Category: Asset Allocation

Correlating Risky Assets

Correlating Risky Assets

Asset allocation is tough, because the correlations are not stable.? Here’s an example: in the 90s, at many conferences that I went to, I was told that one of the smartest moves you could make was to invest heavily in every new class of Asset Backed Security [ABS] created, because they all tighten in yield spread terms after issuance, leading to price gains.

I didn’t believe it then, and that was a good thing, because the most exotic of ABS classes got whacked in the financial crisis.? As it was was, I had already seen debacles in Franchise Loan ABS (spit, spit), and Manufactured Housing (post-1997 vintage).? At a conference for Life Insurance, I was a skunk at the party in 2006, as one ignorant presenter suggested that AAA structured assets never went bad.? History already taught us better, and as I tried to say to the then-CEO of Principal Financial as he was exiting the conference, he needed to look at the mezzanine and subordinated structured product in his company.? Free consulting, but but worth more than the consensus.? As far as I can tell, he didn’t listen.? For many reasons the stock price is lower today.

I have many other tales where in fixed income (bonds), everyone “followed the leader,” which worked in the short run, but failed in the long run.? The point is that investor behavior correlates asset classes.? There may be underlying economic differences, such as owning a natural gas producer and utility that uses natural gas, but most of those differences get erased as most investors seek portfolios immune from factors of secular change.

So as new asset or sub-asset classes are introduced, in the short-run they are uncorrelated, and likely rally, because few own them.? But after the rally, many now own it, and the future correlations are high because so many own it.? The correlations ultimately depend on two things: the underlying economics, and investor behavior.? Investor behavior is the dominant aspect of pricing.

I don’t think there is a lot of diversification in most risky asset classes from an economic standpoint.? Does it matter whether a business is public or private??? I think the answer is no.

What that means in the present environment is that there is a gap between business risk, and those that finance business risk.? In other words, there is a difference between investment grade bonds, and risk assets.? That’s the negative correlation in this market.? Do you want diversification?? Buy some ETFs that invest in long high investment grade debt.? You will not get any effective diversification out of buying different classes of risky assets.? Those are already owned by those that compete with you.

Promises to pay from sound entities that can be relied upon in the future behave very differently than risky assets.? In your asset allocation, to the degree that you need real diversification, look at that as the critical distinction.? All other distinctions are secondary at best.

On Distribution Formulas

On Distribution Formulas

Before I get started this evening, I would like to offer an apology to those that read my recent piece, Simple Retirement Calculator.? I didn’t define all of the terms in the piece, and so here are the definitions:

  • DB plan — defined benefit plan, a pension plan that offers a certain benefit, and the cost of funding that benefit varies.
  • DC plan — defined contribution plan, a pension plan that allows for a certain level of contributions, and the benefit achievable varies.
  • 100% J&S — 100% Joint & Survivor.? In an annuity, its payment is the same regardless of who dies first.? The one surviving does not see any reduction in payments.? In 50% J&S, the one surviving get only half the payment after the first spouse dies, which allows for a higher initial benefit than 100% J&S.
  • CR — cash refund.? Some people getting an annuity hate, really hate the idea that the insurance company might make money off of them if they die early.? The cash refund option says that heirs receive the difference between the premium paid and benefits paid.? The cost of this option is a slightly lower benefit.
  • Indexed — the annuity benefit rises with inflation, usually the CPI.

Now the table in the article tried to show how much of a person’s salary would be replaced at retirement, given a certain level of saving.? Another way of viewing it would be how many years of income would the accumulated value of savings be relative to their final salary at age 70.? That’s the “Accum Years Ending Pay.”? It’s surprising how few years of ending pay a person accumulates unless they save a lot.

That’s all.? Other questions, forward them my way, but please, ask, don’t demand…

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Now there was one more item from my piece Simple Retirement Calculator, the line that read 4% — i.e., pay out 4% of the lump sum annually, an assumption that has fairly broad acceptance for managing a lump sum without annuitizing it.? I myself came to endorse the 4% rule in 2001, after doing a series of analyses using what I thought was a good risk, inflation, and asset allocation model, concluding that the average person had 95% odds of not going bankrupt if they took just 4% of the initial sum invested, adjusted for inflation annually, as a distribution.

The data through 2000 did not allow for a “lost decade” like the one we have recently experienced.? During such a time, marginal returns on capital became very low.? GDP growth slowed, and yields on Treasuries fell.

Going back to Ben Graham, who when bullish never let his asset allocation go above 75% stocks (risky assets), and 25% bonds, and when bearish never let his asset allocation go below 25% stocks (risky assets), and 75% bonds, in the same sense, I use this to offer a new distribution rule for those that don’t annuitize and have to manage a lump sum:

As a percentage of your assets, spend no more than the 10-year Treasury yield annually, plus:

  • 0% if the situation is bearish (risk assets are highly priced)
  • 1% if the situation is neutral
  • 2% if the situation is bullish (risk assets have depressed prices)

As for determining risk posture, I would use things like the Q-ratio, Shiller’s CAPE, and the difference between Moody’s Baa and Aaa spreads to be my guide.? At present, by those measures it would leave me halfway between neutral and bearish in the intermediate-term, and so I would be look to distribute only 2.5%/year from endowments as income.

Chintzy?? Today yes, but it respects the idea that depressionary conditions may persist longer than we might otherwise expect.? It also adjusts as inflation rises, to the degree that it gets reflected in Treasury yields, which may be held down by the Fed.? In such a case of the Fed constraining longer Treasury yields, gold prices and the prices of other materials may rise dramatically, because there is no penalty for holding commodities in real terms.

This views the asset markets through the eyes of a conservative but clever bond investor, who realizes that future equity returns are highly correlated with Baa-rated bond yields, and future bond returns are highly correlated with Treasury yields.

But, think of what this formula would have done in the early ’80s, when endowments were constrained, and they took little as income.? This formula would have anticipated the future, and allowed endowments to spend more aggressively, anticipating the recovery.

So let Treasury yields, the Q-ratio, Shiller’s CAPE, and the difference between Moody’s Baa and Aaa spreads be your guide in distribution formulas.? Better to distribute less now, than find yourself or your institution impoverished later.

Book Review: Abnormal Returns

Book Review: Abnormal Returns

Abnormal Returns

I consider Tadas Viskanta to be a friend of mine.? I write my eclectic blog, and Tadas occasionally features me on his daily curation of the economics/finance/investment blogosphere.

But it is not friendship that leads me to write the following: this is a really good book.? Why?? Every day, Tadas curates the best thoughts in finance.? He finds them, he motivates them, and links to them.? If I had just one site to visit everyday, it would be his, not mine.? He’s really good at finding the best content in finance.

But it goes a step further than that.? Tadas is a very good blogger in his own right.? It’s not that he comes up with new insights, but he is very good at taking the insights of others and weaves them into a greater insight than the separate thoughts of the individuals.? He finds themes, and he finds disagreements.? Each provides good food for thought.

Now, if Tadas can do this on a daily basis, let’s call him the Chief Synthesizer of the economics/finance/investment blogosphere — then, what happens if he decides to take several steps back, and synthesize the grand themes he has seen in six years of writing his blog.

It’s been a violent period, after all.? Tadas has been blogging from the peak of residential real estate (October 2005), through the tail of the boom (October 2007), to the bust (March 2009), to the present.? He keeps it relevant, and he doesn’t take sides, which allows him to source the best content better.

So as he synthesizes the themes of the last six or seven years, he comes down to really basic ideas for each chapter: Risk, Return, Stocks, Bonds, Portfolio Management, Does Active Investing Work, ETFs, Global Investing, Alternative Assets, Behavioral Finance, Using Media, and the Lost Decade.? He handles them deftly, highlighting differences, but giving a consensus opinion.

The book is modest, in that it does not promise you greater profits if you follow his advice.? It is a realistic book, because most of us know that the basic principles of investing are straightforward, but they get clouded by academics and hucksters.? After you read this book, you may or may not earn more, but you will probably be safer.

Also, the book is an easy read; I glided through it in less than three hours.

Quibbles

The editor could have done more work to make the index complete; I was surprised to find myself mentioned in the book more times than the index noted.

Who would benefit from this book: Most amateur investors would benefit from the book, and many, though not all professionals would benefit from the book’s basic approach. Think of it this way — what if you could explain basic concepts to the uninstructed more clearly? Wouldn’t it help you in your business?? If you want to, you can buy the book here: Abnormal Returns: Winning Strategies from the Frontlines of the Investment Blogosphere.

Full disclosure: I asked the publisher for the book and he sent it to me.

If you enter Amazon through my site, and you buy anything, I get a small commission.? This is my main source of blog revenue.? I prefer this to a ?tip jar? because I want you to get something you want, rather than merely giving me a tip.? Book reviews take time, particularly with the reading, which most book reviewers don?t do in full, and I typically do. (When I don?t, I mention that I scanned the book.? Also, I never use the data that the PR flacks send out.)

