Search Results for: Education of a corporate bond manager

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 4

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 4

1??????? Any specific stock, bond, industry, country, or asset picks that you feel strongly about?

I like:

  • The P&C insurance & reinsurance industries — they are very good at compounding earnings, especially the ones that are good underwriters, conservatively reserved, and shareholder focused over the long haul.
  • Selected energy and information technology stocks, so long as the valuations are inexpensive.
  • RGA, National Western Life, Stancorp Financial, AFLAC, and Industrias Bachoco SA
  • Emerging market bonds — their policies are mainly more orthodox than the developed world, for now.

2??????? What strategies do you use to determine if a company is worth a deeper look into, in the first five minutes?

There is this article: GE Does Not Bring Good Things For Your Life. If you have a Bloomberg Terminal, that is a useful article.

But even if not, the five-minute drill is easy:

  • Look at price to expected earnings. ?Look at past earnings.
  • Look at indebtedness and goodwill. ?Ask: is this a stable industry? ?Does the goodwill represent anything valuable, some barrier against competition?
  • Compare cash flow from operations versus earnings. ?An excess is usually better.
  • Look at price-to-book for financials and price-to-sales for utilities and industrials — lower is better.
  • Ask yourself if this is an industry with increasing, stable, or decreasing pricing power.
  • Look at whether the share count is rising or falling. ?Falling is better.
  • Does it pay a dividend? ?Yes is better.

Beyond this, for corporate bonds, I have a similar arrangement. ?And I call that the one-minute drill, because in institutional fixed income, you have to be fast when the market is hot.

3??????? What have been valuable resources that you would recommend to up-and-coming investors?

Look through the book reviews that I have written — there are almost 200 of them. ?I have read a lot of books by eminent value investors, bond investors, growth investors, alternative asset managers — you name it, I have read a lot of investment books.

But let’s add in another question:

4??????? What advice would you give to a student who wants to start investing but has not prior knowledge?

My friend Niall O’Malley gave a good answer to this when he said create two lists of stocks — one that you think will do well, and one that you think will do badly. ?Then track them, and learn from the companies that violate your expectations.

My answer would be more plebian — paper trade. ?I did that in my early 20s, long before I had money to invest. ?I came close to winning the Value Line contest in the mid-80s.

But the biggest thing is making a commitment to improve your investment knowledge. ?When I was 26, I said that I would spend one hour per day, except Sundays, to improve my investment knowledge. ?I went all over the map. ?I read practical stuff. ?I read academic stuff. ?I read stuff on stocks. ?I read stuff on bonds. ?I read stuff on industries, sectors, companies, etc. ?I read stuff on management, operations, financial management. ?I read, read, and read.

Investing requires continual self-education. ?Read and learn and profit.

Final episode tomorrow.

Full disclosure: Long RGA, NWLI, SFG, AFL, IBA

Value Investing Flavors

Value Investing Flavors

I ran across this article, Value Investor or Value Pretender: Which Are You?, by who puts out The Manual of Ideas, along with Oliver Mihaljevic.? I appreciate what they do — you can learn a lot from their organization.

I told him that I was going to write this, and he said to me:

The piece was meant tongue-in-cheek but feel free to rip it apart 🙂

I will rip it apart, but gently, because every point he made is mostly true for value investors, but there are variations in the way that value investors operate, so you can do some of the things he says you can’t do, and still be a value investor — what matters is how you implement them.

There will be more parts to my “Education of a Risk Manager” series, and one of them will deal with all of the different managers that I met, and how much they varied in terms of what they thought were factors that mattered.

Thus, as I developed my own theories of value investing, I considered the range of opinion, and realized that there is a single model for value investing, but that it is complex enough that different parties use different approximations of the full model, and those approximations do better and worse in different environments.

Like a David Letterman-style Top 10 list, John Mihaljevic listed and described things that made you a value pretender.? Time to go through them:

Reason #10: You invest based on chart patterns

I don’t use chart patterns, but I do use momentum both positively & negatively.? There is decent evidence that investors are slow to react to new information, and so stocks with strong price momentum over 200 days tend to do better.? There is some evidence where there is lousy price momentum over a 4-year period, that things tend to mean-revert.

Granted, there is a tendency among some value investors to troll the 52-week low list.? I like doing that too, but you have to be careful, because maybe you are missing something that cleverer investors know.? The same would be true of short interest figures.? Whenever I see one of my stocks gain a high short interest ratio (shares sold short / volume, or % of mkt cap sold short), I do a review to see what I don’t know.? That’s why I am not afraid of the high level of shorting on Stancorp Financial.? This is a conservatively run firm that manages risk up front.? Even though disability claims rise when unemployment is high, they underwrite better than most of the industry.

There have been some very successful value plus momentum investors.? The balance is tricky, but blending two of the most powerful anomalies does bear fruit.

Reason #9: You assume multiple expansion in your investment theses

I never assume that, but if you are buying them “safe and cheap,” you often do get multiple expansion.? The challenge is figuring out where things are less bad then the implied opinion of the depressed valuation.

Reason #8: You try to figure out how a company will do vis-?-vis?quarterly EPS estimates

I don’t do that either, but I have known some value managers that incorporate prior earnings surprise data, because past earnings surprises are correlated with future surprises.? Often, near the the turnaround point for a company’s stock, there are some earnings surprises.

Reason #7: You base your decisions on analyst recommendations

I have few arguments with this, except negatively.? Sell-side analysts are trailing indicators.? I like buying companies where the sell-side is negative, but not very negative.? With very negative opinion, there are often reasons to stay away, unless you possess specific knowledge that the sell-side analysts do not have.

Reason #6: You use P/E to Growth (PEG) as a key valuation metric

I’m sorry, but PEG works, if indeed you have the growth rate right, which is a challenge.? I do try to analyze sustainable competitive advantage for the firms that I own.? That often leads to growth.? Now I am a growth skeptic, so it takes a lot to make me pay up for growth, but occasionally I will do so, when the PEG is low enough.

Reason #5: You use EBITDA as a measure of cash flow

EBITDA is not cash flow from operations, or free cash flow, but it is a valuable figure in value investing when it divides into Enterprise Value (Value of Debt + Value of Stock – Cash).? Low ratios of Enterprise value divided by EBITDA are very effective at identifying promising investments — it indicates cheap assets, and in a time when M&A is hot, it can really pay off.

Reason #4: You would worry about your portfolio if the market closed for a year

I could live with the market closed, but there are advantages to having it open.? With any given stock, there are times in a year to increase or reduce exposure — if you have a firm idea of what the firm is worth, you can buy more during dips, and sell a little into strong rallies.? Short term (one month) stock price movements are fickle, and commonly reverse.

Reason #3: You make investment decisions based on the activity or tips of others

But Manual of Ideas tracks the 13F filings of great investors.? I get good ideas from the best investors also, but you have to do your own research.? Many bright investors chat with each other, and I had many occasions at the hedge fund that I worked for where I disagreed with a friend of the boss.? I was right more often than I was wrong.

Perhaps a better way to phrase it is “choose your idea generators wisely, but do your own research as well.”

Reason #2: Your investment process centers on the market opportunity

This is largely true, but when I know a industry or sector is in horrible shape, I often buy the strongest name in the industry, realizing that they will do well as the competition dies, and they don’t.? Also, there are times when few recognize that pricing power has shifted, and it is time to take a position on a misunderstood industry that is about to grow faster than expected.? Particularly with cyclical companies this idea can be promising.

