Stock Buybacks vs Dividends vs Reinvestment

Stock Buybacks vs Dividends vs Reinvestment

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Buffett’s Career in Less Than 1000 Words

Buffett’s Career in Less Than 1000 Words

This post is at the behest of my friend Tom Brakke of The Research Puzzle.? It is meant to briefly describe how Warren Buffett’s investing changed over the years.

Compounding Capital

The basic idea of Warren Buffett’s investing is simple.? Try to compound your capital at the fastest rate consistent with a margin of safety.? That margin of safety might be a strong balance sheet, or it might be a product with high gross margins that faces little competition.? But compound capital over the long haul.? Do it, whether it is public or private investing.? Do it, regardless of the form of the asset.? Do it, if you have to change in midstream from being an asset manager, to being the manager of an investment-oriented conglomerate.

Those are themes I will explore in this essay, but who can explain Buffett well in less than 1000 words?

Buying Cigar Butts

Ben Graham had a huge influence on Buffett, but Buffett was his own man.? He had made money in many ways prior to working for Graham/Newman — he was a very driven, determined man.? But buying dud companies where the price was far lower than what the net assets were worth was a simple strategy that few followed.? It had great returns from the mid-30s to mid-60s or so.

Why? The Great Depression left the stock market in disarray, and convinced a generation not to touch stocks; they were not able to be analyzed.? So a few enterprising men analyzed and made a lot of money.

After Graham-Newman folded in 1956, Buffett started his own investing partnerships, which he eventually consolidated into one partnership in

But there were limits to this exercise.? Companies were sold for a profit, and the number of companies selling at bargain basement prices shrank dramatically.? Ben Graham folded; Warren Buffett adapted.

End of Buffett Partnership

Buffett ended his investment partnership as opportunities declined, and distributed out the shares to holders around 1969.? After a little delay, he consolidated his holdings under Berkshire Hathaway.? This was a significant move because now Buffett was running a business as an investor.? He had permanent capital, and could use it were he thought best.? Berkshire Hathaway itself was a failing textile producer.? In hindsight Buffett was too kind, and gave it too many chances, it would have been better to shut down the textile company earlier.

Textile Company to Insurance/Conglomerate Holding Company

Buffett discovered insurance early, through GEICO in 1952, and then through Berkshire Hathaway bought insurance companies which became the bedrock of the company, including buying 50% GEICO in 1974 to rescue it.? This would provide the capacity to finance/leverage investment insights.

Influence of Charlie Munger (Growth/Moat)

His friendship with Charlie Munger began in 1959, and he affected the way Buffett thought about investing.? Companies that had protected boundaries, or, sustainable competitive advantages deserved a premium valuation.? That insight began to free Buffett from the Cigar Butts, i. e., dud companies that have no growth potential, only sellout potential.? Such businesses could be bought in whole or in part, but they had to possess a durable advantage.? This would play a role as Buffett wold buy Coke, Capital Cities, American Express, Wells Fargo, and many other high quality businesses.

Willing to work Public or Private, and increasingly Private

Though Buffett was known in the 70s and 80s as a public equity manager inside a public company, he increasingly bought private companies like:

  • See’s Candies
  • Fecheimer
  • Kirby
  • Nebraska Furniture Mart
  • Borsheim’s
  • Scott Fetzer
  • World Book (no one is perfect)
  • Buffalo News (who could have predicted the Internet?)

This changed his view of what he was up to, and made him willing to run an abnormal conglomerate, one that would operate on a disaggregated basis.? Buffett would take the free cash flow from controlled companies, and the dividends from partially owned companies an reinvest them in the areas he thought had the most promise.

Scale rules out Arbitrage / Distressed Debt / Small Cap Equities / not Derivatives

Over time, Buffett invested in many ways, doing deal arbitrage, buying distressed debt, and buying small cap companies.? As time went on he had to abandon these for two reasons: he had too much capital to put to work, and competition increased, driving returns down.

Derivatives were different, Buffett was willing to take bets during times of economic stress so long as he did not have to post margin.? He took bullish bets on US Credit and Global Equities.? Much as he criticized derivatives as gambling, he was willing to take an intelligent bet where his downside was limited.

Buying companies with no auction / Tuck-in acquisitions

Buffett became the home for men who wanted to sell their companies, but preserve the culture.? Buffett didn’t pay the highest price, but he did not interfere with the new subsidiaries.

His subsidiary companies would do little tuck-in acquisitions that would further the vitality of BRK, without spending a lot.

Increasing Insurance Scale

And over time, bought all of GEICO, Gen Re, and many other smaller insurers.? Supposedly, at one point, Hank Greenberg said to Buffett, “Call me when you have a real insurance company!”? The two were frenemies for some time.? But today, the show is on the other foot — the largest insurer in the US in BRK.

The increased scale of insurance provided all the more capital to finance Buffett’s asset buys.? The underwriting discipline provided additional profits.

Opportunistic Provider of Capital

During the crisis in 2008-9, Buffett provided capital to well-regarded companies like GE and Goldman Sachs.? He was ready for odd opportunities like Burlington Northern, Lubrizol, and Heinz.

He was also willing to change his view on buying back shares, setting a line in the sand where he would but back shares, rather than doing a dividend.

Conglomerate Manager

Buffett never intended to run a conglomerate, but that is what he did, and did it very well, much like Henry Singleton, who was another compounder.

That’s what he does now.? There it is, in less than 1000 words.

On Stock versus Flow Measures in Valuation

On Stock versus Flow Measures in Valuation

In valuing companies or indexes, one must look at the earnings or cash flow statements, and the balance sheet.? The former are flow measures, measuring performance over a period, versus the balance sheet which attempts to measure the value of the company on an amortized cost basis (with varying accuracy).

There are advantages to each method.? My view of it is over the short-run, flow measures are the most meaningful.? Over the long-run stock measures are the most meaningful, because over the long run the returns from assets or net worth are more regular than those versus other flow measures.

That is why I focus on longer term valuation measures among short-term valuation measures that are neutral at best at present,? Mean-reversion eventually takes hold.

