Consortium Provides Update on Master Liquidity Enhancement Conduit
December 21 2007 - 5:40PM
PR Newswire (US)
NEW YORK, Dec. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Since forging a collaborative
effort in the fall, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and
JPMorgan Chase & Co. have sought to provide a market-based
solution to continued illiquidity in the short-term credit markets.
Such a solution was intended to support the return of stable market
conditions, an orderly unwinding of structured investment vehicles
(SIVs) and the avoidance of a "firesale" of SIV assets. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050720/CLW086LOGO-b ) During
the last three months, the bank consortium has gathered broad
market participation to discuss and address this shared goal. More
than 20 banks, SIVs and investment managers participated in this
dialogue. The Master Liquidity Enhancement Conduit (MLEC) was
conceived as a "buyer of last resort" for SIV assets, if and when
other traditional and nontraditional sources of liquidity did not
emerge. The design phase for MLEC was completed, producing a
turn-key structure. BlackRock, a recognized leader in global
investment management services, was retained as advisor. Bank of
America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and BlackRock also thank the US
Treasury and other global regulators for their support through this
process. Over this same time period, conditions in the short-term
credit markets steadily evolved, as awareness of market pressures
and potential impacts dramatically increased and multiple, diverse
market-based solutions emerged. In addition to MLEC, these included
moves by several bank-owned SIVs to significantly reduce SIV
exposure and to develop their own liquidity support, as well as
moves by non-bank owned SIVs to sell assets, allow assets to mature
without reinvesting, secure other sources of liquidity and/or
undertake restructurings. Recent reports show SIV assets have been
steadily reduced to less than $265 billion in senior debt
outstanding in early December from $340 billion at a summer peak. A
continued decline is expected. This orderly unwinding of SIVs is
contributing to improved market stability. Based upon the feedback
that the bank consortium and the advisor have received from
domestic and global liquidity sources and from prospective SIV
participants, they have determined the vehicle is not needed at
this time. The consortium will continue to monitor market
conditions and remain committed to work collaboratively on any
appropriate solutions, including an activation of MLEC, if needed.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050720/CLW086LOGO-b
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: Bank of America CONTACT:
Scott Silvestri, Bank of America, +1-980-388-9921, , Brian Beades,
BlackRock, +1-212-810-5596, , Danielle Romero-Apsilos, Citi,
+1-212-816-2264, , Tasha Pelio, JPMorgan Chase, +1-212-270-7441,
Web site: http://www.bankofamerica.com/
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