The same applies to countries where the markets are washed out.? Don’t try to time the bottom, but when a country is cheap, buy a promising/safe company in the country after things have turned up for 100 days or so.

Reason #1: Your investment theses do not reference the stock price

At some points, I like to own companies with strong management teams relative to their industry.? I will let valuation stretch at those points, because there is more of a sustainable competitive advantage there.? You get more positive surprises, and that definitely aids total returns.

That said, a focus valuation is key to all investing.? The only thing more important is margin of safety.

Margin of Safety

There are three elements to margin of safety:

  1. Sustainable Competitive Advantage (Strong Gross Margins)
  2. Strong Balance Sheet (Conservative Accounting)
  3. Cheap Price vs Likely Value

This is different from other formulations of margin of safety, because one has to take into account factors that make it less certain that we can calculate value.? Many value managers were buying cheap financials up until September 2008, only to realize that their estimates? of value were wrong because credit losses would be far worse than expected.

Good stock analysis begins with good bond analysis.? If you wouldn’t buy a bond from the firm, you probably shouldn’t buy the stock.? Value investing is conservative, and looks for situations where there is little credit risk.

Conclusion

If you want to read? summary of my portfolio rules, you can find them here.? I am a firm believer in value investing, but I realize that there are many ways to approach the process.? I watch other value investors, and continue to learn.? Good value investors are lifelong learners, and generalists with broad knowledge.? It is not a narrow discipline, but one that can accommodate new knowledge.

Full disclosure: long SFG

 

On Operating Company Defaults

On Operating Company Defaults

From an e-mail from a reader:

Hi, David. I hope this e-mail finds you well. I am a long-time reader of your blog and have learned an immense amount about markets from your writings.

I am a stock analyst and am just starting to learn the nuances in the operating vs. holding co. relationship.

I saw your brief explanation here:

http://alephblog.com/2009/03/25/holding-and-operating-companies/

Could you point me to any websites, books, or articles that really delves into this? Specifically, there are lots of bonds issued on both the opco and holdco levels ( EIX, CZR, and many others).

I know distressed guys do this all day and I’ve already read Stephen Moyer’s Distressed Debt Analysis. ?I understand structural vs. contractual subordination, cross guarantees, and other basics, but, I’d like to know how it would impact the publicly traded shares at the holdco level.

?For example, if holdco A has publicly traded shares and has opcos B and C. B is a profitable company while C is loss-making company. B and C both have publicly traded debt.

What would happen if C defaults? ?Nothing is clear cut but I’m trying to find a good way think about these things.

I have been here already.? If company C defaults, company A has no obligation to make you whole.? In my case with Teleglobe, the bondholders got zero.? The parent, BCE, is still doing well.

This is a major aspect of being a bondholder.? You must analyze the relationships, so that you do not rely on those that do not legally need to pay you.? Implicit support is always suspect.? In a crisis, it goes away.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

 

Politics

 

  • California Democrats seize super majorities in both houses of Legislature http://t.co/Wp2cVYTF CA businesses plan exit strategies $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Harsher energy regulations coming in Obama’s second term http://t.co/JHDKAhok Fracking, chemical emissions, & more $$ -losing green energy Nov 08, 2012
  • US crop insurance a post-election target, farm bill elusive http://t.co/9OdbRVjy W/Ag doing so well over last 5 yrs, this should b ez, not Nov 08, 2012
  • Ethanol Going Ugly Turns Bush Plan Into Obama Test http://t.co/Pe6ixxc1 Should b a no-brainer, but Congress ag state politics r ugly $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Could This Be End of Evil Filibuster? http://t.co/t72aR3OR Limit filibusters to actual votes & require physical presence on the floor $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Obama Win Means Health Overhaul to Move Ahead in States http://t.co/ybXggsLt Destroy health care 2 replace it w/single-payer system $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Yep, There Have Been Problems With Email Voting in New Jersey http://t.co/lZjzVNrG In general, probability of fraud in voting is rising $$ Nov 07, 2012
  • Defense Fund Rockets to Four-Year High: Romney Rally? http://t.co/3fzUDRTH Discounting Obama’s change of heart after election $$ 😉 Nov 06, 2012
  • Romney Threatens Pimco?s Gross With Bernanke-Dumping Plan http://t.co/xO6Tm0aF 2 many links in the chain of reasoning; low prob correct $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Southfield Twp. voter appears to die, then asks ‘Did I vote?’ http://t.co/2ZwRgotp I found his words to his wife 2b touching in many ways $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Tuesday Is Election Night, Be Careful What You Tweet http://t.co/UdPPMYiJ Measure twice, cut once, tweeps. & bring a dose of skepticism $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • Three Men Make a Tiger http://t.co/eX1PziJK John Mauldin predicts Romney as victor; piece is mostly about eliminating confirmation bias $$ Nov 05, 2012

 

China

 

  • China: Worse Than You Ever Imagined http://t.co/Kp69IC1n 40MM+ people were killed during the “Great Leap Forward.” Mao deserves derision $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • China’s leadership challenge in new era: douse “inequality volcano” http://t.co/pJiAksUl Widespread poverty in China scares Communist Party Nov 08, 2012
  • A Cheerleader for Mao’s Cultural Revolution http://t.co/d3RhdV95 Lied about Cultural Revolution & The Great Leap Forward. Millions died. Nov 08, 2012
  • The Chinese Credit Bubble – Full Frontal http://t.co/MDZn1jCs As I have argued for some time, total debt in China is quite high $$ #danger Nov 07, 2012

 

Companies

 

  • Peltz Takes Stake in Danone http://t.co/P1AdRe9G Danone $DANOY is a French firm, will be difficult to encourage change $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Prudential Records $618 Million Loss on Derivatives http://t.co/6ZQK1Uk5 I worry about life industry; the acctg 4 secondary gtees: yuck $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Nucor Galvanizes Gas Hopes http://t.co/NmfZ9fmJ $NUE provides capital 4 development of gas resources of $ECA -Gets 50% stake in wells $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Office Depot-OfficeMax Deal Seen Rescuing Value http://t.co/bNsFKuJU The failure of office retailers as the non-profit $AMZN undercuts $$ Nov 07, 2012
  • SapuraKencana Agrees 2 Buy Seadrill Tender Rigs http://t.co/XXrAsjFj Interesting deal, clever investor; expands Malaysia exposure $SDRL $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • Sharp blunted, and it?s not alone http://t.co/5jTHzKuN Argues that Japanese electronics mfg & exports r getting killed by strong yen $$ Nov 04, 2012

 

Federal Reserve

 

  • Inflation, QE and forcing the banks to lend http://t.co/XuPgRPJm I’ve subscribed 2 The Economist for 25 years; they r getting dumber $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • Casting Dual Roles, at Treasury & the Fed http://t.co/kIwpAzZ3 Bernanke’s Last Supper & The Return Of Larry Summershttp://bit.ly/Sp9PBZ $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • Off of the last tweet, it would be nice 2c Bernanke retire; he really may b tired of the abuse. His prob was he thought he knew what 2 do $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • & as a result, could not c that Neoclassical macro does not work with an overindebted economy. We need fewer economists at the Fed & Tsy $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • Wrong: Seth Klarman Goes Nuts On The Fed In His Latest Investor Letter http://t.co/G6gAkMfU Y I think value investors should run the Fed $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • Seth Klarman, like most value investors, is farsighted & not just thinking about how to goose GDP for the next year. Klarman 4 Fed chair $$ Nov 04, 2012

