Saturday, October 24, 2009

Hedging On VIX Futures Indicates Of Growing Imbalances?

The anomaly du jour appears to be rising tensions from policies applied versus the natural state of the markets.

The important thing one needs to know is that, has there been pressures from such tensions building underneath?

This from Bloomberg

(bold emphasis mine)

``Investors are guarding against renewed volatility in U.S. stocks even though a so-called fear gauge shows they have overcome the panic resulting from last year’s credit crunch.

``The VIX index, an indicator of expected swings in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, closed yesterday at its lowest level since Aug. 29, 2008. The VIX fell 6.9 percent to 20.69, about half a point above its average since the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s calculations began in 1990.



Again from Bloomberg,

``As the CHART OF THE DAY shows, though, the gap between the index and VIX futures is wider than it was almost 14 months ago. The contracts closest to expiration settled yesterday at 23.65, or 2.96 points higher than the index’s value. The differential was just 1.05 points at the end of August 2008.

“Heavy hedging activity” accounts for the wider gap, according to a report yesterday from McMillan Analysis Corp.’s Option Strategist Hotline. The VIX itself has to surpass 24 to signal an increase in stocks’ volatility, which tends to occur when prices fall, the report said.

``The VIX, more formally known as the CBOE Volatility Index, has tumbled 74 percent from last year’s record close. The gauge peaked at 80.86 on Nov. 20, 2008, when the S&P 500 fell to its low for the year."

Additional comments:

Inflationary policies are inherently unsustainable. At the onset inflation has been mainly an asset dynamic.

Nevertheless, policies can lead to the furtherance of inflation (and a diffusion) from which may translate to the extension of today's aberration.

On the other hand, market forces could unravel on the mounting imbalances when inflationary measures can't sustain its levels.

Hedging in the marketplace appears to be looking forward at the latter scenario for 2010.

Anyway, a valued reminder from John Maynard Keynes on mainstream expectations of "desperately seeking normal", ``The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."

Signs Of Wealth Transfer In US-China Car Sales

This should be a milestone. Car sales in China has surpassed the US.

According to the Economist,

(all bold highlights mine)

``CHINA'S car market has overtaken America’s in sales volume for the first time, several years earlier than analysts had predicted before the financial crisis. Plummeting demand in the West is to blame. Earlier this year, as the American government was buying 61% of General Motors and 8% of Chrysler to prevent them from collapsing, the two manufacturers’ sales in China were rocketing. GM’s sales in China in August more than doubled on a year earlier. For 2009 as a whole the company predicted a 40% rise. Sales of all car brands in China in August were up by about 90%, helped by a cut in the purchase tax on smaller, more fuel-efficient cars. There is also huge pent-up demand as a new middle class takes to the road."

Additional observations:

-the economic orientation of the West had been built mainly on policy induced culture of dissaving and debt financed consumption spending, whereas China has revolved around savings, thrift and production. The difference is that the West consumed its capital whereas the East accumulated capital. The eventual outcome: a dynamic of wealth transfer

-GM's iconic Hummer is still in the process of being sold to a lowly heavy machinery outfit called Tengzhong, this adds salt to injury.

-the apparent dynamics of wealth transfer is now being manifested in the car sales above where China has supplanted the US.

-yet this is a clear sign of decoupling, from which globalization hasn't totally eliminated.

Friday, October 23, 2009

The Return Of The Financial Industry

The financial industry has been returning to its old status-with a vengeance.



According to Bespoke Invest, ``The weighting of the Financial sector in the S&P 500 has made a huge move since the March lows. After being the biggest sector of the market for six years in a row, the weight of the Financials dropped all the way down to 8.9% (6th place) on March 9th, 2009. After the recent rally we've had, the Finanial sector has nearly doubled its weight to 15%, and it now ranks 2nd behind the Technology sector (18.8%). Technology, Financials, Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, and Materials are sectors that have gained market share during the bull market, while the other five sectors have lost share. The Financial sector has gained the most, while Health Care has lost the most (16.1% to 12.5%)." (all bold highlights mine)

Additional comments:

Financial industry epitomized the boom bust cycle six years prior to this rally

From leader to laggard to next to the leader (anew)- seem to signify the same dynamic of the past-another boom bust cycle with a cosmetically altered appearance.

US government has been massively backstopping the Financial Industry relative to the other industries

The resurgent financial industry accounts for as the impact from the massive reflationary measures engaged by policymakers

The implicit guarantees via the "Bernanke Put" and the "Too Big To Fail Syndrome" places a premium to financial industry, where investors (or even rescued institutions) have been stampeding into them.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Wall St. Cheat Sheet: Nouriel Roubini Unmasked; Lessons

The following article, from Wall St. Cheat Sheet, scoffs at the track record of high profile economist Nouriel Roubini in making predictions.

According to Wall St. Cheat Sheet:

``In August I wrote an article “Is Nouriel Roubini a False Prophet?” Apparently, some people are so smitten with Roubini they actually ignored all the cited articles and said, “No.” Consequently, I teamed up with a bunch of people around the world on an open source project to continue our mission exposing false prophets and help unwash those well-meaning brains

``The following video is a large collection of evidence proving Roubini has a horrendous record as a prognosticator. If you too know someone who has been listening to the seductive sounds of Roubini’s mantras, send them this helpful deprogramming message:





Normally, such take downs usually won't make my post. However, there are lessons to be gleaned from this critique which necessitates some discussion.

1. The Role of Media. This reveals of the proclivity of media to glamourize personalities who glibly "represent" the Du jour issues regardless of their past performance.

The appearance of fluency, urgency and connectivity to current events translates to more coverage. Ergo, the celebrity status.

2. Expert problem. Nassim Taleb says that "intelligent or informed persons were at no advantage over cabdrivers" in making predictions.

