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What Did Buffett Know about the Gen Re Finite Reinsurance Deal with AIG?

What Did Buffett Know about the Gen Re Finite Reinsurance Deal with AIG?

Start with my disclaimer: I don’t know for sure. Buffett says that he didn’t know about the details, and certainly didn’t approve of the deal. From the Dow Jones Newswires:

Buffett said in a 2005 statement that he “was not briefed on how the transactions were to be structured or on any improper use or purpose of the transactions.”

Buffett’s attorney, Ronald Olson, said in a recent statement that Buffett “denies that he passed judgment in any way on the challenged AIG/Gen Re transaction in November 2000 or at any other time.”

Personally, I find this amazing for a few reasons. 1) In any dealings with AIG, a smart insurance executive would want to know what was going on. AIG has had a history of getting the better end of the deal in working with reinsurers. Buffett is not dumb, and there had been a decent amount of rivalry between the two companies over the years. 2) Buffett was not “hands off” on the insurance side of the house when it came to large insurance contracts. From his 2001 Shareholder Letter (page 8 ):

I have known the details of almost every policy that Ajit has written since he came with us in 1986, and
never on even a single occasion have I seen him break any of our three underwriting rules. His extraordinary
discipline, of course, does not eliminate losses; it does, however, prevent foolish losses. And that?s the key: Just as
is the case in investing, insurers produce outstanding long-term results primarily by avoiding dumb decisions, rather
than by making brilliant ones.

Now, maybe Buffett was overstating the case of how much he knew about what Ajit did. It is clear that he spent more time with Ajit than the managers at Gen Re, but I find it difficult to believe he didn’t review a major contract of a client who was also a major competitor known to be tough reinsurance negotiator.

3) He understands finite insurance very well. From this article of mine at RealMoney about the 2004 Shareholder letter, my last point:

12) Finally, what was not there: a discussion of Berkshire’s activities in the retroactive (or retrocessional or finite or financial) reinsurance business. This is notable for two reasons: first, in 2003, he split out the retroactive reinsurance in order to give a clearer presentation of the insurance groups operating results. This year the data is only presented in summary form. Second, Buffett made a big positive out of the retroactive reinsurance results, going so far as to explain the business in both the 2000 (page 8 ) and 2002 (page 9) shareholder letters.

Now, to varying degrees, Buffett made effort over the prior four years to explain the profitability of Berky’s retroactive reinsurance business, because it skewed the loss ratios of Berky upward. In the 2004 Shareholder letter, it was too much of a hot potato to give similar coverage to, even eliminating the entries that would have allowed one to see the accounting effect. In 2000 and 2002, he gave mini-tutorials on the business. In 2000 (page 8 ):

There are two factors affecting our cost of float that are very rare at other insurers but that now loom large at Berkshire. First, a few insurers that are currently experiencing large losses have offloaded a significant portion of these on us in a manner that penalizes our current earnings but gives us float we can use for many years to come. After the loss that we incur in the first year of the policy, there are no further costs attached to this business.

When these policies are properly priced, we welcome the pain-today, gain-tomorrow effects they have. In 1999, $400 million of our underwriting loss (about 27.8% of the total) came from business of this kind and in 2000 the figure was $482 million (34.4% of our loss). We have no way of predicting how much similar business we will write in the future, but what we do get will typically be in large chunks. Because these transactions can materially distort our figures, we will tell you about them as they occur.


Other reinsurers have little taste for this insurance. They simply can?t stomach what huge underwriting losses do to their reported results, even though these losses are produced by policies whose overall economics are certain to be favorable. You should be careful, therefore, in comparing our underwriting results with those of other insurers.


An even more significant item in our numbers ? which, again, you won?t find much of elsewhere ? arises from transactions in which we assume past losses of a company that wants to put its troubles behind it. To illustrate, the XYZ insurance company might have last year bought a policy obligating us to pay the first $1 billion of losses and loss adjustment expenses from events that happened in, say, 1995 and earlier years. These contracts can be very large, though we always require a cap on our exposure. We entered into a number of such transactions in 2000 and expect to close several more in 2001.


Under GAAP accounting, this ?retroactive? insurance neither benefits nor penalizes our current earnings. Instead, we set up an asset called ?deferred charges applicable to assumed reinsurance,? in an amount reflecting the difference between the premium we receive and the (higher) losses we expect to pay (for which reserves are immediately established). We then amortize this asset by making annual charges to earnings that create equivalent underwriting losses. You will find the amount of the loss that we incur from these transactions in both our quarterly and annual management discussion. By their nature, these losses will continue for many years, often stretching into decades. As an offset, though, we have the use of float — lots of it.


Clearly, float carrying an annual cost of this kind is not as desirable as float we generate from policies that are expected to produce an underwriting profit (of which we have plenty). Nevertheless, this retroactive insurance should be decent business for us.


The net of all this is that a) I expect our cost of float to be very attractive in the future but b) rarely to return to a ?no-cost? mode because of the annual charge that retroactive reinsurance will lay on us. Also ? obviously — the ultimate benefits that we derive from float will depend not only on its cost but, fully as important, how effectively we deploy it.


Our retroactive business is almost single-handedly the work of Ajit Jain, whose praises I sing annually. It is impossible to overstate how valuable Ajit is to Berkshire. Don?t worry about my health; worry about his. Last year, Ajit brought home a $2.4 billion reinsurance premium, perhaps the largest in history, from a policy that retroactively covers a major U.K. company. Subsequently, he wrote a large policy protecting the Texas Rangers from the possibility that Alex Rodriguez will become permanently disabled. As sports fans know, ?A-Rod? was signed for $252 million, a record, and we think that our policy probably also set a record for disability insurance. We cover many other sports figures as well.

And 2002:

Ajit Jain?s reinsurance division was the major reason our float cost us so little last year. If we ever put a photo in a Berkshire annual report, it will be of Ajit. In color!


Ajit?s operation has amassed $13.4 billion of float, more than all but a handful of insurers have ever built up. He accomplished this from a standing start in 1986, and even now has a workforce numbering only 20. And, most important, he has produced underwriting profits.


His profits are particularly remarkable if you factor in some accounting arcana that I am about to lay on you. So prepare to eat your spinach (or, alternatively, if debits and credits aren?t your thing, skip the next two paragraphs).


Ajit?s 2002 underwriting profit of $534 million came after his operation recognized a charge of $428 million attributable to ?retroactive? insurance he has written over the years. In this line of business, we assume from another insurer the obligation to pay up to a specified amount for losses they have already incurred ? often for events that took place decades earlier ? but that are yet to be paid (for example, because a worker hurt in 1980 will receive monthly payments for life). In these arrangements, an insurer pays us a large upfront premium, but one that is less than the losses we expect to pay. We willingly accept this differential because a) our payments are capped, and b) we get to use the money until loss payments are actually made, with these often stretching out over a decade or more. About 80% of the $6.6 billion in asbestos and environmental loss reserves that we carry arises from capped contracts, whose costs consequently can?t skyrocket.


When we write a retroactive policy, we immediately record both the premium and a reserve for the expected losses. The difference between the two is entered as an asset entitled ?deferred charges ? reinsurance assumed.? This is no small item: at yearend, for all retroactive policies, it was $3.4 billion. We then amortize this asset downward by charges to income over the expected life of each policy. These charges ? $440 million in 2002, including charges at Gen Re ? create an underwriting loss, but one that is intentional and desirable. And even after this drag on reported results, Ajit achieved a large underwriting gain last year.

What I am trying to point out here is that Buffett had significant knowledge of the retroactive (finite) deals at Berkshire Hathaway. He was even somewhat proud of them, though perhaps that is a matter of interpretation. He liked the almost riskless profits that they provided.

Before I move onto my last point, I’d like to digress, and simply say that not all finite reinsurance is a matter of accounting chicanery. The key is risk transfer. Without risk transfer, regardless of what the technical accounting regulations might say, there should be no reserve relief granted, regardless of the amount of money given to the cedant by the reinsurer; that money should be treated as a loan, because it will have to be paid back with interest. With full risk transfer, the company ceding the risk should not have to hold any reserves for the business. In between, the amount of reserve credit is proportional to the amount of risk shed; excess money given to the cedant by the reinsurer should be treated as a loan. Economically, that’s what it should be, even though that is not what always happens in the accounting. (Side note: yes, I know that it is difficult to determine the amount of risk shed, and different actuaries might come to different conclusions, but can’t we at least agree on the underlying theory?)

What has happened is that in many cases, little risk is shed, and a full credit for risk reduction is taken. Sometimes FAS 113 would be followed, with its 10% chance of a 10% loss as a miserably low tripwire for risk transfer. Sometimes FAS 113 would get bent, and other times, badly bent. That brings me to point 4.

4) Berky had a lot of experience with many different types of finite insurance. I remember a notable asbestos contract they took on for White Mountains where they would bear a large amount of risk. (On that one, I think White Mountains got the better end of the deal.) There were others, like the finite contract with Australian insurer FAI, which made them look solvent while experience was deteriorating. HIH bought FAI, and later went bankrupt, partly due to the acquisition. There were other finite reinsurance deals, like Reciprocal of America, where it made a company that was insolvent look solvent.

I can argue that in many cases, Berky’s underwriters did not know the accounting treatment that the cedant would use, and could not be responsible for the troubles that followed. In many cases, Berky bore significant, if limited, risk. That’s fine too. The greater question is if they were a large writer of finite coverages, which they were, they would have to have some knowledge of the cedant’s goals if they were to underwrite properly. Also remember that Buffett watches the “float” that his insurance businesses generate like a hawk. If there was a large amount of float that would come from a new contract, he likely would have known about it.

The AIG contract was big. AIG is a tough reinsurance negotiator. AIG and Berky have been rivals (Greenberg insulted Buffett on at least one occasion). Buffett watches underwriting carefully, even that of his trusted lieutenant Ajit Jain (a nice guy, really). That makes it really hard for me to believe that Buffett did not have any significant knowledge of the AIG finite reinsurance contract. In the end, I really don’t know; I’m only guessing. My guess is this: Buffett had general, but not detailed knowledge of the deal with AIG. In my estimation, he probably checked to see that there were adequate risk controls to make sure that AIG was not getting too good of a deal.

I admire Buffett. I have learned a lot from him. In general, compared to most businessmen, he is an honest and open guy who speaks his mind. If he said that he never had any significant knowledge of the contract with AIG, we should give him the benefit of the doubt, maybe. But from my angle, it is inconsistent with the way he has done business generally.

Tickers mentioned: AIG, BRK/A, BRK/B, WTM

PS — If you ask me how I feel about writing this, I will tell you that I am not crazy about what I have written. I’m not after publicity for criticizing a man that I admire greatly. I think that Buffett should be more forthcoming on the topic, and be willing to be a witness in the trial. Five people are facing ruined lives, and if Buffett really knew about it, and is saying nothing now because he is powerful enough to get away with it, well, shame on him. If he didn’t know anything about it, well, his testimony would clear the air, because it is a distraction at the trial.

