Category: Blog News

Post 700, For Real

Post 700, For Real

From the beginning of this blog, I have posted my thoughts about blogging about every one hundred posts.? That was complicated by WordPress, whiich often skipped numbers in posting for its own reasons.? But now, WordPress counts accurately for me, and though my last post was number 950, this one is close to 700.

I have often thanked those who refer to me, through linking or quoting, but I have not often thanked those who actually read me.? By virtue of Quantcast, I have some idea of who reads me, and so I thank:

  • AllianceBernstein L.P. (US)
  • Banque Paribas (US)
  • Citadel Investment Group, L.L….
  • City of New York (US)
  • Credit Suisse Group / CANA (US…
  • DEUTSCHE BANK (US)
  • Dow Jones-Telerate (US)
  • FAHNESTOCK CO. (US)
  • Federal Reserve Information Te…
  • GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY (US)
  • GOLDMAN SACHS COMPANY (US)
  • Henry Ford Hospital (US)
  • HSBC Bank plc, UK (GB)
  • Kasowitz Benson Torres Friedma…
  • KOCH INDUSTRIES (US)
  • Lehman Brothers (GB)
  • Metlife (US)
  • Michigan State Government (US)
  • Morgan Stanley Group (US)
  • Morning Star (US)
  • Ottawa General Hospital (CA)
  • PNC Bank (US)
  • Prudential Securities (US)
  • Royal Bank of Canada (CA)
  • State Street Boston Corporatio…
  • THE BOEING COMPANY (US)
  • The Vanguard Group (US)
  • Toronto Dominion Bank (CA)
  • UBS AG (US)
  • Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd (IN)
  • Wausau Insurance Companies (US…
  • WELLS FARGO BANK (US)

That is a pretty prestigious group of readers, and so I am grateful for the reception that I have gotten on the web.? I try to do my best for readers, knowing that I can only cover a small subset of all that I am interested in in economics, finance, and business.

Again, my thanks to all who read me.

My Interview on BizRadio

My Interview on BizRadio

On Wednesday afternoon I was interviewed on BizRadio’s The MoneyMan Report regarding my recent piece: The Fundamentals of Residential Real Estate Market Bottoms.? (Boy, did that get a lot of play all over the web.)

You can listen to the interviews here (at my site):

Or here (at their site):

The two segments together are about 15 minutes in length.

I enjoyed the interview, though it would have helped if I had done a little more homework into the prevailing philosophy of the show, and if I had been more clear about how to introduce me.? I sent them my bio, but they must not have looked too As it is, they never mentioned my employer (bad — I want them to be better known).? Nor did they mention my blog, so if someone wants to read the piece, they don’t know where to find it.

So, I get heard across Texas, and wherever else they syndicate their programming.? It’s interesting talking with people who are looking to make money, and had to say to them, “Not yet, not yet.”? But, I tried, and I did better than I expected.? I would be willing to do other radio shows as the opportunity arises.

Advertising, Blogrolls and Linkfests

Advertising, Blogrolls and Linkfests

As my blog has gotten more popular, I have gotten a lot of interesting “business” propositions.

“Join our ad network.”

I am still considering a few of them, but most rake off too much to the network.

“Let us republish your content at our site.”

Sorry, no.? Aside from Seeking Alpha, no one else is allowed to regularly republish my material.? Fair use is fine, but I regularly check to see if my content is being misused.? If you are swiping it, you better put it in a place where Google can’t reach it.

Anyone taking the headers of my articles and publishing text links is fine.? Good examples of that would be newsflashr, Realclearmarkets, and a new one, tradememe.? Their objectives are consistent with mine.? I want to drive traffic flow to where good content is located for the good of my readers.

“Would you exchange links with me?”

Generally, no.? I only link to people and articles with which I am impressed.? I am not out to sell my credibility.

“I loved your article on XXX.? Please write more articles like that and link to my site.? I will pay you well.”

Sorry, no.? If you want to advertise here, buy a Blogad.? That is clearly labeled as advertising, and I am not out to bamboozle my readers with ads disguised as my thoughts.? My Blogads aren’t expensive.

“Would you link up with our site?? We are trying to promote investor education, and we could use your content.”