 

Eurozone

 

  • Convergence between the core and the periphery economies in the Eurozone http://t.co/2oD2exeV Drowning PIIGS pull Germany & France under $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • ECB & Fed: Worlds Apart http://t.co/zZuaFiXU Axel Merk praises the ECB & disses the Fed. Argues that ECB has not gone fiscal as the Fed has Nov 08, 2012
  • Unsteady Greek Coalition Faces More Strikes http://t.co/dxQJYzmw Suspect they make it through; Greeks don’t want 2 leave Eurozone yet $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • The peripheral threat to France http://t.co/0atOAKZq Many of the PIIGS r getting more competitive relative 2 France. No E-zone w/o France Nov 04, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Old People Versus Babies, In One Graph http://t.co/Erk2Mu8z Global demographic crisis in one very easy to manipulate graphic $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Iceland Sees Mortgage Bubble Threat From Foreign Cash http://t.co/djtYZDxw The problems of capital controls start to bite $$ #nofreelunch Nov 06, 2012
  • Turning Trash Into Tidy Profit http://t.co/FvM32C3a Optimistic story on turning trash into durable building materials in Senegal $$ Nov 05, 2012

 

Sandy and Disaster

 

  • Frederick County teen wins regional science competition http://t.co/F72thGx3 The software can read a picture & tell where it is. $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Sandy’s Aftermath: Samuel Pritt Develops Geolocation Software http://t.co/InnwZaGe Young friend won Siemens US Science Competition $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Insurance divides haves from have-nots after Sandy http://t.co/NngZdchm Insurance is for catastrophes; scrimp on frequency, not severity $$ Nov 04, 2012
  • Reserved Buoyancy, Down-Flooding, and Living Off the Grid http://t.co/TXxn9f6e The value of slack in physical systems, especially boats $$ Nov 03, 2012

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • FIRE IN THE DISCO! http://t.co/YComOnGA @reformedbroker warns us that a recession is coming, & talks about a decline in corporate profits $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Even 6.75% is too high. Looking at the Q-ratio, CAPE10, & long high quality bond yields would make 4% more realistic http://t.co/vjP0X7y1 $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Lightening the Pension Load http://t.co/bi2j6cdJ Never thought I’d c terminal funding return; can b bad 4 annuitants if insurer fails $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Fitting Factors Into the Formula http://t.co/35speWwR Bob Arnott& Cliff Asness discuss quantitative investing; long article worth reading $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • TAGP expiration will put downward pressure on short-term yields http://t.co/YgwmR2bu Once guarantee goes, much S-T $$ will look 4a home $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Cash as Trash, Cash as King, and Cash as a Weapon http://t.co/fWS1TOTl In different environments & hands, cash has different properties $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Wrong: Is Your Manager Skillful?or Just Lucky? http://t.co/vJu2tTrd Bill Miller neglected “margin of safety” & reaped bad results $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • http://t.co/VRj1k4Vg They didn’t read paper closely. Performance of anomalies diminished, not destroyed, by publishing academic research $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • For John Maynard Keynes, Economic Theory Was a Sideline http://t.co/IVdB6Gyc He was a better investor than he was an economist $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • It?s the Earnings, Stupid: ?Atrocious? Q3 Turns Josh Brown Cautious http://t.co/a2ChJKTL Time 2b cautious says @reformedbroker. Calendar? Nov 05, 2012
  • “All I know: The next bankruptcy cycle, whether in 2 or 3 or 4 years, is going to be one for the ages. Count on it.” http://t.co/xtHy7lqj $$ Nov 03, 2012

 

Policy

 

  • A New Idea of How to Fix the Ratings Agencies http://t.co/fTEECPUP by @carney | My response: http://t.co/3dWFo2Pv $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Investors won?t read the fine print http://t.co/t2W8Nrk9 Even many institutional investors become overworked, lazy, etc. & don’t read $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • Hero of the day, CPDO edition http://t.co/wIxyPo2T I remember 2006 when @alea_ @interfluidity & I (@ Realmoney) were criticizing CPDOs $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • Health-Care Law Spurs Shift to Part-Time Workers http://t.co/0ui2LGvm Law of unintended consequences: How 29-hr workweek got created $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • 10 things walk-in clinics won?t tell you http://t.co/qKPj3D3R Major factor is the loss of continuity u have w/doctor who knows u $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • After Bailout, Giants Allowed to Dominate the Mortgage Business http://t.co/K9HZZWDu “Is this what we saved [the financial system] for?” $$ Nov 04, 2012

 

Retweets

  • Can say that again RT @bespokeinvest: Wow, big selloff in the last couple minutes of trading. Dow down 430 points since Tuesday’s close. $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • Some gift RT @pdacosta: Gift that keeps on taking: France, Belgium agree to pump 5.5B euros into bailed-out Dexia http://t.co/qgq8PI6R Nov 08, 2012
  • RT @ReformedBroker: This Greek austerity bill is the equivalent of slapping a Kick Me sign on the Troika’s back. Gives us one day’s peac … Nov 07, 2012
  • Rupert goes back to sleep $$ RT @felixsalmon: RT @dansabbagh: Pearson says FT is not for sale. “This particular Bloomberg story is wrong. ” Nov 06, 2012
  • RT @SimoneFoxman: you’ve got to be kidding me. — Southfield Twp. voter appears to die, then asks ?Did I vote?? http://t.co/2ZwRgotp Nov 06, 2012
  • First of many 2 come RT @FrancesDenmark: Indiana is the first state to drop its pension return expectations below 7.0% http://t.co/ir8anqN4 Nov 06, 2012
  • Murdoch would b interested $$ RT @ReformedBroker: The Financial Slides RT @TheStalwart: Who will buy the FT? Maybe BI in a reverse merger? Nov 06, 2012
  • Bite your tongue 🙂 Janet Yellen has exceeded the Peter Principle $$ RT @fundmyfund: precious metals say = janet yellen here we come Nov 06, 2012
  • Easy 2 talk tough, hard 2 not repay $$ RT @munilass: So much for cities standing up to Calpers http://t.co/xWIciI4C Nov 06, 2012
  • marriage changes u $$ RT @moorehn Surprising: single & married women are further apart politically than men & women r http://t.co/b4adY1pc Nov 06, 2012
  • Probably priced in $$ RT @kyles09: isn’t the exp of TAG a negative for the big bank stocks or do you think it is already priced in? Nov 06, 2012
  • I was just looking forward to the end of the political season, sigh RT @jfahmy: Hillary Clinton listed as current 2016 favorite (6:1 odds). Nov 05, 2012
  • Dog bites man RT @TheStalwart: National Review endorses Mitt Romney http://t.co/ZBAptg8Q Nov 05, 2012
  • Wow $$ RT @businessinsider: New York Magazine’s Breathtaking Cover Shows Manhattan From Up In The Sky by @KimBhasin http://t.co/FaTgCqA1 Nov 03, 2012

 

