Tuesday, September 03, 2013

Example of Agency Problem: Goldman Sach’s Seeming Poop and Scoop on Gold

US financial giant Goldman Sachs announced to the public “a sell on gold” as early as December 2012 and continued to do so as the gold market crash last April.

The Zero hedge reports that what Goldman clients sold, Goldman bought. (bold and italics original)
In early April, the status quo was exuberant when none other than Goldman Sachs issued a "sell" on the barbarous relic that has become so indicative of the exuberance of central planning. At the time, we were skeptical (to say the least) and, just for extra Muppetting, the bank also suggested its clients buy Treasuries. Well, now that the full details of holdings changes have been released for Q2, it is perhaps clearer than ever before that as the bank was telling its clients to "sell, sell, sell" it was itself "buy, buy, buy"-ing the Gold ETF (GLD) with both arms and feet. In Q2, Goldman Sachs added a stunning (and record) 3.7 million 'shares' of GLD. As Paulson dumped his GLD, Goldman lapped it up to become the ETF's 7th largest holder.

Goldman was the largest adding holder for GLD...
image

buying what its clients were selling in size...

image
The attempt to drive down prices in order to purchase them at a bargain by spreading false information or rumors is called Poop and Scoop. Though technically illegal this is hard to prove.

But the more important lesson is one of the principal agent dilemma or the agency problem or the conflict of interests between the clients and industry participants as I explained here.

It is imperative for the public to scrutinize and not just accept hook line and sinker on the information sold by industry participants because they can be camouflaged by interests that may run counter to those of investors.

Despite Booming Markets, Europe is still bleeding

European markets boomed last night as US financial markets were closed due to a public holiday.

image

The rally in Europe’s markets (quote from Bloomberg) are likely to provide fuel for the embattled ASEAN bulls today.

Nonetheless global markets are looking for all sorts of rational to justify the continuation of unsustainable asset booms.

Yet the so called recovery in Europe is nothing less than propaganda. Sovereign Man’s Simon Black argues:
the disconnect between reality and propaganda is at an all-time high.

The political leadership across the continent is sounding the ‘all clear’ signal and trying to hype up anything they can pass off as ‘recovery’.

(This, brought to you by the same people who said ‘when it gets serious, you have to lie…’)

To be fair, the continent does have its bright spots. Germany, Luxembourg, Austria, etc. are comparatively awash with paper prosperity.

But in Greece, despite phony political promises that ‘this year will be better’, the numbers tell a completely different story. Here’s an example:

Based on the Finance Ministry’s own numbers, the Greek government collected 4.31 billion euros in tax revenue in January 2013.

This was less than the 4.87 billion euros Greece collected in January 2012, which was less than the 5.12 billion collected in January 2011, which was less than the 5.68 billion collected in January 2010.

You can see the trend. Down. And the data is very clear about this: the Greek government’s tax revenue in January 2013 was 23.2% lower than three years before.

Moreover, Greece has managed to rack up another 6.5 billion euros in debt during the first seven months of this year at a time when the economy is actually shrinking.

Higher debt, shrinking economy… meaning that the nation’s 175% debt to GDP ratio is worsening. This suggests that another bailout request is imminent.

Meanwhile, I saw complete devastation in the real estate market over in Spain and Portugal– assets being liquidated at far less than the cost of construction. And still there are few buyers.

In Cyprus, I saw a country still operating under the intense capital control framework they imposed after freezing and confiscating people’s bank accounts.

In Italy, I saw an entire generation of young people coming of age at a time when there is practically zero opportunity for anyone under the age of 25. And this is taking a huge toll on the national psyche.

And in Iceland, I saw a forgotten story of collapse that has been erroneously heralded by mainstream financial press as the poster child for recovery.

Iceland is far from recovery.

The government’s own data shows that they posted a RECORD cash deficit for the first seven months of 2013 (which was double last year’s cash deficit).

And they’re now spending a massive 21.94% of non-pension tax revenue just to pay interest on the debt!

Perhaps most problematic for Iceland, though, is the steep turn in domestic bond appetite.

For the last several years, Iceland’s politicians have been able to sell more government bonds to their people than they’ve had to pay back.

But this trend came to a screeching halt this year as Icelanders are now dumping their government’s bonds.

All of these numbers paint a completely different picture than what the governments are telling us.