A Letter to Warren

A Letter to Warren

[Address]

[Phone]

1 March 2013

Dear Mr. Buffett,

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

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

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

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

Sincerely,

David J. Merkel, CFA

Principal, Aleph Investments

Writer at the Aleph Blog

And the deservedly terse handwritten response:

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

Warren

My Thoughts

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

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

Company Name State of Domicile NAIC Number
CALIFORNIA INSURANCE COMPANY CA

38865

COMMERCIAL CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY CA

32280

CYPRESS INSURANCE COMPANY CA

10855

FINIAL REINSURANCE COMPANY CT

39136

GENERAL RE LIFE CORPORATION CT

86258

GENESIS INSURANCE COMPANY CT

38962

IDEALIFE INSURANCE COMPANY CT

97764

NATIONAL LIABILITY & FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY CT

20052

AMERICAN CENTENNIAL INSURANCE COMPANY DE

10391

GENERAL REINSURANCE CORPORATION DE

22039

GENERAL STAR NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY DE

11967

APPLIED UNDERWRITERS CAPTIVE RISK ASSURANCE COMPANY, INC. IA

14144

CONTINENTAL INDEMNITY COMPANY IA

28258

ILLINOIS INSURANCE COMPANY IA

35246

MEDICAL PROTECTIVE COMPANY (THE) IN

11843

GEICO CASUALTY COMPANY MD

41491

GEICO GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY MD

35882

GEICO INDEMNITY COMPANY MD

22055

GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES INSURANCE COMPANY MD

22063

SEAWORTHY INSURANCE COMPANY MD

37923

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESTATE INSURANCE COMPANY NE

20044

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEBRASKA NE

62345

CENTRAL STATES INDEMNITY CO. OF OMAHA NE

34274

COLUMBIA INSURANCE COMPANY NE

27812

CSI LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY NE

82880

NATIONAL INDEMNITY COMPANY NE

20087

OAK RIVER INSURANCE COMPANY NE

34630

REDWOOD FIRE AND CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY NE

11673

STONEWALL INSURANCE COMPANY NE

22276

ATLANTA INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY NY

20931

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY ASSURANCE CORPORATION NY

13070

UNIONE ITALIANA REINSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA, INC. NY

36048

AMGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

42390

EASTGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

14702

NORGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY PA

31470

PHILADELPHIA REINSURANCE CORPORATION PA

12319

UNITED STATES LIABILITY INSURANCE COMPANY PA

25895

How do you get the data in this case?

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

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

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

3) I could ask my readers for ideas.

Why would anyone care about this?

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

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

Anyway…

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

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

Full disclosure: long BRK/B

Most Large Acquisitions Are Errors

Most Large Acquisitions Are Errors

Hubris:? “We can do it better than [the target company].? With additional scale, we will be able to gain operating efficiencies and marketing opportunities. We will be a big company in our industry, and we will control our own destiny.”

So some CEOs think.? It is easy to propose a large merger, wave your hands at the details, and the deal takes on a life of its own.? But large deals:

  • Attract competition.? If a large piece of market share is up for grabs, many will try to grab it.? Premiums to get a large deal are often uneconomic, akin to the guy who shows of a jar of nickels? in a crowded room, and invites people to bid for it.? He never clears less than a 20% profit on the jar.
  • Have to meld two different cultures.? This is not trivial.
  • Have to meld two different information technology departments.? Also not trivial.
  • Have synergies and cost savings that are often overestimated.
  • Face greater scrutiny from the government, which slows things down, and results in greater restrictions on the combined enterprise.
  • Have a CEO that will be severed, and he will require handsome compensation to go. Sadly, the remaining CEO will get a pay boost, after all, he is running a bigger company.
  • Run into the problem of Too Big To Manage.? This may not apply to large energy companies, because they are relatively simple, but with most other companies with market caps over $100 billion, performance deteriorates.? It is difficult to keep incentives sharp for employees and managers.
  • Have a buyer who may not appreciate some strengths of the target company.? In two insurance acquisitions, I saw the acquirer throw away valuable divisions that they could not understand, firing people more talented than the acquirer was.? At least they should have sold the division to someone else.
  • Generates goodwill, which makes the company harder to analyze, an lowering its valuation versus book.

That’s why I don’t buy companies that do scale acquisitions.? They tend to flounder and lose money.

But I do buy companies that do tuck-in acquisitions.? Tuck-in acquisitions are buying a little company that adds:

  • A new technology
  • A new marketing channel
  • A new product or service

Which is complementary to their existing business, and they will grow it organically.? With a tuck-in, the competition is less, integration issues are less, almost every difficulty versus large acquisitions are less.? Prices are low.

One use of free cash flow is acquisitions.? Companies that focus on small acquisitions and organic growth use free cash flow wisely.? Large acquisitions overpay to buy a trophy asset that the acquirer may unintentionally destroy.? Avoid such acquisitive companies.? The company? may grow, but the stock price likely will not.

A Bond Deal Requiring Caution, Completed

A Bond Deal Requiring Caution, Completed

A friend of mine told me the price talk for the Fidelity?& Guaranty Life Holdings, Inc. bonds was 6.5%, but yield lust must have prevailed, because the coupon was 6.375% when the deal closed.? Almost all corporate bonds are priced at a slight discount, so the actual deal yield may have been higher.

So much for my warning.? Anyway, here is the press release:

Harbinger Group Inc. Announces Pricing of Fidelity & Guaranty Life Holdings, Inc.?s $300 Million Senior Notes

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Harbinger Group Inc. (?HGI?; NYSE: HRG), announced today that its wholly-owned subsidiary, Fidelity?& Guaranty Life Holdings, Inc. (?FGL?), priced an offering of $300.0 million aggregate principal amount of its 6.375% senior notes due 2021. The notes were priced at par with a coupon of 6.375%. The notes will mature on April 1, 2021. The offering is expected to close on or about March?27, 2013. FGL expects to use the net proceeds from the issuance of the notes for general corporate purposes, to support the growth of its subsidiary life insurance company and to pay a dividend to HGI.

The notes were offered to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the ?Securities Act?) and to persons outside the United States under Regulation S of the Securities Act.

I got one thing wrong in my initial piece, domestic retail investors could not buy it — it was a 144A deal.? That said, if it has registration rights, it could be resold to retail in the future.

If anyone buying the bonds is reading me, let me suggest a swap for you, while the market is still liquid.? Sell this bond and swap it for the recently issued subordinated bonds of The Hanover Insurance Group.

The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. (THG) announced that it has priced a registered offering of $175 million of subordinated debentures due March 30, 2053 with a coupon of 6.35%, and redeemable in whole or in part after March 30, 2018 at a redemption price equal to their principal amount. ?The debentures are also redeemable in whole, and not in part, before March 30, 2018 in case of specified changes in the tax or rating agency treatment of the debentures. The Hanover plans to use the net proceeds from this offering for general corporate and working capital purposes, which may include repurchases of its common stock.

The yields are almost the same but the risks are far lower on The Hanover Insurance Group’s subordinated debt.? There is no complexity here.? The structure is simple.? It’s a short duration P&C company that has not lost money for the last seven years.? FGLHI may be improved from the past, but it had a really bad past.? Improvement might not be enough for FGLHI.

Risk Summary: Sell complexity, buy simplicity.? Pick up rating. Add duration, drop convexity. Take on the risks of a smaller deal.

I would do this trade in a heartbeat.? It’s not perfect, but I prefer simpler bonds to more complex bonds, unless I am one of the few that understands the complexity.

