Category: Currencies

Ten Unsolved Problems in the Global Economy

Ten Unsolved Problems in the Global Economy

There are many celebrating the recovery as if it were already here.? This is a brief post to outline my main remaining concerns for recovery of the global economy.

1)? China is overstimulating its economy, and forcing its banks to make bad loans.? This pushes up commodity prices, and makes it look like China is growing, but little of the investments made are truly needed by the rest of the global economy.

2)? Western European banks have lent too much to Eastern European nations in Euros.? The Eastern Europeans can’t afford it, and widespread defaults are a possibility.

3)? The average maturity of bonds held by foreign investors in US Treasuries is falling.? Runs on currencies happen when countries can no longer roll over their debts easily, which is facilitated by having a lot of debt to refinance at once.

4)? On a mark-to-market basis, market values for commercial real estate have fallen dramatically.? Neither REIT stocks nor carrying values for loans on the books of banks reflect this yet.? Many banks are insolvent at market-clearing prices for commercial real estate.

5)? We still have yet to feel the effects from pay-option ARMs resetting and recasting.? Most of the pain in residential housing is done, but on the high end, there is still more pain to come, and the pay-option ARMs will reinforce that.

6)? The rally in corporate debt and loans was too early and fast.? Conditions are not back to normal for creditworthiness.? There should be a pullback in corporate credit.

7)? We had global overbuilding is cyclical sectors 2002-2007.? We overshot the demand for large boats as an example.? We overdeveloped energy supplies (that will be short-lived), metals, and other commodities.? It will take a while to grow into the extra capacity.

8 )? The US consumer is still over-levered.? It will be a while before he can resume his profligate ways, assuming a new frugality does not overcome the US.? (Not likely by historical standards.)

9)? The Federal Reserve will have a hard time removing their nonstandard policy accommodation.

10)? We still have the pensions/retiree healthcare crisis in front of us globally.

That’s all.? To my readers, if you can think of large unsolved problems in the global economy, forward them on to me here in the comments.? If I agree, I will incorporate them in future articles.

Twenty Notes on Current Risks in the Markets

Twenty Notes on Current Risks in the Markets

1)? A modest proposal: The government announces that they will refinance all debtors.? Not only that, but they will buy out existing debt at par, and allow people and firms to finance all obligations at the same rate that the government does for whatever term is necessary to assure profitability or the ability to make all payments.? The US Treasury/Fed will become “The Bank.”? No need for the lesser institutions, The Bank will eat them up and dissolve their losses, taking over and refinancing their obligations.? Hey, if we want a single-payer plan in healthcare, why not in finance?? Being healthy is no good if you can’t make your payments. 😉

This scenario extends the US Government’s behavior to its logical absurd.? The US Government would never be large enough to achieve this, but what they can’t do on the whole, they do in part for political favorites.? They should never have bailed out anyone, because of the favoritism/unfairness of it.? Better to have a crash and rebuild on firmer ground, than to muddle through in a Japan-style malaise.? That is where we are heading at present.? (That’s the optimistic scenario.)

2)? I have exited junk bonds, and even low investment-grade corporates.? Consider what Loomis Sayles is doing with junk.? Yield = Poison, to me right now, which echoes a very early post in this blog.? There are times when every avenue in bonds is overpriced — that is not quite now, because of senior CMBS, carefully chosen.? All the same, it makes me bearish on the US Dollar, and bullish on foreign bonds.? This is a time for capital preservation.

3) High real yields are driving the sales of US Government debt.? Is that a positive or a negative?? I can’t tell, but there is always a tradeoff for indebted governments, because they can usually reduce interest expense by financing short.? When their average debt maturity gets too short, they have a crisis rolling over the debt.? We are not there yet, but we are proceeding on that road.

4)? I have a bias in favor of buyside analysts, after all I was one.? But this research makes me question my bias.? Perhaps sellside analysts are less constrained than buyside analysts?

5) Debtor-in-possession lending is diminishing, reflecting the likelihood of loss.? In some cases that may mean more insolvencies go into liquidation.? Interesting to be seeing this in the midst of a junk bond rally.

6)? Short-selling isn’t dead yet.? Would that they would take my view that a “hard locate” is needed; one can’t short unless there is a hard commitment of shares to borrow.

7) Should we let managers compete free of the constraints imposed by manager consultants?? You bet, it would demonstrate the ability to add value clearly.? I face that? problem myself, in that I limit myself to anything traded on US equity exchanges.? As such, I have beaten most US equity managers (and the indexes) over the last nine years, but no one wants to consider me because I don’t fit the paradigms of most manager consultants.

8 )? Is there a fallacy in the “fallacy of composition?”? I think so.? Yes, if everyone does the same thing same time, the system will be unstable.? But if society adopts a new baseline for saving/spending, the system will adjust after a number of years, and there will be a new normal to work from.? That new normal might be higher savings and investment, in this case, leading to a better place eventually than the old normal.

9)? Anyway, as I have said before, stability of a capitalist system is not normal.? Instability is normal, and is one of the beauties of a capitalist system, because it adjusts to conditions better than anything else.

