Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Recovery for SIVs unlikely given Basel II rules-panel

(Reuters) - The troubled market for so-called structured investment vehicles (SIVs) is effectively dead and likely to stay that way given new international rules for matching banks' reserves to their risks, panelists at a bond industry conference said on Tuesday.

The new Basel II international accord, to be applied to U.S. banks with total assets of $250 billion or more, is likely to make investing through off-balance sheet SIVs less attractive for banks, which are the main sponsors of such vehicles, speakers at the American Securitization Forum conference in Las Vegas said.

SIVs are specialized funds that raise cash by issuing short-term debt and invest the proceeds in longer-dated and higher-yielding assets, including U.S. mortgages. The funds pocket the difference between what they make on their investments and the interest they pay out to investors.

The vehicles have been unable to fund themselves normally for many months amid the U.S. credit crisis and the market value of their investment portfolios has plummeted, prompting ratings downgrades and mass restructuring efforts.

But the market for SIVs may have eventually contracted anyway given the onset of Basel II, which has been seen as offering a way for banks to lower their capital reserves by linking reserve requirements to the credit quality of investments.
 

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