Foreigners Don’t Own That Much Subprime. Maybe.

Speaking of those damn foreigners — you know, the ones who keep propping up Fannie/Freddie by buying their debt — there is a new Federal Reserve study out seemingly showing that non-U.S. exposure to subprime is a little less than some of us expected.

In a hypothetical scenario with a 20 percent default rate on nonconforming mortgages and a 10 percent default rate on other types of underlying loans (with a 50 percent recovery rate for each), we predict that foreigners would ultimately lose $75 billion on their holdings of ABS backed by U.S. assets.

Oh, that doesn’t sound too bad. But wait:

Then again, the mark-to-market losses stemming from a price markdown in all foreign-held ABS can be as much as six times larger using a 20 percent price markdown.

So, it’s either $75-billion in foreign losses or a half-trillion — which is reassuring, or not.

Source:

Foreign Exposure to Asset-Backed Securities of U.S. Origin

August 2008
Daniel O. Beltran
Laurie Pounder
Charles Thomas

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