Full disclosure: I am long the common stock of THG

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Pettis / China

 

  • Modified Pettis: Peripheral country depositors will remember Cyprus & it will affect their future credibility w/deposit guarantees $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Pettis: the idea that urbanization creates growth may have the causality backwards. It is far more likely that growth causes urbanization $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Parsing the Words of the New Premier http://t.co/KggvVUZ0bf Li Keqiang: We need to leave to the market and society what they can do well $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Closer Look: Parsing the Words of the New Premier – http://t.co/8LIiTxxqi0 Previous quote taken from Pettis, led me to this article $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Li Keqiang: The reform is about curbing government power. As a self-imposed revolution, it will require real sacrifice and will be painful $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Pettis: It turns out that we?ve seen record growth in debt. Is it really a surprise then that [China’s] economy is still growing quickly? Mar 22, 2013
  • Pettis:It isn?t until you write down the debt associated with the second bridge that you end up with a more meaningful measure of GDP. (3/3) Mar 22, 2013
  • official measures will have them contributing the same amount to GDP, even though the former creates real value & the latter does not (2/2) Mar 22, 2013
  • Pettis: If you spend $100 million each on two separate bridges, one of which is actively used and the other rarely used, (1/2) Mar 22, 2013
  • Biggest Solar Collapse in China Imperils $1.28 Billion http://t.co/yYgYpSpjAv Even w/subsidies solar is an inefficient technology $$ #duh Mar 21, 2013

 

FOMC

 

  • FED Optimistic Forecasts… http://t.co/MjilXrTSX1 The FOMC is always overoptimistic; they consider that 2b a part of their jobs $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Wrong:US economy needs a third term of Ben Bernanke http://t.co/fStUDLjy7g A lunatic praises a dangerous lunatic leading US 2 Stagflation $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • That’s all folks! #FOMC $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for Year end Fed Funds forecast: 2013 0.29%, 2014 0.55%, 2015 1.30%, Long run 4.01% $$ #FOMC Who can tell? Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency 4 PCE inflation fcst since December 2012: 2013 1.55%, 2014 1.75%, 2015 1.93%, Long run 2.00% $$ #FOMC Way 2 optimistic Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency Unemployment rt fcst since December 2012: 2013 7.35%, 2014 6.77%, 2015 6.20%, Long run 5.57% $$ #FOMC Way 2 optimistic Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency for real GDP since December 2012: 2013 2.53%, 2014 3.17%, 2015 3.25%, Long run 2.43% $$ #FOMC Too optimistic 2014-5 Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency Change in Fed Funds fcst since December 2012: 2013 -0.11%, 2014 -0.05%, 2015 -0.11%, Long run -.03% $$ #FOMC Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Change in Appropriate Timing of Policy Firming fcst since December 2012: 2.49 yrs, which shortens by 3.4 months $$ #FOMC Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency Change in PCE inflation fcst since December 2012: 2013 -0.20%, 2014 -0.03%, 2015 -0.01%, Long run no change $$ #FOMC Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency Change in Unemployment rate fcst since December 2012: 2013 -0.13%, 2014 -0.15%, 2015 -0.08%, Long run -0.03% $$ #FOMC Mar 20, 2013
  • FOMC Central Tendency Change in real GDP since December 2012: 2013 -0.10%, 2014 -0.32%, 2015 -0.13%, Long run -0.03% $$ #FOMC Mar 20, 2013
  • I am shocked that the Fed doesn’t have estimates on deposit insurance subsidies. That’s either a lie, or they should have that estimate $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • @pdacosta Good questions on Cyprus & deposit insurance subsidies $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Go Pedro! Mar 20, 2013
  • Federal Reserve, Expected to Continue Stimulus, Tries to Reassure Investors http://t.co/DuoAg3hYTv Doing the same, expecting different $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Bernanke Tightens Hold on Fed Message Against Hawks http://t.co/JyGTM0gP1f Wondered when this would happen; naive academic focuses power $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Insights from Former Fed Chairmen http://t.co/q3RbM7sm9e Greenspan, meh. Volcker says some interesting things regarding removing stimulus $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Fed’s Fisher: Too-big-to-fail banks are crony capitalists http://t.co/t65lN4kaaU Break them up & eliminate their funding advantages $$ Mar 16, 2013

?

Companies & Industries

 

  • Proto Labs seeks 1st acquisition shuns 3D printing http://t.co/56KeW8j4In Instead of creating by layers, start w/a block & cut away $$ $PRLB Mar 22, 2013
  • Old Tech Stocks, New Value: Santoli http://t.co/jfDtkOAwwX Tough part: estimating moat & probability of obsolescence, margin of safety $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Health Insurers Warn on Premiums http://t.co/zzZI2s1s2h Wrote about this b4 law was passed. Was accused of bias $$ http://t.co/WCECEQYuns Mar 22, 2013
  • Plywood Becomes Hot Item in Housing Recovery http://t.co/2LMfLI43L1 4 confirmation, look here: http://t.co/HbnVnGdJmO Plywood on fire $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • As Crop Prices Surge, Investment Firms and Farmers Vie for Land http://t.co/B1ESXEnefd Presence of a large amount of borrowed $$ = bubble Mar 22, 2013
  • Intuitive Robosurgery Training Seen Lacking in Lawsuits http://t.co/VgyqOZqLMD Accidents r common & significant training of MDs needed $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Gold Giants Shrink to Fit as Paulson Pushes Breakup http://t.co/9yXUb9Z11s Miners tend 2 overpay for marginal mines w/high variable costs $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Americans Cut Restaurant Spending as Taxes Bite http://t.co/VAZELXMwM2 Less $$ available for small luxuries like eating out. Mar 20, 2013
  • Electronic Arts Ousts CEO as New Game Consoles Await http://t.co/QMDjN8uZmN Game systems shift away from use of PCs; $EA doesn’t adjust $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • Revealed: The Fragility of US Wireless Customer Loyalty http://t.co/j8U5wZ9GvT May be few choices, but wireless customers r not sticky $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Corporate Cash Piles Grow to Record $1.45 Trillion, Moody?s Says http://t.co/0M84CE0tRi How much is domestic & not held 4 margin $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Intermediate hold co debt has none of the protections of sr unsec parent co debt, or operating subsidiary debt. Not worth risks, avoid $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • $HRG Announces Debt Offering by F&G Life Hldgs http://t.co/APQvmAECv3 Total desperation w/intermediate holdco debt; Avoid, avoid, avoid $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Private Equity?s $36B Retail Bet Not Going So Well http://t.co/xdQ9NzdAPs Retail does not work well w/leverage aside from mortgage debt $$ Mar 16, 2013

 

Cyprus

 

