Category: Macroeconomics

Many Will Not Retire; What About You?

Many Will Not Retire; What About You?

 

Retirement.? A concept of the late 1800s to the present.? Easy to swallow when the population is growing rapidly.? Tough to do when populations are growing slowly, much less shrinking.? I would point you to two articles I have written:

With stock prices high and interest rates low, many people look at their portfolios and smile: high current market values.? But what would happen if you had to turn?it into income?? Interest rates are low.? Dividend yields, though better than the past, are still pretty low.? This is another place where total return blinds us to economic reality.? If market values have risen solely because people are desperate for yield, earnings, etc., and not because future productivity is likely to be far higher, the rise in asset values does not represent a rise in distributable cash flows, which is what investors truly need.

Think of this a different way, and ignore markets for a moment.? How do we take care of those that do not work in society?? Resources must be diverted from those that do work, directly or indirectly, or, we don’t take care of some that do not work.

Back to?markets: Social Security derives its ways of supporting those that no longer work from the wages of those that do work.? That’s one reason to watch the ratio of workers to retired.? When that ratio gets too low, the system won’t work, no matter what.? The same applies to Medicare.? With a population where growth is slowing, the ratio will get lower. If the working population is shrinking, there is no way that benefits for those retiring will be maintained.

Pensions tap a different sort of funding.? They tap the profit and debt servicing streams of corporations and other entities.? Indirectly, they sometimes tap the taxpayer, because of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which guarantees defined benefit pensions up to a limit.? There is no explicit taxpayer backstop, but in this era of bailouts, who can tell what will be guaranteed by the government in a crisis?

Current low interest rates imply that there aren?t a lot of highly productive projects yearning for capital.? This is a product of overly easy monetary policy that never let recessions clear away bad projects.? Low interest rates make future promises more expensive for defined benefit plans, and make it harder to accrue assets for defined contribution plans.

Do you have one million dollars socked away yet?? No?? Under optimistic assumptions, maybe you can earn 4% on your money without touching the principal.? That would give you $40,000/year pre-tax.? Add in Social Security, and maybe you can make things work.

If you want to give up liquidity, and any sort of estate for heirs, you could annuitize all or part of your assets, bringing your yield up 1-2%.? For whose who have less money, that could make things work.

That said, inflation could throw a monkey wrench into all of this.? Buying inflation protection knocks around 0.5% off yields.? But who knows how much the government will encourage or discourage inflation?? That is the leading open question at present.

Summary

So long as interest rates remain low, and asset values high relative to replacement cost, funding retirement will be an expensive proposition.? Not many will be able to do it.? As population growth slows, government entitlements will prove difficult to maintain at current levels.

As such, we should expect older people to work longer than their parents and grandparents did.? In many cases it will be ?Work till you die.?? The idea of retirement as a long vacation at the end of life will only be true for the well-off, a minority of the population.

And compared to prior history, that?s how it should be.? A comfortable retirement is an expensive proposition, and not something that can be given to everyone by government fiat.? The economy only has so much productivity; to the degree that retirees suck off resources, there is that much less to help the economy grow.

I write this as a 52-year old man.? I have opportunities ahead, but for most people in the Western nations, as demographics lead to older populations, economies will decline unless something comes to revive growth in population.

To those who are older, I say ?Be ready to work.?? To those who are younger I say, ?Plan and prepare, save, and figure out how to supplant the oldsters who occupy the positions you want to have.?

It?s not going to be easy over the next forty years.? But if it were easy, everyone could do it.? Instead, those who are prepared will do it.? And so my readers, get ready to do it.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Bond Markets

 

  • Pimco Sells Canadian Provinces After Worst Rout Since ?94 http://t.co/POYIjfboYV Fascinating 2c everything hit after shift in Fed Lingo $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Fund Manager Ducks Mortgage Trouble?at His Peril http://t.co/SX3sFQ0jX5 When Krsnich can’t find mtges worth investing in, he gives $$ back Jul 05, 2013
  • Wealthy Americans Benefit From Banks Hunting Jumbos http://t.co/FJbeZimpim Jumbo 5/1 ARMs 0.09% under prime, 30Y fixed 0.16% over prime $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Gross Caught in TIPS Trap Gundlach Sidestepped in Tumble http://t.co/aT1cJZv0wh Until 2 months ago, TIPS had expectations 4a rising CPI $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Bond Market’s Memo To The Fed: This Is Not A Misunderstanding, This Is A Blow-Up http://t.co/jLBbFDT7f1 Expect short rates 2 rise: Boom! $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Bernanke’s Misfired Shot Heard ‘Round The World http://t.co/AlsbrOpGht The bond market understands the Fed; Fed doesn’t get the bond mkt $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Who Goes to Cash Shows Extent Bonds Will Become Bear Market http://t.co/atkAmUbJoK Worries over a self-reinforcing rout a la 1994 $$ Jul 01, 2013

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Obama Call for Muslim Brotherhood Role Overtaken in Egypt http://t.co/eJquVIdGED Democracy is only as good as marginal person who votes $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Few Roads Leading to China Tell Tale of Mongolia Fears http://t.co/O9KIR9lc5i Long article on Mongolia/China frictions & opportunities $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Mobius Weighs Private Equity as Way to Access African Growth http://t.co/m3D1CKiFeF The world has changed, if Africa is investable $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Toronto?s soaring condo market ignites fears of a US-style crash http://t.co/LYnhx5dK8l That is what u r facing a US-style crash, sorry $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Britain’s baby boom will affect our economy more than anything Mark Carney does http://t.co/ti8aiU4jFX Demography is destiny, no doubt $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Lottery Raided as $115 Billion Hole Filled http://t.co/vvyH4CE6pN Appreciate the growing Argentine Kleptocracy 4 what it is, a failure $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • The US Should End the Cuban Embargo http://t.co/aU6562c3BM The ability 2 trade w/the US will increase demand 4 more freedom in Cuba $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Emerald Thieves Brave Dogs to Sap Zambia?s Gem Revenue http://t.co/4TKAKutxxP People will take many risks in order 2 take care of family $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Mursi No Longer Egyptian President After Military Action http://t.co/VuyzxXCU8s Now 2c how much public & Brotherhood supports military $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Loan Practices of China?s Banks Raising Concern http://t.co/QdOVNNx1q8 Lure depositors into illiquid nonguaranteed products w/high yields $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Portugal Resignation Rocks European Markets http://t.co/v3bEhcXwrW Foreign minister resigns, Yields Rise Sharply, Stocks Fall in Europe $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Looking abroad for better investment http://t.co/ayUAUFNU5l Not only investment, but a better place to live. Well-off Chinese try2leave $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Chinese Malls Waive Rents as Vacancies Loom http://t.co/lpWb0yQV75 How do the malls stay afloat in the long run? Banks will loan 2 them? $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Unrest Roils Egypt as Army Deadline Moves Markets http://t.co/mddmYI82I7 Stocks rally; in some nations, stability of army rule is prized $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Give Us Your Real Dollars for Our Fake Dollars: http://t.co/ioBcU1N2U7 Argentine govt attempts to soak up USDs held by citizens 4 itself $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Syria?s Annual Inflation Hits 200% http://t.co/QsqIPNc52G Wars, especially civil wars r ripe to create inflation, even Sun Tzu knew that $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • EU Leaders Set to Slow Support for Ailing Banks http://t.co/yrwTgNbqor ?Banking union is, to all intents and purposes, dead.” $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • Tempers fray in France as drastic cuts loom http://t.co/l8EPQPKCQ4 Eurozone will end with France withdrawing, it is too big to bail out $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • After the liquidity crunch http://t.co/sAp85eE4GH Keeping inter-bank interest rates stable – a key to $$ policy – is not yet a policy target Jul 01, 2013

 

Companies & Industries

 

  • Why Are California’s Businesses Disappearing? http://t.co/CdRcmrWZ6s The right Q is “Why Do Any Businesses in California Decide to Stay?” $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Answer: Clumps of talented people & industries that would b difficult to relocate. Network effects that would b tough 2 duplicate $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • & a bunch of clever people built their biz there, & don’t want to leave their poorly-run home state, same as MD http://t.co/3Bm0REbYGc $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Inland US refiners hit by collapse in Brent-WTI oil spread http://t.co/79yEHqYvLt Adequate tankcars send gas prices down in CA up Midwest $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Truckers Are Losing Sleep Over 70-Hour Workweek Limit http://t.co/aXRhVvq6er It pushes trucking costs up, causes industry to complain $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Samsung Slides Equivalent of Sony as S4 Sales Disappoint http://t.co/aae6GoUdPe Smartphones become a commodity business; multiples drop $$ Jul 01, 2013

 

US Health Insurance

 

  • Health-Law Employer Mandate Delayed by US Until 2015 http://t.co/f4waOST0ax A small boon 2 employers who hire many unskilled workers $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Long-Term-Care Insurance Gap Hits Seniors http://t.co/QkWlGDfCdA No surprise. Long-term care is not insurable. Companies lose $$ ;prems go ^ Jul 02, 2013
  • Health-Insurance Costs Set for a Jolt http://t.co/C4B8c2FzUj For the Healthy, Rates Will Soar Under New Law; Sicker Consumers 2c Relief $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • Obamacare 1.0: States brace for Web barrage when reform goes live http://t.co/1YU4Bey8ZL Biggest unforced policy error inflates premiums $$ Jul 01, 2013