Most of these are not trying to promote investor education, but to maximize their fees over the long haul.

As a rule, I have tried to segregate advertising to places where it is clearly distinguishable as advertising.? I am not out to trick readers or advertisers.

“I’ll place you on my blogroll if you place me on your blogroll.”

I don’t do that, either.? My blogroll is something special for me.? It is the group of blogs that I read anytime they post.? Aside from when I started up, I haven’t asked anyone to put me on their blogroll.

My blogroll is meritocratic.? If anyone wants me to consider them for my blogroll, fine, e-mail me.? I’ll read you for a little while.? If I find you indispensible, I will add you to my blogroll.? I always have a few bloggers that I have added to my RSS reader that I am trying out before I add them to my blogroll.? If I don’t place a blogger on my blogroll, it doesn’t mean that they aren’t good.? It does mean that they aren’t consistently useful to me.? (There are a few on my blogroll that are there for personal reasons.? But only a few.)

On Linkfests

I like linkfests.? I think they can be useful. ? In my opinion, the best linkfests are:

  • Regular
  • Focused mainly on financial topics
  • Not pushing a political view
  • Of moderate length, but comprehensive (difficult balance)
  • Wise — They have a real sense of quality.

About a year ago, a friend of mine who is a really good credit analyst for financials asked me,

Friend: “If I were to read just one blog per day, what should it be?”

DM: Abnormal Returns.? He samples the finance blogs, and gives one concise daily post on the best of what was written.

F: Not your blog?

DM: Look, my quality varies, and what I write about is quirky.? I don’t have a narrow focus, like most blogs.? Half of what I write won’t appeal to half of my audience, and it is a different half each time.? Plus, I can’t cover everything.? I would go nuts.

Second place, but not a close second, would go to FT Alphaville.? Beyond that there is Naked Capitalism, occasional links at Alea, and a number of others, but if I had to pick just one, it would be Abnormal Returns.

Why don’t I do linkfests?? Well, I do them in my own way.? I try to write articles focused on a single topic, and then link to relevant content on the web.? It’s more work, but I think it produces a better product than those that make a few small comments and do big blockquotes.? I’m not out to overuse the content of others at my blog.? I might copy a couple graphs or paragraphs with attribution, but to paste whole articles into one’s blog violates “fair use” in my opinion.

One last bit of blog housekeeping.? I appreciate all of the feedback that I get, so feel free to e-mail me.? I read all of my e-mails, but I can’t respond to all of them.? Thanks for reading me.

The Fundamentals of Residential Real Estate Market Bottoms

The Fundamentals of Residential Real Estate Market Bottoms

This article was posted at The Big Picture this morning as I was guest-blogging for Barry.? That’s a first for me, and there is no better site to do it at.? I present the article here for those that did not see it at The Big Picture.

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This piece completes a series that I started RealMoney, and continued at my blog.? For those with access to RealMoney, I did an article called The Fundamentals of Market Tops, where I concluded in early 2004 that we weren?t at a top yet.? For those without access, Barry Ritholtz put a large portion of it at his blog.? I then wrote another piece at RM applying the framework to residential housing in mid-2005, and I came to a different conclusion: yes, residential real estate [RRE] was near its top.? Recently, I posted a piece a number of readers asked me to write: The Fundamentals of Market Bottoms, where I concluded we weren?t yet at a bottom for the equity markets.

This piece completes the series for now, and asks whether we are at the bottom for RRE prices. If not, when, and how much more pain?

Before I start this piece, I have to deal with the issue of why RRE market tops and bottoms are different.? The signals for a bottom are not automatically the inverse of those for a top. Tops and bottoms for RRE are different primarily because of debt investors.? At market tops, typically credit spreads are tight, but they have been tight for several years, while seemingly cheap leverage builds up.? There is a sense of invincibility for the RRE market, and the financing markets reflect that. Bottoms are more jagged, with debt financing expensive to non-existent.

As a friend of mine once said, ?To make a stock go to zero, it has to have a significant slug of debt.?? The same is true of RRE and that is what differentiates tops from bottoms.? At tops, no one cares about the level of debt or financing terms.? The rare insolvencies that happen then are often due to fraud.? But at bottoms, the only thing that investors care about is the level of debt or financing terms.

