Category: Insurance

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 16

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 16

I try to do “The Best of the? Aleph Blog” pieces between 1-2 years after original publication.? Why?? It gives time for reflection, time for series to complete, time for me to be proven wrong/right, etc.? I would have preferred that readers do this job for me, so that I could be neutral, but I realized that I am the one that has the most concentrated interest in doing this, so that is why I do this.? The main benefit for me in doing this is when I submit free content to “Wall Street All Stars,” I know what I think is good stuff, and I utter a few words to explain how my wisdom has proven right, or fell on its face.

This episode covers the era of November 2010 through January 2011.

On Investment Modeling, Part 1

On Investment Modeling, Part 2

On Investment Modeling, Part 3

On Investment Modeling, Part 4

Investment modeling is tough, you omit some bits of reality, and deny other bits of reality.? In this four-part series, I try to explain how difficult good modeling is, and how to make it better.

Flavors of Insurance, Part I

Flavors of Insurance, Part II (Life)

Flavors of Insurance, Part III (Personal Lines)

Flavors of Insurance, Part IV (Commercial)

Flavors of Insurance, Part V (Reinsurance)

Flavors of Insurance, Part VI (Brokers)

Flavors of Insurance, Part VII (Health)

Flavors of Insurance, Part VIII (Financial)

Flavors of Insurance, Part IX (Title)

Flavors of Insurance, Part X (Conglomerates)

Flavors of Insurance, Part XI (Banks and the Insurance Business)

Flavors of Insurance, Part XII (Summary ? The End)

This was a unique series where I tried to bring my expertise to bear on a complex industry.? I wrote the original piece in 2003, and it never got published.? I used OCR to scan it and one of my brighter children to edit it, so you have my original text, plus my commentary in 2010, pointing out where I was right and wrong.

Time to Grow Up

I am an advocate for a brainy libertarianism that reflects the intelligence embedded in the Bible, coming form the Creator Himself.? I do not back what the t-party has to say, whose positions reflect personal selfishness.

Nonidentical Twins: Solvency and Liquidity (III)

Now, when a government is overleveraged, but interest rates are low, the situation is potentially unstable.? A rise in rates could tip the scales.? Market actors would conclude that they can?t survive at rates high than a certain threshold, so sell the debt now, in case rates would get so high.? That action forces rates higher, leading to a self-reinforcing panic.

Sometimes this happens in advance of a debt refinancing, leading some politicians and bureaucrats to say the forever bogus phrase, ?This is not a solvency crisis, this is a liquidity crisis.?? Sorry, if you play near the cliff, don?t complain if you happen to fall off.

Liquidity crises do not happen to governments with low debt levels.? Liquidity crises are solvency crises during the panic phase, before they are revealed to be solvency crises alone.

The Value of Fair Accounting

Why fair value accounting has value to investors.? This should be a “duh” moment, because everyone should understand this.

2010 Financial Report of the US Government

My annual post on the topic, describing the deterioration of the situation.

A Portrait of Maryland?s Public Companies

I explain why Maryland, my adopted homestate, has the mix of publicly traded companies that it does.

Why We Don?t Need the Fed

We would do better with a commodity standard, and even a gold standard.? The Fed hoodwinks us with its pretended efforts to maintain value.? I genuinely mean that we could do better without the Fed.? Put James Grant and Steven Hanke in charge of our monetary policy, and we will do well

On Human Fertility

A controversial topic, but fertility rates are falling more rapidly than the demographers expect. Why? It is politically correct to say that the planet is running out of resources, a bogus idea, but often stated.? As it is, because of changes in the way that women and men view their roles, fewer children will be born.

And as for a guy who has sired three children, and adopted five (far more difficult), I would simply say that we are better off with more children in homes that care about the results of how children turn out.

Strong Hands

Strong Hands

When I started writing this blog, my Major Article List was a big thing to me.? I wrote some pretty good things at RealMoney.com, and I wanted to have a record of the best of that.? I only wish I had done the same thing for my Columnist Conversation comments, because many of them were far better than most articles at RealMoney.? Give TST credit, they would frequently take my best comments, and turn them into posts, and pay me for them.? They did not have to do that.

But, I would love to republish many of my best timeless posts here.? I offer a deal to RealMoney: In exchange for being able to republish old posts and comments of mine here, I will offer you new posts of mine, or the best of my old posts at my blog, so long as they are timeless.

Regardless, when I was at RealMoney, I wrote a series that dealt with the motives of various investors as it stemmed from their balance sheets.? For those that have access to RealMoney, here are the articles (note: I wrote different titles than what was used):

Managing Liability Affects Stocks, Pt. 1
Separating Weak Holders From the Strong
Get to Know the Holders? Hands, Part 1
Get to Know the Holders? Hands, Part 2

The main idea is this: There are a wide variety of investors, and they have differing abilities to hold assets.? Why should investors have differing abilities to hold assets?? And why should that matter?

When will you need the cash?? That should be a central question for every investment adviser, dictating asset allocation.? This is basic asset-liability management.? This gets neglected in investing more often than most imagine.