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • Elizabeth Warren Tackles Wall Street http://t.co/3HjkAZcuNY Article begins about Warren, ends w/complaints about the unaccountable Fed $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • 10 things Social Security won?t tell you http://t.co/G7JIC1fK68 Small error: SS benefits will be cut in 2026, not 2033, but a good piece $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Exclusive: Edward Snowden’s father suggests son’s leaks may be protected by Constitution http://t.co/1ZOiwHqKYj Sad 2c a father lose son $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • How Not2Misunderstand Scalia http://t.co/HETEmoM4yd Some ethics r not in Constitution; Congress makes sum unethical laws constitutionally $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • IOW, Scalia looks2 original intent of Constitution; where it is silent, that means Congress has power to act, & can lead 2 unethical laws $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • The Criminal NSA http://t.co/mK1wulNL0t 4th Amendment obliges government 2demonstrate probable cause b4 conducting invasive surveillance $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • FBI?s Data Mining Needs Scrutiny, Too http://t.co/eeuDaL6IYK We need to move back 2 limited government & realize terror is a small threat $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • Simons Strategy to Shield Profit From Taxes Draws IRS Ire http://t.co/vKAKFfbQja Another reason why investors should be taxed as traders $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • Last tweet: it also helps explain y all income should be taxed at the same rate, with no ability to defer income taxes $$ Jul 01, 2013
  • Uninsurable Risks http://t.co/ezcqpSiYmt I’m not worried about climate, that’s cyclical, but abnormal $$ policy is running into the wall Jul 01, 2013
  • US Economy:7 Critical Indicators of Potential Recession Flashing RED http://t.co/sSTItHGd6J YOY declines 4 7 indicators:hi recession odds $$ Jul 01, 2013

 

US Monetary Policy

 

  • How Fed?s 7% Jobless Avoids Deterring Bondholders Is Mystery http://t.co/tcqXDr1KBt It confuses & it raises the path of forward rates $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • How Sensitive we are to Interest Rates: A Scary Picture? http://t.co/Re8aDixkFf Central banks will do all they can to keep rates low $$ #FTL Jul 02, 2013
  • Sizing Up Bank Risk Using VAR Is a Stab in the Dark http://t.co/wi3ZJsod1u Only long-term stress testing is adequate 2 manage risk $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Fed Voting to Bring US Capital Rules in Line With Basel http://t.co/BiCBh3Y4MR Basel offers 2much flexibility 2mgmt teams 2 shape result $$ Jul 02, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Doug Engelbart Delivered the Mouse and Other Large Inventions http://t.co/jxo6H50Xk2 Died @ 88, made a lot of $$ 4 others, changed computers Jul 05, 2013
  • Confessions of a Stay-at-Home Mom http://t.co/Sc3J3oj1QX True 4 men 2; employers pay less to those who won’t sacrifice home 4 work $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Single-Father Households Are Growing Much Faster Than Single-Mother Ones http://t.co/B1kUluZxxt Still, the real problem is female poverty $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Cheating Wives Narrowed Infidelity Gap Over Two Decades http://t.co/6VhGcyBDPl We can make women bad, but we can’t make men good $$ #sad Jul 02, 2013
  • Ellison Speeds Up America?s Cup With Flying Cats in Spectacle http://t.co/uqD71IjSkU He has remade the America’s Cup, & made it hi-tech $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Gold Traders Seeking Floor After $66B Rout http://t.co/s0xwQdqtx2 Not much different than any market fallen hard: where’s the bottom? $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • Of course, what’s new with gold is all of the derivative activity going on around ETPs, the facility of trading paper gold, etc. $$ Jul 02, 2013
  • The Cost of Cashing Out Your Life Insurance Policy http://t.co/4hra2qGlMK Selling a policy 2a third party has tax and other implications $$ Jul 01, 2013

 

Wrong

 

  • Wrong: Odds you?ll save enough to retire? 50/50 http://t.co/cMPTzPiESe Sorry, but the odds are lower. The writer does not understand. $$ Jul 05, 2013
  • Wrong: Warren Buffett: More myth than legend http://t.co/SJZEmEc9MW Buffett runs so much money he can’t run it like a value index fund $$ Jul 03, 2013
  • Wrong: Fed Ready for September Taper After Shocking Market, Meyer Says http://t.co/M70XlUXbNP Fed will find it very difficult 2 taper $$ Jul 03, 2013

 

Replies, Retweets & Comments

 

  • RT @JamesGRickards: Just in case you think the #Fed has any idea what they are doing, this graph will cure you of that delusion. http://t.c? Jul 05, 2013
  • @OccupyWallSt @JamesGRickards Given that most babies born @ 20 weeks, aided by technology would survive, abortion after that is infanticide Jul 04, 2013
  • . @davidmanheim I’ve known too many truckers & I would b loath 2 take bread from them; bankers r another matter & should b regulated tightly Jul 03, 2013
  • . @davidmanheim Could b… 1 of the few professions that works as long & hard as investment bankers (w/externalities). Hey Comparable Worth! Jul 03, 2013
  • . @ProForexCourse Nothing has intrinsic value; it’s all a question of how much u r willing to exchange of A for B at a given moment in time Jul 03, 2013
  • @wggm Macro plays a role in my bond investing, not so much with stocks Jul 03, 2013
  • @wggm I think the Fed will find that it can’t reduce the flow of policy accomodation without violent reactions like this w/weak economy Jul 03, 2013
  • @marcmakingsense @ballenmo Still, the amount of gold used 4 industrial purposes is piddly compared to uses 4 jewelry, bars & coins Jul 01, 2013
  • . @stockbets I am sorry but I have seen many cases where arithmetic averages r put into simulations as if they r geometric averages $$ Jun 30, 2013
  • . @davidmanheim BP’s sloppy safety record is the main issue, but this article is about grifters wanting to score when they weren’t hurt $$ Jun 30, 2013
  • . @ballenmo You are right, gold does nothing, & that is why it is valuable http://t.co/pojnNG1fkE Gold is anti-financial repression $$ Jun 30, 2013
Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Wrong

 

  • Wrong: A Hawkish Signal Bernanke Didn’t Send stks.co/sISp No, Fed misunderstood the markets, & what their “transparency” said $$
  • Slow-minded: Fed Presidents Say Dodd-Frank Failed to Dispel Too-Big-to-Fail stks.co/fbLA No, duh. U r only realizing this now? $$
  • Wrong: Pension funds may see the silver lining on the interest rate cloud stks.co/gbLA As interest rates rise, assets go down $$
  • Wrong: The Last Mystery of the Financial Crisis stks.co/aZl7 Shallow analysis that does not take account of regulatory needs $$
  • Wrong: Long Live Synthetic CDOs – Bloomberg stks.co/ianr Levering up risky debts exacerbates the credit cycle; should b ended $$

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • Traders Trapped in Scandinavia Discover No Easy Sell stks.co/tIUb Low-liquidity currencies, big moves when all rush 2the exit $$
  • Why ?average? returns aren?t good enough stks.co/fbLB Arithmetic avgs r less accurate than geometric averages & more $$
  • Royal Bank of Canada Gains by Putting the Brakes on Traders stks.co/qIXh Over the long haul they will prosper vs HFT $$
  • Billionaire Ron Baron: The Dow?s A Double stks.co/cZbY He’s delusional, and does not get how stretched prices are vs book/sales $$
  • Holding bonds today is a disaster in the making stks.co/iatP I think the economy will b weaker than Fed expects, could c rally $$
  • Closed-End Funds Bite Back stks.co/garg Leverage Juiced Returns When Rates Were Moored; Now It Is Magnifying Losses $$ #BlameDaFed
  • Apollo Fueled by $9.6 Billion Profit on Debt Beats Peers stks.co/pI7U Strength of investing across capital structure evident $$
  • State Street Temporarily Stops Cash Redemptions For Muni-Bond ETFs stks.co/pHnc Dealers can’t presently swap ETF shares 4 cash $$
  • Billionaire Fisher Says U.S. Still in Middle of Stock Rally stks.co/hanR He is stuck in a mindset of a low debt world $$
  • Housing Seen Shrugging Off Loan Rate Rise as Banks Loosen stks.co/jaQY Easier financing returns, tho Tsy yield rise undoes more $$
  • Treasury Yields Surge Most Since 2003 as Fed Previews Tapering stks.co/sHeT When cheap forward financing ends, prices go south $$

 

Metals

 

  • Gold-Price Decline Uncovers Mining Companies’ Debt Woes stks.co/tIUa Debt in cyclical industries is always a problem in a bust $$
  • Gold Drops to 34-Month Low as Precious Metals Slide on Fed View stks.co/cZdI All risk assets have been hit since Fed meeting $$
  • Gold Bear Market Hits Hardest in South Africa Mines stks.co/eZl1 Mines r high cost per ton, no surprise they r affected early $$
  • Bottom Falling Out of Copper Prices stks.co/jbDz When Dr. Copper speaks, we can sense the pulse of the economy, getting weaker $$
  • Gold Miner Writedowns at $17 Billion After Newcrest stks.co/aZDq Beginning of a process reconciling dud mining assets $$

 

Monetary Policy

 

  • Risk of 1937 relapse as Fed gives up fight against deflation stks.co/ibLa Deflation is inevitable given present policy $$
  • 2 Fed Presidents Emphasize Stimulus 2Persist After QE Taper stks.co/cZ7b & stks.co/aZHK Fisher & Kocherlakota obfusc8 $$
  • BIS fears fresh bank crisis from global bond spike stks.co/eZGv Banks r mismatched long; will have trouble in run on liquidity $$

 

China

 

  • Credit Warnings Offer World a Peek Into China?s Secretive Banks stks.co/cZdL & more extreme: stks.co/dZdV Bad future $$
  • China breaks silence on cash crunch stks.co/fasu Nation’s lenders approach crisis point as part of crackdown on shadow finance $$
  • China?s alarming credit crunch stks.co/sHxk This could have been exacerbated by a reversal of a popular yen-yuan carry trade $$
  • China Loses Control of Its Frankenstein Economy stks.co/faqF Things r likely 2b shaky in China’s short-tern lending markets $$
  • Financial reform cannot wait stks.co/jaiU But the Party, is it ready to give more freedom to its people & transparency 2 banks $$