Why Do RRE Defaults Happen?

It costs money to sell a home ? around 5-10% of the sales price. In a RRE bear market, those costs fall entirely on the seller. That?s why economic incentives for the owners of RRE decline once their equity on a mark-to-market basis declines below that threshold. They no longer have equity so much as an option on the equity of the home, should they continue to pay on their mortgage and prices rise.

As RRE prices have fallen, a larger percentage of the housing stock has fallen below the 10% equity threshold. Near the peak in October 2005, maybe 5% of all houses were below the threshold. Recently, I estimated that that figure was closer to 12%. It may go as high as 20% by the time we reach bottom.

Defaults occur in RRE when there would be negative equity in a sale, and a negative life event occurs:

  • Unemployment
  • Death
  • Disability
  • Disaster
  • Divorce
  • Large mortgage payment rise from a reset or a recast

The negative life events, which, aside from changes in mortgage payments, can?t be expected, cause the borrower to give up and default. During a RRE bear market, most people in a negative equity on sale position don?t have a lot of extra assets to fall back on, so anything that interrupts the normal flow of income raises the odds of default. So long as there are a large number of homes in a negative equity on sale position, a certain percentage will keep sliding into foreclosure when negative life events hit. For any individual, it is random, but for the US as a whole, a predictable flow of foreclosures occur.

Examining Economic Actors as We near the Bottom

Starting at the bottom of the housing ?food chain,? I?m going to consider how various parties act as we get near the RRE price bottom. At the bottom, typically Federal Reserve policy is loose, and the yield curve is very steep. Financial companies, if they are in good shape, can profit from lending against their inexpensive deposit bases.

This presumes that the remaining banks are in good shape, with adequate capacity to lend. That?s not true at present. Regulation has moved into triage mode, where the regulators divide the institutions into healthy, questionable, and dead. The bottom typically is not reached until the number of questionable institutions starts to shrink. Right now that figure is growing for banks, thrifts, and credit unions.

The Fed?s monetary policy can only stimulate the healthy institutions. Over time, many of the questionable will slow growth, and build up enough free assets to write off bad debts. Those free assets will come through capital raises and modest profitability. Others will fail, and their assets will be taken over by stronger institutions, and losses realized by the FDIC, etc. The FDIC, and other insurance funds, will have their own balancing act, as they will need to raise premiums, but not so much that it harms borderline institutions.

Another tricky issue is the Treasury-Eurodollar [TED] Spread. Near the bottom, there should be significant uncertainty about the banking system, and the willingness of banks to lend to each other. Spreads on corporate and trust preferreds should be relatively high as well. Past the bottom, all of these spreads should be rallying for surviving institutions.

Financing for purchasing a house in a RRE bear market is expensive to nonexistent, but the underwriting is strong. At the bottom, volumes increase as enough buyers have built up sufficient earning power and savings to put a decent amount down, and be able to comfortably finance the balance at the new reduced housing prices, even with relatively high mortgage rates relative to where the government borrows.

Many other players in RRE financing will find themselves stretched, and some will be broken. Consider these players:

1) Home equity lenders will be greatly reduced, and won?t return in size until well after the bottom is passed.

2) Many unregulated and liberally regulated lenders are out of business. The virtue of a strong balance sheet and a deposit franchise speaks for itself.

3) Buyers of subordinated RMBS have been destroyed; same for many leveraged players in ?high quality? paper. Don?t even mention subprime; that game is over, and may even be turning up now as vultures pick through the rubble. This has implications for MBIA, Ambac, and other financial guarantors, since they guaranteed similar business. How big will their losses be?

4) Mortgage insurers are impaired. In earlier RRE bear markets, that meant earnings went negative for a while. In this case, one has failed, and some more might fail as well.

5) Do the GSEs continue to exist in their present form? That question never came up in prior bear markets, but it will have to be answered before the bottom comes. Will the FHLB take losses from their mortgage holdings? Will it be severe enough that it affects their creditworthiness? I doubt it, but anything is possible in this down cycle, and the FHLBs have absorbed a lot of RRE mortgage financing.