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Rest of the World

 

  • Chavez ?Likely? to Lose, Supporting Bonds, Barclays Says http://t.co/zcufsNLN Something optimistic 4a Friday afternoon; but will he go? $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Spain Sees Divorce Driving Breakup of Towns in Recession http://t.co/J423DVhS Badly handled, economic problems lead2 relationship problems Oct 05, 2012
  • BOJ Seeks Help Against Deflation http://t.co/G1ONwoA7 Contrary to popular belief, low central bank policy rates inhibit growth $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Europe Jumps on Bank-Overhaul Bandwagon http://t.co/daaAcm0l also http://t.co/oxESdQiY Basel has done a bad job setting capital levels Oct 03, 2012
  • How ECB Chief Outflanked German Foe in Fight for Euro http://t.co/KWlbuvkT Clever politician sways Merkel through Hollande & wins4now $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • The real risk is the Capriles wins by a little, & Chavez finds a way to retain power. $$ http://t.co/k5f5082A Oct 03, 2012
  • Property Funds, Bonds Supplant Europe Lenders http://t.co/ebXwgIxa Banks can’t lend; watch currency risk, liquidity risk & credit risk $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • Longest Rally in Nine Years for JGBs on Deflation http://t.co/dCzC59cM 6th straight quarter of gains: matches a similar stretch in 2003 $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • Norway?s Wealth Fund Targets U.S. Real Estate by End 2013 http://t.co/JQalAy2U They have a long time horizon; this isn’t 4 speculators $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • Spain Expects a Wider Budget Gap http://t.co/5AHLEGGI No surprise, Eurozone numbers r routinely gamed, b/c there is no enforcement $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • Trade Slows Around World http://t.co/YkTFRBDE Kind of a soggy feeling w/China slowing, huge gov’t deficits & loose $$ policy Oct 02, 2012

Energy

 

  • Bakken Crude Prices Rise as Railroad Reach Grows http://t.co/m34o45AD Fascinating 2c transportation matching crude supply & demand $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Natural Gas Glut Pushes Exports http://t.co/ycNBikZR Usually big, aggressive investments don’t work out. Small ones are manageable $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • California Refiners Ration Gasoline as Prices Near Record http://t.co/sWGlRBF1 also http://t.co/gk85k7jC Price of EPA fuel rules $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Regulations help create shortages because gas in 1 area can’t be used in another. Time to simplify & have fewer blend? http://t.co/Y925MhFg Oct 04, 2012

 

Companies

 

  • Jet-Lease Billionaire Udvar-Hazy Takes On $AIG Hand That Fed Him http://t.co/04THKwF7 When AIG bot ILFC, took stock to avoid taxes, oops Oct 05, 2012
  • Apple?s Steve Jobs: What He Knew in 1983 http://t.co/JyLPvlbW Jobs was an amazing guy. What he foresaw makes him even more amazing. $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • Dan Loeb and Boyz II Men: Break Up Murphy Oil http://t.co/MdPhjujW $MUR doesn’t want to break up, but many oils cos r going that way $$ Oct 04, 2012

 

Federal Reserve

 

  • When central banks feel they need to reveal more & show action, they fall into a trap of over-acting, which leads to a liquidity trap $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Fed Seeks to Clarify Plans http://t.co/DzOT2NXj Fed transparency is a bad idea. Fed managed $$ policy better when it revealed little Oct 05, 2012
  • Rubik?s Revolutions http://t.co/Q3SAYuJ6 @izkaminska takes us through the vagaries of why QE doesn’t do that much. We r Japan now $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Don?t call it money printing, rubiks cube edition http://t.co/Eo5vkEkN No, QE is not money printing, but it won’t be easy 2 undo $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Bernanke Seeks Gains for Stocks in Push for Jobs http://t.co/Xby6Bvd9 Monetary policy favors the rich over the poor in the current Fed $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • TIPS Show Inflation Alarm Fading as Options Give Fed Time http://t.co/YgLi0BDr Off ~15 bps since QE3 launch $$ http://t.co/J90Ch2FL Oct 02, 2012

 

Market Dynamics

 

  • Despite Gains, Many Flee Stock Market http://t.co/JRhWY0c8 Y retail investors tend to lose- fail 2 buy & hold @ a moderate risk level $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Investors Jump Off the ‘Junk’ Pile http://t.co/iqbZRo5b New record in junk issuance, & a very low proportion of BBs, feels like 2006 $$ Oct 05, 2012
  • Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo Keep Losing Market Share, And They May Be OK With It http://t.co/1gKpSevF RIAs Ascendent $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • My (Not so) Golden Rules About Investing (& Not Investing) http://t.co/YNReadXs HT: @reformedbroker 25.75 tungsten-filled investing rules $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • Early Impact Of 401(k) Fee Disclosure Rules http://t.co/HBdtk7Oy This will be big. When you really c how much expenses they charge, ouch $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • They’re back! Yield hunt pushes funds into CLOs, CDOs http://t.co/x47V6xSc Into the final phase of the credit rally. Wind it tighter! $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • Stop Me Before I Do Something Stupid http://t.co/tOjyLW7R Tips for becoming a more disciplined investor?and boosting your returns $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • The Three Most Overrated (& Underrated) Financial Planning Recommendations http://t.co/eIMjtTjt Worth a read $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • For Warren Buffett, the cash option is priceless http://t.co/srmJcalh If you have the discipline, the cash option has value, if not no $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Damages http://t.co/MzXBB2QR Bill Gross takes an inflationary view, & assumes that the deflationary forces of the world will go away $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Dylan Grice Writes His Most Negative Note Ever http://t.co/VIhFGEEc Notes that the present QE policy favors the rich over the poor $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • America?s new subprime boom: This time it?s cars http://t.co/EBkXqw0a This will b a positive trend for 2 yrs; worry out in 2014 $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • 6 reasons to dump a bad mutual fund http://t.co/IleCG33t Could b simpler: sell when you find a fund w/better prospects net of loads $$ Oct 02, 2012

 

Politics

  • The Romney Reboot Arrives http://t.co/ViEoTb5L I’m voting 3rd party, but it is interesting 2c the presidential contest liven up $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • How to Make an Ailing World Economy Even Sicker http://t.co/XDiOkq5U The idea of gradually reducing the deficit is politically naive $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Romney’s Middle-Class Tax Sale http://t.co/qywvSVXM The devil is in the details, & true of Obama as well. Ended up being Bush-plus $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Romney Floats Idea of Itemized Deduction Cap http://t.co/E5nkUUO3 Has to be a cleaner way 2 do this. Ah, return to TRA ’86. Simple $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Obama Cabinet Flunks Disclosure Test With 19 in 20 Ignoring Law http://t.co/Nt07Bgwu Less transparent than Bush http://t.co/NZ6A3PIs $$ Oct 02, 2012

 

Bank Regulation

 

  • Bank-Friendly US Regulator Shifts Focus to Revamp Reputation http://t.co/xUVY1UOE OCC is actually going to regulate banks?! Who knew? $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • Freddie’s Foreclosure Plan Hits Roadblock http://t.co/XrUeAjze We don’t get it. After 2 much debt financing housing we seek more debt $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Banking should be a low ROE business.? High capital levels keep the banking system safe. $$ http://t.co/uUntNaXw Oct 03, 2012
  • Intelligence Exits Washington, Vacancies Rise http://t.co/VJt1y4KU Will b interesting 2c how comm RE pricing shifts as Wash DC retrenches Oct 03, 2012
  • Banks Like Munis; Mom-and-Pop Investors Don’t http://t.co/ugDPBL4F I don’t get how banks w/short liabilities can buy long munis $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • Sheila Bair: The one thing banking regulators should do now http://t.co/tu5jGYx4 Her solution is to raise capital requirements $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • A Very Strange Way to Assess the Safety of Banks http://t.co/8u05kbZO Simpler metrics than Basel r needed; complex ones r easy 2 game $$ Oct 02, 2012

 

Other

 

  • Big Picture Conference 10/10/12 http://t.co/IrsvZtU0 Lineup: Barofsky, Grice, Yamarone, O’Shaughnessy, Ritholtz, Rosenberg, Bianco & more $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • Bill Gross calls for a balanced budget so that all Treasury bonds & his bonds will get paid in full. $$ http://t.co/lTzq5zmf Oct 02, 2012
  • SEC Leads From Behind as High-Frequency Trading Shows Data Gap http://t.co/H6YnjVWr SEC way behind $NDAQ & $NYX in understanding HFT $$ Oct 02, 2012

 

Comments

 

  • RE: She bought Paypal, the most valuable part of $EBAY . What more could you ask for? $$ http://t.co/tfEVghRF Oct 04, 2012
  • Commented on StockTwits: Name 3 insurers that have managed Life & P&C operations well… I am a former insurance buy… http://t.co/aMsgW4nN Oct 03, 2012
  • Commented on StockTwits: Pretty certain that the DTAs would be divided up in a breakup. Insurance acctg tracks DTAs … http://t.co/NGmkWSmk Oct 03, 2012
  • RE: @bloombergview This really seems like wishful thinking. Huge difference in the way most Muslims & Westerners thin? http://t.co/rMt8w3zf Oct 03, 2012
  • Commented on StockTwits: $HIG has issues with variable products 2a higher degree, even though $AIG has the same issu… http://t.co/JWzZSvrV Oct 03, 2012
  • Commented on StockTwits: There r no synergies btw each of the 3 groups: no advantage to having P&C, Life & Other tog… http://t.co/sRU7zWys Oct 03, 2012
  • Commented on StockTwits: I would split P&C & Life & everything else — still a valid idea. http://t.co/FPAXZZUX Oct 02, 2012
  • RE: @PS46MMUCF4PDUIQ4LRUF3DMW2A That doesn’t solve “fat finger” problems, rogue automated trader, or feedback loop pr? http://t.co/EgjYsqbZ Oct 02, 2012

 

Replies

 

  • @incakolanews Could be… or maybe Barclays is trying to reduce its VZ bond inventory… Oct 05, 2012
  • . @The_Analyst The life insurance industry got burnt on CDO crops 1 (1998) & 2 (2001), but not 3 (2008), what will crop 4 yield? $$ Oct 04, 2012
  • @BlackRaven999 Both stock & flow are important, that is what makes this complex 2 understand Oct 03, 2012
  • @DividendMaster I think that either a significant recession &/or inflation is unavoidable. Delayed deficit decline means no deficit decline Oct 03, 2012
  • @BlackRaven999 Waiting till maturity leaves QE deposits in the system 4a long time due to twist. All removal of policy accommodation is hard Oct 03, 2012
  • @hook910 Take it up w/Buffett who has done it successfully. Intelligent businessmen do it: buy cheap assets when opportunities allow. $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • @hook910 With a long enough time horizon, and patient capital, market timing can succeed, value mgrs do this. This is what Buffett & FPA do Oct 03, 2012
  • @hook910 So you admit that the value of dry powder does change over time. Thanks! 😉 Oct 03, 2012
  • @hook910 It is not on option on cash, but cash can b thought of as an option on other assets. Was dry powder valuable in late 2008? Yes $$ Oct 03, 2012
  • @wanderinggull I think it is a bit of a stretch Oct 02, 2012
  • @DividendMaster They r attempting to lock in a smaller loss. Wonder when the yield on the 30-yr TIPS goes negative? $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • @ReformedBroker I respect Chuck Royce, but basically he is estimating the odds of deflation as being very low. What if China shrinks? $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • @TheStalwart Big installed base for LIBOR, easy to offer something better: even total up all US interbank lending 4a day, calc avg rate $$ Oct 02, 2012

 

Retweets

 

