Category: Portfolio Management

Triage, Part 2

Triage, Part 2

In the first round of triage I went through the first third of my portfolio. Now is the time for the second third; definitely a more positive experience, together with my changes on the first third, after further reflection.
The Dead ? Companies with bad balance sheets, but have been whacked so bad that it is still worth playing

  • Jones Apparel
  • Deerfield Capital

If they rally a lot more, I am out.

Walking Wounded ? Companies with okay balance sheets that we feed more cash to

  • Lafarge
  • Industrias Bachoco
  • YRC Worldwide [moved from The Dead]

Seemingly healthy that might have financing problems ? Sold

  • Lithia Automotive
  • Group 1 Automotive

Uncertain as of yet

Sara Lee

Don’t know what to do here. Balance sheet has issues but profitability is improving as the turnaround progresses.

Healthy companies that we leave alone

  • Barclays plc (Moved from Uncertain as of yet — Capital levels are seemingly adequate.)
  • Deutsche Bank
  • Mylan Labs
  • Cimarex Energy
  • Nam Tai
  • Arkansas Best
  • Bronco Drilling
  • Vishay Intertechnology
  • Aspen Holdings
  • Safety Insurance
  • Lincoln National
  • Assurant

Safe New Names Bought

  • PartnerRe
  • National Atlantic [Did not get a full position on, was too stubborn about levels… not buying here.]

So, there’s the triage with one third to go — I have not done the companies with my largest gains, which I presume to be in better shape. At this point, I’m relatively happy with what I have.

PS — As to my methods, the main parts are reviews of the balance sheets and cash flow statements. It’s basic bond analysis, asking how likely it is that future cash flows will be able to cover the debts in question. At present, I am looking to hold companies that can survive a crisis. With the reservations noted above, most of this portfolio can do so.
Full Disclosure: Long JNY DFR LR IBA YRCW SLE BCS DB MYL XEC NTE ABFS BRNC VSH AHL AIZ LNC SAFT PRE NAHC

The Longer View, Part 1

The Longer View, Part 1

Here are some posts that have caught my attention over the last month, but I never commented on because of the increase in volatility placed more of a premium on covering current events.

  1. Will we ditch GAAP accounting for IFRS?? Personally, I don’t want to learn a new set of rules, but if it improves our ability to invest in a more global era, then maybe it will be a good thing.
  2. Do we care if we have auditors or not?? BDO Seidman recently got hit for damages of $521 million.? If this damage amount stands, it will bankrupt them, and possibly eliminate the #5 auditor in the US.? My argument here is not over guilt, but merely the size of the award.? That said, if the damage amount stands my solution would be to award 30% of the ownership of BDO Seidman to the plaintiffs.? Let them earn it through shared profits.
  3. Peter Bernstein takes my side in the understating inflation debate.? As I have said before, if you want to smooth inflation, use the median or the trimmed mean, which is more statistically robust than excluding food and energy.
  4. Jeff Matthews comments on how many companies that paid large special dividends, or bought back too much stock are regretting it in this environment.? What should they say to shareholders, but won’t?? I’ve said that for years at RealMoney, but during a boom phase, who listens?
  5. I found it fascinating that private issuances of equity via 144A are exceeding IPOs at present.? Only the big institutions get to invest, and they can only trade it to each other.? I experienced that as a bond manager, but for equities, this is new, and a growing thing.? Question: most trading will then be negotiated block trades as in the bond market.? If a mutual or hedge fund buys one of these 144A issues, how do they price it?? With bonds, it doesn’t usually matter as much, because things usually move slowly, but with equities?
  6. Can we time the value premium?? (I.e., when do we invest in growth versus value?)? The answer seems to be no.? Value strategies work about two-thirds of the time, which makes them dominant, but not so much so as to overcome the more sexy growth investing.? This allows the anomaly to continue.? The end of the article concludes: The bottom line for investors is that the prudent strategy is to ignore the calls to action you hear from Wall Street and the media and adhere to your investment plan. The only actions you should be taking are to rebalance your portfolio and to harvest losses when that can be done in a tax-efficient manner.? I like it.
  7. I’ll say it again.? Be careful with ETNs.? They may have tax advantages versus ETFs, but the hidden risk is that the sponsor of the ETN goes bankrupt, in which case you are a general creditor.? With an ETF, bankruptcy of the sponsor should pose little risk.
  8. Hit me again, please.? If financials didn’t hurt me recently, then it was cyclicals.? Ouch.? Both are at risk, but for different reasons.? Financials, because of a fear of systemic risk.? Cyclicals, because of a fear of a slowdown stemming from an impaired financial system being unwilling/unable to lend.

