ABX, RIP

Required reading from

Alea today on the subject of the notorious ABX subprime indices. We’ve been

here before, many times, but no one ever seems to learn: the ABX indices do

not measure bond prices. They do not give an indication of

what subprime-backed bonds are worth in terms of cents on the dollar. If the

triple-A ABX index is at 79, that does

not

mean

that

AAA tranches of CDO trade at, or are worth, 79 cents on the dollar.

What’s more, the ABX tranches always refer to the weakest tranche

of any given bond. They are also much less liquid than you might think: Alea

provides the bid-ask spreads, which are a minimum of 8 points on the

most recent series. (Interestingly, the older, "off-the-run" series

seem to be more liquid, weirdly enough.)

And none of this matters much in any event, since, as Alea tells us:

The ABX

will soon be dead, according to analysts at Wachovia only 3 deals qualify

for the next roll in january (20 are needed).

The ABX remains, for all its faults, the best and most transparent instrument

we have for valuing subprime debt. But its weaknesses are legion, and maybe

its disappearance might help prevent a lot of lazy thinking and journalism.

This entry was posted in derivatives, housing. Bookmark the permalink.