Ambac Rocky Balboa oder chapter 11
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Eröffnet am: | 14.05.09 22:36 | von: pacorubio | Anzahl Beiträge: | 8.707 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 25.04.21 01:14 | von: Petraqnvka | Leser gesamt: | 1.385.321 |
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Dagegen der Unteschied zu ABK, die ja negatives Eigenkapital in den Büchern verbucht stehen haben, aber dafür sehr hohe Reserven verbucht haben, hat z.B. alleine die JPMorgan Bank - die Bank die im letzten Jahr mal ABK für wertlos erklärt hatte - am 13. Oktober sich aussergerichtlich mit ABK geeinigt (siehe ambacpoliceholder.com).
Ich tippe mal darauf, dass sogar JPMorgan ABK Aktien eingekauft hat, weil sie ja schon am 13. Oktober ABK vom Haken gelassen hatten.
Aber der Unterschied zwischen PMI und ABK ist vielseitig. Einfach gesagt bekommt PMI jetzt einen BK-Preis die Tage und ABK einen Nicht-BK-Preis.
Die Ablehnung der Policeholderanträge sind leider noch nicht vom Markt aufgenommen wurden, sollten sich aber noch positiv auswirken. Das Settlement mit JPM wird auch noch Früchte tragen. Das hier eine kleine Kurspflege stattfindet sollte jedem klar sein.
Hier werden m.M.n. den Zittrigen noch ein paar Stücke abgenommen.
Ich warte entspannt auf die Q3 Zahlen und auf das abzusehende Ende des Moratorium.
Gruß, Gropius
http://ambacpolicyholders.com/court-fili ...
Sag mal bitte kurz und knapp um was für Einsprüche es eventuell geht.
Oder verlink mal die Passagen bzw. kopiere Sie hierher.
Danke und Gruß, Gropius
Da steht geschrieben, dass die Versicherungsnehmer im segregated Account Zugang zu 98% der Vermögenswerte von ABK AAC general Account haben, es sei denn die Vermögenswerte fallen unter 100 Millionen Dollar.
Erläuterung:
Bis ABK die Schuldanleihe der Verischerten im segregated Account bezahlt hat, was sie in den nächsten 9 Jahren erfüllen müssen, dienen als Sicherheit 98% aller Vermögenswerte für die Versicherten im segregated Account, aber 2% oder anders gesagt 100 Millionen Vermögenswerte bleiben immer in der AAC. Die AAC hat damit eine Basis, mit der sie ihr operatives Geschäft weiter fortführen kann, sowas wie eine Lebensgarantie.
Gruß Marlboromann
Das Sicherheiten beansprucht werden ist legitim, bin aber gespannt wenn sich in den Mortgage fällen was tut oder Settlement mit den Banken gerichtlich oder außergerichtlich erzielt werden können.
Hier scheint noch viel Musik in der nächsten Zeit reinzukommen, und damit auch die Phantasie !
Mal sehen wie sich allein die BoA hier verhält. Ich denke es genügt nur ein Urteil als Basis über die Mortgage Fälle oder der Zwangsversteigerungen zu unseren Gunsten um den Kurs zu extrem zu beflügeln.
Wie von Storm belegt, gibt es hier mehr als genug Ansätze!
Nochmals vielen Dank Marlboro, und allen viel Erfolg !
Gruß, Gropius
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/64076576/
Nr. BK hier ..... größten heimischen Public Finance und Healthcare Forderungen!
http://www.ambac.com/pdfs/Top% 2050% 20pF% ...
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-29/...ankruptcy.html?cmpid=yhoo
then compnay gets its AAA back for Everspan...THEN after all is said and done company gets money back from banks..totaling $30 billion and then the stock buyback brings the stock down to 100 million O/S and then the prices shoots back up the $90/sh...all this takes place in 2 year period....Ambac will be $90/sh by Santa Claus 2012.....unbelievable...and YES this could very well happen. imho
http://messages.finance.yahoo.com/...p;mid=529868&tof=4&frt=2
Erzwungene Rückkauf von hypothekarisch gesicherte Wertpapiere und Hypotheken ist nicht nur ein theoretisches Risiko von Rechtsstreitigkeiten.
Ich zitiere: "Im Falle einer Verletzung der Zusicherungen und Gewährleistungen, die Gesellschaft kann zum Rückkauf entweder die Hypothekendarlehen (wird normalerweise am ausstehenden Nominalwert zuzüglich aufgelaufener Zinsen) mit den festgestellten Mängeln oder freizustellen (" make-whole ") den Investor oder der Versicherer. "
Das Zitat oben zitierten nicht ein Anwalt, sondern kommt aus den Gesprächsthemen einer Securities Class Action Klägers: Es kommt von Citi's 2009 10K.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/39909854
The Next Battle in Foreclosure Mess: Title Insurers ( interessanter Bericht + Video )
http://www.cnbc.com/id/39909157
http://www.cnbc.com/id/39909000
ich fasse es nicht, habe doch in die sch.... gegriffen. tschuldigung aber ich bin STINKERT.
Jetzt hilft nur warten oder schmeißen, je nachdem wie sehr du dem Wert vertraust.
P.S. Wir haben doch grad wieder nen Lotto Jackpot, oder? Geh spielen ;-)
We’re entering the “Bleak House” period of the mortgage bubble. The action has shifted to the courts. Worse, it will drag on for years and cost hundreds of billions of dollars.
As with Dickens’ mid-19th century tale of the English legal system, lawyers become enriched and families and communities get shattered one court file at a time.
So, what will the courts discover in our mortgage mayhem? That thousands of documents were ill prepared and possibly fudged because Wall Street couldn’t wait to get their hands on them for securitization. It was all about the bond market, stupid. Mortgages literally became back-of-the-envelope ways to get rich.