6) Securitization gets done limitedly, if at all. This is already true for non-GSE-insured loans; the question is how much Fannie and Freddie will do. My suspicion is near the bottom, as loan volumes increase, banks will be looking for ways to move mortgages off of their balance sheets, and securitization should increase.

7) The losses have to go somewhere, which brings up one more player, the US Government. Through the institutions the US sponsors, and through whatever m?lange of programs the US uses to directly bail out financially broken individuals and institutions, a lot of the pain will get directed back to taxpayers, and, those who lend to the US government in its own currency. It is possible that foreign lenders to the US may rebel at some point, but if the OPEC nations in the Middle East or China haven?t blinked by now, I?m not sure what level of current account deficit would make them change their policy.

That said, the recent housing bill wasn?t that amazing. Look for the US Government to try again after the election.

A Few More Economic Actors to Consider

Now let?s consider the likely actions of parties that are closer to the building and buying of houses.

1) Toward the bottom, or shortly after that, we should see an increase in speculative buying from investors. These will be smarter speculators than the ones buying in 2005; they will not only not rely on capital gains in order to survive, but they require a risk premium. Renting the property will have to generate a very attractive return in order to get to buy the properties.

2) Renters will be doing the same math and will begin buying in volume when they can finance it prudently, and save money over renting.

3) At the bottom, only the best realtors are left. It?s no longer a seemingly ?easy money? profession.

4) At the bottom, only the best builders survive, and typically they trade for 50-125% of their written-down book value. Leverage declines significantly. Land gets written down. JVs get rationalized. Fewer homes get built, so that inventories of unsold homes finally decline.

As for current homeowners, the mortgage resets and recasts have to be past the peak at the bottom, with the end in sight. (In my piece on real estate market tops, I suggested that after the bubble popped ?Short rates would have to rally significantly to bail these borrowers out. We would need the fed funds target at around 2%.? Well, we are there, but I didn?t expect the TED spread to be so high.)

5) Defaults begin burning out, because the number of the number of properties in a negative equity on sale position begins to decline.

6) Places that had the biggest booms have the biggest busts, even if open property is scarce. Remember, a piece of land is not priceless, but is only worth the subjective present value of future services that can be derived from the land to the marginal buyer. When the marginal buyers are nonexistent, and lenders are skittish, prices can fall a long way, even in supply-constrained markets.

For a parallel, consider pricing in the art market. Many pieces of art are priceless, but the market as a whole tends to follow the liquidity of the rich marginal art buyer. When liquidity is scarce, prices tend to fall, though it is often masked by a lack of trading in an illiquid market.

When financing expands dramatically in any sector, there is a tendency for the assets being financed to appreciate in value in the short run. This was true of the Nasdaq in the late ’90s, commercial real estate in the mid-to-late 1980s, lesser-developed-country lending in the late ’70s, etc. Financing injects liquidity, and liquidity creates confidence in the short run, which can become self-reinforcing, until the cash flows can?t support the assets in question, and then the markets become self-reinforcing on the downside, as buying power collapses.

The Bottom Is Coming, But I Wouldn?t Get Too Happy Yet

There are reasons to think that we are at or near the bottom now:

But I don?t think we are there yet, and here is why:

My best guess is that we are two years away from a bottom in RRE prices, and that prices will have to fall around 10-20% from here in order to restore more normal price levels versus rents, incomes, long term price trends, etc. Hey, it could be worse, Fitch is projecting a 25% decline.

Not all of the indicators that I put forth have to appear for there to be a market bottom. A preponderance of them appearing would make me consider the possibility, and that is not the case now.

Some of my indicators are vague and require subjective judgment. But they?re better than nothing, and keep me in the game today. Avoiding the banks, homebuilders, and many related companies has helped my performance over the last three years. I hope that I ? and you ? can do well once the bottom nears. There will be bargains to be had in housing-related and financial stocks.

Full disclosure: no positions in companies mentioned

Financial Bloggers: The Conscience of Wall Street?

Financial Bloggers: The Conscience of Wall Street?

Many CFA charterholders blog, though it is a tiny fraction of the total pool of CFA charterholders.? Many of them contribute to Seeking Alpha.? Granted, if you look at lists of the most popular investment weblogs, few of the writers are CFA charterholders.? Why?? Well, having basic knowledge about investments and ethics does not mean that you can write about it well.? For those who can write well, there are other options, most of which are more remunerative.

