Credit Wrap
14 November 2008, Markit Credit Wrap - The Week in Perspective
| Products | Net Notional ($bn) | Gross Notional ($bn) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 07-Nov | Change | 07-Nov | Change | |
| Total Single-name CDS | 1,556 | -200 | 15,441 | 30 |
| Total CDS Indices | 1,405 | -29 | 13,918 | -850 |
| Total CDS Index Tranches | 3,362 | -48 | ||
| Total | 2,961 | -229 | 32,692 | -866 |
The latest figures show that total net notional outstanding fell by $229 billion from the previous week. Most of this was due to a $200 billion reduction in single name CDS exposure. The fact that gross single name exposure rose by $30 billion highlights the inadequacy of this metric as a risk indicator. Clearly, investors have been entering into offsetting trades to reduce their risk exposure, a fact not captured by the gross measure, which overstates exposure.
Drilling down into the single names, the DTCC data shows that the Republic of Ireland is the subject of the biggest increase in net risk exposure this week. The sovereign was the first in the eurozone to go into recession, though it has since been followed by Germany and the region a a whole. Its credit profile worsened significantly after it guaranteed its banking sector and the dire economic news has continued to flow. It looks set for a deep and prolonged period of contraction and the domestic banks will be reliant on the government guarantee for funding
