Category: Insurance

On Questions to Buffett

On Questions to Buffett

I’m going to comment on three articles written before Buffett’s party.? I am not picking on these because they are dumb.? I am picking on them because they are brighter than most, but still don’t get Buffett.

Copying Warren Buffett harder for investors today

No individual investor can copy Buffett in full, unless he buys BRK, which isn’t the worst idea around.? These two articles explain why almost no one can copy Warren:

In general, it is far better to follow the principles that Buffett has espoused — value investing, than to try to mimic Buffett himself.? Buffett is so big that he can’t look at the little opportunities that you and I can look at.? So take advantage of your small size, and buy some of the illiquid companies that Buffett can’t touch, because they don’t move the needle.

That said, if I were in the shoes of Todd Combs or Ted Weschler, I would create a “small cap bucket” for odd names that you know are cheap, but you only want to get at your level.? You don’t want to waste a lot of time on this, but you do want to take advantage of your insights, at least to the level that DFA does.

Buffett?s Bear: 5 Questions Doug Kass Should Ask

I think Doug Kass will have better questions than these, but they are simple enough that I can answer them in my imitation of Buffett’s voice:

1) Why the lackluster returns?

Charlie & I have often said our stock was overvalued.? We recently initiated a buyback, because we no longer thought so.? Since then, performance has been adequate.

But we don’t manage for market returns.? We manage the company to compound the net worth.? We can’t control the capitalization that outside investor might assign the company, so we focus on what we can control.

2) Why shouldn?t Berkshire break-up?

There are real financing advantages to being part of Berkshire Hathaway.? We have chosen firms that will do well in good times and bad and have conservatively financed them.? Further, one of our advantages is that those who sell companies to us know that the culture of the company will be preserved.? That gives us an advantage in acquiring firms that most of private equity does not have.? It makes us eclectic, but it is a good eclectic.

3) Is the stock market overvalued?

We don’t pay much attention to that, but we won’t overpay for investments, and we are not finding much attractive at present.? We just try to grow the net worth of our company.

4) Is Geico moving fast enough?

GEICO has done exceptionally well over the years, underwrites very well, and is one of the lowest cost operators? in personal insurance.? Speed is not what we are concerned with; we are more concerned about the quality of what we do rather than taking chances, as we believe some of the industry is regarding close monitoring of policyholder behavior.? If it truly works, our managers at GEICO will adopt it.

5) Is Berkshire?s business model preventing success?

I empower my managers to make all manner of decisions to enhance the value of the company.? This is not a weakness; they help me make money in good times and in bad times.? The stock market has had a hard run of late; please revisit what we do after the next correction in the market.

(I hope Doug Kass has better questions than these…)

Berkshire Annual Meeting: 5 Questions for Warren Buffett

1) Come on, Warren, isn?t it Ajit?

This isn’t obvious.? We have many excellent managers.? Ajit’s underwriting skills are considerable, as well as his general management skills.? He would do well to succeed me, but there may be others who are better.

2) About that Heinz deal??

Heinz was an excellent deal for us, and we would do more of them.? We have an excellent partner managing the investment, and if it does well, we have a disproportionate amount of the upside in the deal.? If it does middlingly, we do well also.

3) How does the economy look to Berkshire?

Really, we don’t care much about the economy in the short-run.? We are building a business to exist over the long-term.? We are bulls on America; no one has ever won in the long haul being bearish on America.

4) About those new stakes in Goldman Sachs and General Electric?

We have expressed our desires to be long-term holders of Goldman Sachs.? As for General Electric, we admire the company.? Who doesn’t?? That said, we will manage our stakes relative to our long-term expectations of their value.

5) Is your Twitter account due diligence?

We only buy companies where there is no competition, and where we think there is value and sustainable competitive advantage.? We created a Twitter account for me so that we could communicate with those who follow our company.

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I’m sure Buffett would sound better.? That said, even though it is the Wall Street Journal’s reporters, there are better questions to ask.? Hopefully Doug Kass will ask some of them.? That said, Berkshire Hathaway is well thought out.? I think a question that would surprise Buffett would be unlikely.? And if it did surprise Buffett, Charlie would give an adequate terse answer.

Using Life Insurance Products to Fund Long-Term Needs

Using Life Insurance Products to Fund Long-Term Needs

I have noted recently a number of advertisements offering risk-free investing.? When I dig into them, they are selling life insurance and annuities.? They claim high rates of return with virtually no risk.? Here are the problems:

  • Life insurers have come off of 3+ decades of falling interest rates, portfolio yields are high relative to what you can get in the market today.? Some insurers may show above average rates, but if enough take advantage of them, the rates will fall to market levels.
  • Commissions to agents are relatively high, which has two effects: 1) less investment performance goes to the insured, and more to the agent, and 2) High surrender charges.? If you ever need your money in full, you will never get it back from an insurance contract.
  • People have forgotten the 1970s, with rising interest rates, where many insurers were near bankruptcy, and on a market value basis, many were technically bankrupt.
  • Life insurers that have written a lot of variable business or a lot of indexed business have taken on a lot of hidden equity risk.? Imagine a Great Depression scenario, where equities fall 90% over 3 years, and it takes 20 years more for values to recover.? Guess what?? Virtually all of the life insurance industry dies, whereas most survived the Great Depression.
  • From Mutual Insurers, life insurance dividends are not guaranteed.? In a real crisis, dividend scales could drop to zero.? The insurance you thought was free regains a price.
  • Equity indexed products rarely return well.? When I analyzed them back in the early 2000s, T-bill yields were the result of my models.? Today, T-bill yields are so low that the returns must be better.? That said, you will have to accept low returns versus a long surrender charge.

Insurance is meant for protection, not savings.? It is also meant for scamming the tax man, especially with respect to estate taxes.

Just be wary here, I’m not naming names, because many of these parties are litigious, another sign of weakness.? But there is no “one size fits all” method for Wealth Management.? One of my clients recently complimented me because I don’t try to get all of the assets of a client.? Indeed, I want my clients to feel that they have chosen me for their purposes.? I do not want them to allocate more to me than they are comfortable allocating.

So, be aware of the limitations inherent in life insurance products.? And when you hear that something is virtually risk-free, take a step back and hold onto your wallet.? Nothing is risk-free.? Even with the guaranty funds backing the insurers, the full value of large policies is not guaranteed, much like large depositors in the banks.

The regulation of the solvency of life insurers has been better than that of banks for the last 30 years, but it hasn’t been perfect.? I was on the takeover team that tried to have AIG to take over the Equitable.? AXA overbid, and bought a bad situation just as it was about to turn.

As for AIG, some of those promoting insurance products say that AIG’s life insurance subsidiaries did not need a bailout in the crisis.? That was false, because of the securities lending agreements, and a few other things.? Most of the domestic life companies of AIG received bailout money.

The good record of life insurance lack of default over the last 30 years is the result of three things:

  • Falling interest rates
  • Better solvency regulation than banks
  • AIG’s life insurance subsidiaries were bailed out.

Be diversified, and don’t use just one set of entities to fund your retirement.? Using only insurers runs a lot of regulatory and taxation risk.? A future government may find clever ways to undo the clever tax avoidance that has been achieved there so far.? Spread your regulatory risk.? If you are wealthy enough, spread out your country risk, but be wary as you do so.? Who will support the rule of law better than the US?? Where will governments not tap assets under custody in a crisis?? Remember Cyprus.? It will not be the last place where assets are expropriated for the good of locals, even if locals got hurt as well.

