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Non-Tech : Bill Wexler's Trading Cabana -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: deeno who wrote (2604)8/14/2007 5:09:17 PM
From: RockyBalboa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6370
 
Thanks, I don't know how big Sentinel is but with 26 years he is quite the granddaddy of the funds.
Like in 1998 and then 2000 some tricks have been tried out on funds.
I already wonder - who is on the other side of the trade.

Saying a lot about our beloved "Tyco"



High grade securities are trading like junk bonds
as panicked investors dump names like General Electric at Tyco-like prices.



To: deeno who wrote (2604)8/15/2007 5:53:44 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6370
 
The Chicago Tribune has a different view, a money market fund but not for the public.

Originally posted: August 14, 2007

Subprime slimes money market funds for a moment
In a sign of how panicky investors have become over the mortgage-related securities that are poisoning financial markets, an incorrect reference to a money market fund freezing investors' money today, sent the press and investors searching for ticking time bombs in funds that are considered almost as safe as a bank.

Luckily, the frenzy was unwarranted. Stocks fell after CNBC referred to Sentinel Management Group Inc.'s fund for commodity traders as a "money market mutual fund." In fact, the troubled fund is not a money market mutual fund and the distinction is very important.

Sentinel's fund is set up for pros, and was paying about 7 percent in interest to compensate commodities traders for the risks they were taking in it. Money market mutual funds, which pay about 5 percent, are the place where everyday investors and institutions put their money for safe-keeping. The funds are supposed to be the worry-free investments individuals can count on when they want to stash cash for awhile and withdraw it on a moment's notice. The thought of freezing a money market fund and telling investors "too bad...go away for some other day," is completely foreign to the expectations of investors in safe funds. Of course, it sent a chill while investors unwound the truth.

In today's market, investors are so troubled by the unfolding of one bad piece of news after another, they sell stocks first and ask questions later. Until recently, financial market regulators, rating agencies and Wall Street firms told investors they didn't have to worry about mortgage-related securities infecting markets. But now it's clear the mess is more serious than officials let on. It is causing billions of dollars in losses for banks, hedge funds, and even a few mutual funds that have tried to juice their yields with the mortgage gizmos. And central banks here and in Europe had to come to the rescue of financial institutions stuck with the messy investments as investors tried to run for the exits.

The models used by Wall Street to design the securities have been a flop. As a result, the securities have plunged in value. Some financial firms are laying low, holding onto the sludge, and hoping that if investors calm down the securities will regain some of their value.

Money market funds are allowed to invest in the mortgage-related securities, but only the safest slices -- or traunches -- of them; such as those rated AAA or AA.

Still, in the current environment, even those slices have lost value, and investors are learning that the top AAA rating on the mortgage-related securities is not akin to AAA in corporate bonds.

With the securities under pressure, Standard & Poor's Joel Friedman says analysts are watching money market funds carefully for exposure to the troubled securities.

Money market funds are typically examined weekly. "We know what they have, and go through it every week," said Friedman. Analysts examine whether the securities are losing money and whether they mature within the time frame rating agencies and the Securities and Exchange Commission requires.

According to federal rules, the securities within money market funds are supposed to mature quickly -- no longer than 13 months for securities, or 90 days on average for all the investments within a fund. Within those constraints, money market funds can also hold "illiquid securities" -- or securities, like the mortgage-related bonds. "Illiquid" means the bonds cannot be sold easily. Of course, in today's nervous market, institutions holding the mortgage-related securities can't find willing buyers at decent prices.

By requiring money market funds to keep risky securities at a minimum, and mandating that most securities mature quickly, the funds have had a reliable track record.

The industry prides itself on guaranteeing that funds "don't break a buck." In other words, if you put a dollar into a fund, you can get that dollar out.

Still, money market funds are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation like bank savings accounts are. So investors cannot take them for granted. That, of course, is what sent investors into a new panic today.



To: deeno who wrote (2604)8/18/2007 6:38:18 AM
From: RockyBalboa  Respond to of 6370
 
Sentinel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The Fed action didn't save Sentinel. Too little, too late?

This is probably what Cramer had in mind: "The Fed is asleep"
(But completely ignoring the fact that the Fed can not salvage individual misdeeds)

Reuters
Sentinel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
Saturday August 18, 12:25 am ET


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sentinel Management Group Inc., a U.S. futures commission merchant whose decision to freeze client accounts on Tuesday helped roil global financial markets, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late on Friday.

The cash management company, which managed about $1.6 billion of assets, said its board decided it was in "the best interests of the corporation, its creditors and other interested parties that a voluntary petition be filed ... in an effort to restructure the indebtedness of the corporation," according to a filing in the bankruptcy court for the Northern District of Illinois.

Sentinel told clients in an August 13 letter: "we are concerned that we cannot meet any significant redemption requests without selling securities at deep discounts to their fair value and therefore causing unnecessary losses to our clients."

The Northbrook, Illinois-based firm said then that "we don't believe it is in anyone's best interest if a run on Sentinel took place and we were in a forced liquidation mode."

The bankruptcy filing said Sentinel estimated assets and liabilities both exceeded $100 million, but it wasn't more specific. It said it estimated it had at least 200 creditors.

It said it signed a letter on August 15 engaging the law firm of Goldberg Kohn Bell Black Rosenbloom and Moritz Ltd. to help with the bankruptcy petition.