Category: Speculation

Don’t Buy Stocks on Margin, Unless you are an Expert

Don’t Buy Stocks on Margin, Unless you are an Expert

Most academic economists are irrelevant, so we can ignore them.? The few that are relevant are worth noting.? They can write such that ordinary people can understand — think of Milton Friedman with his “Free to Choose.”? Such economists are viewed skeptically by the “profession” because they interact with the unwashed.

So it is with Ayres and Nalebuff.? I have rarely been impressed with what they write.? Like Freakonomics, they write about stuff that is sensational, and challenge the conventional wisdom.? Yo, the conventional wisdom is right most but not all of the time.? Anyone that focuses on where the conventional wisdom is wrong will commit a lot of errors in an effort to be novel.

Now, Abnormal Returns and Sentiment’s Edge have made their polite comments, but now it is time for my less polite comments. I have five main critiques of their paper, which stems from the lack of practical experience in the markets for these two professors.

1) History is an accident.? It is fortunate that they are analyzing the US, rather than nations whose markets got wiped out during a war.? It is not impossible that the US could face a similar crisis in its future.? Try the same analyses with Argentina or Peru.? Will it work?

2) Even in the US stocks don’t outperform bonds by that much.? My estimate of the equity premium is around 1%.? Yes, the economics profession says the equity premium is higher, but they use a wrong metric; they should use dollar-weighted returns, not time-weighted returns.? The estimate of 4% equity returns over margin rates, which are higher than bond yields, is hooey.

3) Average people aren’t capable of managing portfolios that are 100% equities, much less levered equities.? It is well known that people invested in equity funds tend to buy and sell at the wrong times.? It would be far worse with leveraged portfolios.

4) Leveraged ETFs tend to underperform over time, have you noticed?? This is a mathematical necessity.? Through options and swaps, which have larger bid-ask spreads, maintaining the leverage is at low cost is tough.? If the advantage over margin rates were true, there would be real advantages to leverage.

5) What if everyone did it?? The paper is a typical, “If you had done this in the past, you would have done a lot better.”? Duh, and I can do better versions of that than the authors.? Going back to point one, history is an accident, and cannot be relied on.? Point two, their math is wrong.? Point three, average people can’t implement it.? Point four, those who try to do this don’t do as well as you might expect.

The last point is that everyone can’t do this.? Can you imagine what would happen if everyone aged 25-41 suddenly invested into equity exposure equal to twice their assets?? Stock prices would shoot up, and would offer little future returns to holders.? Stocks aren’t magic, and over the very long haul, they tend to return what the GDP does plus a few percent.

Think of Alan Greenspan encouraging people to finance using ARMs at the worst time possible.? The authors here encourage young people to speculate on equities with leverage at a time when the market is somewhat overvalued.? If this were a good idea, you would have seen many people doing it already, and it is not a common practice.? Don’t listen to academics that have little practical experience for investment advice.

One final note: when I wrote at RealMoney, I took a contrarian view that for average investors, no one should be fully invested.? Even the great Ben Graham never exceeded 75% invested.? My view is that average people must limit their risks or they will not be able to sustain their investment plans.? A 50/50 or 60/40 balanced fund approach is best for the average person — they will never get scared enough to abandon it.

Leverage is for experts only, and I have never used leverage.? Only use leverage if you are more of an expert than me.? (I write this not out of pride, but out of my experience where so many have gotten burned by taking too much risk.)

The Rules, Part VII

The Rules, Part VII

In a long bull market, leverage builds up in hidden ways within corporations, and does not get revealed in any significant way until the bear phase comes.

If I were to change that sentence, I would change the word “corporations” to “organizations.”? Why?? Everyone attributes greed to the corporate sector, but the same is true in different ways of governments and nonprofits.

Year to year, organizations measure progress.? Corporations look at profits.? Politicians look at whether they are still in office or not the success of programs passed.? Those that run non-profits look at how they have done on their missions, amid scarce resources.

But, when things are good for a long time, institutional laziness sets in.? I remember being out at some party at a golf course in Philadephia in 1996, when our best salesman uttered the inanity, “Let the stock market pay your employees.”? Really, he was a decent fellow, and brighter than most who sold for us, but his statement reeked of the bubble logic that assumes that stock markets are magic.? They always go up.? Corporations and individuals come to rely on the stock market going up, because it always beats bonds and cash over long enough periods of time.? That is true, but less so than most think, and the time periods have to be longer than most can tolerate.

Back to topic.? Non-profits are slaves to the stock market.? Giving goes up considerably when there is appreciated stock to give.? People donate more from wages when they are secure in their homes, and they think their retirements will go well, (fools that they are).

Governments are also slaves to rising asset values.? When housing prices fall, sales drop, and transfer taxes plummet.? But real estate taxes fall as well.? My property taxes dropped by 30% — I can hardly believe it, even though I thought they overshot 3 years ago.

Governments also get used to the boom, and begin forecasting increases in wage taxes, capital gains, real estate, and all other taxes.? They rely on the increase, and borrow beyond that.? But more insidiously, since they run on cash accounting they begin to fudge accruals to make the cash accounting look good.

Tough negotiations with the public employees union?? Offer less of a wage increase, and a generous increase to the pension benefit. That will reduce the present cash costs, leaving others to deal with the costs shifted into the future.