 

On High Short Interest Ratios

On High Short Interest Ratios

Two of my 35 stocks have short interest ratios over 10 days.? [Short interest ratio = amount of shares shorted / average daily volume]

I look at this statistic, and force myself to re-examine companies where the ratio is over 10.? Maybe there is something that I don’t know.

The two stocks in question are Stancorp Financial and National Western Life Insurance.? The short cases for both are based on a naive view of how insurance companies work.

Stancorp is a disability insurer.? Disability insurers often do badly in a recession because disability claims increase — people who are unemployed claim they are disabled.

There are two models for disability insurance: 1) Underwrite carefully, and pay all legitimate claims. 2) Accept all business, but when claims come in litigate with vigor.

Stancorp follows the first model.? I would never own an insurer that followed the second model, it is dishonest, and it is bad business.

Because Stancorp does its risk management up front, it does not get the same degree of unemployment masquerading as disability claims.? But the shorts don’t get this.? Thus the short interest ratio near 20.

Doesn’t bother me.? This is a undervalued company with a quality management team.? Low debt.? Sustainable competitive advantages in its niches.? One nice thing about being a knowledgeable insurance investor is that you can get a firm grip on the nature of the management teams, and invest in the good ones when they are out of favor.

With National Western, the short interest ratio is near 11.? Admittedly, it is an unusual company.? No analysts. Large controlling shareholder.? Hasn’t lost money in over 10 years.? Trades at less than 40% of adjusted book value.? Sells insurance policies to foreigners who want flight capital.

With interest rates falling, some shorts think some insurers will have difficulty meeting policy interest guarantees.? From my view, that is not the case with National Western, they have a large amount of long bonds to protect the guarantees.

Thus I say to the shorts: short all you want.? You will be buyers at higher levels.

Full disclosure: long NWLI and SFG for my clients and me

Classic: Get to Know the Holders’ Hands, Part 1

Classic: Get to Know the Holders’ Hands, Part 1

Note: this was published at RealMoney on 7/1/2004.? This was part three of a? four part series. Part One is lost but was given the lousy title: Managing Liability Affects Stocks, Pt. 1.? If you have a copy, send it to me.

Fortunately, these were the best three of the four articles.

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Investing Strategies

Different investor groups in the market have different patterns of funding and disbursement.

Understand those patterns to read market action more clearly and see what trends might emerge.

 

Recently, the firm I work for held a large amount of the common stock of Phoenix (PNX:NYSE). As the stock rallied, I kept moving out my sell target, because the technicals on the stock were so compelling. There were no analysts saying buy, there were a few saying sell and the short interest was high. The company was doing all the right things and the stock had great price momentum, but the valuation was just too high. I wanted to sell, but I couldn’t figure out when.

Finally, on Feb. 21, the stock price began to rally on no news. Going to the message boards, I discovered that there was a momentum investor with a radio show who was making one of his occasional television appearances, and was touting Phoenix. I went to our trader and said that we had our chance. There was a group of valuation-insensitive buyers buying the stock with abandon. I said, “Ride the ask [offer stock at the asking price], and if you get any thick bids near the ask, hit them.” (Read: If there are aggressive large bidders, sell to them at their level.) We sold our position in two weeks, without disturbing the market; we were able to get an average price of about $14.25. (Our trader is top-notch.) Today the price of Phoenix is about 15% lower. The momentum investors choked on the stock that we (and others) fed them.

Why did this work for us? We understood two aspects of how Phoenix traded very well: the fundamentals and technicals. The fundamentals taught us what fair value should be, but the technicals taught us how investors would react to movements in the stock price.

Every investor has a mode of funding and a mode of disbursement. The funding and disbursement modes affect how long and under what conditions an investor wants to, or is able to, hold his position. Some examples will illustrate general principles of these modes. I will describe the ways that various classes of investors fund their investments, how their investments are held, how they are liquidated and how all of this affects what kinds of investments they can use from both an asset class and liquidity standpoint. I also will attempt to explain how the behavior of some classes of investors can become temporarily self-reinforcing, leading to booms and busts.? Finally, I will try to give some practical advice along the way as to how you can benefit from the behaviors of different classes of investors.

 

1. Banks and Other Depositary Institutions

Banks make promises to depositors. Some of these promises are absolute; some are contingent on external events. Bank regulations exist to make the keeping of the promises more certain (or, in modern times, keep the guarantee funds solvent). Banks have to keep adequate capital on hand to provide a margin of safety against insolvency. The amount of capital varies on the immediacy with which deposits may be withdrawn, the degree of equity/credit risk of the assets and how well the asset cash flows are matched to the liability cash flows.

Liquid assets must be set aside to meet the amount of funds that may be withdrawn immediately with little or no penalty. The more that is set aside, the lower the risk and the lower the profit. If the assets are materially longer or contain more equity risk than a money-market-like investment, there may be a loss when the assets are liquidated to pay off depositors. In general, the cash flows of assets must be matched to the liabilities that fund them, at least in aggregate.

This biases banks to hold primarily short- to intermediate-term, high-quality fixed-income assets: bonds, loans, mortgages and mortgage-backed securities. These are generally safe investments, but banks are fairly leveraged institutions. If the market moves against their investments and their capital cushion gets eroded to the point where their ability to operate becomes questionable to regulators (or customers), the banks might be forced to sell investments into a falling market in order to preserve solvency.

The first motive of a financial institution is to survive; the second is to profit. When the first motive is threatened, even if there is a good possibility that the institution will survive and make more money if it retains the assets that now are perceived as risky, in general, the risky assets will get sold to assure survival at the cost of current profitability.

To return to a concept I discussed in the first column I wrote for RealMoney, Valuing Financial Slack in the Steel Sector, banks with a high degree of leverage relative to the overall riskiness of their assets and liabilities possess little in the way of financial slack. Volatility in the markets that cuts against their position harms such companies. They end up becoming forced sellers and buyers.

Banks with financial slack can enjoy volatility. When the markets are dislocated, they can make room on their balance sheets to wave in securities that are distressed and temporarily trading below intrinsic value. During times of volatility, the strong benefit at the expense of the weak, whereas weak firms outperform during periods of stability. As an example, after the real estate crisis in 1989-1992, the banks that did the best over the whole cycle were those that did not become overleveraged, did not over-lend to marginal credits and had diversified operations. During the crisis, they had the flexibility to lend in situations of their choosing at favorable yields.

 

2. Insurance Companies

Insurance companies are like banks but generally have longer funding bases and typically run at a higher ratio of surplus to assets. Insurance companies typically have more ways to lose money than banks, and potential cash flow mismatches in the longer liability structure require more capital to fund potential losses. In principle, the higher surplus levels and the longer liabilities should allow for investment in longer-duration assets like equities, but the regulations make that difficult. Surplus is limited; what gets used for equities can’t be used for underwriting.

As a counterexample, consider what happened to the European insurance industry in 2002. European insurers are allowed to invest much more in equities than their U.S. counterparts can. (Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A:NYSE) is an interesting exception here.) As the bull market of the 1990s came to an end, European insurers found themselves flush with surplus from years of excellent stock-market returns, and adequate, if declining, underwriting performance. The fat years had led to sloppiness in underwriting from 1997 to 2001.

