Search Results for: problems compound interest

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

US Government Shutdown

 

  • To Lead Is to Negotiate http://t.co/AJTjPESgiI Elements of an interview w/James Baker describing Reagan the pragmatic dealmaker $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Pig Sales Fly Blind as Data Cut by Shutdown Hampers Firms http://t.co/MHHnn29XXH Guess what? That’s the way most markets operate $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Troops Forage for Food While Golfers Play On in Shutdown http://t.co/Y9HV5IpF3A “the appropriations process has completely failed” $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Obama Rewrites Debt-Limit History http://t.co/BIRNHLH7Pm D&R Congresses have used the borrowing limit as political leverage w/a president $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • US banks fearing default stock up on cash http://t.co/tYXMlQXcIe If money markets freeze, currency will be needed to mediate exchange $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Loose monetary policy needed to counter Washington gridlock: Fed officials http://t.co/AmJqqcMQPQ Fed enables intransigence of congress $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Republicans Are No Longer the Party of Business http://t.co/Vwa5U0pENS Case not proven; as if the Democrats think of any biz but big biz $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Frustrated Republicans Pressure Boehner to End Shutdown http://t.co/m6eSEtXQ5n Likely endgame: Democrats & liberal GOP ally in House $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • US Stocks Rise as Investors See Limited Shutdown Impact http://t.co/nB5WCCcsd4 Will they say the same thing today off neg mkt action? $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Behind the Noise, Entitlement Reform http://t.co/Ed2ug8HoCN This is the elephant in the room; the economic problem behind all the rest $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • More Than 800,000 Federal Workers Are Furloughed http://t.co/GP0XdAxugH Oddly, this helps point out what true priorities of the govt r $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • In Government Shutdown, Few Parallels With Most Recent One http://t.co/RmJ7X3iL0Q Maybe shutdown is an alternative mode of running govt? $$ Oct 01, 2013

?

Companies & Industries

?

  • Twitter Look-Alike Ticker Triggers 684% Advance in Penny Stock http://t.co/hLf2VRP6Hs Big difference btw Twitter $TWTR & Tweeter $TWTRQ $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Mars Repays $4.4B of Berkshire Bonds Tied to Wrigley Deal http://t.co/U5uSgTXBd8 Now Buffett has tough job of redeploying capital $$ #cash Oct 04, 2013
  • Twitter Sends Different Message Than Facebook in Filing http://t.co/azMDDPHVwz 32 pages of risk factors, no classified stock, refreshing $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Blackstone Opens Europe Spigot as Distressed Deals Surge http://t.co/yYQl2dwhzS As EU banks get reasonable, $BX sees opportunity 4 deals $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Alcoa on ?low risk financiers? and parallel metal markets http://t.co/ganjSH2aZg With low interest rates, cheaper to store metal $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Beanie Baby Creator Pleads Guilty to Swiss Bank Tax Dodge http://t.co/V8PrsbKEAO He’ll make up the $$ w/a line of Ty the Jailbird dolls Oct 03, 2013
  • We Are Googling the New York Times to Death http://t.co/OLJ0XsSCRA Use Google 2get free access to the $NYT – broken media revenue model $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • OGX Upheaval Portends Deeper Bond Loss for Pimco http://t.co/m9Do3MALyM BK is tough on creditors in Brazil; long process, low recoveries $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • How BlackBerry blew it:The inside story http://t.co/4K7Kw4Y5bL Long article as $BBRY focuses on core biz, misses threat from new entrants $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Schwarzman Says Selling BlackRock Was ?Heroic? Mistake http://t.co/G8ZKjxNOZ0 Missed out on 79%/yr returns compounded over 19 years! $$ $BLK Oct 01, 2013
  • BlackBerry Rare Breakup Fee Seen Deterring Bids http://t.co/uyo9Ra1zzA Watsa gets a free look, while others effectively locked out $$ $BBRY Oct 01, 2013
  • Why Anglo American Walked Away From Pebble Mine Gold Deposit http://t.co/QwqmjykuD9 Interesting, but only speculations on y $AAUKY left $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Commodities ?Super Cycle? Is Seen Enduring by McKinsey http://t.co/Jnj1XwZNKO Marginal costs keep rising as lower costs ores deplete $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Storage Wars Seize Metals Market http://t.co/WkX0fsOx3o Aiming 2end games that lock up metal in storage as collateral for loans, I think $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Falcone?s Funds Sell Harbinger Group Shares to Leucadia http://t.co/2l8dSyEPKP $HRG funds sell shares 2 $LUK @ a 20% discount 2 mkt price $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Of course $LUK has 2 hold onto the shares 4 a while, but still that’s a pretty stiff price 2 pay 4 liquidity $$ $HRG Oct 01, 2013

?

Finance, Pensions, Etc.

?

  • More Than 5,000 Stockbrokers From Expelled Firms Still Selling Securities http://t.co/E5lczvdLJP Don’t buy what someone wants 2 sell 2u $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • How to Look Under a Hedge Fund’s Hood http://t.co/oKy6ZQWo1q There’s more 2ask than this, but these 7 questions r a good start $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Hedge Funds Used Obscure Bond Bet to Win in GM Bankruptcy http://t.co/SaLKh7sg9Q They did hard work with their brains, & won $$ #distressed Oct 04, 2013
  • 8 Incredible Shares On StockTwits About Hedge Fund Market Wizard Ray Dalio http://t.co/tjQ9ecAF1A I added two more resources $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Time to Ditch the Yale Endowment Model?http://t.co/aYWfleXE7R Similar to an article I wrote 4 years ago http://t.co/2ox3Zzdaac $$ @M_C_Klein Oct 04, 2013
  • S&P 500 Pension Status Continues to Improve in September http://t.co/tyL1fqCivB Rising prices for risky assets & more contributions help $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Peak-population investing http://t.co/0I5s49iBBC Demographics affect inflation – goods inflation w/many young asset inflation w/many old $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • 10 Terms Investment Pros Use to Raise Money @Reformedbroker http://t.co/cHivwK8uvh Points @ 10 buzzwords w/fuzzy meanings & little truth $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Option-Selling Is Not Income http://t.co/zdiP91nKsK Well written,& it needs 2b said. Option “income” vs capital losses & opportunity costs $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Eric Schneiderman, Wall Street Time-Machine Sheriff http://t.co/trSBh80ObO Dig deep enough in2 any multiparty trnsctn & u will find dirt $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • In multiparty transactions, u have 2b careful. Who has more info than u? How r incentives aligned? Y r u lucky one invited 2play w/them? $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Student-Loan Straitjacket http://t.co/1keTvDykpV They should look at income-based repayment plans; in many cases they would pay far less $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Fab Tourre Wants Another Chance to Explain http://t.co/X4H8b70hVi Did Tourre withhold mind-chging information deal players were entitled2 $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Inter-dealer brokers? inside information @FelixSalmon http://t.co/cCcVMM3foF What is fraud vs making/arbing a mkt? http://t.co/6aKN6t0Abw $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Top 20 Films about Finance: From Crisis to Con Men http://t.co/nDv0Rz4P4P I added on the film “The Billion Dollar Bubble” Equity Funding $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Gibraltar Seen as Europe-Beater for Finance Professionals http://t.co/YzHgQRv82A Perhaps more money per hectare than any other place $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Commodity Trader Didn’t Really Believe in Market Prices http://t.co/qVEC4lQB8u Citi mismarked illiquid exchange-traded ethanol contracts $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • This Sociological Theory Explains Why Wall Street Is Rigged 4 Crisis http://t.co/ff6NWs1GOO Technological efficient w/odd feedback loops $$ Oct 01, 2013

?

PPACA / Obamacare

 

  • Overwhelming Demand 4 Obamacare Shows Potential Success http://t.co/4i3Kb6P8SN Success?? Show you what happened 2me http://t.co/vlrqUxFXzr Oct 04, 2013
  • How ObamaCare Wrecks the Work Ethic http://t.co/3U2z8PKPwR Saw this a month ago, subsidies raise marginal tax rates 4 lower middle class $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • The Republicans Fighting Obamacare Aren?t Crazy http://t.co/A61poB4ArU PPACA *can* b repealed, but would take a GOP swing in 2016 2do it $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Why must the American people suffer when even so many Democrats don’t want Obamacare? http://t.co/uJfncEetS7 Congress exempts itself $$ Sep 28, 2013

 

Civil Liberties in Cyberspace

 

  • NSA chief admits misleading numbers, adds to Obama administration blunders http://t.co/wsS2qrIW74 Politicians overstate metadata value $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • NSA Involvement in NIST Encryption Standards Could Make Companies Less Competitive http://t.co/RzRVSYVtiv Does NSA demand backdoors? $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • On NSA’s encryption defeating efforts: Trust no 1 http://t.co/afq1Fjngzv Big companies r in cahoots w/NSA, can’t b trusted, r lying 2us $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • NSA Gathers Data on Social Connections of U.S. Citizens http://t.co/oVIYLWdHFi The NSA endangers our civil liberties; we need to end it $$ Sep 30, 2013

 

Monetary Policy

?

  • Will Unconventional Monetary Policy Be the New Normal? http://t.co/nN00ta4UIM Fed is hopeless; they don’t get they r inflating assets $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Aluminum Prices: Blame It on the Fed http://t.co/kgjOTbNeqd Low interest rates lead to loans collateralized by aluminum $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Don?t Cry for Me, Ben Bernanke http://t.co/unN01G8N8K Developing Countries should get ready for the eventual Fed tightening, if they can $$ Oct 01, 2013

?