Most people buying at Amazon do not enter via a referring website.? Thus Amazon builds an extra 1-3% into the prices to all buyers to compensate for the commissions given to the minority that come through referring sites.? Whether you buy at Amazon directly or enter via my site, your prices don?t change.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Busy week last week.? Here’s the economic and other news:

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China

 

  • Bloomberg: Inflated Notions http://t.co/hvMoIFH6 Patrick Chovanec questions whether Chinese economic statistics are correct. $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • China?s Political Stability Questioned, while Deposit Withdrawals Accelerate http://t.co/X9kJ9oZb Deposits exit China’s banks; many worry $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Asia dominates new treasury purchases http://t.co/BXvgGQRi If you want to favor your exporters, you have to suck in the debts of the buyers Apr 22, 2012
  • China?s Achilles heel http://t.co/3TPxHEvL Very difficult to change the practice of having fewer children once it is entrenched $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Son is a good man, more worthy than Dad $$ RT @mprobertson: & the first wife had a son. http://t.co/dFzgm1kp extra extra, read all about it Apr 19, 2012
  • Chinese Move to Wealth Products May Undermine Bank Stability http://t.co/bYK4qImP Disintermediation happening increasing shadow bank risk $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Chinese Officialdom Indulges in the Almost-Free Lunch http://t.co/tTMkP8JK A modest subsidy/perk looks big if the 1 looking in is poor $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • The Power Shift in China http://t.co/bgxN7t8h Shifts: 1.weak leaders < strong factions 2. government < interest groups 3. party < country $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • More Chinese get US green card http://t.co/ZU30ahwF They know where they’ve got it good, not in the Socialist worker’s paradise! $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • So many Chinese officials r arrested 4 embezzling funds through Macau that 2 scholars devoted a study to the subject http://t.co/YZbDqX57 $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • That?s Governor Zhou to you http://t.co/AkXcHbPZ Check out chart of central bank balance sheet growth http://t.co/VG0bySGA China leads $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • China widens the range 4 currency fluctuations. Is it really making x-rate more flexible? http://t.co/Rv79vI0q PBOC still targets x-rate $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Rotting From Within http://t.co/vAwKBTzb Investigates the massive corruption of the Chinese military; makes corruption in the US look small Apr 18, 2012
  • Bo Xilai’s first wife gets her revenge at last http://t.co/UsrGejSF Some Chinese r very good @ maintaining a grudge 4a long time $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • China Doubling Yuan Band Signals Drive for Convertibility http://t.co/FK9OohMh Importance overstated; will not have a big effect on x-rate Apr 18, 2012
  • China Adds Treasuries for Second Month on Reserve Growth http://t.co/Ev9Fqi8s Export earnings have 2b invested somewhere $$ is best of bad Apr 18, 2012
  • China New Yuan Loans Surge in March as Money Supply Quickens http://t.co/DmXg6QB5 Sounds inflationary, if not 4 goods, then 4 assets $$ Apr 18, 2012

 

Energy

 

  • Peak oil goes mainstream (again) http://t.co/BijPuVFG Oil & Gas will never run out, but the price to get them could get high $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Feeling peaky http://t.co/4mefPCBR “But there is a simpler explanation: that supply is inadequate to keep up with rising demand.” $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Could US natural gas run out of storage capacity? http://t.co/8R1aYxjM Yes, it could, and we could see the price of spot gas go 2 zero $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Delta?s Oil Refinery Plan Flies Against Economic Sense http://t.co/0xAnIV2z It rarely makes sense to be vertically integrated. $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Obama’s oil market plan more politics than substance http://t.co/w2vwKhNx Crude oil market is so big; would be difficult 2 game secretly Apr 18, 2012

 

Eurozone

 

  • Odds of bankruptcy http://t.co/v0xBexrW Short table of bankruptcy odds: European banks = E-Zone Fringe > US Banks > Other nations $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • The bank-sovereign linkage in the Eurozone http://t.co/9q7Sx9cn Not 2 surprising; governments & banks comprise most systemic risk $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Spain’s loan delinquencies accelerate http://t.co/3Nlf2QDu Really ugly graph: http://t.co/iJVux7fj The Spain issue is not dead $$ #ezonedead Apr 22, 2012
  • Paulson Said to Short Europe Bonds Amid Spain Concern http://t.co/hJQwSc9n This one isn’t as easy as shorting subprime. Be careful $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Modell Deutschland ?ber alles http://t.co/DtrBNHDL Suggests EZone imitate German labor rules, but not austerity $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • French Campaign Enters Final Week With Hollande Extending Lead http://t.co/whQhmUb1 & widening recently; could make Ezone matters messy $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Downgrades Loom 4 Banks http://t.co/EdDRDGQa Moody’s Weighing Ratings Cuts to 114 Institutions in 16 European Countries $$ #lookoutbelow Apr 18, 2012
  • Spanish Minister Asks ECB to Buy Bonds as Crisis Deepens http://t.co/cUcLRHLW Things r calmer now but this is the path of least resistance Apr 18, 2012
  • Spain?s Surging Bad Loans Cast New Doubts on Bank Cleanup http://t.co/QQT2BSsB NPLs /totallending jumped to 8.16% in February, <1% in 2007 Apr 18, 2012
  • Weidmann says not ECB job to tackle Spain’s problems http://t.co/kRUWSfyQ Famous last words $$ ECB only entity w/flexbility 2act fast Apr 18, 2012
  • Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Says Spain Is Worse Off Than It Was Before The LTRO http://t.co/nVMDpG5c It’s a solvency, not a liquidity problem Apr 18, 2012
  • GEORGE SOROS: The Euro Crisis Just Entered A ‘Less Volatile But More Lethal Phase’ http://t.co/uzIev7nm LTRO papers overinsolvency probs Apr 18, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Argentina’s shadow FX rate shows total loss of confidence http://t.co/RVRicp1p Dishonesty in one area makes others distrust u elsewhere $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Cristina: she is not alone http://t.co/gBWcllwU Many nations engage in expropriation from foreigners. $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Pakistan And India To Go To War Over Water? http://t.co/2mx9a7u9 Whiskey’s for drinking, water’s for fighting over — Mark Twain $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Unlikely but never say never RT @SCMITHA: @AlephBlog Sir No chance of war bet India & Pakistan both Nuclear Army Chief Kayani wants peace Apr 18, 2012
  • Mexico Manifesting its Own Destiny http://t.co/kLwx5A6l “Mexico has clearly stood out to me for its relative and absolute strength.” $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Japan?s Teachers Fund to Start Investing in REITs, Hedge Funds http://t.co/9nKnY0zM Trend following; late to the alternative assets party Apr 18, 2012


US Tax Policy & Pensions

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  • Congress Eyes 401(k)s Again http://t.co/nRL9IkeO Interesting article on some possible/unlikely proposals to change 401(k)s $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • How to Pay No Taxes: 10 Strategies Used by the Rich http://t.co/ljjgefpc The main problem is defining income, not tax rates on the rich $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Occupy defined-benefit pension funds! http://t.co/eQooNetC Employees would be better off with DB plans, even if had to fund them themselves Apr 22, 2012
  • New Suits Over Do-It-Yourself IRAs http://t.co/B6UYpG5m They aim for the wrong target; the custodian is only a conduit, not a referee $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • As population ages, institutions reduce equity holdings http://t.co/rPfescwH A first: US pensions have allocated more to bonds than equities Apr 18, 2012

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Miscellaneous

 

  • The New York Times Company in 2015 http://t.co/qp451VDA An optimistic view of $NYT three years from now. I will not buy it. $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Joel Kotkin: The Great California Exodus http://t.co/WOvr2BFE Y California is in deep trouble & will shrink as better places r found $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Contra: Climate Change Has Nothing to Do With Al Gore http://t.co/GO0S60J3 Misinterprets Lk 16:2, & I am to believe he is a Christian? $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • The Celestial Event That Sparked a Revolution http://t.co/Kn3E9XJb Fascinating tale on the transit of Venus across the Sun $$ #June6th Apr 22, 2012
  • The Downside of Cohabiting Before Marriage http://t.co/a1fFySzW For a man & woman 2 live together long run requires decisive commitment $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Amazon’s knock-off problem (35 Shades of Grey, anyone?) http://t.co/oRJNKhVB Fascinating that some r knocking off books & selling on $AMZN Apr 18, 2012
  • Median age for first marriage spikes to record, holding back family formation http://t.co/Uf2SbCTI Long-run effect on society won’t b good Apr 18, 2012
  • To Pay Off Loans, Grads Put Off Marriage, Children http://t.co/G72NieZI Far better to skip college than put off marrying & children $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • The 101 Finance People You Have To Follow On Twitter: http://t.co/pIaCWK1n A good list, but where’s @moorehn, @interfluidity, @edwardnh $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Dark Meat Getting a Leg Up on Boring Boneless Breast http://t.co/7BDSaTru “Every single day we have shortage of dark meat.” Who knew? $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • ?Pink Slime? Furor Means Disaster for U.S. Meat Innovator http://t.co/uGwKSIhw The other side of the story; fighting bacteria in beef $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • RAIL TRAFFIC CONTINUES TO SOFTEN http://t.co/EnhWT7Ay Economy slowing; just another straw blowing in the wind. $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Freeport Deal Talk Intensifies on Cheap Copper http://t.co/DH26Nf1s Would be a big deal & difficult to pull off; Interesting idea tho $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Taxes are filed and now I have some time to tweet, making up for lost time… Apr 18, 2012
  • @danprimack Private Investment Limited Partnership. Features: asset & profit-based fees. Limited liquidity & information. Aims high gets low Apr 17, 2012?(DM: defining ?hedge fund? in 140 chars)