10)? Corporate treasurers are increasingly engaged in a negative arbitrage where they borrow long and hold cash so that the company will be secure.? How will this work out?? Will this turn into buybacks when things are safe?? Or will it just be a drag on earnings, waiting for an eventual debt buyback?

11)? Does debt doom the recovery?? Maybe.? I depends on where the debt is held, and how is affects consumption spending.? Personally, I think that consumers and small businesses are under a lot of stress now, and it won’t lift easily.

12)? So things are looking better with junk bond defaults.? Perhaps it was an overestimate, or that it would not all come in 2009.? We will see.

13)? Junk bonds do well; junk stocks do better.? In a junk rally, everything flies.? All the more to hope that this isn’t a bear market rally; if so, the correction will be vicious.

14)? Eddy, pal.? Guys who criticize data-mining are near and dear to me.? Now the paper in question has a funny definition of exact.? I don’t know how to describe it, except that it seems to mean progressively more accurate.? I didn’t think the paper was serious at first, but given the relaxed meaning of “exact,” it data-mines for demographic influences on the stock market.? Hint: if you have lots of friends when you are nine, ask for stock as a birthday present.

15)? I’m increaisngly skeptical about China, and this doesn’t help.? I sense that the global recession is intesifying, amid the current positive signs in the US.

16)? Do firms with female board members do worse than companies with only male board members?? No, but they get lower valuations, according to this study.? I started a study on female CEOs in the US, and I got the same result, but it is imcomplete at present — perhaps new data will invalidate my earlier findings.? Why does this happen, if true?? Men seem to be better at managing single investments, while women are better at managing portfolios.

17)? Do we have more pain coming from the banks?? I think so.? Residential real estate problems have not reconciled, and Commercial real estate problems are just beginning.? If we mark loans to market, many large banks are insolvent, and this is not an issue that will easily be healed with time.

18)? As a nation, I like Japan, and would like to visit it someday.? What I don’t want is for the US to imitate its economic stagnation, but maybe that could be the best of all possible worlds for the US.

19)? I am de-risking my equity and bond portfolios at present.? I do not think that the present market levels fairly reflect the risks involved.? I am reducing risk in bonds, and looking for strong sustainable equity yields in equities.

20)? Echoing point 17, we face real problems on bank balance sheets from commercial real estate lending.? There is more pain to come.? The time to de-risk is now.

Book Review: Mr. Market Miscalculates

Book Review: Mr. Market Miscalculates

Since the first time I read him, I have been a fan of James Grant.? He helped to sharpen my focus on how money and credit work in the long run, and how they affect the economy as a whole.? Reading one of his early books, Minding Mr. Market: Ten Years on Wall Street With Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, I gained perspective on the increasingly complex financial world that we were moving into.

But not all have shared the opinion of Mr. Grant’s wisdom.? When I worked for Provident Mutual, the Chief Portfolio Manager (at that time new to me, but eventually a dear colleague) said to me, “feel free to borrow any of the publications we receive.”? For a guy who likes to read, and learn about investments, I was jazzed. But, when I came back and asked whether we subscribed to Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, I got the look that said, “You poor fool; what next, conspiracy theories?” while she said, “Uh, noooo. We don’t have any interest in that.”

Now the next two firms I worked for did subscribe, and I enjoyed reading it from 1998 to 2007. But now the question: why buy a book that repeats articles written over the last fifteen years?

I once reviewed the book Just What I Said: Bloomberg Economics Columnist Takes on Bonds, Banks, Budgets, and Bubbles, by another acquaintance of mine, the equally bright (compared to James Grant) Caroline Baum.? This book followed the same format, reprinting the best of old columns, with modest commentary.? In my review, I cited Grant’s earlier book as a comparison, Minding Mr. Market.

As an investor, why read books that will not give an immediate idea of where to invest now?? Isn’t that a waste of time? That depends.? Are we looking to become discoverers of investment/economic ideas, or recipients of those ideas?? Books like those of Grant and Baum will help you learn to think, which is more valuable than a hot tip.

Here are topics that the book will help one to understand:

  • How does monetary policy affect the financial economy?
  • Why throwing liquidity at every financial crisis eventually creates a bigger crisis.
  • Why do value (and other) investors need to be extra careful when investing in leveraged firms?
  • What is risk?? Variation of total return or likelihood of loss and its severity?
  • Why financial systems eventually fail at compounding returns at rates of growth significantly above the growth rate of GDP.
  • Why great technologies may make lousy investments.
  • Why does neoclassical economics fail us when trying to understand the financial economy?
  • How does one recognize a speculative mania?
  • And more…

The largest criticism that can be leveled at James Grant was that he saw that he would happen in this crisis far sooner than most others.? Being too early means you eventually get disregarded.? The error that the “earlies” made, and I knew quite a few of them, was not recognizing how much debt could be crammed into the financial economy in order to juice returns on fixed income assets with yields lower than likely default losses.? That’s a mouthful, but the financial economy had not enough good loans to make relative to the amount of loans needed to maintain the earnings growth expectations of the shareholders of financial companies. Thus, the credit bubble, facilitated by the Fed and the banking regulators.? You can read all about it in its many facets in James Grant’s book.

