Archive for the ‘Financial Instruments’ Category

A Toxic Solution

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Using Crisis Innovation, Strategy and Technology for Tomorrow’s Challenges

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

J.P. Morgan once stated, “No problem can be solved until it is reduced to some simple form.  The changing of a vague difficulty into a specific, concrete form is a very essential element in thinking.  As he also noted and practiced, sustainable change rarely happens during periods of economic comfort. 

So as markets, investors, politicians, and homeowners seek answers in a “simple form,” those practitioners within the discipline of crisis innovation are challenging, “Are we really asking the right questions for tomorrow’s problems in the face of trillions at risk?”  As others have noted since J.P. Morgan’s time, just because the answer is simple does not mean it addresses the core issues.

Whereas innovation within the business markets has become a cliché, crisis innovation deals with non-traditional approaches implicitly demanded during times of great stress and uncertainty.  Simply put, they question organizational “truths.”  As you can imagine, their positions, strategies, and expert opinions have not been popular – until recently.  The markets have ensured that crisis innovation is no longer esoteric or academic. 

Along these lines, during times of prosperity crisis innovators and their approaches appear detached from reality.  In business terms, they are “outdistancing” their markets and buyers.  Their “radical,” complex approaches now are being reexamined under the growing weight of huge, multi-year industry and individual failures. 

In an effort to stitch together new, innovative strategies, I asked retired Colonel John Warden, acclaimed master planner of Desert Storm and now CEO of Venturist, his insights on financial markets, risks, success, and strategy.  “There are many factors which contribute to the real success or failure of any political, military, business, or personal enterprise.  If the strategy is not good enough, the intelligence of the participants, the brilliance of the tools or weapons employed, and the prowess of execution will be to no avail for it is strategy that integrates all three to enable success.  Without strategy, an organization is dependent on luck or genius–both of which are statistically unlikely and utterly undependable to be available when needed.”

As we will discuss later in this article, 21st Century crisis innovators are looking beyond archaic limitations today – in particular, innovators are seeking new methods to repurpose toxic assets, while creating a new securitization paradigm.  But first, perhaps crisis innovators’ unorthodox questions make more sense during times of calamity?  Foundationally, do organizations have the crisis leadership skills and insights necessary to deal with a 100-year event?

A Legacy of Distress

Where we often hear about the dire state of the domestic economy, the housing crisis, and the consumer sentiments, let’s set a holistic baseline on why this legacy of distress has provided a mandate for crisis innovators and the strategic and tactical solution sets that must be implemented. 

Since the early 1990’s innovation for much of the financial and mortgage markets has been about gaining efficiencies.  Striving for lower costs and greater throughput, the value chain of players (i.e., originators, servicers, aggregators, outsourcers, investors, and Wall Street firms) concentrated on lending, registration, standards, and fraud prevention actions.  The process chains were a one-way pipeline that served the market needs during times of unprecedented euphoria and easy credit.  Some argue that was financial innovation.  Others believe that efficiency gains were merely incremental process improvement.  Still more now believe it was an “innovative” recipe for failure and crime.

This legacy debate aside, the industry for years was concentrated on delivering solutions primarily around a common question or theme, “how can we improve the volume of lending to consumers to gain greater market breadth, wallet share, and profits?”  In July 2007, just before the MBS / CMBS markets catastrophically fractured, a boasting of these “innovative” ideals were echoed by former CitiGroup CEO Chuck Prince – “we’re still dancing.”  20 months later, a U.S. Federal government injection of a trillion dollars, $2 trillion yet to be recognized and written down, loan programs and collateral exceeding $3 trillion, and a global wealth loss exceeding $40 trillion, those “innovative” financial products now resemble a terminal cancer. 

Moreover, private securitization has virtually halted, the GSE’s are under conservatorship and demanding billions to stay afloat, 10 million homes are at risk of delinquency, millions more are in trouble, and hundreds of thousands are in active foreclosure.  Consumer debt now exceeds $13 trillion or roughly the equivalent of the national U.S. GDP – a situation that last occurred during the Great Depression.  Now let’s add insult to injury.  Additional data from the government projects that if unemployment reaches 8% by mid 2009 coupled with declining home valuations, up to 35% of all homeowner’s may possess negative home equity (aka “upside down” loans).  As of now, the national federal loan rescue plan looks like only a down payment on a broad and sustained rebalancing.

If there was a time for crisis innovation and new innovative leadership, the time would be now.  So what can be done?  What approaches should be undertaken?  Are there any strategies or technology solutions that provide better efficacy as we rebuild a financial structure and stability from the ashes?