Replies

  • @valuewalk Thanks. $DANOY might do what they can to improve margins, but might play badly in France. Has mgmt been s/h-friendly in past? $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • @Frank_McG Very cool. We homeschool — only 4 left, 1 senior, 2 freshmen & a 5th grader. My wife is having a blast. $$ Nov 08, 2012
  • @TheOneDave You’re welcome — you do some great stuff Nov 07, 2012
  • @TheOneDave Hey, Dave, don’t see where we can get the Chart… Nov 07, 2012
  • @amacker Floating NAV, hehe Nov 07, 2012
  • @TheStalwart My friend and former boss Eric Hovde would have beaten Baldwin, and handily… Nov 07, 2012
  • @kyles09 My actuarial conservatism, and knowing that God can do whatever he wants with me Nov 07, 2012
  • @carney I hear you: I’m going to write a piece where I take my “eliminate the rating agencies model” and clarify it http://t.co/x4WsWaj3 $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • @PragCapitalist Thanks, Cullen. I applied that idea to corporate board elections when writing 4 Realmoney, Shame it didn’t get traction $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • @michaelroston Yes, but there is a lot of $$ on both sides, and the phones ring. WV & PA gambling firms & Christians vs MD gambling firms Nov 06, 2012
  • @michaelroston However, if you live in MD all u hear about is 7, the ballot measure expanding gambling. Other measures: <crickets> $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • @BradErvin1 That’s what I am saying — they r taking consensus risks $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • @BradErvin1 But my point about the balanced funds is this: in the selection he could invest in, they r all taking the same broad risks Nov 05, 2012
  • @BradErvin1 57, Married, one kid at home, significant assets good job, wife w/good health, 52, he not so healthy, has saved aggressively Nov 05, 2012
  • @FriedrichHayek I knew that Keynes got bailed out once (or was it twice?), but he learned from his losses, & was far better at the end $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • @MarketIntegrity @CFAInstitute @CFAcareers @CFAevents You might want to get different logos; it makes you look like u r RT-ing yourself $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • @japhychron Bingo. You got it. Nov 04, 2012
  • @TeamHeadwaters Forgot about that.. those are some of the best limestone deposits in the world, in an area ideal 4 potato farming, right? Nov 04, 2012
  • @nelson3748 That seems correct, but doesn’t S. Korea have the same issues w/the Chaebol, & they r functioning ok, seemingly… Nov 04, 2012
  • @munilass Thanks. I put it on my wish list. We discussed mishedging in the finance markets, Soros, &c. Nice of him 2 spend time w/little me. Nov 03, 2012
  • @munilass What’s the title of the book? I spent about ten minutes talking with him in early 2000 at a Complexity Theory conf @ Columbia U Nov 03, 2012

 

Comments

  • I suspect that Obama ends up winning the popular vote as well, and maybe surpasses 50%, fwiw, which isn’t much… $$ Nov 07, 2012
  • Best thing about elections: they’re over. Second best: gridlock continues. Worst: Four more years of Bush-clone Obama. $$ Nov 07, 2012
  • “Stocks aren’t GDP futures, so its not a lock that they immediately fall during the recession?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/CdH1CNuP Nov 08, 2012
  • Last pres election, took oldest child 2 vote. This time, took child #5 2 vote. If I live, next time will be kids 6 & 7. Time after, kid 8 $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • “Josh, the article is worth a read, but the Chronicle of Higher Education misreported on it. The?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/BFGqCw04 $$ Nov 06, 2012
  • “People easily forget that the stocks of commodity producers are very different than buying the?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/dDlMNxIY $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • Helping a client w/his 401(k). Common balanced fund risk factors chosen: Low Duration, Medium credit quality, Large Cap Blend Equities $$ Nov 05, 2012
  • The benchmark changes added jobs that were created at an unknown earlier point in time. If they were… http://t.co/TmRLG1vg Nov 03, 2012

 

Yield is the Last Refuge of Scoundrels

Yield is the Last Refuge of Scoundrels

Governments involved in financial repression (keeping savings rates below the inflation rate) encourage their citizens to do stupid things by reaching for yield.? Remember, most people think of yield as a magic chicken that lays eggs on schedule, and never gets sick or dies.? Those who truly understand markets know that yield is an allocation of free cash flow, and that many businesses can’t control their free cash flow, so dividends are less than fully certain.

And so, I’m skeptical of the focus on income investing.? With bonds, I am not as skeptical, because there is a promised, though not guaranteed return of principal.? That doesn’t mean there aren’t problems there.? We are having a record year for issuance of corporate bonds.? Abbott Labs is offering a huge deal.? My experience with huge deals is to avoid them, unless there is some special reason to play, kind of like the last bond deal from Household International in 2002, where I bought and then traded them away for the 3o-year non-deal protected bonds bigtime.

That said, I get concerned over:

China has low interest rates for savers, so many Chinese turn to Wealth Management Products in order to earn something decent on their money.? Many of them may be little different than a Ponzi scheme.? When governments do not allow savers to earn rates exceeding inflation, savers turn to all manner of products that could harm them, both legitimate and illegitimate.

The same thing goes on in Malaysia with their Gold Plans, and suchlike.? But let’s keep things simple: let’s invest in the best corporate bond investment out there: long Baa bonds.

What’s that I see?? We’re at a 50-year low for yields on low investment-grade-rated bonds.? Surely the economy should be booming.

What, like the Great Depression, we are in a liquidity trap?? Seems that way.? Additional capital finds rare incremental productive uses, and often the best use is shrinking the company by buying back stock.

Part of that stems from the folly of the Federal Reserve using its balance sheet to buy up all manner of high quality debts by expanding its balance sheet — its cost of finance is 0% (maybe, wait till the losses come, they came to Fannie and Freddie).? By doing so, they distort pricing in the debt markets, favoring issuers over lenders, favoring the government over the private sector.

It leads to nothing good, because increasingly marginal projects get financed.? As in Japan, the marginal efficiency of capital fell dramatically, and has not risen for two decades plus.? Though it would have been painful it would have been better to have more failures and longer recessions 1986-2007.? The Fed should have kept rates higher for longer.? We would have normal markets today if they had.

As I have said before, investors don’t do well when they don’t have a place to park excess money for a small real return.? I’m not looking for the ’80s, when the return was often huge, but something above inflation, fairly estimated.? Until then, the misguided plans of the Fed will continue to do little, as businesses look at the low marginal efficiency of capital, and shrink their operations.? Remember, when businessmen see economic policies that can’t persist, they don’t take advantage of the situation — they pull in their horns and become defensive.? Thus the budget deficits, QE, and the ZIRP lead to a slower economy in the intermediate-term.

On Floating Rates

On Floating Rates

I have to admit I don’t have much sympathy for those who lent or borrowed at floating rates like LIBOR.? Personally, I have always preferred fixed-rate deals where everything is locked in from the beginning.? It means the terms are fixed, and either you can meet them or you can’t.

There are two problems with floating rate deals.? The first is that you can’t control your funding costs.? This stems from two things: short rates are volatile, and the index is typically not controlled, though it often acts like it is.? Here is an example: there were mortgages that floated off of the one-year Treasury Note rate.? Then the Treasury cancelled the one-year Treasury Note auction, and investment banks scrambled to come up with a substitute.? As I recall, they used the interpolated rate on six month bills, and two year notes.

When I was a corporate bond manager, aside from rare occasions, I never bought floating rate debt.? Why?? I needed more certainty for the client.? Fixed rate bonds and loans are more certain.? When you float, you are subject to the vicissitudes of the index, whether a borrower or a lender.

