Category: Value Investing

Classic: The Long and Short of Trend Investing

Classic: The Long and Short of Trend Investing

The following was published by RealMoney on 4/26/2006.? As with all of these “classic” articles, I republish them because they aren’t available at RealMoney any more.? They changed their system for links, and so articles and comments that I put a lot of work into have disappeared.

-==-=—==–=-=-==-=–=-==-=-=–=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-==-=-=–=-=-=-==–=-==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Investing

If you believe in the trend but prices are high, take a half position.

Despite U.S. automakers’ woes, cars will be built by someone; this makes stronger parts suppliers a good play.

Global economic development means more demand for chicken.

 

One of the most important things to understand with investment ideas is what time period they are for. Sometimes a given asset can take different directions over the short, intermediate and long terms.

Imagine for a moment that you buy the thesis that a large portion of the world is joining the capitalist economy, and that this will lead many more people and businesses in developing countries to demand more goods consistent with what we view as a middle-class lifestyle. That’s a secular trend that will play out over many years. It can be a guiding theme that can help organize investment ideas over the long term.

Now, say that your interpretation of that secular trend implies higher worldwide demand for foodstuffs, metals, timber and energy. However, when you look at the valuations of some of the companies affected by the trend, they appear to be too high, and profit margins are above historical norms. (Valuations are in fact reasonable for many companies in these sectors, but play along with me for a moment.)

You are faced with a problem, then. You think the secular trend is valid, but that much of the story is presently anticipated by current valuations. What to do? One technique that I have used in situations like this is to buy half of what I would if valuations were reasonable (which occasionally aggravates my boss, who is an all-or-nothing kind of guy).

If the stocks go down, I would come up to a full position. If the market gets crazier and valuations rise, I would punt out the smaller position for a gain. If the market muddles somewhat trendlessly, I would buy and sell using my rebalancing discipline, which will clip a couple of extra percentage points over time.

There are alternatives, though. You could buy a full position, but then you are committing to the stock for the long run on the idea that the secular trend will dominate over valuations. You’d better be right, because with higher valuations than normal, being wrong has a greater cost.

You also could do nothing. After all, valuations are extended, and you won’t just pay anything for a stock. This strategy presumes an interruption in the general trend will be coming. That may or may not happen; high valuations often get higher for stocks in a winning thesis. Paying up for a good idea is often a good strategy, but the tradeoff between valuation and the secular trend is a difficult balancing act.

Part of working that tradeoff comes with experience, but I would argue that it also requires humility — the market always finds a new way to make a fool out of you. Always consider what could go wrong. Conservatism means that you will always stay in the game, and staying in the game for a long time is the secret to compounding returns.

The Internet Bubble

Let me give you a few real-world examples. Think of the Internet bubble. The long-term prognosis that the Internet would be big was correct (in hindsight), but valuations were screaming “Don’t play here,” and many concepts were quite marginal from a cash-flow standpoint. That said, the technicals were screaming, “Momentum, baby! Time to play!”

My solution was to sit it out. I figured that, eventually, the cheap financing would run out and the market trend would shift. The problem was, it lasted two years longer than I anticipated.

Maybe I left something on the table. I could have played with smaller position sizes, or played with a mental “stop order” in the back of my mind. That said, it didn’t fit my personality, and I didn’t feel that I could evaluate who the survivors would be, so my optimal decision was to sit it out. (I didn’t short it because the momentum was too great. Never argue with a liquidity wave.)

Industries in Secular Decline

What if you are looking at an industry in secular decline, such as the photo film business (think of how Kodak (EK:NYSE) has fumbled, or, worse, Polaroid), fixed-wire phone service companies, or the newspapers? All of these are being displaced by new technologies.

Verizon (VZ:NYSE) looks cheap and has a nice dividend. Is it a candidate to buy?

This is an example of Warren Buffett’s concept of “cigar butt” investing: Someone may have tossed it on the ground, but you can still get a few good puffs out of it. The company has limited growth potential unless a radical new strategy gets introduced, and that could be costly, or even fail. I had better get this company extremely cheap to compensate for potentially falling earnings at some point in the future. Even a wasting trust has a proper price, so if I can get it at a level that reflects a 15% annualized return, that could be a great investment.? One nice thing about declining industries is that there usually isn’t a lot of direct competition.

Here’s one more example: auto parts. I own Johnson Controls (JCI:NYSE) and Magna International (MGA:NYSE) , two companies with strong balance sheets that are picking up market share against weaker competitors. Automobiles are going to be built, even if GM and Ford aren’t going to be building as many of them.

This is one part of the auto sector where you can have moderate growth, and the stronger suppliers can do far better than the average. I still want to buy them cheap, but I can afford to pay a little more for quality in markets where quality is scarce. In this case, lower-quality companies could be cheaper, but they aren’t the ones to buy when an industry is under stress.

Playing Chicken

As the developing world grows, so will demand for animal protein. To me, that means chicken.

Valuations are favorable here, because many investors are scared about avian flu. Whole flocks of birds might have to be culled if even a few get sick. That said, large North American poultry producers isolate their birds from wild birds, and even from humans who have the flu.

