Showing posts with label seth godin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seth godin. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Global Job Markets: Specialized (Value Added) Work Means Higher Pay

Here is my favourite marketing guru, Seth Godin’s take on cheap labor… (bold emphasis mine)

When something is scarce, it's valuable. MBA's with buzzwords and the ability to raise a million dollars around some web idea are not scarce. They are fungible.

People who understand technology and are willing to bend it to their will, on the other hand, are scarce. They can't be found with a classified ad on Craigslist or in a blind project ad on eLance.

The job of the smart business person isn't to fish in waters where coders are cheap. It's to have enough initiative and vision that the best coders in the world will realize that they'll do better with you than without you.

Business people add value when they make things happen, not when they seek to hire cheap.

Cheapness isn’t everything. Job markets are a function of demand and supply. In today’s climate where global economies have been transitioning from mass production to niche markets, specialization (division of labor and comparative advantage) will be playing a much greater role in shaping job markets.

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Courtesy of Kauffman Foundation

Thus, people who specialize will command higher pay. To argue that “cheapness” steal away jobs represent squishy thinking.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Seth Godin On The Diminishing Force Called Gatekeepers

From my favourite marketing guru Seth Godin, (bold highlights mine)

Amanda Hocking is making a million dollars a year publishing her own work to the Kindle. No publisher.

Rebecca Black has reached more than 15,000,000 listeners, like it or not, without a record label.

Are we better off without gatekeepers? Well, it was gatekeepers that brought us the unforgettable lyrics of Terry Jacks in 1974, and it's gatekeepers that are spending a fortune bringing out pop songs and books that don't sell.

I'm not sure that this is even the right question. Whether or not we're better off, the fact is that the gatekeepers--the pickers--are reeling, losing power and fading away. What are you going to do about it?

Read the rest here.

Whether applied to commerce, music or politics, the forces of technology aided decentralization appear to be rapidly eroding the power of centralized “gatekeepers”.

Friday, March 04, 2011

Quote of the Day: Popular or Workable?

From my favorite marketing guru, Seth Godin

The thing that makes it popular...
might be precisely the thing that keeps it from working….
There are a hundred ways you and your organization can become more popular, earn more clicks, generate more comments... but is popular what you're after?

In terms of the markets and of the political economy I vote on ideas that are workable.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Power of Slow Change: Dying Mass Media, Endangered Traditional Politicians

Another marvelous stuff from marketing guru Seth Godin (all bold highlights mine)

Now, though...When attention is scarce and there are many choices, media costs something other than money. It costs interesting. If you are angry or remarkable or an outlier, you're interesting, and your idea can spread. People who are dull and merely aligned with powerful interests have a harder time earning attention, because money isn't sufficient.

Thus, as media moves from TV-driven to attention-driven, we're going to see more outliers, more renegades and more angry people driving agendas and getting elected. I figure this will continue until other voices earn enough permission from the electorate to coordinate getting out the vote, communicating through private channels like email and creating tribes of people to spread the word. (And they need to learn not to waste this permission hassling their supporters for money).

Mass media is dying, and it appears that mass politicians are endangered as well.

As the information based economy deepens, knowledge will likely be more dispersed, aided by the web. And that the power of traditional influences will get diminished, as the public’s attention gravitate towards niche based interest groups, founded on fragmented and specialized knowledge.

And as we long been saying, politics is NEVER static, they always evolve. The reshaping or the ‘digitalization’ of the economy will likewise reconfigure politics. Perhaps, seen in the line of niche marketing which could likewise evolve into realm of niche politics.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Quote of the Day: The Future of Labor

Here is a great post labor day quote from marketing guru Seth Godin,

In a world where labor does exactly what it's told to do, it will be devalued. Obedience is easily replaced, and thus one worker is as good as another. And devalued labor will be replaced by machines or cheaper alternatives. We say we want insightful and brilliant teachers, but then we insist they do their labor precisely according to a manual invented by a committee...

Companies that race to the bottom in terms of the skill or cost of their labor end up with nothing but low margins. The few companies that are able to race to the top, that can challenge workers to bring their whole selves--their human selves--to work, on the other hand, can earn stability and growth and margins. Improvisation still matters if you set out to solve interesting problems.

The future of labor isn't in less education, less OSHA and more power to the boss. The future of labor belongs to enlightened, passionate people on both sides of the plant, people who want to do work that matters.

In the ongoing transition to the information age, investments, trade and jobs will require increasing patterns of diversity and specialization. And as pointed out by Mr. Godin, those who focus on the mediocre will suffer from commoditized wages and profit margins and will be subjected to rigors of tight competition.

Finally, this also shows how labor, like capital, isn’t homogeneous.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Multiple Intelligence And Human Freedom

Marketing guru Seth Godin makes another fantastic insight about the multiple intelligence of the individual which he calls ironically calls multiple dumbness.

``About twenty five years ago, Howard Gardner taught us his theory of multiple intelligences. He described the fact that there's not just one kind of intelligence, in fact there are at least seven (1 Bodily-kinesthetic, 2 Interpersonal, 3 Verbal-linguistic, 4 Logical-mathematical, 5 Intrapersonal, 6 Visual-spatial, 7 Musical, 8 Naturalistic). This makes perfect sense—people are good at different things." (emphasis added)


In other words, dumbness or intelligence depends on the relative comparison of traits, as no person can claim a monopoly or absolute superiority in all traits.


And such uniqueness makes man superior and complimentary, which highlights the case for human freedom.