Why? Because of egotistical problem. Again according to Mr. Taleb, ``The problem with experts is that they do not know what they do not know. Lack of knowledge and the delusion about the quality of your knowledge come together-the same process that makes you know less also makes you satisfied." (emphasis added)

In short, experts tend to confine themselves on what they know.

3. Knowledge problem. There is also the tendency for experts to lean on models and mathematical equations to "scientifically" construct predictions while disregarding the variability of the human response aspect.

According to F. A. Hayek, ``the unavoidable imperfection of man's knowledge and the consequent need for a process by which knowledge is constantly communicated and acquired. Any approach, such as that of much of mathematical economics with its simultaneous equations, which in effect starts from the assumption that people's knowledge corresponds with the objective facts of the situation, systematically leaves out what is our main task to explain."

4. Prediction dilemma.

The public tends to look for specific answers or forecasts from experts rather than examining the reasoning behind them.

For publicity seeking experts, an audacious gambit on forecasting could be a rewarding endeavor.

This, in my view, is where Mr. Roubini has capitalized from basking as a celebrity during last year's crisis.


The google trend chart shows of this phenomenon.

According to NYMAG, ``Since his forecasts proved correct, or semi-correct, Roubini's become an economic celebrity, practically a household name (okay, maybe only in the wonkiest of households, but still). He's been the subject of countless magazine profiles and is lauded by his peers. His independent economic research firm, RGE, has flourished, and he's always speaking at some conference, somewhere, around the globe. (And, with respect to Julia Ioffe, who wrote a great profile of the economist recently for The New Republic, we're not buying the idea that he's taking his message on the road out of some noble sense of duty. His fees must be astronomical at this point.) His stock has gone up with the ladies, too; as he recently told New York, "The recession has been great for me."

In my view, this represents as a personal victory for Mr. Roubini. He attained both the fame and the attendant fortune of booming business and adoring ladies. And maybe some of his critics could have been envious of this.

For us, this goes to show how doing our homework matters more than simply listening or heeding on the opinions of celebrity gurus.

Milton Friedman: Why Electing The Right People Isn't Enough





People have a great misconception in this way, they think way they solve things by electing the right people. Its nice to elect the right people, but that isn’t the way you solve them. The way you solve things is by making it politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right things!

Graphic: US Versus Russia

A graphic comparing the US and Russia on various aspects courtesy of mint.com.
See the original plus other graphics at mint.com

The Economics of Holidays

The Economist asks, "Are Holidays good for the economy?"


The Economist continues,

``STRIKING the right balance between life and work can be tricky. Employees in European countries tend to have a better deal than most, enjoying more days off work than their counterparts in Asia or America. Workers in Finland, France and Brazil have the most generous statutory allowance, getting 30 days of holiday every year. Americans work longer hours: theirs is the only rich country that does not give any statutory paid holiday. (In practice, most workers get around 15 days off.) This work ethic may in turn help to explain Americans' material wealth. Even adjusting for purchasing-power parity, America generates more wealth per person than all but a handful of mainly oil-rich economies such as Norway." (bold highlights mine)

In short, Americans have NO statutory mandates but earn more than their counterparts. The reason is obvious, capital accumulation through worker productivity gains offset losses from mandated "paid holidays".

This reminds me of the Philippine incumbent government's thrust to promote "holiday economics", where most of the holidays have been rescheduled to "extend the weekends" (even if they fall on Saturday or Sundays) allegedly to promote local tourism.

This we had earlier excoriated in Broken Window Fallacy: The Vicious Hidden Costs of "Holiday Economics".

The above commentary from the Economist exposes how local policies are counterproductive, privileges one sector (4% direct 10% indirect) over the entire economy, raises cost of doing business, reduces output, promotes idleness, hedonism and wrong virtues (spending instead of saving) and importantly the "elitist" tendencies of the powers that be.

While the adverse effects can't directly be seen, this contributes to why the Philippines has lagged its neighbors in terms of economic performances.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

John Stossel: Unseen Negative Effects of Minimum Wages

David Einhorn: The Inevitable Ramifications Of Short-term Popularity Policies Over Solvency

Greenlight Capital's David Einhorn recently delivered a discerning speech at Value Investing Congress.

Here are some noteworthy quotes:

-Two basic problems in how we have designed our government.

The first is that officials favor policies with short-term impact over those in our long-term interest because they need to be popular while they are in office and they want to be reelected.

The second weakness in our government is “concentrated benefit versus diffuse harm” also known as the problem of special interests. Decision makers help small groups who care about narrow issues and whose “special interests” invest substantial resources to be better heard through lobbying, public relations and campaign support.

-With the ensuing government bailout, we have now institutionalized the idea of too-big-to-fail and insulated investors from risk.

-The lesson of Lehman should not be that the government should have prevented its failure. The lesson of Lehman should be that Lehman should not have existed at a scale that allowed it to jeopardize the financial system.

-The bailouts have installed a great deal of moral hazard, which in the absence of radical change will be reinforced and thereby grant every big institution a permanent “implicit” government backstop. This creates an enormous ongoing subsidy for the too-big-to-fails, as well as making it much harder for the non-too-big-to-fails to compete. In effect, we all continue to subsidize the big banks even though we keep hearing the worst of the crisis is behind us.

-In addition, the now larger too-big-to-fails are beginning to take advantage of developing oligopolies. Even as the government spends trillions to subsidize mortgage rates, the resulting discount is not being passed to homeowners but is being kept by mortgage originators who are earning record profits per mortgage originated.

-CDS are also highly anti-social. Bondholders who also hold CDS make a bigger return when the issuing firms fail. As a result, holders of so-called “basis packages” – a bond and a CDS – have an incentive to use their position as bondholders to force bankruptcy triggering payment on their CDS, rather than negotiate traditional out of court restructurings or covenant amendments with troubled creditors.