Banking

 

  • The Bailout That Never Came http://t.co/cROhzGqjYB Bailout for homeowners was half-hearted at best; 4 banks it was a warm friendly hug $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Banks abandon mortgage preapprovals http://t.co/ro6NE8T5Yb Makes the purchases of homes more complex b/c likelihood of financing down $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Are Banks Forward-Looking in Their Loan Loss Provisioning? http://t.co/1V6ytChwB2 I would be more inclined to think it is a “cookie jar” $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • The JP Morgan apologists of CNBC http://t.co/HJgOH3NGvT Media often panders 2 power or they lose access to the powerful people $$ Oct 01, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Duke to NYU Missteps Abroad Lead Colleges to Reassess Expansion http://t.co/1ZoHGD2CeP Have 2 make sure of a good cultural fit first $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Freak Grape-Razing Hail Crushes Burgundy Winemakers? Dreams http://t.co/rxSiKaRpvl 2years of hailstorms destroy the prospects of vintners $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Migrant Ship Sinks Off Italian Island, Killing Dozens http://t.co/KCYgVt0Bx8 Europe is Elysium 4 these migrants; US is the same 4 others $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • NFL Free-Agent Lawyer to Unlock $16B in NCAA Athletes http://t.co/nfitchpsSt Free student labor may disappear; may hit big programs hard $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Moon walker demo lets wannabe astronauts feel 0.17G http://t.co/BsenBrl8ck Cool. Could b used 4physical therapy after severe leg injuries $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Educators in the art of life must have chance of their own http://t.co/HxiCZUOyP3 Certain college depts survive on low paid p/t academics $$ Oct 02, 2013
  • Worried About Cancer? Get Married http://t.co/PQFp8Q67SD A man & a woman who get & stay married tend to take care of each other $$ #healthy Oct 01, 2013
  • Gangnam-Style Nip and Tuck Draws Tourists to Seoul?s Beauty Belt http://t.co/2nC182RWtV Plastic surgery becomes a tourist draw 2 Seoul $$ Oct 01, 2013

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • Small town, big impact: Supreme Court case could define religion’s role in public http://t.co/oD09WqaOaT Govt Ceremonial deism may end $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • Who Do You Believe: The White House and Wall Street ? or the American People? http://t.co/ZIRZDU1i5p Economic Confidence continues 2drop $$ Oct 03, 2013
  • Bankrupt Stockton Plan Favors Retirees Over Creditors http://t.co/yZ80M5s5lz Will b difficult 2get thru BK city, unless emplyee benes cut $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • ‘Strings Attached’ Co-Author Offers Solutions for Education http://t.co/BMF9zPqMU6 I learned the most from teachers that were hard on me $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Panel Finds Planes Can Handle Use of Electronic Devices http://t.co/hCnZNFfR98 At last, the bad science crumbles & freedom increases $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • The most predictable economic crisis? http://t.co/XAqVj9QZ9S Implicitly, entitlement reform lies behind almost all our problems in DC $$ Oct 01, 2013
  • Why I Am Cancelling My Documentary on Hillary Clinton http://t.co/oKxLjUwRDZ No openness from the Clintons dooms a documentary from CNN $$ Oct 01, 2013

 

 

Replies, Retweets & Comments

 

  • 2 all who follow me on Twitter, my account was hacked, & someone sent out a bunch of spam tweets & DMs that I would never send. My apologies Oct 01, 2013

 

  • @kltblom when the amount of range for premium variation is only three, it is not a workable system. Anti-selection will occur. Oct 05, 2013
  • @M_C_Klein I started out as an Asset-Liability Management actuary, and I have traded in illiquid securities, makes me think differently Oct 05, 2013
  • @kltblom Removed deduction for employer-paid healthcare. Encouraged HSAs, and try to move to predominantly first-party payer model Oct 05, 2013
  • @TheUncorrelated I willprobably write an article on this next week. Will sound like the one I cited b4 & like: http://t.co/Y8CA0LX9Qi Oct 05, 2013
  • @kltblom I’m an actuary; since the PPACA was proposed, the health actuaries I have talked with have said tht PPACA won’t work Oct 04, 2013
  • ‘ @JonathanWeil Say run rate EBITDA for 2013 is $50M. If Market Cap of $TWTR is $12B, that is an astounding EV/EBITDA of 240 $$ #nosebleed Oct 04, 2013
  • @_DM0_ I can confirm that, they have taken down the slides. Pity, quickest way to absorb the material Oct 04, 2013
  • @Kitsune808 It is not infrequent that @BloombergNews Headlines are misleading, or quirky. They march to the beat of a different drummer Oct 04, 2013
  • @PlanMaestro I know, but given attention to the video, I thought I would show the PDF that better fleshes out his position. and the slides Oct 04, 2013
  • Thanks @onlineawards @TightTalk @valuetakes for being top new followers in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Oct 04, 2013
  • “”Spain?s public debt in 2014 is expected to be the equivalent of 98.9 percent of total economic?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/HPR50Rjijp $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • “Two more: 9) And for those that want to read Ray Dalio’s economic template book, it is free here:” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/QLWdRs1odG $$ Oct 04, 2013
  • @ToddSullivan A computer could do it anywhere by minimizing the distance of internal boundaries subject to equal popoulations. Not hard. Oct 04, 2013
  • @ToddSullivan We need structural reform 2 end that given gerrymandered districts. A lot of people want change, but districts not competitive Oct 04, 2013
  • @kltblom If PPACA were mere risk pooling, I might agree. It is a messy ugly law that ignores basic actuarial principles & will not work well Oct 04, 2013
  • @volatilitysmile They give us different pieces of the puzzle (insight by http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Oct 04, 2013
  • #FollowFriday Thanks @ReformedBroker @pelias01 @researchpuzzler for being top influencers in my community this week 🙂 Oct 04, 2013
  • @ReformedBroker The Baby Boomers gray, and money socked away, let finance guys play, make dough every day. Thus so many wealthy $$ managers. Oct 04, 2013
  • Thanks @ToddSullivan @ReformedBroker for being top engaged members in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Oct 03, 2013
  • Thanks @TightTalk @BabyFreshNuggz @X9T_Trading for being top new followers in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Oct 01, 2013
  • Thanks @moneyscience @TopInvestBlogs for being top engaged members in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Sep 30, 2013
  • @RexHuppke You are a real man, unlike many today. You may be stupid, but at least you are taking action, rather than compromising w/losers Sep 28, 2013
At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 5

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 5

I left one small question for last; I gave a partial answer to this one at the conference.? I think I was the only one that said much on it.? Here it is:

Where does academic theory fail in finance and in economics?

Little questions, big answers.? How do you eat an elephant?? One bite at a time.? Let’s start with math in economics:

1) We have to reduce the complex math in economics — I think we are trying to apply math where it is not valid.? As such, the true strength of ability to explain what is going on decreases, while economic becomes an odd “inside game” for a funny group of mathematicians trying to make sense of an idealized world that bears little resemblance to our own world.

2) The next piece is on maximizing utility or profits.? Maximizing takes work, assuming one can even do it.? Work is a negative, so people conserve on that.? Most of us know this: we look for a solution that is “good enough,” and do it.? That means we don’t maximize utility, and the pretty equations don’t represent reality.

What’s worse is that men care more about relative results than absolute results.? We would rather be kings over an impoverished realm rather than middle class in a wealthy country.? We are worse than greedy; we are envious.

It’s even worse for firms.? There you have agency problems where the management often has its own goals that do not maximize profits, or their net present value, but maximize the benefits they receive.? Boards are frequently a cover for management, rather than advocates for the shareholders.

Regardless, since firms don’t maximize, the elegant math does not work. Putting it simply, if you want to understand economics better, don’t listen to economists — become a businessman.? An ordinary businessman knows more about how the world works than a neoclassical economist.

3) One of the beauties of a capitalist economy is its dynamism.? It adapts to changing needs and desires.? The variation is considerable; as an example, go through your supermarket and try to count the total number of different tomato products.? Or? look at the amazing degree of variety in a major tools catalog.? Or go to Costco, Walmart, Home Depot, Ikea, and look at the incredible variety that exists under one roof.

But that level of variety cannot be mathematically accommodated by economics.? They have to aggregate the complexity into categories, and a lot of the reality is lost in the process.? That is why I distrust? many economic aggregates, such as inflation, GDP, etc.? Politicians find “economists” to suit their political ends, and they come up with complex reasoning for why measured inflation is higher than it should be, inequality is rising, etc.? You can find an economic advocate for almost anything.

Macroeconomics

4) Because of the aggregation problem, the link between microeconomics and macroeconomics is made weak, especially since utility cannot be compared across any two people, and yet the economists mumble, and implicitly do it anyway.

5) At least with microeconomics, we can agree that demand falls as prices rise, and supply rises as prices rise.? But with macroeconomics, there is little agreement as to whether a given policy aids real growth or not.? Modern neoclassical economics is to me a bunch of sorcerer’s apprentices playing around with very large and crude tools that they think can affect the economy, only to find the results are not what they expect.? Somewhere, economists got the naive idea that they could eliminate the boom-bust cycle, only to find that by eliminating minor busts, they set up the conditions for growth in indebtedness, leading to a huge bust.? Far better to be McChesney Martin, or Volcker, who let recessions do their work, than slaves of the government who did not — Burns, Miller, Greenspan or Bernanke.

Take inflation as an example.? Does printing more money, or creating more credit boost asset prices, product & services prices, both, or neither?? The answer to this is not clear.? The Fed has taken many actions over the past 30 years, using a model that assumes tight relationships between short interest rates and inflation/ labor unemployment.? The evidence for these relationships are not evident, except at the extremes.

6) The idea that running deficits to “stimulate” the economy is questionable.? Debts have to be paid back, repudiated or inflated away, any one of which would make business and consumers less confident.? Further, the way the the money is spent makes a great deal of difference.? Much government spending inhibits or does not help economic growth; think of the complexity of the tax code — a recipe for wasted time, and unneeded social enginerring.? Some government spending does aid economic growth, where it lowers the costs of consumption or production — critical infrastructure projects, etc.? But those are rare.? If it were really needed, lower level governments or private industry would do it.