Quoting Murray N. Rothbard from Inequality,


``If men were like ants, there would be no interest in human freedom. If individual men, like ants, were uniform, interchangeable, devoid of specific personality traits of their own, then who would care whether they were free or not? Who, indeed, would care if they lived or died? The glory of the human race is the uniqueness of each individual, the fact that every person, though similar in many ways to others, possesses a completely individuated personality of his own. It is the fact of each person's uniqueness, the fact that no two people can be wholly interchangeable, that makes each and every man irreplaceable and that makes us care whether he lives or dies, whether he is happy or oppressed. And, finally, it is the fact that these unique personalities need freedom for their full development that constitutes one of the major arguments for a free society." (bold emphasis added)

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The Importance of Choice

This is great stuff from marketing guru Seth Godin,


With so many options in media, interaction and venues, you now get to choose what you expose yourself to.

Expose yourself to art, and you'll come to appreciate it and aspire to make it.

Expose yourself to anonymous scathing critics and you will begin to believe them (or flinch in anticipation of their next appearance.)

Expose yourself to get-rich-quick stories and you'll want to become one.

Expose yourself to fast food ads and you'll crave french fries.

Expose yourself to angry mobs of uninformed, easily manipulated protesters and you'll want to join a mob.

Expose yourself to metrics about your brand or business or performance and you'll work to improve them.

Expose yourself to anger and you might get angry too.

Expose yourself to people making smart decisions and you'll probably learn how to do it as well.

Expose yourself to eager long-term investors (of every kind) and you'll likely to start making what they want to support.

It's a choice if you want it to be.

There is a political aspect to this message; that's if we are made free to make that choice.

Unfortunately, many people would like to have such privilege taken away from us.

They prefer individual choice to be substituted by choice made by some elite group, particularly, technocrats, officials, bureaucrats or politicians, expecting that you and I are not qualified to make the right decisions on ourselves. And worst, they force their choices on us!

The moral as I see it from Seth's message, is best said by Archibald MacLeish [(1892-1982) Poet, playwright, Librarian of Congress, & Assistant Secretary of State under Franklin Roosevelt],

"Freedom is the right to choose: the right to create for oneself the alternatives of choice. Without the possibility of choice and the exercise of choice, a man is not a man but a member, an instrument, a thing."

Friday, October 16, 2009

The Problem With Mainstream Media's Mindset

Here is another gem from marketing guru Seth Godin on The problem with cable news thinking

(all bold emphasis mine)

``Cable news thinking has nothing to do with fires or with politics. Instead, it amplifies the worst elements of emotional reaction:

  1. Focus on the urgent instead of the important.
  2. Vivid emotions and the visuals that go with them as a selector for what's important.
  3. Emphasis on noise over thoughtful analysis.
  4. Unwillingness to reverse course and change one's mind.
  5. Xenophobic and jingoistic reactions (fear of outsiders).
  6. Defense of the status quo encouraged by an audience self-selected to be uniform.
  7. Things become important merely because others have decided they are important.
  8. Top down messaging encourages an echo chamber (agree with this edict or change the channel).
  9. Ill-informed about history and this particular issue.
  10. Confusing opinion with the truth.
  11. Revising facts to fit a point of view.
  12. Unwillingness to review past mistakes in light of history and use those to do better next time."
Additional comments:

The above don't just apply only to cable news but also to traditional media: TV, radio or even mainstream broadsheets.

Emotions capture best the attention of the public than the rational. This leads us to our next concern...

The manipulation of public opinion


A chilling reminder from Joseph Paul Goebbels' (1897-1945), Nazi's Propaganda Minister, speech in 1933, ``It is the absolute right of the state to supervise the formation of public opinion."


Manipulating public opinion to advance the interests of the state and of those interest groups who depend on the state can easily be done by brandishing emotions to a gullible public.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

A Bet On Free Education

This fantastic article from Marketing Guru Seth Godin is simply too irresistible not to share.

From Seth Godin, (blue bold emphasis mine)

``Should this be scarce or abundant?

``MIT and Stanford are starting to make classes available for free online. The marginal cost of this is pretty close to zero, so it's easy for them to share. Abundant education is easy to access and offers motivated individuals a chance to learn.

``Scarcity comes from things like accreditation, admissions policies or small classrooms.

Should this be free or expensive?

``Wikipedia offers the world's fact base to everyone, for free. So it spreads.

``On the other hand, some bar review courses are so expensive the websites don't even have the guts to list the price.

``The newly easy access to the education marketplace (you used to need a big campus and a spot in the guidance office) means that both the free and expensive options are going to be experimented with, because the number of people in the education business is going to explode (then implode).

``If you think the fallout in the newspaper business was dramatic, wait until you see what happens to education.

``Should this be about school or about learning?

``School was the big thing for a long time. School is tests and credits and notetaking and meeting standards. Learning, on the other hand, is 'getting it'. It's the conceptual breakthrough that permits the student to understand it then move on to something else. Learning doesn't care about workbooks or long checklists.

Read the rest here.

So here's how things might shape in the future:

The laws of economics should apply: lower costs equates to higher demand.

Taxpayer funded public education may go down as free online education flourishes.

What should matter now is securing online access for the public and investments (in content and infrastructure) are likely to get focused here.

Consequently too, certificate courses will have to be reconfigured.

It's simply just amazing how free markets, underpinned by innovative technological infrastructure (likewise a product of the markets), have evolved to make society much progressive.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Worth Doing: Inflation Analytics Over Traditional Fundamentalism!