 

Energy

 

  • How BP Got Screwed on Gulf Oil Spill Claims stks.co/tISo Free $$ brings out the worst in people | FD: +$BP
  • Frack Music Attracts Halliburton to Submarine Spy Tool stks.co/hb7I “The hills r alive, w/the sounds of fracking…” $$
  • In Moving US Oil, ‘Flexible’ Rail Bests Pipelines stks.co/pI7j Railroad tank cars:low fixed, high variable costs, more flexible $$
  • New Pipelines to Bring Landlocked Oil to Texas-Coast Refineries stks.co/jakj Pipelines: high fixed cost, low variable cost $$

 

Insurance

 

  • Berkshire?s Tracy Britt In, Lynn Swann Out at Heinz?s Board stks.co/bZh0 Whiz Kid gets 1st board seat $BRK.A M&A | FD:+ $BRK.B $$
  • Regulators put chill on US private-equity insurance deals stks.co/dZbX Those who might undo the conservatism should not buy $$
  • $HIG to Sell Unit to Berkshire stks.co/pIb8 I do not get how $BRK.B benefits from this; its worse than the $CI transaction $$
  • 7 Annuity Mistakes to Avoid stks.co/sHxj Illiquity, wrong payout type or guarantees, switching, w/d 2much, taking buyback, etc. $$
  • Misjudged Annuity Guarantees May Cost Life Insurers Billions stks.co/rI1Z Why I don’t invest life insurers w/much variable biz $$

 

Other

 

  • Working Poor Losing Obamacare as States Resist Medicaid stks.co/dZdW A rare case where states avoid Federal $$ | avoiding a trap
  • Four Reasons Non-GAAP Metrics Are Exploding stks.co/cZbX Non-GAAP measures r an attempt to make acctg reflect free cash flows $$
  • Another shameful day for Europe as EMU creditor states betray South stks.co/pIb9 Germany crams down on Greece & euro-fringe $$
  • Holder Says US Seeking More Disclosure on Surveillance stks.co/aZ10 U can disclose it now; U r a bigger threat than terrorism $$
  • Sorry, but Do You Speak English? stks.co/pHna Not surprising; cultural differences drive differences in English dialects $$

 

Full disclosure: long BP, BRK/B

Efficient Markets versus Ben Bernanke

Efficient Markets versus Ben Bernanke

I’ve looked around for a transcript for Bernanke’s press conference, and I can’t find one.? Here’s my gripe, and I mentioned briefly at the end of last night’s article.

But if the tightening is two years away, why did the market react so badly?? Markets are discounting mechanisms, and react to expected future changes, not the mistaken view of Bernanke that stocks of debt still affect the markets.? No, it is changes in the stock of debt, and changes in the expected changes in the stock of debt that affect the markets.

Ben Bernanke either does not get markets, or is hiding what he knows from economic illiterates.? He insisted that maintaining the purchased assets in the monetary base would continue stimulus, even if they slowed down the rate of purchase.

Really, I should have made it simpler last night, and said, “Market prices change when new information changes the views of economic actors regarding the future.”? Markets are discounting mechanisms.? If you tell the market that you will suck $85 billion of the highest credit quality assets out of circulation for as long as it will take to get the economy moving again, and then later you say that you will reduce that flow within a year, you think that won’t change the views of market participants?? It certainly will, and with violence, as we have seen over the last two days.? The market’s forward path for cost of capital has risen, and stocks have fallen as a result.

Not that I will ever meet Bernanke, but if I did, I would point him to the Efficient Markets Hypothesis [EMH].? He probably believes it.? I view it as a limiting concept, that is, EMH is partly true, but only when lots of people who don’t believe in the EMH scour the markets looking for information advantages.? For a funny take on EMH, you can read this.

The short answer to Bernanke is that what has happened in the past should have no influence on current market prices.? That information has already been incorporated into the price.? Only changes of future expectations affect the current stock price.? The same applies to asset prices versus monetary policy; asset prices react to changes in expectations.

But maybe it’s not so bad, or maybe it’s even worse.? What if the Fed is wrong about improving economic prospects, and we see GDP disappoint over the next two quarters?? I think that is likely, as do Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach:

Going forward, however, yields are likely to start falling. And that means the place to make money in the next few months is ?everybody?s most hated asset class: long-term government bonds,? Gundlach said. ?There?s really no inflation, no sign of inflation.?

Gundlach says he?s uncomfortable with the term ?tapering? to describe the Fed?s expected approach to winding down its bond-buying program, saying it wrongly implies the central bank can achieve ?perfection? in its effort to wind down quantitative easing. While the Fed will eventually look to slow the pace of bond purchases, it could subsequently speed them up as well if economic data weakens, he said.

The Fed is wrong about how much power they think they have.? The more aggressive the easing cycle is, the harder the tightening cycle is.? There has been no greater easing cycle than this one.? Thus even the slightest hint of reduction in accommodation hits like a ton of bricks.? Now to hear from Bill Gross:

Gross and his colleagues have been skeptical about the U.S. economy?s potential for growth since the financial crisis. Gross said last week the Fed won?t raise rates in a ?meaningful way? for at least the next two years and investors should be cautious when it comes to all risk assets.

As interest rates have climbed over the past two months, Gross has recommended buying U.S. Treasuries. In a Twitter posting June 18, he recommended buying five-year Treasuries and earlier, on June 12, he called intermediate Treasuries with yields above 2 percent a ?buy.? The ?Fed?s not raising interest rates for years,? he said.

and

?We simply think the real economy won?t follow the path that the Fed thinks it will because the Fed is based on a cyclical model that?s inappropriate,? Gross said in a Bloomberg radio interview today with Tom Keene.

When there is too much debt, we tend to get deflation, because we slowly realize that all debt claims will not be honored.? That leads to uncertainty and slow growth, as people try to preserve the value of what they have, rather than take risks to grow their assets.? I’ll be writing more about this in a future book review.? Highly indebted societies tend not to grow rapidly.

I’ve been adding some long Treasuries to bond accounts, and I may add more.? Like Japan, I think we are in the midst of a “bad policy” trap that restrains growth and leaves the economy to muddle, until enough debt is paid down, and fiscal policy looks sustainable.? That may not happen for a long time, so that leaves me a bear at present.

Redacted Version of the June 2013 FOMC Statement

Redacted Version of the June 2013 FOMC Statement

May 2013 June 2013 Comments
Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in March suggests that economic activity has been expanding at a moderate pace. Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in May suggests that economic activity has been expanding at a moderate pace. No real change
Labor market conditions have shown some improvement in recent months, on balance, but the unemployment rate remains elevated. Labor market conditions have shown further improvement in recent months, on balance, but the unemployment rate remains elevated. No change
Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector has strengthened further, but fiscal policy is restraining economic growth. Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector has strengthened further, but fiscal policy is restraining economic growth. No change.? I?m sorry, but balanced budgets promote growth, because economic actors don?t fear their taxes rising in the future.
Inflation has been running somewhat below the Committee’s longer-run objective, apart from temporary variations that largely reflect fluctuations in energy prices. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. Partly reflecting transitory influences, inflation has been running below the Committee’s longer-run objective, but longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. No change.? TIPS are showing falling inflation expectations since the last meeting. 5y forward 5y inflation implied from TIPS is down near 2.25%, down 0.4% from May.
Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. No change. Any time they mention the ?statutory mandate,? it is to excuse bad policy.
The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic growth will proceed at a moderate pace and the unemployment rate will gradually decline toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic growth will proceed at a moderate pace and the unemployment rate will gradually decline toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. No change

Emphasizes that the FOMC will keep doing the same thing and expect a different result than before. Monetary policy is omnipotent on the asset side, right?

The Committee continues to see downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee sees the downside risks to the outlook for the economy and the labor market as having diminished since the fall. Shades up their view of the economy.
The Committee also anticipates that inflation over the medium term likely will run at or below its 2 percent objective. The Committee also anticipates that inflation over the medium term likely will run at or below its 2 percent objective. No change. CPI is at 1.4% now, yoy.
To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee decided to continue purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month and longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month. The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee decided to continue purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month and longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month. The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. No change.

Does not mention how the twist will affect those that have to fund long-dated liabilities.

Wonder how long it will take them to saturate agency RMBS market?

Operation Twist continues.? Additional absorption of long Treasuries commences.? Fed will make the empty ?monetary base? move from $3 to 4 Trillion by the end of 2013.

 

Taken together, these actions should maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative. Taken together, these actions should maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative. No change.
The Committee will closely monitor incoming information on economic and financial developments in coming months. The Committee will closely monitor incoming information on economic and financial developments in coming months. No change. Useless comment.
The Committee will continue its purchases of Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate, until the outlook for the labor market has improved substantially in a context of price stability. The Committee will continue its purchases of Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate, until the outlook for the labor market has improved substantially in a context of price stability. No change.
The Committee is prepared to increase or reduce the pace of its purchases to maintain appropriate policy accommodation as the outlook for the labor market or inflation changes. The Committee is prepared to increase or reduce the pace of its purchases to maintain appropriate policy accommodation as the outlook for the labor market or inflation changes. No change. Vacuous.
In determining the size, pace, and composition of its asset purchases, the Committee will continue to take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases as well as the extent of progress toward its economic objectives. In determining the size, pace, and composition of its asset purchases, the Committee will continue to take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases as well as the extent of progress toward its economic objectives. No change
To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee expects that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee expects that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. No change.

Promises that they won?t change until the economy strengthens.? Good luck with that.

In particular, the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored. In particular, the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored. Not a time limit but economic limits from inflation and employment.