“To achieve system change, it is necessary to change a number of centers of gravity as operations against just one or two will rarely be effective,” states John Warden.  “Contrary to popular wisdom, time is always the enemy of enterprise.  It may take a long time to accomplish something but the longer the time from inception to completion, the lower the probability of success.  For a high probability of success, parallel, time-compressed operations against multiple system centers of gravity are a necessity.  As operations move from parallel to serial, the probabilities of success falls rapidly while the cost of operations mounts dramatically.” 

Hitting the Reset Button

“One might ask, ‘How can highly paid business and government leaders with blue-chip business degrees create such a mess,’” said Michael Brooks, President of Checkmate Advisors and acclaimed business analytics and causality expert.  “The more important question is, ‘Can we trust that they have what it takes to create the mess that they’ve made?’”

Crisis innovators and their pragmatic methods look beyond historical limitations and thought processes.  Nearly 100 years ago J.P. Morgan said it best, “I don’t want a lawyer to tell me what I cannot do. I hire him to tell how to do what I want to do.  In fact, as in most cases today, taking the serious legal drawbacks away from potential discussions there are historic paradigm leaps that may be achieved. 

We all know there are trillions in “toxic assets” still hidden in the balance sheets of many, many financial and non-financial institutions.  We also know that these assets are not only thinly traded, but often lack robust documentation.  Representing an “out-of-the-box” idea, a 21st century crisis innovator was seeking a new solution to the burgeoning toxic debt hangover enveloping global markets.  Arguably “hitting the reset button” for crisis innovation sometimes leads to reassembling the best of ideas, organizations, and individuals in new and unique ways. 

Ignoring “conventional” wisdom and domestic industry editors who ridiculed European debt instruments, he proposed a solution set using July 2008 Treasury and FDIC sanctioned debt into a value framework for the repurposing of existing assets.  The end solutions, trustees, and governance structures weren’t common practice, but that didn’t mean it couldn’t gain robust domestic support in the future.

Thinking further, the 21st century innovator began aligning the multitude of needs and values of the non-for-profits, thinly traded or illiquid MBS markets, lenders, servicers, and investors.  He openly proposed combining old non-performing tranches with modified and new loans, thereby properly assessing the risks, while instituting a “cover pool” for future non-performance.  Bottom line, he proposed using the best value from each process participant and creating an acknowledged set of new asset classes that is higher rated (as compared to the old ones) and potentially has implicit government downside guarantees. 

Taxpayers (aka Treasury and the Fed) would provide downside support in a similar fashion already developed for several banks.  Private investors would benefit from upside and counterparty risk transparency along with instrument security.  Lenders would be able to reinstate these assets into performing tiers, thereby freeing funds and paying back the government.  Technologist and vendors would provide the “glue,” analytics, and dashboards needed for delivery.  Securitization markets would again be more than GSE based.  Private money would prime the pump of investment – controlled investment.

Like J.P. Morgan, this 21st Century crisis manager sought the simpler solution from those options that were already available.  He thought, unlike many existing managers, “Since the rules of engagement no longer apply, why can’t I reassemble the best of the legacy pieces into something new?”  He further mused, “If the government, associations, and lenders are seeking changes, why not address market, public, and regulatory heartburn with a positive twist on a known approach that already accounts for $3 trillion in worldwide debt?”

The above example is currently just that – an idea that has yet to gain acceptance as it runs counter to existing dogma and standing regulations.  However, with vast changes are already in play, why not use a crisis innovation to achieve a new positive reality?  If the worlds’ governments are rewriting the rules in an effort to remake the financial markets, why can’t a “simpler” solution be part of the reset efforts?

Mr. Warden concludes his belief on why crisis innovation is important during period of survival and great upheaval.  “Every strategic endeavor will either fail in some manner, or less likely, succeed.  In either case, survival and prosperity demand exiting the current strategy.  In the case of success, it means moving on to a new endeavor that is appropriate for the next time increment whereas in the more likely event of failure, it means abandoning a strategy that is not working while there are still resources available to try something else.  In many ways, end games and exiting are the most difficult parts of strategy; people don’t like to change and they don’t like to admit error so their tendency is to stick with something long past the point where doing so makes any sense at all.” 

* * * * * * * * *

For those who know my strategy and work, my ideals cannot be confused with those who represent the current “establishments.”  My approaches seldom reflect conventional thinking or shackles of the “ordained” pundits.  Unlike many within and around the industry, I hope I have demonstrated that crisis innovators don’t get their cues from talk radio shows or the limitations within struggling vendors and enterprises.  You see, it is not singularly about principles, it is about sustainable survival.  The slogans, analogies, methods, and the dogma that were promoted are dead or dying.  We, collectively as a series of interrelated disciplines and experts, need to make sure that we are not part of the decay littering the landscape. 