The risk is overstated, and once the pandemic is over, valuations will rise. (Some people are mistakenly avoiding chicken, even though there is no chance of getting avian flu if the chicken is properly cooked.) I own Gold Kist (GKIS:Nasdaq) and Industrias Bachoco SA (IBA:NYSE) , but am considering whether I shouldn’t increase my exposure and add Pilgrim’s Pride (PPC:NYSE) , or Sanderson Farms (SAFM:Nasdaq). Tyson (TSN:NYSE) is too diversified, and I’m not crazy about the management.

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-==-=–==–==-=-==-=-=-=–==-=-=-

Full disclosure in 2013: I am still long Industrias Bachoco SA [IBA] — what a great unknown company.

Classic: Get to Know the Holders? Hands, Part 2

Classic: Get to Know the Holders? Hands, Part 2

Note: this was published at RealMoney on 7/2/2004.? This was part four of a? four part series. Part One is lost but was given the lousy title: Managing Liability Affects Stocks, Pt. 1.? If you have a copy, send it to me.

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

-==-=-==-=?==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=????????

Investing Strategies

Some groups can reinforce their own behavior in the market, causing booms and busts.

Balance sheet players tend to be strong holders.

Liquidity can change the market landscape.

 

In Part 1 of this column, I began describing the various classes of investors and their investment behavior. In Part 2, I’ll continue that description, and will follow it up by explaining how some classes of investors can temporarily reinforce their own behavior, causing booms and busts. Finally, I will offer practical ways you can benefit from understanding the behaviors of different investor classes.

 

8. Leveraged Private Investors

The use of leverage gives the investor the ability to make more out of his bets than his equity capital would otherwise allow, but eliminates some of the advantages that the unleveraged possess. Investors that are leveraged do not entirely control their trade; if their assets decline enough in value, either they or the margin desk will reduce their position.

Leveraged investors are in the same position as the European banks that I discussed in Part 1. Worry sets in as one gets near a margin call, not when the margin call happens. As worry sets in, mental pressures to change the asset positions materialize. The challenge to the investor is to decide whether to liquidate, or take chances. Being forced to make a decision leads to a higher probability, in my opinion, of making the wrong decision.

In addition, leveraged longs have to pay for the privilege of financing additional assets. With overnight rates low today, that might not seem like much of a cost. But when the market is in the tank and interest rates are sky-high, as they were from 1979 to 1982, the cost of leveraged speculation is a deterrent and helps keep a lid on the market.

9. Short-Sellers

Being short is not the opposite of being long. It is closer to the opposite of being a leveraged long. Shorts do not entirely control their trade; if their shorts rise enough in value, either they or the margin desk will reduce their position. This is the opposite of leveraged longs. Remember, unleveraged longs can stay put as long as they like, and almost no one can force them to change. Shorts can be forced to cover through a squeeze, whether through rising prices threatening their solvency or a decrease in borrowable shares from longs moving their shares from margin to cash.

Stocks with a large short interest relative to the float, like Taser (TASR:Nasdaq) , can behave erratically with little regard to anything more than the short-term technicals of trading. (If fundamental investing is akin to a chess game, trading Taser is more akin to a street brawl.)

Short-sellers also have costs that unleveraged longs don’t face. When it is difficult to borrow shares (i.e., the borrow is tight), you might have to pay for the privilege of borrowing. As an example, when I was short Mony Group, I had a 2% annualized rate to pay on the last block of shares that I shorted. The rest came free, but that was before the trade got crowded. (When the borrow is not tight and if you are big enough, it is possible to get a credit, but that’s another story.)

Another cost is paying any dividend that the company might pay. Granted, the stock is likely to drop by the amount of the dividend, but cash going out the door to support a trade makes a trade more difficult to hold on to.

 

10. Options Traders

Buyers of options fully control their trade and pay a premium for the privilege. Sellers of options give up some control of their trade and receive a premium for their trouble. Being short an option is like being short a stock; theoretically, the risk is unlimited. If the short options of an investor rise enough in value, either they or the margin desk will reduce their position. Long option investors face no such constraints, but they do face the continual decay of the time premium of their options.

When there are company-issued options outstanding, such as warrants, convertible preferreds and convertible bonds, another trading dynamic can develop. Because the company has offered the call options on its stock, unlike other investors, it can issue stock to satisfy calls. The dilution from share issuance can put a ceiling over the price of the stock near the strike price for the call options until enough demand exists for the stock that it overcomes the dilution.

One more example of embedded options shows up in the residential mortgage bond market. Residential mortgages contain an option that allows the mortgage to be prepaid. Mortgage bond managers, who often manage to a constant duration (interest-rate sensitivity), run into the problem that their portfolios lengthen when rates rise, and shorten when rates fall. This can make them buyers of duration (longer mortgages or noncallable Treasuries) when rates fall, and sellers when rates rise.

In either case, with enough mortgage managers (and mortgage originators, who are in the same boat) doing this, it can become self-reinforcing because many market players buy into a rising market and sell into a falling market. This has an indirect effect on the Treasury and swap markets because mortgage hedgers use them to adjust their overall interest-rate sensitivity. In general, mortgage hedgers are weak holders of Treasuries, which they sell off as rates rise.

?

Balance Sheet Players vs. Total Return Players

I find it useful to divide the players in the investment universe into two camps: balance sheet players and total return players. Balance sheet players can lose it all and then some. Total return players can lose only what they have invested and include mutual funds (including index funds), unleveraged private investors, defined benefit plans, option buyers and endowments. Balance sheet players include banks, insurance companies, leveraged private investors and option sellers.