The thing is, most of the deficit spending has not been useful; there’s no economic reason to run such large deficits.? If we were rebuilding all of our aging infrastructure, that would be one thing, but the crazy quilt of tax breaks and subsidies affects behavior, but does not compound and aid growth.

7) We need to admit that culture is not a neutral matter.? Some cultures will have faster economic growth, and others will be slower.? There is no universal culture, no generic economic man.? Some cultures are more enterprising than others.? That has a big impact on growth quite apart from resources, population, education, etc.

8 ) Whether the money is tied to gold or fiat, banking must be tightly regulated.? Solvency of all financial institutions should be tightly regulated.? With financials risks arise when the is too much leverage, and too much leverage that is layered.? Things should be structured such that there is no possibility of dominoes knocking over other dominoes.

  • Limit leverage
  • Increase liquidity of assets vs liabilities
  • Forbid lending to/investing in other financials
  • Derivatives should be regulated as insurance, insurable interest must exist, which means that bona fide hedgers must initiate all transactions.

On Finance

9) The first thing to realize is that a mean-variance model for investments is loopy.? First, we can’t estimate the mean or the variance, much less the covariance terms.? There is also good evidence that variances are infinite, or close to it.? Thus the concept of an efficient frontier is bogus.? Far better to try to estimate crudely the likely forward returns on a cash flow basis, the way a businessman would, and weakly factor in the uncertainty of the forecasts.

10) Thus, beta is not risk, and volatility is not risk.? At least at present, until the low volatility funds get too big, there seems to be an anomaly where low volatility equity investing beats high volatility equity investing.? This is consistent with my theory that the relationship of risk and return is non-linear.? Taking no risk brings no return; taking moderate risk brings decent return; taking high risks brings low returns.? There is a sweet spot of prudent risk-taking that brings the best returns on average.

11) Multiple-player game theory indicates that to win, you assemble a coalition with more than 50% of all of the power, and you get disproportionate benefits.? Think about the poor buyer of a home in 2006, going into the closing with the deck staked against him.? Or think about forced arbitration of disputes on Wall Street, where the investors rarely win.

Complexity is not the friend of most ordinary economic actors.? Avoid it where you can.

12) Capital structure does matter; it is not irrelevant like Modigliani and Miller said.? Companies with low leverage tend to return more than companies with high leverage.? There are real costs to being in distress or near distress.

13) Markets can have non-linear feedback loops, like in October 1987, or the “Flash Crash.”? Markets are not inherently stable, and that is a good thing.? Instability shakes out weak players that are relying on a shaky funding base, leaving behind stronger players who understand risk.? It is not wise to try to eliminate the possibility of disasters occurring.? When you do that, pressures build up, and something worse occurs.? Better to let the market be free, and let stupid speculators get burned, so long as they aren’t regulated financial companies.

Ethics matters

14) Economics would be more valuable if it focused what is right, rather than what is “efficient.”? I know there will be differences of opinion here, but a discipline that focused on explicit and implicit fraud could be far more valuable than men who don’t have good models for:

  • Inflation
  • Asset Allocation
  • GDP
  • Unemployment
  • and more

Imagine applying all of that intelligence to fair dealing in economic relationships, rather than vainly trying to stimulate the economy, and accomplishing nothing good.? It would be like the CFA Institute applied to the economy as a whole.

Two Insurance Questions

Two Insurance Questions

First question:

Good afternoon.? I’m an avid reader of your blog and want to thank you for the work that you’ve done. I’m reading through the 10-Ks of insurers to try and educate myself and wanted to see if you can provide some advice.? I’m trying to find a guide/book that can help me understand the mechanics of the loss reserve developments show as an adjustment to each “vintage” year.? For example, I’m trying to understand if these are rolling reserves or if they are standalone on an annual basis.? I’m also trying to understand how changes in reserves flow through the income statement.? If you have a book that you can point me to, I’d really appreciate it.? Thanks for your help and have a nice weekend.

First, to any casualty actuaries reading me, if I get this wrong please correct me.? I am a life actuary by training, though I’ve tried to learn your discipline in broad from outside.

There are two main exhibits for P&C reserving in 10Ks — there are the loss triangles that go by accident year (i.e. the year in which the claim is incurred, rather than paid).? But the triangles show what has been paid, and how the incurred estimate changes over time.? With this, you can see how estimates of losses have proven liberal or conservative over time.

The second main exhibit breaks down reserve setting? for the current year.? It breaks into two main parts:

  • What reserves have you set for the business written in the current year?
  • How have you changed your estimate of losses incurred for prior years?

My article last night dealt with the latter of those questions.? What this implies is that good companies are very conservative in setting reserves for the current year, and lets the excess of those reserves release over time.? This may not juice stock performance in the short run, but in the long-run, it will lead to good results, because there will be few negative surprises from reserving.

Here’s the second question:

I?ve been intrigued by the recent reader questions, specifically the last couple questions on insurance stocks (RGA, AIZ and others). It sparked a mini research project this weekend for me and I read through a bunch of your old posts, along with some of the company reports and conference call transcripts. I don?t have in depth knowledge of the insurance industry?. I like the business model and understand the basic business, but am not yet well versed with reading and deciphering balance sheet items and insurance industry specific metrics-although I?m getting there

My question is very general in nature. As a value investor, each month I go through 6 or 7 different screens (basic value metrics like P/E, P/B, P/FCF, etc?). I know you?ve said that insurance stocks tend to follow their book value over time, but can trade in ranges from 0.5 to 2.0 times book? and I?ve read through your thoughts on adjusting book value for intangible items and AOCI. But my question is basically: ?Why is the market pricing so many insurance stocks so far below book value?? I know that the near term outlook for interest rates is that they?ll stay low, and I know the near term outlook for the industry isn?t great, but it seems like the market is pricing these stocks for poor results for years.

I know you can?t answer this question specifically, but I just wanted to hear your expertise on why you think these stocks are so far below their book value. I subscribe to Value Line and was reading the latest section on Life Insurers (section 8 from last month)? Value Line covers 10 or 12 of these stocks- RGA, LNC, MET, AFL, PRU, AIZ among others? and all of them seem to be priced at very low prices to earnings and/or book value. In the stock you like, National Western Life Insurance (NWLI), as I?m sure you know-it?s priced at .44 x book, and 6x forward earnings. Almost all of the stocks I looked at in Value line are single digit current P/E ratios as well.

The other thing I?ve noticed as I looked at the 10 year financial histories of these stocks is this: most of them are successfully growing their businesses (premium income seems to be steadily rising each year with most of them), and most of them are growing their book values. Some had the bad year in 2008, but many of them seem to be growing their book values at 10-15% per year consistently for the past decade.

So you have stocks that are selling at very low P/E ratios, very low P/B ratios (and low relative to their own historical valuations in both those categories), AND they are growing their book values (most of them at least).

I guess I?m just looking for some help as to what I could be missing? What does the market see that warrants these valuations?

Insurance is a mature industry.? It’s not a sexy industry.? Further, the accounting in insurance is complex, and few outside the industry understand it.? I have a huge book explaining the nuances of GAAP accounting for life insurers… it is complex.

Now there are some reserving issues with life insurers.? With secondary guarantees, there is little way to tell that reserving is adequate with Variable Products, or Universal Life with no lapse guarantees.

As such, I avoid the companies that are heavy with these products.? Part of the discount there is the distrust of the accounting, but the taint spreads to the industry as a whole,? and as such, the whole life insurance industry trades at a discount.? Some more so, some less.

That said, well-run insurance companies pay great dividends and compound book value at high rates.? Aside from NWLI, I don’t own any pure play life insurers,? Yes, I own SFG, but it is mostly a disability insurer.? AIZ offers funeral insurance, but it is #1 there, with weak competition.? I own RGA. a life reinsurer, but the issues are very different.

There are concerns in life insurance about crediting rate guarantees that can’t be met.? I don’t own any companies with that problem; that is a real problem.

I’m happy to own the insurers without accounting problems, which have low P/B & P/E ratios.? In the long run, their ability to compound returns will benefit any portfolio — it is only a question as to when serious and large investors realize this.? I am willing to wait for this.

Full disclosure: long NWLI SFG AIZ RGA AFL

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Market Dynamics

 

  • Go Your Own Way: Correlation Breakdown in the Market http://t.co/3Zwpx3kB @japhychron hints at deterioration in US stocks as USD strengthens May 26, 2012
  • RE: To me it implies that conservative HY investors are running out of places to put money.? Yellow flag. http://t.co/eUSRq8dY May 25, 2012
  • Vanguard Closes High-Yield Fund ? ETF Alternatives http://t.co/bMmYUMTC Note: ETFs proposed take more credit risk than Vanguard fund does $$ May 24, 2012
  • Vanguard’s high yield fund was fairly conservative; they may feel strain in the size of their positions relative to t? http://t.co/lLJFeiYc May 24, 2012
  • RE: They were called the Americus Trusts, sponsored by the Americus Shareowner Service Corp., and they had Scores and? http://t.co/TPNPkL8T May 23, 2012
  • Wealthy Americans Turn to Trusts to Shield Assets http://t.co/2rKGuNWb Reasons: taxes, liability, avoid probate. Covetous world $$ May 23, 2012
  • You can say that again, momentum is addictive $$ RT @credittrader: lol – never learn – especially when momentum feels so good haha May 23, 2012
  • @credittrader I’m well. Fascinating that $JPM didn’t learn from the correlation crisis in 2005; tranche px/corr relationships shift $$ May 23, 2012
  • IG CDX diverges from S&P500; JPMorgan advocates mean reversion trade http://t.co/FIsOqhBN Long IG spreads vs HY spreads and equities $$ May 23, 2012
  • Kroll Sees Supplanting S&P in Rating Commercial Mortgage Bonds http://t.co/IrzfQ6cH Gratuitous trash talk on competitor S&P from Kroll $$ May 22, 2012
  • Treasuries in Longest Winning Streak Since ?98 on Europe http://t.co/EWJkiN5u Everyone knows that Treasury yields can only fall, right? $$ May 20, 2012