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Economics & Finance Theory

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  • Is modern portfolio theory bunk? http://t.co/NrplQvbp Low volatility anomaly says bunk; if you didn’t know MPT was bogus alre ady-> #hopeless Apr 22, 2012
  • U.S. money supply growth offers bullish signal http://t.co/aqV6oP0c It is bullish in nominal terms for risk assets; not bullish for the rest Apr 22, 2012
  • Slump Taught Profligate Americans Value of Saving http://t.co/22jWf3OL Having slack assets & not being in debt is a virtue not a vice $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • The Great Depression as a Credit Boom Gone Wrong http://t.co/OBXRGeY2 Until the great depression is viewed as the bust after a credit boom + Apr 22, 2012
  • …we won’t get policy right. The credit cycle is real, & the Fed ignores it, providing liquidity as if it were not a structural problem. $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • El-Erian Breaches The Final Frontier: What Happens If Central Banks Fail? http://t.co/pRcdN42N Goal: print enough credit until promises -> 0 Apr 18, 2012
  • Deflation Does Not Lead to a Depression, suggests Research http://t.co/2VTu2bAd Separate probs; falling inflation vs systemic impaired debts Apr 18, 2012
  • Depression is a choice http://t.co/F4YdBn8x Every creditor wants 2b paid off @ par; many debtors would like compromise, enabling econ growth Apr 18, 2012
  • Difficulties in forecasting the impact of shadow inventory on the housing market http://t.co/xcALioOb Mtge > value makes sales slow, $$ low Apr 18, 2012

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Financial Markets

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  • Are fixed income ETFs the new “securitization” product? http://t.co/6qo2U7Zg Shows the many ways that sponsors make $$ off of ETFs Apr 22, 2012
  • Time for the SEC to institute new disclosure rules on CEO leverage http://t.co/nMJZslXg Insider CEO deals r material & should be revealed $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • Fear Barometer Bubbling http://t.co/HjXre23p Puts getting more expensive relative to calls on the S&P Apr 22, 2012
  • Is This the Book that Inspired Jamie Dimon’s Warnings About Regulation? http://t.co/ikzuXwlD Regs make banks behave alike ->systemic risk $$ Apr 22, 2012
  • @historysquared One question I always ask is how mgmt/directors treat outside passive minority shareholders. Do we ride the back of bus? $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • @historysquared Yeh, don’t let management control audit, nominating, or compensation committees. Split Chairman & CEO, etc., etc., etc… $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Regulators should encourage more diversity in the financial system http://t.co/xhfvsTlS Consistent regs create less diversity forces conform Apr 18, 2012
  • In New Funds, Old Flaws http://t.co/h931mglc Some have high fees, longer-term tracking error, hidden counterparty risk, enable stupidity Apr 18, 2012
  • Why Investors Should Pay Attention to the JOBS Act of 2012 http://t.co/kk9seYVH Here’s what Hunter thinks are the positives of the JOBS Act Apr 18, 2012
  • Fannie Mae Fix Said to Retain Some US Mortgage Role http://t.co/YPAFyygs Crazy people @ UST. 2much debt on housing in general->instability Apr 18, 2012
  • Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Label More Junior Liens as Bad Assets http://t.co/QpwE2S43 Wow, this took a long time to finally happen $$ #reality Apr 18, 2012
  • Structured-Note Fees (etc) http://t.co/rYf5WXBS IBs must disclose likely value of securities, fees incurred in creation of the notes $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Citadel, Millennium Above $115 Billion With Rule Change http://t.co/j53AMUGG Many hedge funds have borrowed lots; now we know how much $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Year’s first outflows from HY bond funds http://t.co/mUmIq0Yw May eventually lead to $$ weakness Apr 18, 2012
  • Green Light for Hedge-Fund Ads Means Caution on Main Street http://t.co/4mh9LNgW Most people will not fare well w/complex investments $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Doing the Right Thing: Upside? Zero. Downside? Financial Ruin? http://t.co/eZlNDJJA We aren’t paid 2b sheriffs a la: http://t.co/egqIsb9V $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Do Jubilee shares make any sense? http://t.co/2LxtggJ1 I don’t think so. Unnecessary complexity; increased illiquidity; would not work $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • 12 Intriguing Insights on Mutual Funds http://t.co/6U3JZegh Interesting mutual fund trivia from Morningstar $$ Apr 18, 2012
  • Interesting post. But a successful spec on 1 risk can morph into credit risk post-crisis. … http://t.co/Vzlb5xdT Apr 17, 2012
  • Falcone looks like a one-trick pony who made one lucky bet and won. Now he loses regularly. http://t.co/dsivgMCs Apr 16, 2012

 

On Book Reviewing, Part 2 (What not to write if you want a good review from me)

On Book Reviewing, Part 2 (What not to write if you want a good review from me)

Most of the time, when a book is bad, I don’t write a review.? Sometimes it will inspire me write a screed against a certain topic that the book was about, and occasionally a negative review.? But most often I say nothing.

What to avoid if writing a finance/investments/economics book?

1) Don’t claim you are an expert when you have a thin resume.? If you are writing, you better have some real accomplishments behind it.? Particularly irritating are vigorous self-promoters and newsletter-writers that are facile writers — they say lots of clever things, but they are not subject to market discipline in the same way that a portfolio manager is, who manages real money, and has real results, good or bad.

2) If you are merely pushing the services of your firm, don’t write a book.? It is very annoying to read a book where the says, “This is the broad outline, but if you want the whole enchilada, buy my service.

3) Don’t advertise your book as popular if it is academic.? Please don’t raise the hopes of people if they find by the middle of the book that they can’t understand it.

4) Don’t write a book that has already been written unless you have a very, very special gift for teaching that makes the concepts far more accessible to the average person.

5) Just because it is a “little book” does not mean it deserves to see the light of day.

6) You may think you have boiled down the concept for dummies, idiots, whatever.? In investing, dimwits tend to lose — no amount of simplification will replace study.

7) Books that forecast total destruction get no play with me, because they assume that we can’t adjust.

8 ) Books that are a series of essays from “experts” don’t grab me.? Good books take a position and argue for it.

9) Books that do an extended series of stock screens in order to show the best one are just an exercise in torturing the data to make it confess.

10) Books that force you to study abstract philosophy that I can’t follow means that most people won’t follow it.? Useless.? (I have studied philosophy to a high degree.)

11) Books written by a group of academics rarely make for good reading, unless the editor forces them to interact with each other, which is rare.

12) If you write a book on a controversial area, and you don’t interact with the criticisms of the topic, you lose major credibility with me.

13) If you aren’t an expert, don’t write.? There are a lot of newsletter writers, or radio talk show hosts who know little about the areas they talk about.? Avoid them.? Okay, do research.? Do they really have talent, or are they just facile talkers?

14) Please don’t advertise the past as being the future.? History is not prologue, and by the time your book is published, it is time for those who believe you to lose.

15) Don’t write a book where you tell people that they ought to read your last book or books.? Make your book readable, so that you give a quick summary of the relevant information.? Every book should stand on its own; no one should have to buy another book to read your book.

16) If you are describing a bunch of quirky people who made money deploying small amounts of capital, do not declare them to be great investors, and don’t write about them.

17) Simulations off of past data have little relevance to the future, unless carefully done.? Most are not carefully done.

18) If you are writing a policy book, try to be fair.? If you are a liberal or conservative, that will win a lot of points with me, because it means you have really looked at the issue.? Few things are totally clear.

19) Please, please, don’t write another book on a basic topic where you have nothing new and good to say — asset allocation is a good example for me, and few books get a good review from me as a result.

20) Don’t write books saying that you only need one asset class in order to do well.