  • RT @ppearlman: RT @AlephBlog: Break up $AIG. I said it first here: http://t.co/MKsYqMYo then here: http://t.co/fZ6EW85e $$ Oct 02, 2012
  • Break up AIG $$ RT @ppearlman: RT @RonReuven @ppearlman no one understands all of $AIG’s assets or businesslines, including most of $AIG Oct 02, 2012

 

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Financial Regulation and Policy

  • Dodd Frank Was Never Gutted – It Was Barely Touched https://t.co/sRapmRVUrx  Interesting sidelights on how little Dodd-Frank got changed Mar 18, 2023
  • Banks borrowed a combined $164.8 billion from two Federal Reserve backstop facilities in the most recent week, a sign of escalated funding strains after SVB’s collapse https://t.co/xq4nCKYON5  Things are that bad… Mar 18, 2023
  • A federal appeals court in New York is asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to share its views on whether syndicated loans are securities https://t.co/N2xYrY6xE3  I think they are if securitized, and not otherwise. Mar 18, 2023
  • Let me try again. They are securities if you don’t mark them as “held to maturity.” https://t.co/HdBSJotVWc  Mar 18, 2023
  • President Biden called on Congress to pass legislation to impose tougher penalties on bank executives who are deemed responsible for the collapse of financial institutions. https://t.co/Xq4MpXLTRr  Better you should punish the Fed & the Administration for its lousy regulation Mar 17, 2023
  • US banking system sound but not all deposits guaranteed, Yellen says https://t.co/PpAzFR5K37  Will they finally do stress testing of bank interest rate risk to the degree that life insurers do? Mar 16, 2023
  • Banking in very uncertain times https://t.co/0fDg23dzHz  I know few will agree with me, but we need to rethink banks doing maturity transformation. Mar 15, 2023
  • Gradually, Then Suddenly https://t.co/kfEJZD8csg  There were a few times as an investment actuary I got to review bank interest rate risk analyses. They were comically simplistic, and wondered why the regulators allowed it. The same applied to illiquidity mismatches. Mar 15, 2023
  • STEVE HANKE And CALEB HOFMANN: Banks Have Now Become Gov’t-Backed Businesses — Just Look At Silicon Valley Bank https://t.co/5w2ZUmFQ9U  “Under such a government-backed regime, a massive amount of moral hazard will be injected into the commercial banking system.” Mar 14, 2023
  • ‘People full of hubris and greed take stupid risks’ https://t.co/5gFk63iQfG  More hidden monetization of bad debts. Continuing to foster more moral hazard Mar 13, 2023
  • After Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank closed, here are some questions and answers to explain what is happening now https://t.co/pCyCbmtTCl  The Fed further expresses its lostness via its new “Bank Term Funding Program.” The FDIC joins in by insuring some uninsured deposits. Mar 13, 2023

Odds & Ends

  • “A lot of corpses and there was nowhere to put them.” Authorities are overwhelmed by the record number of migrants who die trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border. https://t.co/ZmP3gIFwwI  Sad Mar 18, 2023
  • The CFA Institute unveiled sweeping changes to its three-level financial analyst exam in the biggest reworking since the test was introduced in 1963 https://t.co/ERmkWJ94qS  Seems like a downgrade on investment knowledge to me. Mar 18, 2023
  • 3 reasons to sleep more: avoid dementia, have great sex and become a better investor https://t.co/nh043CTvTB  When research is this sloppy, you can believe anything Mar 17, 2023
  • They thought the artworks were in storage. Until they saw them on the news—hanging in the White House. A family art dispute worthy of “The West Wing”: https://t.co/XLaxNiPK1q  Real life can be stranger than fiction. Mar 16, 2023
  • Check Fraud Is on the Rise. Here’s What You Can Do to Prevent It. https://t.co/UJ6g0tqIdW  Good article. Avoid mailing checks. Mar 15, 2023
  • The surprise villain of Americans’ diets: sandwiches https://t.co/Kn4DGVRM0I  Moderation is the key; also ingredient freshness and diversity Mar 15, 2023
  • Hospitals are tapping technology in a new push to reduce stubbornly persistent medical errors https://t.co/hEv9YaIupp  This will help, but hospitals will remain a dangerous place… too many sick people, and people with compromised immune systems. Mar 15, 2023
  • LastPass was hacked. Columnist @nicnguyen explains why you should still use a password manager https://t.co/qCsU7vvIUP  One strong pass phrase & two-factor authentication Mar 14, 2023
  • Stuck in the Sunbelt: In most U.S. cities, traffic is less congested than it was in 2019. In some Sunbelt cities, such as Miami, Nashville and Las Vegas, it has become worse  https://t.co/gejcKye5V7  A First World problem. Welcome to the disadvantages of growth. Mar 14, 2023
  • After a decade of Pope Francis’s leadership, church teaching on issues once considered settled, such as homosexuality and contraception, is now hotly contested https://t.co/3WWfj8JykX  In a different way, he rivals the bad popes prior to the Reformation — little is Scriptural Mar 14, 2023

Monetary Policy

  • This isn’t the start of a banking crisis, it’s markets waking up to the fastest rate-hike cycle since the 1980s — & the growing risk of recession https://t.co/jl4arf05a7  If the yield curve inverts, monetary policy is tight. Separation principle is wrong unless you want a crisis Mar 18, 2023
  • Exactly a year into its rate-raising campaign, the Fed is likely to pay a price for its late start, & SVB could be just the beginning https://t.co/bBC68G2xBY  We forget Fed’s third mandate: protect the banking system. When that is threatened, inflation & unemployment don’t matter Mar 18, 2023
  • This is no time for the Fed to retreat on tightening https://t.co/mYsAnSWdpc  Idiotic opinion from @Bloomberg. Bad things happen when you invert the yield curve, and you want to make it worse. Mar 16, 2023
  • For all the concern about Silicon Valley Bank, the latest CPI shows why the Fed can’t abandon its inflation fight just yet https://t.co/foyr8JdGo3  The author & Waller are wrong — the Fed always cares more about banking stability over inflation & unemployment Mar 14, 2023
  • Transcript: How the Federal Reserve Grew More Powerful Than Anyone Ever Imagined https://t.co/TzWD1uLLEY  @tracyalloway & @TheStalwart interview @jeannasmialek — we are waiting for the day when the Fed does something nonstandard & the markets rebel… too many balls to juggle Mar 14, 2023
  • The Treasury market is signaling that a recession is all but inevitable, if history is any guide https://t.co/s68Zm031gu  I doubt the FOMC is intelligent enough to pause their rate hikes. They envy Paul Volcker, but don’t get that it is different than 1980 — too much debt Mar 13, 2023

Companies

  • Elon Musk’s carmaker has been more active on his social media service since he acquired it for $44 billion https://t.co/gz1i6qJzcj  Just wait until $TSLA acquires Twitter. Mar 16, 2023
  • Kroger and Albertsons are working on the supermarket of the future. https://t.co/rSykseLoz1  I’m not sure it matters if they merge or not. There are so many ways to shop today. Mar 16, 2023
  • The maker of Cheez-It crackers and Frosted Flakes is splitting its business in two—a snacks business and one for North American cereals https://t.co/P1WHVHxHnn  This makes sense $K Mar 15, 2023
  • BuzzFeed wants its scaled-down newsroom to produce more articles in an effort to boost traffic and revenue https://t.co/lbzqKKfJLS  This doesn’t make economic sense. How do you do more with fewer people? AI? Quality? Mar 15, 2023
  • SVB wasn’t just important to the tech and startup scenes — it was a key player in affordable housing https://t.co/n5krF0ZdJK  This is just business, baby. Most journalists don’t get how affordable housing lowers corporate taxes. It’s not meritorious. Mar 14, 2023
  • The London Metal Exchange finds bags of stones instead of the nickel that underpinned a handful of its contracts at a warehouse in Rotterdam https://t.co/Pb7BRAU416  Probably worth doing an audit of all LME warehouse inventories Mar 18, 2023

Non-US

  • Pakistan says the International Monetary Fund is seeking the release of funds pledged by some third-party countries before signing an agreement under its bailout program https://t.co/mvvnFHGWw1  This usually doesn’t work Mar 18, 2023
  • South Africa’s newly appointed electricity minister warns that record electricity outages could get worse before they get better https://t.co/ncptD1xdxJ  First clean up the corruption, and prosecute those stealing coal. Mar 18, 2023
  • China’s Communist Party unveiled an overhaul to strengthen its role in managing finance, social affairs and technological development https://t.co/bICBlMpdAm  Will likely lead to a lack of competence if the CCP closely directs everything. There will hesitation to speak truth Mar 16, 2023
  • Russia was able to save abroad about a third of the $227 billion windfall earned last year from its commodity exports https://t.co/nl3RU7snQI  Money frequently finds a safe home. Value is fungible, if not liquid. Mar 15, 2023
  • Italy’s defense minister is seeking NATO and EU’s help to deal with a new influx of migrants from north Africa he says has been sparked by Russian meddling in the region https://t.co/opQpHr02pn  NATO was not designed to deal with migration issues Mar 13, 2023
  • North Korea fires two cruise missiles from a submarine and issues a new threat to “mercilessly punish” the US as it starts large-scale military drills with South Korea https://t.co/6vIIA09qlY  Greatest possibility of accident is here Mar 13, 2023

Market Dynamics

  • Markets are grappling with a $600 billion question right now: Are the half-dozen banks in the spotlight outliers or a warning sign of a wider malaise? https://t.co/95LCDU832W  Credit will be less available as the cost of capital has risen for banks. Mar 18, 2023
  • Wealthy Executives Make Millions Trading Competitors’ Stock With Remarkable Timing https://t.co/5nfo6WZIsk  Fascinating that an article can write about this and not mention “mosaic theory” where a person doesn’t know for sure but has made an educated guess. Mar 16, 2023
  • In the Hunt for Fraud, the Red Flags Start With the Auditor https://t.co/yLyAbkm3vq  Beware small auditors, and odd phrases in the audit report. Mar 14, 2023
  • Asset managers including Invesco and Franklin Resources added shares of SVB Financial Group in the months before the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank wiped 60% off its stock value in a single day https://t.co/XHNW4uK7w6  They are value investors. They resist trends. Mar 14, 2023
  • The ‘Investor Identity’: The Ultimate Driver of Returns @SSRN https://t.co/OzBVe4cCLg  This is too basic of an idea to think this is something special Mar 13, 2023

Contagion

  • Schwab clients pulled $8.8 billion from the firm’s prime money market funds this week https://t.co/ZG5G247vZ3  So much for the commercial paper market Mar 18, 2023
  • Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BNY-Mellon, PNC Bank, State Street, Truist and U.S. Bank to make uninsured deposits totaling $30 billion into First Republic Bank https://t.co/ga6k7xBKTM  Reminds me of LTCM and Wall Street Mar 16, 2023
  • All your modern-day bank run questions, answered https://t.co/Zc2dqsv1Ea  Will we finally deal with repo and other types of short-dated margin funding as well? Have we just given permission to banks to take as much interest rate risk as they like? Mar 16, 2023
  • Credit Suisse bonds tumble to levels typically associated with distress https://t.co/U0PDMmnj3T  It’s better to measure financial distress by looking at the dollar price curve by maturity — w/low prices & everything outside of 1 year trades at roughly the same price -> distress Mar 15, 2023
  • In the wake of the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, those looking for the industry’s next threat should start with commercial real estate https://t.co/tyTeNsfPwR  Yes, look at banks have a lot of loans to office and retail real estate, and CMBS, etc. Mar 13, 2023