During the bull market, many of the European insurers let their bets ride and did not significantly rebalance away from equities. Running asset policies that were, in hindsight, very aggressive, they came into a period from 2000 to 2002 that would qualify as the perfect storm: large underwriting losses, losses in the equity and corporate bond markets and rating agencies on the warpath, downgrading newly weak companies at a time when higher ratings would have helped cash flow. In mid-2002, their regulators delivered the coup de grace, ordering the European insurers to sell their now-depressed stocks and bonds into a falling market. Sell they did, buying safer bonds with the proceeds. Their forced selling put in the bottom of the stock and corporate bond markets in September and October of 2002. Investors with sufficient financial slack, like Warren Buffett, were able to wave in assets at bargain prices.

This principle may be articulated more broadly as, “The tightest constraint dominates investment policy.” As an example, an insurer that already was at a full allocation on junk bonds could not take advantage of the depressed levels in the junk bond markets; such investors were biting their nails, wondering if they would make it through alive. Another example occurred in 1994, when the most volatile residential mortgage bonds were blowing up. Insurance companies that had a full allocation to that class could not buy more when prices were at their most attractive. Companies and investors that rarely bought the “toxic waste” of the residential mortgage bond market began scooping up bonds at discounts unimaginable previously. A number of flexible investors, including St. Paul (now St. Paul Travelers) and Marty Whitman both ventured outside their ordinary investment habitats to benefit from the crisis.

 

3. Defined Benefit Pension Plan

Defined benefit plans need cash to fund payments to beneficiaries. The amount and timing of the benefit payments vary with plan demographics (sex, age and income), physical roughness of the industry and the specific plan provisions (e.g., late retirement, early retirement, etc.). Inflows to DB plans depend on funding levels and the financial health of the company sponsoring the plan. For an individual DB plan, the cash inflow and outflow characteristics will help determine the plan’s asset allocation, together with the risk tolerance of the plan sponsor.? The more risk-averse a plan is, the less capable it is of funding inflows, and the older the plan’s participant population, the larger the proportion of assets that will go into bonds and other safer investments.

For all DB plans in aggregate, though, the cash flow and demographic characteristics mirror those of the Old Economy. DB plans were created back in the days when the relationships between employer and employed were more fixed than they are now. In the current era of more short-lived employment relationships and with the average age of participants in DB plans rising, these plans face several challenges:

  1. Net cash outflows are getting closer.
  2. There are fewer cash inflows.
  3. Plans are being terminated (or converted to cash balance plans) due to cost, economic weakness and inflexibility.

DB plans are major holders of equity and debt in the U.S., but they are not as great a force as they once were.? Defined contribution plans (i.e. 401(k)s, 403(b)s, etc.) are bigger now. The relative decline and aging of DB plans has had, and will continue to have, two effects in the market. First, because of aging, there will be a greater relative demand for bonds. Second, DB plans have always had a long investment time horizon. That is shrinking now. DB plans tend to resist trends in the market; they tend to rebalance to a fixed asset allocation, which leads them to buy low and sell high. DB plans were the ones selling equities in March 2000 and buying in October 2002; their rebalancing strategies insured that. As DB plans become a smaller fraction of the investor base, markets will become more volatile due to the reduction in long-horizon capital in the market.

 

4. Endowments

Endowments plan to survive forever. Forever is a tough mandate.

Inflows to endowments are uncertain, and outflows are fairly constant. They have spending formulas, the most common of which has the charity spending a constant percentage each year, usually 4% to 6% of the endowment. (In the old days, say 10 years ago, most formulas allowed charities to spend income, which was defined as dividends plus net capital gains.) Within these constraints, endowments behave like defined benefit plans.

 

5. Mutual Funds

Mutual funds do not face any fixed funding or disbursement. Their flows come from retail money chasing past performance. Managers that do well face the blessing of attracting more funds, which they hope will not dilute their returns. Managers that do poorly have funds withdrawn from them, forcing them to liquidate investments that they otherwise think are promising. If a manager is a big enough investor in a given company’s stock (think of Janus’ concentrated portfolios), this can have the effect of worsening performance as liquidation goes on, or boosting the already good performance of managers that are receiving cash inflows to a concentrated fund.

These tendencies become more pronounced the better or worse that performance gets. When performance is near the median level, say, within the second and third quartiles, performance-driven fund flows are small. For many mutual fund managers, this gives them the incentive to never drift too far away from the benchmark, whether that is an equity index or an average portfolio of peers. There is safety in the pack, even if there might be more grass to eat further from the herd. It is rare for a mutual fund manager to be fired for being mediocre.

 

6. Index Funds

What is true of regular mutual funds is also true of index funds, but the difference between the two helps illuminate a basic idea on demographics. Aside from taking market share away from active managers, when do index funds receive and disburse funds? The answer lies mainly in the demographics of investors.

When investors are younger, they invest surplus cash. When they are older, particularly after retirement, they liquidate investments to generate cash. Given the demographics in the U.S., the excess return for merely belonging to the S&P 500 has been roughly 4% per year over the past 15 years; index funds have received disproportionate large inflows relative to the market as a whole. Aside from that, in aggregate, active equity managers benchmark to something that approximates the S&P 500. Belonging to the S&P 500 ensures a continuing flow of capital.

Or does it? What will happen near 2020, when aggregate investment behavior changes from saving to liquidation?? Belonging to major indices may not have the same cachet as investors liquidate their holdings to fund present needs. What was 4% positive in the 1990s could become 4% negative in the 2020s, absent a continuing move toward passive investing.

I don’t have a firm answer here, but I do have suspicions. I would be cautious of too much index exposure 15 years from now, to the extent it can be avoided. (And of course, this will be anticipated several years before the flows turn negative.)

 

7. Unleveraged Private Investors

Sometimes private investors feel disadvantaged vs. larger institutional players, but there are advantages that unleveraged private investors have that institutional players often don’t: the abilities to invest for the long term, concentrate and do nothing.

Institutional investors are subject to the tyranny of constant measurement because they manage money for others. As I have noted before, measurement affects how a manager invests, particularly when it might affect the amount of assets under management, or the receipt of incentive fees. This encourages managers to be both short-term in their orientation and more like an index. It also encourages hyperactivity; clients often expect a manager to make changes to the portfolio even when doing nothing could be the most prudent policy.

Unleveraged private investors can make aggressive investment decisions. They can concentrate their portfolios or consider more esoteric areas of the market. They also can back away from the market if they feel that opportunities are absent. Finally, they can buy and hold, which is not always an option for institutions. They can’t always ride out long but temporary dips in the price of an asset.

That an unleveraged private investor can do these things doesn’t mean he should. Using these advantages presumes a level of expertise in the market well in excess of the average investor. Most investors are average and should index. Those with skill should use it to their maximum advantage, realizing that they are taking their own financial life in their hands; the risks to such an approach are significant, but the same is true of the rewards.

Unleveraged private investors have needs for cash. Some will need it for college, retirement, a second home, etc.? The sooner that an investor will need to liquidate a significant portion of his portfolio, the more conservative the portfolio must be to achieve those spending goals. Looking at private investors in aggregate, this would mean that as the baby boomers approach and enter retirement, there might be a tendency for the overall willingness to take risk in the markets to decline. Also, once the baby boomers are in retirement, assets will have to be liquidated to support them, which will be a drag on the markets at that time.

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In the second part of this column, I will describe how the funding and disbursement modes of three more key groups of investors affect the market, \and how balance sheet players and total return players further mix up the market forces. I’ll also use the Long Term Capital Management crisis to illustrate how illiquidity can shape and shake the market.