Politicians lie. People can be easily deluded. But numbers don’t ‘feel’ optimistic or pessimistic. Numbers are simply truth.

And the truth is that Europe is still bleeding.

We can expect more bailout requests for sure. But more importantly, we should also watch out for deepening capital controls, higher taxes, and even more severe tactics in the war on cash.
The  Zero Hedge uncovers more parallel universe:
So in summary: manufacturers feel broadly better about themselves: in fact the best in 26 months, with new orders largely fueled by export demand. Yet exports to where one wonders, considering net trade surplus data has been stronger than expected for virtually all nations in the past month: after all in a zero trade sum world someone has to be substantially increasing their imports? But more importantly, actual jobs - the real growth dynamo for the European economy - continue to deteriorate, accelerating their downward pace having declined for 19 months in a row.

Finally, and the biggest concern for Europe, continues to be the clogged monetary pipeline. As was reported last week, even with European M3 having peaked recently and is now rolling over, it is the credit to the private sector that posted the largest Y/Y drop on record. The Goldman breakdown was as follows:

Loans to non-financial corporations, on a seasonally adjusted basis, declined by €19.4bn in July, following a €12.5bn contraction in June. Adjusted for securitizations and sales, the figure was broadly similar. This larger fall is somewhat concerning after the rate of contraction in loans to NFCs moderated within the second quarter, although Q2 on average saw large falls in lending.

Loans to households fell by €4.8bn in July after a similar move in May. This is the third fall in loans to households since July 2012. Unlike corporate lending, loan growth to households remained broadly unchanged between mid-2012 and mid-2013, albeit with monthly loan flows well below their long-term average of €15bn.

So, in summary: better than expected European manufacturing driven by surging exports to somewhere, forcing employers to cut jobs for 19 straight months and at an accelerating pace in August, in the context of record low loan creation.

Forgive us if we remain skeptical on Europe's so-called "recovery", which just may meet reality once the German elections are over in less than a month.

image
Last night’s stock market boom, came with a substantial selloff in bond prices (thus higher yields) in most major European nations with the exception of Italy, Spain and Portugal). 

Ironically rallying bonds in the crisis stricken PIGS area comes in the face of more economic woes as stated by Mr. Black above. 

Low yields in the PIGS serves as a subsidy to the PIGS governments, apparently being financed by the majors EU states.

Yields 10 year US Treasury (futures) notes even spiked to 2.83%.

Higher yields amidst surging debt levels and tepid recovery has been seen as beneficial for stocks. Add elevated oil prices, for me, this would seem as the surreal Wile E Coyote moment.

Quote of the Day: Bank Regulation and Fraud, the China experience

Currently, China’s market order is relatively awful, but I believe everyone should also be full of hope. We Chinese throughout history have valued reputation. Looking back on history, many years ago we had contractual relationships. A piece of bamboo split in half, with each person having one end for comparison, was a contract. I previously mentioned Shanxi Remittance Firms. About two hundred years ago they issued what we today call a traveler’s check. They had branches in Saint Petersburg and Kobe. There were no central banks to examine and approve banks, anyone could start one, but there was no fraud. Why do we today have more and more controls, but fraud is also more common? This is an issue that deserves our consideration.
This quote is from Professor Zhang Weiying zhu in his book Shenme Gaibian Zhongguo (CITIC Press, 2012), page 177 (source Mao Money Mao Problems)

Some may see this as a post hoc argument. And it also seems an exaggeration to say there has been ‘no’ fraud, but perhaps, the fraud has been minimal.

Yet regardless of the moral justifications, every interventionism, which signifies as the use of organized or institutional violence, upsets the balance of nature to favor one party over another. Such political inequality provides motivation for repressed parties to resort to restoring the original balance through unorthodox or ‘illegitimated’ measures where fraud and corruption becomes part of the equation. This is the reason why informal or shadow economies exist and why political corruption thrives.

Generally, political controls encourage fraud, corruption and other (what media sees as) immoral acts.

Monday, September 02, 2013

Video: The great global warming swindle

Watch why environmentalism (the religion of misanthropists) is a huge swindle  (hat tip EPJ)

Phisix: Has ASEAN Bear Markets Been Signaling a Crisis?