  • It?s Up to Putin Now: Cyprus Looks to Russia For Love?and Money http://t.co/CJdlAmyM5A Many Russians would lose $$ in Cypriot Bank default Mar 22, 2013
  • Just Let the Troubled Banks in Cyprus Fail http://t.co/0lSyyTjWIJ @carney gets it right. Protect small deposits, wipe out equity, etc. $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • ECB May Cut Emergency Funding to Cypriot Banks after Refusal http://t.co/jssqb7og4u If Cyprus’ banks fail, will anything else fail? $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Cyprus banks dwarf economy thanks 2funds from wealthy foreigners http://t.co/GbElR3bcTP Countries w/large financial sectors tend 2b risky $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • BlackRock CEO Fink Says Cyprus Instability Will Be Resolved http://t.co/E3RYIDQENi The politics r pretty toxic; time 2end euro experiment $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Outcry over Cyprus bailout taxing bank accounts http://t.co/kQ7DJgUN7P If it can happen in Cyprus, it can happen where you are too $$ #boo Mar 20, 2013
  • Daylight robbery in Cyprus will come to haunt EMU http://t.co/HsrbbJUVKk Imagine the US grabbing a portion of bank deposits in 1933 $$ #yuck Mar 20, 2013
  • Deauville Zombie Strikes as Cyprus Tax Inflames Crisis http://t.co/pkStGZyh5M Hard 2 believe confiscation of deposits wouldn’t lead 2runs $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • The Cyprus precedent @FelixSalmon http://t.co/EXBLMXj3by Taxing via confiscation doesn’t affect incentives, except the incentive 2 hide $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Cyprus: What Were They Thinking? and some other notes http://t.co/LJPQ7FRSaT Try 2tax depositors, esp Russians, trigger a bank run, great $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Cypriot authorities in revised deal talks http://t.co/f7NXFf5B9S This is getting desperate. Remember when they said subprime was small? $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Dejected official: ?If this is successful then it will be used in the future… If this is not successful then who cares about Cyprus.? $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Depositors Pay Price in Cyprus Bailout Deal http://t.co/CssNI6QUXK Imagine waking up one morning & 10% of your bank deposits r gone $$ #augh Mar 16, 2013

 

Energy

 

  • Sierra Club blasts new plan to improve fracking http://t.co/izJx8axguf Really depends on how much CO2 truly affects climate, jury is out $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Ethanol Slumps Against Gasoline on Speculation Imports to Climb http://t.co/nFGWml3HBZ Profitable to import Brazilian ethanol caps prices $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • HEARD ON THE STREET: Chevron, Shell and Big Oil’s Big Divide http://t.co/zcrclj78XS FD: + $CVX | Smart move was focusing on crude oil $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Wow, North Dakota, That?s a Lot of Oil http://t.co/NzKU4rhswH Up ~1000% in 10 years, would b more w/better transport (pipelines) $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Consumers to Pay $13B Price as Ethanol Upends Refiners http://t.co/qRr3ZnGPnB Ethanol an expensive fuel; we would not use it w/o govt req $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • Valero Cancels Sale of California Refineries http://t.co/tu1lXOLBe4 Now better 2 retain them, if cheap oil can b sent there via rail $$ $VLO Mar 19, 2013
  • Suntech Said to Get Default Notice on $541M Unpaid Bonds http://t.co/hiA8ZfvW2K Equity likely 2b wiped out, even w/some willing 2 4bear $$ Mar 17, 2013
  • Canada Wonders Why Crude Oil Is Coming From Texas http://t.co/aIKRNA7UoT This is the price of not permitting pipelines; US oil by tankers $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Three Years After the Spill, BP Gets Bullish http://t.co/owgnHfH9w5 FD: + $BP | Lots of valuable assets, but has the culture changed? $$ Mar 16, 2013

 

Financial Sector Issues

 

  • JP Morgan to Issue Its First Mortgage Bond Since 2007 http://t.co/M38KF7463e Reps & warranties weakened; harder 2 put back 2 originators $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • ?In money management what sells is the illusion of certainty.? http://t.co/iiqXAHTRZ8 @researchpuzzler comments on words of @John_Hempton $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • SumZero Honors: 14 Top Buyside Analysts http://t.co/cZRnfBQJVd @sumzero does a study of buyside analysts to find the best quietly working $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Proxy sites dump 1-click vote button on SEC concerns http://t.co/nycHC62TUa Levels the playing field a little bit; mgmt has 2 much power $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Masked by Gibberish, the Risks Run Amok http://t.co/bKvbpCRyvZ Floyd Norris can write me 4 clarity, or read this: http://t.co/bhJwuegzP5 $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Buffett Says Bet on Natural Juices of Market http://t.co/gyGA34vVMP USA is the most flexible place in the world, but stocks aren’t cheap $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • DeMarco pushes for 5-year wind down of GSEs http://t.co/aApiRMzoIK Don’t c how politics work here; pols don’t like 2 give up piggy bank $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Could gold be the next Libor scandal? | Business http://t.co/gstTm7EWQA Looks like real trades take place, so it doesn’t seem the same $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Workers Saving Too Little to Retire http://t.co/tWMYk3cpg8 I know of few people who save 20% of their incomes over 40 years $$ #prettytough Mar 19, 2013
  • Stock Bulls Get New Member of Club http://t.co/qEOMyG47WM I dunno, this makes me nervous. But 3% more upside in 2013 is no raving bull $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • Quantitative easing does little to boost gold prices http://t.co/o42EZUMk3T Gold prices react to inflation adjusted cost of carry $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Traders Short Junk-Bond ETFs as Gains Top 100%: Credit Markets http://t.co/4CmFy3ebaC Short interest = 11.5% of total outstanding shares $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Wrong: Want to Fix the Deficit? Get Real http://t.co/3fuRoKKw6S Increasing the deficit from here would worsen our long-term problems $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Boo! Derivatives, Japan, $$ demise, pension defaults, debt jubilee RT @StockTwits: Zombie Swans from Outer Space http://t.co/jcNoTTzolI #boo Mar 16, 2013
  • How to Safeguard Your 401(k) http://t.co/HRCNqz1RkJ If plan has annual match, do not count on it. Avoid employer stock; know plan rules $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Company Insiders Are Dumping Shares! Or Are They? http://t.co/D5cgLmM902 Best to look at what insiders do, not the large outside holders $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • If third-party custody fails in any significant way, i.e. bigger than what happened w/MF Global, all public investing will b ruined $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Are Your Assets Safe?No Matter What? http://t.co/vWvSVno7JC @jasonzweigwsj talks about custody; strong incentive 4 present system 2 work $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Golden State Hits Golden Age Of Bank M&A http://t.co/WLFhPq8jFC Higher capital requirements create demand for banks 2 merge in California $$ Mar 16, 2013

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Is Emerging Market Debt Undervalued? http://t.co/8hSOukeOKf I tend 2 think so, but performance so far this year has been subpar $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Bank of Japan vows ‘all means available’ to smash deflation http://t.co/AJ27okuZFZ Difficult 2 have inflation w/shrinking population $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • BRICs: a Slowing Dilemma http://t.co/furMgL5VTO The BRICs r not a natural group; very different econ, but as GWP growth slows, so do they $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • RAHN: Where will the next financial crisis begin? http://t.co/x2rBMqCJUG Numerous countries r poised 2 lead global tailspin; I pick EZone $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Spanish Banks Cut Developers as Zombies Dying http://t.co/CxRucV5Y7h Bottom not yet found for Spanish Real Estate $$ #bringoutyerdead #thud Mar 21, 2013
  • Europe?s work is far from over http://t.co/JfIY5PRW4f This is a colossal example of government management of the economy gone awry $$ #endit Mar 20, 2013
  • Canadian Household – Drowning in Debt http://t.co/XsdSDPBUn8 Canada: poster child 4 Central Bank-induced bubbles, amid good fiscal policy $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • BRICs Abandoned by Locals as Fund Outflows Reach 1996 High http://t.co/Xv4QZrNmSX Locals r throwing in the towel on stocks; time 2 buy? $$ Mar 16, 2013
  • Argentina Debates Pope’s Political Past http://t.co/FY25FtCCF2 Probably one where the truth will never b known; hard to fight a dictator $$ Mar 16, 2013