  • Write internal research for a buy-side firm that no one else sees.
  • Be a sell-side analyst for those who trade with your firm.
  • Write a newsletter for paying clients.
  • Manage money, and write an entertaining quarterly/monthly missive that adds to the subjective value of having money managed by you.
  • Write for RealMoney, or some other major media newspaper/website.

The thing is, for most bloggers, it is self-expression, not remuneration, that matters.? For me, it is giving something back to the broader investing community.? The retail investor does not have many friends.

So, it was with puzzlement that I read Susan Weiner’s piece called, “Investment Strategy Blogs Slow to
Influence Financial Advisors
,” as cited by Felix Salmon.? Now, don’t get me wrong here, becoming a CFA charterholder opened a lot of doors for me.? But the CFA Institute, with its curriculum does not have a monopoly on training smart investors.? For those starting out young, getting an MBA from a well-regarded school can often be a better choice.? On the buy-side, having a CFA charter has some punch, but not so much on the sell-side.

I wrote for RealMoney for 3.5 years before starting my blog.? Writing for RealMoney taught me a lot about how to phrase things in an interesting way.? Most of the contributors there were/are very good at expressing themselves.? Most are not CFA charterholders.? Almost all journalists aren’t CFA charterholders either.? Buffett is not a CFA charterholder, though his mentor, Ben Graham, helped found the predecessor to the CFA Institute.

My surprise as a blogger has been the quality of the information/advice that I have run across in blogging.? The best are reflected in my blogroll, but there are many others that I like but don’t read regularly.? Bloggers tend to be more pointed, sometimes more sensationalistic, than the financial press, and the sell-side.? But there is a virtue to blogging that the others lack: criticism.

Look, I make mistakes.? As a blogger who prizes his reputation (and honesty generally), when I make a mistake, I try to be fast to confess it.? Blogging is more interactive than other forms of media, so the feedback cycle is faster for those who take honesty seriously.? Those that make too many mistakes, or refuse to accept criticism, get marginalized, and quickly.

Blogging has another virtue, in that bloggers are willing to take more chances in what they say.? Those who are wrong too often are disregarded… it’s a tough environment out there.? But those who are willing to hazard unvarnished opinions about tough issues will gain a following, if they are correct often enough.? Ask yourself this, in the recent credit crisis, who has been more accurate in their predictions, the mainstream media, the sell-side, or leading finance bloggers?? My money is on the bloggers.

Now, the articles cited above glorify CFA charterholders, licensure, and the mainstream media.? None of those are guarantees of good investing or writing.? Those that I interact with in the mainstream media are pretty sharp, and I think quality has increased there over the last ten years.? TheStreet.com has something to do with that, in that they have trained a bevy of young smart journalists that can write, and they understand the markets better then 95% of the population.

I place more stock in a strong liberal arts education that does not neglect business and the hard sciences.? Like Buffett and Munger, lifelong learners tend to be some of the best investors and writers.? We are strong generalists.? The CFA syllabus imparts a limited set of knowledge that is very useful, but most CFA charterholders are mediocre investors.? As Ken Fisher said to me, “The first thing you have to do is forget everything you’ve learned in the CFA training.”? He also told me to forget what I learned from his books.? What is known is not valuable.? What do I know that no one else knows?? That conversation kicked off my current investing approach, of which, 40% of it derives from the useful CFA syllabus.? (Though the advanced investing syllabus for the Society of Actuaries has a few things to commend it that the CFA syllabus does not have.)

You can get a CFA charter.? You can pass the Series 7, and become a broker.? You can become a financial journalist.? None of those guarantee that you can add value.? The best in each of those areas become known for the quality of work that they generate.? The cream rises to the top.? So, I put out this challenge to those that are skeptical about financial bloggers.? Look at the sites in my blogroll, and tell me which ones have poorly thought-out opinions that will harm readers.? I maintain that they are all useful for both experts and retail investors, and are a useful supplement to conventional investment research that doesn’t take chances, because it is not in their interest to do so.

