Month: January 2013

The Evaluation of Common Stocks

The Evaluation of Common Stocks

Today, Tom Brakke of the Research Puzzle wrote:

?Go to it then. The field is wide open. The old masters have confessed their inability to determine value objectively. More investors than ever before are committing their capital to stocks. Very little has as yet been done in the field of stock evaluation by statistical organizations ? and I say this with full awareness of our own efforts in the past 21 years. Here in the field of stock evaluation you will find a worthy challenge to your intelligence, and exciting adventure too.? ? Arnold Bernhard, founder and editor of the Value Line Investment Survey.

The above excerpt is the last paragraph of Bernhard?s 1959 book, The Evaluation of Common Stocks. It is interesting to consider the changes since that time and to ponder the opportunities (or lack thereof) that exist now as a result of those changes.

Is the field still ?wide open? for the enterprising investor?

When I was writing my Master’s Thesis at Johns Hopkins at the tender age of 21, I did a significant study on what did and didn’t work in stock investing.? My unpublished Master’s thesis anticipated momentum investing, but I did not get it at the time.? It also showed that value effects could make money, as well as tracking insider trading.

My life might have been quite different if I had started a hedge fund in my 20s off of my thesis… might have been richer, but my knowledge of of business was enriched by being an actuary for so many years… admittedly, I was not your normal actuary, but having to solve practical business problems does shape your views of many other things.

But Value Line, as created by Samuel Eisenstadt, discovered quantitative growth investing — price momentum, earnings momentum, and earnings surprise long before the rest of Wall Street caught on.? Once Wall Street caught on in the 90s, a lot of the excess profits got squeezed out, and Value Line lost its mojo.

As an aside, when I was running a set of multiple manager funds that did pretty well in the 90s, one manager had its methods and they were price momentum, earnings momentum, and earnings surprise.? I said to them, “Oh, you do what Value Line does.”? They were as offended as they could be without poisoning the possibility of being hired by us.

In another situation, I ended up hiring a value plus momentum manager in the mid-90s.? Very reliable outperformance.

But let’s go back a little further.? After the Great Depression, a lot of companies sold for considerably less than their net assets.? This diminished but held true until the 60s.? Ben Graham earned his living from arbitrage and net-net value investing.? Buffett, getting started later, did much the same, but being younger, reached a point where the easy opportunities were largely gone, but he had a lot of his investing life in front of him, unlike Graham, who picked that time to retire.

Value investing I do not think is tapped-out, though beating value indexes is difficult.

In the 80s, quantitative value came into existence, along with momentum and size as factors.? But throughout the 90s insider trading, net operating assets, distress and other factors began to be modeled. Now there are many quantitative factors, and it is hard to tell which are redundant.

With Graham, and Buffett and Eisenstadt in their early years, financial data did not flow easily… those who put in the hard work of gathering scarce data earned exceptional returns.? Today, with the internet, mere quantitative investing yields less of an advantage.? In order to do anything worthwhile some qualitative knowledge must be mixed in, or, proprietary data that few have.

Tom asks if the field is wide open.? I don’t know.? We’ve had a lot of discoveries over the past 50+ years, but discoveries are sometimes “forgotten” when they lose their punch.? There may be future discoveries, whether from technical or accounting measures.? I am reluctant to say everything that can be discovered is discovered, but I don’t want to say that there will be some earthshattering theory in the future… that may not happen.

What might happen is an economic disaster like the Great Depression that makes many flee stocks.? Then some of the older theories will work again for a time.? So I would answer Tom — is the field wide open?? No, but it is open somewhat, and with a lot of application and intelligence, it’s possible but not likely that you will do something amazing.

On the Platinum Coin

On the Platinum Coin

Okay, so the Treasury mints a Platinum coin, and deems it to be worth One Trillion Dollars.? We have a fiat currency, so what is the problem?

There are fiat currencies, and there are fiat currencies.? Depositing something as collateral into the central bank where the “melt value” is decidedly less than one million, much less trillion dollars, is ridiculous.? I realize that many believe that the Fed can do whatever it wants, but eventually cash flows will catch up with a central bank as inflation rises.