  1. Mutual funds know that money will be pulled if they underperform.? This forces them to be more short-term in investing.? An exception can be closed-end funds, since they have captive capital, so long as the discount to NAV doesn’t get too great, and they attract activist investors.
  2. Same thing for hedge funds; they tend to be volatility-averse on average; and their investors may be technically more sophisticated than mutual fund investors, in practice, they make the same mistake of chasing performance.
  3. Average individual investors chase trends; that is very short-term.
  4. ETPs react to the market.? Indexed investing amplifies a market as it grows, and muffles a market as it shrinks.
  5. Endowments can resist short-term underperformance for a few years, then the trustees get antsy.
  6. Same thing for Defined Benefit [DB] pension plans, but more so.
  7. Most banks and insurers have short liability structures so they can’t allocate that much to long duration assets like stocks and esoteric illiquid assets.? Life insurers could invest there, but the risk-based capital regulations make it unworkable.? That leaves P&C insurers writing long-tailed business; many of them are value investors, and use the long-duration liabilities (as Buffett calls it “float”) to invest in a wide number of cheap assets where it may take a while for value to be realized.
  8. Trusts, limited partnerships, etc., hinge on how much leverage they employ and how often the terms of the leverage shift, as well as any limitations on when capital must be distributed.? Sometimes that’s not obvious, as in the failure of many mortgage REITs when the repo haircuts got boosted in the midst of the financial crisis, leading to forced selling, as they did not have enough capital to post as margin against all the assets that they held.? The forced selling led to falling prices for mortgages, which led to further increases in the repo haircut, which created a self-reinforcing spiral until a new class of investors held many of the mortgages, and many mortgage REITs were bankrupt or broken.

With respect to institutional investors, my experience is the more of the investment is done internally, the more patient the capital tends to be.? Perhaps that’s the illusion of control, but I tend to think that investors have more trust in their own reasoning than in the reasoning of external managers.

The longer the time that you can invest and wait for returns, on average, the more aggressive you can be in investing.? The investor that can “Buy-and-hold” can take on the most difficult situations if there is a sufficient discount in the price to make the wait worthwhile, and avenues that allow for change to be encouraged.

So, when I think of how my investment is affected by those that invest alongside me, I divide them up this way:

  • Strong Hands — long liability structures, excess capital, experienced, patient, never compelled to do anything; they can live with short-term losses.
  • Weak Hands — no balance sheet or short liability structures, have to make a certain return each year, less experience, leveraged; they can’t live with short-term losses.

When I go through 13F filings, I note the quirkiness of the assets held, and often held for a long time.? Almost all of the 13Fs that I track I would classify as strong hands.? They don’t care about the next quarter; they are thinking about the next 3-5 years.? They care about the growing underlying value of the businesses; they wouldn’t care if stock market was only open one day per month.? Some, like Seth Klarman, do little on the long side when opportunities are not compelling.? Like underwriters at well-run insurers, when an insurance market is nuts, you stop writing business, and spend time improving your skills.

So for my own investing this past period after I finished my 13F analysis, I took the companies that had:

  • The 100 largest increases in my 13F investors
  • The 100 largest increases in cash invested as a fraction of market cap
  • The 100 with the greatest number of my 13F investors
  • and the 100 largest positions as a fraction of market cap,

and put them in as competitors in my ranking system, against my current portfolio.? Because of redundancy, it was about 320 companies in all.? I think it was a good exercise, because it made me think about a bunch of companies that I would otherwise never consider.? Anyway, the process is complete, and the equity portfolios have some promising new names with good prospects, and fellow shareholders that are for the most part “strong hands.”

On the Facebook IPO

On the Facebook IPO

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

 

Full disclosure: long AIZ, for me and clients

Don’t Become the Market

Don’t Become the Market

It was late 1993, and I knew that we could make a lot of money if I sold floating-rate Guaranteed Investment Contracts.? Let me quote an earlier piece:

My goal as an actuarial businessman was to make profits with modest risk for my ultimate owners, who were the mutual policyholders.? Once I faced a situation where there might be easy profits ? writing floating rate GICs.? So, I went to my models and tried to figure out how we could make money safely while our interest rates would shift every three months.? I came to the conclusion that there was no safe way to do so, and so I walked into the office of my boss and told him so.? He surprised me by supporting my thesis, and in his usual back-of-the-envelope way, explained to me in a few minutes why it had to be so.

A few weeks later, he informed me that an actuary from Goldman Sachs (yes), would be dropping by to tell about one of their new derivative contracts that would enable us to write floating rate GICs profitably.? The meeting day came, and I validated the expectations of my boss.? The year was 1993.? I asked the actuary from Goldman what happens if the yield curve inverts.? He answered honestly, ?This strategy blows up when the yield curve inverts.?? Score a small victory for me.? I gave myself points for avoiding trendy bad ideas.? Over the next twelve months, two major insurers and one investment bank would announce billion-dollar blowups from following that strategy.

After the blowups, I went back to the buyers of floating-rate GICs, and asked them if they would accept a lower spread over LIBOR.? The response was a firm ?no.?? So much for that market.

Those few players in that market had mispriced the risk.? Is it any surprise that they got a lot of volume?

Here’s another example:

Two years after that, I was at the Society of Actuaries annual meeting, where I met a well-known actuary who had worked inside the corporate actuarial area of the Equitable during the critical years.? I.e., he watched and analyzed the assets and the liabilities as they arose.? The conversation went something like this:

David: What was it like working inside the Equitable during that period of fast growth?

Corporate Actuary: It was amazing.? It took everything we could do to stay on top of it, and still we fell behind.