Whatever else is true, you do not control a floating rate index.? If a related party has some influence on it, that is a negative surprise, but there may be nothing illegal about their influence, particularly if it is moderate as is likely with LIBOR.

As I say to so many others in related situations: don’t give others options against you; don’t play in their casino by their rules.? Average people should not let financial institutions have variability of terms; terms should be fixed to the greatest extent possible.

And, why do borrowers go for floating rates, if they can be harmed by them?? Because they are cheaper on average.? Yield lust works on the downside as well, and many borrow shorter than is prudent for them, in order to save a little.? Works most of the time, but not all of the time, and when it doesn’t work, it can be ugly.

Thus I encourage fixed rate finance, as always, and encourage lenders and borrowers to fix their financing in advance.

On the Facebook IPO

On the Facebook IPO

If you are a manager of corporate bonds, you get to learn the speculation cycle.? New IPOs may close in weeks if things are cold, and close in minutes if things are hot.

When things are hot in bonds, eventually the syndicate (“Wall Street”) decides that it is time to test the bullishness of buyers.? At such a time, they extend the time of the offering, and either lower the yield spread (raise the price), or increase the size of the deal.

When I was a corporate bond manager, if a deal was upsized by a large amount during a period while the market was hot, I would not buy.? Tough decision, but cutting against the grain is usually a good thing.? My brokers marveled that I was not participating in these large “benchmark” deals.? More often then not, they failed, and I smiled on the sidelines.? The brokers “stuffed” the ignorant buy-side that was all too willing to take risk.? Typically after that, corporate investors were more careful.

I don’t know the right value for Facebook, and I don’t think anyone does.? Too much of the value depends on future decisions, competitor actions, and economic conditions.? Valuing stocks where the positive cash flows are far out into the future is tough, should the cash flows materialize.

The last IPO I bought was Assurant [AIZ] where I was buying the company for <90% of book value,? and 9x earnings.? I’m a value buyer, so I buy companies where prospects are not fairly calculated by the market, but I avoid new issues where the price is outlandish.

Look, Wall Street works on two levels: distribute paper at a slight discount price, until buyers take it for granted and bid aggressively, leading to a mini-crisis, like it is for Facebook now.

Did Wall Street get the best price for Facebook’s current shareholders at the IPO? Probably yes.

Was that the right price? For recent investors, the answer is no.? But in any IPO process there were a wide number of ways to protect themselves:

1) Don’t participate in IPOs. When general valuations in the market? are high, IPO valuations are higher.

2) Avoid buying IPOs in hot sectors, they are often overvalued.? Only go for IPOs in sectors no one cares about, like insurance, where I offer you Assurant [AIZ} and Safety Insurance [SAFT], among others.? (I don’t suppose it helps you to learn that insurers return better than almost any other industry?? Didn’t think so… because it is a boring yet complicated business.? Even Buffett said about Assurant — “too complicated,” and he is one of the greatest insurance executives of all time.)

3) Avoid IPOs where the deal size is upsized.? When a deal is upsized that often means the underwriters are taking advantage of demand, which diminishes the likelihood of any short-term outperformance.? For this point, in the bond market, I would cut my bid, unless I really liked the credit, together with my analyst.

4) Avoid IPOs where the price talk is raised, which also limits the likelihood of any short-term outperformance.? Same thing as a bond manager, I would drop out out if the new yield did not meet my yield needs.

5) Buy IPOs when they are forced to occur and are hated, like my experience with the Prudential “C” bonds, and most mutual insurer conversions.? IPOs are like the market on steroids, you want to avoid them when things a hot, but they are interesting when things are cold.? After all, who wants to IPO when things are cold?? There are occasional situations where legal matters force a company to go public, and that can be an interesting time to be an opportunistic buyer.

6) Avid IPOs where the valuation is stretched.? It may be a great business concept, but can it grow into that fancy valuation?? Unlike Dr. Damodaran, I don’t go in for fancy reasoning that justifies high valuations.? Most investors are better off avoiding high valuation situations, and focus on more down-to-earth types of businesses.? (My recent purchases include: Crude Oil Refining & Transport, Integrated Oil Major, two basic technology companies with forward P/Es under 10, a specialty retailer that is the strongest in its category, and two insurers, one that is a holding company, and one that is a hedge fund.)

7) Finally, avoid IPOs where those that know nothing about investing are interested.? Facebook is a perfect example here, with a large number of users who love the company, but have little idea of how profits are made, or how they will grow.

IPOs are tough, I think tougher than ordinary investing, so? avoid them unless you have an edge that justifies participation.? Be tough on yourself here — what is your edge?? Share it with a friend who has expertise, and see if he agrees with you.? This is not easy stuff, it only seems easy when the market is running hot, and that is a bad place to be when it goes cold.

 

 

Full disclosure: long AIZ, for me and clients

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Eurozone

 

  • Danske Bank?s Patience With Moody?s Evaporates http://t.co/eGbf3kV5 Questions over willingness of Denmark to provide support in a crisis. May 11, 2012
  • CIC Stops Buying Europe Government Debt on Crisis Concern http://t.co/dljk9Tau Overblown; China will return to funding the Eurozone $$ May 10, 2012
  • Greeks May Hold $510 Billion Trump Card in Renegotiation http://t.co/P7U4LSpG Depends on how well Core EZone banks have divested Greece $$ May 10, 2012
  • Spanish Banks Erode Creditors With ECB Loans http://t.co/HaEx3bgT Better collateral highly encumbered; Unsec debts implicitly subord 2 ECB May 10, 2012
  • Greece Euro-Exit Debate Goes Public http://t.co/0xOgsa7G Core Eurozone wrestles w/how to kick Greece out, even though they can’t. $$ May 10, 2012
  • How a Radical Greek Rescue Plan Fell Short http://t.co/Ds0589IG Greece is failing as a culture due2 corruption; no rescue would work $$ May 10, 2012
  • Denmark?s Banks Endure Writedown Shock Delaying Recovery http://t.co/A2Vdpymn Good sign on Denmark; take pain early -> in good shape $$ May 10, 2012
  • Greek Election Surprise Rejects ?Barbarism? of Bailout Austerity http://t.co/oX0nt5SF Growth is magic, magic I tell u! Just invoke it! $$ May 08, 2012
  • Merkozy End Means Franco-German Gulf; Greek Voters Rebel http://t.co/iCd0Cs6l Loss of Sarkozy may not b bad, but Greek paralysis will b $$ May 08, 2012
  • Francois Hollande has ten weeks to avert a French bond crisis http://t.co/3SEAWJB5 When few adults r in the room the children run wild $$ May 08, 2012
  • Challenge to Austerity, And Germany, Is Sharpened http://t.co/BWbgQJ85 The odds have risen that Germany will leave the Eurozone $$ May 08, 2012
  • Obvious but it needs 2b said $$ RT @Hawk100Clemens: Mauldin tells #CFA12 every monetary union in history has failed. May 07, 2012
  • France faces 40pc house price slump http://t.co/nPuMaVnJ If French banks have trouble now, just wait until the bad mortgage debt hits $$ May 06, 2012

 

JP Morgan

 

