Day: May 10, 2007

Insurance Earnings So Far 1Q07 — XI

Insurance Earnings So Far 1Q07 — XI

We’re going to end this one at a dozen, cousin.? Leaving aside a few new and oddball names, by Tuesday of next week virtually everyone will have reported.? So, after I get back from Bermuda, I will finish this series up.

Bermuda?? Business only.? Going to hit about a dozen companies in two days with one of my favorite P&C analysts, Harry Fong of Calyon.? I hope there are a decent number of insurance only buy-side analysts along for the ride.? They make grilling the management teams so much fun.

As an aside, the last time I was in Bermuda was after Wilma.? I was traveling with Bill Wilt of Morgan Stanley (another good analyst).? Because of a glitch, only seven buy-side analysts analysts were on the trip, but four were “insurance only.”? Between us and Bill, we got a lot done.? The meetings were free-form, with a lot of good give and take.

But the night before the meetings started, I had just gotten to my hotel, and I was hungry.? The hotel bar was the only thing open, so I went down with my computer to get a burger or something.? While sitting there, waiting for my food to come, I work on a RealMoney article.? A fellow that I have never met walks up to me and says, “You’re David Merkel; what are you doing here?”? I am floored; I ask him how he knew me, and he said that I wrote for RealMoney.? Amazing what that little picture will do.

He explains to me that he is there for the Bermuda tour.? I tell him that I am glad he is there for the Morgan Stanley tour.? He looks at me puzzled and says he is there for the Lehman tour.? The Lehman tour is well planned… too well planned.? 24 analysts in all.? Whereas we got the give and take, they got the canned presentations.? Oh well.

Wait, this was supposed to be about earnings.? We have only two companies.? AIG beat by a healthy amount on both the top and bottom lines.? Whether out of hedge fund mischief, MR Greenberg selling out of spite, or that the buy-side had gotten ahead of the sell side because of prior good earnings this quarter, AIG stock traded down in the after hours.? Hallmark Financial Services, primarily a personal lines insurer, met estimates.? Nothing amazing one way or another.

Four Interesting Things I Have Seen Around the Web

Four Interesting Things I Have Seen Around the Web

1) In Grad School, one of my Ph. D. fields was econometrics. In general, I agree with this piece by Jeff Miller on the payroll survey, but I have a few things to add. My main problem with the birth-death model is that they use an ARIMA model. We only use ARIMA models when we don’t have sufficient cofactors to try to explain something structurally. At best, an ARIMA model is the reduced form solution to the broader structural model for which we do not have data. Second, I would simply add that the true error bonds on the month-to-month change are large, and I would advise everyone to look at year-over-year changes to get a better sense of the trend in the economy. As Morganstern showed over fifty years ago, economic data has so much noise that noise swamps signal until you look at year-to-year changes.
2) From the ever excellent Daniel Gross at the NYT, comes his piece questioning how important the US is the US to the global economy at present. I have written about the same thing over at RealMoney. With the US accounting for a shrinking fraction of global trade, it is hard to see how the role of the US is not diminishing here. We need to get used to the idea that we are “first among equals,” and make our policy requests as a part of coalition building among the nations that trade.
3) In general, I like John Hussman; I have learned a lot from him. We even live in the same city. That said, his commentary on share buybacks needs some clarification. Once a buyback is completed, the economics of the buyback are reflected in the diluted EPS. One should not count it as a dividend; the increment to book value reflects the change in value. But after the announcement, but prior to the buyback itself, investors analyze whether a management team is credible on the announcement. Does management follow though? Can the balance sheet handle it? Credible management teams can make the stock price rise with the mere mention of a buyback.

4) Calling John Henry and his modern counterparts: can traders be replaced by computer algorithms? Average traders, yes. The best traders, no. Good trading relies on a variety of factors that are difficult to turn into math. I learned that as a corporate bond manager/trader. Sensing when the speculative nature of the market is turning is touchy. There are many aspects of that that I think would be difficult to teach to a machine. It’s one thing for a computer to beat us at chess, which is a relatively simple game, but when will one beat us consistently at poker?

I have more, but I will publish now, and bring the rest back tonight.

Theme: Overlay by Kaira