You can buy the book here: Mr. Market Miscalculates: The Bubble Years and Beyond.

Who would benefit from the book?

  • Those that have assumed that neoclassical economics adequately explains the way our economy works.
  • Those that want to understand how monetary policy really works, or doesn’t.
  • Those that want to learn about equity or fixed income value investing from a quirky but accurate viewpoint.
  • Those that want to be entertained by intelligent commentary that proved right in the past.

As with other James Grant books, this does not so much deal with current problems, as much as educate us on how to view the problems that face us, through the prism of how past problems developed.

Full disclosure: If you buy anything through the links to Amazon at my blog, I get a small commission,? but your costs don’t go up.?? Also, thanks to Axios Press for the free review copy.? I read the whole thing, and enjoyed it all.

Seven Notes on the Current Market Mess

Seven Notes on the Current Market Mess

1)? Avoid short-cycle data.? When writing at RealMoney, I encouraged people to ignore short-term media, and trust those that gave long-term advice.? After all, it is better to learn how to invest rather than get a few hot stock picks.

In general, I read writers in proportion to their long-term perspective.? I don’t have a TV.? I rarely listen to radio, but when I do listen to financial radio, I usually feel sick.

I do read a lot, and learn from longer-cycle commentary.? There is less of that around in this short-term environment.

When I hear of carping from the mainstream media regarding blogging, I shake my head.? Why?

  • Most bloggers are not anonymous, like me.
  • Many of us are experts in our? specialty areas.
  • Having been practical investors, we know far more about the markets than almost all journalists, who generally don’t invest, or, are passive investors.

Don’t get me wrong, I see a partnership between bloggers and journalists, producing a better product together.? They are better writers, and we need to get technical messages out in non-technical terms.

We need more long-term thinking in the markets.? The print media is better at that than television or radio — bloggers can go either way.? For example, I write pieces that have permanent validity, and others that just react to the crisis “du jour.” Investors, if you are focusing on the current news flow, I will tell you that you are losing, becuase you are behind the news flow.? It is better to consider longer-term trends, and use those to shape decisions.? There are too many trying to arb the short run.? The short run is crowded, very crowded.

So look to value investing, and lengthen your holding period.? Don’t trade so much, and let Ben Graham’s weighing machine work for you, ignoring the votes that go on day-to-day.

2)? Mark-to-Market accounting could not be suppressed for long in an are where asset and liability values are more volatile.? Give FASB some credit — they are bringing the issue back.? My view is when financial statement entities are as volatile as equities, they should be valued as equities in the accounting.

3)? Very, very, weird.? I cannot think of a man that I am more likely to disagree with than Barney Frank.? But I agree with the direction of his proposal on CDS.? My view is this: hedging is legitimate, and speculation is valid to the degree that it facilitates hedging.? Thus, hedgers can initiate transactions, wtih speculators able to bid to cover the hedge.? What is not legitimate is speculators trading with speculators — we have a word for that — gambling, and that should be prohibited in the US.? Every legitimate derivative trade has a hedger leading the transaction.

4)? I should have put this higher in my piece, but this post by Brad Setser illustrates a point that I have made before.? It is not only the level of debt that matters, but how quickly the debt reprices.? Financing with short-term dbet is almost always more risky than financing with short-term debt.

Over the last six years, I have called attention to the way that the US government has been shortening the maturity structure of its debt.? The shorter the maturity structure, the more likely a currency panic.

5)? Look, I can’t name names here for business reasons, but it is foolish to take more risk in defined benefit pension plans now in order to try to make up? the shortfall of liabilities over assets.? This is a time for playing it safe, and looking for options that will do well as asset values deflate.

6)? Junk bonds have rallied to a high degree; at this point I say, underweight them — the default losses are coming, and the yields on the indexes don’t reflect that.

7) Peak Finance — cute term, one reflecting a bubble in lending/investing.? Simon Johnson distinguishes between three types of bubbles — I’m less certain there.? Also, I would call his third type of bubble a “cultural bubble,” rather than a “political bubble,” because the really big bubbles involve all aspects of society, not just the political process.? It can work both ways — the broader culture can draw the political process into the bubble, or vice-versa.

The political process can set up the contours for the bubble.? The many ways that the US Government force-fed residential housing into the US economy — The GSEs, the mortgage interest deduction, loose regulation of banks, loose monetary policy, etc., created conditions for the wider bubble — subprime, Alt-A, pay-option ARMs, investor activity, flipping, overbuilding, etc.? In the process, the the federal government becomes co-dependent on the tax revenues provided.

I still stand by the idea that bubbles are predominantly phenomena of financing.? Without debt, it is hard to get a big bubble going.? Without cheap short-term financing, it is difficult to get a stupendous boom/bust, such as we are having.? That’s just the worry behind my point 4 above.? The US as a nation may be “Too Big To Fail,” to the rest of the world, but if the composition of external financing for the US is becoming more-and-more short-term, that may be a sign that the endgame is coming.