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part III

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part III

There’s kind of a rule of thumb in Asset-Liability management, that you match liquidity over the next 12 months, and match interest rate sensitivity overall.? I would do more than that, creating my own randomized interest rate models, as well as a new way of creating structured randomness in simulation models.? For a brief period of time, I had one of the best multivariate randomness programs out there, eliminating the problem of correlations in higher dimensions common with Hammersly points.? (My work was not theoretical, but intuitive… once I saw how the randomness was created, I figured out how to de-correlate the higher dimensions (since it was based on prime numbers, create more number than you need, and use a higher prime number to select observations.)

Anyway, when I brought my full-interest rate curve scenarios to the investment department in 1994, they said to me, “These are the first realistic interest rate scenarios we have ever seen.? Did you constrain them?”? I told them “No, just weak mean reversion.? Noise dominates in the short run, mean reversion dominates in the long run.”

As a result, for the lines of business over which I had oversight, we measured our interest rate mismatch in terms of days, weeks, and months, but never years.? Please ignore this incident where things drifted, but worked out exceptionally well (really, that should be a part of this series).? We published a document to show everyone how well we managed interest rate risk in Provident Mutual’s pension division.? We used scenarios far beyond what was required to show how well we did our work.? The regulators never complained.

At that point in time, the ability to integrate residential mortgage-backed securities into cash flow analyses was rudimentary at best.? But I found ways to make it work, most of the time.? That said, I remember joking with the MBS manager in late 1993, and saying there was a new term for a well-protected PAC bond.? He asked, “What is it?”? I replied, “Cash.”? He sarcastically said, “Oh, you are so funny.”?? That said, I pointed out to the investment department that some of their bonds that they thought would last another four years would disappear in 2-3 months.

Then there was the floating rate guaranteed investment contract project that I eventually killed because it was impossible.? You can’t argue with expectations that are unrealistic.? Even better, I beat the Goldman Sachs representative.

In running the GIC desk at Provident Mutual, I had to review a lot of strategies because making money on short-term bonds/loans was difficult, and difficult the degree that I doubted as to whether we were in a good business.? On the bright side, I protected the firm until the day that we? could not write any more? GICs, because our credit quality was too low.? That was the fault of the less entrepreneurial part of the company, so I couldn’t so much about it, except close my operations down.? I asked the senior management team to provide a guarantee to my GICs, but they refused.

As such, I shut the line of business down.? With clients that were unreasonable over credit quality, and management unwilling to extend credit protection to GICs, the battle over GICs was ended, and I sent the line into runoff.

Five years later, as we were now part of the same firm I stood at the estate of John Dwight, with a young woman that I had sold the last GIC of Provident Mutual to, I said, “The end of the GIC business of Provident Mutual.”? We talked, she smiled, but it was part of the end of an era, because GICs were a minority of the assets in Stable Value funds.

If nothing else, this helps to highlight the impermanence of all that is done in financial firms.? I know this in my own life, but I am sure that it is true for most people in finance.

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part II

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part II

When I worked for Pacific Standard, which had the dubious distinction of being the largest life insurance insolvency of the 1980s, I had few investment-related tasks.? Investments were handled by the overly aggressive parent company Southmark, which gave little attention to risk.

But I knew things weren’t going well, and so I interviewed widely, finally landing two job offers with Midland National and AIG.?? I chose the spot with AIG, because they led me to believe I would work on the international side.? When I arrived, lo, I had a job on the domestic side.? As far as the job went, had I known I would be placed on the domestic side, I would have rather gone to Midland National.? They thought I had real leadership potential — whether true or not, that’s what I was told, and I would not have minded living in South Dakota, or nearby.? As it was, there were many good things that happen to me as a result of living in-between Wilmington, Delaware, and Philadelphia, living on the PA side of the line for reasons of adoption and homeschooling.

When I got to AIG, there was one main thing that involved my risk management skills.? AIG parent wanted growth in GAAP earnings.? They wanted to see a 15% ROE, which few in the life industry were attaining.? In order to do that, they entered into reinsurance treaties (before I arrived).? These would lever up the balance sheets of the subsidiary companies, without incurring debt.? Most of them passed risk to the reinsurers, one did not.

So, when I was called into an examination by the Delaware State Insurance Department auditor over the one treaty that did not pass risk, he said to me, “You know this treaty does not pass risk.”? I replied, “Under ordinary circumstances, I would agree, but the reinsurer has taken a significant loss from this treaty.”? He said, “What do you mean?”? I replied that when Congress passed the DAC tax, the reinsurer suffered the loss — they paid up front, and we pay over time, with zero interest.

He looked at me and said that reinsurance treaties did not exist to cover tax policy, and that the treaty was a sham.? I just shrugged.? I was not the creator of the treaty, and would not have done it if I had been at AIG two years earlier.

But the there were the two larger treaties that passed risk with a vengeance to a large reinsurer [LR] who is no longer a reinsurer (if anyone wrote treaties like these, he might not be a reinsurer anymore either).? In one sense, the treaties were structured like the trading requirements in CDOs.? If you must trade:

  • Get more income
  • Don’t give up rating
  • Don’t extend maturity
  • And a few more smaller things.

I was not there when the treaties were created.? Had I been there, I would have paid a lot more attention to them, and instructed the investment department to set up segregated portfolios, which was not done.? As it was, bonds that underlay the treaty were casually sold as if free to do so.

Now I arrive on the scene.? After reading the treaties, and looking at the data, I conclude that the treaties have been abused on our side.? I suggested to LR that I go through the history, and reallocate bonds that would have fulfilled the treaties strictures, an re-work the accounting so that the terms of the treaty would be fulfilled.? Initially LR agreed to this.

The treaty passed all investment risk to the reinsurer, so defaults would hit them.? What was worse, the liabilities underlying the treaty were structured settlements.? (Structured settlements result from a court case where someone is injured.? The defendant offers to buy from a reputable life insurer an annuity that will make the requisite payments.? Low bid wins, and if the plaintiff is badly injured, the cost goes down for payments that terminate at death.? That’s where most of the bad estimates com in.)? In those days, structured settlements were a “winner’s curse.”? If you won, it was because you mis-bid.? AIG Domestic Life Companies regularly overbid for their business (as did most of the industry).? LR did not do enough due diligence to see the underwriting errors.

I did a mortality study to estimate how badly we needed to increase reserves, and lo, it was more than $100 million, all of which would flow to LR.? LR decided to sue.? After I had gone on to Provident Mutual, AIG settled with LR.? Our missteps with the assets made the case tough, and the reinsurance treaty was rescinded.? That should have been enough to jolt AIG’s earnings for a quarter, but it did not.? Funny that, and it always left me a little suspicious of AIG.? (And LR.)

Before I left AIG, I had clipped the wings of the underwriters of the structured settlements so that they could not write on cases for the most severely disabled.? I also shut down a tiny line of variable annuities that was losing money left and right to an outsourcer who had a sweet contract from a prior management team, but upon leaving AIG I did not feel that great, because I had not built anything — most of my time had been spent trying to limit losses from prior bad underwriting and planning.? It wasn’t fun, and I loved my next company more because I got to build.