I’ll try to post on the other half of this on Monday.? Have a great Sunday.

A Baker’s Dozen on Current Issues in the Markets

A Baker’s Dozen on Current Issues in the Markets

If I have the energy this evening, I’ll put up two posts: the first on the near-term, and the second on longer-dated issues.? Then, next week on Monday, I hope to continue addressing the balance sheets of the companies in my portfolio.? I still believe that credit quality will not in general improve, but that companies that can benefit from additional financing and obtain it will be the best off in this environment.

  1. First a few macro pieces.? I usually don’t comment on Nouriel Roubini.? To me, he seeks too much publicity.? Is the present situation worse than LTCM?? Yes and no.? Yes, the entire housing market and housing finance areas are affected, as well as some levered areas in corporate credit — CDOs and loans to private equity.? No, at least not yet.? During LTCM, the solvency of at least one major investment bank (the rumor is Lehman) nearly went down.? That would have been worse than what we have at present by a fair margin.
  2. This piece from Paul Kasriel is interesting.? He brings up the correlation of seemingly unrelated asset classes, and hits the nail on the head by explaining that it id the owners of many risky classes of securities that are forced to sell due to margin calls that drives the rise in correlations.? Then he makes another hit on a favorite topic of mine, Chinese inflation.? That is the greatest threat to the value of the US Dollar and the end of Chinese stimulation of the US through the recycling of the current account deficit.? (At an ISI Group lunch late in 2006, I suggested that Chinese inflation was the greatest threat to the global economy.? Jason Trennert thought it was amusing.)
  3. I disagree a little with this otherwise useful piece from Investment Postcards.? In the middle of the graphic it reads “Subordinate bonds (junk-bond quality) on balance sheet.”? Usually not true.? Banks are typically more senior in the financing structure, unless they originated the loans themselves, and retain the equity residual.? In the first case, there is low probability of a large loss.? In the second case, a high probability of a more modest loss.
  4. Countrywide has certainly scared a number of people, including depositors.? First time I’ve seen anything resembling a bank (S&L) run in a while.? Here’s a quick summary on what went wrong.
  5. Now, US mortgage lenders are not the only ones having trouble, but also those in the UK.? Part of the issue there is that a larger part of their mortgage finance is adjustable rate, which makes rising short rates proportionately more painful there.? Maybe the Bank of England, which has been among the more aggressive inflation fighters, will have to loosen soon.
  6. One problem with securitization is that that legal documents are complex, and arguments over which party has what right become more common when deals go bad.? I’m no lawyer, but expect to see more situations like this one between CSFB and American Home.
  7. Okay, a rundown.? What markets have been hit so far?? Emerging markets, real estate and funds that invest in real estate,? merger arbitrage and LBOs, art, many hedge funds (an article on the demise of Sowood), high yield debt, and the stock market globally.? I’m sure I’ve missed some, but I can’t remember a time when so many implied volatilities went up so much at the same time.
  8. What’s not hurt as much?? Life insurance companies, though you sure can’t tell it from their stock prices.? I like Life the best of all my insurance sub-industries.? This area will come back sooner than most financials.
  9. What might have scared the FOMC most?? The move in T-bills.? It was the biggest rally over one or two days ever, as the Wall Street Journal concludes, that is panic.? Such an incredible bid for safety demonstrated a lack of confidence in the banking system, as well as other riskier elements of the markets.? It’s rare for T-bills and LIBOR to get so out of whack.
  10. But maybe things aren’t that bad, after all, US corporate earnings are rolling ahead at over a 10% rate.? I can live with that.
  11. Is Citadel a rescuer of Sentinel, or a rogue-ish clever firm that took advantage of panic at weakly managed Sentinel? Penson argues for the latter, but if there were multiple bids considered, it may be a difficult case for Penson to prove.? I would guess that Sentinel is toast, and that their clients will take most of the financial hits.
  12. Now, will the carry trade finally blow up?? After the move in the yen on Thursday, some thought so.? Some felt that it would plunge the world into a deflationary collapse.? I don’t think it will be that bad, but it will lead to inflation in the US, and an increase in the purchasing power of Asia and OPEC, at the expense of the US and a host of smaller countries (NZ, Iceland, etc.).? The parallels to LTCM are interesting; that’s the last time the carry trade got blown out.
  13. Finally, Hurricane Dean.? I wasn’t so bold two days ago, but I felt that damage to the US would be limited.? I’m more certain of that now.? (Someone tell the Louisiana Governor that there is no bullseye on her state.)? I’m an amateur meteorologist, but what I do in situations like this is measure the deviation of the track of the storm from the forecast.? In my experience, deviations tend to persist.? That told me that Dean was likely to miss Texas.? That’s more likely now; bad news for Mexico.? Pray for those in harm’s way.
The FOMC as a Social Institution, Part 2