The Trillion dollar coin would have value only because the taxation authority of the US Government stands behind it.? But that is not the way the government is behaving.? The taxation authority is not taking in as much and more so that they can redeem the promises inherent in the coin.? Instead, they are looking to the Fed to absorb losses in a stealth monetizing of the debt.

Monetizing government debt leads to inflation.? Receiving something worthless, and deeming it to be of high worth is the same as monetizing the debt.? Yes, the Fed can try to sterilize the effects, but it leaves the Fed with a problem — it will never be able to shrink its balance sheet to 2007 levels.? Thus inflation, eventually.

The platinum coin is a bad joke, and bad policy if eventually done.? This is what I wrote at Felix Salmon’s blog yesterday:

If they tried the platinum coin(s) once, Congress would legislate to eliminate the practice. The Purple party would take back their authority.

It is also possible that the Supreme Court would make them reverse the transaction, on the grounds that only Congress can regulate what is money. The executive may not. The minor exception made by Congress for platinum coins was only intended for numismatic coins ? not anything large.

But yes, Felix, you are right. This would end the concept of the dollar as a reserve currency. Only banana republics monetize their debt. Hey, maybe even the Fed would develop a backbone, and refuse the coin, or tell them it is only worth $1000. They don?t want to be stuck with QE not of their own design. Their QE is bad enough, but the coin, which will be a hole in the Fed?s balance sheet for as long as it lasts will be far harder to reverse.

You can’t get something for nothing.? Monetary stimulus is garbage, it steals from savers to reward solvent debtors.? Insolvent debtors can rot.? As with all monetary policy, stimulus helps the solvent.

This is a huge advertisement to get the government out of the economics business.? It has never been good at it, and this is proof.? The government might be able to goose things in the short-run, but it never succeeds in the long-run.

As it is, our government is addicted to short-run policy, and as such, does not consider long-run solutions that might be painful in the short-run.

Too bad.? Your kids lose, while you don’t seem to lose much for now.? This is a lousy position to be in.? People play for short-term advantage while while inflation increases.

You can’t get something for nothing.? Either there will be inflation, or taxation to pay back the platinum coin.

Why I Sold the Long End

Why I Sold the Long End

My bond strategy has always had a position in TLT until last week.? TLT, composed of long Treasuries. is a hedge against deflation, and has made money for my clients.

I changed last week because of significant disagreements at the Fed regarding the duration of QE, and also the selloff in the long end breaking my price drop limits.? Also, it is worthy of note that each Fed intervention is leading to smaller results.? In the process, I made more money from my credit-sensitive investments than I lost from TLT.

With stocks, I am not a technician or an active trader.? With bonds, I am both.? Why?

Bonds are more determinate than stocks and the tradeoffs are clearer.? Bonds are promises to pay under certain conditions.? Those conditions can be analyzed more readily than the open-ended conditions of stocks.

At this point in time, I am taking limited domestic credit risks, and taking larger risks in the emerging markets, where economic policy is more orthodox then it is here.

But beyond that, I have pulled in my horns, and have reduced interest rate risk.? If I see opportunities, I will act on them, but I am taking far less risk than previously.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Greetings

 

  • To all of my readers: Happy New Year. Here is to a blessed and fulfilling 2013, amid troubles and joys – no year is w/o them, glory 2 God $$ Jan 01, 2013
  • To all of my readers: 2012 had its joys and sorrows, but I appreciate that you read me. I will always try to bring you my best on twitter $$ Jan 01, 2013

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US Fiscal Policy

 

