Category: Speculation

Speculation Away From Subprime, Part 1

Speculation Away From Subprime, Part 1

Subprime lending is grabbing a lot of attention, but it is only a tiny portion of what goes on in our capital markets.? Tonight I want to talk about speculation in our markets, while largely ignoring subprime.

  1. I have grown to like the blog Accrued Interest.? There aren’t many blogs dealing with fixed income issues; it fills a real void.? This article deals with bridge loans; increasingly, as investors have grown more skittish over LBO debt, investment banks have had to retain the bridge loans, rather than selling off the loans to other investors.? Google “Ohio Mattress,” and you can see the danger here.? Deals where the debt interests don’t get sold off can become toxic to the investment banks extending the bridge loans.? (And being a Milwaukee native, I can appreciate the concept of a “bridge to nowhere.”? Maybe the investment bankers should visit Milwaukee, because the “bridge to nowhere” eventually completed, and made it to South Milwaukee.? Quite an improvement over nowhere, right? Right?!? Sigh.)
  2. Also from Accrued Interest, the credit markets have some sand in the gears.? I remember fondly the pit in my stomach when my brokers called me on July 27th and October 9th, 2002, and said, “The markets are offered without bid.? We’ve never seen it this bad.? What do you want to do?”? I had cash on hand for bargains both times, but when the credit markets are dislocated, nothing much happens for a little while.? This was true after LTCM and 9/11 as well.
  3. I’ve seen a number of reviews of Dr. Bookstaber’s new book.? It looks like a good one. As in the last point, when the markets get spooked, spreads widen dramatically,and trading slows until confidence returns.? More bad things are feared to happen than actually do happen.
  4. I’m not a fan of shorting, particularly in this environment.? Too many players are short without a real edge.? High valuations are not enough, you need to have an uncommon edge.? When I short, that typically means an accounting anomaly.? That said, there is more demand for short ideas with the advent of 130/30 and 120/20 funds.? Personally, I think they are asking for more than the system can deliver.? Obvious shorts are full up, and inobvious shorts are inobvious for a reason; they aren’t easy money.
  5. From the “Too Many Vultures” file, Goldman announces a $12.5 billion mezzanine fund.? With so much money chasing failures, the prices paid to failures will rise in the short run, until the vultures get scared.
  6. Finally, and investment bank that understands the risk behind CPDOs.? I have been a bear on these for some time; perhaps the rapidly rising spread environment might cause a CPDO to unwind?
  7. Passive futures as a diversifier made a lot of sense before so many pension plans and endowments invested in it.? Recent returns have been disappointing, leading some passive investors to leave their investments in crude oil (and other commodities).? With less pressure on the roll in crude oil, the contango has lessened, which makes a passive investment in commodities, particularly crude oil, more attractive.
  8. Becoming more proactive on ratings?? I’m not holding my breath but Fitch may be heading that way on CMBS.? Don’t hold your breath, though.

Part 2 tomorrow.

The Five Pillars of Liquidity

The Five Pillars of Liquidity

Liquidity, that ephemeral beast.? Much talked about, but little understood.? There are five pillars of liquidity in the present environment.? I used to talk about three of them, but I excluded two ordinary ones.? Here they are:

  1. The bid for debt from CDO equity.
  2. The Private Equity bid for cheap-ish assets with steady earnings streams.
  3. The recycling of the US current account deficit.
  4. The arbitrage of investment grade corporations buying back their own stock, or the stock of other corporations, because with investment grade yields so low, it makes sense to do it, at least in the short run.
  5. The need of Baby Boomers globally to juice returns in the short run so that their retirements will be adequate.? With equities, higher returns; with bonds, more yield.? Make that money sweat, even if we have to outsource the labor that our children provide, because they are too expensive.

Numbers one and two are broken at present.? The only place in CDO-land that has some life is in investment grade assets.? We must lever up everything until it breaks.? But anything touched by subprime is damaged, and high yield, even high yield loans are damaged for now.

With private equity, it may just? be a matter of waiting a while for the banks to realize that they need yield, but i don’t think so.? Existing troubled deals will have to give up some of the profits to the lenders, or perhaps not get done.