Cash costs of paying your debts too high?? Wall Street has many derivatives that can lower your cash cost today, at a price of probably or certainly raising your cash costs in the future.? Ask Jefferson County, Alabama; they will tell you.? Greece and Italy did much the same to enter the Eurozone, amid winks from those that presently disapprove.

“Can’t we raise the spending rate on our endowment?” naive nonprofit board members ask.? Tell them to look at the 10-year Treasury yield — that is a reasonable proxy for sustainable distributions.? Most nonprofit board members don’t know up from down economically; they tend to favor the present over the future.

Corporations are the same, but they do it differently.? They run on accrual accounting, so they tend to tweak accounting to make net income look good, relative to cash flow.?? Also, they buy back stock, which increases leverage.? Even raising the dividend increases leverage, because it is like junior debt, corporations know their stock prices will fall if it isn’t paid or increased.

Buffett says something to the effect of, “Until the tide goes out, you don’t know who is swimming naked in the harbor.”? Bear markets reveal optimistic assumptions and accounting chicanery.? This is true for any organization, because we all rely on the same economy.? Yes, the wealthy support some organizations more than others, but many governments rely on taxes from the wealthy more than they realize.

This even applies to individuals.? Who paid attention to the increases in debts, especially junior debts like home equity lending during the boom?? My last firm did, and I wrote about it at RealMoney, but it felt lonely at the time.? Silent seconds, low LTV lending, mortgage insurance, and other means of getting people into housing that they couldn’t afford looked like like the pinnacle of success for US housing policy.? Now, with all of the wounds the banking system has taken, and all of the foreclosures, past, present and future, many are beginning to think differently, but you can’t see that in government policy.? Many people are not capable of bearing the fixed commitments associated with home ownership, and there is no way that government policy can materially change that.? But the government continues to encourage high home ownership and asset prices, merely delaying the inevitable reconciliation of bad debts and lower housing prices.

It’s the nature of a boom.? Free money brings out the worst in us, leading many to borrow more to get even more prosperity that seems to never end.? When the bust comes, it ends, with interest compounded.? The positive dynamic becomes a negative one, until sufficient debt is compromised, cancelled, or paid off.? There’s no way around it, but our government will fight on hopelessly.? They always do.

The Rules, Part V

The Rules, Part V

Tonight’s rule:? Massive debt issuance on a sector-wide basis will usually have a slump following it, due to a capacity glut.

If you are a bond manager, it pays to do what is difficult.? Buy proportionately less or none of the sector that is the heavy issuer.? Even? more, sell into it, and try to create a balanced portfolio without the hot sector.

When a sector as a whole borrows far more than in the past, it is often a mania, and the management teams are expanding capacity all at once, because conditions are so favorable.? I experienced this twice as a bond manager.? When I came on the scene in 2001, I tossed out all of my investment grade telecom bonds (aside from some of the Baby Bells), and auto bonds.? I could not see how they would make money over the long haul.

Those were two sectors heading for capacity gluts.? Yet there was a bigger capacity glut growing — that of the banks.? As 2005-2007 progressed, it was difficult to keep a balanced corporate bond portfolio, because almost half of all issuance was from financials.

Debt issuance is the option of optimists, and in an era where your competitors are issuing debt, it is hard to not imitate them.? But when everyone is optimistic in a sector, and levering up, that is often a time where subpar performance resides.

There is more than a hint of seeming success as a sector adds progressively more debt.? Pass on too many deals, and you begin to feel like a stick-in-the-mud.? There is a lot of pressure to change your strategy when things are running so hot.? Rather than change strategies in mid-stream, a good manager will sit down with colleagues and discuss:

  • What companies are misunderstood, and are safe to invest in.
  • What companies are misunderstood, and are definitely not safe to invest in.
  • Are there safe industries in the sector that aren’t adding so much debt?
  • On the scale from historic widest spreads over Treasuries, to historic lowest, where are we?? What inning of the tightening game are we in?
  • Stop looking at companies, and let’s create a model of the sector on the whole.? Is there enough business to justify all of the expansion that is going on?? What is happening to product pricing?
  • Who is the marginal buyer of the hot sector, and of yieldy paper generally?? Do they have strong or weak balance sheets?? How fast will they sell if things go wrong?
  • How fast are new deals completing?? Are the syndicates testing the waters to price deals too tight, in order to restore normalcy to bidding?
  • Are fools making money?? Have they been making money for a little while or a long time?? Are ordinarily risk-averse investors beginning to imitate them?
  • Where is the Fed?? Perhaps today it would be “What is the Fed?”? Are they getting ready to jerk the rug out from under the markets?? How complacent are expectations?
  • How long can we suffer underperformance before money begins to get pulled from us?? Are our clients educable or not?? Do they appreciate the risks in the market?? Why do we always get the dumb clients?? (Wait, don’t answer that, you get the clients that you deserve…)
  • And more, but you get the picture…

By the time you are done, you have a roadmap toward how you will add and subtract exposure in areas of the hot sector that you like and don’t like.? You will know your limits, and will maximize performance given those limits.? Finally, you will have an estimate of how long the hot sector will do well, and a trading strategy for the short run.

Capacity gluts are tough.? They have such an air of inevitable success as companies compete to dominate a promising area.? But ideas that are great if one company pursues the opportunity are only good when two do so, and average when three or four join the party.? But when a half dozen to a dozen join in, results will be poor.