 

Eurozone

 

  • Merkel May Be Persuaded on Euro Debt-Sharing Compromise http://t.co/P3yQaN1K H/L misrepresents Merkel; does not seem likely politically May 25, 2012
  • Indeed, why not? RT @TimABRussell: ?http://t.co/831diM1O Why not just pick the best person for each position regardless of sex, race, etc? May 25, 2012
  • If a man will not respect his “wife” by marrying & staying with her, why should you expect him to respect women in mo? http://t.co/83lvXtu1 May 25, 2012
  • Stock Market Performance Versus Dollar http://t.co/mfrXyqvp Difficult for the US stock market to do well when the $$ is strengthening v Euro May 25, 2012
  • Slim Family Sees European Crisis as Good Time to Invest http://t.co/XZOgx3xX Buy when there is blood running in the streets $$ #slimchance May 25, 2012
  • Europe Girds for Greek Exit http://t.co/HMfsVt86 Two problems: Can’t kick Greece out & Greece can only leave Eurozone by leaving EU $$ May 24, 2012
  • Euro-Zone Economic Contraction Deepens http://t.co/b49VctDj Overindebted Eurozone muddles as politics/bureaucracy strangle growth $$ May 24, 2012
  • EU Chiefs Clash on Euro Bonds as Crisis Summit Bogs Down http://t.co/S1YnHrbM Fiscal Union requires political union; elephant in room $$ May 24, 2012
  • The Seeds of the EU?s Crisis Were Sown 60 Years Ago http://t.co/SsWQUvGa Overly ambitious EU goal of “ever closer union” leads 2 crisis $$ May 24, 2012
  • War-Gaming Greek Euro Exit Shows Hazards in 46-Hour Weekend http://t.co/WD7HSbMI Assumes Greek competence & they care about global mkts $$ May 23, 2012
  • A Greek Exit Could Make the Euro Area Stronger http://t.co/C7v2mDmM Concludes that a Greek exit would lead the rest 2 pull together $$ May 23, 2012
  • Campaign for Joint Euro Bonds Builds http://t.co/xXAvSU73 Will the core Eurozone countries give up resources to bail out the fringe? $$ May 23, 2012
  • Europe?s Prisoner?s Dilemma ? LTRO Needs to Continue for Years http://t.co/NldAsVL2 Until govt debt is gone from finl sector?s bal sht $$ May 23, 2012
  • Germany to Sell Interest-Free Bonds http://t.co/q7ewNqd2 It is good to be king. People give you their money, & they pay for the honor $$ May 22, 2012

 

US Politics / Economics

 

  • Even with a High Court win, Obamacare won’t work http://t.co/NKhyAe56 Failed ideas @ the states will not add up to a successful Federal plan May 26, 2012
  • USDA Is a Tough Collector When Mortgages Go Bad http://t.co/ZX24InYJ Definitely has different goals than most of the govt re mortgages May 26, 2012
  • Report: Negative Equity More Widespread Than Previously Thought http://t.co/UkQBpbGY Adds in value of second liens, 31%+ inverted $$ May 24, 2012
  • Let Mr. Reid look to his own spending extremism.? As for me, let the tax cuts expire, and automatic cuts happen.? Bet? http://t.co/cabthITQ May 22, 2012
  • Shale Glut Means $1-a-Gallon Savings at the Pump http://t.co/RHlFbT3L Liquefied Natgas would shave $1/gal over diesel for trucking $$ May 22, 2012

 

China

 

  • New Signs of Global Slowdown http://t.co/2o4kFRkD Weak Reports in U.S., Europe and China Suggest Economies Are Slipping in Sync $$ May 26, 2012
  • @researchpuzzler Pettis is among the best on China. @ritholtz and John Mauldin are good friends. Trends in China r very negative… $$ May 25, 2012
  • EM investing: check out the grid http://t.co/dIEGJeJC 3Qs How much electricity do they have? Future development? Probability of success? May 24, 2012
  • China flash PMIs point to contraction, again http://t.co/DZGf3ZZS The number for May is 48.7, compared to 49.3 in April. 7th decline. $$ May 24, 2012
  • China, North Korea ties hit rough weather http://t.co/r7TlDbux Kim Jong Un needs lessons showing honor2the Suzerain: Chinese Communist Party May 24, 2012
  • RE: @SoberLook I’ve heard that Chinese electricity consumption has flatlined.? Another straw in the wind. http://t.co/IqAHJCgo May 21, 2012

 

Companies

 

  • Facebook Investor Spending Month?s Salary Exposes Hype http://t.co/eGhCiHXq Please. Stox r risky. High expectation stox r veryrisky $$ $FB May 24, 2012
  • General Mills Unveils Restructuring, Job Cuts http://t.co/IUHltbai $GIS Budget-conscious US consumers push back against price increases May 23, 2012
  • Benihana Agrees to $296 Million Buyout http://t.co/YxJtfun3 Agreed 2b acquired by investment firm Angelo Gordon & Co. for about $296M $$ May 23, 2012
  • The Miracle on Wellington Street http://t.co/DUbSY81d Fairfax Financial Holdings’ tricky transaction for 6.6% of Odyssey Re -> legal trouble May 21, 2012
  • Barclays to Sell Entire $6.1 Billion BlackRock Investment http://t.co/notUgeFk Basel III rules make it uneconomic to hold as capital $$ May 21, 2012
  • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Files for Bankruptcy http://t.co/heUuF3gj Bank debt -> New Equity, old Equity -> warrants for 5% $$ May 21, 2012

 

Financial Sector

 

  • JPMorgan Gave Risk Oversight to Museum Head Who Sat on AIG Board http://t.co/INr9ebI5 No banking experts on $JPM ‘s risk ctrl committee May 25, 2012
  • Goldman to JPMorgan Swap Trades Soar on Risks http://t.co/fvSPysAp A cheap-ish option on systemic risk rising. And not in the eurozone! $$ May 25, 2012
  • JPMorgan Copper ETF Plan Seen Creating Havoc by Merchant Groups http://t.co/zoJ0BfeM They oppose retail hoarding b/c it hurts them $$ May 24, 2012

 

Advice Regarding Life

 

  • I Wish I Had Known: Don?t Underestimate Compounding In EVERYTHING http://t.co/mIdFf5Dx People overrate their ability to change habits $$ May 26, 2012
  • Compound Experience, Not Just Interest http://t.co/n6CaWLN0 Early behavior influences later behavior, and the options that will be open 2u May 26, 2012

 

Berkshire Hathaway

 

  • Buffett Says Free News Unsustainable, May Add More Papers http://t.co/medRWMWm Strategy: Buy papers, end free distribution on Internet $$ May 25, 2012
  • Buffett?s Idiot Challenge Seized by Jain in Premium Hunt http://t.co/89qcKilo Misses how Jain blew it reinsuring life & LTC from Swiss Re May 23, 2012
  • Don’t get me wrong, Ajit Jain knows more about insurance than me; I’m saying he is not perfect; he does not know all insurance equally $$ May 23, 2012

 

High Frequency Trading

 

  • +1 That would work too RT @merrillmatter: @AlephBlog how about for all orders, one second minimum life May 24, 2012
  • Mutual Funds Promised Haven From Speedsters http://t.co/iCFFZXsU I proposed this HFT solution @ BaltimoreCFA 2 1 of those interviewed $$ May 24, 2012

 

Miscellaneous

 

  • The sex slavery stuff makes me sad/angry. I have daughters. $$ RT @moiracathleen: Brothels on Wheels http://t.co/COBuwJbS @leafjohnson May 25, 2012
  • How a bizarre legal case involving a mysterious billionaire could force 1.2M Canadians 2b married, against their will http://t.co/zv7QJBCz May 24, 2012
  • Veterans Face Ruin Awaiting Benefits as Wounded Swamp VA http://t.co/W0Ydcu3x Long sad tale: wounded vets not getting enuf disability pay May 24, 2012
  • Gold Boom Spreading Mercury as 15 Mln Miners Exposed http://t.co/f7oBSo26 Long fascinating article about mercury poisoning in Colombia $$ May 24, 2012
  • Rust-Belt Babushkas Live Alone as Fewer Remain to Marry http://t.co/ASbsIAMg % of US single person households up ~250% since 1940, 8%->27% May 23, 2012
  • Private Spacecraft Lifts Off Toward Space Station http://t.co/JlGRR2m0 The sustainable space age has begun, w/private $$ flying rockets May 23, 2012
  • Fitch Downgrades Japan http://t.co/rITu0126 Blasts the govt 4 taking a “leisurely” approach2solving country’s spiraling debt problems $$ May 23, 2012
  • Is the College Cave Age About to End? http://t.co/ispDBLTX Thinner slices of “deeper” knowledge produce less relevant research & teaching May 21, 2012
  • Getting America on a Diet That Works http://t.co/vooh1iNN What’s funny2me is how little agreement there is today on what works in diets $$ May 21, 2012
  • +1 Fatal Risk RT @ToddSullivan: AMAZING book…one of my favorites RT @alephblog: Please follow my friend @BoydRoddy, who is new to Twitter May 21, 2012
  • Please follow my friend @BoydRoddy, who is new to Twitter. $$ May 21, 2012
  • Read my review: ‘The Alpha Masters: Unlocking the Genius of the World’s Top Hedge Funds’ by Maneet Ahuja via @alephblog http://t.co/kJf89aVT May 21, 2012
The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 12

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 12

This portion goes from November 2009 to January 2010.

Yes, I was one of the eight bloggers that made it to the first meeting with the US Treasury:

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 1

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 2

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 3

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 4

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 5

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 6

My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 7 (Final) (if you have to read only one of these, read this one)

How to Regulate the Banks, and other Financials

It comes down to diversification, leverage, and liquidity.