Beyond that, I would say, write something unique, and well-researched.? Create a good theme and follow it.? Even if academic, don’t settle for dull writing.? Find a way to make the topic live, and after that, explain the complexities.? Above all else, explain what could go wrong.? Most strategies fail at some point, so explain where failure can happen for the good of your readers; it will give you greater credibility.

There may be another part to this series, but at present, I think this could be all.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Valuations

 

  • High Yield Closed End Funds 68% over NAV, 3% avg premium. Loan Participation CEFs 40% over NAV, -1% avg discount. Conditions r medium hot $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • Why Stocks Look Too Pricey http://t.co/TWqZzGg3 Various Indicators Suggest the Market Is No Longer a Bargain, at best fairly valued $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • Contra: The alarming fall in syndicated lending http://t.co/hiGK9UoK With the high yield mkt running hot why not avoid restrictive banks $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • Not so new… Eddy Elfenbein said something similar 4 months ago: http://www.crossingwallstreet… http://t.co/mhIxGGwt Apr 04, 2012?(on inflation expectations driving stock prices in the short run)
  • Time to take some risk off the table http://t.co/sCuYxc6u Trends breaking globally, US looks okay. Humble Student has made good calls lately Apr 04, 2012
  • The Dangers of an Interventionist Fed http://t.co/thKsHa8J QE Removal: what happens to banks if Fed does & 2 inflation if Fed doesn’t $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Junk Bonds ? Getting Risky for a New Reason? http://t.co/7bJ08JxT Record pace of junk issuance bodes ill 4 performance… 3 yrs from now. $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Two Pros Weigh In on U.S. Stocks: Ben Inker’s Bearish View http://t.co/iJ7742P5 Katie Nixon’s Bull View http://t.co/Zn9jj503 $$ Apr 02, 2012
  • Eichengreen on Credit Bubbles http://t.co/bSs0MHPA Leading indicator of finl stress in em mkts: loan growth > 2x GDP growth 2 yrs earlier $$ Apr 01, 2012
  • Taking the High Out of High Yield http://t.co/WYIvHb0n Nonprofessionals are the ones buying junk at the margin. This won’t end well. $$ Apr 01, 2012

 

Central Banking

 

  • The ECB has completely lost control over the monetary policy for Greece http://t.co/MHNTXLHo Massive liquidity drain; total credit failure Apr 07, 2012
  • Post-war financial repression is back http://t.co/JGLo9Aic If the post-war experience is any guide, savers face many years of suffering. Apr 06, 2012
  • Bernanke – I’m Slowing Down the Ship http://t.co/TJcJl20n Stocks don’t like less inflation coming and so they fall. But bonds rally. $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • Draghi Scotches ECB Exit Talk as Spain Keeps Crisis Alive http://t.co/rREDdqrW LTRO can only go so far; can solve liquidity, not solvency Apr 06, 2012
  • The Market?s Obsessive Fixation on The Fed & QE http://t.co/W6kg1n7k Runs through a Fed tightening scenario, thinks Fed won’t sell bonds $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Oest.. Nationalbank follows Bundesbank in refusing some periphery collateral http://t.co/96xx0xg7 Not so big in itself; Tear in EZ fabric Apr 04, 2012
  • Draghi Tested as German Pay Deals Add to Euro Divergence http://t.co/glKumOZx Inflation rising @ core? May even labor productivity some $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • @federalreserve Tried using your Data Download Program today http://t.co/vRroRPMt I managed 2get the data I needed, but it was tough 2use Apr 03, 2012
  • Bernanke – ‘The Fed never makes mistakes’ http://t.co/JBgRHqx2 He goes, speaks to soft audiences, argues that no one could have known #dope Apr 01, 2012

 

China

 

  • Coup Rumors in China Have Deeper Meaning http://t.co/QaoDxKFF Small fissures appearing in the Communist Party’s hold on power $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • Australia?s Export Slump Intensifies Rate-Cut Pressure http://t.co/sIDzeteW China sneezes, Australia catches a cold, mate. $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • China doomsayer sees crash coming http://t.co/2QatU1ps Hardly a crash, but GDP shrinking. Wait, that *is* a crash for China? $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • The Revenge of Wen Jiabao http://t.co/nw5qvCNa Long read. Eye-opening. Formal system of Comm Party eclipsed by family coalitions that war $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • The informal aspects of how China is governed relies on rival coalitions of elite families over the long run. Short-run, Comm party rules $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • China Accelerates Markets Opening as QFII Quota Doubles http://t.co/yrXVDcdR May prove 2b significant due to unintended consequences $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • China Manufacturing Gain Masks Exporters? Woes http://t.co/VyeN9AWF Goods unneeded by the rest of the World build up in China $$ #glut Apr 03, 2012

 

United States

 

  • When safe assets return http://t.co/QLUPuj1j Long piece on the status of money-like instruments, public and private. Many questions. $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • Income Inequality Is Killing the Economy, Obama Says?Is He Wrong? http://t.co/xrA4pGu2 Going up in developed world, going down globally $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • And I don’t get it as well, Josh.? I’m as Libertarian as they come, but with financial services, I know that trickery? http://t.co/lIJDCr1Y Apr 05, 2012
  • More woes in Fedl subsidized solar power: http://t.co/83ch2YUM & http://t.co/6XaEjl10 ht: @zerohedge | Send bureaucrats 2study physics? $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • The return of the US manufacturer http://t.co/75WCMyPi Manufactured goods represented 61 per cent of all US exports during 2010 $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • +1 RT @ReformedBroker: ADP is the Diet Arizona Iced Tea of Employment gauges. Like, we’ll take it if it’s there but no one’s looking for it Apr 04, 2012
  • When does the US Treasury bubble burst? http://t.co/8agHomQH “Pomboy pointed out that Treasury yields are less than current CPI rates” $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Why Are the Fed and SEC Keeping Wall Street?s Secrets? http://t.co/bZYF3LgV Fed & SEC view those they regulate as their clientele $$ Apr 02, 2012
  • US consumers dipping into savings http://t.co/757XDPuW Implies that the recovery is weaker than presently posited, demand comes from savings Apr 01, 2012
  • Obama Campus Fervor Losing 2 Apathy as Students Sour on 2012 http://t.co/kcyQbWKI Students thought they were getting change, got Bush-plus Apr 01, 2012
  • How Stockton, California Went Broke in Plain Sight http://t.co/ggOzSOmV If you hand out benefit increases like they are candy… $$ Apr 01, 2012

?

Finance

 

  • Quants: The Alchemists of Wall Street http://t.co/L0CzLQVN Recommend this video, features Paul Wilmott, Matthew Goldstein, & more $$ Apr 07, 2012
  • The 401(k): Americans ?just not prepared? 2 manage their own retirement funds http://t.co/8Tr0wggt Conclusions similar http://t.co/etCEp8BT Apr 06, 2012
  • Hedge Funds Accomplishing Very Little in the Aggregate? http://t.co/pxqjw2kk HFs tend 2b volatility-averse, weaker funding than long-only $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Ackman SPAC a nice touch, no? RT @ReformedBroker: Private Equity-held Burger King coming public again. “Hooray!” said no one to no one else Apr 04, 2012
  • Performance persistence in hedge funds http://t.co/zORfjAts How do hedge funds differ v unlevered value investors? $$ gets pulled vals drop Apr 04, 2012
  • ETN Double Dipping With GAZ? http://t.co/Uo9y1T5p Interesting piece. An ETN issuer can make more $$ stopping creation & lending shares Apr 04, 2012
  • Loan classes “season” over 10-30% of the life of loan… defaults/prepays stabilize. Large cohorts 4 bond issuance go bad in the 3rd yr $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Merrill, Morgan Stanley seen losing grip on rich http://t.co/44mW7ki0 Top 4 brokers mkt share 56% in 2007, 45% in 2011 & still falling $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Low Vol Underperforming http://t.co/NYqjw2Fp Every valid strategy has times when it doesn’t work, to shake out the weak hands $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Corporate pension funds break away from equities http://t.co/EMPaDGea Yes, when yields r low, DB plans move 2 bonds. Brilliant. $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Does Danger Loom for Multiemployer Pension Plans? http://t.co/VpfDZ04m Plans that are <80% funded must take steps 2 nurse plans 2 health $$ Apr 01, 2012
  • Credit Suisse Opened Volatility Bets to Small Investors http://t.co/ZLMGANXh Wall Street produces products 2 benefit itself, not retail $$ Apr 01, 2012
  • Keynes: One Mean Money Manager http://t.co/WJ2jESFE “The board of King’s College gave him uncontested authority to invest as he wished.” Apr 01, 2012

 

Japan

 

  • Just a guess, but after Japan’s Current Account goes into deficit for ~2 years, the big adjustment down in the Yen will happen. $$ #ouch Apr 06, 2012
  • @valuewalk Probably because so many have lost money shorting the yen, & some have made $$ long the yen, that many just trust the momentum $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • @valuewalk long-dated yen currency puts have fairly low vol 😉 Not doing that either, but… someone will. Apr 06, 2012
  • Yen Forecast: Xie Sees 40% Drop, Japan Bubble Bursting http://t.co/EjI7hytt Wow. Thinks Japan near tipping point 4 internal financing fail Apr 06, 2012
  • Japan?s Strongest Storm Since 1959 Slams Into Tokyo Region http://t.co/CCOVz7C6 Very unusual 4 Tokyo 2 have such strong winds w/no typhoon Apr 03, 2012
  • Yen Losing Most Since ?95 Not Enough for Toyota http://t.co/IT0g84s8 Japanese Industry cheerleaders 4 “penny parity” $$ #race2thebottom Apr 02, 2012

 

Insurance

?