This goes double for equity investors.? Avoid sectors that have high debt issuance.? At minimum, if you are a momentum investor, follow the mo, and decide in advance what sort of decline will cause you to make an exit.

Impractical Application for Today

This is all very nice, you might ask, but where are the debts building up today?? Need you ask?? We have just seen some of the biggest transfers of debt from the banking system and consumers to the government.? Government debt is the hot sector.

Wait, you might say.? How can this principle apply to governments?? They don’t go broke, at least, that what Walter Wriston told us.? Sorry, but Reinhart and Rogoff’s book says differently.? Government defaults are not unusual.? Also, banking crises are often followed by sovereign crises.

Wait, you might say again.? I have to limit my risks.? Governments will always be the safest credit in a currency because that can tax the other credits.? Maybe, but there are limits.? As tax rates get very high, they don’t produce incremental revenue.? Yes, I know this sounds like supply side economics, but there is a difference here — I believe higher tax rates would produce greater revenues at present.? But there is a tax level that governments cannot exceed before tax revenue goes down.? A sound business in a country with an unsound taxation policy might survive even if the government refused to pay on their debts.

I know, that government would likely try to inflate their way out, but indexing of benefits and political outcry might hinder them.? I don’t believe that it would be easy to inflate out of a debt crisis.? Too many economists derive simplified models of reality, and don’t consider how ugly the politics will be in the situation.? Sorry, men aren’t rational, particularly not as groups, and there would be a lot of sturm und drang, and delay.? Who could tell what foreign nations might do in response?

Still, I would underweight Treasuries relative to high quality bonds in other sectors.? Issuance is high as far as the eye can see — and beyond 2050, given all of the difficulties with entitlement programs.? Many high quality corporates won’t have much issuance over that same period; they will be scarce versus the massive amount of government debt to pay.? Beyond that, when the Fed tightens, debt costs for the government will rise dramatically.? Perverse, huh?? When you have so much to refinance, everything fights against you.

So, avoid the hot sector.? Suffer underperformance for a while, but decide in advance what mitigating actios you will take, lest you be a buyer out of insecurity near the peak, when losers capitulate prior to the bear market.

Book Review: ECONned

Book Review: ECONned

Many of you have heard of the blog Naked Capitalism, and its pseudonymous writer, Yves Smith.? Well, she has written what I regard as an ambitious book, ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism.? It is ambitious for several reasons:

  • It tries to be comprehensive about all aspects of the crisis.
  • It digs deeper than most, analyzing flaws in economic and financial theories that underpinned the errors of the crisis.
  • It looks at the political angle of how laws and regulations were subverted, while alleging conspiracy probably too much, when ordinary greed in the open and stupidity could cover the causes of the crisis.

There is a tension between capitalism and democracy.? We don’t like to talk about it, but it is there.? Property rights are human rights, and should be protected.? Governments often determine that certain contracts are not valid on public policy grounds.? (I.e., gambling, prostitution, arson, assassins, etc.)

Democracies also do not like rivals for power.? If business gets too big, to the point where it is influencing the decisions of the government, democracy fights back.? I write this as one who would err on the side of property rights rather than democracy.? Property rights are a direct descendant of the eighth commandment, “You shall not steal,” whereas the form of government of any nation is a thing of relative indifference.? Many nations have different ways of ruling themselves.? It is not yet proven that democracy is the best form of government.? Personally, I think it is more prone to corruption than most governmental forms.? But it has the advantage of motivating the people.

I draw the line when businesses use political power to exclude rivals.? It is one thing to be really clever, and dominate your market, like Google.? It is another to have a natural monopoly like the old AT&T, before technology obsoleted them.? But it stinks to have a system where major financials, who have nothing of patentable value, hold the nation hostage, saying “Bail us out or the financial system fails.”

I argued against the bailouts, as did Yves, but the government caved under the asymmetry of “Heads we win, Tails you lose.”? It came up tails for all of us.

Yves digs deeper than many critics.? She questions the assumptions of the economics profession,with its gloss of pseudo-science.? She pokes at the questionable assumptions underlying much of finance theory.?? She looks at those who got it right regarding the crisis, and were marginalized as a result.? Where I differ is that there isn’t necessarily a conspiracy behind unwillingness to listen to discordant theories.? Academic guilds ignore researchers who question their closely held beliefs, regardless of the truth of the matter.? They know that it couldn’t be true, and the outsider doesn’t really understand their discipline.? I do not charge them with ill intentions, but stupidity.

What I really appreciated about the book was its willingness to challenge academic economics and finance.? She did it well, but left little in her wake as to what to look to as a substitute.? The willingness of economics to engage in pretend games with high level math is ridiculous.? If we restarted economics from scratch today, whether mathematical or not, it would not look like much of the sterile games that are played in leading economic journals.? Ask the question: how many benefit outside the economics profession from what is written in economic journals.? Answer: precious few.

I have many more things to say about this book, but this review is long enough as it is.? Let me say that there are few books that I have marked up as much as this one.

Quibbles

I do not go in for conspiracy theories.? Usually, most evil can be performed outside of darkness; people still don’t notice for the most part.

Yves should have spent more time on the enablers of the crisis — yield hogs.? You can’t buy protection on a company that you think will die, unless there is a yield hog out there that wants extra income that they think they are getting for free.? AIG was the largest of them, but by no means the only one.