  • Why the fights over disaster relief in Congress keep getting worse http://t.co/NZCEwU7N Local disasters increasing funded by Feds $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Sorry Folks, The $1 Trillion Coin Is Unconstitutional http://t.co/RXav6MlY h/t: @carney | Congress controls $$ policy, can’t delegate 2exec Jan 04, 2013
  • Why were there so many special interest provisions in the fiscal bill? Why didn’t the president veto it & ask 4a clean bill? #fiscalcliff411 Jan 04, 2013
  • Fresh Budget Fights Brewing http://t.co/lOdAltk7 Markets Breathe Sigh of Relief After Fiscal Clash, but Tax-and-Cut Battles Loom $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Infighting in GOP Follows Scuttling of Storm-Aid Vote http://t.co/cUQxnnu5 “Tin ear” When something big hits smaller principles must bow Jan 03, 2013
  • How Deal Was Made, Unmade, Then Saved http://t.co/xhHj15fs Surprising deal between Biden & McConnell did an end-around on other tries $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • A trifecta of articles on pork in the fiscal cliff bill: http://t.co/0ymE51HH & http://t.co/iEvwLdxE & http://t.co/CCuMAXnS Shame $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Senate-Passed Deal Means Higher Tax on 77% of Households http://t.co/WvIyEkJT What! You thought your taxes would not increase?! Hahaha! $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Deductions Limits Will Affect Many http://t.co/D0rteMMC Taxes are going up more than you think due to the phasing-out of deductions $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Ron Paul Rips Government in Last House Speech http://t.co/UuwfSI9o He was 2good 2b in DC; now he can be a rock star on college campuses $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Sequestration Threat To Defense Sector Begins To Recede http://t.co/QYACs66b Grateful that I did not sell my defense stocks $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Bipartisan House Backs Tax Deal Vote as Next Fight Looms http://t.co/Ns4SgHKX Both sides claim victory & decry dishonesty of the other $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • As an aside, when I had the chance to ask Ron Paul whether the Fed’s policies favored rich over poor, he immediately said, “Of course.” $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • House Balks at Cliff Deal; Down2Wire as Republicans Object2Lack of Spending Cuts in Senate Bill http://t.co/FkS6o1Ms Fall off cliff $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Lawmakers push one-year extension of farm bill in bid to avert spike in milk prices http://t.co/bRroFoo4 Please, just free milk prices $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • US loses if we go over the Fiscal cliff = US wins if we go over the Fiscal cliff | Some will be b affected 4 better/worse; US will b ok $$ Dec 31, 2012

 

Energy

 

  • US petroleum rail shipments up nearly 50% in 2012 http://t.co/kQnGw63v Only way to get additional crude to the coasts in the short-run $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Buffett Like Icahn Reaping Tank Car Boom From Shale Oil http://t.co/ekehRs3Y Buffett keeps all tank cars he produces-> BN can ship oil $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • A Novel Ship Extends Shell’s Reach http://t.co/RAEtM1fH High technology at work in offshore oil drilling. Impressive! $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Shale-Gas Revolution Spurs Wave of New US Steel Plants http://t.co/XEuaDiKY Ask this: what other impacts exist from cheap natgas? $$ Dec 31, 2012

 

Financials

 

  • “Did the authors look at the “Call Reports” filed with the FDIC? More public data there. Kinda sloppy to miss that.” http://t.co/vCtQkZmu $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Why Bank Disclosure Is So Awful and How to Fix It http://t.co/RwW45LG5 Did they try reading the call reports? http://t.co/vAYMh7wE @carney Jan 04, 2013
  • BofA Joins JPMorgan in Having Units Ripe for Sale, Mayo Says http://t.co/4DtCCVdR Is there enough slack $$ around 2 absorb all of these? Jan 03, 2013
  • US Money Fund Exposure and European Banks: Eurozone Rises for Fifth-Straight Month http://t.co/nfWYO4jv “Risk on” MMF trade returning $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Insurer Sues Paulson Firm http://t.co/XFGKNGWB Does not seem like an easy win. ACA should have done more due diligence; they r pros $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Basel Becomes Babel as Conflicting Rules Undermine Safety http://t.co/1QIyVdR5 Rules, not principles. External models, not internal $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Big RIA Firm Uses Bible to Advise Clients http://t.co/9mtmySTo Almost every Evangelical w/$$ knows of Ron Blue; never knew he was so big $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Buffett Combines BofA With Buybacks to Beat S&P 500 http://t.co/zo8kLdNz FD: + $BRK.B | BRK is a conglomerate fueled by insurance prems $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Carlyle Agrees to Buy Duff & Phelps for $665.5 Million http://t.co/VoFVh6Oi Cheap price 2 become part of the ratings triopoly $$ Dec 31, 2012