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • Stockton Creditors Face Long Odds to End City Bankruptcy http://t.co/WcEuHjJft1 Think Stockton’s gambit will lose $$ cc: @munilass Mar 22, 2013
  • Gingrich-Santorum ?Unity Ticket? Almost Toppled Romney http://t.co/8jBjvs868Q G+S-> 0+0 = -1. Romney= -2. All R candidates fatally flawed $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Getting the CIA Out of the Drone War http://t.co/kWcxz4mooN It matters less who does it, because there is no moral basis for it $$ #enditnow Mar 22, 2013
  • Mary Pat Christie Juggles Roles as Political Facilitator http://t.co/04VJb6UcbD Interesting background piece on Chris Christie’s wife $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • Postal Service Can?t Cut Saturday Delivery, GAO Says http://t.co/3BbcJ1arge Loss of Saturday would b start of end 4 USPS> less relevant $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Rotten Tomatoes for a Billion-Dollar Farm Payout http://t.co/8FMfZnvqZC Ag is doing well in the US. Time to shut down much of the Ag Dept $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • California Nonpartisan Districting Ousts Life Incumbents http://t.co/1edUiXyizM Minimize internal boundaries subject 2 law requirements $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • Army Carbine Program May Waste $1.8 Billion, Report Finds http://t.co/WQOhHRZ5Mw Another area of DoD waste. Insiders tell me -> lots more $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • The Smarter Healthcare Consumer Myth http://t.co/BSdzrzQmMu Many underinsured people do not go to see a doctor when they are sick $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • Puerto Rico slides toward insolvency http://t.co/WaOVo1dWUa Puerto Rico exists to make California look responsible & Illinois honest $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Or, as the late Bob Casey (former Governor of PA) once said, “You can’t lose if you are a pro-life Democrat.” $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • RNC Issues Scathing Analysis of GOP http://t.co/CsROwzkNxT Sounds dumb. Does not grasp the reliance of the GOP on moral issues voters $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • It’s a Lonely Quest for Land-Tax Fans, But, by George, They Press On http://t.co/yt8tPEVgjV Candidate 4 dustbin of history, dying hard $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Republicans Foil What Majority Wants by Gerrymandering http://t.co/h2gMnsO5cp I live in MD, w/Democrat Gerrymander http://t.co/9ORTUnVjo9 $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Roadkill May Reach Montana Menus Under Bill Allowing Fare http://t.co/5UsoOXeAsr Interesting 2c differences in state policies 4 roadkill $$ Mar 17, 2013
  • Obama Will Use Nixon-Era Law to Fight Climate Change http://t.co/HxRrpdoajr Expands National Environmental Policy Act to Climate Change $$ Mar 16, 2013

Other

 

  • The Beatles vs. the Taxman: A Former Manager Recalls Yesterday http://t.co/wNikAvMAdh Union of music,culture &finance cc: @reformedbroker $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • The Odd, Enduring Power of D?rer’s ‘Praying Hands’ http://t.co/QzEQsRYalP An idol 2b destroyed; far better 2 pray, regardless of hands $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • ‘The Croods’: Making the Cartoons Sing http://t.co/Pj50Vytvuo As a musician, I find this article makes me optimistic on popular music $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • ‘BioShock Infinite’: A Videmeogame With a Political Philosophy http://t.co/NzxQqrTXkM Americans r exceptional; doesn’t mean they r good $$ Mar 22, 2013
  • The Branding of ‘Liger’: Tiger Woods and Lindsey Vonn http://t.co/AW1CGnYHLh Two attractive sports stars dating? A marketing opportunity! $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Inside the Art of Handling Negative Online Reviews http://t.co/vzsenUcvjq When negative reviews come, act quickly, it could wipe you out $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Silicon Valley looks to Amy Andersen for love, at $50K a pop http://t.co/yVj37tUL9C Awkward men seeking wives need tailored personal help $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • How To Quarantine Java Like The Disease That It’s Become http://t.co/uhUcbRhFqh Sadly, I have to keep Java 4 my trading platform $$ #poison Mar 19, 2013
  • Study: Delaying marriage hurts middle-class Americans most http://t.co/ynHKcN4m4x Putting off marriage often means marriages don’t happen $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • Helmets Preventing Concussion Seen Quashed by NFL-Riddell http://t.co/FF4Gh6Viyn Long story on how conflicts of interest led2 concussions $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • With Speech, Cardinal Set Path 2 Papacy http://t.co/rDDOXEwCA2 Argued RC Church was 2 introspective, better 2b out doing good, short talk $$ Mar 17, 2013
  • The New Unmarried Moms http://t.co/1hnxyrE67R Teen pregnancy reduced, childbearing outside wedlock rising among 20-somethings $$ #bad4kids Mar 16, 2013
  • New York Is Sterilizing Its Rats. Here’s How http://t.co/qryyCDiLoK Tasty stuff for rats that renders them infertile in 4 days $$ #whoknew Mar 16, 2013

 

Replies & Retweets

 