-Over the last couple of years we have adopted a policy of private profits and socialized risks. We are transferring many private obligations onto the national ledger.

-As we sit here today, the Federal Reserve is propping up the bond market, buying long-dated assets with printed money. It cannot turn around and sell what it has just bought. There is a basic rule of liquidity. It isn’t the same for everyone. If you own 10,000 shares of Greenlight Re, you have a liquid investment. However, if I own 5 million shares it is not liquid to me, because of both the size of the position and the signal my selling would send to the market.

For this reason, the Fed cannot sell its Treasuries or Agencies without destroying the market. This means that it will be challenged to shrink the monetary base if inflation actually turns up.

-When a country cannot reduce its ratio of debt to GDP over any time horizon, it means it can only refinance, but can never repay its debts.

-I believe there is a real possibility that the collapse of any of the major currencies could have a similar domino effect on re-assessing the credit risk of the other fiat currencies run by countries with structural deficits and large, unfunded commitments to aging populations.

-I believe that the conventional view that government bonds should be "risk free" and tied to nominal GDP is at risk of changing. Periodically, high quality corporate bonds have traded at lower yields than sovereign debt. That could happen again.

-And, of course, these structural risks are exacerbated by the continued presence of credit rating agencies that inspire false confidence with potentially catastrophic results by over-rating the sovereign debt of the largest countries. There is no reason to believe that the rating agencies will do a better job on sovereign risk than they have done on corporate or structured finance risks.

-Gold does well when monetary and fiscal policies are poor and does poorly when they appear sensible.

-When I watch Chairman Bernanke, Secretary Geithner and Mr. Summers on TV, read speeches written by the Fed Governors, observe the “stimulus” black hole, and think about our short-termism and lack of fiscal discipline and political will, my instinct is to want to short the dollar. But then I look at the other major currencies. The Euro, the Yen, and the British Pound might be worse. So, I conclude that picking one these currencies is like choosing my favorite dental procedure. And I decide holding gold is better than holding cash, especially now, where both earn no yield.

-Events can move from the impossible to the inevitable without ever stopping at the probable.

The complete transcript (all bold emphasis and underscores mine)

"One of the nice aspects of trying to solve investment puzzles is recognizing that even though I am not always going to be right, I don’t have to be. Decent portfolio management allows for some bad luck and some bad decisions. When something does go wrong, I like to think about the bad decisions and learn from them so that hopefully I don’t repeat the same mistakes

This leaves me plenty of room to make fresh mistakes going forward. I’d like to start today by reviewing a bad decision I made and share with you what I’ve learned from that error and how I am attempting to apply the lessons to improve our funds’ prospects.

At the May 2005 Ira Sohn Investment Research Conference in New York, I recommended MDC Holdings, a homebuilder, at $67 per share. Two months later MDC reached $89 a share, a nice quick return if you timed your sale perfectly. Then the stock collapsed with the rest of the sector. Some of my MDC analysis was correct: it was less risky than its peers and would hold-up better in a down cycle because it had less leverage and held less land. But this just meant that almost half a decade later, anyone who listened to me would have lost about forty percent of his investment, instead of the seventy percent that the homebuilding sector lost.

I want to revisit this because the loss was not bad luck; it was bad analysis. I down played the importance of what was then an ongoing housing bubble. On the very same day, at the very same conference, a more experienced and wiser investor, Stanley Druckenmiller, explained in gory detail the big picture problem the country faced from a growing housing bubble fueled by a growing debt bubble.

At the time, I wondered whether even if he were correct, would it be possible to convert such big picture macro-thinking into successful portfolio management? I thought this was particularly tricky since getting both the timing of big macro changes as well as the market’s recognition of them correct has proven at best a difficult proposition.

Smart investors had been complaining about the housing bubble since at least 2001. I ignored Stan, rationalizing that even if he were right, there was no way to know when he would be right. This was an expensive error.

The lesson that I have learned is that it isn’t reasonable to be agnostic about the big picture. For years I had believed that I didn’t need to take a view on the market or the economy because I considered myself to be a “bottom up” investor. Having my eyes open to the big picture doesn’t mean abandoning stock picking, but it does mean managing the longshort exposure ratio more actively, worrying about what may be brewing in certain industries, and when appropriate, buying some just-in-case insurance for foreseeable macro risks even if they are hard to time. In a few minutes, I will tell you what Greenlight has done along these lines.

But first, I’d like to explain what I see as the macro risks we face. To do that I need to digress into some political science. Please humor me since my mom and dad spent a lot of money so I could be a government major, the usefulness of which has not been apparent for some time.

Winston Churchill said that, “Democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others that have been tried from time to time.” As I see it, there are two basic problems in how we have designed our government.

The first is that officials favor policies with short-term impact over those in our long-term interest because they need to be popular while they are in office and they want to be reelected. In recent times, opinion tracking polls, the immediate reactions of focus groups, the 24/7 news cycle, the constant campaign, and the moment-to-moment obsession with the Dow Jones Industrial Average have magnified the political pressures to favor short-term solutions.

Earlier this year, the political topic du jour was to debate whether the stimulus was working, before it had even been spent.

Paul Volcker was an unusual public official because he was willing to make unpopular decisions in the early ’80s and was disliked at the time. History, though, judges him kindly for the era of prosperity that followed.

Presently, Ben Bernanke and Tim Geithner have become the quintessential short-term decision makers. They explicitly “do whatever it takes” to “solve one problem at a time” and deal with the unintended consequences later. It is too soon for history to evaluate their work, because there hasn’t been time for the unintended consequences of the “do whatever it takes” decision-making to materialize.

The second weakness in our government is “concentrated benefit versus diffuse harm” also known as the problem of special interests. Decision makers help small groups who care about narrow issues and whose “special interests” invest substantial resources to be better heard through lobbying, public relations and campaign support. The special interests benefit while the associated costs and consequences are spread broadly through the rest of the population. With individuals bearing a comparatively small extra burden, they are less motivated or able to fight in Washington.