Given the relentless growth in credit exactly to the same sectors during the two months of April-May, statistical GDP growth will likely remain ‘solid’ and will likely fall in the expectations of the mainstream. The results are likely to be announced in August.
This was my prediction on the 2nd quarter Philippine economic statistical growth[1] that had been released last week. Such news was cheered upon and interpreted as signs of relief by a confirmation bias starved public from the ongoing market pressures

The Secret of ‘Resilient’ 2nd quarter Philippine Economic Growth
clip_image001

The Philippine government’s National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB) hails the current growth streak[2] as the “second quarter growth is the fourth consecutive GDP growth of more than 7.0 percent under the Aquino Administration” implying for a politically induced growth nirvana.

But where did the growth come from?

The services sector which grew by 7.4%, remained as the “main driver” of the Philippine economy and had been “supported by the 10.3 percent and 17.4 percent growth of  manufacturing and construction, respectively boosting the Industry sector to grow by 10.3 percent” according to the NSCB.

clip_image002

From the industry side (left window), the so-called ‘resilient’ growth in the services sector comes from financial intermediation (stock and bond market speculation?) and real estate, renting and business activity (real estate speculation?).

From the expenditure side (right window), the source of “resiliency” growth is from construction (20.4%) and government spending (21.4%).

So we have bubbles and prospective higher taxes or inflation as models for a boom.

clip_image003

Yet here is the secret recipe or ingredient behind the fourth successive quarter of vigorous statistical growth…a surge in real estate related bank loans (year on year basis) as well as financial intermediation loans as per Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas data[3].

Soaring banking loan growth has translated to a spending and supply side boom, which has been reflected on money supply growth and deposit growth in the banking system.

Notice, y-o-y construction loan growth has hovered in the 50% area for the past 6 months. Real estate loan growth has peaked in January and has been on a decline but remains above the 20% growth level.

Yet household final demand or household final consumption expenditure grew by only 7.8% during the 2nd quarter, whereas construction has grown by 20.4%, so who will buy those excess real estate units?

This only means that a reduction of the growth rate of banking loans on these ‘bubble’ sectors will effectively diminish the rate of statistical growth and expose on the system’s dependence to, and fragility from, a credit fuelled statistical growth.

The recent resilient economic picture has already shown some indications of incipient cracks.

Since the first bear market attack on the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) last June, growth in the financial intermediation sector shrivelled to only 1.45% which I pointed out earlier[4]. Fortunately enough, the banking loan growth conditions of April and May has been significant enough to neutralize the substantial rate of slowdown, thus 2nd quarter’s “resilient” growth.

But if June’s financial intermediation sector conditions will become a trend, and if June’s financial intermediation sector conditions will serve as precedent and diffuse into the overall banking loan growth conditions going forward, then this will signify as a foreboding sign for future statistical growth conditions.

Philippine asset markets have already been showing the way.

The illusions of frontloading of statistical economic growth via inflationary credit will be bared soon enough.

Unreliable Statistics and Regulatory Arbitrage

I have lumped or categorized wholesale and retail trade along with hotel and restaurant as these sectors are parcel or inclusive to the real estate bubble via the shopping mall[5] and casino[6] bubbles.

While the consensus worships Philippine statistical data as reliable indicators of economic performance, I don’t. For instance, I see banking caps on the real estate sector as being bypassed by market participants. Loans are likely to have been diverted to other industries but end up on inflating bubble sectors.

The lessons of the Bangladesh stock market crash in 2011 tells us of how numerous companies circumvented banking regulations by rechanneling industrial loans in the hunt for yields into the once booming stock market. But when the Bangladesh government tightened the monetary environment the ramification has been a nasty stock market crash which provoked riots[7].

The emergence of the shadow banking represents an offshoot to repressive regulatory environment. Shadow banking emerged mainly out of arbitrage activities based on loopholes from existing regulations or regulatory arbitrages. 

The global shadow banking industry has been estimated at $67 trillion as of November 2012[8] and has been expanding swiftly.

The Philippines as I pointed out last May has its own shadow banking system which like Thailand accounts for more than one third of total financial assets according to the World Bank[9].

Local regulators like to project that they are in control of “excessive credit extension[10]” but current market actions seem to suggest otherwise.

Political direction and market forces have now been diverging

Despite Possible GSIS Interventions, the Bears Rule

clip_image005

The Phisix June bear market lows have been reinforced by the latest meltdown. 

The bear market area has been encroached for the second time in less than three months. Such alarming deterioration in risk conditions has validated my repeated warnings where we should expect heightened volatility in both directions but with a downside bias.