She complains a bit much about “free markets.”? Aside from trading with the enemy, why should trade be constrained?? Why should I try to take away the property rights of my neighbor?? Beyond that, suppose you are right.? Where would you draw the lines?? It is one thing to criticize, and quite another to propose new policy.? Personally, I make an effort that when I suggest that something be demolished, that I recommend something else to take its place.? It is easy to be a critic, but hard to be a builder.

Who would benefit from this book:

Most people would benefit from the book, if they read it realizing that the things that happened do not require that parties conspired to make this happen.? Those who would especially benefit include economics and finance professors; they need the criticism.

If you want to buy the book, you can buy it here: ECONned: How Unenlightened Self Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism.

Full disclosure: The publisher sent me the book for free.? I spent several hours reading it in full.? If you enter Amazon through my site and buy anything, I get a small commission (6-7% typically).? But, your costs don’t rise versus going to Amazon directly.? I have avoided doing a “tip jar” because I would rather people benefit from the books I review, while allowing Amazon to pay me indirectly.

Greenspan versus Reality, Part 2

Greenspan versus Reality, Part 2

Again, Greenspan’s comments are in italics.? Part 1 can be found here.? Greenspan’s full paper can be found here.

Part of the dynamic here is while leverage is increasing, and sham prosperity is growing, there are few that will argue against it, and those who do are regarded as shrill misfits.? In the short run, the powerful in society benefit from the growth of a credit bubble.

The evaporation of the global supply of short term credits within hours or days of the Lehman failure is, I believe, without historical precedent. A run on money market mutual funds, heretofore perceived to be close to riskless, was underway within hours of the Lehman announcement of default. The Federal Reserve had to move quickly to support the failing commercial paper market. Unsupported, trade credit withdrawal set off a spiral of global economic collapse within days. Even the almost sacrosanct fully collateralized repurchase agreement market encountered severe unprecedented difficulties.

We need to dig very deep into peacetime financial history to uncover similar episodes. The call money market, that era?s key short term financing vehicle, shut down at the peak of the 1907 panic, ?when no call money was offered at all for one day and the [bid] rate rose from 1 to 125%.?36 Even at the height of the 1929 stock market crisis, the call money market functioned, though rates did soar to 20%. In lesser financial crises, availability of funds in the long-term market disappeared, but overnight and other short-term markets continued to function.

It is easy to make too many assumptions… that markets that have never failed can’t fail.? To assume depressions can’t happen again.? Any market can become overlevered — ANY MARKET.? Further, collateralized lending has a great tendency to attract bad loans, because lenders overestimate the value of collateral.? Also, all short-term borrowing at banks carries considerable risk, particularly non-consumer funding, because there are no guarantees.

Given this virtually unprecedented period of turmoil, by what standard should reform of official supervision and regulation be judged? I know of no form of economic organization based on a division of labor, from unfettered laissez-faire to oppressive central planning, that has succeeded in achieving both maximum sustainable economic
growth and permanent stability. Central planning certainly failed and I strongly doubt that stability is achievable in capitalist economies, given the always turbulent competitive markets continuously being drawn towards, but never quite achieving, equilibrium (that is the process leading to economic growth).

It is not equilibrium that drives growth, but disequilibrium.? Excess demand drives supply.? Excess supply drives demand.? The concept of equilibrium in economics is almost useless, because the system is too noisy, and the tendency toward equilibrium far weaker than the creativity of mankind creating new products, new markets, new technologies, new needs, etc.

The aftermath of the Lehman crisis traced out a startlingly larger negative tail than most anybody had earlier imagined. I assume, with hope more than knowledge, that that was indeed the extreme of possible financial crisis that could be experienced in a market economy.

Again, the Great Depression was worse, but it would not be impossible to have a crisis worse than that.? People don’t like to think about these things, but jst because they are painful to think about does not mean they can’t happen.

Greenspan goes on to add that bank capital levels need to be raised, but does not note that on his watch, bank capital levels were reduced.? He also comments on how the government standing behind the banks rescued them, but does not comment on the moral hazard engendered by the government intervening.

The rates of return on assets, and equity (despite the decline in leverage, moved modestly higher during the years 1966-1982 owing to a rapid expansion in non-interest income, such as fiduciary activities, service charges and fees, net securitization income, (and later investment banking, and brokerage). Noninterest income rose significantly between 1982 and 2006 (increasing net income to equity to a near 15%) as a consequence of a marked increase in the scope of bank powers.

That in part reflected the emergence in April, 1987 of court sanctioned, and Federal Reserve regulated, ?Section 20? investment banking affiliates of bank holding companies. The transfer of such business is clearly visible in the acceleration of bank gross income originating relative to that of investment banks starting in 2000 (exhibit 15).

Bank profitability exploded after 1986 for several reasons:

  • The Greenspan Put — recessions were never allowed to eliminate bad lending.
  • Securitization — originating loans to sell to others can be far more profitable than holding them on balance sheet.
  • Offering complex loans/services to corporations is more profitable.
  • Offering complex loans/services to individuals is more profitable.

After wallowing in the backwaters of economics for years, ?too big to fail? has arisen as a major visible threat to economic growth. It finally became an urgent problem when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed into conservatorship on September 7, 2008. Prior to that date, U.S. policymakers (with fingers crossed) could point to the fact that Fannie and Freddie, by statute, were not backed by the ?full faith and credit of the U.S. government.? Market participants however, did not believe the denial, and consistently afforded Fannie and Freddie a special credit subsidy. On September 7, 2008, market participants were finally vindicated.