Just ran the calculation ? TIPS implied forward inflation one year forward for one year ? i.e., a rough forecast for 2014, is currently 2.20%, down 0.05% from May.? Here?s the graph.? The FOMC has only 0.30% of margin in their calculation.

 

In determining how long to maintain a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy, the Committee will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial developments. In determining how long to maintain a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy, the Committee will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial developments. No change.
When the Committee decides to begin to remove policy accommodation, it will take a balanced approach consistent with its longer-run goals of maximum employment and inflation of 2 percent. When the Committee decides to begin to remove policy accommodation, it will take a balanced approach consistent with its longer-run goals of maximum employment and inflation of 2 percent. No change.
Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; James Bullard; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Jerome H. Powell; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Eric S. Rosengren; Jeremy C. Stein; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen. Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Jerome H. Powell; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Eric S. Rosengren; Jeremy C. Stein; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen. No change
Voting against the action was Esther L. George, who was concerned that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations. Voting against the action was James Bullard, who believed that the Committee should signal more strongly its willingness to defend its inflation goal in light of recent low inflation readings, and Esther L. George, who was concerned that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations. Bullard finally votes against, but the language is puzzling.? Defend the inflation goal which way? Should inflation be higher or lower?

?

Comments

  • This FOMC Statement was a nothing-burger.
  • I really think the FOMC lives in a fantasy world.? The economy is not improving materially, but they shade their view of the economy up.
  • Current proposed policy is an exercise in wishful thinking.? Monetary policy does not work in reducing unemployment, and I think we should end the charade.
  • In my opinion, I don?t think holding down longer-term rates on the highest-quality debt will have any impact on lower quality debts, which is where most of the economy finances itself. When this policy doesn?t work, what will they do?
  • Also, the investment in Agency MBS should have limited impact because so many owners are inverted, or ineligible for financing backed by the GSEs, and implicitly the government, even with the recently announced refinancing changes.
  • The key variables on Fed Policy are capacity utilization, unemployment, inflation trends, and inflation expectations.? As a result, the FOMC ain?t moving rates up, absent increases in employment, or a US Dollar crisis.? Labor employment is the key metric.
  • GDP growth is not improving much if at all, and much of the unemployment rate improvement comes more from discouraged workers.
Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Data Privacy

 

  • Many in Media Claim Bradley Manning’s Leaks Had Little Value?Here’s Why They’re So Wrong | The Nation stks.co/jZXy Who knew? $$
  • Congress grills intelligence officials on data-gathering practices stks.co/qGqB Issue doesn’t divide neatly by political party $$
  • Noonan: Privacy Isn’t All We’re Losing stks.co/hZsF “…you can’t give up your own liberty and your own freedom.” $$
  • US Agencies Said to Swap Data With Thousands of Firms stks.co/gZcv Not paranoid? That doesn’t mean they aren’t coming 2get u $$
  • How Rand Paul Can Take On the NSA stks.co/pGjI We need to rethink the conditions under which the govt may do surveillance on us $$
  • Pardon Edward Snowden wh.gov/liZnR I support this petition at whitehouse.gov $$
  • US Relies on Spies for Hire to Sift Deluge of Intelligence stks.co/aXgm I have many friends involved in this; they keep quiet $$
  • Booz Allen Grew Rich on Government Contracts stks.co/qGMz Thus all the radio advertisements you hear if you live near DC $$
  • Edward Snowden: the whistleblower behind the NSA surveillance revelations stks.co/pGCi Rare person who put US ahead of self $$

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Korean Tiger Moms Scrimp for Tutors in Blow to Spending stks.co/bY3b The solution is home schooling, should it b legal in SK $$
  • Italian showdown with Germany over euro looms closer stks.co/bXwF A halt2fiscal & monetary contraction, or full-blown reflation $$
  • Southern Europeans Flee to Germany: OECD stks.co/tGdg If the jobs won’t come to the people, the people will go to the jobs $$
  • On Iran?s Inflation Bogey stks.co/gZQP Iran’s inflation rate may be over 100%/year $$
  • What Abenomics tells us about the great bond market asset bubble stks.co/jZFc Japan is a bug in search of a windshield $$
  • Consumer Price Inflation Slows in China stks.co/gYzR & so does the rest of China’s economy, rebalancing will b painful $$
  • Denmark Seeks to Pass Too-Big-to-Fail Bank Laws in Parts stks.co/jYj7 SIx large financial companies will require more capital $$

?

Companies & Industries

 

  • Surge in US oil-by-rail suffers first slowdown as spreads slim stks.co/qGqK Start of a new trend, or just a blip? $$ #blip #trend
  • Lampert Uses $393M in AutoNation for Redemptions stks.co/gZcw Future historians will wonder why Lampert received attention $$
  • Comcast Is Turning Homes Into Public Wi-Fi Hotspots stks.co/sGaQ Gateway transmits 2signals; separate SSIDs 1 public, 1 private $$
  • Berkshire to Provide More Insurance Cost Details stks.co/bXuO All of this data is already freely available, ask4statutory files $$
  • Cisco plans to double the speed of the Internet stks.co/iZXI | FD:+ $CSCO Fascinating new technology will increase net capacity $$
  • Freeport Declares Force Majeure on Grasberg Copper Shipments stks.co/gZTc Rare 2c Force Majeure invoked; reveals supply issues $$
  • Insurers Inflating Books, New York Regulator Says stks.co/iZTl My response: stks.co/fZQE How do I contact DealBook? $$
  • Insurers Inflating Books, New York Regulator Says stks.co/sGPY Life insurers do this 2 strip out extra conservatism in reserves $$
  • A Rising Star Emerges at Berkshire stks.co/pGYd Bright lady Tract Britt takes over David Sokol’s old role @ Berky $$ FD: + $BRK.B
  • Anglo American Miner Slogs Ahead in Brazil stks.co/rG6r Rare people walk away from bad sunk costs; no walking away here $$ $AAUKY
  • Google to buy Waze for $1.3B stks.co/aXV7 Improves $GOOG ‘s maps capability, while denying the same asset to $AAPL & $FB $$

 

Market Impact

 

  • Price Benchmarks Said to Be Rigged in the Foreign Exchange Market stks.co/sGjl Should not b surprised; humans try2rig markets $$
  • Regulators Question Banks on Business Lending Risks stks.co/fZV2 Perhaps regulators r being more active this credit cycle $$
  • US Banks Margin Under Tremendous Pressure stks.co/rGeA Few safe places to lend at any significant spread over funding costs $$
  • Banks Get Reprieve on New Swaps Rule stks.co/jZPA Get 2 more years 2 place derivatives in special subsidiary 4 close regulation $$
  • The trick to bank profits stks.co/tGZB Sadly, reserves r not forward-looking but suffer from driving via the rearview mirror $$
  • Wrong: Interest Rates are Headed Higher. Are You Ready? stks.co/eXy4 This is a consensus view; global economy is weakening $$
  • Earnings Roundup: Second-quarter Earnings Guidance Among the Most Negative on Record stks.co/jZFb Could mean positive surprises $$
  • Fear of Missing Out Sparks Covenant Light Lending; ‘Return of the Silly Season’ stks.co/pGYc Credit cycle boom is getting late $$
  • These CDO Names Don’t Cry ‘Wolf’ stks.co/hZCu Doesn’t matter *what* you call them, CDOs lever up credit risk til next bear mkt $$
  • Intelligent Investor: What?s Eating Munis? stks.co/iYsP @jasonzweigwsj tells us 2 beware getting gouged on muni bond trading $$
  • Hulbert on Investing: Why ‘Boring’ Stocks Beat ‘Exciting’ Ones stks.co/dXCa Long-term, low vol has been a winner. Short-term?? $$

 

Monetary Policy

 

  • Fed Likely to Push Back on Market Expectations of Rate Increase stks.co/tGmK Gives the Fed 2much credit; they don’t have a clue $$
  • The Fed’s other trillion dollar problem stks.co/pGjZ Will b challenging 2 lower the amount of excess deposits @ the Fed $$
  • The Trapdoors at the Fed?s Exit by Nouriel Roubini stks.co/cXNh Will b difficult 4 Fed 2 remove policy accommodation $$

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • White House Aims to Loosen Grip on Government-Held Wireless Spectrum stks.co/hZsO As it should b, govt has 2much spectrum $$
  • Camp Warns Against Cap on Charitable Break in Tax Rewrite stks.co/cXsG Private charity can do things govt can’t &more effective $$
  • FCC hopes to avoid ‘end of world’ for cell phones stks.co/cXrm Allocation of more bandwidth 2 mobile data would help $$
  • Urgency on debt issue fades, but underlying danger remains stks.co/qGAq W/deficit declining, the need to agree declines as well $$

 

Other

 

  • Larry Ellison’s Fantasy Island stks.co/iZhG Lanai benefits from the benevolent dictatorship of Larry Ellison $$
  • Blimps Morph Into Cargo Haulers as Maker Sees Revolution stks.co/fZdT Engineered concept of variable buoyancy; goes up/down $$
  • Hire Economics: Why Applying to Jobs Is a Waste of Time stks.co/aXwB Networking is more important than job boards, etc. $$
  • Drinking Water Runs Low as Drought Drags On stks.co/gYoc Weather isn’t fully random; correlated in short-run, thus droughts $$

 

Comments, Replies & Retweets

?

  • @dpinsen Pipelines – high fixed, low variable costs. Railcars – high variable, low fixed costs. Getting pipelines over mountains is tough
  • @Undertherock3 I’m a skeptic on $GNW. I don’t trust their reserving, underwriting, etc. Low ROE justifies the low P/B.
  • @Undertherock3 Are you talking about Genworth? $GNW
  • @AlephBlog The best is “there is no way to get rich quick (eg Kyosaki). Snake oil salesman will always exist, learn to identify them & avoid
  • “This deal will get done after it is sweetened a little” ? Merkel disq.us/8die83 $$ $DOLE DeJa Vu: Murdock Wants to Go Private Again

?