  • What Beached the London Whale? Credit Indices http://t.co/JKFxfaMb Crosshedging long credit risk by buying protection on an index? $$ May 11, 2012
  • J.P. Morgan Trades In Its Crown http://t.co/QUJ6hmoA That goes for firms and CEOs as well: $JPM and Jamie Dimon will not get free passes May 11, 2012
  • Drew Built 30-Yr JPMorgan Career Embracing Risk http://t.co/uocyyVC1 Lifetime 2build reputation; few years 2destroy it; revealed: 1 day $$ May 11, 2012
  • And the best way to reduce risk is to lower leverage & raise cash $$ RT @marydchilds: “The best way to hedge something is to get rid of it.” May 11, 2012

 

Facebook

 

  • Facebook Co-Founder Saverin Gives Up U.S. Citizenship Before IPO http://t.co/kL1VQYXU Cuts down on the tax bill; discount prior 2 IPO $$ May 11, 2012
  • Facebook IPO Said to Get Weaker-Than-Forecast Demand http://t.co/ktK5Bgun $FB faces slowing revenue growth, order books 4 IPO go slack $$ May 11, 2012

 

Miscellaneous

 

  • Google?s Brin Makes Strides in Hunt for Parkinson?s Cure http://t.co/YvL4LUNA He may get it one day; his Mother already has Parkinson’s $$ May 11, 2012
  • And also for those who call vegetables “veggies?” RT @jasonWSJ: Can we impose a $40 fine on dudes who refer to sandwiches as “sammies”? May 10, 2012
  • Firefox browser group irked with Microsoft, Windows 8 http://t.co/tBZ9GFuw Only Internet Explorer runs on Windows 8; expect some lawsuits $$ May 10, 2012
  • Aluminum Buyers in Japan to Pay Record Fee on Supply Drop http://t.co/7AVU1knI Smelting capacity reduced, China buys more, Japan pays up May 10, 2012
  • @RobTheStreet A lot depends on the definition of marriage, Would you allow people to marry inanimate objects, animals, or multiple parties? May 09, 2012
  • Brookstone to sell Lilliputian portable power chargers, this year http://t.co/FnSvdfOw Impressive technology if it works. $$ May 08, 2012
  • Economy Reshapes Wisconsin Recall Vote http://t.co/G0OetHhV My wife and father were forced in2 unions by collectivist brutes. Go Walker! May 08, 2012
  • Father?s Shadow as Transit Leader Hard to Evade for Shuster http://t.co/0FAZUqd4 Bud Shuster is a jerk, forcing us through Breezewood $$ May 08, 2012
  • Kellogg?s Kashi Targeted as Web Food Fighting Escalates http://t.co/BNhf5294 We need 2 send a lot of people back 4 science reeducation May 08, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Sony, Panasonic Fall to 30-Year Lows as TV Losses Mount http://t.co/Euo37RLQ Sold Panasonic after reviewing uneconomic “green” agenda $$ May 11, 2012
  • Kim Jong Un Bashes ?Pathetic? North Korea Fun Park http://t.co/gb4S9HBc He should know; he lived outside NK, where there is real fun $$ May 10, 2012
  • Sukhoi SuperJet Disappears During Indonesia Demo Flight http://t.co/0JrxAkAw Another sign of degraded Russian abilities in aerospace $$ May 10, 2012
  • Bad H/L: Shooting to Kill Pirates Risks Blackwater Moment http://t.co/laW55VEo Correct H/L: Hiring Armed Guards protects cargoes &crews $$ May 10, 2012
  • Drug-Defying Germs From India Speed Post-Antibiotic Era http://t.co/XGeno5mf Long. Scariest article of the day; wash your hands w/soap $$ May 08, 2012
  • Israel Pyramid Rules Turn Insurers Into Buyout Targets http://t.co/4tXBqehx Interesting:

Israel is limiting holding company levels to 3 $$ May 10, 2012

  • UK Pay Protests Oust Aviva Chief http://t.co/WKVdmQGM I remember when they overpaid for Amerus Life in the US; sign of bad management $$ May 10, 2012

 

 

Energy

 

  • RT @merrillmatter: @AlephBlog Methinks we’ll need to see some epic blowouts in natgas space (ha ha) before supply/demand can come back i … May 10, 2012
  • Chesapeake Deals Carry $1.4 Billion in Undisclosed Liability http://t.co/UFohsseZ $CHK May b worth a look when things stop getting worse May 10, 2012
  • When the Exxon way stops working http://t.co/BgN2zLO6 $XOM learns 2b more cooperative w/foreign countries where it wants 2 explore 4 oil $$ May 08, 2012
  • Argentina Taps Ex-Schlumberger Executive Galuccio to Run YPF http://t.co/j5P1oyoS Possibly a good choice to run the purloined company $$ May 08, 2012

 

Fixed Income

 

  • Still time to make money in Treasury bonds http://t.co/ABl43gzM The depressionary bull case 4 long T-bonds; D. Rosenberg & Lacy Hunt $$ May 10, 2012
  • Why Emerging Market Corporate Bond ETFs are Hot http://t.co/tWvz0sif High USD yield, but be wary. Laws governing creditor rights vary $$ May 10, 2012
  • In other words, the 30-year Tsy sold well today b/c some seek Depression insurance & others hedge convexity or immunize long liabilities $$ May 10, 2012
  • Treasuries Pare Losses as Europe Concern Aids Sale http://t.co/C7jytF08 Investors make sure they get income 4 30-yrs & $$ back when old May 10, 2012
  • S&P Warns Of $46T Perfect Credit Storm http://t.co/jZTbvy42 If companies have adequate cash flows from operations, this is not an issue. May 10, 2012

 

Canada

 

  • In Canada, Alternate Currency Keeps Traction With Fans http://t.co/ePyXRH1f Paper Money, Issued by Canadian Tire, Is Popular Way 2Pay $$ May 11, 2012
  • Revisit after their housing bubble pops RT @vgmac: There is a lot of love for Canada’s banking system here at the Chicago Fed conferences $$ May 10, 2012
  • @vgmac Then again, at the first Treasury/blogger summit I told them they should imitate the Canadian regulators and central bankers. #canada May 10, 2012
  • Canada Housing Bubble Concern Shown in Insurer Query http://t.co/kGHcqgDE Should the Canadian govt try2exit the mortgage insurance biz? $$ May 10, 2012
  • CMHC Says Capital Levels “Double” OSFI Requirements http://t.co/R4p5TuBO F&F also had capital far higher than their disaster level $$ May 08, 2012

 

Cisco Systems

 

  • Cisco shares drop on tech spending worries http://t.co/06maBaX4 Global economic weakness feeds into tech firms that sell much abroad $$ May 10, 2012
  • @ampressman Cramer said something like, “It’s not a growth company if they have to talk about the economy, weather, industry factors, etc.” May 10, 2012
  • @ampressman $AAPL is a growth company, at least for now, $CSCO was a growth company somewhere in the last 15 years… May 10, 2012

 

Delta Air Lines

 

  • Buy Delta Air Lines: Trainer Refinery Purchase & Improving Financials Will Lift The Stock http://t.co/W7YeEmgb Poorly reasoned thesis $$ May 08, 2012
  • Remember when $DD bot Conoco? There would b synergies in petrochemicals. $DD bot it at the peak, spit it out at the bottom $$ #limitscope May 08, 2012
  • $DAL substitutes risk in jet fuel pricing 4 risks in crude oil, gasoline, heating oil prices, & operational risk in a biz it doesn’t know $$ May 08, 2012
  • @The_Analyst Agreed, though enough capacity has come out of the industry through mergers that they might finally c some pricing power $$ May 08, 2012

 

US Housing

 

