Day: January 11, 2008

Time for the Next Portfolio Reshaping

Time for the Next Portfolio Reshaping

I will admit, I don’t feel much like doing my portfolio reshaping now, even though it is a part of my management discipline, because the portfolio has been kicked around.? Not much worse than the rest of the market, though, and there are some stocks that look interesting that could be worth considerably more three years out.? As you look through my tickers list for candidates for addition, you’ll see a few commonalities:

  • Energy (still)
  • Industrials (still)
  • Retail (now, that’s new)
  • Insurers (many still cheap, particularly some stronger operators, also title names)
  • Technology (different for me)
  • ?A few odd real estate names (not likely, but there are some places where values are protected)

So, the process begins.? Within a few days, I’ll run my industry model, and do a few screens off of it, adding a few more tickers.? Beyond that, I invite you to send me ideas as well.? Last time, ideas suggested by readers made up two of the four new names that I bought.? So, send them in, and thanks as always for reading me.

The replacement candidate tickers:?? AA ABK ACIW AEO AES AIG AIT ALL APA APL ARM ARO ARW ASGN ATU ATW AVCA AVZA AZ BAC BCS BER BGP BKE BKS BRO BRY CACC CAE CAKE CALL CAMD CBL CCRT CHS CNQ CNX COF COST CQP CRI CRK CRZO CSCO CSG CSGS CSL CTLM DDS DFG DITC DLB DNR DRI DTLK DVN EAT EEP EFII EMC ENWV ESST ESV EXAR EXTR FLEX FNF FNM FRE FSII GCA GLW GPC GS GSIT GSK GW HAS HCC HCSG HD HIG HILL HMC HOC HOG HOLX HPQ IDTC INAP INFN INSP INT INTC IRE ISSI JCG JCP JEC JRT JWN KEM KFT KSS LINE LM LOOK LRW LUV LYG MAN MAS MDC MHK MHP MHS MMC MNST MTSC MTW MU MUR MVC MW MWA NOV? NSH NSR OII OMX ORI OXY PCZ PDC PDE PDII PDS PHLY PNCL PNRA POL PROS PTEN PVSW RAMR RAVN RGA RIG RNIN RNWK SCMR SGP SIMG SKS SKSWS SKX SLXP SNY SPN SSTI SSW STC STI SU SWK T TECH TECUA TEX TGI TLGD TMTA TM TNB TOT TRID TRLG TSO TWB UFS UNP URBN USG VFC VMC VNR VPHM WAG WCG WDC WHQ WLL WSM WSTL WU WWW XL XTEX XTO

PS — Though I don’t feel like doing it, I didn’t feel like doing it in the Fall of 2002 either,and some of my best picks came then.? So, discipline before feelings.

Politics and the Fed

Politics and the Fed

I do not share the view that the Fed is above politics.? The Fed was created by politicians.? They appoint/approve many of its governors.? They set the rules for what the Fed is authorized to do, whether the Fed follows that or not.? The politicians can change the rules if they want.

Beyond that, there is the formal and informal lobbying from businessmen, bankers, and speculators, who might implicitly argue for preservation of purchasing power, or stimulation of the economy.

There is also the interaction of the Fed with the Department of the Treasury.?? So, from all of this, I view the Fed as an implicitly political institution, which is why my analyses of the Fed stem largely from the economics of the situation, but do not end there.? I engage in “game theory” analyses of prospective Fed actions, asking myself how different scenarios would be received politically.? The Fed lives to protect itself.

So, when I read articles that suggest an apolitical Fed, I come to two possible conclusions:

  • The truth is being stretched, and what you hear serves a political goal, or,
  • The Fed governor speaking does not care about reappointment.

Politics abhors idealists, outside of semi-revolutionary moments.? Being the art of the possible, politics favors compromisers.? As I see it here, the Fed is under a lot of political pressure to stimulate the economy, and not under a lot of pressure to restrain inflation.? Should it surprise us if the Fed continues to loosen, perhaps aggressively?