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Market Impact

  • Old-School Stock Picker Weitz Struggles With Index Craze?stks.co/gYnx?Weitz has a really good long term track record, good guy $$
  • High-Yield Companies Cash In on Dividend Deals?stks.co/cXCJ?W/the rise in interest rates, junk corporations move 2 refinance $$
  • IRS Reconsiders What Qualifies for REIT Status?stks.co/jYiU?There should b1 tax law for all things like corporations in the US $$
  • New Revenue Recognition Rules Arriving Soon?stks.co/rFvA?I’m afraid the new rules will b less clear than current GAAP rules $$
  • How the Robots Lost: High-Frequency Trading’s Rise & Fall?stks.co/gYk9?Every investment strategy has a capacity limit, even HFT $$
  • Sam Zell says sell?stks.co/rFr3?1 month old; he also thinks that efforts by corporations 2 manage single family homes will fail $$
  • Banks will take hit on mortgage refi buststks.co/pFwq?This may true 4 whole industry, but some banks will profit via MSRs, ALM $$
  • FASB?s Seidman: Americans Prefer Rules to Principles?stks.co/pFpb?We should stick w/GAAP & ditch IFRS convergence. We know GAAP $$
  • IFRS Makes Progress Around the Worldstks.co/tFir?Incomparable Financial Reporting Standards r less converged than many realize $$
  • 401(k)s Are Doing Great Except For A Few?stks.co/eX9U?Fine,except 401(k) users don’t put enough away 2 care 4 their retirements $$
  • Why Low Volatility Is Losing Its Alphastks.co/cX0J?Any strategy can be overfished. Monoculture rarely leads to good results $$
  • “Any strategy can be overfished. Monoculture is a recipe for disaster. How many analogies do I?” ? David_Merkeldisq.us/8dev71?$$
  • Money-market fix is a flawed compromise?stks.co/dWtx?My proposal was cleaner and far better:?stks.co/dWty$$
  • Bet on CDOs Returns to Wall Streetstks.co/bWy4?Synthetic CDOs take the field again, just in time to fleece anxious yield hogs $$
  • Bruce Berkowitz Places Bet on Fannie, Freddie?stks.co/jYCL?A lot of this rides on political future of F&F, w/Berkowitz unsure $$
  • Don?t Sell Your Soul for Yield, Pimco?s Simon Says?stks.co/qFRi?He retires @ 52 2pursue philanthrophy & fun; bond risks high $$
  • Rise in US Bond Yields Jolts High-Dividend Stocks?stks.co/qFIa?If they r used as bond substitutes, will trade more like bonds $$
  • Brokerage firms debate value of Certified Financial Planner title?stks.co/dWU1Interesting 2c firms asking CFPs to decertify $$
  • The 100% Stock Solution?stks.co/sEyrOnly the stoutest souls should try this; best time to start is after a meltdown, if u can $$
  • The Intelligent Investor: How Funky Is Your 401(k)? by?@jasonzweigwsjstks.co/dWKf?Unusual bond funds not recommended 4 novices $$
  • Why Hedge Funds Aren’t Worth the Money?stks.co/iXxM?Double-alpha & leverage r great in theory; in practice they don’t work well $$
  • ‘?@Matthew_C_Klein?@felixsalmon?But I disagree:?blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2??Cov-lite loans r a sign of general credit degradation $$
  • Interesting argument by?@felixsalmonthat cov-lite bonds are good because they give borrowers greater flexibility:blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2?

 

US Politics

  • The NSA Doppelganger?stks.co/jYiY?Govt has been collecting records on every phone call made in the US ever since Patriot Act $$
  • Will New Health Insurance Be Too Expensive 4 America’s Lowest-Paid?stks.co/rFvF?Law of unintended consequences teaches $$ lessons
  • Trading Dollar Bill for Coin Big Savings, No Small Change?stks.co/iYrY?This could makes sense if we eliminate the penny as well $$
  • Fed Hurdle of 4 Straight 200,000 Payrolls Sets Bernanke View?stks.co/iYrW?I don’t think the Fed has a coherent policy response $$
  • An Insider’s Guide to Obama’s Summit With China’s Xi?stks.co/sFp7?Makes me think that nothing much will come out of this summit $$
  • Start Your Engines: NatGas Revs for Transportation?stks.co/hYwm?This is more complex than it looks b/c liquification low temps $$
  • Obama’s Civil-Liberties Record Questioned?stks.co/qFu9?Obama is not a change agent; he is merely Bush-plus & we r the losers $$
  • US declassifies phone program details after uproar?stks.co/hYwd?Terrorism is an unlikely threat – doesn’t justify the snooping $$
  • Alan Greenspan’s Epic Incompetence: Another Shoe Drops?stks.co/jYXF?This piece provided the link 4 the last tweet $$#greenspan
  • How Elite Economic Hucksters Drive America?s Biggest Fraud Epidemicsstks.co/eXA3?Of course fraud should b a crime, it’s theft $$
  • NSA seizes phone records of Verizon customers?stks.co/jYXC?Shouldn’t a warrant b required 4 such indiscriminate investigation? $$
  • Jefferson County, AL, Reaches Bankruptcy Deal?stks.co/gYbR?$JPMloses most, then taxpayers. “gross incompetence, waste, graft” $$
  • Debt Deal in Alabama Will Cost JPMorgan?stks.co/aX7U?Sewer rates rise. Everyone loses except the speculators who bot debt cheap $$
  • Warplanes to Tankers Delayed by Contested US Contracts?stks.co/gYUYLosers contesting contracts is now normal & slows things $$
  • FHA Losses Could Hit $115 Billion in Extreme Scenario?stks.co/gYLJ?4 political reasons, FHA guaranteed lousy loans, losses come $$
  • Jefferson County Paves Way for Bankruptcy Exit?stks.co/cWky?The biggest losers r taxpayers, but then they elected the schmoes $$
  • Mistake:?$AIG,?$PRU,?$GE?Named Systemically Important by Panelstks.co/jYCN?Focus should b: financing long assets w/short loans $$
  • The Real Scandal at the IRS?stks.co/sFMf“…larger threat of abusive behavior by a fearsomely powerful government agency.” $$
  • ObamaCare Bait and Switchstks.co/jYCG?Obamacare was never meant 2 make healthcare affordable 2all, only 2 those w/o insurance $$
  • It really annoys me, because the key of financial safety is asset/liability mgmt & all of new regulations do not tighten this up $$
  • Risk that the Feds should care about is the toxic mix of illiquid assets funded by liquid liabilities; long liability structures r safe $$
  • Feds close to picking ?risky? non-banksstks.co/iY88?Really looks like the Feds r going2goof again & call non-risky firms risky $$
  • Overstated: Risk-Averse Culture Infects US Workers, Entrepreneursstks.co/eWev?Generally moderate risk-taking leads2best result $$
  • Little Cause for Inflation Worriesstks.co/jXms?Far better 2 use median or trimmed mean CPI, than the more doctored core PCE $$

 

Europe

  • France demands emergency EU summit over China’s wine tax threat?stks.co/dX8ATrade wars have 2 start somewhere, however small $$
  • Moody?s Casts Doubt Over Nordic Havens Amid Housing Risksstks.co/bXCh?Rest of world adopts bad monetary policy of US, EZ&Japan $$
  • Central Banks Put More Scandinavian Currencies in Reserve?stks.co/jY4tEnables the Nordic countries to import asset inflation $$
  • Swiss Seen Passing US Bank-Tax Law to Avoid Worse Fate?stks.co/qFJY?Most compromises r better than seeing many banks die $$

 

Companies & Industries

  • Tyson CEO Says Smithfield Deal Could Aid Pork Exports?stks.co/iYnc?Many Chinese might like 2 buy high quality American food $$
  • $COST?CEO Craig Jelinek Leads the Cheapest, Happiest Company in the World?stks.co/gYk1?Investing in workers vs cheap workers $$
  • Wells Fargo Will Benefit From Interest-Rate Increase, Sloan Says?stks.co/eX42Could just b brave words, few give up income $$
  • Fannie Shares Seen as Worthless Surging in Disconnect?stks.co/dWtw?The politics of the situation r in flux; no margin of safety $$
  • Goldman Wants You to Forget About Too Big to Fail?stks.co/gYUx?There is a subsidy to the big banks, not as large as some think $$
  • Like Berkshire, Markel thrives on buy&hold?stks.co/rFbN?Thomas Gayner, like Buffett is a compounder w/underwriting float $$?$MKL
  • Alcoa Junk Downgrade Is Rare Trauma for Dow Stocks?stks.co/iYYW?Time2 modernize & create News Corp Indexstks.co/gYUZ?$$
  • Whale of a Trade Revealed at Biggest US Bank With Best Control?stks.co/iYYVLong but definitive article on?$JPM?credit trade $$
  • Scor to Buy Generali Reinsurance Unit for $750 Million?stks.co/tFMQ?How do u say “Scottish Re” in French? “Scor”?$RGA$$?#spitspit
  • Apple Saves $724 Million With Well-Timed Sale?stks.co/qFCo?20-20 hindsight, but?$AAPL?timed their debt sale well $$
  • Kinder Morgan Cancels $2 Billion Pipeline Plan?stks.co/iY7O?Sending crude via rail costs same & does not require LT contract $$

 