It should be clearly understood for strategy, process, and technology that crisis innovation is very uncomfortable for established organizations secure in “the way it has always been done.”  However, survival and prosperity no longer reside in the minds and actions of a privilege few.  The dawn of the crisis innovator is upon the worldwide economies and underpinned technology infrastructures.  How will you innovate, and who, by name, are your crisis innovators within and outside of your organization?

Covered Bonds

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo 

 www.Innovative-Relevance.com

Last month, when U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson announced the U.S. Government’s support for a traditionally European securitization instrument, many mortgage industry insiders began to wonder “what is a covered bond?”  As we are now aware, the U.S. Treasury in conjunction with the FDIC efforts in June and July represented the adoption of new financial tools to aid a catatonic securitization environment – albeit a small initial step to ease the rising strain on the GSE’s.  From an innovation perspective, do covered bonds truly represent the first “use-case” for private securitization efforts that demand robustly delivered and managed “e” documents and processes?  Is the deployment of the covered bond and its potential future allocations and permutations represent the forward and reverse mortgage supply chains that could not be achieved without the current market’s catharsis?  Does the “Americanization” of these centuries old iconic instruments usher in a permanent watershed event or merely symbolize a temporary market ripple? 

Lost among the headlines and the countless industry coverage in July 2008 was a report issued by the U.S. Department of the Treasury – “Best Practices for Residential Covered Bonds.”  It should be a required read for any lending institution, vendor, or outsourcer who is contemplating the deployment or inclusion of covered bonds within their downstream residential operations and offerings.  Whereas, covered bonds have been around since the 1770’s with current market capitalization exceeding $3 trillion USD, American investors and regulating bodies have traditionally shunned this financial instrument. 

So why should we discuss covered bonds in an innovation column, if they have been in existence for hundreds of years?  Simple.  Because they potentially represent the first of many new financial “tools” that leverages and legitimizes the decade of mortgage standards and data improvements fought for by industry and association personnel.  For innovative ideas to be relevant, they need a market that is willing to “pay for” the investment and innovation – or its ideas.  Let me use an analogy from another industry.  The transistor was an innovative idea and product.  Nevertheless, it was a product in search of a market and hence acceptance.  A watershed event for the transistor was when Sony electronic included it into an end-user product that its mass-appeal skyrocketed – the Sony Walkman. 

You see, the mortgage industry clearly recognizes that “e” capture, delivery, and management of origination, servicing, and securitization delivers immediate cost savings and life-cycle operational improvements.  However, in 2007 when private MBS securitization approached 60% total market share, few organizations were effectively implementing “e” anything – regardless of what they publically said.  Fast-forward 18 months, and we now have an industry rushing into “e” options in droves.  The end-result of these standards, including MISMO, demands an outlet within the financial and investor community that is willing or needs to “pay for” their deployment.  Covered bonds demand a continuous robust data and operational linkage.  Without the decade of standardization and “e” efforts already behind us, it would be nearly impossible to efficiently met the covered bond components and characteristics assembled within the following illustrative diagram.

Covered Bonds 

Covered bonds are not a panacea for our ailing industry – they are a good first step in a new direction.  They do represent a much needed option for greatly diminished MBS instruments.  Why not a panacea?  They will probably not appeal to institutions that seek out and tranche risk to investors who want a higher return (e.g., hedge funds).  Most covered bonds by their definition carry AAA ratings and they will remain on the balance sheet of the issuing institution – at least for now.  For the leadership lending institutions that stood behind the U.S. Treasury – Bank of America, CitiGroup, JP Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo – they clearly recognized the market opportunities and shifting investor demands.  Other institutions will quickly follow.

For vendors and outsourcers, the challenge will be to adopt and implement with their clients the forward and reverse supply chains that reach beyond a single product or service offering.  The downstream impacts and cross-correlated touchpoints will be many – compliance, reporting (including investor), servicing, origination, fraud, registration, and many other functional and process areas.  A clear implication of these new market ideals is that orchestration of solutions will be paramount among the accountable IT and business process personnel.  Competitive partnerships will be more commonplace as time will favor those innovatively nimble providers.  For forward-looking groups, covered bonds may represent a robust, vertically integrated (and cross-discipline) knowledge process – perhaps those providing KPO solutions should take note?

Specchio, Specchio…

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

One of my mentors used to tell me this story as a humbling, learning lesson.  A few years back, one of our American presidents was on a PR campaign.  He was visiting a nursing home.  He met a man walking down the hallway and went over and shook his hand.  He said, “Do you know who I am?”  The man looked at the president, but did not recognize him.  He replied, “No I don’t sir, but if you ask one of the nurses maybe they can tell you.”  

Contemplation is a humbling experience.  If you ask the right sequence and series of questions, sometimes, just sometimes, business and technological innovation can surface in the strangest ways.  The relevance of innovation is frequently revealed amidst the failures of our past. 