Politics & Policy

  • The U.S. Needs a Budget Straitjacket https://t.co/xuFqLQ1NON  It’s a good idea, but it will never get enough political traction Mar 18, 2023
  • Trump’s tariffs couldn’t save the California olive industry https://t.co/zHcGa6TZIC  In general trade wars aren’t worth fighting Mar 17, 2023
  • Pensions are where the money is https://t.co/MtGusEwsUG  Using pension funds to fund government projects is a colossally bad idea. Mar 15, 2023
  • Biden’s budget is dead on arrival — and deserves to be https://t.co/qsoUZwX7i2  Both the GOP & Democrats live in separate fantasylands. Mar 14, 2023

Corporate Life

  • HR departments usually deliver the bad news of a layoff. What happens when they are the target? https://t.co/Phrym51dqX  Given my dealings with HR in my life, hearing that they are getting laid off makes me grin. Least productive department Mar 17, 2023
  • Some white-collar training programs have become as selective as Ivy League universities https://t.co/dMqtiucPN1  An idea that is better than college for many young people Mar 16, 2023
  • Communicating through technology may seem easier than meeting in person, but it leaves us more depleted in the long run https://t.co/YEMG6m01Io  We are designed to relate to each other in person. Mar 15, 2023
  • CEOs often stay long past their prime due to their star power, spineless boards and a lack of succession planning. https://t.co/4HhDBvV4HB  Disagree. More often, effective CEOs get removed due to age. The opposite is far less common Mar 14, 2023

Artificial Intelligence

  • OpenAI Unveils GPT-4, Months After ChatGPT Stunned Silicon Valley https://t.co/pTJXnIojvH  Interesting and affordable, but still you have to analyze whether the output is valid Mar 18, 2023
  • What is ChatGPT-4 and how can I use it right now? Here’s everything you need to know about OpenAI’s new release https://t.co/Szr6pUQVgS  Reasonably good summary including costs Mar 15, 2023
  • Here’s what it takes to run the latest AI chatbots in the cloud https://t.co/n5MmtMF750  Pretty ambitious, but will it be accurate? Mar 13, 2023

Economics

  • US Homebuilder Sentiment Unexpectedly Rises for a Third Month https://t.co/prC3YZ8WOB  But will people have enough confidence to buy them in a recession? Mar 15, 2023
  • Egg prices in the US fell for the first time in 5 months https://t.co/GyhGqlBU6j  A welcome change Mar 14, 2023
  • The typical homebuyer’s monthly mortgage payment hit an all-time high of $2,563 https://t.co/JFWp16GtgO  There is still pressure lowering housing prices and mortgage rates, which would bring mortgage payments down in the short run Mar 13, 2023

California

  • Farmers warn US strawberry prices are going to rise if disastrous California flooding continues https://t.co/3xWgX7dg7Y  It’s almost like someone is messing with the weather just to hurt California. Mar 18, 2023
  • The unending storms pounding California are testing the state’s extensive but weakened system of levees, causing some to fail as happened last weekend in the farm town of Pajaro https://t.co/LK3DD7ABwY  These were known issues. California & its counties used their taxes badly. Mar 16, 2023

French Pensions

  • French President Emmanuel Macron should press ahead with his plan to raise the retirement age in the face of public opposition, OECD head Mathias Cormann says https://t.co/vnlOMrKW1Z  Easy for him to say. He doesn’t face the consequences Mar 18, 2023
  • The government of French President Emmanuel Macron invoked a special provision of France’s constitution to bypass Parliament and increase the country’s retirement age https://t.co/pFreR1Yf8K  Macron is right that it is unsustainable, but he just touched the “third rail.” Mar 16, 2023

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Picture Credit: David Merkel, with an assist from the YouImagine AI image generator || Twitter bird with his best friend

Market Dynamics

  • Short sellers are betting against Cathie Wood’s flagship fund more than ever before https://t.co/Gkck6wyVws  This may give Cathie Wood a tailwind… shorts eventually have to be bought in… Mar 11, 2023
  • US buyback announcements are running at a record pace, with $261 billion in commitments so far this year — though much of it is spread across just five companies, according to JPMorgan strategists https://t.co/2y0XNg9jGq  Profitability, but limited opportunities to reinvest Mar 09, 2023
  • Presentation: How to Avoid Financial Disasters by @ritholtz https://t.co/x66S0upQrC  I downloaded and viewed the slide deck. I thought it was quite good. Mar 08, 2023
  • As stock markets take another pummeling, more traders are hiding out in credit markets https://t.co/Gf8P2aGdcU  This is making me feel a little more bullish on stocks. Mar 08, 2023
  • The bond market is doubling down on the prospect of a US recession after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned of a return to bigger interest-rate hikes https://t.co/P5lwUgRm2i  Converting junk-grade floating rate finance to credit risk. Mar 08, 2023
  • What I Don’t Own https://t.co/HC5DPTZ3aq  Sounds pretty similar to me, except I primarily invest in individual stocks w/ some ETFs (together with my clients) Mar 08, 2023
  • The largest-ever buyout financing arranged by private credit firms would allow health-care technology company Cotiviti to pay a whopping 50% of the interest on a $5.5 billion loan with additional debt https://t.co/ytzVQubTMY  Bear market in credit not yet complete for this cycle. Mar 08, 2023
  • A cyberattack that disrupted derivatives trading in January is prompting calls for more oversight to combat the risk of hacks across financial markets https://t.co/NvZIUTz5ds  There are basic safeguards for avoiding hacks, but don’t shocked when a hack happens. Mar 08, 2023
  • While stock-picking investors wait around trying to decide their next market move, their computer-driven counterparts have no such luxury https://t.co/QEBS5qftSH  Another CTA article, which suggests they might be buying US stocks. Who knows? Mar 07, 2023
  • CTAs are minnows, not whales https://t.co/yvT2LmHFpt  Explains how CTAs do position sizing. Mar 07, 2023
  • Dividend stocks are hot. Here are ways to pick the right ones https://t.co/DHBWUkrHWY  Watch free cash flow Mar 07, 2023
  • Junk-rated companies are borrowing again https://t.co/ZVVFazw0Ck  Spreads may be down, but yields are up. Mar 07, 2023

Odds & Ends

  • Recent snowfall won’t end the US Southwest’s historic drought https://t.co/YnKGFUO6Nv  Be happy. After all — weather varies, but sometimes you get a streak where conditions give you more (or less) rain for years. Mar 09, 2023
  • This is your brain on AI: Powerful billionaires are pouring money into life-extending technology — and they just might succeed. https://t.co/ncjE9HZmhH  A faulty mirror of the way you think could live after you die, but face it, you’re still dead, and in the afterlife. Mar 09, 2023
  • Why your house is a terrible investment https://t.co/Atp9TGOuWp  In general I agree, unless you live in an area that people are still moving into, and there is little land to develop. That said, a house gives you more flexibility in how you live. Mar 08, 2023
  • Enough: The Forgotten Lesson of Ben Graham’s Life https://t.co/El31glsWBK  Once he had enough money, he did what he loved Mar 08, 2023
  • Chuck E. Cheese Still Uses Floppy Disks To Make Its Rodent Mascot Dance — For Now https://t.co/Q0ie46iBCd  It is truly hard for old tech to die completely Mar 08, 2023
  • He’s the Oscar-nominated director of “TĂĄr.” He’s also the accidental inventor of Big League Chew. https://t.co/AHJbyEilBN  This is very weird Mar 08, 2023
  • It’s not just you: Customers say they are experiencing more problems with products and service than ever before https://t.co/U7pkDWqdDp  Much as I like Southwest, they have cancelled flights on me too frequently. Mar 08, 2023
  • Ken Griffin said his firms are in the process of negotiating an enterprise-wide license to use OpenAI’s ChatGPT tool https://t.co/fhBIQB8N4j  I’m considering it as well; I’m less certain about how much it would help me. Mar 08, 2023
  • Second Norfolk Southern Train Derails in Ohio in a Month https://t.co/CSCUXoHm3y  Remember that $NSC is culpable here, the owners of the railcars have some liability here as well Mar 07, 2023
  • How Four Scientists Created Gatorade and Became Billionaires https://t.co/I84CCpAbdZ  Excellent and weird story of how Gatorade was created, then monetized. Mar 07, 2023
  • SO YOU WANT TO BE THE NEXT WARREN BUFFETT? https://t.co/cOll6lGZBe  Because this is a “paid” substack, this guy will never learn from me how much he doesn’t know about the liability structure of $BRK.A $BRK.B. I would have given him a nice comment Mar 07, 2023
  • E-Bike battery fires are soaring, especially in New York City where the number of fires more than doubled last year https://t.co/9hz0ngasL7  People aren’t thinking hard enough here. Any battery that can charge fast and discharge fast is likely to be unstable. Mar 07, 2023

Banks

  • The collapse of Silvergate and the takeover of Silicon Valley Bank by the government don’t repeat the Texas banking crisis of the 1980s, but they share similarities https://t.co/5cWjJ2R2Mr  Undiversified & uninsured deposit bases are more prone to runs. And rates have risen Mar 11, 2023
  • The US could learn a thing or two about banking regulation from its strategic rival, China https://t.co/5Qx4iCkvrn  Smaller banks tend to be more cautious in their financing. $SIVB is not representative of small banks. And, no, China’s banks aren’t well regulated. Mar 10, 2023
  • US bank stocks plunged by the most in nearly 3 years https://t.co/Xr3h4ldo1S  Deposits are seeking higher yields, little by little Mar 09, 2023
  • The average 30-year US mortgage rate hit 6.73%, the highest since November, after five straight weekly increases https://t.co/mLjJo24pAn  Interesting to see mortgage yields rise as long treasury yields fall. Bank stock prices have taken a hit also. Mar 09, 2023
  • Silvergate Capital plans to wind down operations and liquidate its bank after the crypto industry’s meltdown sapped the company’s financial strength https://t.co/jQSjAnrwwZ  Will they try to sell of SEN? If they do, will anyone buy it? Mar 09, 2023
  • Fed Chair Jerome Powell laid out a series of concerns he has with crypto and said lenders the regulator oversees must be “taking great care” when engaging with it https://t.co/ci12LaI68t  They have proof of concept with $SI Silvergate Mar 08, 2023

Non-US

  • Western neglect has left Georgia, recently a staunch ally of the West, drifting into Putin’s insidious camp, writes @ThereseRaphael1 https://t.co/BzMLSDNySu  How does the Georgian law differ from US law which requires that foreign lobbyists register? Mar 09, 2023
  • Despite 100% inflation, Argentina is providing an unlikely haven for middle-class Russians who have given up on their homeland https://t.co/rNQgJ1sWtu  Argentina is a place for Russians to flee to, then figure out where they really want to live. Mar 09, 2023
  • Toblerone has to change its packaging to a generic mountaintop because the chocolate doesn’t meet Swiss laws for using the national symbol https://t.co/lKFt83YzBh  Costs win out over the Swissness business. Mar 07, 2023
  • One of the world’s most indebted countries will tell us if central banks went too far, or not far enough https://t.co/H64zsFJV5k  The day of reckoning comes to Canada. Balance sheet stress begets cash flow statement stress once interest rates rise. Mar 07, 2023
  • Estonia’s prime minister, one of Ukraine’s staunchest backers among Western leaders, won a second term, a sign of continuing support for Kyiv in Europe’s east https://t.co/ssRAzqgWMN  Brave Estonia. Mar 07, 2023

