NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Annaly Capital Management, Inc. (NYSE: NLY) released its monthly
commentary for February. With this month's commentary, the company is
changing its naming convention to match the month in which it is
released. Through its monthly commentary and blog, Annaly Salvos on
the Markets and the Economy (Annaly
Salvos), Annaly expresses its thoughts and opinions on issues and
events in the financial markets. Please visit the Resource
Center of our website (www.annaly.com),
to see the complete commentary
with charts and graphs.
The Economy
On January 29th, the Bureau of Economic Analysis released the
advance reading for GDP in the fourth quarter of 2009: growth of 5.7% on
an annualized basis, versus 2.2% in the previous quarter and (5.4%) in
the year-ago period. The details of the release were met with mixed
reviews. The major contributor to growth, as was widely reported, was
the change in private inventories. The adjustment in inventories added
3.4% of the 5.7% total, or very nearly 60%. Inventories didn't actually
grow, they simply shrank at a slower pace. Economists, analysts, and
investors seem to be split into two camps, and persuasive arguments can
be made for either. "Give me a one-handed economist," demanded President
Harry Truman, in vain:
-- On one hand - A slower inventory decline is not the same as a recovery.
With all this government stimulus, shouldn't we be seeing more robust
growth? The mighty fiscal and monetary effort has relatively little to
show for it.
-- On the other hand - Inventories always lead the rest of the economy, so
this presages more to come. It doesn't matter where growth comes from,
it's here.
Both sides have a point. Fortunately, the quarterly release from the BEA
comes with other data, including personal income and spending, to help
shed light on the headline GDP growth number. Readers of our
blog know that we've been watching the labor market closely, and
readers of past
commentaries will be familiar with real personal income less
transfer payments, which we've renamed real organic personal income
(ROPI) for our purposes here. In our online
version we present a chart that highlights the long-term
relationship between ROPI growth and GDP growth (both measured as
year-over-year percent change, not the BEA's quarter-over-quarter
annualized method).
The relationship has historically been fairly tight--an 88%
correlation--but you'll see that we've highlighted recent anomalous
behavior. The current spread between year-over-year ROPI growth and GDP
growth is a record -417 basis points (bps), meaning that GDP has grown
0.10% while ROPI has shrunk by 4.07%. The next widest
historic spread is nearly 100 bps narrower, in the 3rd
quarter of 1983, when the country was several quarters beyond the double
dip recession. That spread was between 5.64% GDP growth and 2.46% for
income, both positive, and very different than our current situation of
growth in GDP coupled with near-record declines in income.
One reason that this income/GDP correlation is so tight is because of
the intuitively simple relationship between ROPI and consumption.
Lately, however, that relationship has broken down. As the graph in our online
version shows, real personal consumption expenditures have not
subsided as much as income.
In another post-War first for our country, real consumption is higher
than real personal income less transfer payments. The spread between the
two is shown on the right hand axis. Considerable government effort has
gone towards stimulating consumption, which seems to be having the
desired effect. While inventory adjustments grabbed the GDP headlines,
personal consumption expenditures added 1.4%, or about 25%, to GDP
growth. We doubt that the current relationship between income and
consumption is sustainable, but disequilibriums can, and do, sometimes
last for much longer than anyone thinks possible.
The Residential Mortgage Market
In December (January release) prepayment speeds for aggregate 30-year
Fannie Mae fixed-rate mortgages increased by 28% from 14.5 Constant
Prepayment Rate (CPR) to 15.3 CPR. The higher coupons of 6%, 6.5% and 7%
led the increase, speeding up by 32%, 42% and 39%, respectively,
bringing them back to prepayment speed levels of October. Most analysts
are mixed about what to expect in the months ahead. While some believe
HAMP modifications and lower rates will easily offset the day count
difference from December to January, others suggest that HAMP-related
buyouts will be noisy and slow to come, similar to the spike in speeds
on 6.5s and 7s that arrived in December after their surprisingly slow
November prints.
Today, Freddie Mac announced it would purchase "substantially all" 120
day or more delinquent loans from the company's related fixed-rate and
adjustable-rate mortgage-backed securities pools. Freddie further gave a
timeline of the buyouts stating that purchases would be fully reflected
in next month's factors. Fannie Mae quickly followed suit. It appears
the agencies are finally, and swiftly, dealing with a problem. While
this release came as no surprise to the market, it nonetheless is worth
a brief comment as it will affect short-term prepayment speeds. We will
keep our readers up to date with any changes to the program, as well as
our analysis, in future commentaries.
With the majority of the MBS purchase program complete and due to wind
up by March 31, the overall effectiveness of the program can now be
debated with hard facts. What has the American taxpayer received for the
$1.25 trillion that ultimately will be spent on the program? The Fannie
Mae current coupon rate, or par coupon, has tightened in from a wide of
6.146% on July 18, 2008 to the current 4.329%, or 181.7 bps.