Notes from Recent Travels

Commentary on the health care bill, and also the AIG Bailout, and the Fed’s reprehensible actions.

Problems with Constant Compound Interest (4) (and more)

Retells my story interacting with the Federal Reserve bank of Richmond, and makes the application to commodity investing.

Post 1100 ? On Thanksgiving

Points out where we need to be thankful.? Even amid crisis, we have many things going well.

The Right Reform for the Fed

Criticizes a lame editorial that Ben Bernanke wrote in the Wall Street Journal.

On Sovereign and Quasi-Sovereign Risks

Talks about the relative riskiness of foreign debts, and the value of being able to tax.

Where the Rubber Meets the Road at Home

Explains how I teach my children about economics and other matters.

Uncharted Waters

Laments the low return on equity culture the US Government creates by trying to keep interest rates low.? (Sound familiar?)

My TIPS, Treasuries, and Inflation Model

An amazing model that describes the forward inflation and real yield curves.

On Contrarianism

“With markets, it doesn?t matter what people say.? What matters is what they rely upon.”

Not so Cheap Trills

One of a number of pieces that I wrote to fight the concept of trills, a form of debt more dangerous than any other I have seen

One Dozen or so Books on Economics

Many clever books on economics that major on history, and minor on theory.

Yield = Poison (2)

The perils of reaching for yield.

Fat Fed Profits Do Not Create a Healthy Economy

Large Seniorage profits for the Fed are not a positive for the economy as a whole.

R Bonds R Bad 4 U

A veiled attempt to raid pension assets to fund the US Government by those aligned with the Obama Administration.

Rationality versus Time Horizons

To come back to the beginning of this article, the fetish of rationality exists in economics because the math doesn?t work without it.? Many tests of rationality have failed, yet the profession does not give up, because their skills are useless if man is not economically rational.

Cram and Jam

There are many distortions of accounting data, and this gives you two of them.

Double Down Institutional Investing

Deals with the asset-liability mismatch in much of endowment investing.

Fear the Boom and Bust ? an Economics Lesson

My commentary on the Keynes vs Hayek videos up to that point.

In Defense of Home Bias

It is very rational to invest closer to home and this article explains why.

The Forever Fund

One of my best pieces ever, where I defend Buffett’s purchase of Burlington Northern, because it is irreplaceable.? This helps to explain how Buffett manages for the very long term, and does well at it.

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 10

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 10

This era encompasses May through July 2009, as the market rallied.? As usual, I sold too soon, and did not benefit from the continuing rally.

Farewell to John Davidson

This is my only short story at my blog, about an honest insurance executive in the credit crisis.? I know many insurance executives like his adversary, but few like him.

Choose Two: Principal Protection, Liquidity, and Above-Market Returns

The main idea is simple: you can get two out of three at best.

The Zero Short

Shorting is a tactical discipline and not a structural discipline.? Don’t try to short stock to zero, or near it.

The First Priority of Risk Control

Can you assure liquidity under all reasonable possible futures, and a few unreasonable futures?

?Just Gimme the Answer, Will Ya??

Do you want to understand the situation fully, or do you want a soundbite answer to your question?

Problems with Constant Compound Interest

Problems with Constant Compound Interest (2)

Problems with Constant Compound Interest (3)

No tree grows to the sky.? Nothing can grow at above average growth rates forever.

Do you Want to be Proud, or do you Want to Make Money?

Humility is a core asset for investment managers.

Loss Severity Leverage

Structured securities have a higher probability of “losing it all.”? Also, the medium-sized insurer mentioned did not go insolvent, but did have to get a cash infusion from some other insurers that had joined with them into a greater entity.

Fruits and Vegetables Versus Assets in Demand (2)

Fresh produce is what it is, a perishable commodity, where quantity and quality are positively correlated, and pricing is negatively correlated.? Financial assets don?t perish rapidly, quantity and quality are negatively correlated, and pricing is often positively correlated to the quantity of assets issued, since the demand for assets varies more than the supply.? Whereas, with fresh produce, the supply varies more than the demand.

The Benefits of Dumb Regulation

In short, why regulators have to have some spine, and just say no to fancy ideas.? Implied in this is that state regulation of insurance, dumb as it is, is more effective than Federal regulation of banks.

It Takes Two to Tango

Why simple explanations of market phenomena are frequently wrong.

Sorry, Doctor Shiller, not Everything can be Hedged

“The concept that everything can be hedged assumes deep markets everywhere, which is not the case.”

Toward a New Concept of Asset Allocation

An attempt to flesh out what a better concept on asset allocation would look like.

To Control Bubbles, the Fed Must First Control Itself

Why the Fed should be the systemic risk regulator.

The Equity Premium is No Longer a Puzzle

Why stocks are slightly better than bonds in the long, long run.

Central Bank Independence is Overrated

If the independence of the Central Bank is never used to resist that desires of the politicians to goose, then that is not independence, but a sham.

The Rules, Part VI

The Rules, Part VI

History has a nasty tendency to not repeat, when everyone is relying on it to repeat.

History has a nasty tendency to repeat, when everyone is relying on it not to repeat.? Thus another Great Depression is possible, if not likely eventually.

When people rely on the idea that a Great Depression cannot occur again, they tend to overbuild capacity, raising the odds of another Great Depression.

I think I wrote those between 1999 and 2002.? I kept a MS-Word file at work and home, and when ideas would strike me, prior to my time of being asked to write at RealMoney, I would write them down, and later revise them, until I had something that I thought was worth keeping.? I eventually ended up with 6 pages.? At some point in time, I concluded that my musings needed to be more structured, and I reorganized them so that similar thought were near each other.? I am fairly certain I wrote the three phrases above at different times.

I have sometimes said that to be a good contrarian, you don’t analyze opinion, you analyze reliance.? How much have people invested in an idea?? Are those that have invested in an idea long-term holders with a strong balance sheet, or short term holders that are reliant on total returns?? Do those who have invested in an idea have to get returns in the short run in order to survive?

The idea may be right or wrong, in the long run or the short run.? But near turning points, short-term money seems to be near-unanimous in its opinion that “this is the best way to make money.”? Seemingly free money brings out the worst in us.? We were created to work, but we would rather speculate, if given the opportunity.? I criticize myself here as much as anyone else; maybe I should have been a Mathematician or a Chemist.? That’s what I started out as in College, before being seduced by the simple beauty of Economics 1 & 2, which hid the complexity, and lack of ability to estimate their models.

It’s Different this Time.”? So say many investors during booms.? Following momentum is a great strategy when few are doing it, less good when many are doing it, and troublesome near market breaks.

The same is true of governments.? They happily accept credit for a good economy, and then during busts, they borrow from the future in order to make the present better.? The first few times they do it, is works amazingly well, and so they assume that it is a rule: let the government borrow, and let the central bank lower rates a lot, and voila! the recession ends.? They don’t notice the increases in debt, public and private, and that useless economic capacity is not disappearing, because it gets financed at lower and lower rates.? We tend to be lazy, and not think of better uses for resources until there is financial failure forcing us to do so.

The cost of eliminating recessions too quickly and prolonging boom cycles, is that the debts build up.? Consumers and investors lose fear, and take on more debts than is prudent.? Debt-based economies are more complex and fragile than economies with lower leverage.? Particularly when financial entities are highly levered, the odds of a crisis are high.

As my wise former boss once said, “We don’t make the mistakes of our parents, we make the mistakes of our grandparents.”? Our parents typically warn us of the problems they survived, but not those that their parents did.? Thus we fall into the forgotten problem, and why big busts tend to recur about once every two generations.

The knowledge is out there, but culturally, we don’t use it.? The past is irrelevant; this is a new era.? It’s different this time.? Alas, the hubris of man is one of the few infinite things that he has.? Few study economic history, particularly most economists.

As such, we build up productive capacity using debt, assuming that high compound growth will make it work, and fall into another bout of debt deflation.? It may not be the Great Depression, it might be like Japan for the last two decades, or, maybe… it could be another Depression.? Or, something entirely different… the US Government builds up so much debt, and is constrained politically from inflation or higher interest rates, that it decides to default on external obligations.? Not likely, I know, but hey, there are a lot of unusual things going on, and unusual tends to beget unusual, at least in the short run.

But, how many are truly invested for total disaster?? And which total disaster?

  • Depression.? Buy long Treasury bonds, sell gold.
  • High inflation.? Buy TIPS, foreign bonds, and commodities. Sell long bonds.
  • Hyperinflation. Buy Gold and Silver.? Sell bonds short, if it is still legal.? Look for alternatives for practical currency.
  • Civil unrest? Choose your home with care.? There is nothing to buy or sell here.? Survivalism would work for short periods, but almost all long-term solutions rely on a stable civil government.

My estimate is that few are invested for a crisis.? That does not mean that a crisis is coming, but that if a crisis comes, since most are not prepared, the selloff would be hard.

-=-==-=-=-=-=-=–=-==–==–=-=-==–==-=-=-

Moving to the short run, there are many who say that the current rally is tapped out, and will fail soon.? That may be, but there is a lot of liquidity generated by the Fed’s low short rate policy, and many in the short run will borrow short to fund a long term asset, like a stock, which has a higher yield.? Eventually that will fail, but in the short run it is temporarily self-reinforcing.

My view: favor the momentum in the short run, but realize that most of this rally is anticipating profit margins in the economy that have never been obtained in the past.? Trim exposure, or be ready to do so.? Remember, bond yields are proving to be greater competition day by day.

More on Sovereign Risk and Semi-Sovereign Risk

More on Sovereign Risk and Semi-Sovereign Risk

When does a sovereign or semi-sovereign government default?? I have seen three answers:

1) When debt is greater than future seniorage revenue (central bank profits) plus future debt repayments.? (Kind of a tautology, but what is implied is that if future debt repayments are onerous, a government would default.)