Commercial Property

  • Adler: The property group’s market capitalization has fallen more than €3Bn in just over two years. It now needs a €938Mn financing deal, but some creditors are opposing this in London’s High Court https://t.co/ACtqFHXFul  Near the start of a credit bear cycle the weakest default Mar 10, 2023
  • Even wealthy landlords are skipping payments on office buildings https://t.co/ta53kWt2LK  For office property owners, as they approach the balloon repayment of principal they face unwilling lenders. Then the mortgagees face unwilling buyers. Mar 10, 2023
  • A hedge fund manager who made a 119% return shorting debt linked to shopping malls is betting on fresh pain in the US commercial property market https://t.co/fEMWwLyRVT  Difficult to short office-related CMBS Mar 09, 2023
  • A handful of office landlords — from Pimco’s Columbia Property Trust to Brookfield — are defaulting on debt as interest rates ratchet up the pain for property owners https://t.co/USdBjJ03kW  And so the rationalization of unneeded office space begins. Mar 09, 2023

China

  • “It’s not our assessment that China wants to go to war” over Taiwan, US spy chief Avril Haines told a House panel https://t.co/5CScZBwYVN  Yet not everything goes according to plan. Accidents happen. Mar 09, 2023
  • China in a hard pivot to more supply-side reforms https://t.co/oRNbF7a0Gp  The Chinese Communist Party always talks about getting people to consume more, but the politics of that implies more freedom, so they never follow through. Japanese style malaise ensues Mar 09, 2023
  • More local government financing vehicles in China may seek debt reprieves after authorities issued clearer instructions on how to defuse one of the nation’s top financial risks https://t.co/gOEGTrBUrR  This doesn’t do anything to reduce debt at the local governments Mar 08, 2023
  • As China tries to turn the page on one of its worst stretches of growth since the 1970s, its economy is being weighed down by the colossal debts of its local governments https://t.co/sPQJDAwBr5  China’s debt capacity is surpassed by local govt debts. Local govts cut key services Mar 08, 2023

Politics & Policy

  • Stablecoins Like UDSC Are Commodities, CFTC Chair Says https://t.co/ZE42RfbIYE  Regulate them like money market funds Mar 09, 2023
  • Jenna Ellis, an attorney who once described herself as part of an elite strike force representing former Pres. Donald Trump, was disciplined by a judge after admitting to falsely claiming the 2020 election was stolen https://t.co/fuX7cUMWLR  Are lawyers allowed to lie in court? Mar 09, 2023
  • TikTok’s post-reality values increasingly clash with progressive ideals, say @parmy and @tculpan https://t.co/rlIEEXMjBZ  It is ridiculous to blame this on China. The US is a shallow place where many want to look more beautiful than they are. Who cares about “progressive ideals?” Mar 09, 2023

Superconductivity Breakthrough

  • A research team’s breakthrough in superconductors could lead to more efficient electrical grids, better battery life for handheld devices and improving nuclear fusion https://t.co/Z7rnW6acTk  Nitrogen-doped Lutetium Hydride. What a concept using an element that is hard to produce Mar 08, 2023
  • From the Time-Life book “Matter” (1968) regarding Lutetium: “With many of its chemical and physical properties unknown, it has no practical value.” It is a byproduct of processing monazite https://t.co/gelAuCYUvP  https://t.co/1CBTaS2oUz  Mar 08, 2023
  • And how you would maintain a PSI of 145,000 to use this as a superconductor would be challenging, though less challenging than other superconducting materials regarding temperature and pressure https://t.co/1CBTaS2oUz  Mar 08, 2023

Comments

  • @mark_dow What of those who pay on CDS indexes? Also, you could short $HYG while being long $IEF / $SHY to neutralize Treasury duration. Mar 10, 2023
  • @ritholtz You are welcome. Recently I did a presentation like that for the Baltimore CFA Society’s reception of new charterholders. That said, I am an active manager, but I eat my own cooking. 80%+ of my total assets are in my strategies, and 95% of my liquid assets. Mar 09, 2023
  • @JimPethokoukis Why “policymakers” use short-term data that is error-prone to make long-term decisions? (Neglecting lags as well…) Mar 08, 2023

Economics

  • Next big job cuts will be in finance and health care, data show https://t.co/ub34knyFh5  Job cuts are coming. Here is a good guess as to where they come from. Mar 11, 2023
  • Transcript: The Real Reason Companies Are Still Raising Prices https://t.co/NLjbnYE450  Great interview with @SamuelRines @TheStalwart @tracyalloway Mar 10, 2023

Adani Group

  • Heard on the Street: Adani stocks have bounced back strongly in March. But even assuming the group avoids regulatory trouble, a further recovery looks challenging https://t.co/t13vz2cW00  Capital is tight, and they are mostly in capital intensive industries Mar 10, 2023
  • More shares belonging to some Adani Group companies have been encumbered, a trustee says https://t.co/BYg24ow67p  Margin loans are a risky way to finance Mar 08, 2023

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Picture Credit: David Merkel, with an assist from the YouImagine AI image generator || Twitter bird happily surfs

Real Estate

  • NYC’s biggest-ever office-to-housing conversion is opening in the Financial District at prices ranging from just over $1 million for a studio to $12.75 million for a four-bedroom spread https://t.co/sXCwHGAgC3  Nice, if you can afford it. Feb 24, 2023
  • Home lenders are looking for ways to make 6% mortgages more appealing https://t.co/fOq3ulMZm0  Don’t do a buydown of the first-year interest rate. If you can’t afford the house on a level rate basis, don’t buy the house. What will you do when the rate rises? Feb 24, 2023
  • That 3% Mortgage Just Keeps Getting Better https://t.co/mFcum8UPo1  Rather than prepay, invest prepayment money in higher-yielding safe bonds. If rates fall such it doesn’t work anymore, take the appreciated bonds and do a big prepayment Feb 24, 2023
  • The US housing market lost the most value since 2008 https://t.co/qJYXFrPWp7  Has the FOMC forgotten the lessons of the Great Financial Crisis? Yes! Same errors that Bernanke committed… same certainty Feb 23, 2023
  • A growing number of big office landlords are defaulting on their loans, reflecting high interest rates and the popularity of remote and hybrid work policies https://t.co/5LJIGtxPrn  Slow motion train wreck Feb 22, 2023
  • Some people buying their first home will see their fees cut by about $800 a year under a new program that aims to address soaring borrowing costs https://t.co/ABVJpJfqj1  Make FHA loans more attractive by reducing the rate charged on mortgage insurance by 0.3% Feb 22, 2023
  • A couple near Chicago sees investing in real estate as a way to boost their wealth. A financial pro offers advice https://t.co/lVFWXKktkX  No. Real estate is a business. Consider the value of your time, as you say you want to start a family. Buy shares in equity REITs instead. Feb 22, 2023
  • Pyramid’s Crossgates Mall loans lurch toward default https://t.co/Xx2tiOqSR6  “Like most large malls across the U.S., the Crossgates business model has been crushed by the pandemic and changing shopping trends” Feb 21, 2023
  • A growing number of big office landlords are defaulting on their loans, reflecting high interest rates and the popularity of remote and hybrid work policies https://t.co/5LJIGtxPrn  Office properties & lower quality retail will show increasing defaults Feb 21, 2023
  • Europe’s property sector is springing cash calls and dividend cuts on shareholders. But investors in the financially stronger firms aren’t all smiles @hughes_chris https://t.co/nxWXx4cVWw  Effect is highest in Sweden, lowest in the UK Feb 21, 2023
  • A California-based real-estate agent was arranging a deposit when she realized she was getting scammed. “My guy was ready to wire $70,000 to this escrow. Thank God he didn’t.” https://t.co/IRvY6Ap0fW  Bizarre real estate stories where crime was a factor. Feb 20, 2023

Odds & Ends

  • Starbucks launches a range of olive oil-infused drinks in Italy to boost market share in a country where it’s struggled to gain a foothold https://t.co/qsDrYX3fHr  That will work? Feb 23, 2023
  • Is tort reform in the Sunshine State even possible? https://t.co/xyLdMxeue8  Unlikely. By the state gov’t being too interventionist in market issues and yet allowing for too many tort claims to go to trial, the P&C insurance markets are broken in Florida Feb 23, 2023
  • @michaelxpettis I said something like this yesterday, but not as well. Thanks. Feb 23, 2023
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether investor-protection laws were violated as stablecoins were issued https://t.co/PAF7eJnwfF  They are akin to deposit accounts in banking, and should be regulated that way. This one doesn’t belong to the SEC. Feb 23, 2023
  • Social Security Myths That Won’t Die https://t.co/BFGmcGq9GE  Mostly correct, though there are some nuances that he misses. Worth a read. Feb 22, 2023
  • The pandemic wiped out decades of gains by US students. Many parents are in the dark about how far their own kids must go to recover https://t.co/MKkoW2YSuK  One big error of the COVID era was not requiring an additional year of school for students, to make up for what they missed Feb 22, 2023
  • Major brokerages and news media feature technical analysis https://t.co/D6REmikOvx  Pictures grab people, because they like patterns, whether intellectually defensible or not. Feb 21, 2023
  • My tweet “Clouds moving rapidly west, with strong surface winds out of the south” s/b “Clouds moving rapidly east, with strong surface winds out of the south” But what a day, now it is “Clouds moving rapidly east, with strong surface winds out of the north” Feb 21, 2023
  • The Perfect Retirement Investment Nobody Wants https://t.co/27PPPYbt3k  Life insurers have gotten badly burned on LTC. Many annuity companies don’t want to offer LTC. Agents don’t like Immediate Annuities because they never get another commission from the policyholder Feb 21, 2023
  • Asda is rationing sales of fruit and vegetables after widespread shortages. Here’s what UK shoppers need to know https://t.co/x7ITKaOtuU  Effects of a bad growing season in N. Africa Feb 21, 2023
  • Plains, Ga., has about 550 residents—including Jimmy Carter, who is receiving home hospice care. “When I heard the news my heart hurt to know that he was going through this.” https://t.co/3Q5eSEDV6s  Liberal Baptist became a most improbable President of the US Feb 20, 2023