The FOMC as a Social Institution, Part 2

Part 1 of this unintended series came two weeks ago, when the FOMC was resolute that there were no problems in the markets that could potentially har,m the economy.? Then, one week later, after the FOMC showed that it was willing to toy around with temporary liquidity, I knew that I had to change my FOMC opinion, and rapidly.? It’s akin to a situation where someone protests their virtue, but cheats a little; at that point the question become how far he will go.? With the FOMC, a small change in temporary liquidity would not convince the banks of the seriousness of the FOMC, and would engender no additional confidence.? Given that the FOMC showed that it wanted to fix the problem, it had to ask the question, “What’s the minimum we can do to make the problem go away?”? Or at least, get the problem away from the Fed’s door?

Here’s the problem, though.? In a credit crisis, there is variation in how much trouble each firm is in.? When the FOMC provides liquidity, it stimulates healthy firms and provides no stimulus at all to firms that will die, because the credit spreads to those firms are too wide, assuming that anyone will lend at all to them.? It’s the marginal firms that benefit the most from a change in Fed policy to loosening.? The earlier the FOMC acts in a credit crisis, the fewer marginal firms go under.? The lowering of short term rates convinces lenders that the marginal firms can be refinanced at lower rates, and after some fitful action, the weak but not dead survive (and their stocks fly).? Also, the earlier the FOMC acts, the more moral hazard it creates, because the markets know that the FOMC will rescue them, and so they take risk to excess.

Now, a lowering of the discount rate, and encouragement to use it,? does several things.? Unlike Fed funds, lower quality collateral can be lent against.? The encouragement to borrow reduces the stigma; it tells the bankers that the regulators won’t cast a jaundiced eye on borrowing.? (Previously bankers would worry about that.)? That will to some degree reliquefy the market for riskier assets, but given that credit spreads have blown out for a wide variety of Asset-, Residential Mortgage-, and Commercial Mortgage-Backed securities, how much will 1/2% on the discount rate do?? My guess: not much.

Now, the change in the bias does more.? It shows that the FOMC will start permanently loosening Fed funds, probably at the September meeting, unless conditions worsen soon.? They still haven’t injected any permanent liquidity yet, aside from what little the discount window will bring, so some marginal firms will continue to deteriorate until then.