  • Could work $$ RT @steve_hanke: @AlephBlog @carney or try a swap. Here’s how we did it in Latin America: http://t.co/fvT6V6dX9u| #Cyprus Mar 22, 2013
  • @SconsetCapital In China, if the gov’t builds two bridges in a BOGO deal, I don’t think you’d want the free one 😉 Mar 22, 2013
  • @Donald_Shekels No, not with the Asian operations Mar 22, 2013
  • @Donald_Shekels I could have said worse than I did, but I worry about getting sued. Mar 22, 2013
  • @JPDesloges You are off to a good start at Financial Iceberg. Keep it up. Mar 21, 2013
  • @agnestcrane Global Inequality is dropping, though. Global wages converging. “Rethinking Comparable Worth” http://t.co/qBWe9kxnim $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • Get well soon! RT @StockTwits: StockTwits Is presently down. Apologies for the inconvenience. We should be back up shortly. $$ Mar 21, 2013
  • @exMBB No. But title insurers had a rough time after housing bubble. Fraud drives most title insurance claims. Title insurance is complex Mar 20, 2013
  • @exMBB It’s all heavily depreciated. Not an issue. Mar 20, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: You’ve got it, Charles. Where IB is good it is very, very good, & where it is bad it is … http://t.co/o4fpUt2j66 Mar 20, 2013
  • @sleepyhungry It’s like a barrier option. Once it is breached it is over — this is only the 7th time I have done this. U made me smile Mar 20, 2013
  • Doing what their targets do RT @rcwhalen: Foreclosure Processor Prommis Holdings Files Chapter 11 http://t.co/mE30yP1gtj $$ Mar 19, 2013
  • But I think he is running out of options $$ $HRG RT @Nonrelatedsense: @AlephBlog continually amazed by Falcone. How does he do it? Mar 18, 2013
  • Extracts purchase price, retains control, kills bond buyers RT @Nonrelatedsense: continually amazed by Falcone. How does he do it? $$ Mar 18, 2013
  • I liked the photo RT @fundmyfund: @ritholtz what are you looking at in the new blog photo – a bird, a plane, or superman? Mar 18, 2013
  • RT @Royal_Arse: Mr. Merkel @AlephBlog is far more diplomatic than I in his tweet regarding pipeline construction. https://t.co/HIE2ngC4A3 Mar 16, 2013
  • @pdacosta 2 create a synthetic, u need 2 speculators: yield hog who wants a security @ a high yield, & a speculator who wants 2 short it Mar 16, 2013
  • @pdacosta If that ever had to happen, would b a crisis b/c synthetics r more numerous than organic. They can b & were created @ will. Mar 16, 2013

 

FWIW

?

  • My week on twitter: 54 retweets received, 2 new listings, 31 new followers, 58 mentions. Via: http://t.co/cPSEMLXpb8 Mar 21, 2013
  • Here’s my NCAA Bracket: http://t.co/ZK22T2bKnV #BlindfoldBracket2013 I’m no great fan of College Basketball, but I gave it a try $$ Mar 20, 2013
  • David Merkel (AlephBlog) on Twitter http://t.co/PsixuvsqiX Here’s a shout-out to my 7000th Twitter follower, Peter Saris @BMCA2461. Thanks! Mar 20, 2013

?

On Time Horizons

On Time Horizons

I wrote a piece with the same title four months ago, but this one will be different, because I want to focus on individuals, and less on institutions.? During the bull phase of market moves, people are willing to take chances.? That can take several forms:

  • Being willing to buy speculative companies
  • Lengthening the time horizon: buy-and-hold.
  • Committing to debt, or even just lessening cash reserves, to own assets like houses, cars, second homes, boats, furniture, etc.
  • Being willing to buy illiquid assets like art, private equity, hedge funds, etc.

This applies to institutions as well, because they also give into the boom-bust cycle.? They are willing to speculate in good times, and seek safety in bad times.

But for individuals, time horizons sum up asset behavior whether it is investing or buying consumer durables.? Willingness to part with cash lengthens time horizons.? Those with short time horizons hang onto cash.? But often the same people change from having a long time horizon to a short time horizon and vice-versa, and at the wrong times.

The delicious perversity of markets — they incline you to do the wrong thing at the wrong time.? Have I been taken by this?? Yes, but not as much as many, because I don’t trade much.

Optimism creates long time horizons; it simplifies thinking.? “Let the market pay your people.”? “Cash is trash.”

Pessimism creates short time horizons; it simplifies thinking.”I’m going to stick with my money market fund.”? “I will keep my savings in gold.” “I will buy long Treasuries because I want cash flows that are certain out in the future.”

Time horizons are a symptom of the bull/bear cycle.? During bull phases, people commit capital for long time periods.? During Bear phases, periods shorten to the degree that many hold only cash.

To some academics this will seem unreasonable.? People are rational, aren’t they?? They don’t regularly make bad decisions, do they?? Sorry, but with economics, the answers are no and no.? The assumption that people are rational is not proven.? A far better assumption is that people try to justify themselves, whether they succeed or not.? Winners proclaim their brilliance.? Losers blame the umpire.

Yes, people regularly make bad decisions, and those brighter than them sporadically benefit.? It is hard to buy at the bottom, but a few do.? It is hard to sell at the top but a few do.? Note: those “few” are not the same people, because native bullishness or bearishness overcomes.? No one consistently gets out at the top, and in at the bottom.? But many get out at the bottom, and in at the top.? That is the way the markets work.

You might argue that this increases inequality and is not fair.? I’m sorry, but this is fair because people misjudge the underlying businesses, and they don’t keep adequate cash around as a margin of safety.? The equity market is only for those who keep an adequate reserve of safe assets around.? It is too dangerous for anyone else.

Stocks do not reward people year after year.? It comes in fits and spurts.? That is as it should be, and get used to it.? Those who don’t have long time horizons should reduce the amount of stocks they hold, unless valuations are low, and that’s not true now.

This is a time to be cautious, and reduce exposure to risky assets.? Given the global troubles, be wary, because little things like Cyprus could prove as small as subprime, which was declared “well-contained” by someone who didn’t know which end was up, and still does not.

 

 

A Bond Deal Requiring Caution

A Bond Deal Requiring Caution

Recently, a company for which I once managed bond money announced a bond offering.? An odd bond offering that I would not buy regardless of pricing.You might say, “No such thing as bad assets, only bad prices.”? Mostly I believe that, but not here.? There are some assets you should not want to take the chance on.? This is one of them.

Here is the biggest weakness: you are lending to an intermediate holding company.? When I was a bond manager, I would lend to the uppermost holding company, knowing that the stockholders did not want to hand their profitable company over to me.? I would also lend to subsidiaries that I knew a parent company would not want to lose.? But I would not lend to intermediate holding companies — owned by the parent, and owning a subsidiary not directly responsible for the debt.

I inherited such a debt in the portfolio, and it took me months to sell it at a halfway decent level.

Here is the second weakness: they will take two-thirds of the proceeds, and give it to the life insurance subsidiary in exchange for a surplus note, with similar terms compared to the note sold.? Surplus notes are weak, because state insurance departments can forbid payment of interest and principal.? The ability to repay the bond is weak.? The subsidiary borrowing does not have any significant cash flow to repay, aside from dividends from its insurance subsidiary.

Third, I do not appreciate the affiliated reinsurance.? That is just a scam, with no economic difference to the enterprise as a whole.

Fourth, I do not appreciate reinsurance recoverables larger than common equity.? There is some credit risk there… how much do you rely on your reinsurers to pay claims in full?? The operating insurance subsidiaries look like they are adequately capitalized, but with that level of reinsurance, you really can’t tell for sure.

Also, some of the reinsurance agreements are specifically targeted to eliminate pesky reserves that make Statutory (regulatory) accounting more conservative than GAAP.? That’s not all that unusual with financial reinsurance, but it does lessen future statutory cash flow, which is what is needed to service the debt.

Fifth, 25% of the offering will be paid as a dividend to the parent company, which further weakens ability to repay.