Greenspan and I can agree here.? There was always a “wink, wink” regarding the guarantees behind the GSEs.? The US Government would never let them fail in entire.

For years the Federal Reserve had been concerned about the ever larger size of our financial institutions. Federal Reserve research had been unable to find economies of scale in banking beyond a modest-sized institution. A decade ago, citing such evidence, I noted that ?megabanks being formed by growth and consolidation are increasingly complex entities that create the potential for unusually large systemic risks in the national and international economy should they fail.? Regrettably, we did little to address the problem.

Give Greenspan a little credit here — he did urge the slimming down of Fannie and Freddie.? But he did little to slim down the growing large banks.? Indeed, he approved the waivers that allowed for the growth in large banks prior to the repeal of Glass-Steagall, approved of the repeal of Glass-Steagall, and waived deposit-share limits on big bank mergers.

The solution, in my judgment, that has at least a reasonable chance of reversing the extraordinarily large ?moral hazard? that has arisen over the past year is to require banks and possibly all financial intermediaries to hold contingent capital bonds, that is, debt which is automatically converted to equity when equity capital falls below a certain threshold. Such debt will, of course, be more costly on issuance than simple debentures, but its existence could materially reduce moral hazard.

I doubt that will work, much as I like free market solutions.? To be effective, that would have to be a large fraction of the liability base.? I doubt we have that many buyers willing to take on “worst of equity and debt risks” at any reasonable yield premium.

However, should contingent capital bonds prove insufficient, we should allow large institutions to fail, and if assessed by regulators as too interconnected to liquidate quickly, be taken into a special bankruptcy facility. That would grant the regulator access to taxpayer funds for ?debtor-in-possession financing.? A new statute would create a panel of judges, who are expert in finance. The statute would require creditors (when equity is wholly wiped out) to be subject to statutorily defined principles of discounts from par (?haircuts?) before the financial intermediary was restructured. The firm would then be required to split up into separate units, none of which should be of a size that is too big to fail.

We can agree here as well.? Using the government as a DIP lender with big complex firms costs the taxpayers little, and makes the consequences fall on those who made the bad investments.

The Federal Reserve and other regulators were, and are, therefore required to guess which of the assertions of pending problems or allegations of misconduct should be subject to full scrutiny by, of necessity, a work force with limited examination capacity.? But this dilemma means that in the aftermath of an actual crisis, we will find highly competent examiners failing to have spotted a Madoff. Federal Reserve supervision and evaluation is as good as it gets even considering the failures of past years. Yet the banks still have little choice but to rely upon counterparty surveillance as their first line of crisis defense.

I’m sorry, but Madoff should have been detectable.? Buyer beware is still the first line of defense, but it should not be the only line of defense.

The global house price bubble was a consequence of lower interest rates, but it was long term interest rates that galvanized home asset prices, not the overnight rates of central banks, as has become the seeming conventional wisdom. In the United States, the house price bubble was driven by the low level of the 30 year fixed rate mortgage that declined from its mid-2000 peak, six months prior to the FOMC easing of the federal funds rate in January, 2001.

Greenspan then goes into a series of statistical arguments that attempt to show that long Treasury interest rates correlated more with mortgage rates than the Fed Funds rate was.? Thus, the Fed was not to blame for the housing bubble.? This misses several points.

  • The Fed exerted a a degree of suasion over the long end of the curve.
  • The FOMC kept short rates low for a long time, and though long rates moved less, still, they moved in the direction of short rates.
  • Mortgage hedgers forced long rates lower given the negative convexity (short optionality) of the market.
  • The Fed had oversight over the banking system.
  • Mortgages became shorter in their effective length as the bubble grew.

The presence of abundant Fed liquidity swamped the markets, and led to low spreads on risky instruments (the Great Moderation).? Greenspan must take responsibility for this, after all he accepted the good side of it while times were good.

To my knowledge, that lowering of the federal funds rate nearly a decade ago was not considered a key factor in the housing bubble. Indeed, as late as January 2006, Milton Friedman, historically the Federal Reserve?s severest critic, in evaluating the period of 1987 to 2005, wrote, ?There is no other period of comparable length in which the Federal Reserve System has performed so well. It is more than a difference of degree; it approaches a difference of kind.?

Friedman was not the Fed’s severest critic.? He accepted its existence.? Many would rather have the Fed done away with, because of the inherent dishonesty of fiat money.? Why does the Fed get to create something that must be accepted as valuable to everyone else?? It is a form of coin-clipping at best.

Greenspan also misses John Taylor’s point with respect to policy being too low for too long.? It is not as if the Taylor Rule uses any asset variables for policy purposes (though a better model might do so).? But the interest rates that the model generates would have an impact on asset prices, and the willingness to build homes, many of which would be excess.

Yes, there were global problems here, with the Chinese over-providing liquidity to the US.? But as I argued at RealMoney at the time, the Fed could have fought that and run an inverted yield curve for some time.? They did not do it, but removed liquidity very slowly.