Non-US

  • Soaring onion prices are forcing governments to protect supplies https://t.co/QpkUL7EyZN  If you want to see riots, have poor people unable to afford moderately good food. Feb 25, 2023
  • New Zealand’s recent cyclone shows “the importance of physical cash still in society today,” RBNZ Assistant Governor Karen Silk says https://t.co/lxfSOZh3Th  You can’t have a society without physical currency Feb 25, 2023
  • How India is shaking off its shackles and emerging as an economic power https://t.co/E7WETLSov6  This is wishful thinking. Cultures change slowly, and the Indian government is still pretty corrupt. Feb 23, 2023
  • Iraq is planning to pay for private-sector imports from China in yuan, injecting foreign currency into the financial system to help ease pressure on the dinar https://t.co/IIQsGpJNbI  Will do little for the Iraq economy Feb 22, 2023
  • Iran introduces fresh restrictions on foreign currency sales after a rush on euros and dollars weakened the rial to an all-time low of 500,000 against the greenback https://t.co/BCAg4mi3Om  Corruption, bad policy and sanctions create this hyperflation Feb 21, 2023
  • Kazakhstan says local brokerages that snapped up Russian sovereign debt last year did so largely on behalf of clients who were Kazakh and Russian residents https://t.co/he4RkZaErR  Own Russian sovereign debt? There is liquidity in Kazakhstan. Feb 21, 2023
  • Russian exports of discounted crude and fuel oil to China jumped to record levels as the re-opening of the world’s biggest energy importer gathers pace https://t.co/j6iiSMmeFT  The discounts to Brent for Urals ($13) and Espo ($8) Crude are smaller than what I have read in the past Feb 21, 2023
  • Terrorists were blamed when explosives were found in an SUV parked outside the home of Mumbai’s richest man. The truth was far more alarming. https://t.co/ckyNmd6as8  Long article on entrenched police/political corruption. Another reason India will not develop Feb 21, 2023
  • Japan promises radical spending to boost its birthrate. Will it work? https://t.co/judPpbjI0z  It probably won’t, but perhaps governments could reduce old-age social insurance payments to those who don’t raise children, making the systems solvent #thepunishmentfitsthecrime Feb 20, 2023

Portfolio Management

  • Wagering on the bounce in stocks was always a long shot. Now it’s looking like a sucker’s bet https://t.co/Uy9U89wJBF  The problem is greater for growth stocks Feb 25, 2023
  • “There’s a risk that the macro economy delivers results that markets are still woefully unprepared for,” Billionaire quant investor Cliff Asness warned https://t.co/1yPXSxPr4f  “the valuation gap between the priciest and cheapest stocks is still at the 94th percentile” #agree Feb 23, 2023
  • The fixed-income market has become too bearish, too quickly https://t.co/4CyBDZevFM  Hard to say. There seems to be more demand to borrow on the long end of late. They may be wrong, but the long end of the bond market is rarely irrational. Feb 22, 2023
  • Rajiv Jain is the opposite of Ark CEO Cathie Wood. He’s quietly built a stock-picking juggernaut by investing in old-school, out-of-favor companies https://t.co/JEYvyUM7WD  Difficult to get so many decisions right consistently. Feb 22, 2023
  • The DJIA’s shake-up in the summer of 2020 dumped Exxon Mobil, Pfizer and Raytheon just as it was their turn to thrive https://t.co/QAnLl0umqv  The short-run effect of index inclusion/deletion is up/down, but the 2020 DJIA changes had the opposite performance over the next 2.6 yrs Feb 21, 2023
  • Rising interest rates boosted corporate pensions last year. This year rising rates may boost costs. https://t.co/YctKh06Uxi  It doesn’t have to work this way. You can invest to immunize your pension costs against changes in interest rates. It’s not rocket science. Feb 20, 2023
  • Biden’s SEC is coming for your investment account https://t.co/kTUj8hg9nQ  Actually, Gensler’s proposal would level the playing field, and create a fairer market structure for smaller investors. Why we have such a fragmented market system today astounds me. Feb 18, 2023

Economics

  • “It’s everywhere.” A bird flu outbreak has led to the death of nearly 60 million farm-raised chickens, turkeys and ducks in the U.S. Farmers fear the virus is here to stay. https://t.co/3v2NvG5N5u  A greater proportion of laying hens have died vs chickens generally in the US. Feb 23, 2023
  • Which explains why egg prices have risen so much more than chicken meat prices… https://t.co/eEyGIkUTVG  Feb 23, 2023
  • The world’s largest trial of the four-day work week finds a majority of companies are making the shift https://t.co/hnAky9goEQ  Color me dubious Feb 21, 2023
  • The rise of kitchen table economics https://t.co/Bo6nBxqnZB  Yes, contracts are too complex and construe everything in favor of the large corporations, but you don’t have to sign them unless you are getting enough value. Feb 21, 2023
  • Letter: The economic conditions that make wars more likely https://t.co/NfubUHNC8R  “A plan is needed to regulate current account imbalances, which draws on John Maynard Keynes’s project for an international clearing union.” You really want near-fixed exchange rates? Feb 21, 2023
  • Presidents are tweeting about it, and it’s featuring in election campaigns: Here’s how the world fertilizer crisis became political https://t.co/in7c4UVLgO  This is over shortages of potash & phosphate. Also trade issues stemming from a few wars and their related sanctions Feb 21, 2023

US Politics

  • Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker said he’s willing to spend what it takes to keep Ron DeSantis & Donald Trump out of the White House https://t.co/V8cFk679HD  “Taking your eye off the ball.” I’ve done that. Neglects core responsibilities as governor to criticize national politicians Feb 25, 2023
  • White House is considering two economists who in the Obama administration—Karen Dynan and Janice Eberly—as candidates to become the Federal Reserve’s vice chair https://t.co/IbgMLjjkiP  Please, not an economist. No academics. No former Fed or government lackeys. Feb 23, 2023
  • The Defense Department and Microsoft are investigating an error that exposed military emails, highlighting the security risk of moving sensitive Pentagon data to the cloud https://t.co/w2YPXK9VCM  Happens to the best of us, and the government as well. Feb 23, 2023
  • Biden’s Social Security Trap by @wjmcgurn https://t.co/o2c5ZSJQrV  There is no political will to solve OASDHI (Social Security). Thus in 2032, we will face a scenario like this: https://t.co/BXY54hjsoB  https://t.co/8YWKsnmZvX  Feb 21, 2023
  • The PCAOB says it doesn’t have jurisdiction to monitor audits of privately held crypto firms. Some say there are ways to strengthen the board’s crypto oversight https://t.co/GUoKyWjYY6  Until you can say it is a deposit, commodity, or security, you don’t know how to regulate/audit Feb 21, 2023

Technology

  • Germ-zapping lasers can help cut down on infections after surgery https://t.co/979qq9KSSu  Sounds promising. Feb 25, 2023
  • How Rust went from a side project to the world’s most-loved programming language https://t.co/YvAvVy4H0K  Long read, but fascinating. Memory flaws are one of the biggest reasons for software crashes, and Rust eliminates that problem. Feb 24, 2023
  • Apple is making major progress on a no-prick blood glucose monitoring system for its smartwatch https://t.co/fzN4nDBa1Q  Big stuff, if it works, which has been elusive so far Feb 23, 2023
  • Ozempic’s popularity among people looking to lose weight has limited supplies for diabetes patients who depend on the drug to control their blood sugar https://t.co/2cFHjgLzjK  What is nice for those who want to lose weight is necessary for diabetics Feb 22, 2023
  • Removing carbon from the air will be a key step in fighting climate change. But it’s plagued by problems https://t.co/IhFxHwvqYV  Interesting, if it genuinely does what they say it does Feb 20, 2023

China

  • Xi Jinping is set to have more control in decisions over the financial system, with the likely revival of a powerful committee and a possible appointment of a key ally in the central bank https://t.co/eu2p8z2dpx  What good or bad comes from this is a mystery – ill-minded tinkering Feb 25, 2023
  • Empty shipping containers pile up at packed Chinese port as orders dwindle https://t.co/3f8GPQ1By3  So much for the Chinese economic recovery Feb 21, 2023
  • Thousands of Chinese Retirees Protest Government Cuts to Benefits https://t.co/8JmxGfyENx  Social Insurance plans fail when the ratio of workers to beneficiaries gets too low. Feb 21, 2023
  • Any gains China might have anticipated from its embrace of Russia are hard to spot. But the costs are clear & growing https://t.co/F8wNl8ruWU  “Xi is trapped in a strategic dilemma, at the mercy of events. His erstwhile masterstroke is looking more and more like a losing bet.” Feb 21, 2023
  • Pakistan’s creditors are demanding China take as big a haircut as them in any sovereign debt restructuring, perhaps bigger. It should @mihirssharma https://t.co/2wnXDsT4nW  If corruption is not ended, debt forgiveness won’t do much Feb 20, 2023

Companies

  • Carvana’s disappointing quarterly results sent the online used-car dealer’s stock into freefall and triggered a string of warnings from analysts https://t.co/Pe6xrZjMBT  So much for showmanship $CVNA Feb 25, 2023
  • BYD Most Likely Faked Its 2022 Sales Numbers, Real Ones Could Be Much Lower https://t.co/hpjoersddF  I have no idea, but if true, wow. Feb 24, 2023
  • National Public Radio will reduce its staff by 10% after projecting a $30 million revenue shortfall for the coming year https://t.co/shgKfke3Xb  In the end, it is just a business, albeit a nonprofit. Good nonprofits care for their people and don’t overexpand during booms https://t.co/Tlzm6Habx1  Feb 23, 2023
  • The EV question for auto executives is: How quickly should they make the shift to electric vehicles? https://t.co/8MaVClqMLB  The danger is in moving too fast on this. Let unsubsidized consumers decide. Feb 22, 2023
  • Almost a decade ago, Elon Musk envisioned a passenger transit that moved at nearly the speed of sound. Where is it? https://t.co/rhGkIWdDSn  Hyperloop: Boring fantasy, not technology Feb 21, 2023

South Africa

  • Eskom’s chairman says outgoing CEO behaved “reprehensibly” when he made accusations of theft and corruption within the state-owned electricity company https://t.co/dupwUx6T1U  Telling the truth is “reprehensible.” Coal thieves also a problem. Get ready for more blackouts. Feb 23, 2023
  • South Africa’s rand rallies after the budget unveiled details of plans to deal with debt at the ailing state-run power utility Eskom https://t.co/TX3kvaN8PN  Unless you deal with corruption and crime surrounding Eskom, this is all for naught Feb 22, 2023
  • South Africa’s finance minister will probably spend about five minutes of his budget speech Wednesday on Eskom — a tense 300 seconds for bondholders https://t.co/SBswUTR3G4  If you can’t end the corruption & sabotage regarding Eskom, the debt transfer won’t help South Africa Feb 21, 2023

Ukraine War

  • As NATO’s military commander a decade ago, Admiral @StavridisJ worked productively with Russian generals. But Putin’s obstinance led to his doomed war in Ukraine https://t.co/73lA9K8J0B  The Russian military exists to make the French military look good Feb 23, 2023
  • As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine enters year two & relations with China worsen, concerns persist over whether the US is ready to fight a war https://t.co/w2JbHsZNi0  â€œEvery single person knows that what we’re doing is crazy,” said Ferrari. “But everybody is helpless to change it.” Feb 21, 2023
  • Vladimir Putin should read the story of King Croesus. In fact, so should we all https://t.co/abmJ06n3qu  Almost no expected the current outcome. That said, many wars end in a stalemate. That seems to be what is happening now. Feb 20, 2023

Personal Finance

  • Why don’t we talk about money? https://t.co/uYnJdKGDFs  Other reasons: looking bad by comparison, people may think you are arrogant because you have done well. I think children need to understand how the economics of the family works, so they can do it as well or better Feb 22, 2023
  • Some parents aren’t waiting for retirement or urgent healthcare needs to move in with adult children https://t.co/EeBAGjFVHu  Think hard about this, and all the adults talk it through — who is in charge? How are bills paid? Privacy? There are many ways for this to go wrong. Feb 22, 2023
  • Markets Weekend: When is a Banc not a bank? https://t.co/QoSdP3yFKx  When it offers bonds that function like deposit accounts. How Compound Banc could originate the loans mentioned does not make sense. Avoid. Avoid. AVOID! ht: @felixsalmon Feb 20, 2023