Asia

  • Hedge Funds in Japan Ride Small-Cap Rally on Abenomics Boost?stks.co/eX41Be wary here, because there is no clear macro path $$
  • The Wonk With the Ear of Chinese President Xi Jinping?stks.co/qFfh?A modernizer who wants the Communist Party 2 keep control $$
  • Topix Profits Percentage Increase Tripling World Even in $400 Billion Wipeout?stks.co/qFUz?Wait. Weak yen also has bad effects $$
  • Poultry-Plant Fire in China Kills Dozensstks.co/jXzF?Sad, but it is common 4 firms that hire low wage workers 2 cut corners $$
  • Muddy Waters to Jupiter Seek Profit as Risk Rises?stks.co/eWeV?Convoluted financial systems can’t handle as much debt b4 crisis $$
  • Heard on the Street: Let Me Not See Old Age in China?stks.co/qFCr?Elderly poor who live away from the coasts suffer in China $$

 

Other

  • Co-hosts of radio show ‘The Pursuit of Happiness’ commit suicide togetherstks.co/sFhK?Happiness pursued as its own end fails $$
  • Harvard Humanities Fall From Favor Among College Students?stks.co/rFgfThere is no one more unrealistic than a humanities prof $$
  • To Catch a Thief: Banks Try Using Big Data?stks.co/jYPf?The banks try 2 detect correlated behavior among fraudsters & succeed $$
  • How Retirees Pay Zero Taxesstks.co/eX3v?If you r older & have little wage income there r often ways 2 reduce your taxes $$
  • Bermuda With Ireland Targets of Tax Vigilantes, Minister Says?stks.co/hYTPThey were really surprised when NATO blockaded them $$
  • Marriage Advice: Sharing a Hobby Is Good for Your Relationship?stks.co/tFMwOur hobby is raising kids, will have2find a new one $$
  • Meredith Whitney?s ?Great Migration?stks.co/fYHh?Disliked by genuine muni experts?@catelong?&Joe Mysakstks.co/gYGr?$$
  • Government 2 Hold Back Growth for Years?stks.co/qFJ0?Balancing the budget may have far less drag than most suppose, lowers risk $$
  • Vatican says Pope Francis got it wrong, atheists do go to hell?stks.co/iY8I?Adults @ Vatican correct Pope’s wishful thinking $$
  • Wrong: Smartest Decision Ever Made by Bill Gates, Warren Buffett?stks.co/rFAj?If u raise your children right, they can handle $$
  • Behind the ‘Internet of Things’ Is Android?and It’s Everywhere?stks.co/tF9hAmazing how 1can change the world on lo profit mgns $$

 

Finance

  • Has BIS Found the Solution to Too Big to Fail??stks.co/fYcY?Has issues, but much better than what was done in 2008. Worth a try $$
  • The rise of the real collateral ?mining? business?stks.co/bX4T?Overproduction of commodities feeds the shadow banking system $$
  • What is the opposite of helicopter money??stks.co/eX43?Negative interest rates suck liquidity, as people seek stores of value $$
  • World Chasing U.S. Yield With 25% Deal Jump: Real Estate?stks.co/hYUF?Enough inventory 2 pick from & seems 2b recovering $$
  • A World Awash in Credit with Much Work to Do?stks.co/gYHW?Increasingly hard to find safe yield; EM still seems promising,but… $$
  • i’d like to see: zip code level correlation between house price growth from 2011 to 2013 against absentee purchase share during same period.
  • Hedge Funds Boost Gold Bull Bets Most in Two Months?stks.co/jY4r?Makes me a little edgy for gold prices $$
  • Mortgage Investors Get Blindsidedstks.co/pFMV?Bonds Backed by Subprime Loans Had $1B Previously Undisclosed Losses $$?#surprise
  • Emerging-Market FX Gets Ugly. Very Ugly.?stks.co/qF1e?Yeah, I feel it, just look at the chart in?$EDD?of which I am long $$

 

FWIW

  • My week on twitter: 51 retweets received, 58 new followers, 34 mentions. Via:20ft.net/p

 

On the Designation of Systemically Important Financial Institutions

On the Designation of Systemically Important Financial Institutions

What does it take to create a global or national financial crisis?? Not just a few defaults here and there, but a real crisis, where you wonder whether the system is going to hold together or not.

I will tell you what it takes.? It takes a significant minority of financial players that have financed long-dated risky assets (which are typically illiquid), with short-dated financing.

The short-dated financing needs to be rolled over frequently, and during a time of financial stress, that financing disappears, particularly when creditors distrust the value of the assets.? It typically happens to all of the firms with weak liability structures at the same time.

During good times financing short is cheap.? Locking in long funding is costly, but safe.? That is why many financial firms accept the asset-liability mismatch — they want to make more money in the short-run in the bull phase of the market.? But when many parties have financed long risky assets with loans that need to be renewed in the short-term, the effect on the markets is multiplied.? The value of the risky assets falls more because many of the holders have a weak ability to hold the assets.? Where will the new buyers with sound finances come from?

Areas of Short-dated Financing

Short-dated financing is epitomized by bank deposits prior? to the Great Depression.? If doubt grew about the ability of a bank to pay off its depositors, depositors would run to get their cash out of the bank.? Deposits are supposed to be available with little delay.? After creation of the FDIC, deposits under the insurance limit are sticky, because people believe the government stands behind them.

But there are other areas where short-dated financing plays a significant role:

  • Margin accounts, whether for derivatives, securities, securities lending, etc.? If a financial company is required to put up more capital during a time of financial stress, they may find that they can’t do it, and declare bankruptcy.? This can also apply to some securities lending agreements if unusual collateral is used, as happened to AIG’s domestic life subsidiaries.
  • Putable financing, particularly that which is putable on credit downgrade.? This has happened in the last 25 years with life insurers [GICs used for money market funds], P&C reinsurers, and utilities.? Now this is similar to margin agreements on credit downgrades because more capital must be posted.? Anytime a credit rating affects cash flows, it is a dangerous thing.? The downgrade exacerbates the credit stress.? Then again, why were you dancing near the cliff that you created?
  • Repo financing was a large part of the crisis.? The weakest large investment banks relied on short-term finance for their assets in inventory.? So did many mortgage REITs.? As repo haircuts rose, undercapitalized players had to sell, lowering asset prices, leading to a new round of selling, and higher repo haircuts.? It was the equivalent of a bank run and only the strongest survived.
  • Auction-rate preferreds — a stable business for so long, but when creditworthiness became a question, the whole thing fell apart.
  • Finance companies — GE Finance and other finance companies rely on a certain amount of short-term finance via commercial paper.? It is difficult to be significantly profitable without that.
  • All other short-term interbank lending.

Crises happen when there is a call for cash, and it cannot be paid because there are not enough liquid assets to make payment, and illiquid assets are under stress, such that one would not want to sell them.? This has to happen to a lot of companies at the same time, such that the creditworthiness of some moderately-well capitalized institutions, that were thought to have adequate liquidity are called into question.

The Value of a Long Liability Structure

Let me give a counterexample to show what would be a hard sort of company to kill.? In the mid-1980s, a number of long-tailed P&C reinsurers found their claims experience in a number of their lines to be ticking up dramatically.? But the claims take a long time to settle, so there was no immediate call for cash.? Later analysis showed that for many of the companies, if the full value of the claims that eventually developed were charged in the year the business was written, many of them would have had negative net worth.? As it was, most of them suffered sub-par profitability, losing money on the insurance, and making a little more than that on their investments.

But they survived.? Other insurers cut some corners in the ’90s & ’00s and wrote policies that were putable if their credit was downgraded.? This would supposedly give more protection to those buying insurance or GICs [Guaranteed Investment Contracts] from them.? Instead, the reverse would happen when the downgrade came — there would be an immediate call on cash that could not be met, and the company would be insolvent.? Even if the majority of the liability structure is long, if a significant part of it was short, or could move from long to short, that’s enough to set the company up for a liquidity crisis of its own design.

Credit cycles come and go.? The financial companies in the greatest danger are the ones that have to renew a significant amount of their financing during a crisis.? It’s not as if firms with long liabilities don’t face credit risk; they face credit risk, and sometimes they go insolvent.? But they have the virtue of time, which can heal many wounds, even financial wounds.? If they die, it will be long and drawn out, and they will hold options to influence the reorganization of the firm.? Creditors may be willing to cut a deal if it would accelerate the workout, or, they might be willing to extend the liability further, in exchange for another concession.

In any case, not having to refinance in a crisis makes a financial company immune from the crisis, leaving aside the regulators who may decide the regulated subsidiaries are insolvent.? But, the regulators may decide they have more pressing issues in a crisis from firms that can’t pay all their bills now.

AIG, Prudential & GE Capital

So the Financial Stability Oversight Council [FSOC] has designated AIG, Prudential & GE Capital as systemically important.? They are certainly big companies in their industries, but are they 1) likely to be insolvent during a credit crisis, and 2) does the failure of any one of them affect the solvency of other financial firms?

That might be true for GE Capital.? They certainly still borrow enough enough in the commercial paper market, though not as much as they used to.? If GE Capital failed, a lot of money market funds would break the buck.

AIG?? The current CEO says he doesn’t mind being being systemically important.? Still, Financial Products is considerably smaller than it was before the crisis, they aren’t doing the same foolish things in securities lending that they were prior to the crisis, and they don’t have much short-term debt at all.? The liabilities of AIG as a whole are relatively long.? And even if AIG were to go down, we shouldn’t care that much, because the regulated subsidiaries would still be solvent.? Financial holding companies are by their nature risky, and regulators should not care if they go bust.

But Prudential?? There’s little short term debt, and future maturities are piddling on long term debt.? If the holding company failed, I can’t imagine that the creditors would lose much on the $27B of debt, nor would it cause a chain reaction among other financial companies.

I feel the same way about Metlife; both companies have long liabilities, and would have little difficulty with financing their way through a crisis.? Just slow down business, and free cash appears in the subsidiaries.