In the context of the recent economic crisis, a highly motivated and organized banking lobby has demonstrated enormous influence. Bankers advance ideas like, “without banks, we would have no economy.” Of course, there was a public interest in protecting the guts of the system, but the ATMs could have continued working, even with forced debt-to-equity conversions that would not have required any public funds. Instead, our leaders responded by handing over hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to protect the speculative investments of bank shareholders and creditors. This has been particularly remarkable, considering that most agree that these same banks had an enormous role in creating this mess which has thrown millions out of their homes and jobs.

Like teenagers with their parents away, financial institutions threw a wild party that eventually tore-up the neighborhood. With their charge arrested and put in jail to detoxify, the supervisors were faced with a decision: Do we let the party goers learn a tough lesson or do we bail them out? Different parents with different philosophies might come to different decisions on this point. As you know our regulators went the bail-out route.

But then the question becomes, once you bail them out, what do you do to discipline the misbehavior? Our authorities have taken the response that kids will be kids. “What? You drank beer and then vodka. Are you kidding? Didn’t I teach you, beer before liquor, never sicker, liquor before beer, in the clear! Now, get back out there and have a good time.” And for the last few months we have seen the beginning of another party, which plays nicely toward government preferences for short-term favorable news-flow while satisfying the banking special interest. It has not done much to repair the damage to the neighborhood.

And the neighbors are angry, because at some level, Americans understand that the Washington-Wall Street relationship has rewarded the least deserving people and institutions at the expense of the prudent. They don’t know the particulars or how to argue against the “without banks, we have no economy” demagogues. So, they fight healthcare reform, where they have enough personal experience to equip them to argue with Congressmen at town hall meetings.

As I see it, the revolt over healthcare isn’t really about healthcare, but represents a broader upset at Washington. The lack of trust over the inability to deal seriously with the party goers feeds the lack of trust over healthcare.

On the anniversary of Lehman’s failure, President Obama gave a terrific speech. He said, “Those on Wall Street cannot resume taking risks without regard for the consequences, and expect that next time, American taxpayers will be there to break the fall.” Later he advocated an end of “too big to fail.” Then he added, “For a market to function, those who invest and lend in that market must believe that their money is actually at risk.” These are good points that he should run by his policy team, because Secretary Geithner’s reform proposal does exactly the opposite.

The financial reform on the table is analogous to our response to airline terrorism by frisking grandma and taking away everyone’s shampoo, in that it gives the appearance of officially “doing something” and adds to our bureaucracy without really making anything safer.

With the ensuing government bailout, we have now institutionalized the idea of too-big-to-fail and insulated investors from risk. The proper way to deal with too-big-to-fail, or too inter-connected to fail, is to make sure that no institution is too big or inter-connected to fail. The test ought to be that no institution should ever be of individual importance such that if we were faced with its demise the government would be forced to intervene. The real solution is to break up anything that fails that test.

The lesson of Lehman should not be that the government should have prevented its failure. The lesson of Lehman should be that Lehman should not have existed at a scale that allowed it to jeopardize the financial system. And the same logic applies to AIG, Fannie, Freddie, Bear Stearns, Citigroup and a couple dozen others.

Twenty-five years ago the government dismantled AT&T. Its break-up set forth decades of unbelievable progress in that industry. We can do that again here in the financial sector and we would achieve very positive social benefit with no cost that anyone can seem to explain.

The proposed reform takes us in the polar opposite direction. The cop-out response from Washington is that it isn’t “practical.” Our leaders are so influenced by the banking special interests that they would rather declare it “impractical” than roll up their sleeves and figure out how to get the job done.

The bailouts have installed a great deal of moral hazard, which in the absence of radical change will be reinforced and thereby grant every big institution a permanent “implicit” government backstop. This creates an enormous ongoing subsidy for the too-big-to-fails, as well as making it much harder for the non-too-big-to-fails to compete. In effect, we all continue to subsidize the big banks even though we keep hearing the worst of the crisis is behind us.

In addition, the now larger too-big-to-fails are beginning to take advantage of developing oligopolies. Even as the government spends trillions to subsidize mortgage rates, the resulting discount is not being passed to homeowners but is being kept by mortgage originators who are earning record profits per mortgage originated. Recently, Goldman upgraded Wells Fargo partly based on its ability to earn long-term oligopolistic mortgage origination spreads.

The proposed reform does not deal with the serious risks that the recent crisis exposed. Credit Default Swaps, which create large, correlated and asymmetric risks, scared the authorities into spending hundreds of billions of taxpayer money to prevent the speculators who made bad bets from having to pay.

CDS are also highly anti-social. Bondholders who also hold CDS make a bigger return when the issuing firms fail. As a result, holders of so-called “basis packages” – a bond and a CDS – have an incentive to use their position as bondholders to force bankruptcy triggering payment on their CDS, rather than negotiate traditional out of court restructurings or covenant amendments with troubled creditors. Press accounts have noted that this dynamic has contributed to the recent bankruptcies of Abitibi-Bowater, General Growth Properties, Six Flags and even General Motors. They are a pending problem in CIT’s efforts to avoid bankruptcy.

The reform proposal to create a CDS clearing house does nothing more than maintain private profits and socialized risks by moving the counter-party risk from the private sector to a newly created too-big-to-fail entity. I think that trying to make safer CDS is like trying to make safer asbestos. How many real businesses have to fail before policy makers decide to simply ban them?

Similarly, the money markets were exposed as creating systemic risk during the crisis. Apparently, investors in these pools of lending assets that carry no reserve for loss expect to be shielded from losing money while earning a higher return than bank deposits or T-bills.