Total return players tend to resist — or at least are capable of resisting — market trends, which provide stability in the market. At the edges of negative price movements, balance sheet players find that they have to sell risky assets in order to preserve themselves. In severe market conditions, balance sheet players can make market movements more extreme.

I think it helps to view the behavior of balance sheet players through the lens of self-reinforcement. When there are too many of them crowding into a trade, there is the potential for instability. If the price of the asset has been bid up to the point to where a buy-and-hold investor would feel that he could not obtain a free cash flow yield adequate to compensate him for the risk of the purchase, then the asset is unsustainably high, which does not mean that it can’t go higher. When you see long-term investors exiting, it’s usually time to leave.

Fueled by leverage, some players will increase their bets as the price of the asset rises because they have more buying power with a more expensive asset. Finally, a few smart players start to sell and the process works in reverse as leverage levels increase for balance sheet players with a large concentration in the stock and a self-reinforcing cycle of selling begins. The same boom-bust cycle can happen with total return players, but it would be more muted because of the lack of leverage.

At the end of the bust, the buyers typically are unleveraged buy-and-hold investors. For example, I remember picking over tech and telecom stocks in 2001-02 that had been trashed after the bubble burst. This is a sector of the market that I don’t play in often, because I don’t know it so well; that said, it became 30% of my portfolio. Many of those stocks were trading for less than their net cash and a few were even earning money. My thought at the time was that if I tucked a few of these stocks away and held them for five years or so, I’d have something better at the end. With the bull market of 2003, my exit came sooner than I expected; other market players saw the potential of the cheap, conservative tech companies that I held and liked them more than I did.

This brings me back to weak and strong hands. In general, total return players have stronger hands than balance sheet players, at least when market values are out of whack with long-term fundamentals.

 

Illiquidity and LTCM

An asset is illiquid when the bid-ask spread is wide, or even worse, when there is no bid or ask for a given asset in the short run. This can happen with large orders in small-cap stocks and in “off the run” corporate bonds. Often an illiquid asset offers a higher potential return than a more liquid asset; given the disadvantage of illiquidity, in a normal market it would have to. Even a liquid asset can act illiquid if you hold a large amount of it relative to the total float. Trying to sell rapidly would drive down its price.

To hold illiquid assets, you either have to hold them with equity or a low degree of leverage with a funding structure for the leverage that can’t run away. One example is the type of portfolio I ran in the mid-1990s: unleveraged micro-cap value stocks. Another example is Warren Buffett’s portfolio. He buys whole companies and large positions in other companies, and funds those purchases with a modest amount of leverage from his insurance reserves.

My counterexample is more interesting (failure always is). Long Term Capital Management for the most part bought illiquid bonds and shorted liquid bonds that were otherwise similar to the illiquid bonds. When LTCM was small relative to the markets that it played in, it could move in and out of positions reasonably well, and given the nature of bonds, absent a default, there was a natural tendency for the bonds to converge in value as they got close to maturity.

As LTCM became better known, it received more capital to invest. Assets grew from profits as well. Wall Street trading desks began to figure out some of the trades that LTCM was making and started to mimic the firm. This made LTCM’s position more illiquid. It was fundamentally short liquidity, leveraged up using financing that could disappear in a crisis and had LTCM wannabes swarming around its positions.

At the beginning of 1998, it had earned huge returns and its managers were considered geniuses. The only problem was that they were running out of places to put money. The yield spreads between their favored illiquid and liquid bonds had narrowed considerably. “The juice had been squeezed out of the trade,” but they still had a lot of money to manage.

By mid-1998, with the Asian crisis brewing and Russia defaulting, there came a huge premium for liquidity. Everyone wanted to get liquid all at once. Liquid bonds rose in price, while illiquid bonds fell. The LTCM imitators on Wall Street got calls from their risk control desks telling them that they had to liquidate the trades that mimicked LTCM; the trades were losing too much money. In at least one case, it imperiled the solvency of one investment bank. But at least the investment banks had risk-control desks to force them to take action. LTCM did not, and the unwinding of all the trades by the investment banks worsened its position.

When the severity of the situation finally dawned on the investment banks, with the aid of the Federal Reserve, the investment banks realized that there was no way to easily solve the situation. LTCM couldn’t be liquidated; its positions were so large that a “fire sale” meant that the investment banks that lent it money would have to take a haircut. LTCM needed time and a bigger balance sheet, if the investment banks were to be repaid. The investment banks eventually agreed to recapitalize LTCM funds and unwind the trades at a measured pace. Even the equity investors got something back when the liquidation of LTCM was complete. LTCM’s ideas weren’t all bad, but it was definitely misfinanced.

 

Final Advice

Keep these basic rules in mind as you consider how to apply these concepts to your own trading. They aren’t commandments, but paying attention to them will help you make more informed investment decisions.

  1. All good investment relies at least implicitly on sound asset-liability management. Assets should be matched to the type of investor and funding structure that can best support them.
  2. Understand the advantages that you have as an investor, particularly how your own cash flow and funding structure affect your investing.
  3. Try to understand who else is in a trade with you, what their motivations are, their ability to carry the trade, etc.
  4. Don’t overleverage your positions. Always leave enough room to be able to recover from a bad scenario.
  5. Be aware of the effects that changing demographics may have on pension plans and individual investors.
  6. Always play defense. Consider what can go wrong before you act on what can go right.
  7. Be contrarian. Maximize your flexibility when the market pays you to do so. Be willing to sell into manias and buy after crashes.
On High Short Interest Ratios

On High Short Interest Ratios

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

-==-=-==-=?==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=????????