2) When the interest rate a government pays is greater than the likely growth rate of revenues. (I.e., if you are paying more than your revenue growth rate, the indebtedness will continue to grow without bounds?)

3) When the structural deficit is high, and total interest paid exceeds the size of the structural deficit.? (In that case, default would bring the budget into balance, at the cost of being shut out of the bond market.? But, given the situation, in the short run, being shut out of the bond market isn?t a problem.? There would be problems if the day comes when they need to borrow again; negotiations would begin over paying old debts.)

I will propose a fourth idea: governments can lay claim to a percentage of the GDP of their country/state/municipality.? How large that can be will vary by culture.? Beyond a certain point, attempts to take more than the natural limit for that culture will not result in higher revenues, because people will hide income, and/or leave the country/area.? When debts and unfunded obligations exceed the present value of maximum GDP extraction by the government, default is likely, the only question is when it will happen ? when does cash flow prove insufficient?? Perhaps the earlier three rules can help with that.

Tough Time to be a Municipality

Revenue is declining for almost all states and municipalities.? Given the need to run balanced budgets (on a cash basis), and not having a central bank to fall back on, the problems are much deeper for States and Municipalities than for the Federal Government.? This report from the Rockefeller Institute shows how widespread the loss of revenues is.

But what should larger governments do for smaller governments in this crisis?? Oddly, the best answer is nothing, and even some of the Europeans recognize this.? Smaller governments need to grasp that they have to solve their own problems, and not rely on the Federal government to help ? it has enough problems of its own.

So, if I had any great advice for strapped municipalities in California, or any other place in the US, one of the first things I would recommend is that you assume you aren?t going to get any help.? Those that could help you are in worse shape.? Such does the Pew Institute indicate.? Few states have their pension and retiree healthcare benefits funded.? They won?t have excess funds to aid municipalities, and my even compound the problem by reducing revenues shared with municipalities in order to stem their own budget shortfalls.

The Federal Government Won?t Be Much Help Either

The politics of the US are dysfunctional enough with opaque congressional earmarking benefiting local and special interests.? It will be yet more dysfunctional if states and municipalities ask the US Government for aid.? Besides, the US Government has issues of its own.? Tonight, it will release the 2009 Financial Report of the United States Government, somewhat behind schedule.? With all of the chaos, who could blame them for being late?? My suspicion is that when one adds up the explicit debts of the US Government and its unfunded obligations, it will add up to a figure near four times GDP.? If the US dollar were not the global reserve currency, we would have long ago slipped into chaos.

What would it take to make the US?s debt to GDP ratio stop rising permanently?? We would need to run surpluses of around 8% of GDP, if I understand the charts on page 5 right.? Absent some major shift in governing philosophy, that?s not even close to being on the table.

As I wrote in my seven part article, My Visit to the US Treasury, Part 5: After the meeting, I said to one Treasury staffer, ?One of the quiet casualties of this crisis is that you lost your last bit of slack from the entitlement systems.?

?What do you mean??

?Just this, prior to the crisis, Social Security and Medicare would produce cash flow surpluses for the Government until 2018.? Now the estimates are 2016, and my guess is more like 2014.? The existing higher deficit takes us out to the point where the entitlement systems go into permanent negative cash flow.? This means that the US budget is in a structural deficit for as far as the eye can see, fifty years or more, absent changes to entitlements.?

He looked at me and commented that it would be the job of a later administration.? No way to handle that now.? To me, the answer reminded me of what I say to myself when I go on a scary ride at Six Flags with my kids.? There is nothing we can do to change matters.? The only thing to adjust is attitude.? So, ignore the fact that you are afraid of heights, and enjoy the torture, okay?

Now, with interest rates so low on the short end, there is one further risk: that the Fed would keep rates low simply to keep? the US Government?s financing costs down.? As the Kansas City Fed?s President Hoenig said recently,

?Depending on your assumptions about the economy, that federal debt will grow at an unsustainable level starting immediately, or in a very few years,? Hoenig said. ?We do have significant private debt, so that?s in place, so what worries me about that [is] that puts pressure on the Fed to keep interest rates artificially low as you try to deal with that debt.?

The US Government is in a tough spot financially, and if inflation rises (which is not impossible, consider stagflation in the 70s), its ability to continue to finance itself cheaply will erode.? On the bright side, the US is still viewed as a safe haven, so if there are troubles in Europe or Japan, the US will benefit from additional liquidity in the short run.

Back to the States

For another summary of how tough things are at the states, consider this piece from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.? Because many state budgets assume a better economy than they actually got, and some were quite optimistic, the average state has a 6.6% gap to fill as a percentage of its 2010 budget.? The gap projected for 2011 is 17% of the 2010 budget.? Not pretty, and if you want to look at it from a bottom-up perspective, this article offers a lot of links to the various emerging troubles.

One further wrinkle in the matter is Vallejo, California, which is in Chapter 9 now.? In the past, muni bond investors and insurers felt assured that in defaults by cities and counties that they would eventually be paid back in full.? With Vallejo, that may not happen; bondholders may have to take a haircut.? If that happens, and it establishes a precedent for Chapter 9 cases, yields will rise for cities and counties that can file for Chapter 9, in order to reflect the increased risk of loss.? Higher future borrowing costs will further burden city and county budgets.? There is no free lunch in the muni bond market.? (For more good articles by Joe Mysak of Bloomberg, look here.)

Conclusion ? Why do I Write This?

This is a pretty gloomy assessment, but it is consistent with the deleveraging process that is rippling through the US economy.? All sorts of hidden leverage have been revealed including:

  • Reliance on optimistic economic assumptions in budgets.
  • Reliance on a robust housing sector.
  • Reliance on financial guarantee insurers.
  • Reliance on increasing leverage at banks, and sloppy underwriting of loans.
  • Reliance on Fannie and Freddie to absorb poorly underwritten mortgages.
  • Reliance on large pension and retiree healthcare promises to keep wages low, and not funding those promises to keep taxes low.
  • Reliance on high stock returns to pay for pensions.
  • Reliance on increasing debt levels in households.
  • Low bond yields make it difficult to invest for pensions.

And there may be other things we have relied on that may fail.? Banking crises often lead to financial crises, as is pointed out in the excellent book, This Time is Different.

  • The US government can always borrow more.
  • The Treasury and Federal Reserve can stimulate the economy out of any crisis.

My main message is that this is a serious situation almost everywhere in the US.? We have borrowed ourselves into a corner.? I write this so that all parties can understand the dynamics going on, so that when muni defaults happen, and the normal dynamics in the bond market shift, you won?t be surprised at the results.? Also, now you have links to a wide number of reports indicating how serious the problems are with Federal and State debts and unfunded liabilities, so that you can do your own digging on the topic.

Default, Inflation, Higher Taxes — Choose One

Default, Inflation, Higher Taxes — Choose One

When I look at the present economic environment, I am not encouraged.? But if you really want me to be discouraged, talk to me about politics.

For the last 40-80 years we have been borrowing, whether implicitly (pensions, retiree healthcare) or explicitly, deferring problems into the future, where they will be compounded with interest and survivorship (lifespans have lengthened, Kaiser, and sadly for those who pay, they want a high quality of life in their dotage).

So, at present, legislators are more partisan, whether in the states or at the federal level.? Why?? There is less slack.? Let’s start at the state level, because most of them have to balance their budgets, and can’t print money to help out.

Many states are screaming in pain.? As such, they tell their legislators in the Federal Congress to send back money.? But that toughens the debate on the Federal level.

With almost all state budgets fighting against a deficit, and some in deep trouble, it makes for interesting and ugly politics.? Much of this was created by optimistic assumptions of what could be earned from equities over the long run, much of which is now being slowly repudiated, as markets fail to live up to expectations.

The Federal budget is hopelessly out-of-whack, with 4-5% of GDP deficits out as far as the eye can see.? So, what do we do about it?

1) Raise Taxes.? I don’t like this idea, because the US Government has entered many areas where it should not be.? I would rather see the discretionary government shrink considerably.? Also, remember, Social Security and Medicare are not guaranteed.? Congress could wipe out all benefits tomorrow, and face a political firestorm.? But remember, in the Great Depression, that is just what they did.? This is why I don’t insist that rates must head higher.? It depends on society as a whole.

Raising taxes has the perverse result of slowing economic growth, which affects future taxes.

2) Inflate the currency.? Ugh.? Oppress the elderly, who cannot work to make up the difference?? Create a new inflation mindset that has all of us focusing on the short-term.? Inflationary economies by their nature become more and more short term.

3) Default on obligations.? There are several forms of this:

a) Total default: anyone with a Treasury Note is a sucker.? Global depression ensues.

b) External default: we do not honor external obligations, but honor internal ones.? Global depression ensues, but the US does relatively well.

c) Internal default: what, are you joking?? Why do we pay off the losers who lent to us?

As we look at Greece, Spain, and Portugal, we chuckle over the foolishness of the EU thinking that they could have monetary union without full political union.? It didn’t work under the Confederation, why should it work elsewhere?

But we should not chuckle.? After all, we have California, Illinois, and New York, and more waiting in the wings.? There is no bankruptcy code for the states.? I am not sure what happens if one state does not pay, aside from being shut out of the municipal bond market.

So, my point remains — what are we going to do?? Raise taxes, inflate the currency, or default?? Perhaps in a real crisis, we would slim down the government.? We might also decrease Social Security and Medicare benefits.? We might also amend ERISA, to allow for reductions in pension payments.? In a real crisis, nothing is fixed.

Or, we might tax a lot more — the depression was an example of that.? That is a reason that I am not a total bear on Treasuries.

The government has choices to make.? What should they do?? Offer your answers as best you can.

