A couple of thoughts regarding the bailout:
1). the $700 bln will be paid by installments ($250/100/350 bln). How much existing "toxic assets" on major financial institutions' B/S now? how much more assets we may expect to be downgraded to be "toxic" in the coming future?
2). the answer to the first question depends largely on the housing market, as you elaborated. Maybe more accurately, depends on the Default rate and Delinquent rate. Here comes three factors for the Default rate: housing price, unemployment rate, and the housing inventory absorption rate. To make things even more complicated, we don't know how many % of the mortgage payers are for pure investing/speculating, and how many % for self-occupancy.
3). above are just RMBS (maybe some CMBS). How much other ABS, underlying assets of credit card receivables/car loans/student loans, are under the danger of downgrading? How serious it is about that pool of "toxic assets candidates"?
Any comment?
1). the $700 bln will be paid by installments ($250/100/350 bln). How much existing "toxic assets" on major financial institutions' B/S now? how much more assets we may expect to be downgraded to be "toxic" in the coming future?
2). the answer to the first question depends largely on the housing market, as you elaborated. Maybe more accurately, depends on the Default rate and Delinquent rate. Here comes three factors for the Default rate: housing price, unemployment rate, and the housing inventory absorption rate. To make things even more complicated, we don't know how many % of the mortgage payers are for pure investing/speculating, and how many % for self-occupancy.
3). above are just RMBS (maybe some CMBS). How much other ABS, underlying assets of credit card receivables/car loans/student loans, are under the danger of downgrading? How serious it is about that pool of "toxic assets candidates"?
Any comment?