Month: August 2013

The Rules, Part XLIX

The Rules, Part XLIX

In institutional portfolio management, the two hardest things to do are to buy higher than your last buy, and sell lower than your last sale.

I’ll tell you about two former bosses that I had.? They are both good men, and I respect them both.? The first one taught me about bond management.? He had a difficulty though.? Typically, he did not like to trade.? When I stepped into his role, but with far less experience, I traded a lot more than he did.? Because I traded more, and liquidity in the bond market is sporadic, I came up with the rule listed above.

The boss had an interesting insight, though: he suggested when you get to large sizes, stocks and bonds are equally illiquid.? I tend to agree.? In my days, I have traded stocks and bonds where I was a disproportionate holder of them, more so with bonds than with stocks.? If you want to learn the microstructure of markets, there is no better training ground than with illiquid securities.? And if you hold a lot of any security, the position is illiquid.

Once you are big, it is hard to trade in and out of positions rapidly.? You have to scale in and scale out, and do it in such a way that you don’t tip your hand to the market, which would then move against you.? Now, it would be easy if you had a fixed estimate of value for the securities, so that you knew whether a proposed buy or sell made sense, but corporate bonds and stocks improve and deteriorate.

Imagine for a moment that you hold five percent of a company’s bonds, and to your surprise, the situation is deteriorating.? Bid prices are falling.? What do you do?? First question: are the bonds money good?? Will they pay off, with high likelihood?? If so, bide your time, and maybe add some more if you have room.? If not, the second question: so what are the bonds worth?? If less than the current price, start selling, but avoid the appearance that you are desperate.? You have a lot of bonds to sell.? For the market to absorb them all will be a challenge.? I would say to brokers, that I was willing to sell small amounts of bonds at the current market, but if someone wanted to buy my full position, I might be willing to compromise a little.? Then you can have negotiations.

More often, in a deteriorating situation, you sell in dribs and drabs as the price of the asset falls.? There is psychological pain as you sell lower, but a good manager dismisses it, forgetting the past and focusing on the future.

Then there was the other boss.? At the interview he asked me, “What is one of the hardest lessons you have learned?”? I said, “In institutional portfolio management, the two hardest things to do are to buy higher than your last buy, and sell lower than your last sale.”

He appreciated the answer, though he had a hard time applying it personally.? He had a tendency to look to the past more than me.? Over the years I have learned to be forward-looking and try to analyze what securities will do the best, regardless of my cost basis.

I got the largest allocation of the Prudential “C” bonds when the deal was done. but I bought an equal amount 10% higher in price terms when it was a great deal in relative terms.? It was tough to buy more at a higher price, but it was still a great yield on a misunderstood bond.

Regret is native to mankind, but you can’t change the past.? You can try to estimate the future.? Don’t think about your cost bases.? Rather, think about what an asset is truly worth, and its trajectory, and manage your buys and sells relative to that.

Forward-looking management wins.? Look forward, and avoid regret.

PS — On Scottish Re (spit, spit) we went through this process.? We bought and bought more as it went down.? I erred in my judgment.? Had I looked at the taxable income, I would have realized that a lot of the profits weren’t real.

Before the company announced its reorganization plan, we doubled our position at a very low price, but then sold the whole thing into an astounding rally when the company announced its plans.? That cut our losses considerably, and we didn’t buy it back.? Eventually, it was worth nothing.? Focus on the future; ignore the past.

The Fed Needs Valuation Actuaries (and More Steel in the Spine)

The Fed Needs Valuation Actuaries (and More Steel in the Spine)

I reviewed the following report from the Federal Reserve to Congress today, and found it disappointing.? From my prior experience as an actuary, and the time that I spent on the asset-liability committee of a small bank, I know that? the banking industry is far behind the life insurance industry on risk control.? The Fed would have done far better to have studied the works of the Society of Actuaries and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, and learned from their efforts.

Now, I know that the contingencies of banks are far less predictable then those of life insurers.? Further, life insurers have long liabilities, whereas the liabilities of banks are short, and thus, they are more subject to runs.? But liquidity risk management does not play a large role in their document — and this is a severe defect in what they write.? Almost all failures of financial firms are due to loss of liquidity.? The word liquidity only appears once in the document, on page 15.? This shows the amateurish work of the writers.

The Fed focuses on a lot of process issues that don’t matter as much as the substantive issues of discovering forward-looking measures of risk, and changing business processes to reflect those risks.

Here are some examples:

1) Internal controls matter, but it is a rare internal control auditor that can truly analyze a complex mathematical process.? They don’t have the capacity to review those processes, or they would be doing it and earning far more.

2) Risk identification is important, but the Fed document would have not helped in 2007-2009.? How do you detect risks that have (seemingly) never happened before?? Further, if you do detect a major problem that has happened before, and it would impair some very profitable businesses, why do you think management will kill profits to appease your lunacy?

3) Governance is important, but the board gets data so late that it is useless.? This is not worth bothering with.? Management has to do the job here.

4) The language on capital targets is weak, and allows the banks way too much latitude in performing their own calculations.? The Fed needs to be far more specific, and prescribe the scenarios that need to be tested.? It need to prescribe the loss severities, asset class by asset class.? It needs to prescribe the correlations, if any, that can be used in the models.

5) The document does not speak of ethics.? Valuation Actuaries do the same work on a higher level, and they have an ethics code.? That may occasionally make them oppose the management team that pays them, but it is a necessary check against managements trying to manipulate results.

6)? The piece spends too much time on the dividend policies of bank holding companies, and no significant time on the abilities of the subsidiaries ability to dividend to the bank holding companies.? The proper focus of a bank regulator is on the health of the operating subsidiaries.? Who care if the holding company goes broke?? Big deal, at least we protected depositors.

Banking regulators should adopt the same policy as insurance regulators.? Outside of ordinary limits, they can deny any special dividends from subsidiaries to the holding company.

7) The piece does not get forward-looking estimates of risk.? On new classes of assets, you don’t have historical data to aid in estimates of risk.? At such a point, one must look at similar businesses that have gone through a failure cycle, or do something even more difficult: do a cash flow model to estimate where losses will fall if asset values decline for an unspecified reason (okay, no more ability to buy…)

8 ) Macroeconomic factors rarely correlate well with the factors that lead to losses on assets.? Most of that effort is a waste.

9) As Buffett said (something like): “We’re paid to think about things that can’t happen.”? This is why the Fed has to specify scenarios, and be definite.? The mealy-mouthed language of the document can be gainsayed.? Life Actuaries have better guidance.

10) So all of the banks did not pass the mark.? With the vagueness of the guidelines, no surprise.? Let the Fed put forth real guidelines for bank stress tests, and let the banks scream when they get them.? Better to have slow growth in the banking sector than another crisis.

On Credit Quality in Life Insurance

On Credit Quality in Life Insurance

When I was 20+ years younger the new chief actuary of a subsidiary I was in came and told me his tale of woe.? At a prior company he had worked for, the company had terminated the defined benefit pension plan, and went to a low-credit quality insurer to purchase annuities to match the terminated benefits.

His complaint was that he had no say in the matter.? With ordinary debt agreements, the debtor has no right to assign his debt to another debtor, without the assent of the creditor.

In the same way, those that buy policies from insurance companies run the risk that their policies could be sold to a weaker insurance company.

20+ years ago, my friend said there was a simple solution, and I agree with it.? When a financial company takes over the liabilities of another financial company, those who have lent to the original company should have the right to receive their assets back at full value, with no deductions for surrender charges, etc.

This is basic.? Debtors should not be able to assign debts to another party, without the assent of the creditor.

I have seen the same thing recently in this article, as aggressive life insurers buy up policies of less aggressive life insurers.? Those insured should have a way out, as the creditworthiness of the insurer has gone down.

I am arguing that life insurers should not be able to sell their liabilities without the insured having an option to cash out at full value.? I realize that this would limit valuations among life insurers, but so what?? The basics of what is fair in debtor/creditor relations should prevail.? Big insurance companies should not have a different set of rules than would be common to other debtor/creditor relationships.

 

Asset-Liability Management for Mutual Funds, and Others Like Them

Asset-Liability Management for Mutual Funds, and Others Like Them

How much confidence do you have in your investments, mutual fund manager?? How much cash do you hold?? If you are very confident, maybe you should hold more cash.? Confidence comes near market peaks.? Everything seems certain; nothing goes badly wrong.? But the turning point might be near.

Same for bear markets.? Amid weakness, reinvest in companies with weak performance that you know are essential, with good balance sheets. Reduce cash during the crisis, because stocks are on sale.

These are pain trades, because they offend our sensibilities.? My view is that you follow price momentum during the middle of a run, and try to resist it near the end.? This applies to both bull and bear markets.

I try to mitigate risk by holding more cash after the market has run hard, and less cash after the market has cratered.? I resist the market’s movements.

But what if shareholders lose confidence?? What if they pull a disproportionate amount of money?

A lost of that depends on how badly you do.? If you do really badly, there is no hope.? When shareholders leave en masse, there are no good solutions.? Sell your positions with the lowest expected return, should you know what stocks those are.? Maybe your best picks, however concentrated, will turn the tide eventually.

I would encourage all mutual fund managers, and those like them, to take courage.? Make the hard decisions, and stick by your best ideas.? Look to the long term and aim for best total return.? If you can’t do this, find another job, because you are not cut out for money management.

Though money management firms are out to gather fees, money managers are out to outperform.? Have appropriate pride for what you do, and give it your best.? Try to avoid panic moves because investors are adding a lot of money, or redeeming a lot of money.

The main idea is this: know your investments, and what you expect them to return.? Add/subtract from your investments in proportion to their desirability.

The balance sheet of a mutual fund is weak because anyone can ask for their money back immediately.? Now, if you are a good money manager with a strong record, your assets will be more sticky.? Opposite true if you don’t have a good record.

And sad in a way, because good track records do not always maintain.? My view is that they do maintain outperformance on average until they hit their limit of assets that their style can manage.

So, invest with smaller promising managers, until they get too big.? As for the managers, be reasonable about what you can manage, like some hedge fund friends of mine, who shut off flows to their special fund near $100 million of net assets.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Companies & Industries

 

  • Odyssey Hits Wall as Honda Redesigns Minivan to Ace Test http://t.co/6VyK2N2EcO $HMC goes all out to reduce crash injuries 4 2014 Odyssey $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • Fairholme Fund May Increase Bet on Fannie, Freddie http://t.co/EOj8Z9SCzg BB reopens fund 2 get more buying power 4 F&F. Wouldn’t do it $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • Warren Buffett Stake in Suncor Energy, Much More Than It Seems http://t.co/ULDMXqYAnt $SU will be producing high cost oil 4a long time $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Mall Owners Entice Hispanic Shoppers http://t.co/k42J96Nhxc Temporary stopgap 4 malls being hollowed out by retail over the internet $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Losing Faith in Gold From Ghana to Vancouver Proves Rout http://t.co/K6VcC7Duyj More high cost mines come out of production as gold falls $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • The iCahn Effect: Apple’s Market Cap Jumps by $17B After Tweets http://t.co/8qb0rUWjCR Don’t c how $1B should move a stock $17B $$ $AAPL Aug 14, 2013
  • Y Food Companies Are Fascinated by the Way We Eat http://t.co/NhIRtprRWj Do u like 2 chew, crunch, smoosh or suck? Food companies study u $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • Financials near to regaining S&P 500’s top spot http://t.co/fgSKGOrfyC We do not learn, we do not learn, we do not learn, we do not learn $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Endurance Welcomes Fred Cooper 2Head US Financial Institutions Insurance Practice http://t.co/XpQcxwYwJS Picking up nickels… $$ FD: + $ENH Aug 13, 2013
  • Heinz announces layoffs in Pittsburgh and Canada http://t.co/VG3WI8OTfs Now that the merger has closed, the cost rationalization begins $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Funny in a way: pricing rationality & profits flow to hard disk makers once the industry consolidated down to three players $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • WD? Founds New Storage Association To Promote The Critical Role Of Magnetic Storage Technologies http://t.co/4jKYDyGGb2 FD: + $WDC $$ Aug 13, 2013

 

Rest of the World

 

  • India Shares Slump, Rupee Sinks to Fresh Low http://t.co/cfEnRd5EjQ Central Bank tightens credit conditions- Rupee still falls & stocks2 $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • How Mexico Ended Political Gridlock With a Pact http://t.co/GjNEfA0Ela How the PAN & PRI managed to work together & get most mutual goals $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • What Obama Misunderstands About Egypt http://t.co/UAKXAQBOPs No one worthy of support here, as Egypt slides into a situation like Syria’s $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • Cayman to Singapore Gain as Rules Stump Clinics http://t.co/giudbhHATR Medical Tourism looks elsewhere as India makes things hard $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • Petrobras Downgrade Looms as Slump Sinks Rating Outlooks http://t.co/EpRahHggSF Brazilian corporate sector got too aggressive w/debt $$ $PBR Aug 13, 2013
  • Death of 75-Year Monopoly Can?t Come Soon Enough: Mexico Credit http://t.co/wqfnynnYkP PEMEX monopoly lasts 75 yrs, dies in a few weeks? $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Japan Inc. Profit Doubles to Add Support to Economic Rebound http://t.co/xv5dPxlRHO Sends $$ from consumers 2 exporters 2 invest abroad Aug 13, 2013
  • Mexico Plans Oil Reserve Sweetener to Lure Exxon, Chevron http://t.co/Ol0sGlse9h Will allow companies 2count reserves from profit-sharing $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • Buffett-Style Dinner Auctions Lure Chinese Seeking Just Society http://t.co/7dK9W52Yhe Long article on odd business seeking a freer China $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • What Brazilian Slowdown? Petrobras Maxes Out Refining Capacity&Imports Oil2Meet Demand http://t.co/0FsI0V6V27 $PBR Milked by Brazil govt $$ Aug 13, 2013

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Bond Markets

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  • Confident Consumers Step Up Their Borrowing http://t.co/QkD3Xss4NS Auto Loans Post Largest Gain in 7Yrs, as Total Consumer Debt Declines $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • California Sells $5.5B in Bonds http://t.co/TbUGTpmTk7 Better fiscal mgmt, maybe, at least it is not Michigan. Liquidity is abundant $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • Muni Investors Make Michigan Pay http://t.co/zCWMx5Ba2a To get a muni deal done in Michigan, you need extra yield & guarantees/covenants $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Summer Lull Draws Investors to Riskier Debt http://t.co/08H0vfFj1b Feels like time to begin peeling back credit risk $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Bond Hubris Overwhelms Fed in Riskiest Credit-Market Sectors http://t.co/WUKgfpse77 No free lunch; Fed’s asset inflation will mean-revert $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Michigan Safety Net for Boomers Frays on Bankrupt Detroit http://t.co/tTso4JMxTR What happens when u make 2 many promises vs tax base $$ Aug 13, 2013

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Central Banking

 

  • Fed’s Yellen Says Stance on Banks Hardened http://t.co/KZIfgPncaN Yellen tries 2 differ from Summers, but bank regulation was weak 2003-8 $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Next Fed Head Should Meet the Bernie Sanders/Elizabeth Warren Standard http://t.co/xM9MF71dvM Questions aren’t realistic about $$ policy Aug 13, 2013
  • Yellen, Fischer Among Participants at Jackson Hole This Year http://t.co/MBui5Hfc3y Bernanke not attending as he slips into the shadows $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Rand Paul on Republicans’ Voter Appeal and the Federal Reserve http://t.co/oVdaavHWsj Can we find another Reagan, who united the GOP? $$ #no Aug 13, 2013

 

Market Impact

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  • Hundred-Dollar Stocks Double as US CEOs Dismiss Splits http://t.co/OOmXdpWSrU With trading costs so low, y do we need splits anyway? $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • How to Invest Like Seth Klarman http://t.co/JDxW9VbROs Easier said than done. Who has the conviction 2 sit on $$ when opportunities r poor? Aug 13, 2013
  • Greater &lesser rotations http://t.co/XZ6D4CgIZq “no evidence that retail investors r very overweight bonds or very underweight equities” $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Will Mom and Pop investors blow it again? http://t.co/95lZYtIZ6u @BrettArends on retail $$ coming back into stocks; time 2b careful Aug 13, 2013

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Politics & Policy

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  • What We Lose if We Give Up Privacy http://t.co/ZOddurR51k When 4th Amendment rights erode, 1st Amendment rights follow, eg, free speech $$ Aug 16, 2013
  • Free Work Entices Businesses to Hire Long-Term Unemployed http://t.co/Lhemn5JIWp Try b4u buy lets employers figure out who they like $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Problems With Authority http://t.co/JjIgnIJVEh Obama ignores unusual writ of mandamus, which compels the govt 2fulfill a legal obligation $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • Everything you know about immigration is wrong http://t.co/UpHiI0Wwfd Militarizing the border did not stop the flow in, did stop flow out $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Encryption App Silent Circle Shuts Down E-Mail Service ‘To Prevent Spying’ http://t.co/95KCJt80mH Destroying data 2 preserve secrecy $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Eric Holder Owes the American People an Apology http://t.co/07JtmV95QA Vastly overstated the efficacy of mortgage relief programs $$ Aug 13, 2013

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Housing

 

  • Report: Half of All Homes Are Being Purchased With Cash http://t.co/p9GF4dOBUz Good sign. More equity means greater sustainability $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Baltimore Foreclosures Surge Again as Legal Logjam Breaks http://t.co/xphbxvRXjv Foreclosures take longer 2work out in judicial states $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Why Home-Price Growth Will Slow http://t.co/IZaE08udfI Prices up, mortgage rates up, fewer distressed homes available 4 sale $$ Aug 13, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Mom, Dad, Sorry I Was So Expensive http://t.co/VakZSkmE3r If u think having children is expensive, imagine the $$ of a society w/out them Aug 15, 2013
  • DNA Sequencing of Tumors Brings Hope of New Lung-Cancer Drugs http://t.co/YRul3Gfiva Costs high, distinguishing between diff cancers worx $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Companies Ease Up on Non-Compete Agreements http://t.co/iEhtgQ7qjq Restraint of Trade laws also make it difficult to enforce non-competes $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Overhaul Proposed for Annual Audit Reports http://t.co/8LAgJf5rrU Could b good 2 get past the the present binary pass/fail $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Stocktwits ? Happy 5th Anniversary http://t.co/AQ8vI1kOsC @howardlindzon extols efforts made as they r the premier social investing site $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Browser wars: Chrome rules the web http://t.co/QoGqVlVNcI The sun never sets on the Empire of Google’s Chrome; IE dying, Firefox choking $$ Aug 13, 2013

 

On Fiduciaries

  • On brokers as fiduciaries, choose: mixed advice, paid for by commissions, best advice, but u have to pay more 2a fiduciary, or no advice $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • You Can’t Afford Your Broker, at Any Price http://t.co/C46ndiTx6U by @asymmetricinfo on holding brokers 2a fiduciary standard $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Look Who?s Locking Horns Over Retirement Accounts http://t.co/xSRFtbFndD @jasonzweigwsj tells us 2 act as our own fiduciaries or hire one $$ Aug 13, 2013

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Wrong

  • Wrong: Don?t Kill Fannie Mae http://t.co/JqDk0kNJM5 People forget the incredible losses on prime mortgages when housing prices fell $$ Aug 15, 2013
  • Dumb: Retirees in Enemy Territory Go Door-to-Door on PPACA http://t.co/4xSgHH2qNL Won’t work unless young & healthy sign up on exchanges $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • Wrong: Your mortgage documents are fake! http://t.co/rErbfMzP7B Mistakes procedural justice 4 real justice. U don’t pay, U get foreclosed $$ Aug 13, 2013
  • Wrong: In defense of the 30-year mortgage http://t.co/cc9kgtRJpM Over-investment in housing & levers up the economy, creating fragility $$ Aug 13, 2013

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Replies, Retweets, & Comments

  • RT @TheLimerickKing: QE has not led to inflation It’s now a much worse situation Velocity’s low But risk assets grow So now it’s just wealt? Aug 15, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: No, I don’t. Ultimately all assets boil down to their cash flows. This doesn’t change th… http://t.co/xjshS62La2 Aug 14, 2013
  • A shout-out to DarkCloud @p0stk0m for being my 8,000th Twitter follower. Thanks a lot, & thanks to all who follow me $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • @marketfolly @EquityNYC That is a very good point, and I internally noted it, but did not comment. I should have. 🙁 $$ Aug 14, 2013
  • “Congratulations, Howard. Well done, particularly the way you survived Twitter’s $ grab.” -Merkel http://t.co/tOlvvEqy0P @howardlindzon $$ Aug 12, 2013

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Value Investing when Debt Levels are High

Value Investing when Debt Levels are High

I would ask yourself how to implement value investing in an era where debt is no longer expanding. Arguably an era where inflation is increasing (albeit from a low starting point).

A few years ago, everyone ?knew? housing prices never went down nation wide. Today, CNBC constantly tells us that the consumer is 70% of the economy? undoubtedly true when debt levels were expanding. But consumer income is not growing as fast as the cost of living, and debt levels cannot expand again. The ?consumer is 70% of the economy? assumption probably won?t hold over the next few decades like it did in the past few decades. How does one implement value investing in such an environment?

So asked on reader in response to last night’s post.? His full comment was similar to some of the musings of Bill Gross, in that we don’t live long enough to really prove we have skill in investing, but over the last 40 years the overall macroeconomic regime of expanding debt favored certain classes of investors.

A few thoughts:

1) Value investing is SAFE and cheap, not CHEAP and safe.? Focus on margin of safety.? Spend time asking what can go wrong.? Test the strength of moats.

2) In 2008-2009, there were a lot of value investors that got savaged.? Why?? They invested a lot in statistically cheap financial companies that were carrying a lot of credit risk.? Having worked for a hedge fund 2003-2007 that did the opposite, my own investing was constrained because I feared what might happen when the bear part of the credit cycle emerged (leaving aside a mortgage REIT that I foolishly held onto).

Credit-sensitive financials are like cyclical non-financials that have over-invested in productive capacity.? They have high operating leverage, and will only prosper when demand is strong/credit is good.? Cyclical companies often have low P/E multiples near the top of the cycle, because the bear phase is anticipated.? They have high or negative P/E multiples near the bottom of the cycle, because the bull phase is anticipated.

The main idea here is to be skeptical of companies carrying a lot of credit risk, particularly after they have succeeded for some time.? When the credit risk manifests, it is savage.

3)?? Avoid debt and products that require it.? My portfolios ordinarily avoid companies with a lot of debt.? I like companies that finance themselves internally through retained earnings.? During bear market phases, companies with financial flexibility do better.? It is always better to get financing at a time when you don’t *have* to get it.? Seeking liquidity when little is available is never an attractive place to be.

Also remember that big ticket items like houses, cars, boats, RVs, college educations, do badly when credit conditions tighten.? Luxuries are disadvantaged versus necessities also.? Before the bear part of the credit cycle hits, own companies that are self-financing, and have stable revenues.

4) Inflation tends to favor value investing based on flow (income statement, cash flow statement) versus stock (balance sheet).? In one sense, corporate pricing power boosts the value of companies that can pass on the inflation and then some.? This was true in the ’70s when value investor did relatively well.

In summary, I would say that in the future, value investors need to focus on:

  • Safety first
  • Avoidance of credit risk, implicit and explicit
  • Investing in companies that don’t have to seek external finance
  • Companies that can pass on the effects of inflation.
Ben Graham Did Not Give Up on Value Investing in Theory

Ben Graham Did Not Give Up on Value Investing in Theory

Hi David,

Love the blog. I am an MBA student and obsessed with the value investing philosophy. There are two points that? could use clarification.

  1. There are so many value investors today, does that mitigate potential rewards? Does value investor competition create less value?
  2. Towards the end of Grahams career he said ” I am no longer an advocate of elaborate techniques of security analysis in order to find superior value opportunities”? This was disheartening to read, but I saw that Jason Zweig commented that Graham was only referring to passive investors.Graham seems to imply otherwise. Any thoughts?

I would really appreciate a response.

All the best.

So wrote one of my readers.? I’ll try to answer both of the questions.

The answer to the first question is relatively simple.? Any strategy can be overused relative to the degree of mispricing in the market.? There can be too many value players.? There can be too many momentum players.? There can be too many investors aiming for dividends, low volatility, high quality, etc.

If you are the only one with a strategy, you can make a ton off of it.? Think of Ben Graham back in the 30s, 40s & 50s… there were few people kicking the tires on seemingly troubled companies that had a lot of unused assets.? It was easy to make a lot of money in that era, for the few that were doing it.

Phil Fisher was a growth investor with a singular insight — look for sustainable competitive advantage, or in the modern parlance, a moat.? He racked up quite a track record in the process.

Or think of Sam Eisenstadt who developed the core of Value Line, building on the ideas of Arnold Bernhard.? He was way ahead of GARP investing by incorporating price momentum, earnings momentum, earnings surprise and valuation into one neat method.? It took a long time before those anomalies were exhausted.? It worked for 50 years or so.

Or think of Buffett, who synthesized many strands of value investing together with an insurance holding company, levering up value investing with an aim of rapid compounding of profits.

Any valid strategy with few users will reap relatively high rewards.? When lots of people pursue it, relative rewards fall.

Value investing has two things going for it that tends to reduce the tendency for the rewards to be played out.? It takes effort, and it’s not sexy.

Value investing can be taken to as deep of a level as one wants.? Sometimes I read the analyses of other value investors, and I say to myself, “This is either masterful, or he had a lot of time on his hands.”? I tend to be more simplistic, realizing that the first 20% of the analysis releases 80% of the value.? I am also a better portfolio manager than I am an analyst, though I’ve had people say to me that my intuition is sharper than many.? (I don’t know.)

The “not sexy” aspect of value investing partly stems from a desire to invest in things that are growing rapidly, because there have been notable growth companies that have made their investors a lot of money.? Why else do you see articles “This stock is the next Microsoft, Apple, Google, etc?”? Creating the next Chevron, IBM, or Berkshire Hathaway would take a lot of time, relatively.

Every now and then, value investing gets crowded, but the advantage never fully goes away for a long time.? Besides, market events like 1973-4, 1979-82, 1987, 1998, 2002-3, and 2008-9 shake up things so that there are a crop of new opportunities.? As I said to my boss in 2007 when he was giving me a bad review, “When I came here in 2003, it was as if the applecart had been knocked over, and easy values were easily picked up, like apples.? Today, there are no easy pickings.”

Okay on to question 2.? Part of the problem here is the famous part of what Graham had to say is well-known but the whole article is not well-known.? Here is the whole article.? And here is the famous quote, again:

In selecting the common stock portfolio, do you advise careful study of and selectivity among different issues?
In general, no. I am no longer an advocate of elaborate techniques of security analysis in order to find superior value opportunities. This was a rewarding activity, say, 40 years ago, when our textbook “Graham and Dodd” was first published; but the situation has changed a great deal since then. In the old days any well-trained security analyst could do a good professional job of selecting undervalued issues through detailed studies; but in the light of the enormous amount of research now being carried on, I doubt whether in most cases such extensive efforts will generate sufficiently superior selections to justify their cost. To that very limited extent I’m on the side of the “efficient market” school of thought now generally accepted by the professors.

On the face of it, to a value investor, this is rather disheartening.? Who wants to see the founder abandon the heritage? But I mostly agree with Jason Zweig, because this has to be taken in context with the other things he said in the FAJ article.? Let me explain:

First, since Ben Graham, we have discovered a wide number of anomalies in investing: earnings quality, momentum, distress, asset shrinkage, share shrinkage, neglect, etc.? We haven’t been impoverished because we no longer have net-nets (cheap companies with unused assets) to invest in.? We’ve sharpened the discipline beyond what Ben Graham could have imagined.

Second, if you read the full article, Ben Graham still defends value investing:

Turning now to individual investors, do you think that they are at a disadvantage compared with the institutions, because of the latter’s huge resources, superior facilities for obtaining information, etc.?
On the contrary, the typical investor has a great advantage over the large institutions.
Why?
Chiefly because these institutions have a relatively small field of common stocks to choose from–say 300 to 400 huge corporations — and they are constrained more or less to concentrate their research and decisions on this much over-analyzed group. By contrast, most individuals can choose at any time among some 3000 issues listed in the Standard & Poor’s Monthly Stock Guide. Following a wide variety of approaches and preferences, the individual investor should at all times be able to locate at least one per cent of the total list–say, 30 issues or more–that offer attractive buying opportunities.
What general rules would you offer the individual investor for his investment policy over the years?
Let me suggest three such rules: (1) The individual investor should act consistently as an investor and not as a speculator. This means, in sum, that he should be able to justify every purchase he makes and each price he pays by impersonal, objective reasoning that satisfies him that he is getting more than his money’s worth for his purchase–in other words, that he has a margin of safety, in value terms, to protect his commitment. (2) The investor should have a definite selling policy for all his common stock commitments, corresponding to his buying techniques. Typically, he should set a reasonable profit objective on each purchase–say 50 to 100 per cent–and a maximum holding period for this objective to be realized–say, two to three years. Purchases not realizing the gain objective at the end of the holding period should be sold out at the market. (3) Finally, the investor should always have a minimum percentage of his total portfolio in common stocks and a minimum percentage in bond equivalents. I recommend at least 25 per cent of the total at all times in each category. A good case can be made for a consistent 50-50 division here, with adjustments for changes in the market level. This means the investor would switch some of his stocks into bonds on significant rises of the market level, and vice-versa when the market declines. I would suggest, in general, an average seven- or eight-year maturity for his bond holdings.
This is value investing.? What Graham is suggesting won’t work is that big investors who have a lot of money to put to work will be forced into big names that are over-analyzed.? He is not saying that analysis of less followed names won’t work; the small size of the individual investor is an advantage, not a curse.
Then Ben Graham says:
What general approach to portfolio formation do you advocate?
Essentially, a highly simplified one that applies a single criteria or perhaps two criteria to the price to assure that full value is present and that relies for its results on the performance of the portfolio as a whole–i.e., on the group results–rather than on the expectations for individual issues.
Can you indicate concretely how an individual investor should create and maintain his common stock portfolio?
I can give two examples of my suggested approach to this problem. One appears severely limited in its application, but we found it almost unfailingly dependable and satisfactory in 30-odd years of managing moderate-sized investment funds. The second represents a great deal of new thinking and research on our part in recent years. It is much wider in its application than the first one, but it combines the three virtues of sound logic, simplicity of application, and an extraordinarily good performance record, assuming–contrary to fact–that it had actually been followed as now formulated over the past 50 years–from 1925 to 1975.
Some details, please, on your two recommended approaches.
My first, more limited, technique confines itself to the purchase of common stocks at less than their working-capital value, or net-current-asset value, giving no weight to the plant and other fixed assets, and deducting all liabilities in full from the current assets. We used this approach extensively in managing investment funds, and over a 30-odd year period we must have earned an average of some 20 per cent per year from this source. For a while, however, after the mid-1950’s, this brand of buying opportunity became very scarce because of the pervasive bull market. But it has returned in quantity since the 1973-74 decline. In January 1976 we counted over 300 such issues in the Standard & Poor’s Stock Guide–about 10 per cent of the total.? I consider it a foolproof method of systematic investment–once again, not on the basis of individual results but in terms of the expectable group outcome.
Finally, what is your other approach?
This is similar to the first in its underlying philosophy. It consists of buying groups of stocks at less than their current or intrinsic value as indicated by one or more simple criteria. The criterion I prefer is seven times the reported earnings for the past 12 months.? You can use others–such as a current dividend return above seven per cent or book value more than 120 percent of price, etc. We are just finishing a performance study of these approaches over the past half-century–1925-1975. They consistently show results of 15 per cent or better per annum, or twice the record of the DJIA for this long period. I have every confidence in the threefold merit of this general method based on (a) sound logic, (b) simplicity of application, and (c) an excellent supporting record. At bottom it is a technique by which true investors can exploit the recurrent excessive optimism and excessive apprehension of the speculative public.
So, no, Ben Graham did not give up on value investing.? One could easily say that he was arguing for value indexing.? He knew what characteristics of cheapness would lead to superior returns.? He also thought there was room for value investing outside of the largest 400 companies available for investment.
He did recognize that the easy days were gone.? Analyzing liquid assets net of liabilities no longer paid off.? But value investing, buying assets with a margin of safety, and buying them cheap to their intrinsic value was not dead, at least for small investors.? What Ben Graham would have learned had he lived longer was that value investing would adapt, and find new ways of seeking value.? We are you heirs, Ben, and we have built upon your work.
As a final note, though Ben Graham sought “the good life” and was often more concerned with the arts than investing, he was the original quantitative investor.? He recognized aggregate behavior of stocks relative to valuation criteria, and saw that such value investing still worked.? But with individual issues, the “Happy Hunting Ground” of the 30s, 40s and 50s no longer existed, aside from ’74-76.? That’s what Ben Graham meant when he no longer believed in individual security selection for value investing.
PS — When I initially inclined to write this piece, I did not think I would write this.? I thought I would support the mainstream opinion — that Graham gave up on value investing. I can now tell you that that view is wrong. :D? Very wrong.

 

Full disclosure: Long BRK/B, CVX

Against Government-Subsidized 30-Year Mortgages

Against Government-Subsidized 30-Year Mortgages

I don’t think that those who disagree with me are dumb.? It is often that the person in question is bright, but has presuppositions that disagree with mine.? I am for the most part a libertarian.? Thus I don’t often agree with liberals, or the pro-big-business wing of the Republican party.? Most of the time, I also favor regulation of financial companies, because when too many of them borrow short and lend long, something horrible happens to the economy as a whole.

That is the main reason why I think government encouragement of 30-year mortgages should end.? It increases leverage in the economy, and makes it more susceptible to crises.? Societies that have a lot of debt tend to be more fragile.? We forget how certain we were that Fannie and Freddie could never fail.? I was one of the few people that argued the opposite at RealMoney.com.? (Sadly, those posts are lost.)? F&F assumed that there would never be a sustained period where housing prices would fall across the US as a whole.? When prices began to fall, their business model was destroyed, because they were levered very high.

30-year mortgages allow some to buy houses that they should not buy.? If you have to have a 30-year mortgage instead of a 15-year mortgage, you are buying too much house for your income.? We spend too much money as a society on housing, and we take on too much debt as a result, leading to fragile financial systems.? Debt-based systems are fragile relative to equity-based systems.

If there are to be 30-year mortgages, let them be purely private, like Alt-A, Jumbo, and Subprime loans.? Don’t let the government place any guarantee on them.? If we have to guarantee mortgages, do it from 15 years and shorter.? Reduce the amount of leverage in the economy as a whole.? Make the system stronger, against those who think that encouraging borrowing is a free lunch.

What is the cost to my proposal?? Fewer people buy houses, and fewer houses get built.? Good.? We are over-housed already.? Far better that investment should go to production rather than consumption in the US (opposite in China).? We already subsidize mortgage lending through the tax code, which we should eliminate.? Why should we favor one class of borrowing over another?

Let the apartment REITs house people.? They borrow over a wide maturity spectrum, and do not rely on long-term finance.? Loss of government guarantees on 30-year mortgages will not affect them.

Now, I am responding to this article of Mike Konczal.? Here is one thing that he said:

The second [reason] is that providing macroeconomic stability is a legitimate and important function of the government. After the crash, the government had to step in, prevent a banking crisis and run the entire mortgage market after private capital disappeared. As such, the government holds the tail risk of the mortgage market imploding already; why not make this insurance explicit, while also regulating and pricing it?

Sorry, that’s not the way it works.? The Fed provided too much liquidity, and F&F provided too much lending up to 2007.? Now we suffer the bust from having over-stimulated housing demand.? The government rarely makes things more stable; they are pro-cyclical, and make things less stable.? That’s the way politicians are, because no one will oppose a boom.

We need to move to a less-levered system, where debt is discouraged, to create a system that is not fragile.? After two failures due to high debt levels (current and the 1930s), we should learn that high levels of debt lead to economic failure, and move to a system where interest in not tax-deductible, but dividends are.? This will lower debt levels, and our economy will become more stable.

 

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Financial Companies & Lending Markets

 

  • Hedge Fund GSO Scores Win With MBIA Bet http://t.co/eMYUgX6Syg Risky bet that paid off; he realized the banks would have2 compromise $$ $MBI Aug 10, 2013
  • Mortgage Delinquencies Hit Five-Year Low http://t.co/HlfyPTbUAV Judicial states trail non-judicial states as cases drag on $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • The bailout Wall Street is blocking from Main Street http://t.co/gFasMd4jdG Eminent domain should not b used 4 trivial reasons $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • The US July 2013 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices http://t.co/JAL5TggXg1 Perhaps bank lending is turning up $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • The US Has a Really Helpful Student Loan Repayment Program?and No One’s Using It http://t.co/xyAgjk24PE Pay % of your income for a # yrs $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • BofA Trader Avoided Bank’s Bad Mortgages ‘Like A Fat Kid In Dodgeball’ http://t.co/3OdziStl8r Colorful, shows awareness of credit issues $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Consumers Find Investors Eager to Make ‘Peer-to-Peer’ Loans http://t.co/5gKhnAzJ2x Eventually credit will b abundant leading 2 failure $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Obama Urges Mortgage Overhaul With Limited Role for Gov’t http://t.co/MCtNMlBlJX Guaranteeing 30Y mtges incents housing overinvestment $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • House Democrat introduces bill to end mandatory arbitration http://t.co/2VHm4qXeK3 Costs of court cases vs crooked playing field of arb $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Mortgage Debt Rejected by Banks Facing New Rules http://t.co/GCCoZvINkt Fewer want 2 hold mtge debts b/c of changes in capital rules $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Many Can’t Pay Student Loans http://t.co/PgxJqtBtYT Some 8% of Borrowers in a New Federal Program Have Defaulted; avoid student loans $$ Aug 06, 2013

 

Companies & Industries

 

  • Hurricane forecast may have traders on edge http://t.co/2mRSgZvuXZ Hurricane forecasting has not been very accurate over the last decade $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • Warren Buffett Trains ‘Elephant Gun’ on Smaller Prey http://t.co/G4l4fxVtOZ No surprise. Buffett lets his managers buy good prospects $$ Aug 09, 2013
  • Remodeling Rebounds in US With Contractors http://t.co/TqOVgTh9Wa Deferred projects r finally getting done, as ppl more willing 2 spend $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Loeb?s Reinsurer With No US Staff Gains From Jobs Act http://t.co/jnBqNMgucG Just b/c u list on US exchange doesn’t mean u will hire here $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Goldman sees ‘creative destruction’ in these businesses http://t.co/BkgQSb1wsk Don’t agree on reinsurance; underwriting takes expertise $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Xerox’s Ursula Burns on Her Career Path and Changing Company Strategy http://t.co/z3kFlsSOKU Xerox is interesting turnaround FD: + $XRX $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • 27,900 Reasons For Amazon’s Loss http://t.co/lQ41dRZfuu Ordinarily, good corporate growth comes w/profits. $AMZN hires 28K over past year $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • CBS-Time Warner Cable Dispute Shows an Industry Unaware of Reality http://t.co/ZSNNOPstzV Internet may reshape economics of televison 2 $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Jeff Bezos’s Tool Kit for Washington Post http://t.co/Yib1yt6k7Y Bezos is a bright guy, but making $$ off of newspapers tough w/internet Aug 07, 2013
  • Ride a Painted Pony, Let the Spinning Wheel Fly http://t.co/vG89yC4ooJ The word flywheel is popular 2 use, c here: http://t.co/vxc8d0fofQ $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • The 40 cheapest stocks, according to Goldman Sachs http://t.co/XADhLHVD4G $GS tells u2 buy cyclicals. I own 4 on the list. Seems risky $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • IBM Furloughs US Hardware Employees to Reduce Costs http://t.co/bQWk3BtgD3 2me, this seems kind of gimmicky; I would lean bearish $$ $IBM Aug 07, 2013
  • Hidden Billionaire Found With Food Fortune in California http://t.co/w2yUPsx86D Uses zoning laws to keep potential competitors at bay $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • We’re In 4A Long Bottom http://t.co/NtMxx5hIzj Barring strong inflation, gold miners have slashed exploration, mining best deposits only $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • For Twitter, Free Speech Is a High-Wire Act http://t.co/Yx80PIwfQ1 Twitter tries 2 chart a middle course in censorship in diff countries $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • Hidden Billionaire Cohen Hauls Fortune in Unmarked Trucks http://t.co/YpXAmxlo3F C&S Wholesale Grocers, biggest company u never heard of $$ Aug 05, 2013

 

Politics & Policy

?

  • A User?s Guide to Obama?s Inside-Out Economics http://t.co/5dHZasczfL Obama long on rhetoric, & short on reason; doesn’t understand econ $$ Aug 09, 2013
  • Fed Belongs to Everybody as Public Says It?s Our Money in Crisis http://t.co/YYy7dXkY3r Level of lobbying 4 Fed Chair is unprecedented $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • We Are All Going to Pension Hell http://t.co/SoGeWiryxV @asymmetricinfo points out hopelessness of the pensions crisis, only Q is when $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Heroin Makes a Comeback, Especially in Small Towns http://t.co/Uwrh97QwU3 Small towns gain big city problems; drugs know no boundaries $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Ted Koppel: America’s Chronic Overreaction to Terrorism http://t.co/4ueqew4oB9 The War on Terror has done more harm to the US than good $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Deficit Shrinks to 5.7% of GDP as Debt Ceiling No Vote Risks All http://t.co/NaWdRcTzlf Maybe the deficit will disappear by accident? $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Obama’s False History of Public Investment http://t.co/X8Lx8za8CW Planned 2b an investment, ended up being an expense. Happens in biz 2 $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Insider-Trading Probe Caught in a Washington Knot http://t.co/ykIYLNNgvL Investigation of Health-Policy Leak Muddled by Congress’ rules $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • Central Bank Needs to Untangle ?Monetary Gordian Knot? http://t.co/IkNfB8X2sh Fisher says little help 2 job growth from $$ Trillions of QE Aug 05, 2013
  • US Growth comes Mostly from Inventories http://t.co/nEUK3zyDTY “Mostly” overstates it, but 40% does put a significant dent in GDP growth $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • US July Non-Farm Payrolls: The Hidden Weaknesses http://t.co/Cb8OyzJAMQ Number of hours worked decreased a lot & lower participation rate $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • Newt Gingrich sees major Mideast mistakes, rethinks his neocon views on intervention http://t.co/n27U4QpgxN Not as big a change as stated $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • Republicans Don’t Need to Sabotage Obamacare http://t.co/Eu9z62ITjz Obamacare, badly designed, is its own worst enemy $$ Aug 05, 2013
  • Summers After Government Saw Wealth Surge to $17M http://t.co/M0MgH8TUco “Consulting” can make up 4a lot of lost revenue post-govt $$ Aug 05, 2013

Rest of the World

 

  • In China, a New City Attracts Few http://t.co/QYyhVJPzx6 CIties r organic things; they grow a little at a time, not all at once $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • India?s Fear of Growth http://t.co/K2A7QTDruR Socialism in India is deep, as deep as corruption. Corrupt countries do not grow. $$ #simple Aug 09, 2013
  • Germany displaces China as US Treasury’s currency villain http://t.co/3JDudxN7yE Low labor costs, strong exports, weak consumer demand $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Terrorist Tungsten in Colombia Taints Global Phone-to-Car Sales http://t.co/jgZr8fDbA6 Long piece regarding FARC smuggling tungsten $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Vietnam Banking Fix Starts With $474M of Bad Debt http://t.co/Zt0YG7Mx0x Credit bust in Vietnam may b absorbed by central bank sub $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Obama Snubs, Russia Laughs, Putin Wins http://t.co/ROvRuwFBDm Russia policy is ticklish 4 any US president, little 2 gain either way $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • The $4M Teacher http://t.co/onnV3kvClQ South Korea’s students rank among the best in the world, and its top teachers can make a fortune. $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Islamists Seize Airbase Near Aleppo http://t.co/eNBrMdgDVu This feels like a long bloody stalemate; a warning to all who favor war $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Toyota $37B Cash Program Shows Effect of Abenomics http://t.co/87YHXM0CkL No: Toyota has no profitable places 2 reinvest in Japan $$ $TM Aug 07, 2013
  • China?s Debt Surge Pressures Xi-Li to Avert Lost Decade http://t.co/tJp4pEDLKB The time to avert a lost decade is when the boom is strong $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Mexico Leader Said to Seek Changes to Break Oil Monopoly http://t.co/Fqi9oJTj4U Never thought Mexico would change its position on oil $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • India Names Rajan Central Bank Governor as Rupee Plunges http://t.co/UOeo9Ah4Tg Good choice; 1 economist who understands financial crisis $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • South Africa?s Post-Apartheid Failure in Shantytowns http://t.co/o4CARCmq4L South Africa merely traded one group of cronies for another. $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Will Portugal Bring Down the Spanish Banking Sector? http://t.co/TKEe5MfAil Spanish banks lent 2 Portugal credits. Tough 2 do Pt haircuts $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Ex-Soros Adviser Fujimaki Sees JGB Bust From Tax Delay, Fed http://t.co/T2Ktp1lHFF Many difficulties afflicting Japan w/the weak yen $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Baguette Hopes Fade for Some French Farmers on Wheat Quality http://t.co/a5JiNJAV4S Just 1 more economic difficulty 4 weak man of Europe $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Stagnant South Korea Property Drags on Growth Rebound http://t.co/bHwUW59ard Add South Korea to property bubble club, underweight stocks $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Bond Salesman Who Wasn?t Reveals RBS Human Errors http://t.co/5vU3u6pWfq Very senior managers fooled in2thinking janitor was top salesman $$ Aug 05, 2013

 

?

Bond Market

 

  • Pimco?s Gross Vows to Win Bond ?War? After Redemptions http://t.co/yrmdUeVeo4 Maybe the total AUM has gotten too great 4 outperformance $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Bond Share Tumbles as Morgan Stanley Says Sell: Credit Markets http://t.co/uq4QFGxYAD Another “interest rates can only go up” piece $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • For Bond Investors, a ‘Generational’ Chance to Sell http://t.co/PtV9OOW7Ok W/a weakening economy, this is not a done deal, 2many leaning $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Private-Equity Payout Debt Surges http://t.co/PWslmEr7YU Borrowing to pay dividends to their sponsors; PIK toggles and other risky bonds $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • Get Ready for the Next Round of Bond Pain http://t.co/rMvYV3Op0b Pain won’t come if economy keeps weakening, but be wary on credit risk $$ Aug 06, 2013
  • US Credit Markets: My US Lite Rita Covenant: Freshness without Protection? http://t.co/N8lbbYEpvz Cov-lite loans larger % now than 2007 $$ Aug 05, 2013

 

 

Market Impact

?

  • How to Teach Teenagers About Investing in the Stock Market http://t.co/eL7BC7rqtQ I learned from my Mom; most of my kids aren’t interested $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • What if the Stock Market Were a Bond? http://t.co/3LJEhCwym3 @eddyelfenbein gives a tool 2 analyze stock prices: http://t.co/Wwu3q5t2kf $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • Confessions of an Institutional Investor http://t.co/Cu5OT0vxVw @reformedbroker prints a saga of high expenses, negative alpha & hopeless $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Spot the Outlier http://t.co/BDfN1ms7t8 @ritholtz notes the considerable outperformance of US equities in 2013. When does the party end? $$ Aug 08, 2013
  • Mind the (Expectations) Gap: Demographic Trends and GDP http://t.co/5LyZkROeyl Because of low pop growth GDP growth resets 3% -> 1%/year $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • Advisers don’t have a firm grasp of ETF liquidity, Cerulli finds http://t.co/b5gnuEKTi4 ETFs do not create liquidity, but shift liquidity $$ Aug 06, 2013

?

Detroit

 

  • Detroit Losing $1 Million Check Bares Hobbling Processes http://t.co/X0R0QpE9an Real question is why didn’t Detroit go bankrupt sooner? $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • Foodies Fight to Save Detroit With Job Hopes Pinned on Arugula http://t.co/s2WZuTYPql Cities die slowly 2, as multiplier effect reverses $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • Michigan’s Saginaw County Postpones Debt Sale http://t.co/N1dbcUamXE Wait. U r in Michigan. They let munis default. We will not lend 2u $$ Aug 09, 2013
  • Steve Malanga: The Real Reason the Once Great City of Detroit Came to Ruin http://t.co/aWSmiIHyK3 Chase out middle class taxpayers $$ #boom Aug 06, 2013

 

Energy

 

  • Growth in crude oil shipped by rail slows http://t.co/Jw3f1KxVFc Price differentials narrow 4 feedstocks & it does not pay 2ship by train $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • US refiners eye shale butane to cut gasoline costs http://t.co/qsfuoOapYr Fracking producing cheap butane, alkylation can make it octane $$ Aug 10, 2013
  • Europe’s gas-fired power plants attract opportunistic investors http://t.co/ShLtiMicQY Idea counts on electric rates rising; uncertain $$ Aug 07, 2013
  • US becoming ‘refiner to the world’ as diesel demand grows http://t.co/8KG3qn4lJY Adds2 GDP growth w/rest of world short refining capacity $$ Aug 07, 2013

 

Replies, Comments & Retweets

  • RT @trengriffin: The spectacle of journalists giving Jeff Bezos advice on how to make a newspaper profitable is like watching a Three Stoog? Aug 09, 2013
  • “If I were running a significant endowment, I would invest in people rather than external firms, and?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/kC5gAHHEl7 Aug 08, 2013
  • @BarbarianCap move along, nothing to see here… Aug 08, 2013
  • . @Contra_Invest Try this: http://t.co/WplgPsxjkL Wisdom from Howard Marks, with help from Seth Klarman in the last two pages $$ Aug 07, 2013

 

Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 22

Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 22

These articles appeared between May 2012 and July 2012:

On Distribution Formulas

Most formulas for distributing income from an endowment or a a savings/investment fund are too liberal.? If you want the purchasing power to last, distribute less.

Correlating Risky Assets

How do correlations come into existence with risky assets.? This piece explains.

Simple Stock Valuation

An exploration of Eddy Elfenbein’s simple stock valuation model.

Don?t Become the Market

When any firm becomes the dominant provider of a good or service, it should ask whether it has mispriced.? A veiled critique of JPM’s whale trade in the credit markets.

In Defense of Nothing

Manufacturing is overrated.? We’ve got enough things, now we need services to make our lives richer.

Little Things are Important

When leverage is high, little things failing can lead to large and bad results.

High Profits

Labor is not scarce, so profit margins are high.? Will that last forever?? No, but it might be a while.

23,401 Auctions

391 Auctions

A pair of pieces suggesting that the markets could be better off if we held auctions once a second, or once a minute.

The Rules, Part XXXII

Dynamic hedging only has the potential of working on deep markets.

Arbitrage pricing can reveal proper prices in smaller less liquid markets if there are larger, more liquid markets to compare against.? The process cannot work in reverse, except by accident

The Rules, Part XXXIII

When politicians don?t have answers, they blame speculators, financiers (Wall Street), or foreigners.? They do anything to take the spotlight off their culpability or ineptitude.

Aim for the Middle

Very basic advice that tells you that the best returns come from taking moderate risk.

Works if Small, Fails if Large

Another bogus theory of asset allocation that works today, because markets favor it, and not enough people are using it.

Strong Hands

On the value of long-term investors holding stocks that you hold.

Logical Links

If there are a lot of links in a chain of reasoning, it is likely to be wrong.

Modified Glass-Steagall

I suggest a number of reforms that would be more effective than reinstating Glass-Steagall.

Don?t Blame Money Market Funds

On the hypocrisy of the SEC and the banking regulators

Do Insurance Stocks Do Better than Average Over the Long-Run?

The answer is probably, but not certainly.? Really, it is a mess.

On Life Insurance and Life Reinsurance

Explains why I like the life reinsurance oligopoly

On Bond Ladders

The most robust strategy for interest rates; always second-best, and never the worst.

On Internal Indexes, like LIBOR

An Analysis of Three-Month LIBOR 2005-2008

On Floating Rates

In most scandals, not enough attention is paid to those who should have been questioning the situation and did not.? There were parties angling for higher LIBOR and lower LIBOR.? Anytime you borrow or lend using an index, you assent to the method of the index.? What, you didn’t analyze it?

The Failure of Government-Provided Prosperity

The government has almost no control over prosperity, and yet it tries to take credit for it, and ends up ruining prosperity through deficits and loose monetary policy.

Grow Embedded Value

The main idea in investing is finding investments that will compound your money at an above average rate, with a margin of safety.

The Education of a Mortgage Bond Manager, Part I

The Education of a Mortgage Bond Manager, Part II

The beginning of my eight-part series on mortgage bonds.? I did it well for three years.

Packages! Packages!

A tale of my younger investing days, when I would mail companies for data.

Missing Earnings Estimates

Why occasional earnings misses are desirable.

Forget Your Cost Basis

All good investment decision-making is forward looking.? Whether you are buying or selling, it doesn?t matter where prices have been in the past.

Concentrated Interest

This piece generated a lot of heat, but I still stand behind it.? The concentrated interest of a profit motive is a good thing, and all of the government services do not affect what you have done at all.? The entrepreneur is a hero, whether in business, government, or elsewhere.

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