I can make a case that of these four, only GE Capital poses any systemic risk, though I would have to do more work on AIG Financial Products to be sure.? But what the selection of companies says to me was it was mostly a function of size, and maybe complexity.? Crises occur because a large number of financial companies finance long-dated assets with short-dated borrowings.? I think the FSOC would have done better to look at all of the ways short-term finance makes its way into financial companies, and then stress test the ability to withstand a liquidity shock.

My belief is that if you did that, almost no insurers would be on such a list; the levels of stress testing already required by the states exceed what FSOC is doing.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Europe

?

  • Risk of Bank Failures Rising in Europe, E.C.B. Warns?stks.co/iXnFdgzCpNK1ctKk7ijN/w&pagewanted=all&pagewanted=print Bad scene $$
  • New BoE chief Carney will devalue sterling, Pimco warns?stks.co/sEin?It’s useless but everyone has 2try2 “beggar thy neighbor” $$
  • The French Economic Maginot Line: A Very Weak Strongpoint?stks.co/cVlX French economy weakening; 2 big 4 Germany 2 rescue $$
  • Greek Economy Optimism Seen in Yield-Curve Switch?stks.co/aVsv?Perhaps they r doing better, but what of France & Germany? $$
  • Hungary Cuts Policy Rate to Record Lowstks.co/sENf?Another nation sucked into the march to global ZIRP; what will break first? $$

?

Asia

?

  • Asia’s Huge Debt Growth Problem: Remember 1997??stks.co/sEsy?Graph on this page is worth a look; could b another Asia crisis $$
  • Aging Chinese Face a Bleak Picturestks.co/cWG6?This should b no surprise; it is the logical outcome of the 1 child policy $$
  • China Failure to Grow With $1T Is Warning to Li: Economy?stks.co/jXddNegative Marginal productivity of capital in China $$?#FTL
  • China’s Xi Comes Calling on Americasstks.co/rEua?Interesting to see the Chinese need 4 products in the Western Hemisphere $$
  • China Failure to Grow With $1T Is Warning 2 Li: Economy?stks.co/dVzl?10 years from now, they’ll wonder y we worried about China $$
  • China-Based Cyber Attacks Rise at Meteoric Pace?stks.co/sEco?This is not news. Practice safe computing, & you will be safe. $$
  • Japanese Housewives Cooling on Aussie Uridashi?stks.co/sEcn?The strong yen is gone,& small investors realize there is no gain $$
  • Tokyo Shares Down Sharplystks.co/bW4G?Japanese stocks get hit, why should anyone be surprised? BOJ engaged in voodoo economics $$
  • Japan?s Bond Market Wants BOJ to Purchase More Short-Term?stks.co/gXRpTraders off-balance as BOJ stops giving them easy profit $$
  • China’s Shuanghui to Buy Smithfield Foods?stks.co/pEdZ?A wise addition to the strategic pork reserve; let the pigs flow west! $$
  • Japan plays down concerns bond price spike could hurt recovery?stks.co/fXGZKuroda thinks 3% higher interest rates won’t hurt?! $$
  • Fears over US stimulus highlight Japan?s fragility?stks.co/aVlz?Japan is reaching the limits of what monetary policy can do $$

 

Rest of the World

  • Sudan Threatens to Close Pipelinestks.co/cVvE?Two corrupt regimes arguing over oil – a lose/lose situation $$
  • Bank of Israel Lowers Rate Again After Surprise Mid-May Cut?stks.co/eVoS?Many fringe economies import low rates 2 aid exporters $$
  • Despite Detractors, Don’t Buy Talk of Dollar’s Demise?stks.co/cVeU?The US is in good shape compared to Japan, Eurozone & China $$
  • Fringe economies are forced to absorb loose monetary policy, or let exports suffer while hot money tries to get yield in their countries $$

 

Central Banking

?

  • Simon Johnson: Choosing the Next Head of the Federal Reservestks.co/bWEQ?No doubt that Dick Fisher would b a lot better $$
  • Is the Fed Right to Calibrate Asset Purchases to Economic Data?stks.co/fXYR?Coarse data doesn’t allow 4 fine policy precision $$
  • US Banks Looking Solid As Bernanke Keeps The Juice Flowing, But Perils Of Financial Crisis Loom?stks.co/pEdg?Low rates will end $$
  • Fed?s 100-Year Roots Grew From Virginia Congressman?stks.co/sEWJ?Puff piece of secular hagiography fawning over Carter Glass $$
  • Kuroda Struggles W/Communication as Japan Rates Rise?stks.co/eVkQ?Most central bankers don’t know forces w/which they r toying $$
  • Also, strong communication skills at central banks r a weakness, not a strength; better 2 move back to the pre-87 era, operate in shadows $$
  • The more communication a central bank puts out, the more markets become “tightly coupled” w/the CB, thus limiting the effects of policy $$
  • Stephen Poloz: Top 10 headaches BoC chief faces right off the bat?stks.co/qEKO2 much debt amid a mortgage bubble germinates $$

 

Market Impact

 

  • NYC Pension Chief Seeks $500,000 Managers to Cut Out Wall Street stks.co/eWPZ?Insourcing looks easy; u need bright mgmt 2do it $$
  • Contrarian Investing in Quality Franchises?stks.co/dWEz?It is not enough 2b contrarian, u have 2b right $$?$STUDY
  • James DeMasi on Overcoming Adversity to Start and Grow a Value Investment Management Firm?stks.co/eWPVIntelligent stuff $$?$STUDY
  • Pension-Fund Swings Make Case for Cutting Risk?stks.co/tEuZ?Much as I like ALM, probably the wrong time 2 trade stocks 4 bonds $$
  • Junk Bonds Having A Bad Week (Down 0.96%) Amid Broader Pullbackstks.co/bWEV?Yet this is small & we need it 2 persist 4 weeks $$
  • Evaluating 3 Bullish Argumentsstks.co/dW9s?PR better than logic, but he is right that the market is overvalued $$
  • Sallie Krawcheck: Big Banks Still Don?t Have Enough Capital?stks.co/rEou?No 1 knows how large the ultimate catastrophe could b $$
  • Morgan Stanley to Downsize Fixed Income?stks.co/dVzj?I think this is a mistake. Wall Street exists 2 sell debt$MS?$$
  • Record Cash Sent to Balanced Fundsstks.co/eVv4?Hail the humble balanced fund, which has the virtue of keeping panic away 4most $$
  • SEC Refocuses on Accounting Fraud stks.co/gXI1?With Crisis-Related Enforcement Ebbing, SEC Is Turning Back to Main Street $$
  • A hedge fund for u & me? Best move is 2 pass?stks.co/eVoW?Sage advice from @ritholtz?| survivor & reporting bias & fees 2 high $$
  • Goldman Sachs Buyback Orders Reach Highest Level of Year?stks.co/bVkE?Are buybacks part of the voting or weighing machine *now* $$
  • Margin Debt Hits a Record, Showing Confidence?stks.co/fX96?Confidence or froth, amid a market influenced by aggressive $$ policy?
  • Beware of ‘Bargain’ Stocks?stks.co/hXKKI disagree for now; look4 strong companies in industries under stress that will survive $$
  • Defaulted Manhattan Complex Rewards Patient $$?stks.co/iXCC?Sadly, equity & mezzanine were wiped out, patience pays only4 snr debt

 

Insurance

 

  • MetLife cuts 2,500 advisers seen lacking chance of success?stks.co/dWF0?Retail chief says productivity ‘way up;’ costs way down $$
  • Regarding the prior tweet, I have wondered 4 ~25 years when something like that would happen; has long been needed @ most life insurers $$
  • $PRU?Takes On?$AFL?in Benefits After Health Law?stks.co/fXpO?Much easier2 “enter” a market than create a sales force $$ FD: +?$AFL
  • $ENH?CEO steps down, replacement named?stks.co/iXML?Sudden. Former CEO of?$AXS?picked, owns ~1.5%, will own ~4% as comp; FD: +$ENH
  • The former CEO of?$AXS?was pushed out by his board; he built Axis, but was a bit of a prima donna. What will he do to $ENH?? | FD: +?$ENH?$$
  • One more note: the competent former CFO of?$PRE?is now CEO of?$AXS?, having been passed over for the CEO job @?$PRE?$$?#musicalchairs

 

US Politics

 

  • Pelosi: ?We have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it.? The more we find out, the less sense it makes.stks.co/pF0S
  • GOP senators want IG probe of Sebelius’ ‘Obamacare’ fundraising?stks.co/dWA5Obama administration is more corrupt than Nixon $$
  • Bible Class in Texas Schools Faulted as Unconstitutional?stks.co/iXnP?Look in the comments 4 bigoted ideas that aren’t American $$
  • Obamacare Competition Has Roots in Economist?s Passion?stks.co/dW9n?If you believe in neoclassical economics u r deluded $$?#loser
  • Regulators Want Better Financial Datastks.co/gXjV?Well, duh, but there are costs involved & the government does not bear those $$
  • When Chinese Walls Come Crumbling Down?stks.co/rEot?There r still conflicts of interest on Wall Street. Be aware & defensive $$
  • Deposits Guaranteed Up to $250,000?Maybe?stks.co/pEdo?Congress transfers insured deposit risks to the taxpayers & depositors $$
  • Liberty Reserve Joe Bogus Account Said to Reflect Evasion?stks.co/jXKv?Money laundering goes high-tech; Feds take action $$
  • Obama Accepting Sequestration as Deficit Shrinks?stks.co/gXIj?Whaddaya know? A policy no one liked actually isn’t that bad $$
  • Health Law Critics Seek to Gut It by Attacking Exchanges?stks.co/rEO6 Exchanges will only attract sick, will b high costs4all $$
  • The US Federal Government Spending: a Huge Fiscal Drag http;//stks.co/iXMS Cutting less useful spending it may help, not harm $$
  • Hollywood Loses Blockbusters as ?Iron Man? Finds Subsidy?stks.co/gXIX?Like building stadiums, except u have to keep doing it $$
  • Obama Nominates 2 Senate Aides for S.E.C. Posts?stks.co/fX8w?A team 2 assure continued incompetence & weak enforcement $$
  • Banks’ Lobbyists Help in Drafting Financial Bills?stks.co/pEJH?Basic goals: min capital reqs, max flexibility, weaken regs $$