But the notion of an effective ?systemic regulator? as part of a regulatory reform package is ill-advised. The current sad state of economic forecasting should give governments pause on the issue. Standard models, other than those that are heavily add-factored, could not anticipate the current crisis, let alone its depth. Indeed, models rarely anticipate recessions, unless again, the recession is add-factored into the model structure.

I agree that there is no good way to create a systemic risk regulator, because the Fed creates most of the systemic risk.? Who will regulated the Fed?? Should that not be Congress?

But, I am sorry, the crisis was anticipated by many of us.? Here is the secret, Alan: the area receiving the greatest increase in debt is the area where systemic risk is growing.? Finance is a mature industry.? Large increases in debt are likely bubbles.? After all, given that the accounting rules allow risky loans to recognize credit margins as paid, in the short run it always pays to write risky loans, until illiquidity kills the lender.

=–==–==-=-=-=-=-=-

This is the end of this short series.? Greenspan is a bright guy trying to preserve his legacy, tattered as it is.? The Fed Funds rate had huge impact over the whole economy during his tenure, as he was aggressive in providing liquidity, and led us into the eventual liquidity trap that Bernanke now has to deal with.

fully
33 Greenspan, Alan. Technology and Financial Services. Before the Journal of Financial Services Research
and the American Enterprise Institute Conference, April 14, 2000.
34 Yields on riskless longer maturities can fall below short-term riskless rates if tight money persuades
investors that future inflation will be less.
35 Hugo B?nziger, chief risk officer at Deutsche Bank. Financial Times, November 5, 2009.
19
collateralized repurchase agreement market encountered severe unprecedented
difficulties.
We need to dig very deep into peacetime financial history to uncover similar
episodes. The call money market, that era?s key short term financing vehicle, shut down
at the peak of the 1907 panic, ?when no call money was offered at all for one day and the
[bid] rate rose from 1 to 125%.?36 Even at the height of the 1929 stock market crisis, the
call money market functioned, though rates did soar to 20%. In lesser financial crises,
availability of funds in the long-term market disappeared, but overnight and other shortterm
markets continued to function.
At the Fordham Conference: Time for a New Antitrust?  False Assumptions

At the Fordham Conference: Time for a New Antitrust? False Assumptions

Carl Felsenfeld: Do we know what the problem is?? What are we trying to solve?? Antitrust does not deal with Citigroup/Travelers, it should deal with Bank of America/Fleet, Wells Fargo/Norwest.? But it didn’t deal with those bank acquisitions.? The regulators were out to lunch.

Jesse Markham: Antitrust can only do so much. It also does not do so well where size is due to organic growth.? (DM: like Google or Microsoft.)

Zephyr Teachout: Antitrust should be based on size.? The DOJ is less subject to regulatory capture, and more inclined to prosecute.

Paul Kaplan: These ideas are against current trends in antitrust.? Perhaps a more rigorous application of the Sherman Act would be more effective.? Organic growth to a large size is still a problem, but how do you avoid punishing success?

(DM: just met Colin Barr of Fortune.? Nice to put a face to the name after all these years.)

Discussant: Canada disallowed securitization for the most part, and stopped more mergers with their banks.

False Assumptions

William Black — Control Fraud & Systematically Dangerous Institutions -Accounting values can be fudged.? RBC as well.? Difficult to detect Control Fraud.? Originating bad loans allows a bank to grow rapidly.? Need forensic accountants.

(DM: look for fast growth — quality, quantity, price. Look for new products.)

Lawrence Baxter — When Big Becomes a Problem.? – Worked ten years at a major bank that went through? a ton of mergers.? The self-regulations with each bank having its own risk model doesn’t work.? The regulators don’t understand them, and spend time learning what is going on.

(DM: fascinating that no one has talked about why the US bailed out holding companies, rather than letting them fail, and merely backing up the operating subsidiaries.? Also, few have fingered the Fed’s monetary policy.)

Shawn Bayern — False Assumptions in Law and Economics — Innovation in the banking is not always a positive.? Bonuses to executives skew incentives.? (DM: it is a form of asset/liability management.)

Russell Pearce — discussant — Business is self-interested, and short-term greedy.? Profit-making is maximized, not even long-term greedy (DM: maximizing the net present value of profits).? (DM: incent using long dated restricted common stock — trouble is, it doesn’t incent as well as cash.)

Mark Gimein — discussant — 3 questions a) What of a big rogue banker?? The market is good at absorbing single failures.? (DM: but not multiple failures.)? b) who should do the regulation?? Tough to get bright men who are tough who won’t go to work for the banks, or buy into the banks logic. c) Control Fraud is hard to prevent; human nature is that way.? No systematic approach to dealing with fraud.

Detecting Fraud — check for adverse selection, honest businessmen won’t do business that way.? Also, it never make sense for a secured lender to accept inflated appraisals.

(DM: Look for gain-on-sale accounting.? Analyze management culture for short-termism.? Remember you can never get pricing, volume and quality at the same time.? Financial companies are in a mature industry, so beware sompanies that grow fast.? Be aware of long dated accruals.)

Discussant — are we worse off today than in the robber baron era? Not necessarily.

Holmes bad man theory — the law exists to constrain bad men.

I gave a 3-minute rant on how insurers are better regulated than banks.? I’ll write more about that tonight in a piece that articulates my views on banking reform.