  • Advisers, B-Ds retreat from Hartford http://t.co/garB6Bwn Not offering new annuities means can’t roll to $HIG products when surr chg ends $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Agents will try to get holders of $HIG annuities to roll elsewhere when surr charge ends (new commission $$ ), but be careful if you own an+ Apr 03, 2012
  • annuity from $HIG, b/c one reason they are getting out of the biz, I think, is that some of the secondary gtees were 2 generous + Apr 03, 2012
  • there is probably a business in analyzing secondary gtees, b/c some r quite valuable, &u wouldn’t want 2get tricked into rolling it by agent Apr 03, 2012
  • Contra: Rising equity markets to drive US life insurers-Barclays http://t.co/S6JtPun7 Catch my comment at the end, didn’t get new DAC issue Apr 02, 2012
  • Insurance Fees, Revealed http://t.co/mLzhpT6V NY State says agents must disclose how compensated & offer to provide full details #woohoo Apr 01, 2012

?

Personal

 

  • Sinkhole at the bottom of my street after a water main break. The water is more than 5′ deep & and hollowing out the road beneath. Apr 07, 2012
  • Street is one way, so I took my son who is a Police Explorer 2 talk to the policeman there. They knew each other. It’s a one-way street so + Apr 07, 2012
  • I asked the policeman (who was short handed) if he would like us 2 block street 2 traffic. Gratefully “yes.” We set up the safety gear. Apr 07, 2012
  • This is the opposite of last summer where we didn’t have power 4 6+ days, but we had water. We have power but no water. Hope it won’t b long Apr 07, 2012
  • Three Year Anniversary http://t.co/0HDD3iyD Congratulations, Hunter! @DDInvesting is our internet guide to all distressed debt $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • LinkedIn Events: Towson University Investment Group – Markets Summit http://t.co/kpgkDTto I’ll b participating on a panel. See you there! $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • @Frank_McG @volatilitysmile As I said to my wife today, “Take care of your wife, and she will take care of you.” Worked for the last 25 yrs Apr 02, 2012

 

Miscellaneous

 

  • Reprise: The Elfenbein Gold Model http://t.co/r3rHvZw3 @eddyelfenbein at his best, I fully subscribe to his model, reflecting cost of carry Apr 06, 2012
  • Matzo Ball Soup, Check. iPad, Check. For Passover, Jews Try Techie Seders http://t.co/xUW3izZl I dislike technology in religion. Yuck $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • Flying Auto Reviving Dreams of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang http://t.co/WixQb8AV Cheap @ $279K, this one might actually work $$ Apr 06, 2012
  • This discussion has problems because there is no agreed upon definition of what “free will” means.? As with all quest? http://t.co/NoMpZf0U Apr 04, 2012
  • Here Come Tablets. Here Come Problems. http://t.co/ezFK4Wfu Five common mistakes: a slow rollout is better to get the bugs out. $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Gene Maps Are No Cure-All http://t.co/JOLTtWTK Study Warns That DNA Scanning to Predict Disease Can Mislead; ‘Not a Crystal Ball’ $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Ten Claims in Support of IFRS Adoption by the SEC ? & Why They are False http://t.co/nj2PZ1pd & http://t.co/4YrMSvaH & http://t.co/7lLtioGo Apr 03, 2012
  • The Mighty Mathematician You?ve Never Heard Of http://t.co/9Qp1NqOB Never heard of her & her impact on physics was as great as that of math Apr 01, 2012
  • Mangled Horses, Maimed Jockeys http://t.co/6Dl1gEmJ Maybe there is a public policy reason to close down racetracks, & after that boxing $$ Apr 01, 2012

 

Energy

 

  • Australia LNG Boom Threatened by US Shale Exporters http://t.co/qleN6sVd Cheap US Hydrocarbons invert prior economic certainties $$ #shale Apr 04, 2012
  • Shale oil: from curse to cure for East Coast refiners? http://t.co/MdlXvjIb US Shale oil is high quality; challenge is delivery2refineries Apr 04, 2012
  • Repsol Worst Debt Swaps on YPF Seize Threat http://t.co/BewpJA4p Argentina not 2b trusted; would buy $REP bonds on weakness, stock a ?? $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Encana in Play as Petronas Seeks Natural Gas http://t.co/SEx832F1 Petronas looking long-term, b/c prospects for natgas pricing r poor $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Why high gas prices at the pump? The answer is BICS http://t.co/LopjaesG Brazil, India, China, & Saudi Arabia have increased gasoline demand Apr 03, 2012
  • The rapidly shifting supply fundamentals in US natural gas http://t.co/myofZrQD Injection cycle starting early w/supplies high already $$ Apr 03, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Contra: The Buck Stops Here: A BRIC Wall http://t.co/RYykjXXr The BRIC nations r2 statist 2 link 2 gold. Good idea, doesn’t fit the politics Apr 06, 2012
  • Germany Asked to Forgo $1.3 Billion Deutsche Telekom Payout http://t.co/b8cvOOlB Interesting how Capex constrains euro-telcos, not US $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Europe?s Ratings Revenge Founders on Market Reality http://t.co/D3dNu7sF Eurocrats stumble in dark; will return 2 old system; it worked $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • How A Baby Bust Will Turn Asia’s Tigers Toothless http://t.co/VE78u9tu Economic growth is partially population growth; sterile societies $$ Apr 01, 2012
  • Swedish High Street Rebound Ends Bets for Riksbank Cuts http://t.co/jYioq0NN A relative bright spot in Europe; having the Knonor helps $$ Apr 01, 2012

 

Company News

 

  • RE: @emergingmoney Never been crazy about firms that perpetually run w/neg working capital. Interesting idea, though. http://t.co/Xx6yFf8v Apr 04, 2012
  • Optical Delusion? Fiber Booms Again, Despite Bust http://t.co/9QiAmZOH Whouda thunk it? I knew this was getting close, demand 4new fiber Apr 04, 2012
  • Scarred Avon Is Takeover Target http://t.co/f2T9E7V7 Don’t think $AVP is a good takeover target: toss dist syst or incompatible syst $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • Technology obsoletes too easily, particularly in hot sectors. Very difficult to get to $1T of?Market Cap. Bit-by-bit? http://t.co/XjGU9ouG Apr 03, 2012
  • $AAPL ‘s War on Android http://t.co/ILGQVAZD Long, fascinating article; perversely, attempts to enforce patent can invalidate patents $$ Apr 02, 2012
  • Dude, is There any Value Left in $DELL ? http://t.co/iG5q5iea U know your marketing is stale when people reference advertising >10yrs ago $$ Apr 02, 2012

 

Housing

 

  • The rebound is now http://t.co/l4coNvgt Worth watching, but I would wait until the foreclosures have been mostly cleared, b4 saying bottom Apr 07, 2012
  • Home Prices Seen Dropping 10% in US on Foreclosures http://t.co/BBjzxKiU Once f/cs clear out, the market will normalize maybe even rise $$ Apr 03, 2012
  • McClellan on Lumber?s tendency to leading housing stocks http://t.co/cevWyVTs If past is prologue, housing prices are set for another dip $$ Apr 01, 2012

 

Funds

 

  • I’ve owned this in the past, but not now.? It’s been around for 19 years as a CEF — just have to watch the premium/d? http://t.co/XMVs6RBS Apr 06, 2012
  • Why I Won?t Be Buying TAGS http://t.co/2S8bqcQJ Expense ratio does not include the expenses paid on underlying ETFs owned by $TAGS $$ Apr 04, 2012

?