 

Other

 

  • Cord Cutters Lop Off Internet Service More Than TV?stks.co/hXwv?You can cut your costs, but what does that do to your life? $$
  • Online Course Providers Reach Out2 Wary Professors?stks.co/jXde?Better to ask the question, “Where is new revenue coming from?” $$
  • Victor Davis Hanson: Why Some Wars Are So Savage?stks.co/bW4K?Evenly matched wars that take a long time lead to barbarism $$
  • Mary Meeker is Back With Her 2013 Internet Trends Report Slidesstks.co/pEfP?A lot of interesting information $$ Things change
  • European Sunscreen Roadblock on U.S. Beaches?stks.co/tENx?If you sunburn like me, maybe European sunscreens will help u $$
  • Dear Grads, Don’t ‘Do What You Love’ stks.co/hXVe?The solution is 2love what u do; working 4 $$ helps other priorities in life
  • Death Jolts Texas Investorsstks.co/aVsN?Since his body was found 2 weeks ago, investors say they lent him millions of $$?#badodor
  • Common Core Education Is Uncommonly Inadequate?stks.co/sENHNational curriculum standards tend 2b dumbed-down; local better $$
  • Science Can?t Pin Powerful Tornadoes on Global Climate Change?stks.co/eVoUA rare fair article on climate @ Bloomberg. Who knew $$
  • Noahpinion: Bets do not (necessarily) reveal beliefs?stks.co/dVdu?In which Noah Smith arbs Brad Delong & Patrick Chovanec $$?#FTW
  • Immunology Gets Turned On Its Headstks.co/jX4P?Discovery may aid vaccine design&begins2explain y gene therapy runs in2 trouble $$
  • Is This Google X’s Plan to Wire the World??stks.co/hXKJ?Solar powered balloons dot the skies, could last 5 years & upgrade $$

 

Companies

 

  • Buffett’s Safe Bet on Vegas?stks.co/gXjUThe Maestro does it again, takes a marginally profitable company, & refinances it $$
  • Goldman Upgrades Defense Contractors?stks.co/gXjT?My but how contrarian; won’t there b less cash flowing to defense companies? $$
  • Berkshire Hathaway Unit to Buy NV Energy for $5.6B?stks.co/dVzk?Another wise move by Buffett; utility earnings make $$ vs funding
  • Alcoa Cut to Junk by Moody?s as Aluminum Price Declines?stks.co/pEkEAnother sign of economic weakness, but Alcoa will survive $$
  • Payday Lenders Evading Rules Pivot to Installment Loans?stks.co/eW4q?I like people to have choice, but not 1 that leads2a trap $$
  • Empire State Building IPO Plan Is Approved?stks.co/fXUM?”The second-largest IPO for a U.S. real-estate investment trust” ever $$
  • BHP Halts Coal Expansion?stks.co/dVthDownturn in the global economy & thus steel makes demand fall for metallurgical coal $$?$BHP
  • Newsweek for Sale: IAC Seeks Buyersstks.co/jXKo?The internet changes everything; say goodbye to a dinosaur $$
  • Utilities Weigh Entering Rooftop-Solar Business?stks.co/sEWA?Sounds dumb; it’s a very different biz in almost every way $$?#FTL
  • Samsung, Sony Court Indians as Subsidies Fund Factories?stks.co/gXIgIndia gives 25% subsidy4capital costs2setup tech plants. $$

 

Energy

 

  • As US Oil Booms, an Unlikely Word Rises: Depletion?stks.co/dVl5?Wells created by fracking have shorter production profiles $$
  • U.S. Oil Boom Divides OPECstks.co/pEUQ?Those most dependent on oil revenues want others in OPEC 2 cut, so that they can cheat $$

 

Replies, Retweets & Comments

  • I just left a comment in “Energy stocks down, look to end week higher – Energy Stocks – MarketWatch”on.mktw.net/18DiBrm
  • “I have read both. Buffett made mistakes that cost him, but never such that he could not bounce back?” ? D_Merkeldisq.us/8da393?$$
  • Commented on StockTwits: Old tweet deleted, new tweet out?stks.co/iXMe
  • “Don’t forget his purchase of 83% of CVR Energy. Equally good. FD: +$CVI ” ? David_Merkel?disq.us/8d9jmi?cc:@refomedbroker?$$
  • @AlephBlog?Growth and the Market. Useful piece to help people make sense of seemingly over-valued equity market:wp.me/p3nd6r-4s
  • Sets up future losses $$ RT@tomkeene: ?Cov-lite? loans soar in dash for yield -?FT.com?on.ft.com/12daxfK
  • @kurtgodeldabomb?I like your name. Yes, that’s y I said it; I think its the voting machine 4 most companies, & weighing machine 4 a few
  • “Until the strategy fails, and he asks you to leave.” ? David_Merkeldisq.us/8d97f5?$$
  • @pope_stephen?Sadly, monetary policy was much better run under Volcker & Martin, & they were not going out of their way 2 explain the Fed $$

 

FWIW

  • My week on twitter: 42 retweets received, 2 new listings, 60 new followers, 37 mentions. Via:?20ft.net/p

 

The Rules, Part XLII

The Rules, Part XLII

During a panic, it is useful to reflect on the degree to which the real economy has been driven by the financial economy.? In the Great Depression, the degree was heavy; in the seventies, it was light.? Today, my guess is that it is in-between, which makes it difficult to figure out the right strategy.

Again, this was written in 2002 or so.? As I posted last night, the banks were in relatively good shape then.? I made a lot of money for my clients buying bank floating rate trust preferred securities at ~$80.? There was no security that we did not clear at least $10 on, and most cleared $20 within a year.? One even went from $68 to $100, plus a healthy coupon.? In bond terms those were a series of home runs.? As an aside, as a bond investor, I focused more on net capital gains than most, and that helped us in a rocky era.? I often gave up current income to gain the potential for capital gains, which was the opposite of most of my competitors.

So in 2002 it was reasonable to buy banks as the willingness to supply of credit grew.? But there are limits to how much credit you can have in an economy without things getting screwy.? An economy with too many promises to pay becomes inflexible; far better to finance more of the economy with equity, but that requires a Fed that works properly, like it was under Eccles, Martin and Volcker.? Under men of less courage, like Bernanke, Greenspan, Burns, Miller, Crissinger, and Young, it simply paves the way for asset bubbles and price inflation.

In 1929 and 2008, though, it was relatively easy to know that the financial economy had grown too large for the real economy.? Total debt to GDP levels were at records.

Or think of it from this angle: in 2004, I was recruited by another financial hedge fund to be their insurance analyst.? I talked with them, but ultimately I refused, because I felt the boss was probably less competent than my current boss.? A major part of his presentation was how amazing the outperformance of financial stocks had been over the prior 10 years, implying that it would be the same over the next 10.? That outperformance was not repeatable because the capital of the banking and shadow banking industries had gotten so large that there was no longer any way that they could extract a high return out of the rest of the economy.? As it was, the effort to do so made them take on asset risks that killed many companies, and should have killed many, many more, had economic policy been handled properly.

This is one reason why my long only portfolio was so light on financials, excluding insurers, going into 2008.? I sold the last of my banks in 2007, realizing Europe would be no safe haven.? I retained one mortgage REIT that cratered as repo fell apart, teaching me a valuable lesson that I had bought something cheap, but not safe.? That was my only significant loss during the crisis starting in 2007-2008.? Repo funding is not a safe funding source during crises, and this is something that is not fixed from the last crisis, along with portfolio margining, and a few other weak liability structures.

With respect to the eras starting in 1929 and 2008, the key concept is debt deflation?? When there are too many debts, there will be too many bad debts.? That is the time to only only companies with strong balance sheets that will not need to refinance under any conditions.? That eliminates all banks and shadow banks.

I can’t guarantee that we are past the crisis, because we haven’t seen what will happen to the economy when the Fed starts to lessen policy accommodation, much less tighten.? As it is, for the most part, I not only own companies that are cheap, but primarily companies that are safe.? Value investing is “safe and cheap,” not just cheap.? This applies to financials as well, but many value investors lost a lot of money on financials because they ignored credit quality near the end of a credit boom.? Many credit-sensitive companies looked cheap near the end of the 2007, but they were cheap for a reason — they were about to get pelted by a ton of losses.

As an aside, do you know how hard it is to get a value manager to short something trading at 50% of book value?

I know how tough that is.? I’ve been through it.? He would not bite.

The company had asset risks as well as liability risks.? I extrapolated the liability cash flows to realize the long-term care? policies the company had written would likely bankrupt them.? But when the boss came to me pitching it as a long because one his buddies thought it was dirt-cheap, I uttered, “Gun to the head boss, I would tell you to short it.”? Reply: “But it’s trading at half of book value.” Me: “Book value is misstates true economic value.? Can’t say for certain, but I think this one goes out at zero.”

As it was, we did nothing, and the stock, Penn Treaty, did go out at zero. (There was one small positive out of this, I did convince the private equity arm not to fund a competitor in long-term care.)

Back to the main point.? Have a sense as to the financial economy.? This will probably only happen once in your life, but that time is crucial.? If there is a financial mania going on, move to safety, and reduce exposure to credit-sensitive financials.? It’s that simple, but to most value investors who invest in seemingly cheap financials that is a hard move.? Remember, safe comes before cheap in value investing, and that means questioning asset accrual items.? Financial companies have that in spades.

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