 

Fixed Income, Gold & Monetary Policy

 

  • Gold Heads 4 Longest Run of Weekly Losses Since 2004 http://t.co/xBRfbJ8P Key Q: What happens to real interest rates; will Fed tighten? $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Gold Set for Worst Run Since ?04 as Fed Signals End of Purchases http://t.co/xBRfbJ8P I would b skeptical here; no idea what the Fed does Jan 04, 2013
  • Risk Seen in Some Mortgage Bonds http://t.co/c7rROhEE Many CMBS bonds seem 2b priced 2 perfection, while some fundamental weakness $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Does the Fed need a new mandate? http://t.co/NkfjhSeG Fed should have one mandate: tighten policy when goods or asset markets go crazy $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Fed Officials Divided on Bond Buys http://t.co/7Gh6y8tn & increasingly worried about stimulus side effects http://t.co/SomUi1uK $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • While still holding $TLT, my bond strategy did well today b/c of all the emerging market bonds.TLT is a deflation hedge http://t.co/TiTMg6So Jan 02, 2013
  • TCW to Pimco Bet on Housing Bond Rally After 41% Gain http://t.co/DcXmVEj9 Feels like squeezing last drop of juice out of the lemon $$ 😉 Jan 02, 2013
  • Credit Has Best Rally in Europe Since 2009 With Central Bank Aid http://t.co/csZD3K8n At a cost of socializing future losses $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Why Bernanke?s policies could hurt the economy more than going over the ?fiscal cliff? http://t.co/EZDkZ6Sv Favors rich over poor $$ Jan 02, 2013

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • TV is Next: Why Investors Are Getting the Media Industry Wrong http://t.co/yLoZRU55 52 pp PDF | $AMCX $CBS $DIS $NWSA $VIAB $TWC $TWX $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • U.S. Electricity Use on Wane http://t.co/dEiZBCDe A good time to avoid overpriced electrical utility stocks, and alternative energy $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Of $30.9B Special Dividends in Q4, 28.6% Went To Insiders http://t.co/QTalSmva Interesting skew on who decided to do special divs $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • A Really Good Year?Wins and Losses of 2012 http://t.co/zS69udit Fridson: “Rather than being reassured, investors should be worried,” $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Avis?s smart Zipcar buy http://t.co/SEgD8JPJ Too early. Depends on refinancing, expenses saves, & uncertain synergies & mgmt attention $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Tribune Co. Emerges From Bankruptcy http://t.co/mUGITwmt So who owns the equity interests in Tribune now? Dec 31, 2012
  • Risk defined. http://t.co/eC3U00Lb @microfundy gives us three common definitions of risk & explains the virtues & deficiencies of each $$ Dec 30, 2012
  • The Six Biggest Investing Lessons of 2012 http://t.co/XWHRu0nG @reformedbroker takes us through mean reversion, momentum, & optimism $$ Dec 30, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • China Poised for 2013 Rebound as Debt Risks Rise for Xi http://t.co/0P9o0HzX Investment will not work, but will the Govt free the economy? Jan 04, 2013
  • El Al?s Shamir Parachutes Into Israeli Vote as Liberman Fades http://t.co/Yyi2iGAv Would heighten tension level if Shamir is elected $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Chavez Cancer Imperils $7 Billion Caribbean Oil Funding http://t.co/j5MLSeYx Lot of “
  • Why 49 Is a Magic Number http://t.co/F2DPpmtV France has a lot of firms that have only 49 workers b/c onerous regulations kick in at 50 $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist http://t.co/mCMokL6T Cartel reminds of De Beers. Competitive supply makes it impossible 2 fix prices $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Used to Hardship, Latvia Accepts Austerity, and Its Pain Eases http://t.co/9v7Sf1AH If u haven’t let debt get too large, austerity works $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Chinese Fly Cash West, by the Suitcase http://t.co/L0NCTpo7 Kind of fitting that they come to Canada & US 2gain freedom after wealth $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • At Europe’s Doorstep, Fierce War Against TB http://t.co/2Z41atWb Makes good case4 quarantine when diseases r highly infectious/deadly $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Japan?s Population Falls by Record in 2012 as Births Decrease http://t.co/OTHuGOY1 Economies don’t work well when population falls $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Chavez Suffers New Complications After Fourth Cancer Operation http://t.co/fqIwxz8R If he dies by 1/10, there will b a new election $$ Dec 31, 2012

