At Subprime Event Too Early to Tell Who'll Survive (Update1) - 11/20/2007 , Class Action News, Class Action, Securities News, shareholder class action, claim, litigation, securities action, common stock'>

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2007 News and Press Releases

News News 2007


HEADLINE NEWS:

At Subprime Event Too Early to Tell Who'll Survive (Update1)
Lisa Kassenaar

Bloomberg. November 20, 2007

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EXCERPT: They dubbed it ``The Survivors' Conference.'' In early November, 2,000 people who handle asset- backed securities for a living crowded into a ballroom at the JW Marriott hotel in Orlando, Florida, just 3 miles from Disney World, to hear speaker after speaker explain why 2008 may be their worst year ever. The subprime crisis, which has claimed the jobs of three chief executive officers and prompted more than $45 billion in writedowns at the world's biggest banks, may end up spilling into 2009. ``These events tend to become deeper and play out longer than most people initially expect,'' says Michael Mayo, an analyst who covers securities firms at Deutsche Bank AG in New York. ``This is one of the slowest-moving train wrecks we've seen.'' The tumbling U.S. housing market will continue to inflict the damage. Mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations containing those securities are falling in price and won't find their footing anytime soon. That's because most of the subprime mortgages, which provide collateral for $800 billion in securities, have yet to go bad, says Christopher Whalen of Hawthorne, California-based Institutional Risk Analytics. ``The collateral is not yet problematic,'' Whalen says. ``That's the next big shoe to drop.''

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