Number three is the heavy hitter.? The current account deficit has to balance.? We have to send more goods, assets, or promises to pay more later.? The latter is what is favored at present, keeping our interest rates low, and making equity attractive relative to investment grade debt.? Until the majority of nations buying US debt revalue their currencies upward, this will continue; it doesn’t matter how much they raise their central bank’s target rate, if they don’t cool off their export sectors, they will continue to stimulate the US, and build up a bigger adjustment for later.

With private equity impaired, investment grade corporations can be rational buyers of assets, whether their own stock, or that of other corporations that fit their operating profiles. Until investment grade yields rise 1-2%, this will still be a factor in the markets, and more so for foreign corporations that have access to cheap US dollar financing (because of current account deficit claims that have to be recycled).

The last one is the one that can’t go away, at least not for another seven years as far as equities go, and maybe twenty years as far as debt goes.? There is incredible pressure to make the money do more than it should be able to under ordinary conditions, because the Baby Boomers and their intermediaries, pension plans and mutual funds, keep banging on the doors of companies asking for yet higher returns.? With debt, there is a voracious appetite for seemingly safe yet higher yielding debt.? The Boomers need it to live off of.

So where does that leave us, in terms of the equity and debt markets?? Investment grade corporates and munis should be fine on average; prime MBS at the Agency or AAA level should be fine.? Everything else is suspect.? As for equities, investment grade assets that are not likely acquirers look good.? The acquirers are less certain.? Even if acquisitions make sense in the short run, it is my guess that they won’t make sense in the long run. On net, the part of the equity markets with higher quality balance sheets should do well from here.? The rest of the equity markets… the less creditworthy their debt, the less well they should do.

Tribunes are to Promote Justice among Common Men

Tribunes are to Promote Justice among Common Men

Bouncing off of Cramer’s lucid post regarding the Tribune deal (when Cramer is good, he is goooood), I wonder if it wouldn’t be better for all involved if the deal didn’t fail.? As I pointed out before, Zell doesn’t have a lot of skin in the game, and the workers get all of the downside and little of the upside.? Zell has a lot of upside, relative to his contribution, which means little downside.

Don’t get me wrong, the newspaper business is tough.? My view is that the ESOP should refuse to fund the deal, and let the equity price fall.? Someone will fund the deal at a lower price, and the remaining workers will get paid, if less than before.

One great lesson of all of this is that no matter what labor demands, it is impossible for labor to do well if the industry does not do well.

Ten Important, but not Urgent Articles to Ponder

Ten Important, but not Urgent Articles to Ponder

I am an investor who does not consider background academic and semi-academic research to be worthless, even though I am skeptical of much of quantitative finance. Here are a few articles to consider that I think have some importance.