And, on that bright note, enjoy this busy week in the markets.?? Last week was a tough one for me personally; let’s see if this week goes better.

China, the Wild Card — Seven Notes

China, the Wild Card — Seven Notes

1) Is China really growing or not?? Wait, is that a stupid question, or what?? Of course China is growing, and pulling the global economy out of the ditch as well.? Read this report from Time.? Uh, maybe not.? What if it is all a lending bubble?

What seems to be happening is that the powers that be in China are encouraging banks to lend aggressively.? Firms in China aren’t finding a lot of opportunities in export markets, so they build up inventories “that they know they will need eventually.”? Financial counterparties and individuals speculate on financial assets like real estate and stocks as they find cheap financing available.? (Example)

That’s my view of China at present.? I think those that are arguing for a resurgence in China at present are missing the similarities to the late 1980s with Japan where large amounts of productive capacity were built up with no markets large enough to sell the incremental production to.

I could be wrong, but this is leading me to lighten up on cyclicals.? Maybe some utilities…

2) With all of the noise of those looking for a replacement for the US Dollar as the world’s global reserve currency, I have two questions:

  • Are the surplus nations looking to reduce their surpluses, and thus suck in fewer foreign assets?
  • Is there a new deficit nation that is politically stable, militarily strong, etc., that is capable of running current account deficits for some time?? Surplus nations need a safe place to invest.

3) In the meantime, the US tries to assure trading partners that their purchasing power is safe.? We remember the laughable assertion of Tim Geithner trying to assure the Chinese that they did not have to worry about devaluation of the dollar.? Well, now he is saying the same things to the Saudis.? At least with the Saudis, we are doing their bidding in the Middle East, by bottling up Iran,? so perhaps he does not have to worry so much there.

4) Back to point 2.? Are the current account surplus nations willing to consume from the rest of the world and flip around to deficit conditions, letting their currencies appreciate, and killing their politically powerful export industries?? That’s what it will take to replace the US Dollar.? I don’t care who is arguing against the US as a reserve currency.? The reserve currency must by nature offer high quality securities on net to the surplus nations to invest in.? It must run current account deficits on average.

That’s why China can’t be the world’s reserve currency.? China isn’t willing to stop export promotion, or encourage domestic consumption.? India and Russia may kvetch as much as they like, but both are in the same boat as China, but to a lesser degree.

Oddly, the best policy for most of the complainers would be to allow/encourage imports, and stop export promotion.? Freed from these distortions, the global economy would start to normalize.? Cross-border capital flows would decline because exports would not need to be balanced out.

5) The US has no interest in selling Yuan-denominated debt yet.? China eagerly buys Treasuries today.

6)? Does the one child policy fuel excess savings in China?? Maybe, but I doubt it is a big factor.? Dowries are unlikely to eclipse the actions of the central bank and government.

7) A final note from Andy Xie — there is a lot of momentum in China, but little underlying change in the fundamentals.

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My summary is this:? To the degree that the recent upturn is driven by expectations that China pull the global economy out of the ditch, the move is mistaken.? As my friend Cody Willard asked me three years ago, what happens if Chinese growth proves to be a sham?? Can you trust their statistics?

My answer was that I wasn’t certain, but that things would get more clear if that were the case — and I think things are clearer now.? My policy implication is to move assets out of export-driven sectors, and those driven by China demand.? Utilities, here I come. 😉

Toward a New Concept of Asset Allocation

Toward a New Concept of Asset Allocation

To my readers: thanks for your responses to yesterday’s article.? I will do a follow up piece soon.? If you have more comments please make them — they will help me with the piece.? Main new concepts coming — need for a deliverable, speculators can’t trade with speculators, only hedgers.

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Longtime readers know that I am not a fan of modern portfolio theory.? It is a failure for many reasons:

  • It assumes there is one type of risk, the occurence of which is random.
  • It assumes that this risk can be approximated by volatility (variance of returns), rather than probability of loss, and the likely severity thereof.
  • Mean return estimates, volatility estimates, and correlation coefficient estimates aren’t stable.
  • In crises, correlations head to 1 or -1.? Assets divide into safe and “not safe.”
  • Problem: some assets always fall into the “not safe” bucket, but what falls into the safe bucket can vary.? Long Treasuries and commodities could be examples of assets that vary during a crisis, depending on the type of crisis.
  • It does not recognize multiple time horizons easily.? Bonds held to maturity have a different risk profile than a constantly rebalanced portfolio.
  • Risk is the same for all people, and their decision-making time horizons are the same as well.
  • And more…

I’m still playing around with the elements of what would make up a new asset allocation model, but a new model has to disaggregate risk into risks, and ask some basic questions:

  • Where am I getting paid to take risk?
  • Where am I getting paid to avoid risk?
  • What aspects of the financial landscape offer the potential for a change in behavior, even if it might take a while to get there?? What major imbalances exist?? Where are dumb people making money?
  • Where options are available, how is implied volatility relative to long-term averages?
  • What asset classes have momentum to their total returns?