Investing Strategies

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

 

1. Banks and Other Depositary Institutions

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

2. Insurance Companies

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

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

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

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

 

3. Defined Benefit Pension Plan

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

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

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

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

 

4. Endowments

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

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

 

5. Mutual Funds

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

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

 

6. Index Funds

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

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

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

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

 

7. Unleveraged Private Investors

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Classic: Separating Weak Holders From the Strong

Classic: Separating Weak Holders From the Strong

Note: this was published at RealMoney on 3/23/2004.? This was part two of a? four part series. Part One is lost but was given the lousy title: Managing Liability Affects Stocks, Pt. 1.? If you have a copy, send it to me.

Fortunately, these were the best three of the four articles.? The copy I received has no links, so sorry for the lack of links.? I hope you enjoy the article.

-==-=-==-=–==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=————————=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Stock Analysis

Watch how the stock reacts to news.

Examine the short side.

Pay attention to what insiders are doing.

 

A little more than a month ago, I wrote a column to help explain some of the differences between the market’s strong and weak hands, and I received quite a response.

It’s been a while since the story appeared, so here’s a chart to clarify some of the ideas I put forth in it.

?Table of Actions for Investors With Long Positions

Consider four classes of investors and how they behave with respect to market action

Market Action

Investor Action Stock price goes down Stock price goes up
More likely to hold Valuation-sensitive and strong holders Momentum investors and strong holders
More likely to sell Momentum? investors and weak holders Valuation-sensitive and weak holders

To put it another way:

  • Weak holders play for small gains and losses.
  • Strong holders play for big gains, will ride out big losses and sometimes get killed with the firm.
  • Momentum investors require liquidity from the market and exacerbate price moves.
  • Valuation-sensitive (or mean-reverting) investors provide liquidity to the market. They hold or buy more when prices decline, and they sell when prices rise enough to hit their valuation targets. This category describes my normal posture in the market.

These four descriptions here are ideal investor types. Some investors and institutions fit only one of them, but many use a mix in their investing activity.

After Part 1 of this piece appeared, the most common reader question was, “How do you identify whether a stock’s holders are weak or strong?” There’s no simple answer, but I can offer a bevy of techniques and tools that I use for this purpose. Some require a good deal of experience and judgment; beginners can use others easily. Here are some tips to get you started:

Assess how the stock reacts to news

Good news should make a stock go up, and bad news should make it go down. But we learn the most when the price reaction is different from what we expect. For example, if a stock refuses to go down much — or even rises — on significant bad news, then it has many strong holders. If it doesn’t go up much — or even falls — on significant good news, then it has many weak holders.

Examine the short side.

Short-sellers are typically weak antiholders of a stock. The percentage of the float that is shorted will tell you how much of the stock is subject to buyback if the price rises significantly.

Now, short-selling is a double-edged sword. Although short-sellers have an impulse to buy back into strength, high short interest usually indicates problems at the company. If you encounter a heavily shorted stock, take a close look to see whether it’s strictly a valuation issue or if something is fundamentally broken at the company on an accounting or operational basis. Short interest is available on Yahoo! Finance; here’s an example of a heavily shorted stock, Phoenix (PNX:NYSE) .

Find out who the large holders are.

The higher the proportion of stock held by insiders and long-term investors, the more strongly a stock’s holder base is. I track this by reviewing proxy statements as well as 13D and 13G filings, which are freely available at the SEC Web site.

These data require some judgment to interpret. First, I find out who holds more than 5% of the stock, because some of those large holders tell a story about the stock.

Most institutional investors will not take stakes of more than 5% in a corporation’s shares, as getting into and out of such large positions requires careful trading. Once they are above the 5% limit, changes in position size must be disclosed via 13D filings, which give away information to other traders who may trade against the large holder.? Large holders by their very nature tend to be strong holders; the costs of exiting a position are significant.

Look at insider activity.

Insiders, if they hold large positions, tend to be strong holders of a company’s shares. Additionally, they often have a clearer perspective on the company’s prospects. Insider buying can be a great indicator of potential value, particularly if the insider pays for the shares from his or her own pocket. Small insider holdings and holdings acquired for compensation are more likely to be cashed in when insiders need the proceeds. Insider data are freely available at Yahoo!; here is an example.

One exception needs to be understood regarding large insider holdings. If the holdings are so large that a single investor has discretionary control over the company, then it pays to review how that “control investor” has treated outside passive minority investors (folks like you and me) in the past. If he or she acts on self-interest to the detriment of smaller investors, then it’s time to look elsewhere.

Review proxy statements.

After spending enough time looking at such data, you begin to see what kinds of investors are among the large holders. Most tend to be value investors or long-term growth investors. After this, a list of the remaining institutional investors can be instructive. A limited view of this is freely available on Yahoo!; here’s an example.

This particular example tells me that the major holders are value investors and index managers. These are relatively strong holders of the stock; they don’t run away after minor disappointments. In general, growth investors tend to be weaker holders than value investors.

Take note of turnover.

To the extent that you can obtain turnover rate data, for example, in mutual fund prospectuses, that’s a good proxy for how weakly a manager holds stocks. Quantitative managers tend to be weak holders of securities; many of them try to profit from short-term mispricings of securities, often trading at very high turnover rates. Qualitative managers who are tightly benchmarked to indices, including many institutional managers who are scrutinized by the consultant community, can find themselves in the same boat.