  1. Implied volatility is up. Credit spreads are up, and the equity market has not corrected. Time to worry, right? Wrong. When implied volatilities (and credit spreads) are higher, fear is a bigger factor; valuations have already been suppressed. Markets that rally against rising implied volatility typically have further rises in store.
  2. Many thanks to those that liked my piece on the adaptive markets hypothesis. Here is a piece about Andrew Lo, one of the biggest proponents of the AMH, which fleshes out the AMH more fully. I would only note that the concept of evolution is not necessary to the AMH, only the concepts inherent in ecological studies. Also, all of the fuss over neuropsychology is cute, but not necessary to the AMH. It is all a question of search costs versus rewards.
  3. John Henry alert! Will human equity analysts be replaced by quantitative models? Does their work have no value? My answer to both of those questions is a qualified “no.” Good quant models will eat into the turf of qualitative analysts, and kick out some of the marginal analysts. As pointed out by the second article analysts would do well to avoid focusing on earnings estimates, and look at other information that would provide greater value to investors from the balance sheet and cash flow statement. (I am looking at Piotroski’s paper, and I think it is promising. He has made explicit many things that I do intuitively.
  4. I work for a hedge fund, but I am dubious of the concept of double alpha. It sounds nice in theory: make money off of your shorts and longs without taking overall market risk. As I am fond of saying, shorting is not the opposite of being long, it is the opposite of being leveraged long, because in both cases, you no longer have discretionary control over your trade. Typically, hedge fund investors are only good at generating alpha on the long side. The short side, particularly with the crowding that is going on there is much tougher to make money at. If I had my own hedge fund, I would short baskets against my long position, and occasionally companies that I knew had accounting problems that weren’t crowded shorts already (increasingly rare).
  5. Maybe this one should have run in my Saturday piece, but some suggest that we are running out of certain rare metals. I remember similar worries in the early 70s, and we found a lot more of those metals than we thought possible then. There is probably a Hubbert’s peak for metals as well, but conservation will increase the supply, and prices will rise, quenching demand.
  6. For those that remember my piece, “Kiss the Equity Premium Goodbye,” you will be heartened to know that my intellectual companion in this argument, Morningstar, has not given up. Retail investors buy and sell at the wrong times because of fear an greed, so total returns are generally higher than the realized returns that the investors recieve.
  7. When there are too many choices, investors tend to get it wrong. When there is too much information, investors tend to get it wrong. Let’s face it, we can make choices between two items pretty well, but with many items we are sunk; same for choosing between two interpretations of a situation versus many interpretations. My own investing methods force me to follow rules, which limits my discretion. It also forces me to narrow the field rapidly to a smaller number of choices, and make decisions from that smaller pool. When I make decisions for the hedge funds that I work for, I might take the dozen names that I am long or short, and compare each pair of names to decide which I like most and least. Once I have done that, numeric rankings are easy; but this can only work with small numbers, because the number of comparisons goes up with the square of the number of names.
  8. Jeff Miller aptly reminds us to focus on marginal effects. When news hits, the simple linear response is usually wrong because economic actors adapt to minimize the troubles from bad news, and maximize the benefits from good news. People don’t act as if they are locked in, but adjust to changing conditions in an effort to better their positions. The same is true in investing. Good news is rarely as good as it seems, and bad news rarely as bad.
  9. This article describes sector rotation in an idealized way versus the business cycle, and finds that one can make money using it. Cramer calls methods like this “The Playbook.” (Haven’t heard that in a while from Cramer. I wonder why? Maybe because the cycle has been extended.) I tend not to use analyses like this for two reasons. First, I think it pays more to look at what sectors are in or out of favor at a given moment, and ask why, because no two cycles are truly alike. They are commonalities, but it pays to ask why a given sector is out of line with history. Second, most of these analyses were generated at a time when the US domestic demand was the almost total driver of economic activity. We are now in a global economic demand context today, and those that ignore that fact are underperforming at present.
  10. Finally, it is rare when The Economist gets one wrong. But their recent blurb on bond indexing misses a key truth. So bigger issuers get a greater weight in bond indexes. Index weightings are still proportional to the range of choices that a bond manager faces. Care to underweight a big issuer because they have too much debt outstanding? Go ahead; there are times when that trade is a winner, and times when it is a loser. Care to buy securities away from the index? Go ahead, but that also can win or lose. If bond indexes fairly represent the average dollar in the market, they have done a good job as a benchmark; that doesn’t mean they are the wisest investment, but indexes by their very nature are never the wisest investment, except for the uninformed.

Well, that’s it for this evening. Let’s see how the market continues to move against the shorts; there are way too many shorts, and too many people wondering why the market is so high. Modifying the concept of the pain trade, maybe the confusion trade is an analogue, the market moves in a way that will confuse the most people.

A Fundamental Approach to Technical Analysis

A Fundamental Approach to Technical Analysis

This was an article that I submitted to RealMoney, but was rejected because it was not relevant enough to “retail investors.” I offer it to you for your consideration. It was the follow-up piece to this article: The Long and Short of Trend Investing.

Throw in the Short Run

But now let?s move to the technicals of the situation. Given that I am a longer-term investor, this doesn?t play as great a role for me as other investors at RealMoney, but I don?t ignore it entirely. I simply view technicals through a fundamental framework. I have described this in the following articles, which still have value today, in my opinion:

1. Managing Liability Affects Stocks, Pt. 1

2. Separating Weak Holders From the Strong

3. Get to Know the Holders’ Hands, Part 1

4. Get to Know the Holders’ Hands, Part 2

(As an aside, I would simply say that technical analysis, as construed by most technicians, does not work on average. Most technicians die the ?death of a thousand cuts,? as they take multiple small losses. Successful technicians have something fundamental going on, whether they realize it or not.)