Recently, I was asked by a group of potential investors what I thought were the top business and technological questions on the minds of mortgage / FSI executives – what encompasses their innovation and survival agendas.  Listed below are a few of the categories and questions that came from these rigorous reviews in our struggle to frame relevant innovation.

·         Customer and Privacy:  The consumer is vanishing — so where are they going?  What effectiveness can be realized, sustained and made adaptable?  Do we really have a product and service strategy that makes sense?

·         Personnel:  Do we have the skill sets of yesterday or the ones needed for tomorrow?  How will we find and retain those personnel that can lead us forward with a strategy yet to be crystallized?  Can our personnel be revitalized and reeducated?  How?

·         e-Strategy:  With all the coverage and euphoria on e-solutions, what makes the most business sense for our firm?  What will it take to achieve and at what cost?  Can the return be sustained and made into a competitive distinction for advantage and profit?  Can mortgage processes assimilate orchestration improvements from the trading world (e.g., SIA, DTC, STP, T+n, FIX, exchanges)? 

·         Process:  How can we holistically examine the processes from end-to-end and remove those that are archaic and non-value added?  How can technology be used as a catalyst to ensure efficiency and rigor?  Do we even know what processes we must develop to meet the changing market, consumer and regulatory demands?

·         Sourcing / Outsourcing:  With labor arbitrage no longer the driving force, what are the criteria needed for selection and on-boarding?  What will be involved with knowledge processes in terms of transition, transformation or governance?  What will “level 3” rigor and insight provide as we begin to commoditize ITO and BPO offerings?   Will travel, security, privacy and public sentiment deliver a new operating mix?

·         Regulatory Compliance:  Can SOX and Basel lessons learned be utilized to create an integrated operational compliance solution addressing current and proposed guidelines?  How can we avoid costly “one-off” solutions and vendor relationships?  Where can we find knowledgeable guidance?

·         Orchestration:  How can orchestration, driven by manufacturing techniques, provide a transformation and restructuring agenda?  Do we know how to orchestrate as compared to simple integration?  Do we possess the innovators and new thought leaders, or are we just using old practices with new labels?

·         Architecture:  What are the iterative blueprints for catalyst change?  Are they cohesively identified and modeled?  What disciplines and methods are we using and are their better ones that we must consider?  How do ITIL, SaaS, widgets, SOA, and the rest of the “alphabet soup” of acronyms fit into the mix? 

·         Infrastructure:  What is it really costing us for the value returned?  Does it conform to the architectural strategy and models or are we divergent from planning to execution?  How can it be “ever-greened” without a “lift and shift” or total replacement?  Who do we trust?  What are the real life-cycle costs? 

·         Data and Standards:  What is the totality of our data and how can it be used?  Are standards useful or part of the “old guard” dogma influenced by aging ideals?  How can we manage the vast array of disparate data types and sources for documents, reporting, integration, investors, legal reviews, and compliance?  What will it cost?

·         Due Diligence, Risk Management, and Legal Representation:  In good times, IT due diligence consumed 1% to 3% of budget – what will a caustic operating environment inflict on marginal pressures?  Do our legal practices and practitioners represent our “best face forward” or are we inflicting even greater damage on our brand and reputation with existing loss mitigation and foreclosure practices?  Should we treat the AG’s (attorney generals) as foe or embrace the need for change – compromise?  How much “fraud” has been endured and taken into our portfolios within the CDO / MBS instruments?

·         Competency and Investment:  What centers of competency need to be expanded or developed for new market practices and offerings?  With top line revenue evaporating, LOC frozen, and PE ratios at historic lows, how can we be expected to reinvent ourselves without sufficient capital?  Moreover, what infrastructure is even demanded given the legacy environment already in place?  Should we outsource anything not deemed to be core? 

·         Community:  The housing indices point to communities and homeowners in complete disarray (e.g., Shiller, MBA), so how will our actions be aligned with the “right thing to do” and our ability to stay in business?  How can we embrace not-for-profits and community activists without incurring additional liabilities or negative coverage? 

So why did I frame these particular questions?

Just nine months ago we thought everyone knew us and respected us.  Our leaders were icons of success.  Our solutions revered by the establishments, our support teams, and those that sought to acquire our operations.  When asked by consumers, investors, and politicians, many individuals and organizations thought they knew us – we were evidently someone else.  Today, we are like the story.  No one is sure who we are and we’re not sure how innovations (e.g., process, business and technical) can be used for offerings we must possess – if we only knew what they were. 

We cannot be like the old CIO who once said, “You start coding, and I’ll go figure out what they want.”  So when you contemplate your next move, review that next system, or determine your next series of layoffs, ask yourself, “Am I asking the right questions for the new business and economic realities?”

If you are wondering about the title, it is Italian for “Mirror, Mirror.”