Catching up on Blog Comments

Catching up on Blog Comments

Before I start, I would like to toss out the idea of an Aleph Blog Lunch to be hosted sometime in January 2010 @ 1PM, somewhere between DC and Baltimore.? Everyone pays for their own lunch, but I would bring along the review copies of many of the books that I have reviewed for attendees to take home, first come, first served.? Maybe Eddy at Crossing Wall Street would like to join in, or Accrued Interest. If you are an active economic/financial blogger in the DC/Baltimore Area, who knows, maybe we could have a panel discussion, or something else.?? Just tossing out the idea, but if you think you would like to come, send me an e-mail.

Onto the comments.? I try to keep up with comments and e-mails, but I am forever falling behind.? Here is a sampling of comments that I wanted to give responses on.? Sorry if I did not pick yours.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=–==-=–==-

Blog comments are in italics, my comments are in regular type.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/16/notes-on-fed-policy-and-financial-regulation/#comments

Spot on David. I often think about the path of the exits strategy the fed may take. In order, how may it look? What comes first what comes last? Clearly this world is addicted to guarantees on everything, zirp, and fed QE policy which is building a very dangerous US dollar carry trade.

Back to the original point, I would think the order of exit may look something like:

1. First they will slowly remove emergency credit facilities, starting with those of least interest, which were aggressively used to curb the debt deflationary crisis on our banking system. The added liquidity kept our system afloat and avoided systemic collapse that would have brought a much more painful shock to the global financial system. Lehman Brothers was a mini-atom bomb test that showed the fed and gov?t would could happen ? seeing that result all but solidified the ?too big to fail? mantra.

2. Second, they will be forced to raise rates ? that?s right folks, 0% ? 0.25% fed funds rates is getting closer and closer to being a hindsight policy. However, I still think rates stay low until early 2010 or unemployment proves to be stabilizing. As rates rise, watch gold for a move up on perceived future inflationary pressures.

3. Third, they can sell securities to primary dealers via POMO at the NY Fed, thereby draining liquidity from excess reserves. I think this will be a solid part of their exit strategy down the road ? perhaps later in 2010 or early 2011. As of now, some $760Bln is being hoarded in excess reserves by depository institutions. That number will likely come way down once this process starts. The question is, will banks rush to lend money that was hoarded rather then be drained of freshly minted dollars from the debt monetization experiment. For now, this money is being hoarded to absorb future loan losses, cushion capital ratios and take advantage of the fed?s paid interest on excess reserves ? the banks choose to hoard rather then aggressively lend to a deteriorating quality of consumer/business amid a rising unemployment environment. This is a good move by the banks as the political cries for more lending grow louder. The last thing we need is for banks to willy-nilly lend to struggling borrowers that will only prolong the pain by later on.

4. And finally, as a final and more aggressive measure, we could see capital or reserve requirements tightened on banks to hold back aggressive lending that may cause inflationary pressures and money velocity to surge. Right now, banks must retain 10% of deposits as reserves and maintain capital ratios set by regulators. Either can be tweaked to curb lending and prevent $700bln+ from entering the economy and being multiplied by our fractional reserve system.

I think we are starting to see #1 now, in some form, and will start to see the rest around the middle of 2010 and into 2011. The last item might not come until end of 2011 or even 2012 when economy is proven to be on right track and unemployment is clearly declining as companies rehire.

Thoughts????

UD, I think you have the Fed’s Order of Battle right.? The questions will come from:

1) how much of the quantitative easing can be withdrawn without negatively affecting banks, or mortgage yields.

2) How much they can raise Fed Funds without something blowing up.? Bank profits have become very reliant on low short term funding.? I wonder who else relies on short-term finance to hold speculative positions today?

3) Finance reform to me would include bank capital reform, including changes to reflect securitization and derivatives, both of which should require capital at least as great as doing the equivalent transaction through non-derivative instruments.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/15/book-reviews-of-two-very-different-books/#comments

David,
A few years back you mentioned to me in an e-mail that Fabozzi was a good source for understanding bonds (thank you for that advice by the way, he is a very accessible author for what can be very complex material.)? In the review of Domash’s book you mention that he does not do a good job with financials. I was wondering, is there an author who is as accessible and clear as Fabozzi, when it comes to financials, who you would recommend.

Regards,
TDL

TDL, no, I have not run across a good book for analyzing financial stocks.? Most of the specialist shops like KBW, Sandler O?Neill and Hovde have their own proprietary ways of analyzing financials.? I have summarized the main ideas in this article here.

http://alephblog.com/2007/04/28/why-financial-stocks-are-harder-to-analyze/

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/05/the-return-of-my-money-not-the-return-on-my-money/#comments

Sorry to be a bit late to this post, but I really like this thread (bond investing with particular regard to sovereign risk). One thing I’m trying to figure out is the set of tools an individual investor needs to invest in bonds globally. In comparison to the US equities market, for which there are countless platforms, data feeds, blogs, etc., I am having trouble finding good sources of analysis, pricing, and access to product for international bonds, so here is my vote for a primer on selecting, pricing, and purchasing international bonds.

K1, there aren?t many choices to the average investor, which I why I have a post in the works on foreign and global bond funds.? There aren?t a lot of good choices that are cheap.? It is expensive to diversify out of the US dollar and maintain significant liquidity.

A couple of suggested topics that I think you could do a job with:? 1) Quantitative view of how to evaluate closed end funds trading at a discount to NAV with a given NAV and discount history, fee/cost structure, and dividend history;?? 2) How to evaluate the fundamentals of the return of capital distributions from MLPs – e.g. what fraction of them is true dividend and what fraction is true return of capital and how should one arrive at a reasonable profile of the future to put a DCF value on it?

Josh, I think I can do #1, but I don?t understand enough about #2.? I?m adding #1 to my list.

http://alephblog.com/2009/12/05/book-review-the-ten-roads-to-riches/#comments

I see that Fisher’s list reveals his blind spot–how about being born the child of wealthy parents. . .

BWDIK, Fisher is talking about ?roads? to riches.? None of us can get on that ?road? unless a wealthy person decided to adopt one of us.? And, that is his road #3, attach yourself to a wealthy person and do his bidding.

I am not a Ken Fisher fan, but I am a David merkel fan—so what was the advice he gave you in 2000?

Jay, what he told me was to throw away all of my models, including the CFA Syllabus, and strike out on my own, analyzing companies in ways that other people do not.? Find my competitive advantage and pursue it.

That led me to analyzing industries first, buying quality companies in industries in a cyclical slump, and the rest of my eight rules.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/28/the-right-reform-for-the-fed/#comments

“The Fed has been anything but independent.? An independent Fed would have said that they have to preserve the value of the dollar, and refused to do any bailouts.”

This seems completely wrong to me.? First, the Fed’s mandate is not to preserve the value of the dollar, but to “”to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.”? I don’t see that bailouts are antithetical to those goals. Second, I don’t see how the Fed’s actions in 2008-2009 have particularly hurt the value of the dollar, at least not in terms of purchasing power.? Perhaps they will in the future, but it is a bit early to assert that, I think.

Matt, even in their mandates for full employment and stable prices, the Fed should have no mandate to do bailouts, and sacrifice the credit of the nation for special interests.? No one should have special privileges, whether the seeming effect of purchasing power has diminished or not.? It is monetary and credit inflation, even if it does not result in price inflation.

?Make the Fed tighten policy when Debt/GDP goes above 200%.? We?re over 350% on that ratio now.? We need to save to bring down debt.?

David, I fully agree (as with your other points).
However, I do not see it happening.

Why would we save when others electronically ?print? money to buy our debt?

See todays Bloomberg News:
?Indirect bidders, a group of investors that includes foreign central banks, purchased 45 percent of the $1.917 trillion in U.S. notes and bonds sold this year through Nov. 25, compared with 29 percent a year ago, according to Fed auction data compiled by Bloomberg News.?

Please note that last year the amount auctioned was much lower (so foreign central banks bought a much lower percentage of a much lower total).

Please also note that all of a sudden, earlier this year, the definition of ?indirect bidders? was changed, making it more complicated to follow this stuff. What is clear however, is that almost half of the incredible amount of $ 2 trillion, i.e. $ 1000 billion (!!), is being ?purchased? by the printing presses of foreign central banks.

This could explain both the record amount of debt issued and the record low yields.

As the CBO has projected huge deficits PLUS huge debt roll-overs (average maturity down from 7 years to 4 years) up to at least 2019, do you think we could extend the ?printing? by foreign central banks? — CB?s ?buying? each others debt — for at least 10 more years?
That would free us from saving, enabling us to ?consume? our way to reflation of the economy (as is FEDs/Treasuries attempt imo).

I?d appreciate your, and other readers?, take on this.

Carol, you are right.? I don?t see a limitation on Debt to GDP happening.

As to nations rolling over each other?s debts for 10 more years, I find that unlikely.? There will be a reason at some point to game the system on the part of those that are worst off on a cash flow basis to default.

The rollover problem for the US Treasury will get pretty severe by the mid-2010s.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/13/the-forever-fund/#comments

Any chance of you doing portfolio updates going forward? I?d be curious to see if you still like investment grade fixed incomes, given the rally.

Matt, I would be underweighting investment grade and high yield credit at present.

As for railroads, I own Canadian National ? unlike US railroads, it goes coast to coast, and slowly they are picking up more business in the US as well.

Long CNI

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/10/my-visit-to-the-us-treasury-part-7-final/#comments

Did none of the bloggers raise the question of the GSEs? I can understand Treasury not wishing to tip their hands as to their future, but I would have expected their status to be a hot topic among the bloggers.

I also don?t buy the idea that the sufferings of the middle class were inevitable. Over the past 15 or so years the financial sector has grown due to the vast amount of money that it has been able to extract. Where would we be if all of those bright hard working people and capital spending had gone to the real economy? I?m not suggesting a command economy, but senior policymakers decided to let leverage and risk run to dangerous levels. Your comment seem to indicate that this was simply the landscape of the world, but it seems more to be the product of a deliberate policy from the Federal government.

