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« Who's Next? | Main | No Magic in the Monetary Policy Wand »

December 05, 2007

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Comments

I keep seeing the 27 cent figure quoted in the press and on blogs as the purchase price Citadel paid for the E-Trade CDOs.

But to sweeten the deal, E-Trade had to give Citadel 20% of E-trade's equity. Granted, it's almost certainly unregistered stock that can't be tradeable until a registration statement is declared effective (and maybe the deal has other trading restrictions, I'm not sure), but the stock certainly has to be ascribed SOME value.

Calculated Risk did some work and figures that considering the E-trade stock as part of the consideration, Citadel effectively paid 11 cents on the dollar.

So, that's the market. 11 cents. It will be interesting to see how firms with major CDO investments get around having to mark them at 11 cents for year end when the FASB standards for Level II and Level III accounting are fully implemented.

Marking at 11 cents will deem many firms effecitvely insolvent, so there's no way it will happen.

"Marking at 11 cents will deem many firms effecitvely insolvent, so there's no way it will happen."

Unless, of course, there's no way to stop it from happening.

Which Paulson, Bernacke and the executives of many financial firms are scared to death will be the case.

Sayonara.

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