As I previously wrote[11]; (bold original)
I believe that such dynamic, viz. sharp volatilities in both direction but with a downside bias, will remain as the dominant theme going forward, unless again, the turmoil in the global bond markets will subside and stabilize.
From the technical viewpoint, the recent short-term head and shoulder breakdown (not drawn in chart) has not only falsified the bullish reverse head and shoulder pattern established last June (not drawn too) which became a popular sight in social media, but has been strengthening the longer version of head and shoulder topping formation (curved green trend lines) as the recent string of harrowing declines have been approaching the huge neckline (downward sloping green line)

With the imminence of the “death cross” or the crossover of the 50 day moving averages (blue line) with 200 day moving averages (red line), the Phisix chart conditions looks awfully biased towards the bears.

The sizable rebound last Thursday (3.54%) and Friday (2.2%) from the new lows has been similarly uninspiring (right blue ellipse). The sum of the two day gains only equals the fierce 5.7% one day comeback by the bulls last June 26th. Yet then, the two day bullish rebellion last June totalled 9.31%. The four day rebound saw a 12.7% gain from the lows (left blue ellipse). The current pace of rally seems to be weakening.

Market internals have equally been unimpressive. The advance decline spread for last Thursday and Friday, 79 and 47 respectively has been quite distant from the spread of 112 and 102 of the huge two day rally for June 26th and 27th correspondingly.

The message is that despite the optimistic chatters in media, particularly by bureaucrats who have little skin in the game and their institutional defenders, the bulls evidently are having diminished convictions in pushing up the markets or that the bears have increasingly been gaining strength which essentially has been neutralizing the bulls.

Interestingly Friday’s material 2.2% gain came amidst a narrow but positive 47 advance decline spread. Since Friday posted a substantial net foreign selling, this means that there may have been orchestrated efforts from what seems as non-profit motivated locals in driving the Phisix higher by concentrating the buying activities to a few index heavyweight issues.

I would suspect that since the incumbent Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) president explicitly placed a floor on the Phisix by announcing last July an increase in the equity holdings of the government pension fund to 20% of total assets “ if the gauge falls below the 5,500 level”[12], then possibly a substance of the local buying during the last three days may have been from Philippine government intervention.

As of July, 16.5% of the Php 725 billion (US $16.2 billion @ USDPHP 44.5) investible assets of the GSIS have been allocated into equities[13]. An increase of 3.5% to 20% would parlay into a Php 25.375 billion (US $16.2 billion @ USDPHP 44.5) wager. While such amount looks big, in perspective this would amount to only 14.9% and 12.7% of the total trading volume in the PSE for the months of July and August respectively.

In short, the intended GSIS investments (euphemism for intervention) will hardly be sufficient enough to prop up the Phisix should foreigners remain on a selling spree.

Worst, this signifies as bad news to either pension fund beneficiaries (who may see their retirement savings dwindle from losses made from reckless punts aimed at promoting the administration’s public approval ratings) or to the taxpayers (who will likely shoulder these losses via bailout of the government pension fund). Milton Friedman was right, the easiest thing to do is to spend other’s people money.

But the Government’s pension fund’s equity market dilemma will overshadow its huge 46.5% exposure in the fixed income or bond markets.

Tightly Controlled Philippine Bond Markets

clip_image007

So far the stock market and peso rout has not transmuted into a domestic bond market selloff, since there has been little exposure by foreigners on local currency or peso based government bond market.

The investor profile of the domestic bond market reveals of a seeming proportional distribution of the outstanding bonds between the resident private sector institutions and various domestic government agencies[14]. In other words, the Philippine government and their private sector allies have been able to ‘manage’ bond markets.

No wonder the BSP can get away with declaring low price inflation figures (e.g. 2.5% July 2013), the entwined interests by the government and the banking sector enables them to manage the illiquid domestic government bond markets and thereby sustain a low interest rate regime to prop up an artificial credit financed asset based boom.

As further proof of how distorted the system is, ironically, the PCSO doubled lotto ticket prices last May[15] to Php 20 from Php 10 or an equivalent of 3.93% lotto ticket inflation rate (from its inception in 1995[16]) with promises of higher winning prices. You see the chasm? 3.93% PCSO inflation ticket rate versus 2.5% BSP inflation rate.