Glance at the message boards.

Although there are exceptions — and this is squishy — the amount and shrillness of postings on message boards seems proportional to the weakness of the holder base. The more reasoned and slow the message board, the less speculative the stock’s retail holder base.

Gauge the volatility of the price action.

If market prices are more volatile compared with the factors that drive the stock’s underlying value, there are relatively more weak holders. If market prices are less volatile compared with the factors that drive the underlying value, there are relatively more strong holders.

Valuation also affects the holder base: The higher the valuations, the lower the proportion of valuation-sensitive investors in the holder base, and that tends to increase price volatility. The lower the valuations are, the lower the proportion of momentum investors in the holder base, and that tends to decrease price volatility.

Review chart action.

I’m not a technician, so bear with me. One simple question to ask is whether buyers or sellers are more motivated.? A simple way to answer that for the immediate past is to look at a money flow graph. Here is an example of a noncumulative money flow graph from Yahoo! The top part of the graph is the price; the bottom part is money flow. When the money flow figure is over 50, more trades have been occurring on upticks than on downticks. The opposite is true when money flow is below 50. Momentum investors dominate the buy side of trading when the money flow indicator is persistently high. Valuation-sensitive investors dominate the buy side of trading when the money flow indicator is persistently low.

As I’m not a technician, I won’t explore levels of support and resistance. I use those techniques, but I’ll leave it to the expert technical analysts to describe them in detail. Levels of support and resistance often indicate where valuation-sensitive investors are accumulating and selling shares.

What I promised at the end of Part 1 will have to wait for Part 3 of this series. In response to the questions I received, I’ll also cover the effect of dividends and weak holders in the Treasury bond market. If you have any questions, please feel free to email me.

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 5

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 5

I left one small question for last; I gave a partial answer to this one at the conference.? I think I was the only one that said much on it.? Here it is:

Where does academic theory fail in finance and in economics?

Little questions, big answers.? How do you eat an elephant?? One bite at a time.? Let’s start with math in economics:

1) We have to reduce the complex math in economics — I think we are trying to apply math where it is not valid.? As such, the true strength of ability to explain what is going on decreases, while economic becomes an odd “inside game” for a funny group of mathematicians trying to make sense of an idealized world that bears little resemblance to our own world.

2) The next piece is on maximizing utility or profits.? Maximizing takes work, assuming one can even do it.? Work is a negative, so people conserve on that.? Most of us know this: we look for a solution that is “good enough,” and do it.? That means we don’t maximize utility, and the pretty equations don’t represent reality.

What’s worse is that men care more about relative results than absolute results.? We would rather be kings over an impoverished realm rather than middle class in a wealthy country.? We are worse than greedy; we are envious.

It’s even worse for firms.? There you have agency problems where the management often has its own goals that do not maximize profits, or their net present value, but maximize the benefits they receive.? Boards are frequently a cover for management, rather than advocates for the shareholders.

Regardless, since firms don’t maximize, the elegant math does not work. Putting it simply, if you want to understand economics better, don’t listen to economists — become a businessman.? An ordinary businessman knows more about how the world works than a neoclassical economist.

3) One of the beauties of a capitalist economy is its dynamism.? It adapts to changing needs and desires.? The variation is considerable; as an example, go through your supermarket and try to count the total number of different tomato products.? Or? look at the amazing degree of variety in a major tools catalog.? Or go to Costco, Walmart, Home Depot, Ikea, and look at the incredible variety that exists under one roof.

But that level of variety cannot be mathematically accommodated by economics.? They have to aggregate the complexity into categories, and a lot of the reality is lost in the process.? That is why I distrust? many economic aggregates, such as inflation, GDP, etc.? Politicians find “economists” to suit their political ends, and they come up with complex reasoning for why measured inflation is higher than it should be, inequality is rising, etc.? You can find an economic advocate for almost anything.

Macroeconomics

4) Because of the aggregation problem, the link between microeconomics and macroeconomics is made weak, especially since utility cannot be compared across any two people, and yet the economists mumble, and implicitly do it anyway.

5) At least with microeconomics, we can agree that demand falls as prices rise, and supply rises as prices rise.? But with macroeconomics, there is little agreement as to whether a given policy aids real growth or not.? Modern neoclassical economics is to me a bunch of sorcerer’s apprentices playing around with very large and crude tools that they think can affect the economy, only to find the results are not what they expect.? Somewhere, economists got the naive idea that they could eliminate the boom-bust cycle, only to find that by eliminating minor busts, they set up the conditions for growth in indebtedness, leading to a huge bust.? Far better to be McChesney Martin, or Volcker, who let recessions do their work, than slaves of the government who did not — Burns, Miller, Greenspan or Bernanke.

Take inflation as an example.? Does printing more money, or creating more credit boost asset prices, product & services prices, both, or neither?? The answer to this is not clear.? The Fed has taken many actions over the past 30 years, using a model that assumes tight relationships between short interest rates and inflation/ labor unemployment.? The evidence for these relationships are not evident, except at the extremes.