Adani Group

  • The combined market value of Adani Group’s shares have just fallen below $100 billion https://t.co/qsNPOK1xGh  The question is how much liquidity they really have, versus maturing debts and needed working capital. Paying off a few debts w/scarce liquidity could backfire Feb 22, 2023
  • Almost a month after a bombshell short seller report lopped off $132B in market value from Gautam Adani’s empire, the Indian billionaire has doubled down on his comeback strategy https://t.co/7RybNimFLC  Making a virtue of necessity, while capital costs skyrocket Feb 20, 2023
  • Adani Group stocks have seen more than $132 billion of market value wiped out since the explosive Hindenburg Research report, but none is hit as bad as Adani Total Gas https://t.co/3j9MzDyK5S  What a chart https://t.co/nlK8PZNAKZ  Feb 20, 2023

Credit

  • The $1.8 trillion student debt bubble is about to burst https://t.co/LPQAkME8BI  Do NOT borrow money to get a degree that will NOT give you the income to repay the debts. And don’t complain unless someone forced you to go to college & take on the debt Feb 25, 2023
  • An office landlord tied to money manager Pimco has defaulted on $1.7 billion of mortgage notes https://t.co/xUCEuoGkfW  Becoming a self-reinforcing cycle of skittish lenders, defaults, sagging prices for offices. Feb 24, 2023
  • A quirky German debt product is gaining fans around the world. Here’s what it is all about https://t.co/FvUnDBAfLJ  Illiquid promissory notes with low disclosure and no secondary market. I can see why borrowers like it, but all the lenders get is extra yield vs a traditional debt Feb 22, 2023

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Picture Credit: David Merkel, with an assist from the YouImagine AI image generator || Twitter bird flies off into the sunset

Companies

  • Missed signals: behind Trafigura’s $577mn loss on non-existent nickel https://t.co/fJNQSmKbgl  Fascinating that they never did physical checks of what was delivered. Also that they didn’t do a background check on TMT. Feb 16, 2023
  • Podcast Companies, Once Walking on Air, Feel the Strain of Gravity https://t.co/RaNTop40uS  My kids ask me to do a podcast. I tell them it’s too much work for too little gain. I would rather read than listen, unless I am driving or cutting the yard. Feb 15, 2023
  • One of the world’s richest families was thrust into the spotlight by a surprising share sale from one of its own members https://t.co/Gk6Xzr2OcU  You need a liquidity plan, akin to what a private real estate fund does. You can’t assume that no family member needs liquidity Feb 15, 2023
  • How Ben & Jerry’s ended up at war with itself https://t.co/x2W5knUvR7  The revolution eats it own children, even as they eat ice cream Feb 15, 2023
  • As tech companies shed thousands of jobs, more employees want a say in their severance https://t.co/WHDVvdwRCO  Hiring a lawyer at your severance can be valuable. Feb 15, 2023
  • On the latest episode of the Zero podcast, @AkshatRathi speaks to the founder of Imprint Energy, which developed a printable battery for internet-connected devices. https://t.co/uIdNoxfPlz  Looks promising Feb 15, 2023
  • FICO scores are flawed. These lenders say they’ve found a better way to judge your credit https://t.co/jklyVW53r3  Sowing the seeds of new consumer bankruptcies on the low end of the income scale. Avoid debt for consumption purposes. Feb 14, 2023
  • A $4B accounting shortfall typically raises alarm bells for an auditor. Somehow a PwC affiliate missed it at Americanas https://t.co/Vr72rqV6c7  PwC may have cultural problems. If you can miss something that large & not be culpable, it calls into question the value of audits Feb 14, 2023
  • As tech giants look to slim down, middle managers are feeling the pressure https://t.co/4I5JhO6ez8  Not sure if this is good or bad Feb 13, 2023

Odds & Ends

  • New Car Prices Are So High Only Rich Americans Can Afford Them https://t.co/yrGEmDSIVS  This will eventually have political impacts, as regulations affect poor people more than the rich Feb 18, 2023
  • Wanting to go big with AI in search, Microsoft could end up causing the kinds of harm it will come to regret, writes @parmy https://t.co/e9g3Mlom6D  They are not sentient. They are easily tricked. They are code. Feb 18, 2023
  • The buildout of so-called dark warehouses has begun, but the high-tech facilities are far from common due to their high price tags and the limitations of robotic technology https://t.co/i1xgwi8BKY  Not quite ready for prime time Feb 17, 2023
  • A ‘Crucial Bridge’ to History, the Codex Sassoon Could Fetch $50 Million https://t.co/z9xQGClGoF  Really, you can’t put a price on this. I bet there are Hebrew scholars worried about who will buy this, & future access. Feb 16, 2023
  • 3 amateur codebreakers set out to decrypt old letters. They uncovered royal history https://t.co/kNGYZx6YT7  But nothing significant, really… Feb 16, 2023
  • This Company Uses Machine Learning to Track Your Antibodies https://t.co/c0r5Bk1Tn4  Promising technology Feb 15, 2023
  • Two of the most-talked-about Super Bowl ads on Sunday focused on an unlikely topic: Jesus https://t.co/lDOsgH3cjM  The gospels were written for a Roman audience as eyewitness accounts of who Jesus was & what he did. Read them & ask, was Jesus a legend, liar, lunatic or Lord? Feb 13, 2023
  • @codywillard Wow, Cody. Glad you’re alive. The Lord had mercy on you and your family. Feb 12, 2023

Culture

  • Yes, Single People Can Be Happy and Healthy https://t.co/6mrXtdv6ai  It is better to be single & wish you were married, than to be married & wish you were single. That said, this article is wrong, at least for men. Married men live longer & are happier than single men, on average Feb 18, 2023
  • The adults celebrating child-free lives https://t.co/hkiZK3zrpn  Those not having or adopting children should be excluded from government pensions and healthcare benefits Feb 18, 2023
  • Some school districts are doing away with honors classes, which has made some parents unhappy https://t.co/rPHDXEx68L  All teaching only reaches a fraction of IQs. This is why there needs to be many levels of teaching: high, middle, low, if you want to have all children improve. Feb 17, 2023
  • Education should not be a social experiment. It needs to be based off of what works, not wishful theories. What gets taught to prospective teachers in college is positively harmful to pedagogy. We need to end that. https://t.co/uHyxOznUxl  Feb 17, 2023
  • Miriam Adelson, along with her late-husband, poured tens of millions of dollars into former President Trump’s reelection campaign. Now she’s leading a push to legalize gambling in Texas https://t.co/jMmlxpVWq7  Legal gambling leaves society as a whole worse off Feb 16, 2023
  • As the country emerges from a pandemic that left children zoning out over Zoom, parents are turning to the turbocharged “Russian math” method to give their kids an academic edge. https://t.co/zsdtgrNnel  The examples given are not impressive Feb 16, 2023
  • Disney has tightly controlled Winnie-the-Pooh’s image. With the copyright expired, ‘Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey’ breaks the wholesome mold https://t.co/2H3IxjRtOc  This is not good, but it is notable. Perhaps $DIS will find a way to sue. Feb 15, 2023

Real Estate

  • America’s Priciest Neighborhoods Are Changing as the Ultra-Rich Move to Florida https://t.co/GOIJ61QsPD  The wealthy seek lower taxes and warmer places. There should be no surprise here. Feb 15, 2023
  • Turning offices into condos: New York after the pandemic https://t.co/z8zoyRUTyy  Popular concept. Tough but not impossible to execute Feb 15, 2023
  • Brookfield Defaults on Two Los Angeles Office Towers. The properties include the Gas Company Tower and the 777 Tower https://t.co/KmTLc9r9OZ  Losses go to Brookfield DTLA Fund holders, & their lenders Feb 15, 2023
  • When It’s Easy to Be a Landlord, No One Wants to Sell https://t.co/brqym7aoJS  With help from firms like Mynd that do property managment, you can keep your home w/a low rate mortgage, and rent it out Feb 13, 2023
  • Why mortgage rates spiked from 6% to 6.5% early-February 2023 & what’s next https://t.co/y6sKncYEBs  Complex way of saying “We don’t know.” Hint: the long end of the curve does not move much in response to short-term inflation. FOMC, take note Feb 13, 2023
  • The high costs of housing are influencing romantic decisions https://t.co/opJ5P2Abjw  Moving in reveals who each of you really are. Selfishness, laziness, bad communicating, substance abuse, lying… break relationships Feb 13, 2023

Adani Group

  • Adani Group tells investors that they will address deadlines to repay debt with options including private placement notes and cash from operations https://t.co/FUEWh43C3I  But will they be profitable after refinancing near-term debt at higher rates? What covenants will they make? Feb 17, 2023
  • Adani halts $847mn acquisition of coal-fired power plant in India https://t.co/hJQDR61XfB  Financing is less available. Not a good sign. Feb 16, 2023
  • That would functionally subordinate some of their public debts, making them even less valuable. I remember looking at the final private placement Enron issued. Complexity was over the top; we did not participate. I would love to see the PP memorandum leaked. https://t.co/sDRoh7P6qc  Feb 16, 2023
  • Indian conglomerate Adani Group is in talks with potential investors as it considers offering privately placed bonds for at least three of its group companies, people familiar with the matter say https://t.co/YF98mIE4Vb  Maybe they do secured debt, or add protective covenants Feb 16, 2023
  • Adani Group sees no material refinancing risk for its listed companies and has no significant near-term liquidity requirements https://t.co/frK2aP7nZq  Complex holding company structures make liquidity management difficult. I’ve lost money on a few of those. Feb 15, 2023
  • Adani Group sees no material refinancing risk for its listed companies and has no significant near-term liquidity requirements https://t.co/frK2aP7nZq  If so, keep paying down your debts, and feed losses to the shorts. Feb 15, 2023

The Markets

  • The rise of short-dated options is creating event risk on the scale of the stock market’s early-2018 volatility implosion, JPMorgan’s Marko Kolanovic says https://t.co/IRIg7SYOb8  Possibility of self-reinforcing move if 0DTE options go into the money, forcing option deals to hedge Feb 16, 2023
  • A once arcane corner of Wall Street is now in demand as borrowing costs soar and $6 trillion of bond maturities loom https://t.co/XZsM1nDN43  The corporate bond market is not arcane, & though there will be bankruptcies, this is not a crisis. Feb 16, 2023
  • The shares have surged so much that it’s creating a dilemma for investment giant Nuveen — and posing a little-known risk to its investors https://t.co/jmcR1WpDbH  Why not do an “in kind” distribution as a dividend, or a discounted buyback, or just “ride the ask” $ENGH Feb 16, 2023
  • Credit Suisse is offering investors a hefty incentive to buy its new euro bonds just days after announcing a bigger-than-expected quarterly loss https://t.co/OeuM8J31NO  Seems desperate Feb 15, 2023
  • The mood is starting to shift in global credit markets after a three-month rally https://t.co/VRjlamNJ0W  Credit rally overdone & difficult to get away from LIBOR #liborwasbetter Feb 13, 2023