PS – a prior note on AIG.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Cyprus & The Eurozone

 

  • Betray Your Bank Before Your Bank Betrays You http://t.co/H0nRJk7pLB Deposits over insured limit r a sitting target 2b taken in a crisis $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Demolishing some myths about the single currency http://t.co/F34IpRQIbF A euro in Nicosia isn’t worth the same as a euro in Berlin $$ #ulose Mar 29, 2013
  • http://t.co/cbKK6ZNfW6 Neatest thing about the Eurozone interactive graphic: crisis comes in fits & spurts; u think it is over,& it’s not $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Eurozone crisis: three-and-a-half years of pain http://t.co/VI8BUD48I8 Cool graphic that allows u2 explore the Euro-crisis blow-by-blow $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Lines Form as Cyprus Banks Reopen http://t.co/0XxAiCFrwq How 2 destroy your banking system & bungle rescue, courtesy of the EZ & #Cyprus $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • MANDATORY CREDIT: BLOOMBERG SURVEILLANCE http://t.co/7bORsyhW8b Marc Faber talks2 Tom Keene & Alix Steel on stocks, Europe, Cyprus & gold $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Italy?s failure to form a government doesn?t bode well for the euro http://t.co/V9nPcWFR60 EZone a political creature w/lousy economics $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Money fled Cyprus as president fumbled bailout http://t.co/gl1J9z80MV Give the Russians credit (figuratively) 4 squeezing $$ out of Cyprus Mar 27, 2013
  • Euro zone overrates ability to curb contagion: Moody’s http://t.co/LpRdQ5RG2B Taxing insured deposits has opened up a can of worms $$ #dumb Mar 27, 2013
  • As a kid, we had a rule, “You can’t beat up my little brother. Only I get to beat up my little brother.” Cyprus: deposit insurance & levy $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Cyprus banks remain closed to avert run on deposits http://t.co/JLDXoGD0T8 Won’t help; trust broken. Better 2 take money home, buy gold $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Cyprus: It?s not over yet http://t.co/2qiIs9aN1b There will be a lot of pushback from Russia & wealthy Cypriots. Taxing Insured deposits? $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Spain?s Swelling Debt Seen Impeding Rajoy Deficit Battle http://t.co/mapViHkfpk Unsure how Spain can escape. After that comes France $$ #woe Mar 25, 2013
  • Cyprus: crossing the green line http://t.co/whW4YR5a9t If I had $$ in a Greek, Italian, French or Spanish bank, I would withdraw some #theft Mar 25, 2013
  • Cyprus: The Operation Was a Success. Shame the Patient Died. http://t.co/79agrH1Mb5 Misery of Cyprus is a feature, not a bug $$ #norelief Mar 25, 2013
  • Cyprus weighs big bank levy; bailout goes down 2wire http://t.co/rm0fHJIfBo Small depositors lose 4%, big 20%. Policymakers gain new tool $$ Mar 25, 2013

 

Financial Sector

 

  • Why Bad Directors Aren?t Thrown Out http://t.co/ZuzGVZk99A Large Institutional Shareholders go along 2get along. Y irritate powerful ppl? $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Surging Student-Loan Debt Is Crushing the System http://t.co/ckFHBbDc4R Avoid student debt if u can; most onerous form of debt in US now $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Wells Fargo Beats Rivals to Oil-Boom Deposits, Study Says http://t.co/Ygt4ENMJqz FD: + $WFC | WFC bot little banks, grew them organically $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Swiss Re settles dispute w/Berkshire Hathaway http://t.co/ADJ0zdufv9 Hasn’t developed same expertise U/W life policies as P&C $$ FD:+ $BRK/B Mar 29, 2013
  • 5 Financial Advisor Red Flags http://t.co/EKFVgc0poP There r2 many fake “credentials” in investing; the person matters more than letters $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • 5th Anniversary of Credit Crisis: Should u Buy CLOs? http://t.co/2sJzKv6LEi All loan participation funds@ prem2NAV http://t.co/qCRczPY0Mu $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • We?ve Already Built the Next Banking Disaster http://t.co/QjYzT4A9gz At minimum, we need to break up biggest 4 banks $C $JPM $BAC $WFC $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Citigroup looks to cut cash holdings to boost earnings http://t.co/5FAoe3egno Every bank hates 2 keep slack liquid assets. Lowers ROE $$ $C Mar 27, 2013
  • The Best Way to Save Banking Is to Kill It @Matthew_C_Klein http://t.co/UP6c1DsMox Separating deposit-taking from credit creation $$ #yes Mar 27, 2013
  • A successful failure by @researchpuzzler http://t.co/cOC4Cpu9L1 Amazing what @pimco can do when it has less money to invest $BOND $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • US Cracks Down on ‘Forced’ Insurance http://t.co/MiWI6a5C1X Restrictions on banks profits on force placed insurance won’t harm insurers $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Warren Buffett and Goldman Sachs: Explaining the Math http://t.co/H6AZImEyTl Buffett receives $GS shares equal 2 his profits on the trade $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • http://t.co/1a1TUDLI6H 44% of Americans think they’re covered 4 weather-related floods. Only 15% have bought a supplemental flood policy. $$ Mar 25, 2013
  • Falcone Follows Michael Jackson Path Taking Fortress Loan http://t.co/697JnVvocq $HRG Falcone tapping every loan source he can $$ #desperate Mar 25, 2013
  • Dealer inventory slump threatens market stability http://t.co/XpsoTJkrl0 Intermediation brings stability 2 mkts if intermediaries solvent $$ Mar 25, 2013
  • Mortgage Securitizers Didn?t Know Housing Was Going Bust http://t.co/rbw2qR2z8H Many drank the same poison Kool-aid they served to others $$ Mar 25, 2013

 

Rest of the World

 

  • US Writes Its Worries About Buying IT Gear From China Into Law http://t.co/OZJt59gZ80 Just imagine the backdoors that could be installed $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Grooms at $18 Fuel IPO Ambitions for Indian Matchmaker http://t.co/liu9239lyU India needs 2 have dowry go reverse way; husband pays $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • How Asia and Robotland have dramatically changed the US labor market http://t.co/Clo8eqpM3w Biggest thing killing off low-end jobs: tech $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Mr Yen cautions on Japan’s ‘unsafe’ debt trajectory http://t.co/iX4GAYAfoR Takehiko Nakao warns of consequences from 2 much govt debt $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • John Mauldin:”Might I suggest that a good trade would be to be long German government debt, short French debt? ” $$ neg carry, long disaster Mar 27, 2013
  • North Korea?s Economic Outlook: Cloudy with a Chance of Statistics by @steve_hanke http://t.co/XXWyKDffB9 Communism often cre8s inflation $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Japanese Investors Start to Cut the Cord http://t.co/9oDHAhiSp8 Mrs Watanabe starts to buy stocks, even foreign & many other investments $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Chinese housing bubble fears grow http://t.co/sejx6Yaj0P China grew its economy by forced investing, & the central planning is failing $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Abe?s Inflation Exceeds Merkel?s After 14-Year Lag http://t.co/4s9838al6a All a race to the bottom; sound $$ will produce greater growth. Mar 27, 2013
  • US shale no panacea for Japan’s crippling energy bills http://t.co/siPd1kiheZ Infrastructure doesn’t exist 4 getting lotsa LNG 2 Japan $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Brazil Soy Boom Bottlenecked as China Left Waiting http://t.co/sUtvoyp8yw Need 2invest transport infrastructure; tax importers/exporters? $$ Mar 26, 2013

 

Companies

 