D: Didn?t you think that perhaps you were offering guaranteed rates that were too attractive?

C: We wondered about it, but with money coming in, everyone felt great about the growth.? We simply had to find ways to productively deploy all of the cash flow.

D: But wait.? Didn?t the investment department have a difficult time investing all of the proceeds?? With that much money coming in, the likelihood of making severe errors would be high.

C: Were you a bug on the wall at our meetings?? Yes, that is exactly what happened.? The money came in faster than we could invest it prudently.

D: Wow.? I thought that was what happened, but it amazes me to hear it confirmed.

They offered free options, and surprise, investors took them up on them.? They couldn?t make enough to fund the promises, and undertook a risky strategy in the late 80s that I called ?double or nothing.?? The strategy failed, and they almost went broke, except that AXA bought them, pumped in a little capital, and then the real estate market turned.

What?s my point here?? Twofold: one, rapid growth in financial institutions is rarely a good thing; it usually means that an error has been made.? Two, there is a barrier in many financial decisions, where responsible parties are loath to cry foul until it is way past obvious, because the cost of being wrong is high.

Long Term Capital Management became large relative to the markets that they “arbitraged.”? Anytime you can feel yourself moving the market, it is time to stop.

There was a correlation crisis in the CDO market in 2005.? For those with access to RealMoney, I wrote about it here.? Some quants with clever ideas, much like the current JPM fiasco, thought that they could hedge mezzanine against subordinated.? True when the trade is small, wrong when the trade is big.

Beyond that, we have the brain-dead example of AIG.? They dominated the market for AAA subprime mortgage insurance.? It was free money, until it wasn’t.? If you have a large share of a market where there are no barriers to entry, you should stop and ask why you are the only smart one.

The problem with becoming large relative to the market, is that you begin distorting the price signals of the market.? If you have a large long position and the price starts to fall, it is easy to justify purchases, because your internal model indicates that it is cheap.? But every model has weaknesses, consider the examples listed above.? Anytime you get a large fraction of the market’s volume, you should stop, and re-evaluate.? You’re probably doing something wrong.

Markets by their nature invite diversity, and do not admit anyone to dominate them except under abnormal circumstances.

So, if you find yourself growing large relative to your market, calm down, and re-evaluate your positions, before they get large enough to bite you.

Skewed Incentives

Skewed Incentives

May is a tough month for me, because I have to submit reports for the nonprofits that I work with, and this year is worse, because I have a moderate injury that I need? to see a doctor about, but can’t until next week, because of the schedule.

But I do want to say a few things about the JP Morgan news.? First, JP Morgan should be broken up, whether state by state, or by Federal reserve district, with an investment bank spun off as well.

Second, after we have been through 2008, why do we care about a piddling $2Billion+ loss?? JP Morgan’s balance sheet can handle far more than that, and come back kicking.

Third, there are a lot of people who are mindlessly asking for the reinstatement of Glass-Stegall, without realizing that the repeal had little to do with the crisis.? Most of the losses at banks sprang from bad lending on residential mortgages, not trading.? Also, if regulators had been more fastidious about asset quality and leverage, it also might not have happened, but who dares to oppose a boom?

My point of view is that states are better at regulating financials than the federal government.? It is far harder to co-opt 50 regulators than one.

Decentralized government, where power is limited, is far harder to corrupt than centralized governments like India, China, Russia, Greece, etc.

Fourth, when a bank engages in a complex trade, and is a large portion of the market, it is asking for trouble.? Companies have problems when they become the market for financial promises.? Markets work well when there are a large number of players, with no one dominating.? Financial markets with a dominant player have a problem because it becomes difficult for the dominant player to discern the right price.? They don’t want to set it too low, because it makes their own financials look bad.? That skewed incentive can harm economic truth, and the company as well.

Being a monopolist or an oligopolist is not as easy as the textbooks would say, at least for long-term transactions.? When there is no free market to validate your pricing against, how does an oligopolist come up with an economic price?? It can’t do so.

We get on shaky ground when anyone becomes dominant in a market of promises.? Initially the accounting is flexible enough that losses do not occur on bad lending, but eventually the bad/negative net cash flows crush the firm.? This is why I never invest in novel financial companies.

 

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 15

The Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 15

This stretches from August 2010 to October 2010:

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part VII

On the value of credit analysts.

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part VIII

On price discovery in dealer markets, and auctions gone wrong.? I never knew that I could haggle so well.

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part IX

On the vagaries of bulge-bracket brokers, and how a good reputation helps on Wall Street.

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part X

On how we almost did a CDO, and how it fell apart.? Also, how to make money in the bond market when you reach the risk limits. 😉

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part XI

On my biggest mistakes in managing bonds.? Also, on aggressive life insurance managements.

The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager, Part XII (The End)

On bond technical analysis, and how to deal with a rapidly growing client.?? Also, the end of my time as a bond manager, and the parties that came as a result.?? Oh, and putting your subordinates first.

Queasing over Quantitative Easing

Queasing over Quantitative Easing, Redux

Queasing over Quantitative Easing, Part III

Queasing over Quantitative Easing, Part IV

Queasing over Quantitative Easing, Part V

Queasing over Quantitative Easing, Part VI

The problems with the Fed’s seemingly “free lunch”strategy.? Pushes up asset prices and commodity prices, benefiting the rich versus the poor.