That they did a rare intermeeting announcement highlights the FOMC’s commitment to reliquefying the economy.? They are into the game with both feet, betting their socks and underwear. 😉

Here’s my projection, then.? There are still a lot of hedge funds that are presently alive that will die in the next six months. Housing prices will continue to go down, dragging down hedge funds and financial institutions with overcommitments to alt-A loans and home equity loans.? There will be howls of pain from them and their lenders, which will goad the FOMC into loosening more than is currently believed.? I see a 3% Fed funds target rate at some point in 2008, barring a US Dollar crisis (possible), or inflation (however well-massaged) convincingly exceeding 3%.

A few final points before I end. The communication of Governor Poole certainly could have been handled better.? We got a real whipsaw in the markets as a result.? I have mentioned in the past that he is often out of step on the hawkish side; this was another example.? But for the repudiation to come so quickly was astounding.? As it was, the New York (read, Wall Street) and San Francisco (read, Countrywide) Regional Federal Reserve Banks sponsored the actions, and all but Poole’s district, St. Louis, went along, and asked for cuts in the discount rate.? St. Louis, caught off guard, belatedly asks for the same thing but starting Monday, not today.

Now, do I favor this from a public policy standpoint?? No.? Let the system purge, that risk once again gets respected.? You can hear the indignation on some market participants, like my friend Cody Willard, and Allan Sloan at Fortune, who wonder why we bail out extreme risk takers.? (My take, the extreme risk takers will still get purged, but the marginal ones won’t.)? Others, like Larry Kudlow, and perhaps Rich Karlgaard at Forbes, wring their hands over moral hazard, but say it has to be done this time to preserve the economy.? Then you have clever realpolitik coming from Caroline Baum of Bloomberg (written before today’s moves), who says that Bernanke will do all he can to prevent another Depression.? Beyond that, we get booyahs from Cramer, PIMCO, and a few others.

So here we are, two weeks later.? The stock market is lower. Yields on the highest quality debt is lower, and low quality yields are higher.? Option volatilities for almost all asset classes are much higher.? The separation of firms viewed as marginal now will continue to get separated into two piles, dead and survived.? In the last FOMC loosening cycle it took three years to get there, from March of 2000 to the spring of 2003, when the high yield market realized the crisis was past.? And housing was flying.? Amazing what reliquefication can do for a healthy sector, and creating the next bubble too.

This won’t be over in a short amount of time.? Look for quality firms that can benefit from lower funding costs, and toss out firms where additional financing is needed, but won’t be available because of high credit spreads, devalued collateral, etc.? Buy some TIPS too, and maybe some yen [FXY] and swiss francs [FXF].? Dollar purchasing power will continue its decline.

One Dozen Items That Characterize The Market Now

One Dozen Items That Characterize The Market Now

I’m going to write this post backwards tonight, partly because going from specific to general may make more money for my readers tomorrow. Let’s go:

  1. Did you know that there has been panic in closed-end loan participation funds? No? Well look here. Or look at this Excel file. Here’s the skinny: the average loan fund has only lost 0.47% of its net asset value since 8/10, but the average price has fallen by 6.30%. You can pick up a little less than 6% here, with modest risk, or a little more, if you are clever. Remember that the grand majority of loans here are senior and secured.
  2. The Title insurers have gotten crushed. Here’s to the activists who bought a ton of LandAmerica in the 90s, something I advised against. Title volumes will slow. Wait for the home inventories to crest, and decline a little, then buy a basket of the Title companies.
  3. I have a decent amount of exposure to Latin America in the portfolio. That Brazil and Mexico have been whacked has cost me, even though my companies are conservative.
  4. The winds are blowing. Hurricane Dean is in the Gulf, and may do damage to Yucatan, and after that, oil infrastructure and Texas. Given the late start of the season, I would not begin to suggest that this will be a heavy loss year. Damages from Dean are still uncertain as well.
  5. From the excellent Aaron Pressman, I offer you his insights off of Nicholas Taleb’s book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. What I would point out here is that when times are unusual, a lot of things tend to be unusual. Credit events tend to be correlated, so when things go bad as in 2000-2002, many seemingly unrelated things go wrong at the same time, often due to correlations in the portfolios of the holders, particularly leveraged ones.
  6. Having seen a decent amount in prime brokerage relationships at a medium-sized firm, I can only say that they are needed but overrated, and the conflicts of interest are significant.
  7. I wish i were managing structured securities again. Buying AAA CMBS at LIBOR + 0.60%. That’s the best since LTCM! Pile it on! Hey, maybe we can lever it?! 😉
  8. Onto credit issues. Fed funds futures are rising in price (down in yield) over the current credit woes. Canadian ABCP participants may have a good solution to their troubles. Convert the claims to longer dated floating rate paper, which can still be held by money market funds. Countrywide cut to BBB+, which effectively boots them from the CP market. Rescap goes to junk, but it should have been there already. If Countrywide survives you can make a lot of money in their unsecured debt. I’ll pass, thank you. I’d rather hold the equity. Anworth is also getting smashed in this environment.
  9. Have you seen the credit summary in the Wall Street Journal?
  10. I had argued at RealMoney that home equity loans would eventually get hit. A non-consensus opinion. Well, now they are getting hit.
  11. DealBreaker.com has chutzpah, particularly on this list of hedge funds that might have blown up.
  12. You can look at it on the serious side or the funny side. Either way, losing money for clients stinks. That’s why I focus on risk control.
Triage