One good example of an approach like this is Jeremy Grantham at GMO.? Asset allocation begins by measuring likely cash flow yields on asset classes, together with the likelihood of obtaining those estimates.? With domestic bonds, the estimates are relatively easy.? Look at the current yield, with a haircut for defaults and optionality.? Still there is room to add value in bonds, looking at what sectors are cheap.

  • Are corporate spreads narrow or wide?
  • How are residential mortgage bonds priced relative to agency bonds, after adjusting for negative optionality?
  • How steep is the yield curve, and where is Fed policy?
  • What is the speculative feel of the market now?? Bold? Scared? Normal?
  • Related, how are illiquid issues doing?? Are they permafrost, or are molasses not in January?
  • If every risk factor in domestic bonds looks lousy, it is time to make a larger allocation to foreign bonds.
  • Cash is underrated, and it is safe.

Understanding bonds is an aid to understanding the rest of the market.? The risk factors in play in the bond market are more transparent than elsewhere, but the rest of the markets eventually adjust to them.

With stocks and commodities, the answer is tougher — we have to estimate future demand and supply for commodities.? Tough.? With stocks, we need to estimate future earnings, and apply a P/E multiple that is consistent with the future yield on BBB corporate bonds.? There is some degree of mean-reversion that can help our estimates, but I would not rely on that too heavily.

There is one more aspect to layer in here: illiquidity of equity investments.? With limited partnerships of any sort, whether they are hedge funds, venture capital, private equity, etc., one has to analyze a few factors:

  • Where is the sector in its speculative cycle?? Where are secondary interests being sold?
  • How much capacity do you have for such investments?? How much of your liability structure is near-permanent?? Is the same true of peer institutions?
  • Is the public equity market overvalued or undervalued?? Public and private tend to track each other.

Beyond that we get to the structure and goals of the entity neding the assets allocated.? Time horizon, skittishness, and understanding levels are key for making a reasonable allocation.

This is just my initial brain dump.? It was spurred by this article in the WSJ, on how asset allocation had failed.? Add in the article on immediate annuities, which are a great aid in personal retirement planning.? For those that think that immediate annuities reduce the inheritance to the children, I would simply say that it is longevity insurance.? If the annuitant lives a long time, he might run out of assets, and might rely on his children for help.? The immediate annuity would be there to kick in something.

Why did asset allocation fail in 2008?? All risk assets failed.? Stocks, corporate bonds, venture capital, private equity, CMBS, RMBS, ABS… nothing held up.? There were just varying degress of loss.? Oh, add in Real Estate, and REITs.? Destroyed.? Destroyed…

When the system as a whole has too much leverage, all risky asset classes get affected.? That’s what happened in 2008, as speculators got their heads handed to them, including many who did not realize that they were speculators.

It Takes Two to Tango

It Takes Two to Tango

For every buyer there is a seller.? For every debit, there is a credit.

People often accept naive views of how the market works, perhaps considering how their own life seems to work, and not considering? the other side of the trade.? As an example, aside from laziness, why do market observers report a day where the market goes down on no significant news as “profit taking,” or grab at some lame smaller story which couldn’t explain the decline?? For every seller, there is a buyer.? No money went into or out of the market unless there was a new IPO, rights offering, company sale for cash, buyback, cash dividend, etc.? People don’t run away from or run to the market; only the terms of the tradew change at the margin.

The same applies to current account deficits.? They have to get funded from somewhere, and on unfavorable terms to the lender if the borrower happens to be the world’s reserve currency.

Thus, when I consider arguments over whether America is to blame for its profligate ways, or whether those that funded the deficits are to blame, I simply say that the books have to balance.? Neither is to blame; both are to blame.

It is not as if China has free capital markets.? Given their neomercantilism (uneconomic export promotion), they had to find places where their exports would be accepted.? The answer was the US.? After that, what do their banks do with excess dollars?? They buy fixed income dollar assets, which they foolishly think will preserve value until they need to liquidate the assets for goods or services of some sort.

That recycling of the current account deficit forced rates lower in the US while the Fed was tightening.? For the Fed to have fought that influence, they should have tightened more rapidly, compared to the plodding 1/4% each FOMC meeting.? How often have mortgage interest rates fallen while the Fed is tightening?? Not often, which is why the Fed was impotent during the last tightening cycle.? It is also why the blows hitting the global economy have fallen more lightly on the US.? To the extent that foreigners buy our bonds denominated in dollars, that transfers a part of the pain to them.? Thanks, but you could have avoided our pain had you opened your markets to our goods and services.

There are many efforts in play to try to replace the dollar.? Most if not all will fail.? At present, the US is politically secure in ways the other large currencies are not, and many invest in the US not to preserve full value, but to preserve most of the value, whatever that may be.

As with many things in life — it takes two to tango.? Blame is infrequently singular.? Both the US and China should own up to their shares of the current problems.? Then, maybe, solutions could be found.

Ten Points — Mainly About the Debt Markets

Ten Points — Mainly About the Debt Markets

1) Why have long interest rates been rising?

  1. Increased supply.
  2. Mortgage bond/supply hedging. (also one, two)
  3. Belief in a strengthening economy.
  4. Long-term inflation expectations have been rising.
  5. Some foreign investors are selling.
  6. Flight to trash.