At the Fordham Conference: Creative Ideas for Limiting Bank Risk 2

At the Fordham Conference: Creative Ideas for Limiting Bank Risk 2

Simon Johnson’s lunch talk was pretty standard: there is no social benefit to banks being larger than $100 billion in assets.? Major banks are too politically powerful, but they should be fought the same way Teddy Roosevelt did with JP Morgan and trustbusting.? Simon thinks that political opinion is shifting on this issue.? He calls for a size cap based off of a 4% percent of GDP for commercial bank assets, and 2% for investment banks.? This would only affect 6 banks, and would put the banking system sizewise where it was in 1990.

A frequent comment is that Canadian banking is concentrated, and they haven’t been hurt.? But other nations have concentrated banking and have gotten into trouble, notably Switzerland and the UK.

One commenter noted that reliance on wholesale funding drove much more of the panic than deposit funding.

Now the third panel starts:

Rob Johnson spoke about creating a credible resolution authority.? He asked why we can’t send Large Complex Financial Institutions [LFCI] through Chapter 11?? Derivatives must be simplified and brought into clarity.? Contagion, complexity, etc.? No real solution offered.

Jane D’Arista — Financials cannot insure other financials.? Leverage must be scaled back.? Various types of short term funding must be scaled back.? Margin standards must be extended to all financial instruments.

Richard Neiman — Banks are risk-takers, that provide a social service, thus taxpayer guarantees via the FDIC.? Volcker rule may not have prevented the last crisis, but it might prevent the next.? Need a group to try to be proactive on future risks — war-gaming.? Attempt to predict black swans.

(DM: most of this can be done by following increases in leverage.)

Arthur Wilmart: no magic bullet.? Fed overstimulated housing market after dot-com crash.? Reduce implied subsidy to banks.? How to internalize the costs?? Three problems on deposit limits: failing banks, intra-state acquisitions and thrifts aren’t counted.? Narrow banking would contain the subsidy.? Systemic risk insurance fund — at least $300 billion, pre-funded.? FDIC would manage it — most competent of the regulators.

Frank Pasquale — Talks about information asymmetries, need more disclosure.? Financial privacy — banks that are big would have to reveal a lot more.? Records of everything would have to be kept for a long time 10-15 years.

A discussant: choosing the lax regulator (DM solution: government assigns the regulator)

DM: banks should not lend to or own other financial firms.? That would end contagion.? At least that should be limited to a percentage of assets, or through the RBC formula.

One panelist suggests that all financial instruments be traded on exchanges.? (Ridiculous, because only common instruments can can trade on exchanges.? Unique things don’t trade on exchanges.? That’s why IBM equity trades on an exchange, but most IBM bonds don’t.)

Discussant: banks cannot self regulate, not even as a group.

Cheapest source of funds are FDIC-backed deposits.? That’s the big subsidy.? (DM: Charge a much larger FDIC fee.)

Discussant: won’t narrow banking create more risk outside the banks?? Where things are less regulated?? Those losing money outside of the banks would end up taking a haircut.

Discussant: GS or MS failing would still shake the system.

Discussant: a new insurance fund would be difficult to make work.? Also,a new regulator might not be better than existing regulators

Discussant: Regulating money market funds as banks.? (DM:? money market funds lost so little, and banks lost so much… why is this an issue.)

At the Fordham Conference: Creative Ideas for Limiting Bank Risk

At the Fordham Conference: Creative Ideas for Limiting Bank Risk

Cornelius Hurley argues that banks are implicitly and explicitly subsidized, and that they need to return the subsidy.

Dean Baker argues for a transfer tax, and weakening the political power of financial institutions.? Really tangential to the point of the conference.? I’m not sure it would help or hurt too much.? It would drop trading volumes.

Dana Chasin argues for more centralized information analysis to deal with opacity and interconnectedness.

Ron Feldman argues that plans should be made in advance for how to wind up firms, based on what is special about the firms aka “living wills.”? Suggests that resolution regimes are too vague.

Tamar Frankel argues that banks should bail out each other, but pay differential guaranty fees based on the riskiness of each bank.? I think that would be difficult to pull off, such a strategy hasn’t worked that well for the PBGC (not equally funded), State Insurance Guaranty funds (post-funding), or the FDIC (pre-funded but equal contributions).? There are moral hazard and agency problems with this idea.

Personally, I would make the Risk based capital [RBC] percentage rise with the amount of risk-based capital.? Say, when RBC gets over $10 billion, the percentage of capital needed for RBC grades up to 50% higher than the level needed at $10 billion by the time RBC gets up to $50 billion.

One questioner suggested unlimited liability for bank shareholders.? That sounds like requiring the investment banks to be partnerships.

Another mentioned the trouble with state guaranty funds in the ’80s.

Also, more capital needs to be held against securitized assets versus non-securitized assets.

One commenter suggested making repo funding unsecured.? Oh my.

Another guy commented that having subordinated debt as a warning sign did not work in the past.

Another commenter said that liquidity always dries up when you need it most.

There are always a few loonies at conferences, who know nothing about the topic at hand.? It keeps things colorful.

At the end of this panel, Heather McGhee of Demos came to talk about Financial Reform in DC.? Snapshot:

  • Non-compromise Dodd bill coming Monday — no systemic risk regulator, but a systemic risk council.
  • Standardization of derivatives trading, clearing, etc.? There will likely be end-user exemptions.
  • Prudential regulation ~20 big financial companies will be regulated by the Fed.
  • New special bankruptcy court — a check to determine illiquidity or insolvency.
  • Possible Prop trading amendment — the Volcker Rule, with regulatory exceptions.
  • Possible amendment: Size cap on assets, unlikely to get made into law.
  • Possible new resolution authority.