The Economic Geography of Publicly-Traded Companies in the United States by Sector

The Economic Geography of Publicly-Traded Companies in the United States by Sector (II)

Shows what US states have diversified vs concentrated economies by sector, and what states dominate each sector.

Portfolio Rule One

Industries are under-analyzed, relative to the market on the whole, and relative to individual companies. Spend time trying to find good companies with strong balance sheets in industries with lousy pricing power, and cheap companies in good industries, where the trends are not fully discounted.

Portfolio Rule Two

Purchase equities that are cheap relative to other names in the industry. Depending on the industry, this can mean low P/E, low P/B, low P/S, low P/CFO, low P/FCF, or low EV/EBITDA.

Portfolio Rule Three

Stick with higher quality companies for a given industry.

Portfolio Rule Four

Purchase companies appropriately sized to serve their market niches.

Portfolio Rule Five

Analyze financial statements to avoid companies that misuse generally accepted accounting principles and overstate earnings.

Portfolio Rule Six

Analyze the use of cash flow by management, to avoid companies that invest or buy back their stock when it dilutes value, and purchase those that enhance value through intelligent buybacks and investment.

Portfolio Rule Seven

Rebalance the portfolio whenever a stock gets more than 20% away from its target weight. Run a largely equal-weighted portfolio because it is genuinely difficult to tell what idea is the best. Keep about 30-40 names for diversification purposes.

Portfolio Rule Eight

Make changes to the portfolio 3-4 times per year. Evaluate the replacement candidates as a group against the current portfolio. New additions must be better than the median idea currently in the portfolio. Companies leaving the portfolio must be below the median idea currently in the portfolio.

The Portfolio Rules Work Together

How the portfolio rules work together to create a “margin of safety.”

The Rules, Part XVIII

When rules become known and acted upon, the system changes to incorporate them, making them temporarily useless, until they are forgotten again.

When a single strategy becomes dominant, it can become temporarily self-reinforcing.? Eventually, it will become self-reinforcing on the negative side.

A healthy market ecology has multiple strategies that are working in separate areas at the same time.

The Rules, Part XIX

There is room for a new risk model based on the idea that risk is unique among individuals, and inversely related to the price paid for an asset.? If a risk control model has an asset becoming more risky when prices fall, it is wrong.

?The Rules, Part XX

In the end, economic systems work, and judicial systems modify to accommodate that.? The only exception to that is when a culture is dying.

?Managing Illiquid Assets

Illiquidity is an underrated risk.? Most financial company failures are due to illiquidity, which usually takes the form of too many illiquid assets and liquid liabilities.? Adding to the difficulty is that it is generally difficult to price illiquid assets, because they don?t trade often.

Of Investment Earnings Assumptions and Century Bonds

If we could turn back the clock 65 or so years and set up a more conservative method of accounting for pension liabilities, we would be much better off today.

Who Dares Oppose a Boom?

This piece won a small prize, and in turn, I received three speaking engagements.

Fairness Versus Economics

Fairness Versus Economics (2)

People care more about fairness than improving their own economic/social position.

Earnings Estimates as a Control Mechanism, Flawed as they are

Earnings Estimates as a Control Mechanism, Flawed as they are, Redux

Earnings estimates have their problems, but they exist to give us a flawed method of estimating the future performance of companies.

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That’s all for now.? Never thought I would do so many long series when I started blogging.

Buffett Musings

Buffett Musings

Buffett made a few comments over the weekend that I thought were significant.

Warren Buffett, who built Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A) with stock picks before focusing on takeovers, said he recently opted against a $22 billion acquisition because he didn?t want to sell investments in marketable securities. (Article here)

and

Berkshire Hathaway Inc is adding to its shareholdings of two U.S. companies amid a market dip, billionaire investor Warren Buffett said on Monday. (Article here)

and

Mr. Buffett said he and Mr. Munger ?have nothing against? commercial insurance and pointed out that they?ve expanded in the medical malpractice field. ?If we could find a quality company in commercial lines? we would buy it in an instant,? he said.

Another analyst question prompted Buffett to discuss how he values Berkshire?s non-insurance operations. Rubalcava was excited by the answer, in which Buffett said he?d look to buy similar businesses for nine to 10 times earnings. (Article here)

1) On the first point, he does not want to sell marketable securities is quite a statement.? It means he expects more return off of public securities than whatever the target might have been.?? Given that he would only be liquidating $5 billion of securities to maintain the $20 billion buffer, it either could not have been that good of a deal, or Buffett has a high view of his current public securities portfolio.

But I sat down and thought about what Buffett might have wanted to acquire.? It could have been a private company; I have no data on that.? What if it were a public company and one with a low P/E and decent prospects, what could it be?

Well, the current market cap would have to be between $15-20 Billion, and so I came up with the following tickers:

PPG APD NOC RTN VFC BRFS PSX DFS AON ALL CME TMO BDX RCI TU PSO RUK WM ETN AEP

There are some with large moats: PPG, APD, NOC, RTN (Chemcials and Defense) AON, CME unique businesses, hard to challenge.? Other moats: VFC, TMO, BDX, RCI, TU, PSO, RUK, WM, ETN

Pipelines, which fit into other BRK subs: PSX

Free cash flow generators: PSX and DFS

Cheap providers of float: ALL? (Of course there would be issues merging Allstate and GEICO, if you merge them at all.? You could keep both systems whole, you could sell off Allstate’s Life companies, or you could merge them into existing BRK insurance subs.? Me?? I would sell the life subs,? and analyze whether having an agency force had value.? My guess would be no, and I would spread the Allstate inforce block onto the current GEICO support system after a year or two.)