``Economics is not about goods and services; it is about the actions of living men. Its goal is not to dwell upon imaginary constructions such as equilibrium. These constructions are only tools of reasoning. The sole task of economics is analysis of the actions of men, is the analysis of processes.”- Ludwig von Mises Logical Catallactics Versus Mathematical Catallactics, Chapter 16 of Human Action

Marketing guru Seth Godin has this fantastic advice on quality,

``When we talk about quality, it's easy to get confused.

``That's because there are two kinds of quality being discussed. The most common way it's talked about in business is "meeting specifications." An item has quality if it's built the way it was designed to be built.

``There's another sort of quality, though. This is the quality of, "is it worth doing?". The quality of specialness and humanity, of passion and remarkability.

``Hence the conflict. The first sort of quality is easy to mandate, reasonably easy to scale and it fits into a spreadsheet very nicely. I wonder if we're getting past that.

In essence, everything we do accounts for a tradeoff. When we make choices it’s always a measure of acting on values.

For instance, the “quality” of providing investment advisory is likewise a tradeoff. It’s a compromise between the interests of investors relative to the writer and or the publisher. It’s a choice on the analytical processes utilized to prove or disprove a subject. It’s a preference over the time horizon on the account of the investment theme/s covered. And it’s also a partiality on the recommendations derived from such investigations.

So “meeting specifications” which is the conventional sell side paradigm has mainly the following characteristics, it is:

-short term oriented (emphasis on momentum or technical approaches),

-frames studies based on “spreadsheet variety” (reduces financial analysis to historical performance than to address forward dynamics),

-serves to entertain more than to advance strategic thinking,

- promotes heuristics or cognitive biases

-upholds the reductionist perspective or the oversimplified depiction of how capital markets work and

-benefits the publisher more than the client (Agency Problem)

Yet many don’t realize this simply because this has been deeply ingrained into our mental faculties by self serving institutions that dominate the industry.

And instead of merely meeting the specifications which is the norm, here we offer the alternative-the “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Why?

-Because we realize that successful investing comes with the application of the series of "right" actions based on the “right” wisdom and rigorous discipline.

And with “right” wisdom comes the broader understanding of the seen and unseen effects of government policies that IMPACT asset markets or the economy more than just the simplistic observation that markets operate like an ordinary machine with quantified variables.

-Because government policies shape bubble cycles which underpins the performance of asset prices.

Think of it, if markets operate unambiguously on the platform of “valuations” or the assumption of the prevalence of rational based markets, then bubble cycles won’t exist.

Hence, the failure to understand policy directions or policy implications would be the Achilles Heels of any market participant aspiring success in this endeavor.

For instance, with nearly 90% of oil reserves or supplies under government or state owned institutions, any analysis of oil pricing dynamics predicated on sheer demand and supply without the inclusion of policy and political trends would be a serious folly or a severe misdiagnosis.

Of course, money printing by global central banks adds to the demand side of the oil equation. Moreover, price control policies can be an interim variable. The recent attempt to curb speculative trading in oil can be construed as a significant factor for the recent oil collapse in oil prices.

-And also because I try to keep in mind and heart Frederic Bastiat’s operating principle, ``Between a good and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference - the one takes account of the visible effect; the other takes account both of the effects which are seen, and also of those which it is necessary to foresee. Now this difference is enormous, for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the ultimate consequences are fatal, and the converse. Hence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come, while the true economist pursues a great good to come, - at the risk of a small present evil.”

In short, the seen and unseen effects of policy actions and political trends are the operating dynamics from which underlines our “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Financial Markets As Fingerprints

We have repeatedly argued against the mainstream and conventional view that micro fundamentals drives the markets [see Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation?].

Stock markets, for us, have been driven by principally monetary inflation, and secondarily from sentiment induced by such inflation dynamics. All the rest of the attendant stories (mergers, buyouts, fundamentals such as financial ratio, etc…) function merely as rationalizations that feeds on the public’s predominant dependence on heuristics as basis of decisions in a loose money landscape.

In an environment where liquidity is constrained, no stories or financial strength have escaped the wrath of the downside reratings pressure.

The disconnect between market price actions over the performance of corporate financials or the domestic economy have been conspicuous enough during the last bull (2003-2007) and bear cycles (2007-2008) to prove our assertion.

Moreover, up to this point our skeptics haven’t produced any strong evidence to refute our arguments. Instead we had been given a runaround, alluding to some regional securities as possible proof of exemptions.

Here we discovered that inflation and inflation driven sentiment seem to apply significantly even in the more sophisticated markets of Asia as well.

So, instead of weakening our arguments, the wider perspective has even reinforced it.

Moreover, financial markets shouldn’t be seen as operating in uniform conditions. Such reductionist view risks glossing over the genuine internal mechanisms driving the markets. The underlying structure of every national financial markets appear like fingerprints-they are unique.

For instance, they have different degrees of depth relative to the national economy as seen in Figure 1.


Figure 1: McKinsey Quarterly Mapping Global Capital Markets Fifth Annual

The McKinsey Quarterly map reveals of the extent of distinction of financial market depth across the world. Yet growth dynamics are underpinned by idiosyncratic national traits.

So it would be an “apples to oranges” fallacy to take the Philippines as an example to compare with the US markets or other markets in trying to ascertain the degree of “fundamentals” affecting price actions versus the inflation perspective.

Finding scant evidence that the Philippine market is driven by fundamentals, we’ll move to ascertain the impact of inflation to US markets-the bedrock of the capital markets.