Nevertheless when the losses in the financial markets (peso and stocks) percolate into the real economy (real estate and related sectors), where private sector financial institutions will be forced to raise cash to meet demands of the real economy, doing so will mean selling these bonds. And this would extrapolate to rising yields.

The bond vigilantes will find many outlets to undermine artificially installed barriers.

Reality Check: Bear Markets Overwhelm ASEAN Bourses

I would like reiterate, contra popular wisdom, current developments has not just been an emerging market phenomena but has been spreading through the ASEAN-Asian region. 

The bond vigilantes have already even begun to make their presence felt in the European crisis nations stricken PIGS as I have been anticipating[17]

clip_image008

Bear markets has become a regional or ASEAN concern.

THREE ASEAN majors have broken into bear markets, particularly, Indonesia (JCI), Thailand (SET) and the Philippines (PCOMP) as shown in the chart above[18].

And as discussed last week, surprisingly even foreign exchange reserve rich (US $290 billion) first world ASEAN economy Singapore has been caught in the line of fire.

The big rallies in the Phisix and JCI last Thursday and Friday, failed to inspire Thailand and Singapore (STI) to do the same. Friday, the SET closed marginally higher while the STI closed modestly lower.

Yet even if Singapore’s STI has yet to reach bear markets, chart indicators suggests of a bearish momentum due to the “death cross”.

I would like to point out that the ASEAN’s bear markets should not be overlooked or dismissed as some figurative nightmare or a bad dream that will be wished away or vanish when the sun shines or when one awakens.

Denials are really destructive to one’s portfolio.

clip_image009
The ASEAN bear markets have been portentous of a deeper economic malaise unseen or unrecognized yet by the public.

Seething pressures from a build-up of accrued imbalances (bubbles) may have just begun to surface and may have found its release valve in currencies and stocks, as well as partly bonds.

The mainstream misattributes the cause of today’s upheaval to capital outflows which are in reality symptoms.

Foreigners don’t just dump stocks mainly out of fear or out of mistaken group identities. Their actions reflect on a perceived negative impact from radical changes in the environment and from changes in arbitrage spreads[19].

Since 1996, each time the Indonesian currency, the rupiah (top), and the Thai currency, the baht (lower pane), declined considerably or crashed vis-à-vis the US dollar, they coincided with either a major world recession (dot.com bust), or a crisis (2007-8 US mortgage crisis and 1997 Asian crisis).

This implies that falling ASEAN currencies today are typically symptoms of an unfolding adverse economic and financial event, which in the current case has yet to be revealed.

This means that the risk conditions from the current environment may further deteriorate.

Déjà vu Asian Crisis?

clip_image011

This reminds me of the Asian 1997 crisis where the Phisix fell by a terrifying 68.6% in 19 months.

February 1997 marked the beginning of the free fall of the Phisix, where the local benchmark dived by 25% into the lows of May 1997. The Phisix rebounded to form a right shoulder, then commenced on the next descent where a head and shoulder pattern came into motion.

A head and shoulder top déjà vu today?

It was 5 months into the bear market when the Asian crisis became official in July of 1997. Says the timeline of the Asian crisis in May[20] (bold mine)
Early May (1997) - Japan hinted that it would raise interest rates to defend the yen. The threat was never carried out, but it did cause global investors to begin selling Asian currencies.
Just replace Japan with the US Federal Reserve. Sounds familiar?

A month after the crisis, the head and shoulder neckline was breached and this was followed by the next wave of the horrendous liquidation based tailspin.

Those two downward pointing red arrows following the market’s peak in February of 1997 exhibits the intense bear market ‘denial’ rallies.

Last week’s rally seem as unlikely a bottom or a reversal rally. They are instead signs of a possible bear market reprieve or a sucker’s rally that has been in reaction to short term government actions.

If there should be any lessons from 1997, then current market meltdown seem suggestive of major bad developments for ASEAN by the yearend.

ASEAN Contagion: The Singapore-Indonesian Link

After fighting market forces in futility by depleting forex reserves, Indonesia’s government succumbed to the tightening imposed by market forces by officially raising rates anew last week[21].

The Indonesian government has been very reluctant to raise interest rates because of the massive recent build-up of both public sector and private sector credit. 

But Indonesian government seem to have been cornered.

By refusing to raise rates the domestic markets have wickedly sold off which effectively translates to a tightening.