Mr. Bernanke decided they needed to be bailed out to save the system. It is hard to imagine why this structure shouldn’t be fixed, either by adding them to the FDIC insurance program and subjecting them to bank regulation, or at least forcing them to stop using $1 net-asset values, which gives their customers the impression that they can’t fall in value.

The most constructive aspect of the Geithner reform plan is to separate banking from commerce. This would have the effect of forcing industrial companies to divest big finance subsidiaries, which would have to be regulated as banks. During the bubble, companies like GMAC, AIG Financial Products and GE Capital, with cheap funding supported by inaccurate credit ratings, took enormous unregulated risks. When the crisis hit, GMAC and AIG needed huge federal bailouts. The Federal Reserve set up the Commercial Paper Funding Facility to backstop GE Capital among others, and GE became the largest borrower under the FDIC’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, even though prior to the crisis it wasn’t even in the FDIC.

In response to the Geithner proposal, GE immediately let it be known that it had “talked to a number of people in Congress” and it should not have to separate its finance subsidiary because it disingenuously asserted that it hadn’t contributed to the crisis. We will see whether the GE special interest is able to stave-off this constructive reform proposal. Rather than deal with these simple problems with simple, obvious solutions, the official reform plans are complicated, convoluted and designed to only have the veneer of reform while mostly serving the special interests.

The complications serve to reduce transparency, preventing the public at large from really seeing the overwhelming influence of the banks in shaping the new regulation.

In dealing with the continued weak economy, our leaders are so determined not to repeat the perceived mistakes of the 1930s that they are risking policies with possibly far worse consequences designed by the same people at the Fed who ran policy with the short term view that asset bubbles don’t matter because the fallout can be managed after they pop.

That view created a disaster that required unprecedented intervention for which our leaders congratulated themselves for doing whatever it took to solve. With a sense of mission accomplished, the G-20 proclaimed “it worked.”

We are now being told that the most important thing is to not remove the fiscal and monetary support too soon. Christine Romer, a top advisor to the President, argues that we made a great mistake by withdrawing stimulus in 1937.

Just to review, in 1934 GDP grew 17.0%, in 1935 it grew another 11.1%, and in 1936 it grew another 14.3%. Over the period unemployment fell by 30%. That is three years of progress.

Apparently, even this would not have been enough to achieve what Larry Summers has called “exit velocity.” Imagine, in our modern market, where we now get economic data on practically a daily basis, living through three years of favorable economic reports and deciding that it would be “premature” to withdraw the stimulus.

An alternative lesson from the double dip the economy took in 1938 is that the GDP created by massive fiscal stimulus is artificial. So whenever it is eventually removed, there will be significant economic fall out. Our choice may be either to maintain large annual deficits until our creditors refuse to finance them or tolerate another leg down in our economy by accepting some measure of fiscal discipline.

This brings me to our present fiscal situation and the current investment puzzle. Over the next decade the welfare states will come to face severe demographic problems. Baby Boomers have driven the U.S. economy since they were born. It is no coincidence that we experienced an economic boom between 1980 and 2000, as the Boomers reached their peak productive years.

The Boomers are now reaching retirement. The Social Security and Medicare commitments to them are astronomical. When the government calculates its debt and deficit it does so on a cash basis. This means that deficit accounting does not take into account the cost of future promises until the money goes out the door. According to shadowstats.com, if the federal government counted the cost of its future promises, the 2008 deficit was over $5 trillion and total obligations are over $60 trillion.

And that was before the crisis.

Over the last couple of years we have adopted a policy of private profits and socialized risks. We are transferring many private obligations onto the national ledger. Although our leaders ought to make some serious choices, they appear too trapped in short-termism and special interests to make them. Taking no action is an action.

In the nearer-term the deficit on a cash basis is about $1.6 trillion or 11% of GDP. President Obama forecasts $1.4 trillion next year, and with an optimistic economic outlook, $9 trillion over the next decade. The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research recently published a study that indicated that “by all relevant debt indicators, the U.S. fiscal scenario will soon approximate the economic scenario for countries on the verge of a sovereign debt default.”

As we sit here today, the Federal Reserve is propping up the bond market, buying long-dated assets with printed money. It cannot turn around and sell what it has just bought. There is a basic rule of liquidity. It isn’t the same for everyone. If you own 10,000 shares of Greenlight Re, you have a liquid investment. However, if I own 5 million shares it is not liquid to me, because of both the size of the position and the signal my selling would send to the market.

For this reason, the Fed cannot sell its Treasuries or Agencies without destroying the market. This means that it will be challenged to shrink the monetary base if inflation actually turns up.

Further, the Federal Open Market Committee members may not recognize inflation when they see it, as looking at inflation solely through the prices of goods and services, while ignoring asset inflation, can lead to a repeat of the last policy error of holding rates too low for too long

At the same time, the Treasury has dramatically shortened the duration of the government debt.

As a result, higher rates become a fiscal issue, not just a monetary one. The Fed could reach the point where it perceives doing whatever it takes requires it to become the buyer of Treasuries of first and last resort.

Japan appears even more vulnerable, because it is even more indebted and its poor demographics are a decade ahead of ours. Japan may already be past the point of no return.

When a country cannot reduce its ratio of debt to GDP over any time horizon, it means it can only refinance, but can never repay its debts. Japan has about 190% debt-to-GDP financed at an average cost of less than 2%. Even with the benefit of cheap financing the Japanese deficit is expected to be 10% of GDP this year. At some point, as American homeowners with teaser interest rates have learned, when the market refuses to refinance at cheap rates, problems quickly emerge. Imagine the fiscal impact of the market resetting Japanese borrowing costs to 5%.

Over the last few years, Japanese savers have been willing to finance their government deficit. However, with Japan’s population aging, it’s likely that the domestic savers will begin using those savings to fund their retirements. The newly elected DPJ party that favors domestic consumption might speed up this development. Should the market re-price Japanese credit risk, it is hard to see how Japan could avoid a government default or hyperinflationary currency death spiral.