  • REITs Trigger Fed Warning as Kain Tops $100 Billion http://t.co/4Lq6xm6Ka3 Shadow banking returns amid unconventional Fed policies $$ #panic Mar 28, 2013
  • M&A Stumbles Amid March Deal Drought http://t.co/sJlM7ndlnr “Can u say overvaluation, boys & girls? I thought u could; you’re special.” $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Here’s Why Marissa Mayer Is About To Spend ~$200 Million On A YouTube Wannabe http://t.co/E5A42QAZac Buy small $ grow organically, smart $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Is the $DELL Stub the Right Investment for You? http://t.co/ut9Mg65gLa Gun to the head, I would say “no.” 2 much leverage & excess supply $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Summaries of What’s Wrong w/ $YHOO ‘s Summly Buy http://t.co/npVsxAj7Hj & http://t.co/KudImnOcdL & http://t.co/OhZfXoUwM3 $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • How the Maker of TurboTax Fought Free, Simple Tax Filing http://t.co/CYUea9aT8O Intuit benefits from complexity in the tax code $$ #simplify Mar 27, 2013
  • Fredriksen Bets $2.6B New Ships Will Beat Glut: Freight http://t.co/QtxTQaxJZF A bold bet that may fail 4 lack of sufficient capital $$ $FRO Mar 27, 2013
  • The Scariest Stock Chart in Town @ReformedBroker http://t.co/mg54zsX9s8 Good example of analyzing balance sheet strength of stockholders. $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Cisco Is Keeping Its Promise Not To Buy Companies In The US http://t.co/GtWyy2bLpx Makes sense given US Tax laws | FD: + $CSCO $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • T-Mobile Becomes First Major Carrier to Drop Subsidies http://t.co/7tJ0FdJYmJ Probably a good strategy; differentiates & unbundles $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Customers Flee Wal-Mart Empty Shelves for Target, Costco http://t.co/PAvNMUUVEP I see it also http://t.co/83s4J9aGA2 $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Dell Says Blackstone, Icahn Offers May Be Superior http://t.co/jgHkKo6Jna Not sure I would want 2 win $DELL game; fixing ops very hard $$ Mar 25, 2013
  • Blackstone?s $DELL Bid Sets Stage for Rare Buyout Bidding War http://t.co/8KAGIEETOw Michael Dell may lose control of company he built $$ Mar 25, 2013
  • Heinz Sells $3.1B of New Bonds http://t.co/kMUfvlkyys Deal upsized, rated B1/BB-/BB-, lowest financing cost ever 4a LBO@ 4.25% 7.5yrs $$ #no Mar 25, 2013

 

US Monetary & Fiscal Policy

 

  • How the Fed Can Create a Market-Friendly Exit Strategy: Jeremy Siegel?s Proposal
    http://t.co/2VPzaCDnyg Listen 2 bank shareholders scream $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Pentagon to Cut $41B After Getting More Funding http://t.co/SrcDNN4Fbn We could a lot of dead wood @ the Pentagon, expensive non-soldiers $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Big Business Spars Over Rewriting Tax Code http://t.co/CRjZZzwLix Importer, Exporter, Services, REIT, MLP, PE: no common corptax position $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • The Exhausted US Consumer http://t.co/QgSkYM2onj Spent-up, not pent-up $$ Looks at Disposable Personal Income, which recently dropped Mar 28, 2013
  • Restaurant Chains Cut Estimates for Health-Law Costs http://t.co/Ed00DMDXAX Test Q: List all the ways that the PPACA fails $$ #needmorepaper Mar 28, 2013
  • Best Predictor of Financial Crisis: Huge Inflows of Foreign Money http://t.co/uOrBJ4OI96 Long assets financed w/short liabilities is why $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Stockton Deficits May Total $100 Million, Forecast Shows http://t.co/Pu8oqu3zQA That’s the cash pmt curve of generous employee benefits $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Stockton Bankruptcy Decision to Come Monday, Judge Says http://t.co/dulFxXxNwm $BEN $AGO & $MBI argue city didn’t negotiate in good faith $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • US Retail Sales: Very Soft Indeed! http://t.co/XSJSyChEHW Unusual in that seasonal adjustments typically go away on YOY figures $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Brenner and Fridson: Bernanke’s World War II Monetary Regime http://t.co/RnHpvMlPL3 Sad but true. Bernanke robs savers to fund US Govt $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • States Build Cash Reserves, Raising Rainy-Day Debate http://t.co/uSiYVMjPGi State budgets should balance on an accrual basis. None do $$ Mar 25, 2013

 

Wrong

 

  • Wrong: Gold Declines in Worst Run Since 2001 as Economic Concerns Ease http://t.co/uB8EhvfpPk Gold is falling because of debt deflation $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Wrong: Proving Greenspan Wrong Shows Why Rey Became Worthy to Bernanke http://t.co/PHHmWJpRgJ Proving Greenspan wrong is trivial $$ #tiny Mar 28, 2013
  • Wrong:Key US senator blames speculators for high ethanol RIN price http://t.co/PNvhTvVmXt Note Senator is from Iowa, which benefits most $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Wrong: Why the Rich Don’t Give to Charity http://t.co/aHdPMnjTt1 The missing variable here is Christian faith; media is blind to that $$ Mar 27, 2013

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • Everybody is Furiously Looking for Bubbles http://t.co/gx4GTwxnTV Bubbles are financing phenomena; look 4 short finance of long assets $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Morningstar: Stocks Are Close to Fair Value http://t.co/TLDpVrjF1M “US stock market is some 50 percent above its historic mean value” $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Crises exist 2 eliminate things that don’t need 2b done; governments interfere w/ this process b/c they r in league w/those who skim society $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • When will the Bond Bubble Finally Burst? http://t.co/WomjY44B9I Fund flows, Fed, other CBs, Banks, & measured inflation supportive 4 now $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Investors face a shrinking stock supply http://t.co/bC1ECjt2Xg Maybe we can get rid of Sarbanes Oxley b4 it kills the equity mkt entirely $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Investing in a High Debt Environment http://t.co/3PxNmNg1Oz Concentrate on inflation, study interest rates & focus on business fundamentals Mar 27, 2013
  • Low Volume = Good Investment? Analysis of David’s “Neglected Stocks R Typically in Strong Hands” Thesis http://t.co/wbseitIGZF Good Stuff $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Use free cash 4 buybacks when price < 90% of franchise value [FV], issue dividends above that. FV is where u rather issue stock than debt $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Not Everyone Loves Dividends: Guy?s Argument is Worth Hearing http://t.co/BsMDyzazLZ Buybacks vs Divs: depends on undervaluation of stock $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Warren Buffett and John Hussman On The Stock Market http://t.co/ynAhtJrDAY The Market Cap/GDP ratio indicates significant overvaluation $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • Investors Pile Into Housing as Landlords http://t.co/rteDMNUl0e Anytime investors become a large part of residential RE-> trouble $$ #bubble Mar 25, 2013
  • Buttonwood: Credit watch http://t.co/53WR3r3BW0 New book argues that investors should focus on the credit cycle, not economic growth $$ #duh Mar 25, 2013
  • How to Unlock That Stashed Foreign Cash http://t.co/qNOnrjyrVD If there are attractive foreign companies 2 buy, would b best use of $$ Mar 25, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Corn Supply Slumps Most Since ?75 on Ethanol Profit http://t.co/ScQ3slOlQ6 Corn supplies may tighten by summer, tough if another bad crop $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • Business Insider Just Told College Students Their Secrets of Success http://t.co/Yd1jLTzEl3 Sprinter & marathoner, act dumb, ask Qs, etc. $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Leaked Photos of Johansson Expose Cloud’s Vulnerabilities to Social Engineering http://t.co/keayvi3iDL Take security seriously $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Methadone Deaths Tied to For-Profit Clinics Prompt Bills http://t.co/GHEnOWPGpr They get paid per visit; few incentives 2 act ethically $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • 6 Reasons You Should Have Cyber Liability Insurance http://t.co/LhbASLS9pD U can make your computer invisible 2 the internet in 15 mins $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Arms Race to Grow World’s Hottest Pepper Goes Nuclear http://t.co/sYW6fX5bZH I don’t get this; I eat spicy food for taste, not 2b macho $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • The New US Industrial Renaissance http://t.co/18ni9ClWEF A bit overstated but cheap energy & rising wages in China aid US competitiveness $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Falling US Gasoline Demand: A Weaker US Economy? http://t.co/3QRS8G59a2 Gasoline is fairly core 2 consumption, when it goes down, trouble $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Case-Shiller: Home Prices Post Biggest Rise Since 2006 http://t.co/nzgY1dSoZs But after the huge drop, it’s really just a dead cat bounce $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Wringing Out Laundered Cash http://t.co/Ary4tMyjCF Always easier 2 press a civil suit than a criminal suit; look at the bankers 4 proof $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • 3D-Printed Polymer Skull Implant Used For First Time in US http://t.co/4rRlfPiVGP Offers high degree of customization 4 surgical repairs $$ Mar 26, 2013

