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Analysis-Hedge fund's trades with lenders point to return of crisis-era structures
FILE PHOTO: A Wall St. street sign is seen near the NYSE in New York · Reuters

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By Shankar Ramakrishnan

(Reuters) - Earlier this year a hedge fund structured two trades worth $642 million, the kinds of which have not been seen since the 2008 crisis. It sold insurance to two U.S. lenders against losses on a loan portfolio, and then sold much of that risk to investors.

The trades, a form of re-securitization, were done by Bayview Asset Management after it sold credit default swaps (CDS) to Huntington and Sofi late last year, according to Moody's reports about the trades seen by Reuters and a person familiar with the transactions.

The source, who requested anonymity to provide details about the deal, said Bayview modeled the deal's structure on similar transactions done before the financial crisis by a large U.S. bank. Separately, six other industry bankers and investors said the deals were the first such transactions they had seen since the crisis to redistribute risk that had already been sold once.

Huntington has said it did the trade as a "capital optimization strategy" in the fourth quarter. It declined to comment further about the deal and the Bayview transactions. Sofi declined to comment beyond its earlier disclosure that it had entered into a CDS on student loans that increased its risk-based capital ratios by greater than 1%.

This form of re-securitizations hark back to some of the complexity and opacity of financial products such as collateralized debt obligations that were blamed for exacerbating the 2008 crisis, the interviews with the industry experts show.

Its return shows how some Wall Street practices from the time, which proved to be problematic as they dispersed risk in ways that were not fully understood, are coming back, albeit in new wrappers.

Demand for high yielding products ahead of an easing Federal Reserve rate cycle and the growth of shadow banking and private markets are encouraging the return of such complex products.

Some experts said the latest trades come with more protections than crisis-era transactions, such as upfront cash requirements, which reduces counterparty risks - a key problem during the crisis.

This time, however, these structures may hide problems in the banking system, making balance sheets look healthier than they are, they said.

Jill Cetina, a finance professor at Texas A&M University, said risks could come, for example, from how banks use the upfront cash collateral given to them as guarantees. It also exposes the system to any governance issues at lightly regulated non-banks that provide the lenders with the capital.

Cetina said regulators should require banks to disclose more about their use of credit risk transfers (CRTs), or trades like those done recently by U.S. banks to offload risk and get regulatory capital relief. Very little information about such transactions is disclosed to the public.