Sixth, there are related party transactions within the Harbinger Group.? Harbinger Group has been through tough times and liquidity is tight.? You only do moves like this when things are desperate. Reminds me of Southmark.? The operating insurance subsidiaries have made loans to EXCO Resources, a Harbinger subsidiary, buys asset-backed securities that other Harbinger subsidaries originate, and has a large reinsurance agreement with a Harbinger subsidiary in the Cayman Islands.? I respect most reinsurers in Bermuda.? Other foreign domiciles like Ireland, Cayman Islands, etc., are more questionable.? Regulation is more lax.

Seventh, Here are some of the points from the risk factors:

Our Reinsurers, Including Wilton Re, Could Fail To Meet Assumed Obligations, Increase Rates, Or Be Subject To Adverse Developments That Could Materially Adversely Affect Our Business, Financial Condition And Results Of Operations.

Our insurance subsidiaries cede material amounts of insurance and transfer related assets and certain liabilities to other insurance companies through reinsurance. For example, a material amount of liabilities were transferred to Wilton Re pursuant to the Wilton Transaction in 2011. See ?Business?The Fidelity & Guaranty Acquisition?Wilton Transaction? below. However, notwithstanding the transfer of related assets and certain liabilities, we remain liable with respect to ceded insurance should any reinsurer fail to meet the obligations assumed. Accordingly, we bear credit risk with respect to our reinsurers, including our reinsurance arrangements with Wilton Re. The failure, insolvency, inability or unwillingness of Wilton Re or other reinsurers to pay under the terms of reinsurance agreements with us could materially adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

As noted above, reinsurance is a source of credit risk, and is a type of leverage.? Companies that use a lot of it are less strong than they seem.

Our Insurance Subsidiaries? Ability To Grow Depends In Large Part Upon The Continued Availability Of Capital.

Our insurance subsidiaries? long-term strategic capital requirements will depend on many factors, including their accumulated statutory earnings and the relationship between their statutory capital and surplus and various elements of required capital. To support their long-term capital requirements, we and our insurance subsidiaries may need to increase or maintain their statutory capital and surplus through financings, which could include debt, equity, financing arrangements or other surplus relief transactions. Adverse market conditions have affected and continue to affect the availability and cost of capital from external sources. We and HGI are not obligated, and may choose or be unable, to provide financing or make any capital contribution to our insurance subsidiaries. Consequently, financings, if available at all, may be available only on terms that are not favorable to us or our insurance subsidiaries. If our insurance subsidiaries cannot maintain adequate capital, they may be required to limit growth in sales of new policies, and such action could materially adversely affect our business, operations and financial condition.

There is kind of a pathology to insurance companies that rely on reinsurance for capital.? It fronts expected statutory profits from the future, reducing future statutory income, but increases capital.? It’s kind of an addiction.

We Operate In A Highly Competitive Industry, Which Could Limit Our Ability To Gain Or Maintain Our Position In The Industry And Could Materially Adversely Affect Our Business, Financial Condition And Results Of Operations.

We operate in a highly competitive industry. We encounter significant competition in all of our product lines from other insurance companies, many of which have greater financial resources and higher financial strength ratings than us and which may have a greater market share, offer a broader range of products, services or features, assume a greater level of risk, have lower operating or financing costs, or have different profitability expectations than us. Competition could result in, among other things, lower sales or higher lapses of existing products.

They are up against much stronger competition with better balance sheets.? In a crisis, they would have less flexibility, and have a harder time raising capital than most competitors.

The Issuer Is A Holding Company And Its Only Material Assets Are Its Equity Interests In FGLIC. As A Consequence, Its Ability To Satisfy Its Obligations Under The Senior Notes Will Depend On The Ability Of FGLIC To Pay Dividends To The Issuer, Which Is Restricted By Law.

The issuer is a holding company with limited business operations of its own. Its primary subsidiaries are insurance subsidiaries that own substantially all of its assets and conduct substantially all of its operations. Accordingly, the repayment of interest and principal on the senior notes by the issuer is dependent, to a significant extent, on the generation of cash flow by its subsidiaries and their ability to make such cash available to the issuer, by dividend or otherwise. The issuer?s subsidiaries may not be able to, or may not be permitted to, make distributions to enable it to make payments in respect of the senior notes. Each subsidiary is a distinct legal entity and legal and contractual restrictions may limit the issuer?s ability to obtain cash from its subsidiaries. While the indenture governing the senior notes will limit the ability of the issuer?s subsidiaries to incur consensual restrictions on their ability to pay dividends or make other intercompany payments to the issuer, these limitations are subject to certain qualifications and exceptions. If sources of funds or cash from the issuer?s subsidiaries are not adequate, we may be unable to satisfy our obligations with respect to the senior notes without financial support from the issuer?s parent, which is under no obligation to provide such support.

(snip)

The issuer intends to use $195.0 million of the proceeds from the senior notes to purchase a surplus note from FGLIC. The interest rate and tenor of the surplus note will be substantially similar to those of the senior notes.

As pointed out above, owners of this bond would be lending to an empty shell from which it will be difficult to extract value if there is financial stress.

We And Our Subsidiaries May Be Able To Incur Substantially More Debt And Other Obligations.

We May Not Be Able To Generate Sufficient Cash To Service All Of Our Obligations, Including The Senior Notes, And May Be Forced To Take Other Actions To Satisfy Our Obligations, Which May Not Be Successful.

The Senior Notes Will Not Be Secured And Will Be Effectively Subordinated To Future Secured Debt To The Extent Of The Value Of The Assets Securing Such Debt.

The Issuer May Not Be Able To Repurchase The Senior Notes Upon A Change Of Control, And Holders Of The Senior Notes May Not Be Able To Determine When A Change Of Control Giving Rise To Their Right To Have The Senior Notes Repurchased Has Occurred Following A Sale Of ?Substantially All? Of Our Assets.

Our Principal Shareholder?s Interests May Conflict With Yours.

Lest this post go from “too long” to “way too long,” I am summarizing off of the headings of five more risk factors.? The first three show the weakness of the position of the holders of the notes, in that you can be diluted or subordinated.?? The fourth shows how the notes themselves would complicate a sale of insurance subsidiary assets.

The fifth tells you that Phil Falcone has different interests than you.? If things go well, he may do very well, while you get repaid early because of call provisions, and must reinvest.? If things go badly, recoveries on a bond like this could be very low.? When surplus notes stop paying interest and principal, they trade near zero if it looks permanent.? Remember, the Maryland Insurance Administration has every reason to be conservative about making surplus note payments if the operating insurance subsidiary is under financial stress.

Eighth, if it’s not obvious get, I eschew complexity in debt agreements.? I’m not crazy about:

  • Reserving on indexed and variable products
  • Complexity of financial operations
  • Liabilities that can run easily — I don’t have the data for that, so I don’t know how big that is, I would have to look at the Statutory books to know for sure.
  • Deferred tax assets as a part of Statutory Capital — again, I would have to look at the Statutory books to know for sure.

Ninth and Last, the covenants protecting the notes are weak, and exceptionally verbose.? I have a rule that the longer and more detailed covenants are, the less protection they usually give note owners.? It’s kind of like Proverbs 10:19, “In the multitude of words sin is not lacking, But he who restrains his lips is wise.”