 

Retweets & Replies

 

  • The local situation in the US can’t run too far ahead of the world. Too interconnected $$ RT @boes_ America http://t.co/8PaIt3uKR5 Mar 29, 2013
  • ‘ @JaredKastriner As for me, I play banker for my children. I pay 4 tuition & unavoidable costs. They pay avoidable costs& I lend 2 them $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • @JaredKastriner No, but it should make us consider whether college is needed, and maybe borrowing against the house might b better $$ Mar 29, 2013
  • ‘ @AndreCimini There r many incentives 4 politicians, regulators & businessmen 2 prolong a boom; I worked 4 a firm that foresaw it & made $$ Mar 25, 2013
  • I hold a CFA Charter, (and was an FSA — dues too expensive) but credentialing is overrated in almost all… http://t.co/kvogKAycVS Mar 28, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: Banks got bailed out after so many bad mortgage & other loans. A few hedge funds properl… http://t.co/4wMpKOQ8Nb Mar 28, 2013
  • @EddyElfenbein As a Christian, it embarrasses me. They misinterpret Revelation & it makes people think they can gauge when Christ will come Mar 28, 2013
  • ‘ @kyles09 My point is this: in 2007, the last time I saw something like this, it was right before loan pricing fell apart. That’s all. $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • ‘ @Nonrelatedsense I’m wrong, cancel that comment on the $PSX midstream assets. Thanks 4 the correction $$ Mar 28, 2013
  • Bitcoin $$ RT @groditi: OK, spill it, who’s gonna be the Big Short for BitCoin?. that parabola looks like it’s about to break any second now Mar 27, 2013
  • RT @SoberLook: Chart: Bitcoin’s unprecedented rally. Another way for Cyprus citizens to take funds out of the country – http://t.co/3cTt … Mar 27, 2013
  • I like it, thanks $$ RT @adamjbonesjones: @AlephBlog Short Frenchies vs EFSF bonds (over-collateralised, positive carry)…. Mar 27, 2013
  • Monster, yes. Greatest? No $$ RT @MattZeitlin: Whoever decided that tables and figures go at the end of papers is history’s greatest monster Mar 27, 2013
  • @Matthew_C_Klein Sometimes they hand out the Nobel Peace Prize 4 what they wish the world could b, hence Obama (drones), EZ (fantasyland) $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • RT @Matthew_C_Klein: For this they won the Nobel Peace Prize MT @SonyKapoor: EZ has made every country feel that they’ve been hard done by Mar 27, 2013
  • Patient is dying. More morphine. $$ RT @TheStalwart: RT @CNBC: Fed’s Kocherlakota: “Monetary policy is currently not accommodative enough.” Mar 27, 2013
  • Controlling system changes it RT @MatthewPhillips @CardiffGarcia:Fantastic NYFed paper financial risk monitoring http://t.co/vwJeUwzXDm $$ Mar 27, 2013
  • Extra points 4 USSR & Japan parallels RT @prchovanec: Apply these last three quotes (from “This Time is Different”) to China … discuss. Mar 26, 2013
  • [cute dog warning] I guess you did have to. RT @moorehn: Sorry. I had to. http://t.co/rJtgXqfQtx Mar 26, 2013
  • ‘ @kyles09 Good point, the rule mostly deals with excess cash over and above a low regular dividend $$ Mar 26, 2013
  • @ToddSullivan I could live with the word “moderate” 🙂 Mar 26, 2013
  • “Thing about low vol investing is that it is a moderate risk strategy, b/c it invests in stocks?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/NzG183hkzG $$ Mar 25, 2013

 

FWIW

 

  • My week on twitter: 57 retweets received, 2 new listings, 60 new followers, 57 mentions. Via: http://t.co/cPSEMLXpb8 Mar 28, 2013

 

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part I

The Education of an Investment Risk Manager, Part I

This is likely to be the last series describing how I learned my skills that I still apply today.? I hope you enjoy it.

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

It was mid-1988, and I had just earned my Associate in the Society of Actuaries [ASA] credential.? After my boss congratulated me, he told me I was now invited to the monthly management meetings.

In insurance terms, this era was the “bad old days.”? Risk-based capital regulations had not yet been developed, and aggressive companies like First Executive and Pacific Standard Life [my company] invested almost entirely in junk bonds.? These were some of the pigs Michael Milken was feeding junk bonds to.

What initially impressed me was that monthly income was so variable, and that most of the variation came from asset performance.? Now, as an actuary, I had more asset knowledge than most, but seeing the variation made me say to myself that if actuaries are risk managers in life insurers, the syllabus for teaching actuaries is wrong, because it focuses on liabilities, not assets.

Pardon this excursus — the Society of Actuaries in the US needs to be more like The Institute and Faculty of Actuaries in the UK.? Investing should be a core skill, not a peripheral skill.? Actuaries have the capability of exceeding the skill of CFA charterholders by a wide margin.? Assets vary far more than liabilities in an insurance company, most of the time.? Focus on what varies, and improve management skills there.

I was low enough in the hierarchy that there was nothing I could do to prevent Pacific Standard from failing in 1989.? That said, I accelerated my job search so that I left two months before Pacific Standard was taken into conservation by the California Department of Insurance.? But for me, that was out of the frying pan, and into the fire, because I went to work for AIG.

PS — I learned a few more things as well:

  • Highly levered companies are dangerous.? Southmark, which owned Pacific Standard, needed everything to go right because of the high degree of leverage.
  • When ever you hear of a management team that is highly litigious, stay away.? Phillips & Friedman surrounded themselves with a phalanx of lawyers, and got away with everything short of murder.? They will get it on Judgment Day, but not likely before.
  • When you interlace the capital of subsidiaries, it is a sign of desperation, indicating likely failure.? If you have subsidiary A buy the preferred stock of subsidiary B, and subsidiary B buy the preferred stock of subsidiary A, in the same amount, they both look a lot healthier, but nothing has happened, aside from an accounting ploy.? Pacific Standard died when the California Department of Insurance refused to accept some preferred stock as an admitted asset.
  • My first project was to set the GAAP reserve factors for Universal Life.?? In hindsight, my boss manipulated me into creating the best profit stream in hindsight, which produced lousy future profits.? He stripped profitability out of the future for then present management bonuses.
Stock Buybacks vs Dividends vs Reinvestment

Stock Buybacks vs Dividends vs Reinvestment

This should be short.? Let me start with some facts.