Adds to the utility portfolio: AEP

I’m not saying BRK should buy any of these companies, but they seem to be reasonable possibilities for BRK to buy.

2) So BRK is buying two companies that they already own.? What could they be?? My two best guesses are General Dynamics [GD] and DirectTV [DTV].?? BRK bought them in the last reported quarter and the price hasn’t moved much.? Other possibilities include: WFC, SNY BK, INTC, USB, CVS, IBM, DVA, V, VRSK, and LMCA.

3) If BRK really wants to get into commercial insurance at a cheap price there is an easy choice — ACE.? Low P/E, P/B, reasonable reserving.? Yes, it is in Bermuda, but that offers BRK other ways to lower its tax bill, which Warren Buffett aggressively pursues.? He never pays a dime more than he has to!

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These are just my musings, don’t give them more emphasis than that.? Buffett offers a few crumbs at his buffet, and I make an effort to offer ideas consistent with what little he said.? I am very likely to be wrong, but I like a lot of the ideas here.

Full disclosure: long AEP, PSX & INTC for myself and clients

Misunderstanding the Tax Debate (II)

Misunderstanding the Tax Debate (II)

I’m going to do something different to start this post.? I’m going to highlight those that disagreed with the last post.? Thanks for disagreeing, because it makes this post better.

Response 1:

It?s all well meaning but it?s likely to fail in practice, with unintended consequences and nasty corner cases where you have to reintroduce complexity.

For example imagine a taxpayer with one, liquid but volatile asset, which is essentially long term flat. It goes up +X in one year, -X the next, etc. So the taxpayer has essentially zero income (amortised) but must pay on the +X on the positive years. The no deferral rule prevents creating an offsetting tax credit on -X years, so he?s either paying tax on non-existing income, no good (>100% tax rate), or requires a refund on the down years, which creates a new class of enforcement problems that didn?t exist before (people creating fake losses to get actual cash, when they could only get tax credits before).

Another example is a taxpayer with a single illiquid asset, say a small business owner who owns nothing else, and the business is with tight cash flow, or a disabled/elderly person who owns their house outright but nothing else and who lives on welfare. If the business/house valuation goes up, these guys have a tax bill. So now they must raise money out of an illiquid asset just to pay tax, and as it?s illiquid and they don?t have cash flow they might have to either pay distressed credit rates on their tax borrowing, or just sell the business/house which is a bit of a harsh punishment for a tax-cashflow issue.

Income is intrinsically a tricky problem. You can clean up the crud from time to time, indeed you must as some nonsensical rules will inevitably accumulate, but a simple tax idyll is unfortunately not realistic I believe.

Response 2:

I respectfully don?t think so. The example of the taxpayer with the volatile asset could also be compared with a person who pays income taxes on a salary. If they lose their job next year (volatility) they would have paid too much this year by your model. The issue is that it seems less fair to tax work (salaries) at a higher rate than wealth (dividend income). Perhaps it could be separated from capital gains ? which isn?t real income until it is sold at a profit. It could also be argued that salaried people contribute more to the economy than dividend income does. I?m not a job creator if I go sell a $100K of stock on the NY Stock Exchange ? what have I added to the economy?

Response 3:

This does not strike me as a good idea. It isn?t practical to tax appreciation of illiquid untraded assets, and the overhead and intrusion involved in doing something like this fairly would be tremendous.

I don?t see why we should be so reliant on taxing income anyway. Pigovian taxes would be better for the economy, and consumption taxes would be easier to levy. Even a Henry George style single-tax would seem preferable to trying to impute income to people as a result of asset fluctuations.

I like my readers.? Why do I like my readers? One, they are bright people, even if I might disagree with them.? Second, they are relatively polite.? I was walking through Times Square with another prominent blogger, and he said to me, “When I see the comments at your blog, David, you have nice commenters, whereas those at my blog are not.”? I said to him that there were three factors in play:

  • He has more readers than I do.
  • His format did not allow for filtering.? I filter, but rarely.??? Also, it’s harder to comment on my site, and that’s a feature, not a bug, because I want people who are determined to comment, not something that is off the top of the head.
  • I pointed out to him that his rhetoric had bomb-thrower tendencies, and what kind of crowd would that attract?

So, I like my readers, and commenters.? In general, if you comment here, and I don’t delete it, I respect you.? (Deletion rate is less than 0.1%.)

But now to my main point.? Much as I like Buffett, I disagree with him on tax policy, because he is a hypocrite.? Let him argue that stock holdings should be taxed annually on the unrealized increase, and I would agree with him.? He doesn’t pay as much taxes as he should because:

  • Berkshire Hathaway doesn’t pay a dividend.
  • He never sells shares of his company.
  • He engages inside his company to avoid taxes in every legal way.? He is not interested in paying taxes in the slightest.

My tax proposals would make Buffett and those like him pay, and others who game the system as well.? The critiques above miss the point in a major sense.? Much avoidance of taxation comes from having companies that are heavily indebted.? I don’t believe that having heavily indebted companies is a good thing.? If they faced taxation on the presumed increase in their value annually they would be forced to have more liquidity, and that is a good thing.

