CreditSights: Guardedly Optimistic About U.S. Loan Market
CreditSights remains guardedly optimistic about the US loan market for the second half of the year and still believes that the market most likely bottomed out in February.
In its second half 2008 outlook, CreditSights says the crux of maintaining a constructive view on the direction of loan prices in the face of new developments and the recent price move down is:
that the technical pressure is moving is a favorable direction;- that there will come a point in the second half of the year when loan prices will be based more on fundamental views than technical pressures; and
- that the change in the technicals will be more pronounced than the change in the fundamentals.
We remain constructive on loan prices and hold that the total risk premium is likely to decline in the second half of the year - knowing that slackening economic conditions make this a more risky trade.
Defaults will continue to rise from the current low levels but the big default worry era remains when refinancing needs hit hard in 2012-2014, CreditSights says. “Making money in loans in the second half of 2008 is a play between the degree to which the fundamental risk premium expands versus the degree to which the technical premiums contract, if not shift to an outright positive.”
The full CreditSights report US Loan Market 2H08 Outlook: Sticking To Our Guns is available for purchase.
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This article has 5 comments:
Michel Clerin
+32+497+465223
ragmatist
The current practice of gouging the consumer with 6%+ mortgage rates on 30 year mortgages and 12% and much higher interest on credit cards will drive the credit worthy from the market place. Bankers and finance companies will continue to be saddled with bad and non-performing loans as those who can service mortgages and credit card debt will sit on the sidelines.
The banking industry will never learn that gouging coupled with easy credit is a path to disaster. But then, bankers have never been known for their intelligence nor have they ever learned to control their greed.
Optimistic predictions are no substitute for common sense and reputable business practices.
speculator