  1. Buybacks are preferred on a taxation basis to dividends.
  2. But buybacks are especially good when the stock is trading below its franchise value, and especially bad the further above franchise value the stock is trading.
  3. Using slack capital to improve operations, or do little tuck-in acquisitions is probably best of all.? Organic growth is usually the best growth, and small acquisitions can facilitate that.? Small acquisitions are usually not expensive.? Be wary of acquisitions to increase scale, they don’t work so well.
  4. Paying a dividend makes management teams more cognizant of the cost of equity capital, which makes them more effective.
  5. In the reinsurance business in Bermuda, companies with slack capital tend to buy back shares below 1.3x book value, and issue special dividends if they are above that level.

Franchise value is management’s best estimate of the value per share of the company’s equity.? If a management team does not have a firm handle on the value of the company, it has no business buying back stock.? Stock should never be bought back over franchise value.? If you want to reward shareholders then, issue a special dividend.

I am reminded of how in 2000 the CFO of The St. Paul cleverly bought back shares in the 20s, wisely bought back shares in the 30s, stupidly bought back shares in the 40s, and foolishly bought back shares in the 50s.? He was a Johnny One Note, except that he impaired the balance sheet so badly that he became the one of the main causes of why The St. Paul sold out to The Travelers.? Price matters with buybacks.

The reinsurance industry is a good example, because well-run reinsurers are simple companies.? The book of business is worth book value.? The reserves are conservative, which is worth ~0.1x book value or so.? Future underwriting profits are worth ~0.2x book value of so.

So the reinsurers have their standard — the companies are worth around 1.3x book value.? That gives them a discipline for capital — buying back at under 1.3x book, and issuing special dividends above that.

It is my opinion that most buybacks are a waste, even with the tax advantages, given that the buybacks occur at prices over franchise value, sometimes significantly over.? It’s also my opinion that a 2% dividend makes management teams think harder about their shareholders, which is a good thing.

If you get to talk to a management team doing buybacks, ask them if they have a model for what their stock should be worth.? If they don’t have one, tell them they should not be doing buybacks, unless they are buying back the stock cheaply.? Above franchise value, buybacks are a value destroyer.

A Letter to Warren

A Letter to Warren

[Address]

[Phone]

1 March 2013

Dear Mr. Buffett,

Four years ago, I contacted the IR department at AIG to ask for copies of all the 2008 statutory books for all the insurance subsidiaries.? To my surprise, they sent them, 60 pounds worth, and I wrote a report explaining how almost all of the domestic life subsidiaries had to be bailed out because of a funky securities lending agreement that allowed AAA subprime RMBS to used as collateral in place of T-bills.? The report was cited by SIGTARP in their review of the AIG bailout.

I am writing to you asking for copies of the 2012 statutory books for Berkshire Hathaway.? My purposes are different than with AIG.? You?ve done something unique with Berkshire Hathaway.? No one else has created such a multifaceted conglomerate, much less one with well-run insurance companies at the core, providing funding.

I have the capability of understanding the documents and doing a good job with them.? I am an actuary as well as a value investor, and have been a buy-side analyst in a hedge fund where I focused on the insurance industry.? (Todd Combs and I interacted a little when I was a buy-side analyst.? You chose well.)

My clients and I own ?B? shares of Berkshire Hathaway, so I am a small part of the Berkshire family.? If you are willing, please send me of the 2012 statutory books for Berkshire Hathaway.

Sincerely,

David J. Merkel, CFA

Principal, Aleph Investments

Writer at the Aleph Blog

And the deservedly terse handwritten response:

David, Sorry we get a lot of requests & it would be burdensome for a small staff to respond to these.

Warren

My Thoughts

Buffett is right, and I should have thought harder.? Everything BRK does is disaggregated, even filing Statutory Statements.? I am mentally stuck in the world of when I was an actuary engaged in financial reporting, where we would have a room where we would gather all the data to go to the states, rating agencies, etc.? I had to do that many times.

But Berkshire acts like a bunch of unaffiliated companies, and files their data separately.? To the best of my knowledge, that means I would have to ask 37 different entities for their Statutory Statements.? Here they are:

Company Name State of Domicile NAIC Number
CALIFORNIA INSURANCE COMPANY CA

38865

COMMERCIAL CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY CA

32280

CYPRESS INSURANCE COMPANY CA

10855

FINIAL REINSURANCE COMPANY CT

39136

GENERAL RE LIFE CORPORATION CT

86258

GENESIS INSURANCE COMPANY CT

38962

IDEALIFE INSURANCE COMPANY CT

97764

NATIONAL LIABILITY & FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY CT

20052

AMERICAN CENTENNIAL INSURANCE COMPANY DE

10391

GENERAL REINSURANCE CORPORATION DE

22039

GENERAL STAR NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY DE

11967

APPLIED UNDERWRITERS CAPTIVE RISK ASSURANCE COMPANY, INC. IA

14144

CONTINENTAL INDEMNITY COMPANY IA

28258

ILLINOIS INSURANCE COMPANY IA

35246

MEDICAL PROTECTIVE COMPANY (THE) IN

11843

GEICO CASUALTY COMPANY MD

41491

GEICO GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY MD

35882

GEICO INDEMNITY COMPANY MD

22055

GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES INSURANCE COMPANY MD

22063

SEAWORTHY INSURANCE COMPANY MD

37923

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESTATE INSURANCE COMPANY NE

20044

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEBRASKA NE

62345

CENTRAL STATES INDEMNITY CO. OF OMAHA NE

34274

COLUMBIA INSURANCE COMPANY NE

27812

CSI LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY NE

82880

NATIONAL INDEMNITY COMPANY NE

20087

OAK RIVER INSURANCE COMPANY NE

34630

REDWOOD FIRE AND CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY NE

11673

STONEWALL INSURANCE COMPANY NE

22276

ATLANTA INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY NY

20931

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY ASSURANCE CORPORATION NY

13070

UNIONE ITALIANA REINSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA, INC. NY

36048

AMGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

42390

EASTGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

14702

NORGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

31470

PHILADELPHIA REINSURANCE CORPORATION PA

12319

UNITED STATES LIABILITY INSURANCE COMPANY PA

25895

How do you get the data in this case?

1) I suppose I could write each one and ask, but there is no guarantee that many would listen or act.

2) I could buy it from the NAIC, but it would run to around $700, and I am not doing that for a mere blog post.? Most insurers give you the statutory statements if you ask (in PDF form).? I never pay for Stat statements; I believe that they should be available in electronic form for free, or a nominal fee.

Maybe someone would want to pay it in exchange for credit on the series of articles that would flow from it?? Maybe SNL would pay for an article from me?? Or Bloomberg?? Or a competitor?? Or the sell-side wanting a guest piece? Or…

3) I could ask my readers for ideas.

Why would anyone care about this?

1) Alice Schroeder wrote the first sell-side analysis of Berkshire Hathaway.? In it she stated that the company had a waiver from the Risk-Based Capital rules from the states.? If true, that is quite a regulatory advantage, and I would want to verify that.? Current regulators might care.

2) Buffett is clever, and has the holding company and well-run insurers owning industrial, utility and service businesses.? If this is done well, and it is quite an accomplishment, because the alphas of prudent underwriting and ownership of well-run businesses get added together on one capital base.? Others might like to duplicate it.? I know that I have gotten pitches from consultants touting such ideas.

Anyway…

Well, it was worth a try.? Marc Hamburg did not return my phone calls, but I understand.? BRK is different from other companies — even the insurance is done subsidiary by subsidiary.? If any of you have ideas, I am all ears.

On the bright side, I do have a short note from the guy I have learned so much from.? I may frame it… 😉

Full disclosure: long BRK/B

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