- Credit Suisse Profit Beats Forecasts
- Gas Natural Considers Cash Bid for Fenosa
- ABB Profit Rise Hits Expectations, Ups Guidance
- European Shares Seen Lower, Results Flurry Dominates
- India's Bharti Airtel Profit Beats Forecast, Shares Up
- Singapore's MAS Ups 2008 Inflation View to 6% - 7%
- SK Telecom Profit Falls on Marketing, Outlook Weak
- Japan Exports Fall for First Time in Nearly 5 Years
- Weaker Oil Prices Lift Asian Markets, Tokyo Gains 2%
- Mad Mail: Buy a House – Now
- Lightning Round OT: Las Vegas Sands, CapitalSource and More
- Lightning Round: FuelCell, Microsoft, eBay and More
- Fast & Furious Trades: Microsoft, Lilly, Dow...
- Market Pans Panera Bread
- Commander Planet: Unexpected Green Trade!
- Emerging Money: These Colors Don’t Run
- Is GE the New Citigroup?
- Pops & Drops: Hershey, Pepsi...
Efforts to help bail out troubled bond insurers are escalating, with one group of big banks focusing on a potential rescue of Ambac Financial Group, CNBC has learned.
![]() |
Bond insurers like Ambac [ABK
Loading...
()
] used to insure just municipal bonds but have been burned by billions of dollars in losses after backing risky subprime-related debt. Losing their Triple A rating could be devastating for the bond insurers because it could prevent them from drumming up new clients and possibly force them out of business.
Banks, in turn, could face fresh writedowns of up to $70 billion if the bond insurers lose their top rating, according to Meredith Whitney, banking analyst at Oppenheimer.
Investor Takeaway |
The banking group working on a possible rescue includes RBS [RBS
Loading...
()
], Wachovia [WB
Loading...
()
], Barclays [BCS
Loading...
()
], UBS [UBS
Loading...
()
], Societe Generale [SGNRF
Loading...
()
], BNP Paribas [BAPBF
Loading...
()
], Dresdner and Citigroup [C
Loading...
()
].
The group is attempting to negotiate with Eric Dinallo, the New York state insurance commissioner who is spearheading a rescue effort for the entire industry, a source familiar with the talks said.
Efforts to help Ambac may be one reason why Standard & Poor's affirmed Ambac's AAA credit rating late Thursday, while putting MBIA [MBI
Loading...
()
] on a negative credit watch.
That move shocked traders because Ambac had been considered to be the much weaker of the two bond insurers. Also, MBIA had received a capital infusion from Warburg Pincus.
The source also said that the group is engaging Greenhill & Co. as an investment bank to advise it in the talks.
Robert Greenhill founded the boutique bank in 1996 after serving as vice chairman of Morgan Stanley and chairman of Smith Barney. He stepped down as CEO of Greenhill last fall, but remains chairman.
The source said "these are early days" for the group and would only say that a variety of solutions are being considered.
Meanwhile, a senior treasury official on Thursday applauded recent developments.
"I am encouraged by progress in the talks," the official said. "People who weren't talking with each other in the recent past are now getting down to business."
For some, this consortium might recall the failed effort to create a super SIV coalition among banks last fall to handle the commercial paper problem.
No one was saying this group would be any more successful. They only said a group of international banks has come together to explore solutions to one of the most vexing problems facing the market.