Additionally, the mortgage basis, or the spread of the yield on the
current coupon over the 10-year Treasury yield, has ratcheted in from a
wide of 237 bps on March 4, 2008 to the present 73 bps. This significant
move in absolute and relative yields should have sparked a refinancing
wave directed squarely at the individuals who needed it most, the high
coupon mortgage borrowers. As illustrated by the graph in our online
version, from the February 2, 2010, Bank of America Merrill Lynch
"Convexity Maven" newsletter, it just didn't happen. Typically,
mortgages that are 200 bps "in the money," or that are refinanceable
with a 2% reduction in coupon, refinance at very fast speeds. This was
last observed during the 2003-2004 refinancing wave. Currently, however,
the same collateral is refinancing at much tamer speeds. As the
Convexity Maven said, "[M]ost truly distressed homeowners have failed to
benefit from lower rates created from the MBS purchase program."
Bank of America Merrill Lynch further estimates that there are roughly
$810 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 6% to 7% mortgage-backed
securities, and had this universe been refinanced into a 4.5% rate
(similar to the main
coupon that the Fed has been buying through the MBS purchase program
as we noted in a recent blog post), and assuming a $150,000 average loan
balance, the average homeowner would have saved almost $1,700 annually.
This $1,700 average annual savings would have not only added $9 billion
in potential consumer spending, but would have also reduced the overall
credit risk exposure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac since the default
rate on the lower coupon mortgages is substantially less than that of
the original higher coupon. In essence, the MBS purchase program has
benefitted MBS bondholders through tightened spreads, but it probably
did not help out the homeowners who needed it most.
Once the program ends, will MBS spreads widen out? It's difficult to
forecast, but while there may be volatility, it is possible that spread
widening is kept in check by demand. Barclays Capital points out that
most money managers have been underweight MBS during the purchase
program. For example, bond fund managers with $344 billion in assets
under management collectively decreased their MBS allocations by 23%
from December 2008 to December 2009, including PIMCO's $185 billion
Total Return Fund which reduced its allocation 40% from 62% to 22%.
Barclays suggests that a rotation back into MBS from fund managers, as
well as demand from banks and foreign investors, will be more than
enough to meet any reasonably modest spread widening.
The Commercial Mortgage Market
By now, the commercial real estate community and most of the greater
population in the New York Metro area are aware that the owners of Peter
Cooper Village & Stuyvesant Town ("Stuy Town") apartments have defaulted
on their $3 billion mortgage and turned the project over to the lenders.
It's a mess, as politicians have rallied behind the tenants, the J-51
tax verdict is being implemented (which held that building owners can't
raise rents when they are receiving tax benefits), mezzanine lenders are
threatening to foreclose and pools of private equity are looking to
acquire the project. But to a CMBS investor, the greatest effect of the
Stuy Town default and foreclosure will be the designation of the new
Directing Certificate Holder (DCH) for each CMBS transaction. The DCH is
responsible for approving special servicer recommendations.
For CMBS, an investor in the lowest rated certificates, referred to as
the B-piece buyer, became the DCH in the event of default. In nearly all
transactions, the DCH was also the special servicer. Therefore, if a
loan became 'specially serviced,' loan actions developed by the special
servicer were basically presented to himself for approval. Naturally,
the special servicer's recommendations were always for the benefit of
all certificate holders.
The B-piece buyer retained the DCH designation provided his certificate
balance was not reduced by losses. While CMBS documents provided
mechanisms to designate new DCHs in the event more than one institution
owns a certificate, never was it foreseen by the architects of CMBS that
holders of investment grade CMBS would become the DCH. The magnitude of
the loss is so great (over $1.5 billion), that this is the story in Stuy
Town.
Generally, investment grade certificate holders are fixed income
investors who invest in CMBS for relative value and as a substitute for
commercial real estate exposure. While they possess desktop analytics
such as Trepp and Intex to stress cash flows, an institution that has
been designated as the DCH will now have to approve special servicer
actions. This is a role that such investors may not be well-suited to
play. For example, do they possess the property specific knowledge to
deal with commercial property workouts? How quickly can they respond to
the special servicer's recommendations? Will those recommendations be
subject to the DCH's own internal investment committee oversight? How
does their institution feel about exposing itself to potential lawsuits
involving "willful misfeasance, bad faith or negligence in the
performance of duties or by reason of reckless disregard of obligations
or duties?" Does the institution still have an investment outstanding
for the certificate or has it written it off internally in which case
staff may be hard pressed to expend significant time on it?