My proposal would lead to companies not being so heavily indebted.? That’s a feature, not a bug.? We need to discourage debt in the financial sector, because it tends to create booms and busts.? If you want to do a big capital investment, save for it, or borrow on a very short term basis.

My proposal on taxation should be phased in gradually.? Mr Buffett should not be presented with a bill for $12 billion, but rather a request for $1.2? billion for 10 years, reflecting the value he has obtained untaxed.? With respect to taxation, he is the ultimate hypocrite.? If he did not speak on such matters, I would respect him, because he is generally such a wise man, but he has prostituted his position to the current political scene.? Thus I don’t respect him here.

(As an aside, we could drop the estate tax after instituting this, because appreciation would be taxed annually.? As such, the cost basis at death would be very near market.? One thing that was little noted in the one year elimination of estate taxes in 2010 was that if you inherited something in that year, your tax basis did not step up to market, but remained at the cost basis of the decedent.? The taxes may be delayed, but they weren’t eliminated.? That’s still quite an advantage.)

I believe that a less levered system is better for the economy as a whole.? It is far better to disallow interest as a deduction for corporations. and allow corporations to dividend to shareholders without taxation.? Or, eliminate corporate taxation, and tax dividend receivers directly, combined with a tax that taxed profitable companies that did not pay dividends.

The economy is better off when it is less levered.? Debt obligations make the economy less flexible, demanding fixed payments, regardless of how likely they are.? For modeling, it is best to think of the unlevered economy. What is the native demand, leaving aside the? speculative demand?? Borrowing to create speculative demand should not be encouraged by the tax code.? After a phase-in, interest should not be tax-deductible, but would add to the cost basis of assets.

My views are relatively simple:

  • Taxes should be moderate, and levied on the approximate increase in value annually.
  • Corporations and individuals should avoid borrowing to finance investment/consumption, at least, it should not be tax-favored to borrow in the short run.
  • Everyone should be taxed; there is no way to avoid it.? This ensures fairness.
  • All classes of income should be taxed at the same flat rate.
  • There are no non-income deductions/credits, and no use of the tax code for social engineering.
  • This should be phased in over ten years to avoid a shock.
  • For illiquid situations, businessmen would have to plan in advance for taxation, which would impose a cost on illiquidity in the economy.
  • We would not favor savings over consumption — goodbye to the complexities of IRAs, life insurance, pensions, and all other deferral vehicles.

The overarching idea is to create a flat taxation system, where the increase in value is taxed annually, and where there is little incentive to engage in any sort of action to convert one sort of income into another.? This would level out many of the advantages that the wealthy have, while leaving in place a relatively transparent taxation system with few preferences which would be stable, and create predictability in taxation.

Those are my views.? I am trying to create something more stable, fair, and transparent (can’t hide income).? Those are desirable goals.? Why shouldn’t everyone love this, aside from the rich that use the overly generous tax code?? Feel free to comment below…

PS — this would have implications for US entities owning foreign assets, but I haven’t figured out how to make this work globally without making people/firms flee the US.? Ideas are welcome.? Thanks to all readers/commenters, I appreciate all of you.

Sorted Recent Tweets

Sorted Recent Tweets

Miscellaneous

 

  • “When women stay home and they raise their kids & maintain the household, it is a job. It’s a job of love.” http://t.co/NV1JddlL #wellsaid Apr 13, 2012
  • @historysquared Have not seen anything definitive on that, but production from fracking decays faster than conventional production. $$ Apr 13, 2012
  • 10 Things I Hate About Tax Day http://t.co/SvezPoPV “There is absolutely no defense for it – none – & yet it persists, year after year.” Apr 11, 2012
  • @TimABRussell It varies. Most of the books I review are within a year of (re)publication. Some are as old as the 1960s. >95% last 10 yrs $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • So, you did an article ghostwritten by Robert Berman, Cinium’s CEO? Lovely. He gets around. But what does Smartmo… http://t.co/usg0buic Apr 09, 2012
  • Voices: Phil Cioppa, On Hiring Advisers http://t.co/zNN92rP4 Most sales positions have high turnover, particularly w/intangible products Apr 11, 2012
  • McDonald?s Pursuit of Perfect Fries Risks Overpromising http://t.co/DWDuesyG Harder 2 assure consistent quality if $MCD locally sources $$ Apr 09, 2012

 

China

 

  • Agree that America declines, but China also RT @historysquared: Historian warns of sudden collapse of American ?empire? http://t.co/Z4hVtKkk Apr 13, 2012
  • Shadow Banks on Trial as China?s Rich Sister Faces Death http://t.co/dJfEanEw It is morally wrong to put someone 2 death 4a property crime Apr 11, 2012
  • Is China slowing down? http://t.co/IJA8jobS From the AEI, very clueless piece: China should raise its exchange rate & lower the central rate Apr 11, 2012
  • Hong Kong?s Tsang ?Highly Concerned? About Property Price Bubble http://t.co/XHRBLgY5 Devel Nations monetary policy fuels many bubbles $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • ‘Jackie Kennedy of China’ at Center of Political Drama http://t.co/MvIPw1oy The politics of China r dirtier than the US & more secretive Apr 10, 2012
  • China Inflation Exceeds Forecast http://t.co/Z9hnKj1Y Too little attention paid here; too much confidence in Chinese central bankers $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • @valuewalk Yes, saw it and the followup bet. I owe a decent amount of my intl economics thinking to Pettis, but not my errors 😉 $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • The ways China can rebalance http://t.co/2ZtRG4F2 Michael Pettis on the constraints the China faces as it tries 2 rebalance its economy $$ Apr 09, 2012