The US has deeper and more sophisticated markets, where [as we pointed out in PSE: The Handicaps Of A One Directional Reward Based Platform] investors can be exposed to profit from opportunities in all market directions- up, down and consolidation, given the wide array of instruments to choose from, such as the Exchange Traded Funds, Options, Derivatives and other forms of securitization vehicles.

This leads to more pricing efficiency in relative and absolute terms.

This also implies that deeper and more efficient markets tend to be more complicated. Nonetheless this doesn't discount policy induced liquidity as a significant variable affecting asset pricing.

In lesser efficient markets as the Philippines or in many emerging markets, the lesser the sophistication and the insufficient depth accentuates the liquidity issue.

The fact that the broad based global meltdown in 2008 converged with almost all asset markets except the US dollar, had been a reflection of liquidity constraints as a pivotal factor among other variables.

S&P 500 Total Nominal Return Highlights Rapid Inflation Growth!

Since we don’t indulge in Ipse Dixitism, the proof in the pudding, for us, is always in the eating.


Figure 2: Investment Postcards: Components of Equity Returns

This excellent chart from Prieur Du Plessis’ Investment Postcards (see figure 2) showcases the categorized return of equity capital since 1871. That’s 138 years of history!

Says Mr. Plessis, ``Let’s go back to the total nominal return of 8.7% per annum and analyze its components. We already know that 2.2% per annum came from inflation. Real capital growth (i.e. price movements net of inflation) added another 1.8% per annum. Where did the rest of the return come from? Wait for it, dividends - yes, boring dividends, slavishly reinvested year after year, contributed 4.7% per annum. This represents more than half the total return over time!”

While it is true that dividends accounted for as the biggest growth factor in equity returns in the S&P 500 benchmark yet, where inflation so far has constituted about 25.3% (2.2%/8.7%) of total returns, what has been neglected is that rate of growth of inflation has far outpaced the growth clip of both capital and dividend growth.

Notice that inflation had been a factor only since the US Federal Reserve was born in 1913. Prior to 1913, equity returns had been purely dividends and capital growth.

And further notice that the share of inflation relative to total returns has rapidly accelerated since President Nixon ended the Bretton Woods standard by closing the gold window in August 1971 otherwise known as the Nixon Shock.

To add, the share of inflation has virtually eclipsed the growth in real capital!!!

In other words, investing paradigms predicated on the pre-inflation to moderate inflation era will unlikely work in an environment where inflation grows faster than dividends or capital.

Hence it is a folly to latch on to the beliefs of “fundamental driven” prices without the inclusion of policy induced inflation in the context of asset pricing.

This is a solid case where past performances don’t guarantee future outcomes!

To further add, if inflation has a growing material impact to the pricing of US equity securities, then the degree of correlation with the rest of the global markets must be significantly greater under the premise of market pricing efficiency.

Policy Induced Volatilities Against Mainstream Fundamentalism

Here is more feasting on the pudding (this should make me obese).


Figure 3: Hussman Funds Secular Bear Markets And The Volatility Of Inflation

Another outstanding chart, see figure 3, this time from William Hester of Hussman Funds.

Mr. Hester uses the volatility of inflation as a proxy for economic volatility.

In the chart, low inflation volatility extrapolates to higher price P/E multiples and vice versa.

Here it is clearly evident that when volatility is low, bubble valuations emerge (left window), whereas the regression to the mean from excessive valuations occurs when volatility of inflation or economic volatility is high (right window).

Mr. Hester adds, ``It's not only the level of volatility and uncertainty in the economy that matters to investors, but also the trend and the persistence in this uncertainty. Shrinking amounts of volatility in the economy creates an environment where investors are willing to pay higher and higher multiples for stocks, while growing uncertainty brings lower and lower multiples.” (bold highlight mine)

So, it isn’t just economic volatility (as signified by inflation) but uncertainty as a major contributory factor to the gyrations of price earning multiples.

And where does “uncertainty” emanate from?

It is rooted mostly from government intervention or political policies instituted by governments, such as protectionism, subsidies, higher taxes et. al.. or any policies that fosters “regime uncertainty” or ``pervasive uncertainty about the property-rights regime -- about what private owners can reliably expect the government to do in its actions that affect private owners' ability to control the use of their property, to reap the income it yields, and to transfer it to others on voluntarily acceptable terms” as defined by Professor Robert Higgs.

In actuality, Mr. Hester’s technical observations of the proximate correlations of inflation and price/earnings multiples is a reflection or a symptom of the operational phases of the business cycles.

As depicted by Hans F. Sennholz in the The Great Depression, ``Like the business cycles that had plagued the American economy in 1819–1820, 1839–1843, 1857–1860, 1873–1878, 1893–1897, and 1920–1921. In each case, government had generated a boom through easy money and credit, which was soon followed by the inevitable bust. The spectacular crash of 1929 followed five years of reckless credit expansion by the Federal Reserve System under the Coolidge administration.” (bold highlights mine)

So it would be plain shortsightedness for any serious market participants to blindly read historical “fundamental” performances and project these into future prices while discounting political or policy dimensions into asset pricing.

As we noted in last week’s Inflation Is The Global Political Choice, the financial and economic milieu has been hastily evolving post crash and is likely being dynamically reconfigured from where asset pricing will likewise reflect on such unfolding dynamics, ``the unfolding accounts of deglobalization amidst a reconfiguration of global trade, labor and capital flow dynamics, which used to be engineered around the US consumer, will likely be reinforced by an increasing trend of reregulations which may lead to creeping protectionism and reduced competition and where higher taxes may reduce productivity and effectively raise national cost structures, as discussed in Will Deglobalization Lead To Decoupling?