For a corporate bond prospectus, this one is really long, ~320 pages, longer than some securitizations that I used to buy as a mortgage bond manager.? I assume that most of the investor interest here would be institutional, but if you give your broker some discretion over an account in which he purchases individual bonds, you might ask him to avoid this deal.? It will be a tempting bond to buy, because it will come with a fat yield in this yield-starved environment, if the deal gets completed.

As one friend of mine once said to me, “This bond deal is horrid, but it has one sweet YTNJ.”

Me: “YTNJ? Haven’t heard that one.”

Friend: “Yield to next job.”

Be like Will Rogers, the return of the money is more important than the return on the money.? Be wise, stay safe.

PS — The opinions of Moody’s & Fitch

Redacted Version of the March 2013 FOMC Statement

Redacted Version of the March 2013 FOMC Statement

January 2013 March 2013 Comments
Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in December suggests that growth in economic activity paused in recent months, in large part because of weather-related disruptions and other transitory factors. Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in January suggests a return to moderate economic growth following a pause late last year.

 

Shades GDP view up.
Employment has continued to expand at a moderate pace but the unemployment rate remains elevated. Labor market conditions have shown signs of improvement in recent months but the unemployment rate remains elevated. Shades their view enmployment up.? So long as discouraged workers increase, this is a meaningless statement.
Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector has shown further improvement. Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector has strengthened further, but fiscal policy has become somewhat more restrictive. New fiscal policy comment, but it should read, ?fiscal policy has become somewhat less loose.?
Inflation has been running somewhat below the Committee?s longer-run objective, apart from temporary variations that largely reflect fluctuations in energy prices. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. Inflation has been running somewhat below the Committee’s longer-run objective, apart from temporary variations that largely reflect fluctuations in energy prices.? Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable. No change.? TIPS are showing flat inflation expectations since the last meeting. 5y forward 5y inflation implied from TIPS is still near 2.86%.

The FOMC is wrong on inflation.

Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. No change. Any time they mention the ?statutory mandate,? it is to excuse bad policy.
The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic growth will proceed at a moderate pace and the unemployment rate will gradually decline toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic growth will proceed at a moderate pace and the unemployment rate will gradually decline toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. Emphasizes that the FOMC will keep doing the same thing and expect a different result than before. Monetary policy is omnipotent on the asset side, right?
Although strains in global financial markets have eased somewhat, the Committee continues to see downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee continues to see downside risks to the economic outlook. Shades down their views of the global financial markets.
The Committee also anticipates that inflation over the medium term likely will run at or below its 2 percent objective. The Committee also anticipates that inflation over the medium term likely will run at or below its 2 percent objective. No change. CPI is at 2.0% now, yoy, so that is quite a statement.
To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee will continue purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month and longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month. The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee decided to continue purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month and longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month.? The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction. No change.

Does not mention how the twist will affect those that have to fund long-dated liabilities.

Wonder how long it will take them to saturate agency RMBS market?

Operation Twist continues.? Additional absorption of long Treasuries commences.? Fed will make the empty ?monetary base? move from $3 to 4 Trillion by the end of 2013.

 

Taken together, these actions should maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative. Taken together, these actions should maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative. No change.
The Committee will closely monitor incoming information on economic and financial developments in coming months. The Committee will closely monitor incoming information on economic and financial developments in coming months. No change. Useless comment.
If the outlook for the labor market does not improve substantially, the Committee will continue its purchases of Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate, until such improvement is achieved in a context of price stability. The Committee will continue its purchases of Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate, until the outlook for the labor market has improved substantially in a context of price stability. No real change.
In determining the size, pace, and composition of its asset purchases, the Committee will, as always, take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases. In determining the size, pace, and composition of its asset purchases, the Committee will continue to take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases as well as the extent of progress toward its economic objectives. Maybe they are hedging a little here ? if they get close to their objective, they might start? to reduce policy accommodation?
To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee expects that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. To support continued progress toward maximum employment and price stability, the Committee expects that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends and the economic recovery strengthens. No change.

Promises that they won?t change until the economy strengthens.? Good luck with that.

In particular, the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee?s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored. In particular, the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored. Not a time limit but economic limits from inflation and employment.

Just ran the calculation ? TIPS implied forward inflation one year forward for one year ? i.e., a rough forecast for 2014, is currently 2.32%.? Here?s the graph.? The FOMC has only 0.18% of margin in their calculation if they are being honest, which I doubt.

 

In determining how long to maintain a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy, the Committee will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial developments. In determining how long to maintain a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy, the Committee will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market conditions, indicators of inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and readings on financial developments. No change.
When the Committee decides to begin to remove policy accommodation, it will take a balanced approach consistent with its longer-run goals of maximum employment and inflation of 2 percent. When the Committee decides to begin to remove policy accommodation, it will take a balanced approach consistent with its longer-run goals of maximum employment and inflation of 2 percent. No change.
Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; James Bullard; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Jerome H. Powell; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Eric S. Rosengren; Jeremy C. Stein; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen. Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; James Bullard; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Jerome H. Powell; Sarah Bloom Raskin; Eric S. Rosengren; Jeremy C. Stein; Daniel K. Tarullo; and Janet L. Yellen. No change
Voting against the action was Esther L. George, who was concerned that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations. Voting against the action was Esther L. George, who was concerned that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an increase in long-term inflation expectations. Esther George takes up the thankless task of telling the FOMC that they are doing more harm than good.

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Comments

  • Notable: they mention that fiscal policy is less accommodative.? Also, some new language leaves room for policy gradualism.
  • Not so notable: they shade up their views on GDP and employment, and shade down their views on global financial market stability.
  • I really think the FOMC lives in a fantasy world.? The economy is not improving materially, and inflation is rising. Note that the CPI is close their 2.5% line in the sand.? TIPS-implied inflation 1X1 (one year ahead for one year) is 2.32%, and 5X5 is around 2.86% annualized.
  • Current proposed policy is an exercise in wishful thinking.? Monetary policy does not work in reducing unemployment, and I think we should end the charade.
  • In my opinion, I don?t think holding down longer-term rates on the highest-quality debt will have any impact on lower quality debts, which is where most of the economy finances itself. When this policy doesn?t work, what will they do?
  • Also, the investment in Agency MBS should have limited impact because so many owners are inverted, or ineligible for financing backed by the GSEs, and implicitly the government, even with the recently announced refinancing changes.
  • The key variables on Fed Policy are capacity utilization, unemployment, inflation trends, and inflation expectations.? As a result, the FOMC ain?t moving rates up, absent increases in employment, or a US Dollar crisis.? Labor employment is the key metric.
  • GDP growth is not improving much if at all, and the unemployment rate improvement comes more from discouraged workers.

 

Question for Dr. Bernanke

Ever liability is someone else’s asset.? Aren’t you doing nothing by trying to hold long term interest rates lower?

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