  • 5 Pitfalls of Home Refinancing http://t.co/ZxGUF3HM Longer maturity, Closing costs, Contract terms, Hidden fees, Appraisals $$ May 10, 2012
  • Look Who?s Pushing Homeowners Off the Foreclosure Cliff http://t.co/T6CBkUAt Mtge docs exist to protect the lender’s property interest $$ May 08, 2012
  • RE: @bloombergview Read any mortgage contract; it exists to protect the rights of lenders, including protecting the m? http://t.co/ob9eIcBt May 08, 2012
  • No Repeating Slowdown Seen by U.S. With Banks to Housing http://t.co/A0LNwrjh While hi % of mtges r underwater, finl stress will remain $$ May 08, 2012
  • Pimco Housing Bear Kiesel Says It?s Time to Start Buying http://t.co/f3zaBNZA He assumes dark supply will hang on for higher prices. $$ May 06, 2012

 

US Regulation

 

  • Maybe to be perfectly fair, the government releases the data on a website at midnight ET, long before the US markets ? http://t.co/9Zqniljs May 10, 2012
  • A Jury of Peers for Broker Disputes http://t.co/5Ly14oKJ The playing field may be more even now; odds r still stacked against investors May 10, 2012
  • Congress Seeks Postal Overhaul While Making It Impossible http://t.co/lvcEBxmw The real danger is after reduction, PS is less relevant $$ May 10, 2012
  • US Millionaires Told Go Away as Tax Evasion Rule Looms http://t.co/Tx6lr1Bl Fewer foreign banks will accept accts w/US citizens/firms $$ May 10, 2012

 

Berkshire Hathaway

?

  • Biggest Buffett Targets Seen Spanning Deere to Henkel http://t.co/dLbp9pic Muses about what Buffett would buy 2 eclipse BNSF $$ May 08, 2012
  • +1 RT @Kevin_Holloway: Good read on possibilities of recent $BRK.B purchases among some other gd thoughts by @AlephBlog http://t.co/xkN8SlXu May 08, 2012
  • Deep in the Insurance Weeds at Berkshire Hathaway http://t.co/GkH9oWBo This helps explain the life reinsurance losses at $BRKB. LTC $$ May 08, 2012
  • Buffett understands tech. But he searches for revenue streams that can’t easily be obsoleted. $AAPL & $GOOG could be ? http://t.co/VyOnKUTy May 07, 2012

?

Market Dynamics

 

  • World?s Simplest Stock Valuation Measure http://t.co/OvmQTmHs Growth Rate/2 + 8 = PE Ratio; @eddyelfenbein & his conservative PE formula $$ May 10, 2012
  • Dole Food Breakup Seen Bearing Fruit With 58% Return http://t.co/C4SvaNvw Can $DOLE become a high margin biz, & pay down debt? $$ May 10, 2012

 

Financial Sector

 

  • What about front-running? $$ RT @abnormalreturns: @MebFaber: Nail in the Mutual Fund Coffin (NAV Based ETF Trading) http://t.co/SZ3CbIY3 May 08, 2012
  • BTW, for those holding dividend funds, back in 1994, stock managers following a yield strategy got crushed. $$ #annushorribilisforbonds May 08, 2012
  • The Dangers of Dividend Funds http://t.co/5WSdEFwN Dividend funds may b safer than other stock funds, r still stock funds w/real risk $$ May 08, 2012
  • True 4 many $$ RT @ReformedBroker: ?Daddy, what do you do at your job?? http://t.co/mxrcVyhm May 08, 2012
  • BofA?s New Black-Belt Data Chief Targets Blinding Gaps http://t.co/P60yhtAk Merger integration didn’t happen in $BAC ‘s IT areas $$ #mess May 08, 2012
  • Billion-Dollar Traders Quit Wall Street for Hedge Funds http://t.co/2yFJ2JXr Volcker Rule reducing dealer-driven market liquidity $$ May 08, 2012
  • Flash-Crash Story Looks More Like a Fairy Tale http://t.co/0mBQDGKZ Still a mystery; but4any self-feeding panic, players leaning wrong way May 08, 2012
  • Almost Half of Finance Graduates Seek New Jobs, PwC Says http://t.co/YUuH9KJl The bubble in financial jobs has popped, decamp 2 other inds May 08, 2012
  • ?Where is Everybody?? http://t.co/7YPOcMUb Little retail participation is bullish; it means that only the relatively smart $$ is playing May 08, 2012
  • 50 Ways to Restore Trust in the Investment Industry http://t.co/VHhllKyp The CFA Institute gathers opinions from members on cleaning up $$ May 08, 2012
  • RE: @bloombergview Equity is more expensive than other types of bank capital; raising the cost of capital means fewer? http://t.co/qPvVygll May 07, 2012
  • Heat’s on Triparty Repos http://t.co/7Jk7DrTS Fed Is Pressing Big Players to Reduce Exposures to $1.7 Trillion Market $$ May 06, 2012

 

Company Specific

 

  • How Hewlett-Packard lost its way http://t.co/pA683e3H Very long & ugly article about board & mgmt dysfunction @ $HPQ. FD: +$HPQ 4 me&clients May 08, 2012
  • A Real Concern For Apple?s Stock: Telecom Carriers Threaten to Kill Subsidies on Phones http://t.co/JlQwSDAq Interesting thesis $$ May 08, 2012
  • AMR Said to Seek More Overseas Flights as Suitor Circles http://t.co/eUHdHju4 $LCC wins more backing, could allow filing another plan $$ May 08, 2012

 

Politics

  • Exodus From Tiburon to Texarkana Is Exaggerated http://t.co/nsyd3QjF Truth is, people & firms r sticky, until they finally get fed up! $$ May 10, 2012
  • If we do not discipline ourselves, the bond market will discipline us $$ RT @carney: Why the left will keeping winning. http://t.co/kJcfgEt4 May 08, 2012
  • Too bad, we need a better opponent to Obama $$ RT @BloombergNews: Breaking: Santorum Endorses Former Rival Romney as Republican Nominee May 08, 2012
  • Don’t Worry (About GDP), Be Happy http://t.co/BaSDMbTM GDP approximates economic growth; more subjective progress measures r ridiculous May 08, 2012
  • @justinwolfers Last thing we need on the Fed is another neoclassical Ph. D. economist. Let’s try some brainy generalists, value investors $$ May 07, 2012
  • @GaelicTorus @justinwolfers All I am saying is value investors understand how the economy works better than neoclassical economists do $$ May 07, 2012
  • Disabled Americans Shrink Size of U.S. Labor Force http://t.co/NX6ZzCjK I still resent former neighbor on SSD, putting Xmas lights on roof May 06, 2012
  • But are they ending with an accrual basis surplus, not just a cash surplus? That’s the question. http://t.co/uGa7WX14 May 06, 2012
Ways to Buy Cars

Ways to Buy Cars

To start, I will extensively quote a prior article that I wrote on the topic:

When I buy a car, I analyze what car I would like to buy.? I look at reliability, repair costs, overall costs, and style.? I use Consumer Reports to help me analyze this.? Then I go to the website(s) of the manufacturer in question, and copy the data on all of the used models on offer at the dealerships within 30 miles of me.? With price as the dependent variable, I then run a regression with model year as dummy independent variables, and total miles as an independent variable.? After I run my regression, I look at the cars with the biggest price deviations, the predicted price is a lot higher than actual.? I then look at the features of the underpriced cars, and choose one where there are good features with a discounted price.