Hence, any purported objectives to attain ALPHA without the context of the measurable impact from policy or political dimensions over the long term are inconsistent with the intended goals.

Instead, these signify as lamentable and plaintive quest for short term HOLY Grail pursuits which is not attributable to investing but to speculative punts.

Hence, traditional “fundamentalism” serves as nothing more than the search for rationalizations or excuses that would conform to cognitive biased based risk taking decisions.

It’s not objectivity, but heuristics (mental shortcuts or cognitive biases) which demands for traditional fundamentalism metrics since evolving market and economic realities and expectations don’t match.

Under A New Normal, Old Habits Die Hard

London School of Economics Professor Willem Buiter [in Can the US economy afford a Keynesian stimulus?] makes the same policy based analysis when he predicts that the US will prospectively underperform the global markets due to the political direction,

``There is no chance that a nation as reputationally scarred and maimed as the US is today could extract any true “alpha” from foreign investors for the next 25 years or so. So the US will have to start to pay a normal market price for the net resources it borrows from abroad. It will therefore have to start to generate primary surpluses, on average, for the indefinite future. A nation with credibility as regards its commitment to meeting its obligations could afford to delay the onset of the period of pain. It could borrow more from abroad today, because foreign creditors and investors are confident that, in due course, the country would be willing and able to generate the (correspondingly larger) future primary external surpluses required to service its external obligations. I don’t believe the US has either the external credibility or the goodwill capital any longer to ask, Oliver Twist-like, for a little more leeway, a little more latitude. I believe that markets - both the private players and the large public players managing the foreign exchange reserves of the PRC, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, the Gulf states, Japan and other nations - will make this clear. There will, before long (my best guess is between two and five years from now) be a global dumping of US dollar assets, including US government assets. Old habits die hard.” (bold highlights mine)

Indeed, old habits, mainstream but antiquated beliefs are even more difficult to eliminate.


Figure 4: John Maudlin/Safehaven.com: Buddy, Can You Spare $5 Trillion?

In an environment where the dearth of capital will be overwhelmed by the expansive liabilities of global governments deficit spending policies [see figure 4], the underlying policy trends will determine, to a large extent, the dimensions of asset pricing dynamics.

And as we noted last week, deficits won’t be the key issue but the financing. Here a myriad of variables will likely come into play, ``the crux of the matter is that the financing aspect of the deficits is more important than the deficit itself. And here savings rate, foreign exchange reserves, economic growth, tax revenues, financial intermediation, regulatory framework, economic freedom, cost of doing business, inflation rates, demographic trends and portfolio flows will all come into play. So any experts making projections based on the issue of deficits alone, without the context of scale and source of financing, is likely misreading the entire picture.”

Yet, like us, PIMCO’s Bill Gross in his June Outlook sees a “New Normal” environment where investing strategies will have to be reshaped.

``It is probable that trillion-dollar deficits are here to stay because any recovery is likely to reflect “new normal” GDP growth rates of 1%-2% not 3%+ as we used to have. Staying rich in this future world will require strategies that reflect this altered vision of global economic growth and delevered financial markets. Bond investors should therefore confine maturities to the front end of yield curves where continuing low yields and downside price protection is more probable. Holders of dollars should diversify their own baskets before central banks and sovereign wealth funds ultimately do the same. All investors should expect considerably lower rates of return than what they grew accustomed to only a few years ago. Staying rich in the “new normal” may not require investors to resemble Balzac as much as Will Rogers, who opined in the early 30s that he wasn’t as much concerned about the return on his money as the return of his money.” (bold highlights mine)

So yes, ALPHA can only be achieved with respect to the understanding of the scope and scale of policy and political trends and its implication to the sundry financial assets and to the global and local economy as well as to industries. For instance, industries that have endured or will see expanded presence of the visible hand of governments will have systemic distortions that may nurture bubble like features of expanded volatility or could see underperformance over the long run.

And any models or assumptions built around traditional metrics are likely to be rendered less effective than one which incorporates political and policy based analysis.

In short, like it or not, in the environment of the New Normal, government inflation dynamics will function as the zeitgeist which determines financial asset pricing trends.

This brings us back to the issue of quality. For us, in almost every sense, it appears that the "is it worth doing?" perspective is the more profitable approach than simply abiding by the conventional “meeting specifications”.

Nonetheless for those who can’t rid themselves of such archaic habits, we suggest for them to enroll in local stock market forums where traditional fundamental information from diverse sellside sources or even rumor based information can possibly be obtained for free! Forums are recommended sources of information for short term players seeking market adrenalin and excitement.


Saturday, June 27, 2009

Stranger, Friendlies or My Friend?

Quote of the day from the ever eloquent and adroit marketing guru Seth Godin-from his latest terse but inspiring missive, The difference between strangers and friends.

(bold emphasis added)

``Strangers are justifiably suspicious.

``Friends give you the benefit of the doubt.

``“Friend” is more broadly defined as someone you have a beer with or meet up with to go on a hike. A friend is someone who has interacted with you, or who knows your parents or reads your blog—someone with history. If you’ve made a promise to someone and then kept it, you’re a friend. If you’ve changed someone for the better, you’re a friend as well.

``We market to friends very differently than we market to strangers. We do business differently as well.

``Thanks to social networks and the amplification of stories online, we have far more friends per person than at any other time in human history. Nurturing your friends—protecting them and watching out for them—is an obligation, and it builds an asset at the same time.