Financial Distress

 

  • Reddy Ice Considers Filing for Bankruptcy http://t.co/IgpYjHue Is it just me, or are we seeing an uptick in insolvencies? $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Hostess Serves Up New Batch of Cuts http://t.co/fHBXwHes Future failure as people don’t buy so many of the “sugar fat bombs” 4 kids $$ Apr 02, 2012
  • Failures: Pinnacle Airlines http://t.co/BXkJ8v9j AFA Foods http://t.co/xs4wsFEE Airlines & Meat renderers r born 2 fail $$ Apr 02, 2012
Gold does Nothing

Gold does Nothing

Gold does nothing, and as Warren Buffett said in his recent annual report:

Today the world?s gold stock is about 170,000 metric tons. If all of this gold were melded together, it would form a cube of about 68 feet per side. (Picture it fitting comfortably within a baseball infield.) At $1,750 per ounce ? gold?s price as I write this ? its value would be $9.6 trillion. Call this cube pile A.

Let?s now create a pile B costing an equal amount. For that, we could buy all U.S. cropland (400 million acres with output of about $200 billion annually), plus 16 Exxon Mobils (the world?s most profitable company, one earning more than $40 billion annually). After these purchases, we would have about $1 trillion left over for walking-around money (no sense feeling strapped after this buying binge). Can you imagine an investor with $9.6 trillion selecting pile A over pile B?

Beyond the staggering valuation given the existing stock of gold, current prices make today?s annual production of gold command about $160 billion. Buyers ? whether jewelry and industrial users, frightened individuals, or speculators ? must continually absorb this additional supply to merely maintain an equilibrium at present prices.

A century from now the 400 million acres of farmland will have produced staggering amounts of corn, wheat, cotton, and other crops ? and will continue to produce that valuable bounty, whatever the currency may be. Exxon Mobil will probably have delivered trillions of dollars in dividends to its owners and will also hold assets worth many more trillions (and, remember, you get 16 Exxons). The 170,000 tons of gold will be unchanged in size and still incapable of producing anything. You can fondle the cube, but it will not respond.

Admittedly, when people a century from now are fearful, it?s likely many will still rush to gold. I?m confident, however, that the $9.6 trillion current valuation of pile A will compound over the century at a rate far inferior to that achieved by pile B.

 

Buffett misses the point on gold, something he doesn’t often do in economic matters.? Gold is valuable because it is beautiful, and it can’t be used for much aside from beauty.? Gold can only be used for things that are not necessary (with a few small exceptions), and is thus a luxury item.? Wait, doesn’t Buffett own a scad of jewelry stores, and he doesn’t get this?? Jewelry is not a necessity, but something to please those we love with something of beauty.

Beyond that, gold is divisible, easily melted down, and doesn’t weigh a lot relative to its value.? It is an ideal store of value.

Gold does nothing, and that’s good.? We need some things in this hectic world that do nothing.? What is the value of doing nothing?

Quietness.? Pause.? Repose.? Reflection.? Measurement Standard.

Fiat currencies change every day, and the price of gold relative to chose currencies changes similarly.? Gold doesn’t change; it’s like God in that way.? We don’t measure it.? Because it doesn’t change, it measures us, because we do change.

I’m not a gold bug.? I own no gold, aside from my small wedding ring and? few other odd bits of jewelry.? But there is a lot of value to a pretty commodity that has little usefulness aside from beauty.? Think of silver for a moment.? Whether in electronics or photography it has significant industrial value.? Though both are used as currencies, and stores of value, silver responds more to the economy, and gold just sits there.

Maybe that’s what Robert Zoellick meant when he talked about gold as a reference point for the global economy.? Unlike fiat currencies, which are manipulated by finance ministries and central banks, gold can’t easily be manipulated.? Gold is the measuring rod of economics, whether we like it or not.

That brings me to Eddy Elfenbein’s Gold model, and my refinement of it.? Gold reacts to real interest rates.? As real interest rates rise, gold falls, and vice versa.? Think of it this way: when real interest rates go down, there is less loss to holding gold, because fiat currencies suffer from financial repression.

Gold can’t easily be repressed; it is far less susceptible to government manipulation because it is something real and tangible — far harder to manipulate.

Some have suggested that gold could back the currencies of major emerging markets, and I think that would be a good idea, but I think none of the large emerging markets except Russia would dare or even want to do it.? Statists like fiat currency, because it gives them one more lever of control over those that they rule.? Gold-backed currencies are for limited governments, and in general, most emerging market governments don’t think that way.

With Mr. Buffett, I will agree, I would rather have the businesses and the farmland [pile B].? They will likely be more valuable in the long run than the gold.? But I might take the $1 trillion of “walking around money,” and use it to buy 10% of the cube of gold [pile A], leaving me with a piddling $40 billion of walking-around money.? I might look at the gold, and think how beautiful it is.

Fondle it?? Nah.? Just admire how unchangeable it is.? Businesses change; technologies obsolete whole industries as they create new ones.? Companies can be mismanaged, or outcompeted.? Very few last longer than a generation; they change a lot, and require constant management.

Farmland depletes unless you take the time to maintain it, and cheap potash supplies are getting scarce.? Besides, perhaps one of my great-grandchildren will note 100 years from now how the global economy has a hard time with the population shrinking globally.? At that point, with less pressure to increase yields, farmland might not be as valuable.? I’m not predicting this; it’s only possible — I’m only saying that arable land, another really scarce resource in the world could in some scenarios become less valuable in real terms.

The real value of the gold would be as a hedge against governments and central banks that financially repress their populations by holding interest rates, making it difficult for savers to preserve value.? And that’s what gold does best, preserving value, as it sits there, beautiful, doing nothing.

So, when governments and central banks debase their currencies, as in the ’70s, the 2000s, and create conditions where real interest rates are negative, gold flies in terms of the debased currencies, and then crashes back down if you get a Paul Volcker-type, and policy normalizes after a lot of pain, which this generation seems unwilling to take.? Until it does take the pain, there will be the tendency for gold to go higher, and more so, if real interest rates remain negative.

So, sit back and and watch the gold measure the policies of governments, central banks, even us.? Gold does nothing except sit there and look beautiful, and that’s what makes it so valuable.

Book Review: The Indomitable Investor

Book Review: The Indomitable Investor

Most books that I don’t ask for are lousy.? This one isn’t, and I love the title, because it indicates the long hard slog that it is to persevere in investing. IT IS A BUSINESS!!? Without hard work it will not yield good results.? Indomitable means persistence, and a lack of persistence will give a bad result.

Steven Sears has been a columnist for Barron’s for many years.? He has read a lot of analyses, and written a lot of columns.? In this book he attempts to explain why many investors are the dumb money that clever investors profit from.? Or, why many investors get sucked dry by brokers, funds with high loads, other illiquid investments, etc.

There is a constant in investing and it frustrates me, because I try to educate retail investors.? People panic as a crisis unfolds, and they sell near the bottom.? Conversely, people buy as a trend nears its peak, because they conclude that they have missed out.

What would it take to educate these people, which are many among us?? Losses for one.? Second, a willingness to read historical finance, which few will do, because it doesn’t seem relevant.? If you will not learn from history, you will not learn.

As is sometimes said, “Wise men learn from the errors of others.? Average men learn from their own errors.? Dumb men never learn.”

Financial markets have more than their share of average and dumb men.? They get fleeced, and rapidly.? That dichotomy is key to investment markets.? Think about it — if you were going into a war, would you spend more to make sure you had the best armaments?? I think you would.? If so, why do you go virtually undefended in contention against Wall Street?

There are two ways to do this.? First, go passive and index.? Safe, reasonable, good.? Second, do a lot of research and find managers that eat their own cooking (like me), and invest with those that have a good long-term track record.? They should be managers with fixed principles regardless of the environment.

What it gets right

More data does not mean things are better.? For most people more data confuses them.? Giving long explanations in prospectuses is a hindrance for most, not an aid.? Maybe there should be a law that says, “Prospectuses can only be 1000 words long.? If you can’t get the risks in that amount of words, you deserve to be sued.”

It takes three years for the average investor to note that the trend has changed.? Is there any surprise then about “dumb money?”? Would it get any better if we told them this?

Quibbles

Ted Benna was a benefits consultant, not a tax consultant (P.5). Maybe they were the same back then.

Regarding Diogenes, he was a skeptic, and did not believe that there were any honest men.? That’s not a bad way to view Wall Street, butthat was not the sense I got from this book.

The author makes a lot out of calender anomalies, bu most of the research I have reviewed does not support them.

He makes a lot of the ISM, but if you aggregate his numbers, they seem higher than market returns have been over the the last 80+ years.? I find the data questionable.? Maybe he didn’t correctly describe what he cited, or maybe those he cited deceived him.

If you can discern consumer spending trends in advance of the market, you will do well, but can you do it?? This is a non-insight.

At the end of the book, page 195, he asks for new relative measures of risk.? If only it were that simple.? We all wish we had those.? They change over time, and asset classes may shift in relative riskiness due to overvaluation.? Oh to have bought bonds in 1987, and in 2000. Oh, to have bought equities in 1982, 1995 and 2003.