Back in the spring of 2009, a consortium of 15 of the largest senior
CMBS certificate holders and the special servicers couldn't complete a
compromise resolution to extend, amend and pretend. It is doubtful that
they will do a better job working together developing and approving
workout solutions. As more Stuy Towns ripple through the commercial real
estate market, we think the workout process could end up being as
challenging as the investment losses.
The Corporate Credit Market
The negative surprises of policy uncertainty have offset the positive
surprises of the corporate earnings season. As disconnected as these two
topics may seem, they are, in fact, linked. Year-to-date spread
performance has been erratic as the strong early January rally has since
faded. Credit investors and dealers started the year with an overweight
position following a spectacular 2009. While expectations of a
plummeting default rate underpinned allocations, the early-year reminder
is that risk and liquidity premiums are also important drivers of
valuations. Even against the backdrop of balance sheet deleveraging,
credit investors must heed the macro.
Together with the ongoing topic of Federal Reserve exit strategy,
several newly emerging unknowns on the policy front have contributed to
the recent weakness. They are global in scope. First, the China growth
engine may lose some torque. Some forecasters had predicted that the
country would account for as much as one-third of 2010 global GDP
growth. In January, policy makers in China raised reserve requirements
and employed other measures to curb excessive credit expansion. Second,
the surprise loss of Ted Kennedy's senate seat to a Republican suggests
a crisis of confidence among the citizenry. Third, Greece's large fiscal
shortfall called attention to more widespread budgetary problems among
peripheral members of the European Union. Just how budget gaps and debt
maturities will be funded presents a test to the solidarity of the
Union. As a result, the euro has declined 9% versus the dollar from its
recent high in November. Furthermore, one could argue that the acute
attention on Greece is a red herring: with the release of the 2010
budget, the U.S. deficit will equate to 9.2% of GDP (CBO estimate). This
compares to Greece's 12 %. Last week, Moody's said the U.S. government's
triple-A rating was in jeopardy "unless it takes radical action to curb
soaring healthcare and social security spending." It's a bit of a relief
that the dollar enjoys reserve currency status.
Concurrent with these global policy uncertainties, U.S. companies have
been busy reporting fourth quarter results. On a year-over-year basis,
fourth quarter 2009 S&P 500 earnings grew 209% with 65% of firms
reporting. Excluding financials, the earnings growth number is a less
eye-popping 13%. Easy comparisons were a contributing factor behind the
growth. Nevertheless, the "positive surprise" ratio is running at a
record 74%. In our view, the thematic drivers of earnings are just as
important as the numbers. They include: China/emerging focus,
"operational efficiencies," uneven top-line growth, and tax benefits. In
recognition that U.S. and Europe recoveries were likely to be tepid, the
Chinese market is a component of many U.S. companies' growth strategies
(e.g. Nike, Alcoa, GE). Any shock to China could derail earnings growth
predicated on this theme. Moving west, due to a weaker dollar, companies
with a high percentage of foreign sales expressed favorable earnings
from currency translation in Q4. Furthermore, a weak dollar contributed
to a Q4 narrowing of the persistent trade imbalance. Domestically, due
to prior losses, tax benefits have been a favorable contributor to
earnings and cash flow. For example, most homebuilders expect material
tax refunds this year.
Low effective tax rates have depressed Federal revenues, thereby
contributing to the deficit. Interestingly, few companies mentioned
federal stimulus spending as an important component of future sales.
It's easy to be a bit miffed just how the U.S. deficit ballooned so
quickly. Interestingly, unemployment benefits which have surged 105%
from last year are helping to drive the gap. Many pundits have described
the recovery as "jobless" and our micro assessment has yet to indicate
anything that conflicts with official data from the BLS. A number of
firms reiterated their focus on operational efficiency-- a euphemism for
cost management. One can't help but conclude that policy uncertainty
with respect to health care and taxes has been delaying corporate hiring
decisions.
The good news for corporate credit is that defensive behavior equals
cash flow. One earnings theme remains the same: firms continue to grow
cash balances. As a result, net leverage by one metric is at a 12-year
low. The chart in our online
version shows that net debt to EBITDA (earnings before interest,
taxes, depreciation and amortization, a proxy for cash flow) for the S&P
500 has collapsed to just over 3x. In sum, if the policy mix can't be
recalibrated to the economic problems de jour, at the least, uncertainty
over policy changes needs to abate before the corporate sector will take
the driver's seat in terms of growth.
February 10, 2010
Jeremy Diamond
Managing Director
Robert Calhoun
Vice President
Ryan O'Hagan
Senior Vice President
Mary Rooney
Executive Vice President
*Please direct media inquiries to Jeremy Diamond at (212)696-0100
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by Annaly Capital Management, Inc./FIDAC. All rights reserved. No
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Source: Annaly Capital Management, Inc.
Contact: Annaly Capital Management, Inc.
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