 

Newspapers

 

  • +1 RT @The_Analyst: I feel like unless its a special situation, everyone who “gets” newspapers would never make a LT investment in them Apr 12, 2012
  • Buffett “didn’t get tech.” I don’t get newspapers. $$ RT @WSJDealJournal: Warren Buffett Building Newspaper Empire? http://t.co/jDx5goqw Apr 12, 2012
  • I don’t get the economics of the newspaper biz $$ RT @WSJDealJournal: Warren Buffett Building Newspaper Empire? http://t.co/jDx5goqw Apr 12, 2012

 

Electronic Bond Markets

 

  • BlackRock’s Street Shortcut http://t.co/JO4Wm5sY Would work better 4 stocks than bonds. Most bonds r held a long time & do not trade $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • If the buyside created their own internal stock exchange, they could reduce the effect of the HFTs on the market & make life harder 4 retail Apr 12, 2012
  • But an internal bond exchange as proposed by $BLK won’t do that much, institutional transaction costs aren’t that hi 4 commonly traded bonds Apr 12, 2012
  • When I was a bond mgr 1998-2003, aside from obscure & illiquid bonds my commissions were $1/32nd or $1/64th per $100 — 1-3 basis points $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • @TFMkts So I would ask you, have comm rates 4 bonds gone up since 2002? My normal trade size back then was $5-20Mil, comms 1-3 bps then $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • @TFMkts Most bonds don’t trade, though. When I was a bond mgr, I needed guys who could find bonds. Always paid them; never let them cross2me Apr 12, 2012

 

Delta Airlines

 

  • It is usually a bad sign when a company can’t manage its current business well, & it tries to enter a difficult unrelated business. $DAL $$ Apr 11, 2012
  • Best quote: “Edward Hirs…says he can think of one reason why Delta would try to get into the refining business: ‘because they?re stupid.'” Apr 11, 2012
  • Why Buying A Refinery Could Be A Disaster For Delta Air Lines (Even With JPMorgan’s Help) http://t.co/MDvs9D26 & http://t.co/gJ0G44Uo $$ Apr 11, 2012

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Qatari Bright Lights Prompt EU?s Hedegaard to Urge Climate Plan http://t.co/0zjAmGit Another reason why multilateralism doesn’t work. $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • Kenyans Almost Dead on Worst Roads Getting New Highways http://t.co/Szcs1Tcy Next time u r stuck in traffic b thankful u r not in Kenya $$ Apr 11, 2012
  • These Charts Point to Trouble for Australia http://t.co/F00FtbpW Housing bubble, co-dependent relationship w/China, & large pool of hot $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • It’s rich 2c Dilma Rousseff criticizing Obama. But Brazil is further down the line in the devel nations game of monetary crack-the-whip $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • Rousseff Tells Obama Rich Nations? Policies Harm Growth http://t.co/Akm14Ifs Devel nations force emerg nations 2 swallow loose $$ policy Apr 10, 2012
  • Bank of Canada stressed about housing http://t.co/4kC0JW3D Nothing like a debt financed housing bubble 2 make a central banker flinch $$ Apr 09, 2012

 

Economics

 

  • Good Jobs News: More People Are Quitting http://t.co/1BlIvqOj The job market is more healthy if people are quitting to take other jobs. Apr 12, 2012
  • Obama?s Fantasy Budget Suggests Tax Hike Surprise http://t.co/03tkRMjZ Obama would likely b more radical in a 2nd term #nothing2lose $$ Apr 11, 2012
  • Tax Breaks for Wealthy Should Be Cut, Paul Ryan Says http://t.co/QppnNGQz “focus our poverty-eradication policies on treating root causes” Apr 11, 2012
  • @DavidSchawel I don’t think the paper changes my main point, it will be very difficult for the Fed to remove “stimulus.” Apr 11, 2012
  • Bernanke Gives College Lecture Series High Marks http://t.co/hu0WNLXq H/L overstates: ?I was very happy with the lectures,? he said. $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • The Fed sold half its short-term notes via Operation Twist http://t.co/Lag2CYWs Will have no short assets if the pace continues 4 6 mos $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • Job Gains in US Trail Most-Pessimistic Forecasts http://t.co/ELesokyT People asked me y I was more pessimistic than most, well… $$ Apr 08, 2012

 

Asset Markets

 