Chris, no, nothing on the GSEs.? There was a lot to talk about, and little time.

I believe there have been policy errors made by our government ? one the biggest being favoring debt finance over equity finance, but most bad policies of our government stem from a short-sighted culture that elects those that govern us.? That same short-sightedness has helped make us less competitive as a nation versus the rest of the world.? We rob the future to fund the present.

http://alephblog.com/2009/11/07/my-visit-to-the-us-treasury-part-6/#comments

it?s not clear from your writing whether the treasury officials talked to you about the GSEs or whether your comments (in the paragraph beginning with ?When I look at the bailouts,?) are your own. could you clarify?

q, That is my view of how the Treasury seems to be using the GSEs, based on what they are doing, not what they have said.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/31/book-review-nerds-on-wall-street/

?There are a lot of losses to be taken by those who think they have discovered a statistical regularity in the financial markets.?
David, take a look at equilcurrency.com.

Jesse, I looked at it, it seems rather fanciful.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/27/book-review-the-predictioneers-game/#comments

David,
Just wondering if there?s an omission in this line:

?The last will pay for the book on its own. I have used the technique twice before, and it works. That said, that I have used it twice before means it is not unique to the author.?

Did you mean to write ?that I have used it doesn?t mean it is not unique?.?

In the event it is, I?ll look it up in the book, which I intend to buy anyway.
Otherwise, may I request a post that details, a la your used car post,your approach to buying new cars?

Saloner, no omission.? I said what I meant.? I?ll try to put together a post on new car purchases.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/22/book-review-the-bogleheads-guide-to-retirement-planning/

thanks for the book review. it sounds like something that i could use to get the conversation started with my wife as she is generally smart but has little tolerance for this sort of thing.

> unhedged foreign bonds are a core part of asset allocation

i agree in principle ? it would be really helpful though to have a roadmap for this. how can i know what is what?

I second that request for help in accessing unhedged foreign bonds ? Maybe a post topic?

JK, q, I?ll try to get a post out on this.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/20/toward-a-new-theory-of-the-cost-of-equity-capital-part-2/#comments

to the point above, basically just an IRR right?

JRH, I don?t think it is the IRR.? The IRR is a measure of the return off of the assets, not a rate for the discount of the asset cash flows.

When I was an undergraduate (after already having been in business for a long time), I realized that M-M was erroneous, because of all the things they CP?d (ceteris paribus) away. For my own consumption, I went a long way to demonstrating that quantitatively, but children, work and family intervened, and who was I to argue with Nobel winners.

But time, experience and events convince me that I was right then and you are right now. As you?ve noted the market does not price risk well. In large part this is due to a fundamental misunderstanding of value. The professional appraisal community has a far better handle on this, exemplified by drawing the formal distinction between ?fair market value as a going concern?, ?investment value?, ?fair market value in a orderly liquidation?, ?fair market value in a forced liquidation? and so on. One corollary to the foregoing is one of those lessons that stick from sit-down education, that ?Book Value? is not a standard of value but rather a mathematical identity.

Without going into a long involved academic tome, the cost of capital (and from which results the mathematical determination of value per the income approach) has a shape more approaching that of a an asymmetric parabola (if one graphs return on the y axis and equity debt weight on the x.).

If I was coming up with a new theorem, risk would be an independent variable. So for example:

WAAC = wgt avg cost of equity + wgt avg cost of debt + risk premium

You?ll note the difference that in standard WAAC formulation risk is a component of the both the equity and debt variable ? and practically impossible to consistently and logically quantify. Yes, one can look to Ibbottson for historical risk premia, or leave one to the individual decision making of lenders, butt it complicates and obscures the analysis.

In the formulation above, cost of equity and cost of debt are very straightforward and can be drawn from readily available market metrics. But what does risk look like? Again if you plot risk as a % cost of capital on the y axis and on the x axis the increasing debt weight, on a absolute basis risk is lowest @ 100% equity. From there is upwards slopes. However, risk however is not linear, but rather follows a power law.

The reason risk follows a power law is that while equity is prepared to lose 100%, debt is not. Also, debt weight increases IRR to equity (in the real world) contrary to MM. Again, debt is never priced well, because issuers don?t understand orderly and forced liquidation, whereby in ?orderly?, e.g. say Chapter 11,recoveries may be 80 cents on the dollar, and forced, e.g., Chapter 7, 10 cents on the dollar. One really doesn?t begin to understand the foregoing until you?ve been through it more than a few times.

So in the real world, as debt increases, equity is far more easily ?playing with house money.? A recent poster child for this phenomena is the Simmons Mattress story. In the most recent go round equity was pulling cash out (playing with house money) and the bankers were either (depending on one?s POV) incredibly stupid for letting equity do so, or incredibly smart, because they got their fees and left someone else holding the bag. I?m seen some commentators say that ?Oh it was OK because rates were so low, the debt service (the I component only) was manageable.? Poppycock; sometime it?s the dollar value and sometimes it?s the percentage weight and sometimes it is both.

But you?ve already said that: ?company specific risk is significant and varies a great deal.? I would also add that ? or amplify ? that in any appraisal assignment the first thing that must be set is the appraisal date. Everything drives off that and what is ?known or knowable? at the time.

Gaffer, thanks for your comments.? I appreciate the time and efforts you put into them.? This is an area where finance theory needs to change.

http://alephblog.com/2009/10/10/pension-apprehension/

I have a DB plan with Safeway Stores-UFCW, which I?ve been collecting for a few years. I?m cooked?

Craig, not necessarily.? Ask for the form 5500, and see how underfunded the firm is.? Safeway is a solid firm, in my opinion.

Long SWY

http://alephblog.com/2009/09/29/recent-portfolio-actions/#comments

David, I am curious about your rebalancing threshold. Do you calculate this 20% threshold using a formula like this:

= Target Size / Current Size ? 1

I have a small portfolio of twenty securities. A full position size in the portfolio is 8% (position size would be 1 for an 8% holding). The position size targets are based generally on .25 increments (so a position target of .25 is 2% of the portfolio and there are 12.5 slots ?available?). I used that formula above for a while, but I found that it was biased towards smaller positions.

Instead I began using this formula:

= (Target ? Current Size) / .25

So a .50 sized holding and a full sized holding may have both been 2% below the target (using the first formula), but using the second formula, they would be 8% and 16% below the target respectively. I found this showed me the true deviation from the portfolio target size and put my holdings on an equal footing for rebalancing.

I was curious how you calculated your threshold, or if it was less of an issue because you tended to have full sized positions. For me, I tend to start small and build positions over time. There are certain positions I hold that I know will stay in the .25-.50 range because they either carry more risk, they are funds/ETFs, or they are paired with a similar holding that together give me the weight I want in a particular sector.

Brian, you have my calculations right.? I originally backed into the figure because concentrated funds run with between 16-40 names.? Since I concentrate in industries, I have to run with more names for diversification.? I don?t scale, typically, though occasionally I have double weights, and rarely, triple weights.? The 20% band was borrowed from three asset managers that I admire.? After some thought, I did some work calculating the threshold in my Kelly criterion piece.

A fuller explanation of the rebalancing process is here in my smarter seller pieces.

http://alephblog.com/2009/09/04/tickers-for-the-latest-portfolio-reshaping/

Have you seen DEG instead of SWY?
Extremely able operator. Some currency diversification as well. I?d like to know your thougts.

MLS, I don?t have a strong idea about DEG ? I know that back earlier in the decade, they had their share of execution issues.? It does look cheaper than SWY, though.

Long SWY

http://alephblog.com/2009/06/11/problems-with-constant-compound-interest-2/

I like your post and want to comment on a couple of items.? You point to the peak of the 1980’s inflation rates and the associated interest rates.

Robert Samuelson wrote a book called The Great Inflation and it’s Aftermath.?? http://tiny.cc/z9H9V

Basically you can explain a great deal the US stock market history of the 40 years by the spike in interest/inflation until the mid 80’s and the subsequent decline.? Since you need an interest rate to value any cash flow, the decline in interest rates made all cash flows more valuable.

The thing that is odd and sort of ties this together is the last year.? After interest rates crossed the 4% level things started blowing up.? The amount of debt that can be financed at 3% to 4% is enormous.? That is, as everyone knows, on of the root causes of the housing bubble.? Anyway, starting last year, treasury interest rates continued to decline and all other rates went through the roof.

I was looking at this chart yesterday.? _ http://tiny.cc/eCZzF The interesting thing to me was that when the system blew up, treasury rates continued to decline and all non guaranteed debt rates went through the roof.

Most of this is obvious and everyone knows the reasons.? The one thing that seems novel is thinking of this as the continuation of a very long secular trend — or secular cycle.? I don’t want to get overly political, but the decrease in inflation/interest in the 90’s to the present was a function of productivity/technology and Foreign/Chinese imports.? Anyway, one effect of these policies was a huge rise in asset values, especially in the FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) sector of the economy at the expense of our industrial and manufacturing sectors.? This was also a redistribution of wealth from the rust belt to the coasts.

It is much more complicated then the hand full of influences I mentioned, but the one thing i haven’t seen discussed a lot is the connection of the current catastrophe to the long term decline in inflation/interest rates since the mid/late 1980’s.? If you think about it, declining interest rates increase the value of financial assets and are an enormous tailwind for finance.? I suppose if you had just looked at the curve, it would have been obvious that the trend couldn’t continue.? Prior to the blowup, there were lots of people financing long term assets with short term, low interest rate liabilities. That was a big part of the basic playbook for structured finance, hedge funds, etc.

The reason that the yield spread exploded is well known.? Here is a snippet from Irving Fisher.? http://capitalvandalism.blogspot.com/2009/01/deflationary-spirals.html

CapVandal ? Great comment.? A lot to learn from here.? I hope you come back to blogging; you have some good things to say.? Fear and greed drive correlated human behavior.

Theme: Overlay by Kaira