Pandora and the Fair Value Accounting Rules

Pandora and the Fair Value Accounting Rules

I’ve been involved in financial reporting for a large amount of my career, so even though I’ve never had an accounting course in my life, I’ve had to work with some of the most arcane accounting rules out there as an actuary, and later as an investor.? Over the years, the direction that the FASB and IASB have gone is in the direction of presenting the statement of financial position (balance sheet) on more and more of a fair market value basis.? (Please ignore the treatment of goodwill, advertising,? R&D, you get the idea though…)? To soften the blow on the income statement, changes in the value of many balance sheet items don’t get run through net income, but through accumulated other comprehensive income, so that income can reflect sustainable earnings power, in theory.? Now, I agree with Marty Whitman’s critique on these accounting issues.? We may be getting more accurate on individual companies (if the accounting is done by angels, for humans we are granting too much freedom), but we are losing comparability across companies.? What an item means on the balance sheet of one company may be considerably different than the value at another company.
The hot topic today is SFAS 157 and 159.? I would point you to Dr. Jeff’s article this evening on the topic.? I would like to give my perspective on this, becaue I have had to work with these accounting rules, and ones like them.

At one company that I managed money for, I originated a bunch of long duration high quality assets that did not trade.? At year end, our incentive payment was based on the total return that we generated.? Interest rates had fallen through the year, and so my high quality illiquid assets had yields well in excess of where new money could be deployed.? What were those assets worth?? Historic cost?? The cash flow streams were fixed.? As a conservative measure, though spreads over Treasury yields had fallen for those instruments, we kept the spreads from the issue, and accounted for the price change due to the move in Treasury yields.? (If spreads had risen, I would have argued that we move the spreads up as a conservative gesture.)? Now this was prior to SFAS 157, but it illustrates the point.? How do you calculate the value of illiquid instruments?? Worse, under SFAS 157, you can’t be conservative; you have to try to be realistic.

Now, that was a simple example.? Almost every moderate-to-large life insurance company has a variety of illiquid privately placed bonds for which there is no market.? What is the fair value?? Who can tell you?? Well, the broker(s) that brought the deal are supposed to provide continuing “color” on the bonds, and what few trades might transpire.? Typically, they don’t move the prices much as the interest rate and spread environments change, and third party pricing services are loath to opine on anything too illiquid.? Though the rating agencies night give a rating at issue, they might not update it for some time.? What’s the fair value?? The life insurer has a hard time determining that for that small minority of assets.

Now let’s take it to a yet more difficult level.? If we are talking about many asset-backed securities, they are generic enough that pricing models can determine a spread to Treasury or Swap yields for tranches with a given vintage, maturity, originator, and rating.? Yes, there will be many assets that “trade special,” but those are deviations from the model that the traders feel out.

With CDOs, things get more difficult, because aside from indexed CDOs, there is no generic structure.? The various tranches are bought and held.? They rarely trade.? Projecting the cash flows is a difficult talk, because there are many different bonds in the trust, with many different scenarios for how many will default, and what recoveries will be obtained.? The best a good simulation model can do is to illustrate what a wide variety of possibilities could be, and look at the average of those possibilities.? Even then, the modeler has an expected cash flow stream.? What’s the right discount rate to use?

There is no good answer here.? One can try to infer a rate from what few trades have happened in the market with similar instruments, but that can be unreliable as well.? During a bear market, the sellers will be more incented than the buyers, particularly if they are trying to realize tax losses.? One can try to look at the scenarios across the tranches, and see which tranches have cash flows that behave like bonds, equities, and warrants, and apply appropriate discount rates like 6%, 20%, and 40% respectively.? Some explanation:

  • Bonds: pays interest regularly, and principal within a narrow window.? Few deferrals of interest.
  • Equities: high variability of payoffs.? Pays something in almost all scenarios, but the amounts vary a lot.? Timing and existence of principal repayment varies considerably.? Interest deferrals are common, but rarely last long.
  • Warrants: many scenarios have very low or zero payoffs.? Some scenarios have significant payoffs.? Interest deferrals last a long time, many never end.? Principal payments are rare.

Estimating fair value in a case like this is tough, if not impossible.? But a fair value must be estimated anyway.? Management teams may try to make the third party estimator come to a certain value that fits their accounting goals.? Given the squishiness of what the discount rate ought to be, management teams could say that once the market normalizes a low discount rate will prevail, and our models should reflect normalized, not panic conditions.

Well, good, maybe.? The thing is, once we open Pandora’s box, and allow for flexibility in valuation methods, subject to auditor sign-off (now, who is paying them?), our ability as third party investors to evaluate the value of illiquid assets and liabilities declines considerably.? There’s a great argument here for avoiding companies that own/buy complex assets in an era where fair value accounting reigns.? There is too much room for error, and human nature tells us that the errors are not likely to yield positive earnings surprises for investors.

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