6) The idea that running deficits to “stimulate” the economy is questionable.? Debts have to be paid back, repudiated or inflated away, any one of which would make business and consumers less confident.? Further, the way the the money is spent makes a great deal of difference.? Much government spending inhibits or does not help economic growth; think of the complexity of the tax code — a recipe for wasted time, and unneeded social enginerring.? Some government spending does aid economic growth, where it lowers the costs of consumption or production — critical infrastructure projects, etc.? But those are rare.? If it were really needed, lower level governments or private industry would do it.

The thing is, most of the deficit spending has not been useful; there’s no economic reason to run such large deficits.? If we were rebuilding all of our aging infrastructure, that would be one thing, but the crazy quilt of tax breaks and subsidies affects behavior, but does not compound and aid growth.

7) We need to admit that culture is not a neutral matter.? Some cultures will have faster economic growth, and others will be slower.? There is no universal culture, no generic economic man.? Some cultures are more enterprising than others.? That has a big impact on growth quite apart from resources, population, education, etc.

8 ) Whether the money is tied to gold or fiat, banking must be tightly regulated.? Solvency of all financial institutions should be tightly regulated.? With financials risks arise when the is too much leverage, and too much leverage that is layered.? Things should be structured such that there is no possibility of dominoes knocking over other dominoes.

  • Limit leverage
  • Increase liquidity of assets vs liabilities
  • Forbid lending to/investing in other financials
  • Derivatives should be regulated as insurance, insurable interest must exist, which means that bona fide hedgers must initiate all transactions.

On Finance

9) The first thing to realize is that a mean-variance model for investments is loopy.? First, we can’t estimate the mean or the variance, much less the covariance terms.? There is also good evidence that variances are infinite, or close to it.? Thus the concept of an efficient frontier is bogus.? Far better to try to estimate crudely the likely forward returns on a cash flow basis, the way a businessman would, and weakly factor in the uncertainty of the forecasts.

10) Thus, beta is not risk, and volatility is not risk.? At least at present, until the low volatility funds get too big, there seems to be an anomaly where low volatility equity investing beats high volatility equity investing.? This is consistent with my theory that the relationship of risk and return is non-linear.? Taking no risk brings no return; taking moderate risk brings decent return; taking high risks brings low returns.? There is a sweet spot of prudent risk-taking that brings the best returns on average.

11) Multiple-player game theory indicates that to win, you assemble a coalition with more than 50% of all of the power, and you get disproportionate benefits.? Think about the poor buyer of a home in 2006, going into the closing with the deck staked against him.? Or think about forced arbitration of disputes on Wall Street, where the investors rarely win.

Complexity is not the friend of most ordinary economic actors.? Avoid it where you can.

12) Capital structure does matter; it is not irrelevant like Modigliani and Miller said.? Companies with low leverage tend to return more than companies with high leverage.? There are real costs to being in distress or near distress.

13) Markets can have non-linear feedback loops, like in October 1987, or the “Flash Crash.”? Markets are not inherently stable, and that is a good thing.? Instability shakes out weak players that are relying on a shaky funding base, leaving behind stronger players who understand risk.? It is not wise to try to eliminate the possibility of disasters occurring.? When you do that, pressures build up, and something worse occurs.? Better to let the market be free, and let stupid speculators get burned, so long as they aren’t regulated financial companies.

Ethics matters

14) Economics would be more valuable if it focused what is right, rather than what is “efficient.”? I know there will be differences of opinion here, but a discipline that focused on explicit and implicit fraud could be far more valuable than men who don’t have good models for:

  • Inflation
  • Asset Allocation
  • GDP
  • Unemployment
  • and more

Imagine applying all of that intelligence to fair dealing in economic relationships, rather than vainly trying to stimulate the economy, and accomplishing nothing good.? It would be like the CFA Institute applied to the economy as a whole.

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 4

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 4

1??????? Any specific stock, bond, industry, country, or asset picks that you feel strongly about?

I like:

  • The P&C insurance & reinsurance industries — they are very good at compounding earnings, especially the ones that are good underwriters, conservatively reserved, and shareholder focused over the long haul.
  • Selected energy and information technology stocks, so long as the valuations are inexpensive.
  • RGA, National Western Life, Stancorp Financial, AFLAC, and Industrias Bachoco SA
  • Emerging market bonds — their policies are mainly more orthodox than the developed world, for now.

2??????? What strategies do you use to determine if a company is worth a deeper look into, in the first five minutes?

There is this article: GE Does Not Bring Good Things For Your Life. If you have a Bloomberg Terminal, that is a useful article.

But even if not, the five-minute drill is easy:

  • Look at price to expected earnings. ?Look at past earnings.
  • Look at indebtedness and goodwill. ?Ask: is this a stable industry? ?Does the goodwill represent anything valuable, some barrier against competition?
  • Compare cash flow from operations versus earnings. ?An excess is usually better.
  • Look at price-to-book for financials and price-to-sales for utilities and industrials — lower is better.
  • Ask yourself if this is an industry with increasing, stable, or decreasing pricing power.
  • Look at whether the share count is rising or falling. ?Falling is better.
  • Does it pay a dividend? ?Yes is better.

Beyond this, for corporate bonds, I have a similar arrangement. ?And I call that the one-minute drill, because in institutional fixed income, you have to be fast when the market is hot.

3??????? What have been valuable resources that you would recommend to up-and-coming investors?

Look through the book reviews that I have written — there are almost 200 of them. ?I have read a lot of books by eminent value investors, bond investors, growth investors, alternative asset managers — you name it, I have read a lot of investment books.