UPDATE: NOON 8/21 — One emendation, regular reader Steve pointed out one bit of sloppiness in the above post.? Where it says “CFA(s)” it should say CFA charterholder(s), or charter.? I have adjusted the post to reflect that.

Post 800

Post 800

Every 100 posts, as WordPress counts, I take a moment out to reflect on my life , my blog, the markets, and more.? My blog is usually a reflection of me as an investor and businessman, but it is not a reflection of me, the whole person.? This is my chance to speak my mind more broadly.? (By the way, it is amusing to be doing post 800 on 08/08/08.)

Hasn’t the market been volatile lately?? I feel like a yo-yo.? Ordinarily my sector rotation methods help my portfolio to be less volatile than the market, but at present my “beta” feels like 1.3.? Now, on the plus side, I am underweight energy for the first time in six years, starting in mid-July, and my energy exposure has a large refining component through Valero and ConocoPhilips. Beyond that, I am in the plus column again for 2008, though returns on Monday could reverse that with ease.

That’s the market.? Only invest what you can afford to lose.

Writing this blog interfaces with the print/online world in a variety of odd ways.? I talk to reporters fairly frequently, and give them a good amount of my time.? So, I want to thank my contacts at the CNN/Money, Fortune, Bloomberg, TheStreet.com, The Wall Street Journal, Business Week, and the Associated Press.? Other interested writers/reporters, e-mail me, and we can talk.

Ordinarily, when I write these posts, I cite those who have driven traffic my way, but right now, my internet connectivity is not cooperating with me.? Instead, I will mention the blogs that are not on my blogroll that I admire: World Beta, Felix Salmon, Information Arbitrage, and Interfluidity.

I remain most grateful to my readers.? I can’t respond to every e-mail, but I do read all of them.? Thanks for taking the time to read my writings.? I enjoy doing it because it gives something back to the broader investment community; retail investors don’t have many friends.

I leave you all with this.? I know my blog is eclectic; I cover a number of issues, and less well than some blogs that are more focused on single issues.? If you have ideas that you want me to write about, please e-mail me.

May the Lord bless you in your endeavors, and grant all of us wisdom in what I expect to be turbulent times in the markets.

Full disclosure: long VLO COP

Asking for Help

Asking for Help

This post is a little different, so bear with me for a moment.? I’m in the midst of taking my value investing and turning into a product that will enable me (and the firm I work for) to manage separate accounts. I figure a few of my readers may manage firms that manage separate accounts.? If you do that, I’m just looking for pointers, particularly regarding difficulties to avoid in starting up such an operation.? E-mail me at the address listed on this page if you think that you can help.? Thanks.

Oh, one more thing.? Today was my best relative performance day in a long time.? I’m back in the plus column (barely) year-to-date, and ahead of the S&P 500 for the month, after having been behind by more than 5% earlier this month.? What a manic, nutty month!? And now, watch it all shift because of Cemex’s earnings miss.? Can’t win them all.

Full disclosure: long CX

I am NOT Your Public Relations Outlet

I am NOT Your Public Relations Outlet

Hi.? I’m back home, and happy, before a one-day turnaround where I leave again.? We were able to get the business of the church done one day ahead of schedule.? While at the meeting, I had no internet… there is something odd about my laptop that blocked them from connecting me, and, they messed up my laptop in trying to connect me, so that I can’t use my dedicated line.? Kinda sad.

One quick rant because when you get a boatload of e-mail at once, things get clearer.? I think someone has created a mailing list for economics/finance bloggers, because I have a number of semi-interesting press releases in my e-mail.? They would be interesting, but there are over a dozen of them, and none of them really fit my profile, aside from a professor asking me to review an academic finance article. (Me?! I’m on the hinterlands of the profession.)? I appreciate truly personal mail, but the faux personal mail, which is really PR, does not get me to move.

One other note: while I was away, since I did not have internet, during free time, I went through my files to cull through research that I downloaded to be read.? By the time I was done, I went through about 200 articles, and added 20 or so to my research files.? I could do a post on what I think is valuable in academic/professional finance research — I’m not sure how much my readers would value it.? That said, going through the research sharpened my views on what I think is valuable in academic research… so, at least I gained something from it.

I should be able to post more tomorrow, beyond that, I have no idea what kind of connectivity I might have.

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