortgage-underwriting behavior of Bank of America's subsidiary Countrywide, for which the company seems to be hit with a new lawsuit every other day."
BAC's pathetic denial/coverup for the fact, and its utter desperation stank from three miles away even before Buffet's cronyism-extraordinaire bathtub loan. Now if someone could call Dick Bove and tell him to stop inhaling whatever he does.
And Henry you should really print some T-Shirt's about this.
Who audits this bank? . . . . Count Chocula?
The theory here is that the securitized pool should be a decent proxy for Bofa's loans.
Think about this: We are cutting pension and benefits to military personnel to bail out fraudulent banks. Repubs and Dems BOTH get massive campaign funding from the banks... its not a one party issue.
on Aug 31, 6:48 AM said:
If the blogosphere -- ZH, Naked Capitalism, BI, et al. -- can finally gain some traction for telling truth about America's TBTF Welfare Queens, perhaps political pressure from Main Street will finally have some effect.
As it is, we (non-elites) just keep getting screwed from behind and told that it is for our own good.
"The "recovery rate" on Non-Performing non-prime loans is only 36% (this is the portion of the original money owed that the lender gets back after foreclosure)"
then later, you have a simplified:
"As you'll recall, the "recovery rate" for non-performing loans in the securitized pool--the loans that go to foreclosure--is a dismal 36%."
the first statement specified *non-prime* loans. so can you really take the failure rate of non-performing, non-prime loans and apply it across all of the suspected non-performing loans in BAC's residential portfolio? there are plenty of prime loans among their holdings. performing or not, a prime loan is still a different beast from a non-prime one.
granted, you mitigate this somewhat by assuming that some loans will be handled with a principal reduction that leads to a smaller loss rate. but this is still a discrepancy that needs to be addressed. what is the recovery rate on prime non-performing loans?
However, think they are still under reserved for the whole loan book (just not as much as Henry calcs) and especially in other product categories Henry mentioned like commercial mtg, heloc, and consumers.
But no matter how bad it gets, there's a simple solution. Since the banks effectively control the federal government through their large campaign contributions, at some point Geithner and Bernanke will simply swap the bad mortgages out for government guaranteed ones. They're already doing this with the bad debt on the European banks' books by providing swap lines to their U.S. branches. And to prevent anyone from talking about it, in addition to short selling bans, they will probably enact laws similar to the states' "veggie libel" laws, which would provide criminal penalties for anyone badmouthing the TBTFs. Think I'm joking? Hide and watch.
and non-lawyer pundits on Huffington Post and Ambulance Chasers musings and off the cuff analises may not have all that much integrity from a legal standpoint
on Aug 31, 8:28 AM said:
Your sceuritized portfolio has 49% performing. and the remianing is 36% recovery.
Do you realy think that only 49% of loans nationwide are performing? No, of course you don't, it's closer to 80-85%, but don't let that stop you from reaching your own conclusion.
Also, in your rush to judgment you labeled "always performing loans" as "troubled", yes, I suppose troubled for bears like you, a better analysis off the top fo my head with no review would be
75% performing
25% non-performing or re-written and half of that insured or guaranteed
That leaves at most 12.5% at risk to B of A equity
B of A has 45 billion or 3.6% reserved
That leaves an extra $64 billion to write off. Tangible book is $14.40 per share, less $6 per share = $8.40
see, I got the answer I wanted, and mine is a hell of a lot closer than yours
on Aug 31, 9:02 AM said:
its actually 52% rounded up from 51.67%
Instead of Buffet investing in something productive, he spends it on a dog like BofA -- I know, I know. It's his money and he can do what he wants with it. Nevertheless...for the sake of argument, how many brand new, environmentally friendly factories could have been built and staffed in the US for that same 5bil? 50, 100? In the long run, the factories would do this country far more good than propping up a bank that is so incompetent and/or corrupt, it can't tell the difference between no mortgage, an on time mortgage and a late mortgage.
on Aug 31, 10:41 AM said:
I don't believe, from personal experience, that America is any longer "the best country in the world" and I'm tired of hearing it mindlessly repeated over and over again.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
http://www.gelending.com/Clg/Resources/lendingFAQs.html#Faq17
http://img.hisupplier.com/var/userImages/2008-04/25/cn-saneboon_085948.jpg
“Our non-standard measures do not in any way impinge upon our capacity to design our monetary policy stance to deliver price stability in the medium term,” Trichet said today at a conference of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, today."
What the hell is meant by 'medium term'?
The all are, it's called Mark to Model rather than Mark to Market (Value). Legalized accounting fraud desired by FASB and approved by CONgress.
on Aug 31, 9:30 AM said:
If you wrote articles like this everyday(and had your people as well), you would be getting 100 bazillion page clicks every day.
We are screwed as a nation because no one with the power will bring these criminals down.
This is how you go from 1st world to 3rd world.
I doubt you've ever lived in the 3rd world, I doubt you even know what the term really means and how it originated, but don't let that stop your ridiculous hyperbole.
You have 3 of the most ludicrous comments I have ever read on here all in the same post, and that is up against some pretty stiff competition
Start with your hero, Sarah Palin and her soon to be running mate, Rick "It's hot in Texas!" Perry. You Teabaggers are funny.
on Aug 31, 3:03 PM said:
That's the problem, my dear, too many of us have just STFU for too long.
Over the past three years the federal government has spent untold trillions in bailouts and stimulus; over time and in drips and drabs, the truth is emerging that ALL of it has been wasted -- the banks (world wide) are still insolvent and the American economy is still in the crapper.
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act..." (George Orwell)
Viva la Revolucion!!!
The banks including BAC have paid TARP back in full with interest mere months after receiving what amounted to a bridge loan to get them past a panicked market. Like I said when you don't know what you are talking about it's best to just STFU.
on Sep 5, 8:50 AM said:
And TARP wasn't even close to the biggest taxpayer ripoff in favor of the TBTFs -- ZIP probably earns that distinction.
There have been dozens of stories published about all of the government handouts that continue in favor of the TBTFs. It's laughable for you to assert that repaying TARP was the end of it!
I won't tell you to STFU but I will suggest that all you're doing is embarrassing yourself with your defense of BAC.
The funny thing is no one at Amherst seems to know what report you are referring to. care to provide a link or date of the report?
Thanks