Who would benefit from this book: If you ae willing to be patient and following long-term strategies (like me) you might benefit from this book.? It is only meant for those willing to take a long-term view, because it tends to work.? If you want to, you can buy it here: The Indomitable Investor: Why a Few Succeed in the Stock Market When Everyone Else Fails.

Full disclosure: This book was sent to me without me asking for it.

If you enter Amazon through my site, and you buy anything, I get a small commission.? This is my main source of blog revenue.? I prefer this to a ?tip jar? because I want you to get something you want, rather than merely giving me a tip.? Book reviews take time, particularly with the reading, which most book reviewers don?t do in full, and I typically do. (When I don?t, I mention that I scanned the book.? Also, I never use the data that the PR flacks send out.)

Most people buying at Amazon do not enter via a referring website.? Thus Amazon builds an extra 1-3% into the prices to all buyers to compensate for the commissions given to the minority that come through referring sites.? Whether you buy at Amazon directly or enter via my site, your prices don?t change.

When Correlations Rhyme

When Correlations Rhyme

Before I start this piece let me give you a blast from the past, the columnist conversation comment that I most frequently reprint, from this post:


David Merkel
Make the Money Sweat, Man! We Got Retirements to Fund, and Little Time to do it!
3/28/2006 10:23 AM EST

What prompts this post was a bit of research from the estimable Richard Bernstein of Merrill Lynch, where he showed how correlations of returns in risky asset classes have risen over the past six years. (Get your hands on this one if you can.) Commodities, International Stocks, Hedge Funds, and Small Cap Stocks have become more correlated with US Large Cap Stocks over the past five years. With the exception of commodities, the 5-year correlations are over 90%. I would add in other asset classes as well: credit default, emerging markets, junk bonds, low-quality stocks, the toxic waste of Asset- and Mortgage-backed securities, and private equity. Also, all sectors inside the S&P 500 have become more correlated to the S&P 500, with the exception of consumer staples.

In my opinion, this is due to the flood of liquidity seeking high stable returns, which is in turn driven partially by the need to fund the retirements of the baby boomers, and by modern portfolio theory with its mistaken view of risk as variability, rather than probability of loss, and the likely severity thereof. Also, the asset allocators use ?brain dead? models that for the most part view the past as prologue, and for the most part project future returns as ?the present, but not so much.? Works fine in the middle of a liquidity wave, but lousy at the turning points.

Taking risk to get stable returns is a crowded trade. Asset-specific risk may be lower today in a Modern Portfolio Theory sense. Return variability is low; implied volatilities are for the most part low. But in my opinion, the lack of volatility is hiding an increase in systemic risk. When risky assets have a bad time, they may behave badly as a group.

The only uncorrelated classes at present are cash and bonds (the higher quality the better). If you want diversification in this market, remember fixed income and cash. Oh, and as an aside, think of Municipal bonds, because they are the only fixed income asset class that the flood of foreign liquidity hasn?t touched.

Don?t make aggressive moves rapidly, but my advice is to position your portfolios more conservatively within your risk tolerance.

Position: none

This article is motivated by this article from the estimable Morningstar.? Correlations are high among risk assets; the only place to lower correlations are cash and high quality long debt.? Guess what this period reminds me of?? 2006-2008 prior to the crisis.

Now there are differences, though the prime driver is central banking in both cases.? In the earlier period, they were tightening slowly.? The mistake was not tightening rapidly, much earlier.? In this era, the floodgates of monetary excess have been wide open for three years.? The error here is assuming that monetary policy can work miracles when the economy is overlevered from the prior boom.

When the ordinary actors of the economy can’t borrow because they are overindebted, monetary policy has a hard time producing any long-term useful result.?? Yes, it can spur a short-term move to risk assets.? It can twist the Treasury curve in the short-run.

This piece isn’t about monetary policy.? It’s about correlations in asset prices.? When risky assets get very correlated with each other, and the only alternative game to play is buying high quality bonds, it is an unstable situation that portends lower risky asset prices.

Color me neutral now, because the supply of cash to invest in high yield bonds, stock IPOs, and private equity is substantial.? But don’t be surprised if asset class performance reverses one year out from now.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

 

China

 

  • China’s first bond default could be good market medicine http://t.co/8ShFniYM Bond trader: “We don’t really have a credit risk culture.” $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • Is China’s slowdown worse than previously estimated? http://t.co/CkZw8tLK Could b business conditions that are worst since 2009. $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • China Banks Said to Underestimate Local Government Risks http://t.co/qpPicyEe China has a clever bureaucracy; always has; big CYA $$ Mar 25, 2012
  • Chinese capitalism is just another knockoff http://t.co/w2hSozQL China is not Capitalist; it rewards Party members, not citizens. $$ Mar 25, 2012
  • Debating a ?Hard Landing? http://t.co/NMnYk2XX friendly debate – Andrew Batson & Patrick Chovanec over China facing a ?hard landing? in 2012 Mar 25, 2012
  • I Am Jordan’s Complete Lack of Surprise: Chinese Co’s Forced to Falsify Data http://t.co/BMj7ux0T Command & control economy, not free $$ Mar 25, 2012

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • The Nature of a Crowded Trade http://t.co/sf1phJjP A July 2008 article of mine where I reflected on the high correlations of the prior 3 yrs Mar 31, 2012
  • A Market Lacking Diversification http://t.co/khXUVjaL Correlation conditions similar to 2006-2008, only diversifier hi-qual long bonds $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • Pension Deficit for 100 US Company Plans Increased 41% in 2011 http://t.co/FdIZTltW Low long hi-qual rates & cruddy returns on risk assets Mar 31, 2012
  • 2277 Stocks and Still Not Diversified? http://t.co/iu0Pw8Ty Recommended solution is similar 2a levered version of the Permanent Portfolio $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • New from Aleph Blog The Rules, Part XXXI: The offering of liquidity through limit orders is a real service to th… http://t.co/ZiuzWIo5 Mar 30, 2012
  • Passive Aggressive: Index-Linked Securities and Individual Investors http://t.co/ZrjMCKCz Curbs stock picking, encourages factor timing $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • Bankers are telling corporate clients this is their chance to refinance http://t.co/Eh9tHEX6 The window of cheap junk financing is open $$ Mar 28, 2012
  • New from Aleph Blog Replacing Defined Contributions: I think that it is pretty certain that defined contribution… http://t.co/Dis34ql2 Mar 27, 2012
  • What Will Replace the 401(k)? http://t.co/miLAuoYc How about DB pensions where it depends on how much the employee kicks in plus match? $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • US Stocks Advance Following Bernanke?s Comments http://t.co/D7sORuIU Stox react 2 increases in inflation expectations. TIPS & Bonds fall $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • Hedge Funds Capitulating Buy Most Stocks Since 2010 http://t.co/XHwxzxNO Short-term money alert! Will propel mkt 4 a while, then… $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • If Bloomberg Business Week is a better magazine than old Businessweek (I think so), what magazine should we use now 4 a dumb $$ indicator? Mar 26, 2012

 

Asset Management

 

  • Nontraded REITS should be a nonstarter for clients http://t.co/O1ZuMvX8 And here’s one that just announced a 72% loss: http://t.co/la8d29my Mar 31, 2012
  • Oaktree IPO Could Pay 2 Founders $117.2M Each http://t.co/Yufla6Jk The Most Important Thing is getting rewarded 4 building AUM 😉 $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • The Trouble With Exchange Traded Notes http://t.co/ZL7dVpjO Unsecured credit, total return swaps, low level of regulatory protection $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • Good 4 all of us RT @frankvoisin: My interview Research Magazine’s April issue: http://t.co/zioono6R Also features @VitaliyK @alephblog $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Bain Gave Staff Way to Swell IRAs by Investing in Deals http://t.co/4LlAExBt Letting employees in on the fun shares the wealth. Good $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Lying By Omission: Mutual Funds, Track Records & Departing Managers http://t.co/4MUyNRYs Track recrds shuld b suspended when critical ppl go Mar 29, 2012
  • New from Aleph Blog A Pox on Promoted Stocks (2): By this time, I would think that it would be worth the the tim… http://t.co/DJkH6E4W Mar 28, 2012
  • The Measured Approach to Value http://t.co/XiZOUMOn Features investors Vitaliy Katzenelson & Croft-Leominster, & smaller Frank Voisin & me Mar 28, 2012
  • GoodHaven Realizes Its Vision http://t.co/zJVmCFMa The CIO of Markel, Tom Gayner showed them favor and invested with them. Good for them. $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • What This Industry Needs is a Good Disruption http://t.co/imKDcElR There r a few areas of the financial industry that justify their fees $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • Found PDF slide presentation: http://t.co/0GfhME7m The Market for Financial Advice: An Audit Study $$ Worth a read, paper not free @ SSRN Mar 26, 2012
  • Treasuries Rise for Fourth Day on Global Growth Concern http://t.co/JYpanHTu Funny how the sentiment has reversed; who is surprised? $$ Mar 25, 2012