Triage

I’m still working through my portfolio, but I have categorized some stocks:

The Dead — Companies with bad balance sheets, but have been whacked so bad that it is still worth playing

  • Jones Apparel
  • Deerfield Capital
  • YRC Worldwide

Walking Wounded — Companies with okay balance sheets that we feed more cash to

  • Lafarge
  • Industrias Bachoco

Seemingly healthy that might have financing problems — Sold

  • Lithia Automotive
  • Group 1 Automotive

Uncertain as of yet

Barclays plc

Safe New Names Bought

  • PartnerRe
  • Microcap yet to be named when I have my full position on.

More tomorrow. As you can tell, I am positioning my broad market fund more conservatively. I am not optimistic on how we work through the amalgam of debts that might not get paid.

Full disclosure: long PRE IBA DFR JNY YRCW BCS LR

Afternoon Actions

Afternoon Actions

I sold Lithia Automotive in the late morning for the same reason as Group 1 Automotive.? Mid-afternoon, I replaced the position with PartnerRe.? As I commented at RealMoney:


David Merkel
Bought Some PartnerRe
8/16/2007 3:35 PM EDT
  • Trades well below adjusted book.
  • Reserves are conservative even prior to the fact that they don’t discount their reserves.
  • Reasonable P/E multiple
  • Quality balance sheet
  • Quality management team.
  • Conservative asset policy
  • Not overexposed to southeastern property risks.
  • Position: long PRE

    What I didn’t mention was how much not discounting their reserves is worth after-tax: nearly $20/share.? Take out a few other items, and you get an adjusted book value of around $85 on a very strong and diversified reinsurer.? I can live with that.

    Full disclosure: long PRE

    Morning Actions

    Morning Actions

    Bought a little Lafarge and Industrias Bachoco in to the morning’s decline. Eliminated Group 1 Automotive, and began the acquisition of a little microcap trading below book value with no debt. The integrating theme here is holding onto businesses that don’t need external financing, and selling businesses that require external financing, starting with companies that haven’t been hit that badly yet.

    Could the existing financing troubles spill over into auto financing and auto floorplan financing? That’s possible, though I don’t see the transmission mechanism now. The potential trouble with Group 1 (aside from a balance sheet with high intangibles), is that changes in financing terms could dent their earnings stream. Now, I know that the automakers are highly motivated to move the metal, and will aid the financing process, but I don’t think they can be relied on in entire, unless they only selling for Honda and Toyota, which have superior balance sheets.

    The moves so far this morning are cash neutral. We will see how that changes as the day progresses.