The failure of Lehman meant that barring extraordinary measures, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs would have failed as the credit market realized that if the government were willing to permit failures, then the cost of financing such institutions needed to be re-priced so as to invalidate their business models.

I believe there is a real possibility that the collapse of any of the major currencies could have a similar domino effect on re-assessing the credit risk of the other fiat currencies run by countries with structural deficits and large, unfunded commitments to aging populations.

I believe that the conventional view that government bonds should be "risk free" and tied to nominal GDP is at risk of changing. Periodically, high quality corporate bonds have traded at lower yields than sovereign debt. That could happen again.

And, of course, these structural risks are exacerbated by the continued presence of credit rating agencies that inspire false confidence with potentially catastrophic results by over-rating the sovereign debt of the largest countries. There is no reason to believe that the rating agencies will do a better job on sovereign risk than they have done on corporate or structured finance risks.

My firm recently met with a Moody’s sovereign risk team covering twenty countries in Asia and the Middle East. They have only four professionals covering the entire region. Moody’s does not have a long-term quantitative model that incorporates changes in the population, incomes, expected tax rates, and so forth. They use a short-term outlook – only 12-18 months – to analyze data to assess countries’ abilities to finance themselves. Moody’s makes five-year medium-term qualitative assessments for each country, but does not appear to do any long-term quantitative or critical work.

Their main role, again, appears to be to tell everyone that things are fine, until a real crisis emerges at which point they will pile-on credit downgrades at the least opportune moment, making a difficult situation even more difficult for the authorities to manage. I can just envision a future Congressional Hearing so elected officials can blame the rating agencies for blowing it, as the rating agencies respond by blaming Congress.

Now, the question for us as investors is how to manage some of these possible risks. Four years ago I spoke at this conference and said that I favored my Grandma Cookie’s investment style of investing in stocks like Nike, IBM, McDonalds and Walgreens over my Grandpa Ben’s style of buying gold bullion and gold stocks. He feared the economic ruin of our country through a paper money and deficit driven hyper inflation. I explained how Grandma Cookie had been right for the last thirty years and would probably be right for the next thirty as well. I subscribed to Warren Buffett's old criticism that gold just sits there with no yield and viewed gold’s long-term value as difficult to assess.

However, the recent crisis has changed my view. The question can be flipped: how does one know what the dollar is worth given that dollars can be created out of thin air or dropped from helicopters? Just because something hasn’t happened, doesn’t mean it won’t. Yes, we should continue to buy stocks in great companies, but there is room for Grandpa Ben’s view as well.

I have seen many people debate whether gold is a bet on inflation or deflation. As I see it, it is neither. Gold does well when monetary and fiscal policies are poor and does poorly when they appear sensible. Gold did very well during the Great Depression when FDR debased the currency. It did well again in the money printing 1970s, but collapsed in response to Paul Volcker’s austerity. It ultimately made a bottom around 2001 when the excitement about our future budget surpluses peaked.

Prospectively, gold should do fine unless our leaders implement much greater fiscal and monetary restraint than appears likely. Of course, gold should do very well if there is a sovereign debt default or currency crisis.

A few weeks ago, the Office of Inspector General called out the Treasury Department for misrepresenting the position of the banks last fall. The Treasury’s response was an unapologetic expression that amounted to saying that at that point “doing whatever it takes” meant pulling a Colonel Jessup: “YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!” At least we know what we are dealing with.

When I watch Chairman Bernanke, Secretary Geithner and Mr. Summers on TV, read speeches written by the Fed Governors, observe the “stimulus” black hole, and think about our short-termism and lack of fiscal discipline and political will, my instinct is to want to short the dollar. But then I look at the other major currencies. The Euro, the Yen, and the British Pound might be worse. So, I conclude that picking one these currencies is like choosing my favorite dental procedure. And I decide holding gold is better than holding cash, especially now, where both earn no yield.

Along these same lines, we have bought long-dated options on much higher U.S. and Japanese interest rates. The options in Japan are particularly cheap because the historical volatility is so low. I prefer options to simply shorting government bonds, because there remains a possibility of a further government bond rally in response to the economy rolling over again. With options, I can clearly limit how much I am willing to lose, while creating a lot of leverage to a possible rate spiral.

For years, the discussion has been that our deficit spending will pass the costs onto “our grandchildren.” I believe that this is no longer the case and that the consequences will be seen during the lifetime of the leaders who have pursued short-term popularity over our solvency. The recent economic crisis and our response has brought forward the eventual reconciliation into a window that is near enough that it makes sense for investors to buy some insurance to protect themselves from a possible systemic event.

To slightly modify Alexis de Tocqueville: Events can move from the impossible to the inevitable without ever stopping at the probable. As investors, we can’t change the course of events, but we can attempt to protect capital in the face of foreseeable risks.

Of course, just like MDC, there remains the possibility that I am completely wrong. And, personally, I hope I am. I wonder what Stan Druckenmiller thinks.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Desperately Looking For Normal

This exemplifies what we deem as “desperately looking for normal”-where the markets are expected to behave according to a scenario molded by traditional metrics as construed by mainstream analysts.

In cases where markets misbehaves or veers from the norm, then all one has to do is to extend the premise of the argument, regardless of its validity, until perhaps it occurs…one day (even for the wrong reasons).


The following is a chart of the day from Bloomberg takes a perspective from seasonality patterns.


According to Bloomberg,

``Predictions that U.S. stocks would decline in September and October weren’t wrong, just early, says Mary Ann Bartels, an analyst at Bank of America Corp.

``The CHART OF THE DAY shows how the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s surge from its 12-year low on March 9 compares with rebounds from troughs in March 1938 and October 1974. Bartels cited those two periods as precedents in a report today.