 

Monetary Policy

 

  • @kyles09 No, not a believer in MMT, MMR, or neoclassical macro. 2 much aggregation, not everything happens at once, goods/services central + Mar 30, 2012
  • @kyles09 and $$ only facilitates goods/services. Debt is important, but not central, some goods owned outright, w/no liabs. Money is a + Mar 30, 2012
  • @kyles09 creation of a culture, not the government, because @ the edges, FX & commodities will crowd out bad currencies. MMT -> inflation $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • What Does Bernanke Know? http://t.co/LydpOqk1 Introduces “The Guy Rate” http://t.co/zNVeUYmP Unemployment of older guys has hi costs Mar 29, 2012
  • Demand for U.S. Debt Is Not Limitless http://t.co/NWKHcpCD In 2011, the Fed purchased 61% of Treasury issuance. That can’t last. $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • Bitter Money Fights Shaped U.S History http://t.co/36jWnkQq Abandoning Gold Helped Dollar Gain Preeminence http://t.co/QbYMkTNL $$ Mar 28, 2012
  • For the last tweet, those r2 good articles by Simon Johnson & James Kwak, authors of ?13 Bankers? & co-founders of The Baseline Scenario $$ Mar 28, 2012
  • Housing bubbles and interest rates http://t.co/9TfzMpt2 Makes my point that asset price levels should be part of monetary policy $$ Mar 31, 2012

 

Banking & Finance

 

  • FiveBooks Interviews > @Ritholtz on Causes of the Financial Crisis http://t.co/RQQZfHTz Many good perspectives from 6 authors on the crisis Mar 31, 2012
  • Geithner?s Math Puzzle Beyond Numbers for DeMarco http://t.co/Eg9BjcgE Principal forgiveness would have moral hazard impacts. $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Why not make LIBOR off of binding offers of the banks to borrow/lend to any of their group $10M short-term unsecured? Avg — LIBOR/LIBID $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Libor Links Deleted as UK Bank Group Backs Away From Rate http://t.co/HOy8TOof British Bankers? Association distances itself from LIBOR $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Branson?s Virgin Money Seen Disrupting U.K. Retail Banks http://t.co/bPcD8im7 Always been a Branson skeptic; he have audited financials? Mar 30, 2012
  • Why not make LIBOR off of binding bids/offers of the banks to borrow/lend to any of their group 10 million dollars sh? http://t.co/wK3HyopV Mar 29, 2012
  • Is Hartford Financial’s market exit a death knell for the annuity crowd or just more Hartford haplessness? http://t.co/AUEVqxWQ Both. $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • The Birth (and Death) of the Moral Age of Wall Street http://t.co/eStszd7i At one point the moral code of $GS had some meaning, not much now Mar 29, 2012
  • @BarbarianCap More subtle than that; for insurance accounting &the concept of release from risk, it is the conservative side of realistic $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • A Proposal for the Resolution of Systemically Important Assets and Liabilities: The Case of the Repo Market http://t.co/WYQGAVVx +1 $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • But, disagree. Would b simpler and more effective to disallow repo financiers unrestricted access to collateral even in counterparty default Mar 26, 2012
  • Obama Relies on Debt Collectors Profiting From Student Loan Woe http://t.co/pYWwgLq2 How independent debt collectors get people 2 pay $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • A Bailout by Another Name http://nyti.ms/GRTNMM GSE writedowns would constitute a direct & sizable gift from taxpayers 2 the largest banks Mar 26, 2012
  • Banks? preemptive strike against Dodd-Frank http://t.co/wjHW0nyv Banks adjusting strategies in order to keep doing as much biz as possible Mar 26, 2012
  • MF?s Corzine Ordered Funds Moved to JP Morgan, Memo Says http://t.co/cYaT9sHy The most likely cause may prove to b correct $$ #corzine Mar 26, 2012
  • BOE’s Tucker: Rehypothecation Consequences ‘Under the Radar’ http://t.co/0X8ZQMMH Good. Rehypothecation should b reviewed, perhaps limited Mar 26, 2012
  • @EpicureanDeal @dsquareddigest I would still lay the blame @ the door of $GS mgmt. Could have grown via retained earnings &stayed private $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • @EpicureanDeal @dsquareddigest Also, there r real advantages 2 partnership culture in an investment bank; risk control works a lot better $$ Mar 26, 2012
  • The Age of the Shadow Bank Run http://t.co/deJRQGgy Borrow short, lend long; clip a spread. Surprise! During the crisis you lose big! $$ Mar 25, 2012
  • The Interest Rate Swaps that Are Bankrupting Local Governments http://t.co/yHQZ1r3u Not true. Gov’ts tried to minimize taxes w/swaps, failed Mar 25, 2012
  • Three?s a Crowd http://t.co/KHtbrqpe Disagree w/the conclusion, because $GS did not have to go public; problem is mgmt, not shareholders $$ Mar 25, 2012

 

Pensions

 

  • Brazil?s pension system http://t.co/90O97tQ4 They allow people to retire too early & offer too much. More unsustainable than Medicare $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • @AlexRubalcava Perhaps a cash balance plan would do that. DB plans are not expensive because of explicit costs. They r expensive b/c + Mar 28, 2012
  • @AlexRubalcava during boom times benefits look free and get set too high, leading to high costs in the bust phase & plan terminations. $$ Mar 28, 2012

 

Politics

 

  • Obama Is a Loser Who Wins, Like FDR in 1936 http://t.co/K0x9go0T Don’t assume a bad economy insures the defeat of Obama. FDR won in ’36 $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • The Rejection of Austerity Begins http://t.co/CgWKa9x6 Until failure, ppl vote 4 politicians who promise magic prosperity thru govt fiat $$ Mar 30, 2012
  • Germany: The Final Frontier… Whose True Debt/GDP Is Now 140% http://t.co/KgW2d76E When you add up the guarantees, doesn’t look so good. $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • Justices Suggest Parts of Health-Care Law May Be Thrown Out http://t.co/cMvKHR20 B best 2 throw the whole law out; let Congress start over Mar 29, 2012
  • Contra: Court Can?t Let Broccoli Get in Way of Health Care Law http://t.co/5Yp2o8tB Sup Ct is moving 2 define interstate commerce better Mar 26, 2012
  • Death Tax Defying http://t.co/FrkL5yLB Eliminate the estate tax; Tax everyone on unrealized capital gains. $$ Same result. Mar 25, 2012
  • Intelligence community can keep data on Americans with no ties to terrorism for up to 5 years http://t.co/PCM7ldiG Stinks; call the ACLU $$ Mar 25, 2012

 

US Economy

 

  • Why Natural-Gas Prices Could Fade to Red http://t.co/GApb0xie When everyone tries 2 frack @ once, there is too much natgas, price falls Mar 30, 2012
  • US coal production declines as industry faces further stress http://t.co/l3WpZtDC Fracking has unpredictable consequences; affects energy $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • Bidding Wars Erupt as U.S. Supply of Homes for Sale Falls http://t.co/JsgIdewr In certain locales, & on the low end, there r bidding wars Mar 29, 2012
  • The Biggest Bellwether In The World Is Giving Some Ominous Comments About Growth http://t.co/vHWs9lwB $FDX says things r slowing down $$ Mar 29, 2012
  • Planned Pipelines to Rival Keystone XL http://t.co/qQZ1Dsj2 Enterprise Products Partners & Enbridge may build competing pipelines $$ Mar 28, 2012
  • ‘Pink slime’ producer suspends operations http://t.co/CvptYPhU Goes from 4 factories to 1. 600 people will probably lose their jobs $$ Mar 28, 2012
  • @valuewalk @The_Analyst It is better for students to start small businesses. Forget economics, it is a waste. Profit/loss best teacher $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • The Economic Surprise Index is now trending down http://t.co/eJCEEdvy @soberlook reminds us that not everything is going well $$ Mar 27, 2012

 

Miscellaneous

  • Like it? I’ve actually bought cars that way! RT @mprobertson: http://t.co/UHdFL0Eu How to buy a car using game theory. very interesting. $$ Mar 31, 2012
  • Eating Chocolate Regularly May Make You Leaner, Survey Suggests http://t.co/l8c6MMpA This means one dark chocolate Dove promise/day $$ Mar 27, 2012
  • The second most dangerous people in the world are smart people with wrong postulates. Mar 25, 2012
  • The most dangerous people in the world are politicians who peddle the views of the smart people with wrong postulates. $$ Mar 25, 2012
  • Madoff FBI Files Reveal How He Fooled His Own Employees http://t.co/lmq2AoZG Gives hope to those accused; Madoff controlled data tightly. Mar 25, 2012
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