    Full disclosure: long LR IBA

    The Value of Having a Deposit Franchise (or a Printing Press)

    The Value of Having a Deposit Franchise (or a Printing Press)

    I’m worried.? That doesn’t happen often.? Over the years, I have trained myself to avoid both worry and euphoria.? That has been tested on a number of occasions, most recently 2002, when I ran a lot of corporate bonds.? Ordinary risk control disciplines will solve most problems eventually, absent war on your home soil, rampant socialism, and depression.? I like my methods, and so I like my stocks that come from my methods, even when the short term performance is bad.? Could this be the first year in seven that I don’t beat the S&P 500?? Sure could, though I am still ahead by a few percentage points.

    Let’s start with the central banks.? I don’t shift my views often, so my change on the Fed is meaningful.? But how much impact have the temporary injections of liquidity had?? Precious little so far.? Yes, last I looked, Fed funds were trading below 5%; banks can get liquidity if they need it, but credit conditions are deteriorating outside of that.? (more to come.)? I don’t believe in the all-encompassing view of central banking espoused by this paper (I’d rather have a gold standard, at least it is neutral), but how much will full employment suffer if most non-bank lenders go away?

    Why am I concerned? Short-term lending on relatively high quality collateral is getting gummed up.? You can start with the summary from Liz Rappaport at RealMoney, and this summary at the Wall Street Journal’s blog.? The problems are threefold.? You have Sentinel Management Group, a company that manages short term cash for entities that trade futures saying their assets are illiquid enough that they can’t meet client demands for liquidity.? Why?? The repurchase (repo) market has dried up.? The repurchase market is a part of the financial plumbing that you don’t typically think about, because it always operates, silently and quietly.? Well, from what I have heard, the amount of capital to participate in the repo market for agency securities, and prime AAA whole loan MBS has doubled.? 1.5% -> 3%, and 5% -> 10%, respectively.? Half of the levered buying power goes away.? No surprise that the market has been whacked.

    Second, away from A1/P1 non-asset-backed commercial paper, conditions on the short end have deteriorated.? As? I have said before, complexity is being punished and simplicity rewarded.? High-quality companies borrowing to meet short-term needs are fine, for now.? But not lower-rated borrowers, and asset-backed borrowers.? Third, our friends in Canada have their own problems with asset-backed CP.? Interesting how Deutsche Bank did not comply with the demand for backup funding.? Could that be a harbinger of things to come in the US?

    On to Mortgage REITs.? Thornburg gets whacked.? Analyst downgrades.? Ratings agency downgrades.? Book value declines.? Dividends postponed.? It all boils down to the increase in margin and decrease in demand for mortgage securities (forced asset sales?).

    It’s a mess.? I’ve done the math for my holdings of Deerfield Capital, and they seem to have enough capital to meet the increased margin requirements.? But who can tell?? Truth is, a mortgage REIT is a lot less stable than a depositary institution.? Repo funding is not as stable as depositary funding.? There will come a point in the market where it will rationalize when companies with balance sheets find the mortgage securities so compelling, that the market clears. After that, the total mortgage market will rationalize, in order of increasing risk.? Fannie and Freddie will help here.? They support the agency repo market, but the AAA whole loan stuff is another matter.? Everyone in the mortgage business except the agencies is cutting back their risk here.

    By now, you’ve probably heard of mark-to-model, versus mark-to market.? The problem is that mark-to-model is inescapable for illiquid securities.? They trade by appointment at best, and so someone has to estimate value via a model of some sort.? The alternative is that since there are no bids, you mark them at zero, but that will cause equity problems for those buying and selling hedge fund shares.? This is a problem with no solution, unless you want to ban illiquid securities from hedge funds.? (Then where do they go?)

    There’s always a bull market somewhere, a friend of mine would say (perhaps it is in cash? that is, vanilla cash), but parties dealing with volatility are doing increasing volumes of business, which is straining the poor underpaid folks in the back office.

    Why am I underperforming now?? Value temporarily is doing badly because stocks with low price-to-cash-flow are getting whacked, because the private equity bid has dried up.? That’s the stuff I traffic in, so, yeah, I’m guilty.? That doesn’t dissuade me from the value of my methods in the long run.