Yet by accommodating pressures from the markets through policy interest rate increases, the selling pressure may temporarily have waned but the effect of tightening will likely cause a meaningful economic growth slowdown that would expose on the systemic (excess debt/gearing) fragilities, which is likely to spark the next wave of liquidations.

And if the barrage of liquidations will affect the core of the banking system, then Indonesia may have opened the nexus to next ASEAN banking or even an external debt crisis which may lead to a currency crisis.

The opposite may also hold true, if the rupiah continues to melt, this may trigger loan defaults on unhedged exposures that again may impact the core of the banking system.

Remember Indonesia had been a darling of emerging markets in 2011, whose supposed success story was extolled by credit rating upgrades.

Indonesia’s Thursday and Friday’s rebound has not been cheered by Singapore. Yet there are important links between Singapore and Indonesia.

Singapore has been the largest foreign investor in Indonesia with a cumulative investment of US $1.14 billion in 142 projects according to Indonesia’s Investment Coordinating Board. Trade between the two countries hit around $68 billion in 2010[22]. Moreover, Singapore has been the biggest market in the region for Indonesia’s non-oil and gas exports.

In addition, many regional investors have used Singapore as a regional hub in setting up holding companies to take advantage of double-taxation arrangements that Singapore has with other countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean)[23]. Singapore has also become an important source of finance for Indonesia.

This also that means Singapore is highly sensitive to the developments in ASEAN.

Yet with regards to stock market linkages in terms of returns, while a study shows that bilateral foreign investments does not appear to be a significant factor, stock market returns are mostly determined by cross-country and sectoral factors based on bilateral linkages through trade and finance (Forbes and Chinn 2004[24]).

If such theory holds true, then a faltering STI may be a reflection of an ongoing deterioration of the real economy through trade and finance between Singapore and Indonesia.

Such signs are hardly “bullish”.

The ASEAN contagion appears to have even affected Vietnam’s stock market which fell another 2.9% this week, a continuation of last week’s 4.13% slump.

A crisis may or may not occur but current environment is hardly an environment conducive for taking on risks.

Yet should ASEAN financial markets continue to fall, then we should expect the unexpected

ASEAN financial markets appear to be in a highly sensitive and critical point.

Better safe than sorry.




[3] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Bank Lending Sustains Growth in June July 31, 2013



[6] See The Philippine Casino Bubble April 11, 2013


[8] Wikipedia.org Shadow banking system





[13] Manila Standard Today GSIS’ net income dips 5.7% to P33b July 16, 2013

[14] Asian Development Bank Asia Bond Monitor March 2013








[22] The Jakarta Globe, Yudhoyono Wants More Singapore Investors, July 22, 2011


Denials are Hazardous to One’s Portfolio

clip_image001

The Phisix bear market has caught many by surprise. And the typical reaction: massive denials.

As shown in the above diagram, denials are natural or common traits of a fledging bear market cycle.

Denials are just one of the 15 psychological defence mechanism[1] used by us…humans. Psychologist categorizes denial as a primitive defence mechanism.

In psychoanalysis denials come in three forms[2]; Simple denial (literal deny the reality), minimization (admit the fact but deny its seriousness via rationalization) and projection (admit the fact and seriousness but deny responsibility or pass the blame on someone else).

The latter can be associated with regret theory or the psychological anguish from an opportunity loss. For example in investing, the fear of regret can make investors either risk averse or motivate them to take greater risks[3]. This partly explains why people tend to double down on losing positions in order to avoid the fear of regret.

Denying responsibility and passing the blame on someone else can also be read as the heuristic called self-serving attributional bias[4]

For instance, the mainstream’s tendency to pass the blame on foreigners as culpable for the current market meltdown signifies as signs of denials and of self serving or self attributional bias.

Denials also go with the endowment effect or the status quo bias or where people tend to put more value on what they own or technically “where most people would demand a considerably higher price for a product that they own than they would be prepared to pay for it (Weber 1993).”[5]

By denying the reality of a bear market, many maintain the notion that securities they own are unlikely to be affected by the growling grizzly bears.

But what are the odds of stocks surviving a bear market?

Not good if the 2007-2008 serves as a model.

Using the US as example, here are some excellent news quotes

From a 2009 article from Bloomberg as I previously posted[6]: (bold mine)
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is the only Standard & Poor’s 500 Index company that has rallied during the entire 22-month recession.
From another 2008 article from Bloomberg[7]: 
The worst annual decline in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index since 1931 has dragged down every industry in the benchmark gauge and 96 percent of its stocks.

