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Fears of Lehman's CDS derivatives haunt markets

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  • Fears of Lehman's CDS derivatives haunt markets

    Fears of Lehman's CDS derivatives haunt markets

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    Those on the wrong side of these Lehman debt contracts - known as credit default swaps (CDS) - must come up with the money by Tuesday, the next D-Day in the ever-fraught calendar of the credit markets. There has been a deafening silence so far.

    There is no easy way of finding out who they are, so every bank and insurer is suspect. The $55,000bn CDS market is "completely lacking in transparency and completely unregulated" in the words of Chris Cox, the chairman of the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

    The settlement auction on Lehman CDS contracts last week was in itself a bombshell. Creditors retrieved just nine cents on the dollar from the Lehman wreckage. As Naked Capitalism put it, the bank had "vaporised". The biggest players at the auction were Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank but they were almost certainly transacting for clients.

    The insurers of the debt -- a third are hedge funds -- will have to pay 91pc of the $400bn in contracts.

    The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation says the risks have been exaggerated in headline scare stories, insisting that the total sum to be paid will be closer to $6bn. It says most positions are "netted out".

    "That's not credible," says Andrea Cicione, credit chief at BNP Paribas.

    "They keep coming up with these number by 'netting' but we think the amount is going to anywhere from $220bn to $270bn. The chain broke in the CDS market when Lehman Brothers went down. We may now see other counter-parties defaulting," he said.

    With hindsight, it is now clear the decision to let Lehman Brothers go bankrupt set off a melt-down of the world financial system, forcing North America, Britain, Europe, Australia, and now parts of Asia to rescue their banks. "A dramatic error," said Christine Lagarde, France's finance minister.
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  • #2
    Re: Fears of Lehman's CDS derivatives haunt markets

    "A dramatic error," said Christine Lagarde, France's finance minister.

    Leave it to the French to play the drama pronoun. "An existential error", n'est pas?

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