    Might there be further liquidity troubles in asset classes favored by hedge funds?? Investors tend to be trend followers, so? yes, as redemptions pile up at hedge funds, risky assets will get liquidated.? Equilibrium will return when investors with balance sheets tuck the depreciated assets away.

    Finally, to end on a positive note.? Someone has to be doing well here, right?? Yes, the Chinese.? Given the inflation happening there, and the general boom that they are experiencing, perhaps it is not so much of a surprise.

    With that, that’s all for the evening.? I have more to say, but I am still not feeling well, and am a little depressed over the performance of my portfolio, and a few other things.? I hope that things are going better for you; may God bless you.

    Full disclosure: long DB DFR

    The State of the Markets, Part 2

    The State of the Markets, Part 2

    There are several ways I would like to go from here in my short-term plan for this blog.? One is to focus on the stress in credit markets.? Second is to post on the macroeconomics surrounding these changes.? Third is to point at the oddball stuff that I am seeing away from points one and two.? Last would be portfolio strategy at this point in time.? From a conversation with my friend Cody Willard today, where we went over many of these topics and more, what I believe every investor should do right now is look at every asset in his portfolio, and ask two questions:? What happens if this asset can’t get financing on attractive terms, and would this asset benefit from any reflationary moves by the global central banks.? That’s the direction that I am heading.? Tonight, I hope to go through stress in the credit markets, and maybe macroeconomics.? I haven’t been feeling so well, so I’ll see what I can do.

    Let’s start with Rick Bookstaber, who recently started his own blog, after writing a well-regarded new book that I haven’t read yet.? He sees the risks with the quant funds: leverage, similar strategies, and the carrying capacity of the strategies.? Very similar to my ecological view of the markets.? Move over to the CASTrader blog, a nifty blog that I cited on my Kelly Criterion pieces.? He also subscribes to the Adaptive Markets Hypothesis, as I do.? He also makes a carrying capacity-type argument, that the quants got too big for the markets that they were trying to extract excess profits from.? Any strategy can be overdone.? Then go to Zero Beta.? The hidden variable that the quants perhaps ignored was leverage, which affects the ability of holders to control an asset under all conditions.? Leverage creates weak holders, or in the case of shorts, weak shorts.? Visit Paul Kedrosky next.? I sometimes talk about “fat tails,” and yes, looking at distributions of asset returns, they can seem to be fat tailed, but regime shifting is another way to look at it.? Assets shift between two modes:? Normal and Crisis.? In normal, the going concern aspect gets valued more highly.? In crisis, the liquidation aspect gets valued more highly.

    Looking at this article, quant funds were precariously over-levered, and now are paying the price.? Goldman Sachs may understand that now, as its Global Alpha fund moves to a lower leverage posture.? This NYT article points out how fund strategy similarities helped exacerbate the crisis, as does this article in the Telegraph.

    We have continuing admissions of trouble.? AQR, and this summary from FT Alphaville.? Tighter credit is inhibiting deals, which is to be expected.? Some mutual fund managers are underperforming, including a few that I like, for example Wally Weitz, and Ron Muhlenkamp.? Problems from our residential real estate markets will get bigger, until the level of unsold inventories begins a credible decline.

    Is 1998 the right analogy for the markets?? FT Alphaville gets it right; the main difference is that the funding positions of the US and emerging Asia are swapped.? We need capital from the emerging markets now; in 1998, it was flipped. Is 1970 the right analogy?? I hope not.? ABCP in credit affected areas should be small enough that the overall commerical paper market should not be affected, and money markets should be okay.? But it troubles me to even wonder about this.? Finally, CDS counterparty risk — it is somewhat shadowy, so questions are unavoidable.? The question becomes how well the investment banks enforce their margin agreements.? My suspicion is that they will enforce them well, particularly in this environment.? But what that means (coming full circle) is that speculators on the wrong side of trades will get liquidated, adding to current market volatility.

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