Number 1 is incontrovertible.? Number 2 is close.? Number three is true, though the economy is not strengthening that much in inflation adjusted terms.? As for 4, yes, TIPS inflation breakevens have been steadily rising, both short- and long-term.

The last one is the most interesting.? It is the analogue to the equity investors that are buying financials.? Since the financials have been hot, equity managers lagging in performance have encouraged the purchase of hot financials.? Same for junk bonds among broad mandate bond managers.? Many managers are buying long financial corporates for speculative gains, while selling long Treasuries to fund the purchases.

With a few exceptions, it has paid recently for bond managers to play on the riskier areas of their mandates, with the exception of high quality long duration bonds, which were the big winners last year, and the big losers this year so far.

So when you look at the rise in high-quality long rates (prices down), and the rally in junk (prices up), etc., realize that these are part of a larger phenomenon.?? There is not one simple reason for the recent moves, there are many, and they are loosely related.

2)? That’s not to say that the Fed publicly understands this (one, two, three) .? When they announced their plan to buy long Treasuries, Agencies, and Mortgage bonds, there was some hope that they could keep mortgage rates down and stimulate the economy by making cheaper to finance homes.? That dream is in tatters now (one, two, three, four, contrary opinion from Paul Kasriel, who I generally respect).? The six forces listed above are bigger than the Fed’s ability to control.

3)? Will the Fed start tightening rates in 2009?? Yes or no?? When you phrase the question that way, most thoughtful observers will answer no, saying that the Fed would never start acting when a recovery is barely underway, if it is underway at all.

But maybe that’s the wrong question.? Ignoring the Fed funds futures market for a moment, ask this question instead:? Subjectively, have the odds risen recently that they might tighten sooner, and maybe even in 2009?? Certainly.? There have been other times when the Fed has acted, tightening when conditions were less than optimal.? I’ll give you two of them:

  • After the dollar tanked in 1986, with inflation still pretty benign, starting in December of 1986, the Fed began to raise rates, primarily to defend the dollar.? Not realizing all of the second order effects that would take place, the tightenings led to a bear market in bonds, and eventually the crash later that year as bonds became compelling compared to stocks.
  • From 1973 to 1982, the Fed often raised rates when the economy was less than strong.? Inflation was out of control, and it didn’t much matter whether industrial capacity or labor capacity were fully used — there was still inflation, and thus, stagflation.

It’s possible we may run into the same thing here, though if the only thing we experience is commodity price inflation because the dollar is weak, that doesn’t feed back into consumer prices that much,? because raw commodity prices play a small role in consumer prices.? Labor costs are much more important.? Would it be possible to get rising wages when unemployment is high?? Yes, look at the ’70s.

4)? But maybe the Fed can tighten without tightening.? They can begin lightening up on their credit easing programs.? Might work.? Maybe they could reverse their trade in long Treasuries, Agencies, and Mortgage bonds.? Uh, yeah, unlikely, but maybe they slow down a little.? In a case like this, moving the Fed Funds rate might be the least painful option.

So maybe a move in the Fed funds rate isn’t impossible in 2009.? The difficult part here is forecasting:

  • What conditions will be in the real economy will be like
  • How well the global economy turns
  • Whether the large amount of incremental Treasury debt and guarantees will be readily digested on favorable terms
  • Whether the financial economy won’t hit a few more roadblocks from commercial mortgages, corporate and personal insolvencies, unemployment, etc.
  • Whether there is some “bolt from the blue” like a new war, weakness in the Chinese economy, etc.

What isn’t hard is looking at the overall debt levels relative to GDP, and realizing that we have only rationalized a part of them.

5) Residential Housing is still weak, and getting weaker, but the pace of the decline has slowed.? The market still has issues in front of it:

As I said in an old CC post:


David Merkel
Hear Cody on Housing
8/24/2007 1:25 PM EDT

Much, but not all of the upset in the lending markets (which, if you look at swap spreads, the current manifestation of the crisis seems to be passing — down 4 basis points today), is from deflating values in housing. My estimate for how much further real estate has to decline on average in the US is 10-20%. We need to find owners for about 4% of the US housing stock that is vacant. The pain that has been felt in subprime and Alt-A loans will get felt in prime loans, and possibly conforming loans as well. Fannie and Freddie won’t get killed, but they will take credit losses.

So, listen to Cody. Residential real estate markets do not clear as rapidly as a futures exchange. The illiquidity and variations in lending standards tends to lead to markets that adjust slowly, and autocorrelatedly. I.e., if it went up last period, odds are it will go up next period, and vice-versa.

It will take a while for the residential real estate market to clear. When the inventory gets down to 3% it will be time to start speculating on homebuilders and mortgage lenders again, but real estate prices won’t start rising in aggregate until the inventory of unsold homes gets below 1.5-2.0%.

Position: none

In hindsight, I was way too optimistic, but I could never bring myself to write that things could be much worse, because then you get labeled a “perma-bear,” and then you get ignored.? So, if you want pessimism, here it is from T2 partners.? We may be near fair value now, but given that our housing stock is misfinanced (too much debt, terms that are too short), we will definitely go below fair value.? The only question is how much we go below fair value.