``(I want to distinguish friends from 'friendlies', the people you have a digital link to, but no real connection. Friendlies are basically strangers with a thumbnail of their face on your screen. They're not friends. And, while we're at it, the moment you treat a friend like a stranger (form mail, for example) they're not a friend any more, are they?)"

(end quote)

My comment: Will you be more than a 'friendlies' and be my friend?

Friday, May 01, 2009

Seth Godin On Survivorship Bias

Marketing guru Seth Godin in his latest post gives a fantastic layman's description of the "survivorship bias"-or the tendency to see only winners- in the context of million blind squirrels.

From Mr. Godin...

``My dad likes to say, "even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then." And it's true. You shouldn't pick your strategy by modeling someone else's success. The success might have been strategic and planned, but it's just as likely to be a matter of blind luck. Someone had to get that big deal, and this time it was him.

``The numbing reality of the net is that now we can see all the blind squirrels, all the time. A recent piece in the Times talked about bloggers getting six figure book deals in just a few weeks after posting community-driven goofy websites. It's easy to read this and say, "I should do that! I could do that!"

``What's missing from the article is that for every 10,000 goofy websites that get launched, one turns into a six-figure book deal and the other 9,999 fade away. If you want to build a goofy website, go for it. Just don't expect to be the lucky squirrel."

In media, blind squirrel reporting or analysis seems to be the norm.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Fruits From Creative Destruction: An Asian and Emerging Market Decoupling?

``But innovation, in Schumpeter’s famous phrase, is also “creative destruction”. It makes obsolete yesterday’s capital equipment and capital investment. The more the economy progresses, the more capital formation will it therefore need. Thus, the classical economist-or the accountant or the stock exchange-considers “profit” is a genuine cost, the cost of staying in business, the cost of a future in which nothing is predictable except that today’s profitable business will become tomorrow’s white elephant.”- Peter F. Drucker, Profit’s Function, The Daily Drucker.

We read from creditwritedowns.com that Morgan Stanley Asia Chairman Stephen Roach made some predictions, namely:

1 “Asia will have a less acute impact from the global financial and economic crisis”

2. “Export-led regions are followers, not leaders.” Hence would recover after their main export markets, the US and Europe, recovered.

3. “The only possibility (to recover earlier) is China, as it has large infrastructure spending in place that could provide support for economic growth.”

Dr. Roach has been one of the unassuming well respected contrarian voices, whom I have followed, who sternly warned of this crisis.

Nonetheless while we agree with some of his prognosis, where we depart with Dr. Roach is on the aspect of a ‘belated recovery’ of Asia because of its “export dependence” on US and Europe.

Creative Destruction: The Telephone Destroyed The Telegraph

While it is true that the Asian model had functioned as an export-led region over the past years, our favorite cliché, ``Past performance does not guarantee future results” would possibly come into play in the transformation of the playing field.

Let us simplify, if a business paradigm doesn’t work do you insist on pursuing the same model or do you attempt a shift?

Marketing Guru Seth Godin has a terse but poignant depiction of “solving a different problem” response to our question. We quote the terrific guru Mr. Godin,

``The telephone destroyed the telegraph.

``Here's why people liked the telegraph: It was universal, inexpensive, asynchronous and it left a paper trail.

``The telephone offered not one of these four attributes. It was far from universal, and if someone didn't have a phone, you couldn't call them. It was expensive, even before someone called you. It was synchronous--if you weren't home, no call got made. And of course, there was no paper trail.

``If the telephone guys had set out to make something that did what the telegraph does, but better, they probably would have failed. Instead, they solved a different problem, in such an overwhelmingly useful way that they eliminated the feature set of the competition.” (bold highlight mine)

In short, we see human action basically at work. To quote Ludwig von Mises, ``Action is an attempt to substitute a more satisfactory state of affairs for a less satisfactory one. We call such a willfully induced alteration an exchange.”

People who relied on old models didn’t see this coming. They would have resisted until they were overwhelmed.

The fact is the telephone replaced an entrenched system. Joseph Schumpeter, in economic vernacular coined this as “creative destruction”. And creative destruction essentially leads to new operating environments: the rise of the telephone.

Similarly, the Asian export model has been built upon the US credit bubble structure. That bubble is presently deflating and would most possibly dissipate. So is it with Europe’s model.

In other words, the global economy’s trade and investment framework will probably reconfigure based on the present operating economic realities. Countries and regions would probably operate under a set of redefined roles.

Here are three clues of the possible creative destruction transformation.

Deepening Regionalism


Figure 3: ADB: Emerging Asian Regionalism

This from the ADB’s Emerging Asian Regionalism, ``In large part due to the growth of production networks just discussed, trade within Asia has increased from 37% of its total trade in 1986 to 52% in 2006 (Figure 3.3). The share of trade with Europe has risen somewhat, while that with the US and the rest of the world has fallen. As set out in Chapter 2, Asia’s intraregional trade share is now midway between Europe’s and North America’s. It is also higher than Europe’s was at the outset of its integration process in the early 1960s.

``But trade has not been diverted from the rest of the world. On the contrary, trade with each of Asia’s four main partner groups has increased in the last two decades—not just absolutely, but also relative to Asia’s GDP (Figure 3.4). For example, Asia’s trade with the EU has more than doubled as a share of its GDP, from 2.6% in 1986 to 6.0% in 2006. The increase is even larger as a share of the EU’s GDP. The aggregate trade data thus suggests that Asia is steadily integrating both regionally and globally.”