Institutional investors run most of the money in the market. Most of them have been trained to think in valuation terms exclusively, and so they set buy and sell prices for their positions. This influences even small investors, because of the impact of sell-side research. Almost every buy or sell recommendation comes with a price target. The sell side analysts often issue new buy or sell when a price target they have been looking for occurs.

But not every fundamental investor agrees on what the proper prices are for buying and selling. As the old saying goes, ?It takes two to make a market.? Sometimes, I will make it into the office and my trader will tell me that someone is aggressively selling a company that we own. I might ask him if our brokers have any feel for the size of the seller, and how desperate he is. The answer is usually ?no,? but if we do get an answer, that can help dictate our trading strategy. We would want to buy more as the big seller is closer to being done. In fact, we want to buy his last block of shares from him, if possible. Sometimes that can be arranged by talking to our broker; other times not.

As another aside, this is simpler to do in the bond market than the stock market. The large brokers generally know who is doing what. Be nice to your sales coverages, and you?d be amazed what they will tell you?. Here?s a stylized example.

Broker: ?You sure you want to buy that Washington Mutual bond??

Me: ?Yes, why??

Broker: ?Uh, there?s someone with size selling the name.?

Me: ?How much size??

Broker: ?Best indications are eight times your order size.?

Me: ?I can?t take that much down. Keep me in mind, and when he gets down to about double the size of my order, call me, and I?ll take the tail [everything that?s left].?

Broker: ?You got it.?

But suppose we don?t have any idea what the intentions of the seller are. We would have to be more humble, and try to infer from the chart what his methods are. Does he put a ceiling over the stock price, and only sell when it gets to a certain level? Or is he a ?mad bomber? that keeps selling regardless of the price level? Looking down the holders list, can I figure out anyone who might be incented to sell so much, and so aggressively? Who is disappointed at present that has a trading style like the group that is selling the stock?

Does he sell in dribs and drabs, scaling over time? Does he do a series of block trades? Is he using some sort of quantitative selling strategy that incorporates both time and price? These are the questions that I try to answer as I strategize my trading. It doesn?t give me perfect information, but it aids me at the margins.

So, say after your analysis of the technicals, you think the stock will continue to go down for a while, or won?t rise because the seller is big, seemingly larger than you can take down. Still, you like the company at the present valuation levels. What do you do?

You could sit on your hands, and wait out the seller. But what if you?re wrong about the size of the seller? The stock could move higher before you get a position on if the seller is smaller than you anticipated. Remember, other traders are watching the big seller also, and they will be waiting for him to be done as well.

You also could buy your full position immediately. After all, you have firm convictions about the secular trends and the stock?s valuation. Timing is for losers, and we are fundamental investors. Well, okay, but what if you are wrong, and the seller is right? Or, what if you like the idea here for the long run, but you would buy even more at lower prices? As Bill Miller has put it, ?Lowest average cost wins.?

Again, we could put on half the position and wait for the seller to be done. I like that, but are there alternatives? We could estimate the size of the seller (imperfectly), try to figure out how long he will be around and do a time-based scale where we put on 80-90% of a full position over that estimated time period. We also could do a price-based scale, and try to estimate (even more imperfectly) how much the seller will drive down the price before he is done. Buy 25% of a full position now, and then scale the remainder of what would be 80-90% of a full position down at the price you the seller gets exhausted at.

These strategies are illustrative, and meant to show the range of ways that one can balance off fundamental conviction versus the technicals of the market. In general, price scales work better when you think the seller is valuation sensitive, or other buyers are showing up in size to gobble up the seller?s supply at a given level. In the absence of that, time-based scales are the proper strategy if you have some confidence in the timing of the seller. Failing all of that, my humble strategy is to buy half and wait. It will never be perfect, but if I am right on the fundamentals, the results will be good enough.

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