Difficult to see how proactive financial services regulation gets enacted… politicians and regulators tend not to be forward looking.

The Rules, Part IV

The Rules, Part IV

Okay, here is tonight’s rule: Governments that scam the asset markets (and their citizens) take all manner of half measures to defend failed policies before undertaking structural reform.? (This includes defending the currency, some asset sales, anything that avoids true shrinkage of the role of government.)? The five stages of grieving apply here.

I know I wrote it 8+ years ago, but it feels very live now.? At present it is most obvious to apply the logic to the PIIGS, and American municipalities that have overextended themselves.

But consider New Jersey that has cut back considerably, and the Kansas City School District that has cut almost half of their schools.? Their backs were to the wall, and they took brave actions to cut back.

But many municipalities remain in denial.? They have long distinguished histories, they cannot fail.? They just need to tax (or borrow) a little more to make ends meet.? Maybe they should raise the rate they expect to earn on pension assets, or offer sweeter pensions instead of greater wage hikes.? This is a big part of the crisis now, and is biting hard.

When the taxes do not come in as expected, or budgets were underestimated, and there is more spending than expected (Snow, Flood, Hurricane) there is anger, and anger drives the hopeless negotiations (bargaining) over spending cuts, over which no one wants to budge.? Not only are there priorities in what interest groups want, there are things that are guaranteed by statute, and some guaranteed by constitution.? Consider the constitutional guarantees on public sector employee benefits in Illinois.? Just try to change the Illinois Constitution; that won’t be easy.

The next stage of grieving is depression, and there are some places like California, L.A., Harrisburg, PA, Greece, etc. that are close to the point where one might say, “There’s no hope.”

After that comes the final stage of acceptance, where finally the tough adjustments are made, and solvency restored, or, bankruptcy is entered, with all of the attendant costs.? Deals are made to reduce budget items that were previously sacrosanct, such as entitlements, public sector employee benefits and salaries, etc.? That is not happening today, not even in New Jersey.

One final note: just as the last refuge of scoundrels that run companies is to blame the shorts, so it is for scoundrels that run governments — they blame the speculators.

The Deadly Dozen

The Deadly Dozen

I have been thinking about the the forces distorting the global economy.? In the long run, the distortions don’t matter, because economies are bigger than governments, and eventually economies prevail over governments.? Here are my dozen problems in the global economy.

1) China’s mercantilism — loans and currency.? The biggest distortionary force in the world now is China.? They encourage banks to loan to enterprises in order to force growth.? They keep their currency undervalued to favor exports over imports.? What was phrased to me as a grad student in development economics as a good thing is now malevolent.? The only bright side is that when it blows, it might take the Chinese Communist Party with it.

2) US Deficits, European Deficits — In one sense, this reminds me of the era of the Rothschilds; governments relied on borrowing because other methods of taxation raised little.? Well, this era is different.? Taxes are high, but not high enough for governments that are trying to create the unachievable “permanent prosperity.” In the process they substitute public for private leverage, and in the process add to the leverage of their societies as a whole.

3) The Eurozone is a mess — Greece, Portugal, Spain, etc.? I admit that I got it partially wrong, because I have always thought that political union is necessary in order to have a fiat currency.? I expected inflation to be the problem, and the real problem is deflation.? Will there be bailouts?? Will the troubled nations leave?? Will the untroubled nations leave that are the likely targets for bailout money?

4) Many entities that are affiliated with lending in the US Government, e.g., FDIC, GSEs, FHA are broke.? The government just doesn’t say that, because they can still make payments.

5) The US Government feels it has to “do something” — so it creates more lending programs that further socialize lending, leading to more dumb loans.

6) Residential real estate is still in the tank.? Residential delinquencies are at all-time highs.? Strategic default is rising.? The shadow inventory of homes that will come onto the market is large.? I’m not saying that prices will fall for housing; I am saying that it will be tough to get them to rise.

7) Commercial real estate — there is too much debt supporting commercial real estate, and too little equity.? There will be losses here; the only question is how deep the losses will go.

8 ) I have often thought that analyzing the strength of the states is a better measure for US economic strength, than relying on the statistics of the Federal Government.? The state economies are weak at present.? Part of that comes from the general macroeconomy, and part from the need to fund underfunded benefit plans.? Life is tough when you can’t print your own money.

9) The US, UK, and Japan are force feeding liquidity into their economies.? Thus the low short-term interest rates.? Also note the Federal Reserve owning MBS in bulk, bloating their balance sheet.

10) Yield greed.? The low short term interest rates touched off a competition to bid for risky debt.? The only question is when it will reverse.? Current yield levels do not fairly price likely default losses.

11) Most Western democracies are going into extreme deficits, because they can’t choose between economic stimulus and deficit reduction.? Political deadlock is common, because no one is willing to deliver any real pain to the populace, lest they not be re-elected.

12) Demographics is one of the biggest? pressures, but it is hidden.? Many of the European nations and Japan face shrinking populations.? China will be there also, in a decade.? Nations that shrink are less capable of carrying their debt loads.? In that sense, the US is in good shape, because we don’t discourage immigration.

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