The fact is that Asia has steadily been regionalizing or developing its intraregional dynamics even when the bubble structure had been functional. Today’s imploding bubble isn’t likely to alter such deepening trend.

Moreover, the current unwinding bubble structure is emblematic of a discoordination process from a ‘market clearing’ environment.

Under this phase, spare capacities are being shut or sold, excess labor are being laid off, surplus inventories are being liquidated and losses are being realized. Essentially new players are taking over the affected industries. And new players will be coming in with fresh capital to replace those whom have lost. Fresh capital will come from those economies with large savings or unimpaired banking system (see Will Deglobalization Lead To Decoupling?)

And like any economic cycles, this adjustment process will lead to equilibrium. Eventually a trough will be reached, where demand and supply should balance out and a transition to recovery follows.

The post bubble structure is likely to reinforce and not reduce this intraregional dynamic.

So in contrast to the notion of a belated recovery in Asia hinged on the old decrepit model, a China recovery should lift the rest of Asia out of the doldrums.

Asia and not the old stewards should lead the recovery based on the new paradigm.

And in every new bullmarket there always has been a change in market leadership. We are probably witnessing the incipience of such change today.

Real Savings Function As Basic Consumption

The assumption of the intransigence of Asia as an export led model is predicated on Keynesian theory of aggregate demand. In essence, for as long as borrowing and lending won’t recover in the traditional ‘aggregate demand’ economies, there won’t be a recovery in export led economies.

But in contrast to such consensus view, demand is not our problem, production from savings is.

According to quote Dr. Frank Shostak, ``At any point in time, the amount of goods and services available are finite. This is not so with regard to people’s demand, which tends to be unlimited. Most people want as many things as they can think of. What thwarts their demand is the availability of means. Hence, there can never be a problem with demand as such, but with the means to accommodate demand.

``Moreover, no producer is preoccupied with demand in general, but rather with the demand for his particular goods.”

``In the real world, one has to become a producer before one can demand goods and services. It is necessary to produce some useful goods that can be exchanged for other goods.”

A sole shipwrecked survivor in an island will need to scour for food and water in order to consume. This means he/she can only consume from what can be produced (catch or harvest). It goes the same in a barter economy; a baker can only have his pair of shoes if he trades his spare breads with surplus of shoes made by the shoemaker.

Surplus bread or shoes or produce, thus, constitute as real savings. And to expand production, the shoemaker, the baker or even the shipwrecked survivor would need to invest their surpluses or savings to achieve more output which enables them to spend more in the future.

Instead of getting x amounts of coconuts required for daily nourishment, the shipwrecked survivor will acquire a week’s harvest and use his spare time to make a knife so he can either make ladder (to improve output), build a boat (to catch fish or to go home) or to hunt animals (to alter diet) or to make a shelter (for convenience). Essentially savings allows the survivor to improve on his/her living conditions.

To increase production for the goal of increasing future consumption, the savings of both the shoemaker and the baker would likely be invested in new equipment (capital goods).

Again to quote Dr. Shostak (bold highlight mine), ``What limits the production growth of goods and services is the introduction of better tools and machinery (i.e., capital goods), which raises worker productivity. Tools and machinery are not readily available; they must be made. In order to make them, people must allocate consumer goods and services that will sustain those individuals engaged in the production of tools and machinery.

``This allocation of consumer goods and services is what savings is all about. Note that savings become possible once some individuals have agreed to transfer some of their present goods to individuals that are engaged in the production of tools and machinery. Obviously, they do not transfer these goods for free, but in return for a greater quantity of goods in the future. According to Mises, "Production of goods ready for consumption requires the use of capital goods, that is, of tools and of half-finished material. Capital comes into existence by saving, i.e., temporary abstention from consumption.”

``Since saving enables the production of capital goods, saving is obviously at the heart of the economic growth that raises people's living standards. On this Mises wrote, “Saving and the resulting accumulation of capital goods are at the beginning of every attempt to improve the material condition of man; they are the foundation of human civilization.”

So what changes this primitive way of production-consumption to mainstream’s consumption-production framework?

The answer is debt. Debt can be used in productive or non-productive spending. But debt today is structured based on the modern central banking.

Think credit card. Credit card allows everyone to extend present consumption patterns by charging to future income. If debt is continually spent on non-productive items, it eventually chafes on one’s capacity to pay. It consumes equity. Eventually, overindulgence in non productive debt leads bankruptcy. And this epitomizes today’s crisis.

But debt issued from real savings can’t lead to massive clustering of errors (bubble burst) because they are limited and based on production surpluses. It is non productive debt issued from ‘something out of nothing’ or the fractional banking system combined with loose monetary policies from interest manipulations that skews the lending incentives and enables massive malinvestments.

To aptly quote Mr. Peter Schiff’s analysis of today’s crisis, ``Credit, whether securitized or not, cannot be created out of thin air. It only comes into existence though savings, which must be preceded by under-consumption. Since savings are scarce, any government guarantees toward consumer credit merely crowd out credit that might otherwise have been available to business. During the previous decade too much credit was extended to consumers and not enough to producers (securitization focused almost exclusively on consumer debt). The market is trying to correct this misallocation, but government policy is standing in the way. When consumers borrow and spend, society gains nothing. When producers borrow and invest, our capital stock is improved, and we all benefit from the increased productivity.”

Now if capital comes into existence by virtue of savings, we should ask where most of the savings are located?

The answer is in Asia and emerging markets.