But let’s add in another question:

4??????? What advice would you give to a student who wants to start investing but has not prior knowledge?

My friend Niall O’Malley gave a good answer to this when he said create two lists of stocks — one that you think will do well, and one that you think will do badly. ?Then track them, and learn from the companies that violate your expectations.

My answer would be more plebian — paper trade. ?I did that in my early 20s, long before I had money to invest. ?I came close to winning the Value Line contest in the mid-80s.

But the biggest thing is making a commitment to improve your investment knowledge. ?When I was 26, I said that I would spend one hour per day, except Sundays, to improve my investment knowledge. ?I went all over the map. ?I read practical stuff. ?I read academic stuff. ?I read stuff on stocks. ?I read stuff on bonds. ?I read stuff on industries, sectors, companies, etc. ?I read stuff on management, operations, financial management. ?I read, read, and read.

Investing requires continual self-education. ?Read and learn and profit.

Final episode tomorrow.

Full disclosure: Long RGA, NWLI, SFG, AFL, IBA

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 3

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 3

More questions not asked:

1??????? Give us your thoughts on which emerging markets are stars and which are dogs? Will developed outperform developing?

I like emerging markets debt but not the equity.? Governance standards are not up to snuff, but the emerging market governments are running better economic policies than most of the developed countries.

As an aside, a pox on those that use the term BRIC.? Brazil, Russia, India, and China are very different countries with very different problems.? Aside from the fact that they are big, there is no reason to class them together.

2??????? What are some alternative assets that might be helpful in building out a diversified portfolio and reducing correlation?

Most “alternative assets” are not helpful.? Keep things simple.? If you have to do alternatives, look for things that few are doing.? Those are real alternatives.

Hedge funds and Private Equity are no longer alternative for big investors.? Their returns are highly correlated with stocks and other risk assets.

It is also useful to remember that reducing correlation during the bull phase of the market has little to do with what happens in the bear phase of the market, where all risk assets trade as a group, and the former correlations don’t hold.

Correlation is not a useful concept in investing.? It needs to be abandoned, because it is not stable.

3??????? What would be a good criterion for determining which asset classes to include in your portfolio and how to allocate these classes relative to each other?

Divide the portfolio into safe assets and risk assets.? Ask what your normal allocation to each would be, and then look at valuations, and adjust to where there is relative advantage.? Invest more in what is relatively cheap.

4??????? How will the abundance of cheap Natural Gas be used between the competing interests of Big Oil (Export) and Big Chemical (Use internally to make cheap chemicals)?

To the degree that chemical plants are near the places where natural gas and tight oil are produced, they will have cheap feedstocks.? But if the ability to export oil and LNG is expanded, it may not mean so much to the chemical companies, because they will have to pay the global price, net of transportation cost differentials.

5??????? How will the new health care changes affect and the regular person and how will it affect companies such as: hospitals, insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies?

Time to be controversial.? I think the PPACA [Obamacare] was not designed to provide better healthcare, and certainly not to lower costs, but to destroy the existing healthcare system that worked well, to force the US into socializing healthcare.

It is raising costs dramatically already.? We would be a lot better off dropping the tax deduction for employee healthcare, and moving the healthcare system to a first-party payer system, where stop-losses would kick in at 50% of income.? We need to end the idea that healthcare is a right.

6??????? Why do you believe that tech companies like Apple and Google have started manufacturing some of their devices in the USA?

Wages in China have risen relative to productivity, to the point where the US is competitive, and what is manufactured in the US is higher quality than what is manufactured in China.? There is a greater degree of control manufacturing here.

7??????? How does the downgrade of U.S?s credit and the increase in the U.S deficit impact U.S-China relations and trade?

There is no effect.? Better you should look at Fitch’s downgrade of China, and Moody’s moving China from a positive outlook to a stable outlook.? China is in far worse shape than the US.? As it is, the government deficit in the US is troublesome, but the trade deficit is narrowing.? That said, foreigners still want to buy US bonds.? The US is in much better shape than China.? Think of Japan in 1989, or the USSR in the late 1960s: that is China.

8??????? What is the future of corporate governance for the emerging markets and what advantages or disadvantages have local companies faced through this lack of corporate governance?

There are only disadvantages here.? Good governance would mimic US standards.? Much as we deride them, they are the best game in town.? If I were in a policymaking position, I would eliminate Sarbox, and Dodd-Frank.? Sarbox killed foreign listings in the US.? I would rather have more potential fraud, because I will not get harmed, while foolish people will get harmed.? As for Dodd-Frank, it aims a blunderbuss at a problem that requires a sniper rifle.? The main thing needed is to change capital standards at banks, and make them hold more liquid assets, which will kill ROEs.

Coming from the life insurance industry, where ROEs are lower, I would say to the banks, “Get used to lower ROEs. You took too much risk in the past.”

Back to corporate governance, the US has a Protestant culture in many ways, though it is badly warped.? Other nations do not culturally agree with the ideas of the US, and so control investors have greater advantages in emerging markets versus outside passive minority investors.

More to come…

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 2

At the Towson University Investment Group?s International Market Summit, Part 2

Here are some questions submitted in writing that did not get asked. ?Here are some questions & answers:

1??????? What do you make of the move towards energy independence in America and what are some benefits that accommodate it?

Any innovation that lowers costs is a good thing. ?Energy independence is a a shibboleth that many bow to but is meaningless, absent embargoes or war.