6)? Regarding the US Dollar fixed income, who is right?? The Russians, who are selling?? The Chinese, who are kvetching, but still buying??? Or the Japanese, who possess unshakable trust in US bonds??? Only time will tell.? Transitions from one currency regime to another can be messy in the absence of an anchor like gold.? There is some point where if the US keeps borrowing, and there seems to be no end in sight, that foreign creditors will finally write off their losses, and move on to some new arrangement.

In the short run, it is not in the interests of China or Japan to ditch the Dollar.? It would take something notable to get them to change, and I can’t see what that would be.? It certainly won’t be Yuan-denominated bonds from the US.

7)? Buy Corporate Bonds Now.? Aren’t we a bit late here?? The time to buy was back in the end of 2008.? Investment Grade Corporates are at fair value now, and I would reduce holdings of BBB corporates to below benchmarket levels. High yield is still a little cheap, so I would reduceallocations to high yield now to benchmark levels.? We still have significant financial stress ahead of us, and there is a lot of room for lower-rated credits to underperform.

8 ) As another example of this, consider how many junk-rated senior loans will need to be refinanced over the next five years.? Perhaps the bid from CLOs will come back, or the the banks will heal and bring it onto their balance sheets.? But absent that, there will be upward pressures on yields when refinancing senior loans.

9) I knew that I wrote something with respect to the Fed and Treasury using force to make banks take TARP funds.? I finally found it.? So, this isn’t hot news that the banks were forced to take TARP funds, (and here) but it’s nice to see that I guess right every now and then.? Barry was quite possibly right that the TARP was a ruse to protect Citi, but the bigger surprise would be how much Bank of America and Wells Fargo would need it.

10) Final note: if banks are opaque, regulators are more so.? Glad to see Matthew Goldstein continuing to put out good work on financials.? He was great at TSCM, and I’m sure will be great at Reuters.

Thirteen Aspects to our Current Economic Situation

Thirteen Aspects to our Current Economic Situation

1) Last night I started out with the concept of a “housing mismatch.”? Today, with a hat tip to Calculated Risk, I can make my case better.? The low end of the market is humming, as new buyers come in.? Makes sense.? Who get the capital together for a downpayment?? New homebuyers for homes on the lower end.? But homeowners that want to upgrade are stuck, because the buying power of the equity of their current home has deflated.? Thus few upgrading buyers, and they are typically a large part of the housing scene.? Good article — helps point out why this cycle in residential real estate may have prices drop below equilibrium levels.? We are close to equilibrium now, but nowhere near reversing.

2) How should bank solvency be regulated?? If sticking with the existing model, the bank examiners must be more rigorous, and they should consider some stressful scenarios, such as we are experiencing now, or worse.? Perhaps a market-based solution would help, such as that which former Fed Governor Poole has proposed.

His objective is the toobig to fail institutions, but he says that all banks would have to issue subordinated debt.? This would be difficult to implement for small banks. Small issue sizes in the debt market are tough to place, and rolling over 1% each year makes the sizes smaller still. The sub debt would have to be at the operating bank subsidiaries, which are smaller than the holding companies.

I like the idea, though. Maybe a market would develop for small bank sub debt? maybe even funds specializing in it. The yields could be significant, and even protected to some degree, given the need to roll it over to stay operating.

That said, loss incidence might be infrequent, but loss severity and correlation would be high. That?s true of losses on unsecured financial debt generally, but it would be worse with sub debt.

This idea is not new, but it is worth a try. The financial analysis of banks by regulators who have little economic incentive to be right, and hampered by politics has not worked well. It would be replaced by profit-seeking analysts who do have an incentive in the health of the bank in question.

3) Given the fall in global trade, export-driven nations are getting hit hard.? Maybe that can help explain why Treasuries are selling off on the long end — aside from excess supply due to the humongous deficit, there is less need to recycle excess dollars by buying Treasuries.

4) Okay, I was wrong about the Indiana Pension System winning in the short run regarding secured Chrysler debt.? Given the time pressures, the suit was rejected.? Maybe they will win on appeal, but how that works out after the deal is done is messy.

5) GM bondholders have rejected a settlement, and so the company will likely go through chapter 11.? I do not get the large amount of financing that the US government is putting up.? What? Do they want to repeat the losses they will experience through AIG?

6) With the shrinkage in market capitalizations, the number of sell side analysts declines.? No surprise here.? The number of sell side analysts is proportional to the money that can be made by investment banks off of underwriting and trading.? As market capitalizations fall, so do revenues for investment banks.

7) Yesterday, I said that if California defaulted, we would face a constitutional crisis.? I still think that is true.? I ran across Felix’s thoughts on the matter today, though they are one month dated.? The upshot to me is that there are no ways of enforcing payment if a state won’t pay on their municipal debts.? This is a hole in the system, and one that could pinch many in the US, not just Californians.