Figure 4: Matthews Asian Fund: Asia Insight

According to Winnie Puah of Matthews Asia, ``The economic potential and impact of Asian savings have yet to be fully unleashed at home. Indeed, Asia’s excess savings fuelled the recent boom in U.S. consumption and housing markets. Creating a consumption boom in Asia would mean that Asia needs to borrow and spend more. To date, governments are supporting domestic demand with fiscal stimulus packages—but it is household balance sheets that hold the key to developing a consumer culture. Overall, Asian households are well-positioned to increase spending—most have low debt levels and high rates of savings… there is a noticeable divergence in saving patterns between emerging and mature economies over the past decade, particularly since Asia learned a hard lesson from being overleveraged during the Asian financial crisis. Today, most Asian households save 10%—30% of their disposable incomes. China’s households, for example, have over US$3 trillion in savings deposits but have borrowed only US$500 billion.”

Thus I wouldn’t underestimate the power of Asia’s savings that could be converted or transformed into spending.

Asia’s Tsunami of Middle Class Consumers

In my August 2008 article Decoupling Recoupling Debate As A Religion, we noted of the theory called as the “Acceleration Phenomenon” developed by French economist Aftalion, who propounded that a marginal increase in the income distribution of heavily populated countries as China, based on a Gaussian pattern, can potentially unleash a torrent of middle class consumers.

Apparently, the Economist recently published a similar but improvised version of the Acceleration Phenomenon model. And based on this, the Economist says that 57% of the world population is now living in middle class standards (see figure 5)!


Figure 5: The Economist: The Rise of the Middle Class?

From The Economist (bold highlights mine), ``In practice, emerging markets may be said to have two middle classes. One consists of those who are middle class by any standard—ie, with an income between the average Brazilian and Italian. This group has the makings of a global class whose members have as much in common with each other as with the poor in their own countries. It is growing fast, but still makes up only a tenth of the developing world. You could call it the global middle class.

``The other, more numerous, group consists of those who are middle-class by the standards of the developing world but not the rich one. Some time in the past year or two, for the first time in history, they became a majority of the developing world’s population: their share of the total rose from one-third in 1990 to 49% in 2005. Call it the developing middle class.

``Using a somewhat different definition—those earning $10-100 a day, including in rich countries—an Indian economist, Surjit Bhalla, also found that the middle class’s share of the whole world’s population rose from one-third to over half (57%) between 1990 and 2006. He argues that this is the third middle-class surge since 1800. The first occurred in the 19th century with the creation of the first mass middle class in western Europe. The second, mainly in Western countries, occurred during the baby boom (1950-1980). The current, third one is happening almost entirely in emerging countries. According to Mr Bhalla’s calculations, the number of middle-class people in Asia has overtaken the number in the West for the first time since 1700.”

So apparently, today’s phenomenon seems strikingly similar to Seth Godin’s description of the creative destruction of the telegraph.

The seeds of the rising middle class appear to emanate from the wealth transfer from the developed Western economies to Asia and emerging markets. Put differently, Asia and EM economies could be the fruits from the recent ‘creative destruction’.

Some Emerging Signs?

However, there are always two sides to a coin.

For some, the present crisis signify as a potential regression of these resurgent middle class to their poverty stricken state, as the major economies slumps and drag the entire world into a vortex.

For us, substantial savings or capital (the key to consumption), deepening regionalism, underutilized or untapped credit facilities, rapidly developing financial markets, a huge middle class, unimpaired banking system, and most importantly policies dedicated to economic freedom serve as the proverbial line etched in the sand.

One might add that the negative interest rates or low interest policies and the spillage effect from stimulus programs from developed economies appear to percolate into the financial systems of Asia and emerging markets.

Although these are inherently long term trends, we sense some emergent short term signs which may corroborate this view:

1. Despite the 30% slump in the global Mergers and Acquisitions in 2008, China recorded a 44% jump to $159 billion mostly to foreign telecommunication and foreign parts makers (Korea Times). Japan M&A soared last year to a record $165 billion in 2008 a 13% increase (Bloomberg).

2. Credit environment seems to be easing substantially.

According to FinanceAsia (Bold highlights), ``The fallout from Japan's banking crisis offers clues to how the current situation may resolve itself. Back then, healing started first in the areas that had been most affected -- interbank lending recovered earliest, followed by credit markets, volatility markets and finally, many years later, equity markets.

``In today's crisis, interbank lending is already starting to recover. The spread between three-month interbank lending rates and overnight rates, which provides a key measure of the health of credit markets, has dropped significantly from its peak of 364bp in early 2008 down to less than 100bp today. As the interbank market recovers, credit should be next to heal.

``However, at the moment, triple-B spreads are at their highest levels in more than 100 years, which makes credit look like an extremely attractive investment opportunity. And there is every reason to expect that Asian corporates will participate in the healing, perhaps even as quickly as their counterparts in the US. (Oops and I thought everyone said divergence wasn’t possible or decoupling is a myth)

3. Asian companies have begun to engage in debt buyback. Again from FinanceAsia, ``Asian companies are buying back their debt with gusto and this could be a sign that credit markets are on the mend, according to Morgan Stanley.

``Asian companies are betting that credit will offer the best returns in 2009 and, like the smart traders they are, executives in the region are busy buying back their debt with gusto.

4. A picture speaks a thousand words…


Figure 6: A BRIC Decoupling?

China and Brazil appear to be leading the BRIC recovery while India (BSE) and Russia (RTS) seem to initiating their own.

For financial markets of developed economies, don’t speak of bad words.