 

Other

 

  • Then I Watch ‘Em Roll Away Again http://t.co/2uF2LKhf The fascinating story of Otis Redding’s final hit. cc: @reformedbroker $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Threatening Asteroid Will Narrowly Miss Earth in 2040 http://t.co/buih448d That means it will come within twice the distance of the Moon $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Outmaneuvered at Their Own Game, Antivirus Makers Struggle to Adapt http://t.co/wD6LAA7l Whitelisting, Petri Dishes, Cleanup programs $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Disease Rips Through Florida Citrus http://t.co/zXlZEXX0 Bacteria Deal Slow Deaths to Trees; diversify to Brazil & California $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • Pattern time: 1-1-13 11:13 PM $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • For-Profit Nursing Homes Lead in Overcharging While Care Suffers http://t.co/6RTKMhdq Choose nursing homes 4 your loved ones w/care $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • “Minds work best when they r castles, w/a moat, drawbridge raised, defenders ready 2destroy thoughts of deceivers w/arrows & boiling oil” $$ Jan 01, 2013

 

Wrong

  • Wrong: In a Diverse New Congress, Several ‘Firsts’ http://t.co/Xy3HVjlo Congress not genuinely diverse; 2 types of thought @ most $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • Wrong: This Dow Component Has A 4.5% Yield And Sells For Less Than Book http://t.co/f9AFrt4t My comment: http://t.co/5T9XMJZW $$ Jan 01, 2013
  • Wrong: Benevolent Billionaires Should Buy Out Bushmaster http://t.co/iicdOxOd Monstrously dumb column asks liberal billionaires 2 lose $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • Wrong: Gauging the Guidance That Models Give the Fed http://t.co/J63vKEWM Neoclassical macro models r not capable of getting turning pts Dec 31, 2012

 