``Using the earlier rallies as a guide suggests the “seasonal weakness” that stocks often suffer in September and October will occur in November, December and January instead, she wrote.

``The 1930s advance appears in the chart’s top panel and the 1970s surge is in the bottom panel. In both cases, the S&P 500 fell more than 10 percent from its peak after the rally ended, surpassing a commonly used threshold for a stock correction.

``Bartels, who relies on chart patterns to determine the market’s prospects, wrote that a correction after the current recovery would lay the groundwork for further gains next year. She sees the S&P 500 climbing as high as 1,325, a gain of 22 percent from the benchmark’s close of 1,087.68 last week.

``September has been the worst month for U.S. stocks on average since 1950, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac. October 1987 and last October produced the biggest-ever losses for the benchmark Russell 1000 and Russell 2000 indexes, dating back 30 years, the almanac said.

We sympathize with such view knowing that markets don’t move in a straight line. This means that eventually markets will correct but the timing is the ultimate question. It could happen tomorrow, in a week, in a month, or so on.

As a saying goes even a broken clock is right twice a day.


Nevertheless, for us, as long as policymakers persist with its manipulative mode, markets may continue to "surprise" on the upside.

Perhaps, until money or liquidity in the system may not be sufficient to sustain present levels or until policymakers reverse present actions...and that's where "normal will probably look normal".

Stephen Roach: Preparing For The Asian Century

McKinsey Quarterly Interviews Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach on his latest book "The Next Asia".










Find below the transcript of the Interview from McKinsey Quarterly...(if video doesn't appear pls proceed to McKinsey's website


(all bold highlights mine)

Clay Chandler: We’re joined today by Steve Roach, the chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia. Steve, thank you for being with us. You’ve been watching and writing about the dynamism in this region for many decades now. In your new book, The Next Asia, you write about how the region in the next 20 years will be much different than in the past 20 years. What’s driving that change?


Stephen Roach: Well, Clay, I think the Asia of the past 30 years has done an extraordinary job—especially China, but, increasingly, the rest of the region—in lifting standards of living well beyond anything we’ve seen in the annals of economic development. But the drivers have been primarily export led. And there’s been a lot of investment in the export platform that has been required to get that export machine to the state that it’s at.

But this model is close to having outlived its usefulness. The next Asia will be more consumer led, will have a growth dynamic that places greater emphasis on the quality of the growth experience, especially in terms of environmental protection and pollution control.

Clay Chandler: If I’m the chief executive of a Fortune 500 company and I’m thinking about my global strategy, how do I need to be thinking differently about Asia than I might have been before the crisis?

Stephen Roach: I think global multinationals have, up until now, primarily viewed developing Asia—and China in particular—as an offshore-production platform. The offshore-efficiency solution is still an attractive option. But what really could be powerful would be a growing opportunity to tap the region’s 3.5 billion consumers. This has been the dream all along of the Asian potential. But the consumer dynamic has largely been missing in action. And now, as it comes online, this is an extraordinary bonanza for global multinationals as well.

Clay Chandler: In The Next Asia, you strike a very optimistic tone. You note that Asia has always embraced change and that that’s really been the secret of Asia’s dynamism in years past. But the same thing was said in the wake of the Asian financial crisis in 1997. And yet by and large, most Asian economies went right back to the model that worked so well for them before the Asian financial crisis, a model that was heavily focused on exports and government-led investments. What’s different about the economic scene today?

Stephen Roach: The external demands that underpin the export model are now in trouble. So even if Asia is the best and most efficient producer that anyone has ever seen, the external demand is not going to be there the way it was. So if Asia wants to keep growing, if Asia wants to keep developing, if it wants to keep raising the standard of living for its three-and-a-half-billion consumers, it’s got to depend more on its own internal demand. So it really boils down to the fact that Asia’s options have been narrowed in terms of economic development as never before. And it has no choice but to become more internally, rather than externally, dependent.

Clay Chandler: Let’s talk for a moment, if we could, about India, the other big, growing economy in the region.

Stephen Roach: I think the micro has always been very positive in India: a large population of world-class competitive companies; a well-educated, English-speaking, IT-competent workforce; pretty good market institutions; relatively stable financial institutions; rule of law; democracy. The micro has never been the problem.

What’s really been the problem for India has mainly been the macro—inadequate savings; relatively limited foreign direct investment, especially when compared with China; and, of course, the horrible infrastructure. The macro has actually gotten better. In the last three to four years, India’s savings rates have moved from the low 20s nationwide to the mid-to-high 30s, which is still short of China but a huge improvement for India.

Foreign direct investments accelerated dramatically—again, not up to Chinese standards, but a huge acceleration vis-à-vis where India has been historically.

And the third leg of the stool is politics. The mid-May election, by sweeping the Communist Party out of this new coalition, gives the reformers an opportunity to finally deliver on the promises they made five-and-a-half years ago, when they first took power. I think that India actually could be the real sleeper in Asia over the next few years. Just at a time when everybody is all lathered up and excited over a China-centric region.

Clay Chandler: You can’t really talk about Asia’s future without also considering the trajectory of its largest economy. That, of course, is Japan. The story there has been almost unrelentingly gloomy for years. But now we’ve got a new government.

Stephen Roach: Well, you know, Japan is an example of what happens when you take a very prosperous economy and allow it to experience the post-bubble aftershocks of a massive asset-led implosion.

But here Japan sits, 20 years into the post-bubble era, and it’s not clear that it has really awoken from its long slumber, as you aptly put it. This is an economy that remains very much export dependent. Its two largest export markets, the US and China, are not providing much sustenance. The Japanese consumer is very constrained by demography, by unfunded pension liabilities. It still has a very high predisposition toward saving. There has been some capital-spending impetus in recent years but, again, it has largely been driven by a new export linkage into China, and that’s on hold right now. And then finally, Japan has a horrific leadership problem. So the combination of structural problems, this long post-bubble hangover, leadership issues—it’s hard to be too constructive on the Japanese economy going forward, I’m afraid.