The important thing is to deregulate exports of energy from the US, so that it can be done freely, allowing energy companies the ability to send crude oil and LNG to the places that value it the most. ?We also need to permit pipelines, and ignore the shortsighted environmentalists who don’t realize that pipelines minimize pollution relative to rail.

There will be some benefit to other US industries, which will get cheap energy because they don’t have high energy transport costs.

2??????? You can argue that we are in the midst of a bond bubble.? What are the implications on markets in the event this bubble bursts?

We aren’t in a bond bubble, at least not yet. ?Bubbles are typically asset-liability mismatches, where long assets are financed short. ?For a bond bubble to pop, you need the short financing rate to rise above the yield of the long bonds being financed. ?In more plebeian terms, you need the yield curve to invert. ?Bubbles pop when investors have to feed the asset in order to hold the position, and that never lasts long.

3??????? What are some risks of the global stimulus taking place?

We are involved in a?colossal?”race to the bottom.” ?Those with low exchange rates can temporarily stimulate their own economy, until another major country devalues their currency. ?The main risk is stagflation. ?Little growth, and depreciation of purchasing power. ?Personally, I would have preferred a deeper recession that eliminated bad debts.

4??????? How big of a risk is the European Union and Euro instability given the unprecedented circumstances in Cyprus where depositor monies are at risk?

The risk is big. ?Why should anyone hold money in a non-core Eurozone bank? ?Better to put it under your mattress where it can’t be confiscated.

Cyprus demonstrated that a Euro is not a Euro; value depends on where the Euro is. ?Far better to have many predictable currencies than a single unpredictable currency.

The Cyprus experience teaches two main lessons to those in stressed nations:

a) The deposit guarantees mean nothing.

b) Your money has a safer home buried in your yard.

You don’t want that to be the case. ?Runs on banks in weak nations compound all the other problems. ?Why help create the conditions of the Great Depression?

5??????? What do you make of the transparency (or lack thereof) in China? How big of a threat does this pose to investors and companies that do business in China?

Regardless of how cheap an asset is, you never trade away transparency. ?If you don’t understand an asset, you will never be able to trade it properly. ?It is a huge threat; avoid situations like this.

As an aside, China does not have the “rule of law.” ?They have “rule by law.” ?The distinction is significant, because under “rule of law” the government is subject to the law. ?Under “rule by law” the government controls the legal process. ?You are only as safe as your government connections are strong, and that is not very reliable as a foreigner.

6??????? With the suggestions from the president to increase the minimum wage, what are some of the effects that it might have on unemployment, foreign and business investment, and the market in general?

7??????? Should state minimum wages be tied the federal minimum wage and will the change in minimum wage at the federal level have any effect on states since they are not tied to federal minimum wage law?

You can’t get something for nothing. ?Any government intervention changing a price will have less impact than commonly believed. ?The free market should regulate wages, not the government.

But away from that, many corporations are penny wise, pound foolish. ?There are virtues in paying your employees an above-market wage where you:

  1. Train them
  2. Instill loyalty
  3. Make them part of the decision-making process
  4. Give them a sense of ownership, and offer profit-based bonuses.

If you pay your employees the minimum, expect minimum or worse efforts. ?Pilferage often comes from employees who realize their efforts are not appreciated.

I suspect this will go 2-3 more pieces. ?I hope you enjoy them.

At the Towson University Investment Group’s International Market Summit, Part 1

At the Towson University Investment Group’s International Market Summit, Part 1

Hello. ?My busy time is over, and I am back to live blogging. ?On Tuesday evening, I was one of five speakers at the?Towson University Investment Group’s International Market Summit. ?It was a fun time. ?Before I came, there was a list of 29 questions we could be asked, in addition to Q&A. ?As it was we were asked 6 of the questions in the main period, and 2 more in the Q&A.

I told the students at Towson that I would post a bunch of links to my blog for the questions asked that I have already answered. ?I will probably do a second post for the questions I am competent to answer that did not get asked.

Anyway, here goes:

1??????? Give us a short summary of things that keep you up at night and worry you in today?s markets.

Too Many Par Claims versus Sub-Par Assets

2??????? How big of an impact do you see the unwinding of QE having on the US and global economy?? In the event of inflation, how will markets react?

Easy in, Hard out

3??????? Give us some insight on how you behaviorally reduce the impact that a volatile market has on your investing strategy?

The Portfolio Rules Work Together?Rules 7 & 8 are particularly important for knowing when to sell.

4??????? Provide some tips to young investors starting out looking for both career and investment advice.

How Do I Find a Job in Finance?

How Do I Find a Job in Finance? (Part 2)

5??????? Should the current monetary policy of increasing the money supply be continued?

No. We should take losses and let the system reset. ?Get the government out of the macroeconomics business.

http://alephblog.com/?s=Queasing

6??????? Do you believe that High Frequency trading helps add liquidity in the market or that it distorts the market.

23,401 Auctions

391 Auctions

Other useful stuff that we discussed:

Buffett?s Career in Less Than 1000 Words

How to Become Super-Rich?

Hit the ?Defer? Button, Thanks?

Winding Down the Eurozone

Aim for the Middle

That’s all for now. ?I will follow this up, answering most of the questions not asked at the?Towson University Investment Group’s International Market Summit.

More to come…

Theme: Overlay by Kaira