Replies, Comments & Retweets

  • @finemrespice @merrillmatter DB plans could have been managed better. Funding rules were too loose @ creation, & IRS discouraged overfunding Jan 05, 2013
  • @finemrespice It would then send out notices to the oldest people not yet retired, bringing the retiree pop up to 1/3 size of workers $$ 😉 Jan 05, 2013
  • @finemrespice At ~3 workers : 1 retiree. Yearly the government would measure the number of workers & announce the # that can retire (2/3) $$ Jan 05, 2013
  • @finemrespice It’s a good idea. It would stabilize %age of people retired vs working. Another way would b2 set the ratio directly (1/2) $$ Jan 05, 2013
  • @finemrespice Good idea – Make it a %age (~80%) of the life expectancy of a 20-yr old. %age goes up if pop proj 2 shrink & vice-versa $$ Jan 05, 2013
  • @carney Thanks, appreciated. Jan 04, 2013
  • .@Carney delegate so much of its rulemaking to study committees. Most of the Dodd-Frank law is getting designed by bureaucrats. $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • .@Carney Having a hard time commenting at @CNBC on yr articles. If Congress can’t delegate significant lawmaking, how does Dodd-Frank 1/2 $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • “I think you are right. Why is it that bad monetary ideas get more “currency” than good ones? 😉 ” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/VbCZpinR $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • You can read my comment $$ RT @BloombergView: It’s time for Japanese women to honor their Gloria Steinem | http://t.co/8brsJJ1v Jan 04, 2013
  • ‘ @TheEconomist Cover preview: America turns European. January 5th ? 11th 2013 http://t.co/JuBYRyZW Europe is in far worse shape $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • Bigtime $$ RT @NorthmanTrader: @AlephBlog speaking fees in 4 years….. Jan 04, 2013
  • @insidermonkey Bigger firms chain together a bunch of 49-person subsidiaries. The French allow it to happen. $$ Jan 04, 2013
  • @Dirty_Alfred @TFMkts Key Question: Do financial institutions have enough capital & liquidity to absorb losses,turning debt into equity? $$ Jan 03, 2013
  • @groditi I like the added duration so I don’t have to hold so much of it. More room 4 other diversifying bonds w/more potential Jan 02, 2013
  • Bigtime $$ RT @mcgilcoli: @AlephBlog a pox on both their houses! Jan 02, 2013
  • RT @AsifSuria: Agreed but they should have replaced Black Swan with Fooled by Randomness. MT @AlephBlog: This is a great list. http://t. … Jan 02, 2013
  • This is a great list. I have read almost all of them. Here are my disagreements. Aswath Damoradan… http://t.co/ATKQ6wkG Jan 02, 2013
  • If he can stop that weird grin, I can stop $$ RT @BloombergView: Can we all please stop laughing at Joe Biden? | http://t.co/xJlpt8wI Jan 02, 2013
  • @ritholtz I have a Tex-Mex Lasagne recipe near me. There r a lot of unusual/fusion recipes that borrow the layering idea from Lasagne $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • “This is why I use momentum positively in most of my investing, even though I buy a lot of undervalued companies” http://t.co/WlFQV6Py $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • “This applies to wealthy people anywhere; at times of crisis, give up 5-20% to preserve 80-95%.” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/XFa6akOC $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • @carney Great, I respect you, Carney. We don’t always agree, but I respect those that say what they think, contra politicians. $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • @McCainBlogette I am sorry, but every generation from the Baby Boomers & prior deserves progressively more blame. You don’t deserve blame $$ Jan 02, 2013
  • @carney Am I MSM, or am I just a blogger? I support the debt ceiling. Jan 02, 2013
  • Sad but true $$ RT @The_Analyst: making early call that’s your best/most accurate tweet of the year. Somehow she’s worth like $200mm. Ugh. Jan 02, 2013
  • Does she realize the she herself is a natural disaster? $$ RT @MicroFundy: Pelosi explaining how natural disasters happen. #nightisyoung Jan 02, 2013
  • Bigtime $$ RT @volatilitysmile: @TheStalwart best motivation to close a negotiation: being tired, wanting to just go home. cc @HarvardBiz Jan 02, 2013
  • U do it well RT @TheStalwart: Not to get sappy, but had a great 2012. Awesome year. Thanks everyone following and reading and all that stuff Jan 01, 2013
  • Yes, default is often the major form of deleveraging $$ RT @ZH_Crown: @AlephBlog @cate_long http://t.co/1nZlMA36 Dec 31, 2012
  • @mark_dow @cate_long & the other point is during a financial bust, enough debt has 2b liquidated/compromised/paid 4 things 2 become “normal” Dec 31, 2012
  • @fbaseggio @interfluidity @rfraserTX That could work; only difficulty is getting the data; oh, &getting the politicians 2 give up control $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • @mark_dow @cate_long Yeh, saw that at the time; one reason we were short so many financials at the hedge fund I worked at — too early Dec 31, 2012
  • @mark_dow @cate_long Good bond mgrs know that when as class of debt is plentiful, you have to avoid it. Hard 2do amid benchmarking though $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • @mark_dow @cate_long Bad institutional incentives like the CDO mkt had 1998-2007, fed by fin’l institutions reaching for yield even in AAAs Dec 31, 2012
  • @cate_long Consumers may not be as leveraged as they were in 2008, but they r still highly levered relative to history amid high unemp $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • @GonzoEcon @cate_long Businessmen do not take risks when their own leverage is high &

they know their customers r in the same boat $$ Dec 31, 2012

  • ‘ @cate_long No such thing as “animal spirits.” If leverage high, caution is warranted. Low leverage allows 4 borrowing 4 new projects $$ Dec 31, 2012
  • RT @TheStalwart: RT @tylercowen: So many say Obama is bad negotiator, but isn’t he actually rolling “the left” and secretly in league wi … Dec 31, 2012
  • @dpinsen That *is* cheap. Pity I can’t use them 4 clients — self-imposed simplicity Dec 30, 2012
  • Fingernails, def RT @ReformedBroker: Should I take the kids to the Les Miz movie? Or just stay home and pull my fingernails out one by one? Dec 30, 2012
  • “If you didn’t mention #4, I was going to. I am still long $TLT for clients, but toward the end of?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/9CGLXgiT $$ Dec 29, 2012