How much will this cost investors, banks and middlemen? I’ve seen estimates of $100 billion, although it certainly will be more if it swiftly envelopes mortgage and title insurers like Ambac, Assured Guaranty, MBIA and others; banks like Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, et al; and mortgage servicers and ratings agencies like S&P, Moody’s.
To see what’s going on, I visited the nation’s largest unified court system in Chicago’s Cook County. To say that the chancery court, where foreclosures are heard and decided, here is swamped, as it is in other cities, is like saying the Pacific Ocean has a few drops of water.
As two lawyers argued over a lawnmower and surge protector, an exasperated judge reminded them that he alone had 7,000 cases in his docket. Cook County may see its backlog of foreclosures grow to more than 50,000 this year. I can’t imagine what Miami, Phoenix or Las Vegas courts look like.
Frequently, those who are losing their homes in foreclosure come in without representation and get burned.
A woman who had lost her job as a psychologist’s administrator went before a Chicago judge without a lawyer to tell him she was attempting a short sale for less than the mortgaged value of the property. She was granted a continuance. The judge wished her “good luck.”
But what about those who don’t show up in court? Are the banks waiting for them and the unrepresented millions to slip through foreclosures that may not withstand full legal scrutiny?
There is some counseling from homeowners and paltry legal aid in Cook County — the judge hands the homeowners a piece of paper and a referral, but the lawyers don’t actually defend clients, who typically can’t afford counsel. The banks know this, of course, since countless homeowners don’t even show up and get ruled against in default judgments. Some homeowners were foreclosed upon even when they were on top of their payments.
Yet for homeowners who discover that a bank can’t prove ownership of a property through the proper documents and assignments, a judge may be able to throw out the foreclosure. Investors who didn’t get what they were promised also have a good case.
Now that the light is shining on these foreclosures, there’s a lot of legal scurrying going on. All of the nation’s largest banks have been vetting their foreclosure files and finding problems. Wells Fargo was the latest to say that it’s rechecking 55,000 foreclosures. It’s up to the state attorneys general to see if there’s any fraud involved.
By the end of 2010, nearly 3.5 million foreclosure notices will be sent out, reports SIGTARP, the inspector general for the Troubled Assets Relief Program in its latest quarterly report. That’s five times the 2006 rate and 26% more than last year. Bank repossessions continue to climb and are running about 100,000 a month, mostly due to rampant unemployment. Almost 3 million slipped into foreclosure in 2009.
Meanwhile, the government’s homeowner modification program (HAMP), is coming up short. Some 700,000 out of 1.4 million trial modifications have failed in keeping people in their homes; 173,000 remain in limbo.
Washington’s biggest folly is neglecting to make modification programs mandatory or neglecting to subject them to realistic affordability benchmarks. Congress should at least provide some “rent to own” options for homeowners or ways to resolve their mortgage debts in bankruptcy courts.
Ralph Nader recently observed that “underneath all of this fine print abtrusiveness and the backhanded evasion of state rules is the contractual tyranny that infects the entire financial services economy and beyond.”
Now that we are reading the fine print of securitization and faulty mortgage bundles, it’s become clear that our real estate crisis is perhaps beyond Dickens. Instead, think Poe’s “Fall of the House of Usher.”
John F. Wasik is also author of “The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome: Turning Around the Unsustainable American Dream.”
http://blogs.reuters.com/john-wasik/2010/10/29/...on-mortgage-bubble/
Highlight of Business Operations:
There has been considerable dislocation in the auction rate bond market, and there have been failed auctions, resulting from insufficient clearing bids. The auctions for the Auction Rate Bonds have failed, beginning with the March 2008 auction. When there are insufficient clearing bids as a result of an auction, the interest rates are set at a rate equal to the one-month London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) times a multiple of 125% to 225%, based on the credit rating on the Auction Rate Bonds assigned by Moody s or S&P.
The principal and interest payments on $64.5 million principal amount of Auction Rate Bonds are insured by Ambac Assurance Corporation (Ambac). These bonds are currently rated by Moody s. The credit rating from Moody s on these bonds is based on the higher of Ambac s credit rating or UI s underlying credit rating. Ambac has been downgraded by Moody s to a rating below UI s rating. Accordingly, the credit rating from Moody s on these bonds is now based on the current underlying credit rating of UI of Baa2. In the event of subsequent failed auctions of the Auction Rate Bonds, the interest rate on the bonds will continue to be reset as described above. The interest rate on these bonds was 0.514% at October 4, 2010 which was equal to two times LIBOR. The interest rate risk of variable rate financings, including the reset at auction of the interest rate on $64.5 million principal amount of Auction Rate Bonds, is $161,250 of increased interest expense for every 0.25% increase in interest rates.
Asset values of funded pension and postretirement plans as of September 30, 2010 and December 31, 2009 were approximately $235.9 million and $231.3 million, respectively. These assets are impacted by changing conditions in the capital markets which can result in reductions in asset value and require UIL Holdings to make contributions to the plans. While there was no minimum required pension contribution for the 2009 plan year, UI currently expects to make total contributions of approximately $8 million in 2010. Given current interest rates and asset values, UI currently expects to make contributions of approximately $45 to $50 million in 2011. Such contribution levels will be adjusted, if necessary, based upon actual December 31, 2010 discount rates and asset values.
http://www.gurufocus.com/news.php?id=110938
Ambac Financial Group, Inc. Com
(NYSE: ABK)After Hours: 0.83 0.0036 (0.44%) 7:48PM EDT
Nachbörslich im Plus geschlossen......???....??
Am Montag dürfte die Gegenbewegung starten, da die Ambac Aktien über die letzten Tage überverkauft / Oversold sind ! Schönes billiges Stock-Fishing am Montag :-))