  • Does ?Sell in May? Really Work? http://t.co/kBNPaslt Reality is more complex than adages. The rule should be sell September, buy November $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • Gunning for yield and “quality” leaves little room for error http://t.co/HW90vwkj High quality junk does not offer enough yield 4 risks $$ Apr 12, 2012
  • High-Yield Bond ETF Breaks March Low http://t.co/lLB2qX19 I sold a lot of my credit-sensitive bond investments today. Market feels weak $$ Apr 11, 2012
  • @munilass @carney High earned & discount rate assumptions did lower contributions by assuming investment earnings would carry the load $$ + Apr 10, 2012
  • @munilass @carney & many municipalities substituted benefit increases 4 salary increases, b/c no immed $$ effect; many factors in play here Apr 10, 2012
  • Flouting Risks, Investors Gorge on Fat Yields of Emerging Market Debt http://t.co/5zZV03Jb Will eventually end badly; Russia 1998 $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • Retweet after me. I HATE HFT TRADING BOTS 😉 RT @merrillmatter: Repeat after me. I HATE HFT TRADING BOTS $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • How to Improve the Potential of Less Volatile Stocks http://t.co/90gHiISj Adding a quality screen further improves returns & risk/vol $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • A Laugh http://t.co/IcFMDnbb @brucekrasting suggests that clearinghouses will concentrate risk rather than dissipating it. $$ #nomagic Apr 08, 2012
  • The Dividend-Fund Dilemma http://t.co/MYdoxPJh I buy dividend-paying stocks because they generate good cash flows, not for the dividend. Apr 08, 2012

 

M&A

?

  • Much $$ stuck overseas MT @ThemisSal: Just 5 companies, $AAPL, $MSFT, $CSCO, $GOOG and $PFE now hold nearly 25% of all corporate cash, $250B Apr 09, 2012
  • Yeh, like dat. 2 much $$ chasing 2 little value RT @The_Analyst: @AlephBlog another brilliant cerberus deal like chrysler, gmac? Apr 09, 2012
  • AT&T to Sell Majority of Yellow Pages Business to Cerberus http://t.co/RIAX6dwb Cigar butt industry; internet changes everything published Apr 09, 2012
  • Both MT @ktbenner: who’s overpaying now: The Zuck or Steve Feinberg… @Pfro: $T sells Yellow Pages 4 ~$1bn 2 Cerberus http://t.co/IGLXXUrp Apr 09, 2012
  • $AOL to Sell Patents to $MSFT 4 $1.1B http://t.co/upBaZBRo Too much $$ chases a legal arms race in Infotech Intellectual property #waste Apr 09, 2012
  • @ReformedBroker I didn’t know Instagram that well, but they don’t seem to have a revenue model. What could $FB do with it? $$ Apr 09, 2012

?

Insurance

 

  • RE: @marketfolly He compares AIG to P&C companies,? but the life companies are a valuation drag here.? Not a fair com? http://t.co/J4aCu4tf Apr 12, 2012
  • Property insurance rates rising worldwide – Marsh http://t.co/CZOHLGfG When surplus is reduced at (re)insurers, premium rates rise $$ Apr 11, 2012
  • Statutory Statements under Affiliated party transactions. Regulators would b annoyed if terms indicate transaction that’s not “arm’s-length” Apr 10, 2012
  • A Costly Toy Subsidized by Others http://t.co/iJea3rTt If Guggenheim is using its insurers 2 fund Dodgers purchase, will show up in + $$ Apr 10, 2012

 

Eurozone

 

  • Spain’s spreads breaking away from other risk indicators http://t.co/SulecZWv “we r in an uncharted territory with respect to this widening” Apr 11, 2012
  • Has bad implications for EZ sustainability $$ RT @pdacosta: Who’s peripheral now? French economy grinds to a halt http://t.co/VSsZtaWI Apr 10, 2012
  • Currency disunion http://t.co/ApXlpMXK Why Europe?s leaders should think the unthinkable; EZ can breakup on own terms, or unfavorable terms Apr 09, 2012
  • Eurozone’s banks cutting dollar businesses http://t.co/wX1kHu8G European banks will never again rely hard on US MMFs to finance their $$ ops Apr 09, 2012
  • Euro Was Flawed at Birth and Should Break Apart Now http://t.co/ZxPy0vId All the things that I predicted have come true & more. Bye, Euro. Apr 08, 2012

 

Politics

 

  • Wind Power Seen Surging as Custom Barges Cut Set-up Costs http://t.co/XA96RbEj Don’t see how this makes the cost of wind power economic $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • For Feds, ‘Lying’ Is a Handy Charge http://t.co/2tLcdyKQ Law in the US becomes more arbitrary; crimes can b dreamed up by bureaucrats $$ Apr 10, 2012
  • Complexity Is Bad for Your Health http://t.co/v9pLQi1V Antonin Scalia & Stephen Breyer agree (!): Obama’s health care law unreadable $$ Apr 09, 2012
  • High-Speed Rail Takes Californians 4 a Ride http://t.co/fZlC3MQx Rail makes sense in densely populated areas, won’t work in California $$ Apr 09, 2012

 

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Valuations

 

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

 

Central Banking

 

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

 

China

 

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

 

United States

 

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

?

Finance

 

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

 

Japan

 

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

 

Insurance

?

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

?

Personal

 

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

 

Miscellaneous

 

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

 

Energy

 

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

 

Rest of the World

 

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

 

Company News

 

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

 

Housing

 

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

 

Funds

 

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

?

Financial Distress

 

  • Reddy Ice Considers Filing for Bankruptcy http://t.co/IgpYjHue Is it just me, or are we seeing an uptick in insolvencies? $$ Apr 04, 2012
  • Hostess Serves Up New Batch of Cuts http://t.co/fHBXwHes Future failure as people don’t buy so many of the “sugar fat bombs” 4 kids $$ Apr 02, 2012
  • Failures: Pinnacle Airlines http://t.co/BXkJ8v9j AFA Foods http://t.co/xs4wsFEE Airlines & Meat renderers r born 2 fail $$ Apr 02, 2012
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