8 ) Federal Reserve Transparency act of 2009?? Bring it on.? Yea, Ron Paul, one of the few economically literate memebers of Congress.? The Fed gets away with a lot because they aren’t purely private or public.? They use their dual status to hide — when it is more useful to be a government institution, they are that.? Vice versa, when being private allows the avoidance of FOIAs.

9) This is one long article.? How sunk are we regarding peak oil/hydrocarbons?? I have revised my estimates of oil production downward, and will buy more energy related stocks at my next rebalancing.

10) Though I am not a dollar bull, there is no easy replacement for the US Dollar on the global scene.? Euro, too experimental.? Yen, too small.? I have not advocated that the Chinese currency could replace the Dollar (as some have), because their economy would have to become far more open.? They aren’t willing to do that.

11) It’s tough being a corporate director. 😉 No, it’s altogether too easy, which leads to complacency.? Consider the situation at the banks, or at the FHLBs.? Years of leverage expansion, where the livin’ was easy, made them lazy, and unwilling to challenge their managements.? No surprise that their reasons for existence are being chalenged now.

12) Though Samuelson misses the point that trust fund exhaustion is not the trouble point, his article is a welcome addition to the discussion.? Time is not on the side of the social insurance programs of the US Government, but as I have stated, that trouble comes when revenues are less than expenses, because the trust funds, invested in Treasuries, are a farce.? The only way the US government can pay off on those is through taxation, borrowing, or inflation.

13) What are implied breakeven levels of inflation implying from TIPS?? That many people fear that inflation will run out of control, given the reckless actions of the Fed and the US Government.

Translation: We Really, REALLY, Hate You Guys!!

Translation: We Really, REALLY, Hate You Guys!!

From an earlier post, point 4:

?We hate you guys. Once you start issuing $1 trillion-$2 trillion [$1,000bn-$2,000bn] . . .we know the dollar is going to depreciate, so we hate you guys but there is nothing much we can do.? [emphasis mine]

So said Mr. Luo, a director-general at the China Banking Regulatory Commission.? I?ve been saying for a long time that China is stuck, and that we are their problem, and not vice-versa.? There may come a point where they stop buying US Dollar-denominated debt, and let existing debt mature, but that will come after a shift in their own economy where they are no longer driven bythe promotion of their exports.? There aren?t many large good alternatives to US debt for parking the proceeds from exporting aggressively.

So today, we get another volley from China as they realize that they are stuck holding US Dollar denominated assets that they are more certain than ever will depreciate.? They see injustice in having bought too many dollars in exchange for the exports they paid to promote to the US.? Excerpting from the article:

People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said he wants to replace the dollar, installed as the reserve currencyWorld War II, with a different standard run by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). after

China, the top holder of US Treasury bonds with 739.6 billion dollars as of January, according to American figures, earlier expressed concern over its investment as the world’s largest economy battles a deep recession.

“The outbreak of the crisis and its spillover to the entire world reflected the inherent vulnerabilities and systemic risks in the existing international monetary system,” Zhou wrote in an essay posted on the bank’s website Monday.

Zhou’s comments come ahead of the G20 summit from April 2 in London, where world leaders and international organisations including the IMF are to discuss reforming the financial system.

He suggested the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights, or SDR, could serve as a super-sovereign reserve currency as it would not be easily influenced by the policies of individual countries.

Russia has also proposed the summit discuss creating a supranational reserve currency. The IMF created the SDR as an international reserve asset in 1969, but it is only used by governments and international institutions.

“The reform should be guided by a grand vision and start with specific deliverables,” Zhou wrote. “It should be a gradual process that yields win-win results for all.”

However, China’s proposal was unlikely to lead anywhere because the SDR is not a currency system backed up by a government, independent Shanghai-based economist Andy Xie said.

Xie said the proposal was probably a protest aimed at Washington’s plan to buy one trillion dollars of its own debt, diluting the value of China’s dollar reserves and raising fears of inflation.

“It’s a sad situation: China is America’s banker. America owes so much to China, but it’s not afraid of China,” he said. “China is America’s hostage. It’s not the other way around.” [emphasis mine]

As the world’s main reserve currency, US dollars account for most governments’ foreign exchange reserves and are used to set international market prices for oil, gold and other currencies.

As the issuer of the reserve currency, the US pays less for products and borrows more easily.

Strategic Drawing Rights are a cute idea, but it would be too small? to support global trade.? Like the Euro, it is a political construct, but one with less dedicated political and economic support.

As I commented in my piece, It is Good to be the World?s Reserve Currency, there’s no good alternative to the US Dollar yet. Like the mercantilists of old, who bought gold dear, and sold it cheaply, so will it be for China — they bought US Dollar claims dear, but will sell them more cheaply.?? This is the price of forced industrialization.

There will come a time when the US Dollar is no longer the world’s reserve currency, but there needs to be a worthy competitor, or a willingness to do without a single clearing unit.? This is an age of computers, so there does not need to be a single dominant unit of exchange, but habits die hard.? It will probably take some disaster to dislodge the US Dollar, and force the changeover.? Whether that comes through inflation, default, partial default, or war remains to be seen.

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