I go to that dealer, review the car, test drive it, and if it passes my tests, I haggle over the price, and buy it. ? In my experience, this cuts thousands off the price of the car.? What a great reason to have studied econometrics.

But then there is another way to do it, and I have done it before with success, and you can review it here.? Decide what car you want to buy, and solicit offers from nearby dealerships, and buy the cheapest offer. ? For used car, you will have to adjust for quality.

I will offer you one more tweak which stems from this article from my bond manager days.? Call up all of the dealers offering the car that you want and tell them that you will buy from the dealer that offers the best offer, but at the second place price.? You’ll have to explain it on average at least once more.? If you want bonus points, mention that this idea stems from the research of a Nobel Prize winning economist William Vickery.? In my experience Vickery auctions even the odds against the experts, because it takes them out of their comfort zones, and makes them bid.

=–==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

One final note: I have one idea that I think is a hole in the system — an area that I think harbors inexpensive cars relative to their value.? In applying the first method — gathering prices and mileages and running a regression, I found one class of vehicles to almost always trade cheaper than they should.? Cars with low mileage that are old tend to be underpriced.? There is a lot of variability here, but if you want to buy a car cheaply that is in good shape, it is a good initial screen to find some good vehicles because people prize younger cars overly, even if they have been driven heavily.

My idea here gives you a way of buying something of greater quality, though unusual, for a lower price.? There’s usually a story behind the vehicles, but it often involves vehicles that had owners that rarely drove them, then had an accident, and the insurance company bought the vehicle as part of a settlement, an a used car dealer rebuilds the car, buys it cheaply, and sells it for what is for him a large markup, but cheap compared to the mileage and condition of equivalent cars of later vintages.

There.? Some practical ways of saving some money for you.? Hope it works well for you.

The Rules, Part XV

The Rules, Part XV

What if securitization allows the economy to expand more rapidly than it would at a price of volatility, when intermediaries would prove useful?

Sometimes securitization and tranching creates securities for which there is no native home.

As the life insurance industry shrinks, it will be hard to find buyers for subordinated structured product.

Securitization is an interesting phenomenon.? Take a group of simple securities, like commercial or residential mortgages, and carve the cashflows up in ways that will appeal to groups of investors.? Do investors want ultrasafe investments?? Easy, carve off a portion of the investments representing the largest loss imaginable by most investors.? The remainder should be rated AAA (Aaa if you speak Moody’s).? Then find risk taking parties to buy the portion that could suffer loss, at ever higher yields for those that are willing to take realized losses earlier.

What’s that, you say?? What if you can’t find buyers willing to buy the risky parts of the deal at prices that will make the securitization work?? Easy, he will take the loans and sell them as a block to a bank that will want them on its balance sheet.

That said, securitized assets are typically most liquid near the issuance of the deal, with the short, simple and AAA portions of the deal retaining their liquidity best.? Suppose you hold a security that is not AAA, or complex, or long duration, and you want to sell it.? Well, guess what?? Now you have to engage in an education campaign to get some bond manager to buy it, or, take a significant haircut on the price in order to move the bond.

It helps to have a strong balance sheet.? If the credit is good, even if obscure, a strong balance sheet can buy off the beaten path bonds, and hold them to maturity if need be.? And yet, there is hidden optionality to having a strong balance sheet — you can buy and hold quality obscure bonds, but if thing go really well, you can sell the bonds to anxious bidders scrambling for yield, while you hold more higher quality bonds during a yield mania.

Endowments, defined benefit pension plans, and life insurance companies have those strong balance sheets.? They do not have to worry that money will run away from them.? The promises that these entities make are long duration in nature.? They have the ability to invest for the long-run, and ignore short-term market fluctuations, even more than Buffett does, if they are so inclined.

If there was a decrease in the buying power of institutions with long liability structures, we would see less long term investing in fixed income and equity investments.? Investments requiring a lockup, like private equity and hedge funds, would shrink, and offer higher prospective yields to get deals done.

-==–==-=-=-=-=–=-=-=-==-=-=–=

But what of my first point?? There are securitization trusts, and there are financial companies.? During a boom phase, the securitization trusts can finance assets cheaply.?? During a bust phase, the securitization trusts have a lot of complicated rules for how to deal with problem assets.? Financial companies, if they have adequate capital, are capable of more flexible and tailored arrangements with troubled creditors.? Having a real balance sheet with slack capital has value during a financial crisis.? Securitization trusts follow rules, and have no slack capital.? Losses are delivered to the juniormost security.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-==-=-=-=-=-=-

Sometime around 2004, a light went on in the life insurance industry regarding non-AAA securitized investments.? In 2005, with a few exceptions, the life insurance industry stopped buying them.? AIG was a major exception.? The consensus was that the extra interest spread was not worth it.? Fortunately for the investment banks there were a lot of hedge funds willing to take such risks.

There should be some sort of early warning system that clangs when the life insurance industry stops buying, and those that buy in their absence have weaker balance sheets.? When risky assets are held by those with weak balance sheets, it is a recipe for disaster.

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During the boom phase, securitization trusts provide capital, cheaper capital than can be funded through banks.? That allows the economy to grow faster for a time, but there is no free lunch.? Eventually economic growth will revert to mean, when securitizations show bad credit results, and the economy has to slow down to absorb losses.

In addition, when losses come, loss severities will tend to be higher than that for corporates.? Usually a tranche offering credit support will tend to lose all of its principal, or none.? (Leaving aside early amortization and the last tranche standing in the deal.)? For years, the rating agencies and investment banks argued that losses on securitized products were a lot lower than that for corporates, because incidence of loss was so low on ABS, CMBS and non-conforming RMBS.? But the low incidence was driven by how easy it was to find financing, as lending standards deteriorated.

Thus, securitization allowed more lending to be done.? First, originators weren’t retaining much of the risk, so they could be more aggressive.? Second, the originators didn’t have to put up as much capital as they would if they had to hold the loans on a balance sheet.? Third, there were a lot of buyers for higher-rated yieldy paper, and ABS, CMBS and non-conforming RMBS typically offered better yields, and seemingly lower losses (looking through the rear-view mirror).? What was not to like?

What was not to like was the increased leverage that it allowed the whole system to run at.? Debt levels increased, and made the system less flexible.?? Investors were fooled into thinking that assets were worth a lot more than they are worth today because of the temporary added buying power from applying additional debt financing to the assets.

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Securitization has been a mixed blessing to investors.? It is brilliant during the boom phase, and exacerbates trouble during the bust phase.? And so it is.? As you evaluate financial companies, have a bias against clipping yield.

Regulators, as you evaluate risk-based capital charges, do it in such a way that securitized products get penalized versus equivalently-rated corporates.? Just add enough RBC such that it takes away any yield advantage versus holding it on balance sheet, or versus the excess yield on equivalently rated average corporates.? It’s not a hard calculation to run.

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Off-topic end to this post.? I added Petrobras to my portfolio today.? Bought a little Ensco as well.? I haven’t been posting as much lately since I was busy with two things: studying for my Series 86 exam, which I take tomorrow, and I gave a presentation on AIG to staff members on the Congressional Oversight Panel the oversees the TARP yesterday.? Good people; they seemed to appreciate what I wrote on AIG’s domestic operating subsidiaries last year.

Full disclosure: Long PBR ESV

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