FWIW

  • My week on twitter: 36 retweets received, 3 new listings, 57 new followers, 69 mentions. Via: http://t.co/SPrAWil0 Jan 03, 2013

 

Locking in a Smaller Loss

Locking in a Smaller Loss

Why are TIPS yields negative out to 20+ years?? People are willing to lock in a loss versus CPI inflation in order to avoid a possibly larger loss.

Why do some people continue to invest in money market funds, bank deposits, savings accounts, when inflation is running at 2%+/year?? They are willing to lock in a loss versus inflation in order to avoid a possibly larger loss.

When the Fed adopts aggressive strategies, people will have two responses:

  1. “Yields on safe investments are too low.? I need more income.? I guess I have to take more risk.”
  2. “Policy is abnormal, and I am scared.? I know I am going to lose here, but I want to lose as little as possible.? TIPS, bank deposits, and money market funds make sense here.? Maybe some gold as well.”

The Fed is counting on response #1, but response #2 is much more common than they would like.? Now, response #1 is nothing all that great — the Fed is trying to extract value out of economic actors by making them undervalue risks, whether those risks are duration, convexity, credit, etc.? When they encourage more risk, they are trying to extract economic wherewithal out of those that invest there.? Who is the one that buys when things are hot, before they are not?? That is the target.

So be wary amid the efforts to “stimulate” the economy.? When an economy is heavily indebted, stimulus does not work.? Far better to invest your money in areas where stimulus does not play a role.? Look for healthy places in the economy that do not rely closely on the government.

Finally, don’t take minor changes by the Fed too seriously.? They are utterly convinced of their “super powers,” and do not appreciate how little control they have.? Every action of the Fed in their “stimulus” has produced progressively less response.

The Fed does not control the US economy.? They are codependent with it, and they do not act, they react.? The FOMC is hopelessly lost, with a cast of C+ students running the show — people who can’t think more broadly than the failed ideas of neoclassical economics.? As I have said before, the FOMC needs more historians, and no neoclassical economists.? Bring in the Austrians, they might solve things.? You might get a depression in the short-run, but afterwards, things would be normal.

That’s why some would rather lock in a smaller loss; this situation is volatile enough that many will want to do so.? As for me, I will try to buy undervalued companies, and make money there.

Funding What Should Not Be Funded

Funding What Should Not Be Funded

With the Fed engaging in financial repression (maybe that should be oppression, the only role of the Fed is to steal from savers…) there are many corporate bonds being issued at low yields, some of which? are at lower yields than losses that we experience during crises for the ratings class.? Should this not be a warning sign?? Yes, it should.

The Fed is creating another bubble.? Note the failure of the last bubble they engineered — the housing mortgage bubble.? They are smart, oh so smart, but with little true knowledge of how the world works.? We would be better of without the Fed.? Please unemploy a bunch of Ph.D. economists who can create very clever models of the economy that bear no resemblance to the real economy.? Please eliminate a bunch of pseudo-intellectuals who think they can control the economy.

Please eliminate a bunch of sorcerers apprentices who think they understand how to stimulate the world, and replace them with a bunch of humble people who know that they do not know, and maybe, a few that know that they can’t really stimulate, so give up.

The low interest rates that the Fed supports for high quality bonds indirectly attempts to overleverage the corporate sector in the same way that they overlevered the consumers through housing 2003-2007.

We would be a lot better off without as much government interference.? We grew much faster when the government did not try to control the economy as a whole.? Please point to successes in government macroeconomic management.? You will find none.

Interest rates are too low now, and are building up a new bubble in corporate debt.? Don’t worry in the short run, the corporate sector is strong.? But what if this continues for a while?? The one remaining sector of strength will be compromised.

Our policies in the US stink… it is only a matter of time before they hurt us badly, whether through higher taxes, inflation, or default.

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