Clay Chandler: How about prospects for greater integration and cooperation in Asia as a whole? In your book, you talk about the emergence of what you call a pan-Asian economic framework. What will that framework look like?

Stephen Roach: Well, I think the building blocks of that framework are starting to fall into place. There’s been increased integration in a China-centric supply chain, with most of the large economies in the region—from Japan, to Korea, to Taiwan—now more dependent on exports to China than any of their other major trading partners, including Europe or the United States. So the logistics of an increasingly China-centric supply chain are starting to fall into place.

But here again, I would say that the real challenge for a pan-regional economic integration would be to shift the structure increasingly away from one that’s externally led to one that’s internally led. When the Asian consumer starts to rise and is sourced increasingly by the Asian producer, that’ll be the real, powerful synergy that I think can take this region to the next place.

Clay Chandler: Is it fair, do you think, to say that the Asian Century has finally arrived?

Stephen Roach: The central premise of my book, The Next Asia, is that it’s a little early to crack out the champagne and declare the onset of the Asian Century. It’s the stuff of great headlines and possibly documentary films, but the next Asia—an Asia which is more balanced, one that brings the Asian consumer into the equation—that’s what the Asian Century needs. The Asian Century, in my view, is not a sustainable image if it’s an Asia of producers or exporters selling things to others. The Asian Century is one where Asia produces to its home markets, rather than just to markets around the world. And until we see that, I think, again, that champagne is going to have to stay on ice for awhile".

Dramatic Improvements In Global Country Default Risks (CDS)

The following is an updated table of country default risk courtesy of Bespoke Invest
According to Bespoke Invest, (all bold highlights mine)

``The CDS prices represent the cost per year to insure $10,000 of debt for 5 years. The US CDS price is quoted in Euros. The list is sorted by year-to-date change, and as shown, default risk in Russia and Australia is down the most in 2009 at -77%. US default risk is down 68.1%, which is the most of any G-7 country. Japan is the only country that has seen default risk actually rise in 2009, but it also had the lowest CDS price of any country at the start of the year. Overall, while CDS prices are down sharply in 2009, they remain well above where they were at the start of 2008, so there's still plenty of recovery work to do."

Additional comments:


Falling cost of insurance on global sovereign debt papers seems consistent with today's general climate where there has been a significant reduction in risk aversion, mainly due to massive and concerted liquidity injections.


This fires up the self reinforcing collateral-lending feedback loop mechanism where rising collateral values prompts for more lending, and more lending increases collateral values.

This seem to also filter into sovereign instruments too. For example, the Philippines has taken advantage of today's yield searching landscape to book its
third dollar denominated debt this year. This comes amidst record bond issuance in parts of the globe.

While this paints an impression of stability, stability becomes future instability as the credit cycle expands on a pyramid structure, otherwise known as the Ponzi finance.

Bespoke rightly points out that most countries have seen their CDS levels STILL significantly higher when compared to the last column or the start of 2008, in spite of the general improvements.


This is a noteworthy reference point. Only Lebanon has seen its CDS rates today lower than the start of 2008.

Moreover the Philippines, startlingly, could be reckoned as the second best performer where its CDS levels are back to the start of 2008! Perhaps this could be one reason she has easily raised a third round of debt issuance this year.

Lastly Indonesia and Brazil are among the closest to recovering the start of the 2008 levels.

Again the marked improvements of credit risks could serve as a staging point for massive levered risk taking-ergo a new bubble.

Monday, October 19, 2009

World Recession Is Over!

That's according to Floyd Norris of the New York Times
From New York Times, (all bold highlights mine)

``The worldwide recession appears to have ended, with surveys showing manufacturing activity is on the rise nearly everywhere.

``“It is the emerging markets that are leading, with the U.S. following and Europe lagging,” said Chris Williamson, the chief economist of Markit, a company that surveys manufacturers in many countries.

``The surveys, conducted in the United States by the Institute of Supply Management and in other countries by Markit, measure not the level of manufacturing output but the way it is changing. The surveys have a reputation for showing turns in the economy, often before other indicators do.

``The September figures for manufacturing seemed to indicate that what had looked like a rapid recovery was slowing in the United States and Europe.

``But similar surveys of service companies appear to show growth accelerating in most countries, although not in the three European economies that Mr. Williamson thinks are still in recession; Spain, Ireland and Italy....

``It now appears that companies cut too much, and the surveys of manufacturing show that companies are expanding in most countries.

``Over all, the surveys indicate that the manufacturing sectors of China, Taiwan, South Korea and India had begun to grow by April, but that the United States did not follow suit until August.

``In Europe, France is reporting growth, and Britain is hovering near the midpoint, indicating the deterioration has stopped but growth has not yet begun. Although the German government estimates that its gross domestic product rose in the second quarter, the manufacturing survey indicates continued weakness in that country.

``New orders and production have turned positive everywhere but in the three European laggards, Spain, Ireland and Italy. Spain and Ireland have been badly hurt by collapses in real estate markets, which had boomed, in part, because of easy credit. Mr. Williamson attributed some of Italy’s problems to a lack of confidence in its government’s ability to deal with problems.

``But employment continues to lag in most countries outside of Asia. Mr. Williamson said he estimated that total job losses in the major developed countries — the United States, Britain, the euro zone and Japan — bottomed out at 1.9 million a month in March and are now about 500,000 a month. While many companies are still hesitant to hire, he says he thinks employment will begin to grow by the end of this year."

Added comments: None of this anything new, from the start of the year we have been arguing that Asia will likely lead the recovery,[ see for example 2009: Asian Markets Could OUTPERFORM, ] and so far this has been so.

Nonetheless, from our end a new bubble cycle has just begun. Enjoy this while it lasts.