All 64 of the S&P 500's so-called level-three categories, groups such as ``distributors'' and``leisure equipment'' with as few as one company, dropped in 2008. Four hundred eighty-two companies slipped as the 500-stock index slumped 46 percent, poised for its biggest yearly retreat in eight decades.

clip_image002

I have pointed out in the past[8] that even when the Philippine economy nearly fell into a recession in 2007-2008, and even when earnings declined modestly from record highs, the Phisix crashed 56% and hardly any liquid stock remained unscathed or unaffected by the bear market destruction.

Conventional fundamentals hardly had been a factor in stock market pricing. Yet the investing public has been remiss of the lessons of 2008, mostly due to the indoctrinations of the industry.

Looking at international markets the Phisix fell as deep as with other emerging market equities from a contagion and not from a crisis. Foreign and US stocks, the latter the source of the crisis, have also been battered[9].

The bottom line is that when the bear market tsunami strikes almost all boats sinks by the end of the cycle.

US treasuries, European and Global bonds and high quality US corporate debt defied the US bear market of 2008

Of course today isn’t 2008. But there is hardly any evidence of which stock/s will defy the bearish downpour. In Walmart’s case, 1 out of the S&P 500 companies is a rarity.

Realize that for every 50% decline this would translate to a 100% upside move to recover. And for every 40% loss means 67% upside for a recovery. Finally for every 30%, 42% upside growth is required.

These numbers are not insignificant. And should there be a crisis, some stocks may even vanish: think Enron, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers.

Instead of having 1 live bullet and 5 empty chambers in a revolver, playing bull in a yet to mature bear market is like playing Russian Roulette in reverse: 5 live bullets and one empty chamber.

If there may be any bullish actions in place, we may consider…

clip_image004
temporarily the US dollar index….perhaps as hedge against naked long equity positions.

clip_image006

Another potential bullmarket is gold over the longer term. But Philippine mines have yet to prove that they can defy the general trend.

People disdain bad news, but denying bad news will neither extinguish its existence nor eradicate its consequences on the world.

In essence, denials signify as self-deception.



[1] John M Grohol PSY. D. 15 Common Defense Mechanisms psychcentral.com

[2] Wikipedia.org Denial

[3] Investopedia.com Regret Theory

[4] Wikipedia.org Self-serving bias

[5] Behavioural Finance Endowment Effect




[9] CNN Money 5 lessons from the crash September 10, 2009

Sunday, September 01, 2013

How ex-Billionaire Eike Batista lost $25 billion in 18 Months

The consensus tends to shrug off the adverse impact of having too much debt. They never seem to realize that whatever illusions of prosperity brought about by having too much debt can be lost in a snap of finger.

Former Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista’s case, which I earlier raised, is a wonderful example of an individual’s boom-bust cycle.

Here is a snippet from CNBC-Reuters:
Since then, things have gotten worse for Batista. Hit by mounting debt, a series of project delays and a crisis of confidence, his six publicly listed companies have suffered one of the most spectacular corporate meltdowns in recent history.

The Brazilian billionaire, who dismissed his critics as he sold investors on the promise of OGX's oil discoveries, was also EBX's biggest investor. He pumped billions into the group's companies even as share prices plunged by as much as 90 percent.

His own fortune - the world's seventh-biggest last year, according to Forbes - has declined by more than $25 billion over the past 18 months.

OGX's failure - and the subsequent unraveling of EBX - reflects Batista's initial success in overselling investors on oil discoveries that proved to be more difficult to recover than they expected.

But the story is not so simple. His empire also fell victim to the sudden end of both the global commodities boom and a wild exuberance for emerging markets - two forces that attracted investors to Batista's vision.
Mr. Batista is now only worth $200 million from over $30 billion according to Celebritynetworth.com

Mr. Bastista is a high profile case, but there are other figurative riches to rags (lost billions) story  such as Zynga’s Mark Pincus Chesapeake Energy Aubrey McClendon and Softbank’s Masayoshi Son (Forbes)

The bottom line is that the fatal cocktail mix of overconfidence, aggressive expansion using debt and patent disregard of risks can lead to evaporation of one's wealth. Much of today's debt financed illusionary wealth will be unmasked once the interest rate environment radically shifts.