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3#
发表于 2011-7-13 14:49
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They have kind of dumbed it down a bit.
A CDS contract is basically an insurance contract on your bonds. It actually has technical language in the contract that says what events would constitute a default (ie. triggering event) like an out of bankruptcy court debt reorg (we swap out all our debt and issue new debt + equity because we are under water, etc.).
The way to think about it is that the COST of the CDS insurance contract reflects current credit risk. And the contract will PAY OFF in FULL in the event of a default (ie. bankruptcy, prepack bankruptcy, debt reorg.).
So when you look at a CDS that is say $500,000 per year on a $50 M set of bonds on JPMorgan and then it's $1.750 M for $50 M worth of insurance on a similar set of bonds for AIG, then you can see how the CDS costs you more for insurance on AIG. If there is a default event on JPMorgan/AIG your $500,000 or $1.75 M annual CDS cost will pay you $50 M total.
In the depths of the financial crisis you could basically buy a CDS and a bond and be guaranteed a risk free return well above where Rf rate was at, because the entire market was liquidity squeezed and had counterparty risks.
As a side note, this is how AIG blew themselves up. They sold a ton of CDS on various mortgages (collecting the premium) w/ the expectation that no one would ever default on their housing market en mass.
Also note, I have kind of dumbed this down. But hopefully it gives you some sense of how these things work. I find them to be pretty stupid contracts, personally... but finance people will invent and trade anything they can make a bet on.
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at Monday, May 23, 2011 at 06:03PM by prophets. |
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