Skip navigation
Watchlist Sponsored By :

Current DateTime: 12:53:33 17 Sep 2008
LinksList Documentid: 24355697
  • Largest US Bankruptcies

      Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy protection filing is the largest in history, dwarfing all others. Take a look at the ten biggest corporate filings in US bankruptcy court.

  • Bank Failures of 2008

      Take a look at this year's bank failures (in chronological order), as measured by total assets and the cost to the FDIC’s deposit insurance fund.

  • Top 10 Gas-Sipping Cars

      Consumers all around the country are quickly taking to the idea that gas over the long haul could become more expensive and they're trying to find vehicles that use less of it.

  • See Our Entire Slideshow Archive

Current DateTime: 08:40:52 17 Sep 2008
LinksList Documentid: 24890560
  • Struggle at AIG

      The Federal Reserve comes to the rescue again with a $85-billion loan package to help shore up the giant insurer'sfinances in the the face of a possible chapter 11 bankruptcy filing.

  • Wall Street In Crisis

      Wall Street was badly shaken Sunday by the failure of Lehman Brothers, the takeover of Merrill Lynch and big asset sales by AIG.

  • The Fall of Lehman Brothers

      It's official -- Lehman Brothers files for bankruptcy protection.  But the Chapter 11 filing will not include its broker-dealer operations or the Neuberger Berman unit.

US Mortgage Losses Could Be $300 Billion: OECD
By Reuters | 21 Nov 2007 | 10:18 AM ET
Font size:

Overall losses from the U.S. mortgage market crisis could be up to $300 billion but financial firms and policymakers need to buy time to ensure an orderly work-out, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said on Wednesday.

The OECD said the super fund being set up by Citigroup [C  Loading...      ()   ] , Bank of America [BAC  Loading...      ()   ] and JPMorgan Chase [JPM  Loading...      ()   ] to pool asset-backed securities of ailing special investment vehicles -- thus preventing a further firesale of these assets -- was one mechanism for buying that crucial time.

"The super SIV idea clearly does provide a mechanism that gives 'time' for all the stock adjustment prices to work through," the OECD said in its latest Financial Markets Trends report. "Time ... is key to solving the turmoil."

But the Paris-based forum said the worst of the U.S. housing market downturn had not yet been seen and would continue to depress mortgage-related debt products and derivatives held by banks, hedge funds and insurance companies.

"We still have not hit the worst point in resets, delinquencies and ultimate losses on mortgages," the OECD said, adding some $890 billion of sub-prime, or poor credit quality, mortgages will have rates reset in 2008 -- with the peak expected about March.

The OECD said a hypothetical 14 percent loss on subprime mortgages being reset in 2008 could result in $125 billion in losses. If so-called Alt-A mortgages are included, cumulative losses in the $200-$300 billion range "seem feasible," it said.

The financial exposure to these losses lies in repackaged mortgage-backed securities such as Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs), variously held by hedge funds, banks and bank-sponsored structured investment vehicles.

The OECD estimated outstanding CDOs and synthetic versions was close to $3 trillion in June, before the worst of the credit crisis emerged. Bank SIVs were around $400 billion that month.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

HOME  |  NEWS  |  MARKETS  |  EARNINGS  |  INVESTING  |  VIDEO  |  CNBC TV  |  CNBC PLUS  |  CNBC HD+
About CNBC   |   Site Map   |   Privacy Policy   |   Terms of Service   |   Advertise   |   Help   |   Feedback   |   Video Reprints
  Data is a real-time snapshot   *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes

Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis