Category: Ethics

It’s That Season, Again

It’s That Season, Again

I don’t celebrate Easter or Passover, though it is intriguing how far apart the two days are this year.? The season that I am talking about is annual reports and proxies.? This is just a friendly reminder to say that voting your proxies is something that helps keep capitalism legitimate.? Granted, I think that board elections should always be contested, and that access to the proxy should be available to anyone with more than 1% of outstanding shares, but my view is that both amateur and professional investors should take the time to evaluate proxies, vote accordingly for their interests, and not blindly side with management.

I vote down:

  • All directors at firms that have lost money for me.? (And the auditor!)
  • Most options and supplemental pay plans.? Pay people cash, not contingent stock that dilutes me.? And, most of the officers earn enough already.? If you don’t do your job because you love it, you’re not the right person for the job.
  • Shareholder proposals limiting executive pay, environmental issues, and other liberal folderol.

I vote up:

  • Proposals for greater shareholder democracy.
  • Plans to de-classify boards, and eliminate poison pills.
  • Proposals to split the Chairman and CEO positions.

If we’re going to be capitalists, let’s exercise our responsibilities, and have our companies act fairly and ethically.?? When we do that, it helps give capitalism a good name, and maximizesw the benefits in the long run to shareholders.

Problems with Tax Reform

Problems with Tax Reform

As I sit here, my taxes are done, all except for one K-1 that is very late, to put it mildly.? My taxes are complex, but my rule is that I do my own taxes.? If I can’t figure out the code, then I am probably doing something that I don’t understand the full economics behind it, and I should avoid it as a result.? Besides, it keeps me up with trends in the tax code that I might not truly grasp.? Surprises this year included the form for HSAs, and a credit? for promoting domestic production.? I also learned some of the intricacies in accounting for the sale of S corporation stock.? Not fun, but I learned something, and that is good.

It does motivate me to write a piece on tax reform, though.? I don’t fit neatly on the political spectrum: I’m a libertarian on economics, and a conservative on social policy (though conservative really isn’t the right word). Tax reform means different things to different people; let’s consider what it means to conservatives and liberals.

What does tax reform mean to conservatives?

  • Eliminate the estate tax
  • Eliminate the double taxation of dividends
  • Eliminate the marriage penalty (actually should be a goal of liberals, and not conservatives, but hey…)
  • Flatten the tax rate structure
  • Preferentially tax income classes that aid in capital formation
  • More taxation at the state level, less at the federal level
  • Carve out exceptions for political allies that support your broad agenda

What does tax reform mean to liberals?

  • Roll back the Bush tax cuts
  • Keep the estate tax
  • Increase the progressivity of tax rates
  • More taxation at the federal level, less at the state level
  • Preferentially tax wage income at lower rates
  • Carve out exceptions for political allies that support your broad agenda

To me, both of them miss a dimension of the problem.? The main problem is how we define income, not the rate at which we tax income.? Both liberals and conservatives support areas in the tax code that allow for deferral of taxation.? To me, that is a core problem in the tax code.? Taxation should be roughly proportionate to the good that a taxpayer is deriving from society.? As a proxy for that, it should be proportional to his increase in net worth, whether the increase in net worth is liquid or not.

I will use Warren Buffett as my example.? Because he rarely sells stock, his taxes are deferred both personally, and at Berkshire Hathaway.? His net worth keeps going up, and the Treasury doesn’t get a piece of it.? Then he has the nerve to show up on Capitol Hill in favor of the estate tax, a tax of which his estate will pay little, because he has given most of it away.

My view is that people should be taxed like traders, on the increase in their net worth, at the same rate, regardless of where the income comes from.? Taxes would be paid on a mark-to-market basis.? There would be no more tax deferral IRAs or 401(k)s, and even pension earnings would get taxed inside DB plans.? Life insurance and annuities would lose their tax breaks.? Even charitable endowments would be taxed.? Private equity would get taxed off of “phantom income” at a 15% compounded rate, i.e., a private equity fund with $100 million in equity would have to pay taxes on $15 million of phantom income, at the fund if 15% distributions are not made to shareholders.? Truing up would occur at the dissolution of the fund.

Another key component here would be that there would be no separate tax accounting basis — the IRS would use GAAP.? What you report, is what you get taxed on, with the exception that firms that are heavily indebted to avoid paying taxes would get taxed on phantom income, the same as private equity.? Also, all like-kind exchanges would be taxed.? Even real estate would follow the property assessor, and income taxation would occur on the increase.

Then eliminate all deductions, conservative and liberal ones, and you have a tax code that can operate at a low rate because the entire increase of wealth in the economy is being taxed, without exceptions.? Oh, and since the income has been taxed all of the way up, the estate tax is no longer needed.? It was needed when wealthy people could shelter their increasing net worth from taxation.

Objections to this Outlandish Proposal

  • Would you really allow investment losses to reduce someone’s income to zero, or below?? Yes, though there would have to be some safeguards against people who disguise their hobbies to be businesses.
  • This will kill investment; the economy won’t grow without tax deferral!? Nonsense.? Most tax deferral incentives don’t change the amount of investment, but just the forms that the investments go into.
  • Without tax deferral, people won’t buy life insurance, annuities, and corporations won’t provide pensions.? To some degree, yes, but after the shock wears off people will invest for maximum advantage again, and with an eye toward what is best, not what is tax-favored.? With my proposal, I don’t care if people have pensions or savings.? It’s all the same.? Life insurance and annuities will be bought for risk reduction reasons, not tax reasons.
  • This will kill private equity!? It won’t.? It may shrink it a little, but there are many advantage to private equity aside from deferral of taxation.
  • But phantom income will require illiquid investments to retain liquidity for taxes, or require equity holders to fund taxes.? Guilty as? charged.? It changes the business model to that degree.
  • This discriminates against the poor in favor of the rich.? No, it discriminates against the clever rich, who shield the increase in their net worth from taxation.? Taxes delayed often become taxes avoided in entire.? Poor people should pay some taxes.? They benefit from society a little, and taxes would give them greater interest in voting.
  • If there’s no deduction/credit for JKL, then JKL will disappear.? Good, or, maybe I should say, yes, there will be a decrease, but if it is valuable, it will find its own level.
  • This proposal is incomplete!? You haven’t considered a lot of other areas.? No doubt; there would be a lot to do here, should it ever see the light of day.? Let John McCain be a real straight-talking maverick, and adopt a proposal like this.? He could be a real conservative, while offending all of the “conservatives.”

I harbor no illusions here.? We have the tax code that we deserve.? Don’t blame the IRS.? Don’t blame the President or Congress.? Blame those who elected them, and those who failed to vote.? The politicians offer us favors from our own money, and we thank them for it, by re-electing them.? I know that my views of tax reform will never be enacted because it steps on too many feet.? Can you imagine how many accountants, attorneys and actuaries would be unemployed by this?? If they fought hard against TRA ’86, just imagine how they would fight against this.? The politicians like fostering the illusion that they create our prosperity, when in reality, they take a share of it.? A proposal like this, that makes taxation more immediate, and more transparent, would make people more concerned about where their taxes go, because they would feel it more acutely.

And then, after all of this, we should move election day to April 15th.? Let the voters feel acutely what the politicians have decided for raising revenue, and they will render a better verdict.

Another Dozen Notes on Our Manic-Depressive Credit Markets

Another Dozen Notes on Our Manic-Depressive Credit Markets

This is what I sometimes call a “Great Garbage Post.”? I’ll cover a lot of ground, so bear with me.

1) How to do a bank/financial bailout: a) wipe out common and preferred equity and the subordinated debt (and offer some warrants to the debtholders).? Make the senior debt take a haircut of 50% (and offer warrants), and the bank debt a haircut of 20% (and offer warrants). Capital is offered in exchange for the equity interest, together with some senior financing pari passu with the banks.? If the management and other stakeholders do not like those terms (or something like them), then don’t bail them out.

Now, realize I’m not crazy about “lender of last resort” powers being in the hands of the government, but if we’re going to do that, you may as well do it right, and bail out depositors in full, while having others take modest to large haircuts.? There is no reason why the government/Federal Reserve should bail out common or preferred equityholders, and those that bought risky debt should pay part of the price as well.? This should only be done for institutions where significant contagion effects could affect other financial institutions.? The objective is to create a firewall for depositors, and the rest of the financial system.

2)? Bear Stearns.? Ugh, a bank run.? A testimony to leverage.? Book value is only fair if one can realize the value over time.? High leverage implies a haircut to book value in bad times, because the value of the assets can go down dramatically.? Will they get a buyer?? I don’t know, and I wouldn’t trust JC Flowers.? If what Jamie Dimon might be thinking is what the Bloomberg article states, then I think he has the right idea: keep the best businesses, dissolve the rest.

But remember, during crises, highly levered financial institutions are vulnerable, unless most of their financing is locked in long-term.? Most investment banks don’t fit that description, particularly with all of the synthetic leverage in their derivative books.

3) The downgrades on commercial bank credit ratings will continue to come, particularly for those that were too aggressive in lending to overlevered situations, e.g., home equity lending.? Home equity lending is very profitable in good times, but then it gets overcompetititive, and underwriting standards deteriorate.? Then a lot of money gets lost, as in 1998, where most of the main lenders went under.? In this case, most of the lenders are banks, and they aren’t concentrated in that line alone.

4)? Home builders are taking it on the chin.? Consider this article about joint venture failures of homebuilders.? It is my guess that we will see a few of the major homebuilders fail.? It will take us to 2010 to reconcile all of the excess inventory.? Personally, I would guess that the stable home ownership rate is still below the current level by maybe 2% of the households.? We tried to force homeownership on people that were not ready for it, people who didn’t have enough financial slack to make it through even a slight recession.

5) I find it amusing that Bob Rubin, the only guy in the Clinton Administration that I liked, says that few people anticipated this bubble. (Sounds like Greenspan, huh?)? Well, in a sense he’s right.? Probably fewer than 1% of Americans anticipated these results, but there were enough writers in the blogosphere that were saying that something like this would come (including me), that some could take warning.? As in the tech bubble, there were a number of notable commentators warning, but no one listens during the self-reinforcing cycle of the boom.

6) I am sticking with a 50-75 basis point move from the Fed in the coming week.? They want to move aggressively, but they don’t want to use up all of their conventional ammo, when they are so close to the “zero bound.”? They might disappoint the markets, but not on purpose.? They will tend to follow what the markets suggest.

7) This Fed is more willing to try novel solutions than in the Greenspan era.? Even so, I expect them to run into constraints on their ability to deal with the crisis, which will force the Treasury Department (yes, even in the Bush Administration) to act.

8)? The glory of “core inflation” is not that it excludes the most volatile classes of goods, but the ones for which there is the most excess demand.? Food price inflation is running.? Farmers can’t keep up with the demand.? Poetic justice for the hard-working farmers of our country, who have had more than their share of hard years.? Agriculture is one of the industries that makes America great.? Let the rest of the world benefit from our productivity there.

9)? This is one of those times where one can get a “pit in the stomach” from considering the possibilities from a financial crisis.? As leverage dries up, those with the most leverage on overvalued asset classes get margin calls, leading to forced liquidations.? As it stands now, many credit hedge funds are finding it difficult to maintain their leverage levels, and other hedge funds are finding their lending lines reduced.? This forces a reduction in speculation, and the prices of speculative assets.

10)? Be careful using the ABX indices.? They are too easy to short, and do not represent the values that are likely to be realized in the cash markets.? The same is true of the CMBX indices.? This would lead me to be a bull, selectively, in AAA CMBS, after careful analysis of the underlying collateral.? (CMBS was a specialty of minewhen I was a mortgage bond manager.)

11)? Two interesting articles on character and capitalism.? This is a topic that I havea lot to say about, but every time I sit down to write about it, I am not satisfied with the results.? Let me make a down payment on an article here.? Capitalism is good, but Capitalists often abuse it.? Short-sighted capitalists play for short-term advantage, and end up burning up relationships.? Longer-term capitalists play fair, because they not only want deal one, but deals two, three, four, etc.? They play fair because they will do better in the long run, even if they are intelligent pagans.? (Christians should play fair anyway, because their Father in heaven looks at their deeds.? If we love Him, we will please Him.)

Economics isn’t everything.? Smart businessmen know that a good reputation is golden.? They also know that happy employees are more productive.? Suppliers that get paid on time are more loyal.? These are the benefits of ethical, long-run thinking.

12) In closing, a poke at quantitative analysis done badly.? Consider Paul Wilmott, or William Shadwick.? With bosses over the years, often they would ask me a seemingly simple quantitative question, and I would reply, “Here’s the standard answer: XXXXX.? But there are many reasons why that answer could be wrong, because the math makes too many assumptions about market liquidity, investor rationality, soundness of funding sources, etc.”? Most quants don’t know what they are assuming.? They are too good with the math, and not good enough at the human systems that inadequately lie behind the math.

As a quantitative analyst, I have generally been a skeptic.? At times like this, when the assumptions are breaking down, it gives me a bit of validation to see the shortfall.? That said, it’s no fun to be right when you are losing money, even if it is less than others are losing.

My Disclaimer is Part of my Philosophy

My Disclaimer is Part of my Philosophy

Disclaimer: David Merkel is an investment professional, and like every investment professional, he makes mistakes. David encourages you to do your own independent “due diligence” on any idea that he talks about, because he could be wrong. Nothing written here, or in my writings at RealMoney is an invitation to buy or sell any particular security; at most, David is handing out educated guesses as to what the markets may do. David is fond of saying, “The markets always find a new way to make a fool out of you,” and so he encourages caution in investing. Risk control wins the game in the long run, not bold moves.

Additionally, David may occasionally write about accounting, actuarial, insurance, and tax topics, but nothing written here or on RealMoney is meant to be formal “advice” in those areas. Consult a reputable professional in those areas to get personal, tailored advice that meets the specialized needs that David can have no knowledge of.

My disclaimer dates back five years.? It’s at the bottom of my blog, and is there for a reason: I get things wrong.? Now, I like to think that I get things right more often, but let’s just look at the gritty downside for a moment.? I wrote a series of articles at RealMoney on using investment advice.

Using Investment Advice, Part 1
Using Investment Advice, Part 2
Using Investment Advice, Part 3
Tread Warily on Media Stock Tips

I wrote these with Jim Cramer in mind.? Now, I like Jim Cramer; he says a lot of bright things.? But when you talk about so many things, and put out so much content, particularly on TV, you have to be careful.

I don’t have 0.1% of the exposure that Mr. Cramer has, but I care what happens to my readers.? (I think Jim does too, but the shell has to get hard when one is that exposed, or, you’ll give up speaking and writing.)? So, when I make notable errors, it hurts me double.? I usually have my cash on the line when I write, or at least, my reputation, which is more valuable (you only get one of those).

Today was my worst relative performance day in a long time.? Deerfield Capital, National Atlantic, and Gehl, all did badly.? I bought more Deerfield today, and I’ll put out a post on my thoughts soon.? That said, March is off to a bad start with me, after a tremendous first two months of the year.

So, I am eating my crow, lightly seasoned, and with humility.?? Always do your own due diligence when you read me, because I get it wrong now and then, at least in the short run.

Full disclosure: long DFR NAHC GEHL

How to Solve the Housing Crisis

How to Solve the Housing Crisis

Now, don’t take me too seriously here, but there is an easy way to solve the housing crisis.? We have too many homes for people with the means to buy them to occupy them.? We also have too much debt to foreigners that they don’t know what to do with.? Well, let’s kill two birds with one stone:? Make a one-time offer of green cards to any foreigner who is willing to buy a house in the US worth $250,000 or more, free and clear.

There are many advantages to this proposal:

  • The foreigners that come will be wealthy, and will contribute even more to the US economy.
  • They will appreciate the stability and freedom of the US, and will send back positive signal to their powerful friends back in the “old country.”
  • Many will want a home in the US for vacations.? Others for a place to flee if politics turns against them in the “old country.”? Either way, we get more of their money.
  • If we want foreigners as citizens, we will be skimming the cream, rather than Emma Lazarus’ comments on the Statue of Liberty.? (Now, if you want to know my heart, I like immigrants, especially poor ones… they work hard to make America great.)
  • It solves problems in mortgage lending and the current account deficit in one fell swoop.

Now, this comes close to selling citizenship.? I don’t want that; they would still have to take the citizenship test, and? have the residency requirement.? Personally, I would like all new citizens to know English as well as? the 25th percentile in the US does now.? (low bar)

This is only partially serious; there are cultural aspects to immigration that are unpopular today.? I would only say to those that don’t like an idea like this, is that your great-grandparents (or so) were openly welcomed here a century ago.? Should we not welcome political, economic, and other migrants looking for a better life, even as our great-grandparents did?? Or are we more stingy than a generation that welcomed our great-grandparents, even if they had stronger negative views against those of different ethnic groups?

The Problem of Publishing in the Social Sciences

The Problem of Publishing in the Social Sciences

One of the troubles with the way that academic research in the social (and biological) sciences is set up, is that there is a bias toward publishing research that is statistically significant. Here are some of the problems:

  1. If honestly done, there is value in publishing research that says there doesn’t seem to be any relationship between variable being studied and the cofactors. If nothing else, it would tell future researchers that that avenue has been checked already. Try another idea.
  2. It encourages quiet specification searches, where the researcher tries out a number of different variables or functional forms, until he gets one with significant t-coefficients. Try enough models, one will eventually hit the 95% significance threshold.
  3. What is statistically significant is sometimes not really significant. The result might be statistically significantly different than the null hypothesis, but be so small that it lacks real significance. I.e., learning that a compound increases cancer risk by one billionth should not be significant enough to merit attention.
  4. Researchers are people just like you and me, and all of the foibles of behavioral finance apply to them. They want tenure, promotions, don’t want to be let go, respect from colleagues and students, etc. They have biases in the selection of research and the framing of hypotheses. For example, we can’t assume that stock price movements have infinite variance, because then Black-Scholes, and many other option formulas don’t work. The Normal distribution and its close cousins become a crutch that allows for papers to get published.
  5. Once an idea becomes a researcher’s “baby”, they tend to nurture it until a lot of contrary evidence comes in. (I’ve seen it.)
  6. Famous researchers tend to get more slack than those that are not well-known. I would trot out as my example here returns-based style analysis, which was proposed by William Sharpe. When I ran into it, one of the first things I noticed was that there were no error bounds on the calculations, and that the cofactors were all highly correlated with each other. The paper didn’t get much traction in the academic world, but was an instant hit in the manager selection consultant community. A FAJ paper in 1998 (I think) came up with approximate error bounds, and proved it useless, but it is still used by some consultants today. (I have many stories on that one; it is that only time that I wrote a pseudo-academic paper in my career to keep some overly slick consultants from bamboozling my bosses.)
  7. Data sets are usually smaller than one would like, and the collection of raw data is expensive. Sample sizes can get so small that relying on the results of subsamples for various cofactors can be unreliable. This is a particular problem in the media when they publish the summary results on drug trials, but don’t catch how small the samples were. People get excited over results that may very well get overturned in the next study.
  8. Often companies fund research, and they have an interest in the results. That can bias things two ways: a) A drug company wants their proposed drug approved by the FDA. A researcher finding borderline results could be incented to look a little harder in order to get the result his patron is looking for. b) A finance professor could stumble across a new profitable anomaly to trade on. That paper ends up not getting published, and he goes to work for a major hedge fund.
  9. The same can be true of government-funded research. Subtle pressure can be brought on researchers to adjust their views. Politically motivated economists can ignore a lot of relevant data while serving their masters, and this is true on the right and the left.


The reason that I write this is not to denigrate academic research; I use it in my investing, but I try to be careful about what I accept.

Now, recently, I took a little heat for making a comment that I thought that the unadjusted CPI or median CPI was a better predictor of the unadjusted CPI than the “core” CPI. So, I went over to the database at FRED (St. Louis Fed), and downloaded the three series. I regressed six month lagged unadjusted, median, and core CPI data on unadjusted CPI data for the next six months. I made sure that the data periods were non-overlapping, and long enough that data corrections would induce little bias. I constrained the weights on my three independent variables to sum to one, since that I am trying to figure out which one gets the most weight. My data set had 80 non-overlapping six-month observations stretching back to 1967. Well, here are the results:

  • Intercept: -0.0002 (good, it should be close to zero)
  • Unadjusted CPI: 0.1720 (prob-value 12.3%)
  • “Core” CPI: -0.1665 (prob-value 11.2%)
  • Median CPI: 0.9945 (no prob-value because of the constraint imposed)
  • Prob-value on the F-test: 24.3% (ouch)
  • Adjusted R-squared: 1.10%. (double ouch)

What does this tell me? Not much. The regression as a whole is not significant at a 95% level. Does the median CPI (from the Cleveland Fed) better predict the unadjusted CPI than the “core” or unadjusted CPI? Maybe, but with these results, who can tell? It is fair to say that core CPI does not possess any special ability to forecast unadjusted CPI over a six-month horizon.

From basic statistics, we already know that the median is a more robust estimator of central tendency than the mean, when the underlying distribution is not known. We also know that tossing out data (“core”) arbitrarily because they are more volatile (and higher) than the other components will not necessarily estimate central tendency better. Instead, it may bias the estimate.

So, be wary of the received opinion of economists that are in the public view. Our ability to use past inflation measures to predict future inflation measures is poor at best, and “core” measures don’t help in the explanation.

Let the Lawsuits Begin

Let the Lawsuits Begin

So FGIC requests to be broken in two.? Personally, I expect that it stemmed from giving into strong-arming from the New York Department of Insurance and perhaps the Governor as well, but if I were FGIC, I would want to do this.? Who wouldn’t want the option of splitting his business in two during a crisis, putting the good business into subsidiary A, which will stay solvent (and protect some of your net worth) and putting the bad business into subsidiary B, which will go insolvent, and pay little to creditors?

In many other situations this would be called fraudulent conveyance, but when you have a state government behind you, I guess it gets called public policy.? The NY Insurance Department tries to sidestep a big insolvency by creating favored classes of insureds.

Those with concentrated interested in non-municipal guarantees should band together to protect their rights, and sue FGIC and NY State (seeking punitive damages) to block the breakup.? The question is, who will be willing to bear the political heat that will arise from this, and oppose an illegal “taking?”

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.

What Did Buffett Know about the Gen Re Finite Reinsurance Deal with AIG?

What Did Buffett Know about the Gen Re Finite Reinsurance Deal with AIG?

Start with my disclaimer: I don’t know for sure. Buffett says that he didn’t know about the details, and certainly didn’t approve of the deal. From the Dow Jones Newswires:

Buffett said in a 2005 statement that he “was not briefed on how the transactions were to be structured or on any improper use or purpose of the transactions.”

Buffett’s attorney, Ronald Olson, said in a recent statement that Buffett “denies that he passed judgment in any way on the challenged AIG/Gen Re transaction in November 2000 or at any other time.”

Personally, I find this amazing for a few reasons. 1) In any dealings with AIG, a smart insurance executive would want to know what was going on. AIG has had a history of getting the better end of the deal in working with reinsurers. Buffett is not dumb, and there had been a decent amount of rivalry between the two companies over the years. 2) Buffett was not “hands off” on the insurance side of the house when it came to large insurance contracts. From his 2001 Shareholder Letter (page 8 ):

I have known the details of almost every policy that Ajit has written since he came with us in 1986, and
never on even a single occasion have I seen him break any of our three underwriting rules. His extraordinary
discipline, of course, does not eliminate losses; it does, however, prevent foolish losses. And that?s the key: Just as
is the case in investing, insurers produce outstanding long-term results primarily by avoiding dumb decisions, rather
than by making brilliant ones.

Now, maybe Buffett was overstating the case of how much he knew about what Ajit did. It is clear that he spent more time with Ajit than the managers at Gen Re, but I find it difficult to believe he didn’t review a major contract of a client who was also a major competitor known to be tough reinsurance negotiator.

3) He understands finite insurance very well. From this article of mine at RealMoney about the 2004 Shareholder letter, my last point:

12) Finally, what was not there: a discussion of Berkshire’s activities in the retroactive (or retrocessional or finite or financial) reinsurance business. This is notable for two reasons: first, in 2003, he split out the retroactive reinsurance in order to give a clearer presentation of the insurance groups operating results. This year the data is only presented in summary form. Second, Buffett made a big positive out of the retroactive reinsurance results, going so far as to explain the business in both the 2000 (page 8 ) and 2002 (page 9) shareholder letters.

Now, to varying degrees, Buffett made effort over the prior four years to explain the profitability of Berky’s retroactive reinsurance business, because it skewed the loss ratios of Berky upward. In the 2004 Shareholder letter, it was too much of a hot potato to give similar coverage to, even eliminating the entries that would have allowed one to see the accounting effect. In 2000 and 2002, he gave mini-tutorials on the business. In 2000 (page 8 ):

There are two factors affecting our cost of float that are very rare at other insurers but that now loom large at Berkshire. First, a few insurers that are currently experiencing large losses have offloaded a significant portion of these on us in a manner that penalizes our current earnings but gives us float we can use for many years to come. After the loss that we incur in the first year of the policy, there are no further costs attached to this business.

When these policies are properly priced, we welcome the pain-today, gain-tomorrow effects they have. In 1999, $400 million of our underwriting loss (about 27.8% of the total) came from business of this kind and in 2000 the figure was $482 million (34.4% of our loss). We have no way of predicting how much similar business we will write in the future, but what we do get will typically be in large chunks. Because these transactions can materially distort our figures, we will tell you about them as they occur.


Other reinsurers have little taste for this insurance. They simply can?t stomach what huge underwriting losses do to their reported results, even though these losses are produced by policies whose overall economics are certain to be favorable. You should be careful, therefore, in comparing our underwriting results with those of other insurers.


An even more significant item in our numbers ? which, again, you won?t find much of elsewhere ? arises from transactions in which we assume past losses of a company that wants to put its troubles behind it. To illustrate, the XYZ insurance company might have last year bought a policy obligating us to pay the first $1 billion of losses and loss adjustment expenses from events that happened in, say, 1995 and earlier years. These contracts can be very large, though we always require a cap on our exposure. We entered into a number of such transactions in 2000 and expect to close several more in 2001.


Under GAAP accounting, this ?retroactive? insurance neither benefits nor penalizes our current earnings. Instead, we set up an asset called ?deferred charges applicable to assumed reinsurance,? in an amount reflecting the difference between the premium we receive and the (higher) losses we expect to pay (for which reserves are immediately established). We then amortize this asset by making annual charges to earnings that create equivalent underwriting losses. You will find the amount of the loss that we incur from these transactions in both our quarterly and annual management discussion. By their nature, these losses will continue for many years, often stretching into decades. As an offset, though, we have the use of float — lots of it.


Clearly, float carrying an annual cost of this kind is not as desirable as float we generate from policies that are expected to produce an underwriting profit (of which we have plenty). Nevertheless, this retroactive insurance should be decent business for us.


The net of all this is that a) I expect our cost of float to be very attractive in the future but b) rarely to return to a ?no-cost? mode because of the annual charge that retroactive reinsurance will lay on us. Also ? obviously — the ultimate benefits that we derive from float will depend not only on its cost but, fully as important, how effectively we deploy it.


Our retroactive business is almost single-handedly the work of Ajit Jain, whose praises I sing annually. It is impossible to overstate how valuable Ajit is to Berkshire. Don?t worry about my health; worry about his. Last year, Ajit brought home a $2.4 billion reinsurance premium, perhaps the largest in history, from a policy that retroactively covers a major U.K. company. Subsequently, he wrote a large policy protecting the Texas Rangers from the possibility that Alex Rodriguez will become permanently disabled. As sports fans know, ?A-Rod? was signed for $252 million, a record, and we think that our policy probably also set a record for disability insurance. We cover many other sports figures as well.

And 2002:

Ajit Jain?s reinsurance division was the major reason our float cost us so little last year. If we ever put a photo in a Berkshire annual report, it will be of Ajit. In color!


Ajit?s operation has amassed $13.4 billion of float, more than all but a handful of insurers have ever built up. He accomplished this from a standing start in 1986, and even now has a workforce numbering only 20. And, most important, he has produced underwriting profits.


His profits are particularly remarkable if you factor in some accounting arcana that I am about to lay on you. So prepare to eat your spinach (or, alternatively, if debits and credits aren?t your thing, skip the next two paragraphs).


Ajit?s 2002 underwriting profit of $534 million came after his operation recognized a charge of $428 million attributable to ?retroactive? insurance he has written over the years. In this line of business, we assume from another insurer the obligation to pay up to a specified amount for losses they have already incurred ? often for events that took place decades earlier ? but that are yet to be paid (for example, because a worker hurt in 1980 will receive monthly payments for life). In these arrangements, an insurer pays us a large upfront premium, but one that is less than the losses we expect to pay. We willingly accept this differential because a) our payments are capped, and b) we get to use the money until loss payments are actually made, with these often stretching out over a decade or more. About 80% of the $6.6 billion in asbestos and environmental loss reserves that we carry arises from capped contracts, whose costs consequently can?t skyrocket.


When we write a retroactive policy, we immediately record both the premium and a reserve for the expected losses. The difference between the two is entered as an asset entitled ?deferred charges ? reinsurance assumed.? This is no small item: at yearend, for all retroactive policies, it was $3.4 billion. We then amortize this asset downward by charges to income over the expected life of each policy. These charges ? $440 million in 2002, including charges at Gen Re ? create an underwriting loss, but one that is intentional and desirable. And even after this drag on reported results, Ajit achieved a large underwriting gain last year.

What I am trying to point out here is that Buffett had significant knowledge of the retroactive (finite) deals at Berkshire Hathaway. He was even somewhat proud of them, though perhaps that is a matter of interpretation. He liked the almost riskless profits that they provided.

Before I move onto my last point, I’d like to digress, and simply say that not all finite reinsurance is a matter of accounting chicanery. The key is risk transfer. Without risk transfer, regardless of what the technical accounting regulations might say, there should be no reserve relief granted, regardless of the amount of money given to the cedant by the reinsurer; that money should be treated as a loan, because it will have to be paid back with interest. With full risk transfer, the company ceding the risk should not have to hold any reserves for the business. In between, the amount of reserve credit is proportional to the amount of risk shed; excess money given to the cedant by the reinsurer should be treated as a loan. Economically, that’s what it should be, even though that is not what always happens in the accounting. (Side note: yes, I know that it is difficult to determine the amount of risk shed, and different actuaries might come to different conclusions, but can’t we at least agree on the underlying theory?)

What has happened is that in many cases, little risk is shed, and a full credit for risk reduction is taken. Sometimes FAS 113 would be followed, with its 10% chance of a 10% loss as a miserably low tripwire for risk transfer. Sometimes FAS 113 would get bent, and other times, badly bent. That brings me to point 4.

4) Berky had a lot of experience with many different types of finite insurance. I remember a notable asbestos contract they took on for White Mountains where they would bear a large amount of risk. (On that one, I think White Mountains got the better end of the deal.) There were others, like the finite contract with Australian insurer FAI, which made them look solvent while experience was deteriorating. HIH bought FAI, and later went bankrupt, partly due to the acquisition. There were other finite reinsurance deals, like Reciprocal of America, where it made a company that was insolvent look solvent.

I can argue that in many cases, Berky’s underwriters did not know the accounting treatment that the cedant would use, and could not be responsible for the troubles that followed. In many cases, Berky bore significant, if limited, risk. That’s fine too. The greater question is if they were a large writer of finite coverages, which they were, they would have to have some knowledge of the cedant’s goals if they were to underwrite properly. Also remember that Buffett watches the “float” that his insurance businesses generate like a hawk. If there was a large amount of float that would come from a new contract, he likely would have known about it.

The AIG contract was big. AIG is a tough reinsurance negotiator. AIG and Berky have been rivals (Greenberg insulted Buffett on at least one occasion). Buffett watches underwriting carefully, even that of his trusted lieutenant Ajit Jain (a nice guy, really). That makes it really hard for me to believe that Buffett did not have any significant knowledge of the AIG finite reinsurance contract. In the end, I really don’t know; I’m only guessing. My guess is this: Buffett had general, but not detailed knowledge of the deal with AIG. In my estimation, he probably checked to see that there were adequate risk controls to make sure that AIG was not getting too good of a deal.

I admire Buffett. I have learned a lot from him. In general, compared to most businessmen, he is an honest and open guy who speaks his mind. If he said that he never had any significant knowledge of the contract with AIG, we should give him the benefit of the doubt, maybe. But from my angle, it is inconsistent with the way he has done business generally.

Tickers mentioned: AIG, BRK/A, BRK/B, WTM

PS — If you ask me how I feel about writing this, I will tell you that I am not crazy about what I have written. I’m not after publicity for criticizing a man that I admire greatly. I think that Buffett should be more forthcoming on the topic, and be willing to be a witness in the trial. Five people are facing ruined lives, and if Buffett really knew about it, and is saying nothing now because he is powerful enough to get away with it, well, shame on him. If he didn’t know anything about it, well, his testimony would clear the air, because it is a distraction at the trial.

The Virtue of Lunch with Friends

The Virtue of Lunch with Friends

I really enjoyed being an investment grade corporate bond manager.? I enjoyed interacting with credit analysts and sales coverages, and the hurly-burly of price discovery in markets that were thinner than optimal.? My credit analysts were professionals, and I never went against them; at most, I would explain to them why market technicals favored a delay in the action they proposed.? But I would never permanently disagree.? What they wanted to buy I would buy, and sell I would sell, eventually.? The level of communication evoked greater effort from them.? Machiavelli was wrong.? It is better to be loved than feared, at least in the long run.? I have gotten more out of associates and brokers by being altruistic than through transactional constraint.? People will give far more to someone that cares for them, than someone that threatens them, in the long run.? (The short run is another matter…)

Now, this is not my character.? I tend to be shy, and constant interaction pushes me out of my comfort zone.? But when others are depending on me, I push myself harder, and do what needs to be done for the good of others.? I can’t let down those who rely on me.

Yesterday I had lunch with three friends and a new friend.? Two were sales coverage, and two from the firm that I used to work for.? It was fascinating to hear the tales of woe in the structured securities markets (worse than I expected, and I am cynical).? It was also fascinating to consider why investors for a life insurance company, which has a liability structure that would allow them to buy and hold temporarily distressed assets, does not do so. ? A lot depends on how short-term the investment orientation of the client is, and this client is definitely short-term oriented.

I talked about my new CDO model, and about what I write about for all of you who read this blog.? The summary of our discussions is that it is a tough environment out there, and one that is particularly not kind to complex securities.? After the lunch, which the sales coverages generously paid for (at present, I don’t know what I can do for them), I went back to the office of my old friends, and reacquainted myself with one of the best consumer/retailing credit analysts period, who is a very nice woman.? I also talked with my former secretary, who is sweet, and was always a real help to me and all of the staff.

Friends.? I am richer for them.? I am richer for being one.? Beyond that, it is excellent business to live life in such a way that your business dealings leave people happy for having dealt with you.? I am truly blessed for all the business friends that I have gained.

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