Non-US

  • Nigeria is trying to gain more control over its vast cash economy by compelling citizens to swap their old money for newly designed naira bills. But the plan is running into serious trouble https://t.co/63mjaLLbBQ  Difficult to outlaw cash when financial systems are underdeveloped Feb 16, 2023
  • It’s undermining Beijing’s attempt to engineer an economic recovery tied to consumption https://t.co/GrjowTdfdT  Efforts to get Chinese to consume more creates financial speculation via low rates on personal loans. Feb 15, 2023
  • More than 200 construction bosses face arrest in Gaziantep and cities across Turkey’s earthquake zone. https://t.co/sCgMpMdLup  Corruption leading to deaths Feb 15, 2023
  • Japan is quietly experiencing its biggest outbreak of the pandemic https://t.co/rbwea15TwH  Elderly population is more likely to die. Medical resources are stretched. Feb 15, 2023
  • Moldova’s pro-European president accused Russia of trying to overthrow its democratic system and open a fresh front in Moscow’s war on Ukraine https://t.co/2koKvf0DbJ  Putin wants the USSR back. Feb 13, 2023

Central Banking

  • Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin says he supported the central bank’s plans to continue raising interest rates in quarter-point increments https://t.co/R9w8bhtw3l  Driving through the rear-view mirror. My three questions he didn’t answer at the 3/22 @CFASBaltimore all came true Feb 17, 2023
  • President Christine Lagarde reiterates that the European Central Bank intends to raise borrowing costs by another half-point next month https://t.co/zGOtVri6ka  Unless you want to discover hidden weaknesses in EU financial systems, you shouldn’t invert the yield curve further Feb 15, 2023
  • Liquidity, leverage and interconnectedness? https://t.co/abqrRH6lsZ  Good interview w/@fmnatalucci. He understands financial risk and liquidity. A lot of what he said sounds like me. Where I see risk is not open-end high yield funds, but EU banks & pseudo-banks. Feb 15, 2023
  • The White House is considering nominating Austan Goolsbee, who became president of the Chicago Fed last month, to serve as vice chair of the Federal Reserve’s board of governors https://t.co/QwxJJD5Gph  We could do worse, but why not Lacy Hunt? Feb 15, 2023
  • The end of distressingly high inflation is coming into view, but the cost of goods, housing and other services is complicating path for easing consumer prices https://t.co/laCY0cZDdn  Focus on median inflation than all of the measures that drop out whole spending categories Feb 13, 2023

Economic Policy

  • How three major bills could change the American economy. https://t.co/ufiiuufFTw  Nothing useful, lots of additional debt Feb 17, 2023
  • The US Supreme Court could rewrite the rules of the internet with a challenge to the liability shield cherished by online companies https://t.co/sQfeDhzmJO  I lean in favor of allowing lawsuits against social media companies for inadequate moderation, but limiting damage claims Feb 17, 2023
  • Odd Lots Transcript: This Is What Happens If the US Actually Hits the Debt Ceiling –What if it doesn’t get lifted? https://t.co/AkPZE6hxoy  No one knows. Maybe the 14th amendment section 4 can be invoked to invalidate the debt ceiling Feb 16, 2023
  • New York City is pausing a small business loan program less than a month after it launched after an unanticipated influx of over 10,000 applications https://t.co/i9uRS9Ml2o  Why governments should not subsidize: they are either too generous or cheapskates Feb 15, 2023

China

  • China’s sweeping policy support for the property sector has been no quick fix for developers’ liquidity struggles, leaving some investors waiting until the last minute for cash https://t.co/EB7wDHkaJH  The Chinese Communist Party learns reflating a bubble is surprisingly difficult Feb 17, 2023
  • Heard on the Street: China’s fiscal position—and ability to fund other priorities—will increasingly be threatened by threatened by rising healthcare costs https://t.co/0sX2iyoBoE  Social welfare systems only work well when populations are young. Feb 17, 2023
  • Investors are buying Chinese stock funds, betting that the reopening of China’s economy will help push markets higher  https://t.co/hISEKrfwbN  ‘“There’s opportunity, to be sure, but I think those are trades, not investments,” said Nancy Tengler.’ Feb 15, 2023
  • In China, single mothers are facing fewer hurdles as Beijing tries to boost its fertility rate https://t.co/BNIeVRlIs2  Reduces abortion Feb 15, 2023

Crypto

  • Binance is considering ending relationships with US business partners as regulators turn up the heat on crypto https://t.co/8f7dIWson0  Pushing crypto out of the US is good policy Feb 17, 2023
  • Crypto platforms could soon face a new set of hurdles to hold digital assets owned by clients of hedge funds and private equity firms in the US https://t.co/m9bZLCxokL  Makes sense if you want custodial accounts. Feb 15, 2023
  • Sam Bankman-Fried was blocked from using virtual private networks while on bail, with the judge overseeing his fraud case expressing concern that VPNs present similar risks as encrypted messaging apps https://t.co/7zpiWHoMjE  From crypto-king to peasant disallowed encryption Feb 15, 2023
  • US regulatory crackdown on crypto aids Tether’s USDT, a stablecoin that’s located offshore, even as the transparency of its reserves faces scrutiny https://t.co/didoPeEO6t  US holders of Tether will appreciate the foreign domicile when Tether fails & recovering value is hard Feb 15, 2023

War

  • Hundreds of fuel vessels are taking steps to hide where they’re going https://t.co/wK67gNEjV2  Evading sanctions — there is a profit to be made, and Russia needs money for the war Feb 18, 2023
  • Many countries are reassessing their military might — and it’s not just limited to Ukraine’s neighbors https://t.co/C0QpA7rXOj  War takes resources, & budgets are stretched… what will be given up? Feb 18, 2023
  • The world’s war machine is running low on ammunition https://t.co/VAMcJLwxbp  Together with stretched government budgets and relatively tight money globally — is this why the long end is selling off? Feb 16, 2023

Pensions

  • Time Bomb of Public Pension Funding Ticks Louder https://t.co/QO6mS07lwI  One way the article could have been improved would be to add in the effects of falling interest rates, not just the long stock rally Feb 13, 2023
  • The aggregate funding level for state and local pension plans is below 50%, inviting a disaster that would outstrip the occasional municipal bankruptcy https://t.co/QO6mS07lwI  Well written. Will it take the failure of a US State to get serious about this? Feb 13, 2023

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Picture Credit: David Merkel, with an assist from the YouImagine AI image generator || Chibi Gautam Adani surrounded by Twitter birds

Adani Group

  • “Foreign investors are clearly watching.” Billionaire Gautam Adani is battling the worst crisis of his corporate life and that’s raising big questions about India’s credibility as a destination for global investors https://t.co/zkvzRS87R6  Indian cronyism affects foreign investors Feb 04, 2023
  • S&P Global slashes the outlooks on Adani Group’s credit scores to negative as investors grow concerned about potential governance risks and funding challenges https://t.co/Z2FSJfUxyB  Not so big, just neg outlook, not neg watch Feb 03, 2023
  • In six trading days, Gautam Adani has lost more than Sam Bankman-Fried and had his wealth wiped out almost as fast as Elon Musk https://t.co/WXJ7aMZhPC  Easy come, easy go. Wealth does not grow that fast, unless there’s too much leverage employed. Feb 02, 2023
  • Gautam Adani recently had a $147B fortune. Now, he’s facing billions of dollars in losses, a short seller’s accusations of fraud and a canceled $2.5 billion stock sale. https://t.co/7VxW1TRVgV  He never had a $147B fortune. The float is small, and the debts are high. Price<>Value Feb 02, 2023
  • Adani says his ports-to-power conglomerate would examine its capital market strategy after pulling his flagship firm’s $2.5B stock offering following fraud allegations made by Hindenburg https://t.co/uUIaQfzKnm  If you think you can grow without free cash flow you are nuts Feb 02, 2023
  • The flagship company of beleaguered Indian tycoon Gautam Adani pulls a record $2.4 billion share sale https://t.co/iJMW4nnV4F  Time for the financing methods of last resort https://t.co/3rqY8GgZ6e  Feb 01, 2023
  • The crisis plaguing Gautam Adani takes a sudden turn for the worse, with a record 28% plunge in his flagship company’s stock raising questions over the collateral he needs to cover loans https://t.co/4b2HYe4IDc  When the is no free cash flow, you can’t fight back against shorts Feb 01, 2023
  • Adani Group put up $300 million worth of its shares on Friday to maintain its collateral cover on a $1 billion loan, sources say https://t.co/au2vrOHbt7  This looks risky, or at least dilutive. Why not borrow directly? Jan 31, 2023
  • Abu Dhabi-based IHC says it will invest $400 million in the $2.5 billion follow-on share sale floated by Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s flagship https://t.co/oyEscsd9yy  They are as shady as Adani Group, and are using many of their techniques. Jan 31, 2023
  • A plunge in dollar bonds of Adani Group companies quickened on Monday after a rebuttal by the Indian conglomerate failed to ease concerns following a scathing report by short seller Hindenburg https://t.co/RjJU0HJcSO  If I were speculating on the bonds, I average in slowly Jan 30, 2023
  • RT @AlephBlog: Billionaire Adani Says India Will Add $1 Trillion to GDP Every 12-18 Months https://t.co/FAbMGwkyV5  Not likely. When this ov… Jan 30, 2023
  • Adani Group fired back at an American short seller, but the group’s 413-page response didn’t stop a slide in the shares and bonds of its companies https://t.co/72zaxIzoDE  Maybe some margin calls? Also IHC of Abu Dhabi has similar issues. Debt, complexity, fast stock price rise… Jan 30, 2023
  • These are the guys who bought $400 million of stock in an Adani Group subsidiary. Birds of a feather flock together. https://t.co/HOgpd9E0sX  Jan 30, 2023
  • For more on International Holding Company, look here: https://t.co/QUAfU9B2PR  https://t.co/fz6Y0WzVMv  Jan 30, 2023
  • Adani says Hindenburg’s conduct “is nothing short of a calculated securities fraud” https://t.co/OskrHOfmQj  As we say near DC, “Never believe anything until it is officially denied.” Also, saying, “Same as above” many times does not answer the question. Same as *what* above? Jan 30, 2023
  • Also, cheaters often label accusers they way they themselves should be labeled. Calling Hindenburg “Madoff” increases the likelihood that Adani is engaged in fraudulent activity. https://t.co/weWJnxUD9w  Jan 30, 2023
  • Adani responds to Hindenburg report, but stocks continue descent https://t.co/HhxMJ4RJGn  Fascinating that Adani Group for all of its size, needs to get a measly $2B secondary IPO done. They don’t want to give up control, but they probably need liquidity https://t.co/IIDr73q2hH  Jan 30, 2023

Portfolio Management

  • Cathie Wood is having a scorching start to the year and she wants investors to know it https://t.co/unUdiVze8B  Humility is not her strong suit. Feb 03, 2023
  • How many stocks should a portfolio hold? https://t.co/AsYvvxPmoo  Usually, I think 20-35, but it depends on what types of stocks, and what other assets you own, and your time horizon. Feb 03, 2023
  • Legendary ‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry issues an ominous warning after the latest stock market rally: ‘Sell.’ https://t.co/fY3XdLg8IX  We are in the 97th percentile of valuations as the equity share model goes. But I don’t see weakness in financials. Analogy 2000-2002? Feb 03, 2023
  • Michael Platt built an $11 billion fortune by turning his back on outsiders’ money to focus on tending his own — with some perilous losses along the way https://t.co/UQZnbki7tO  Odds of flaming-out are nonzero. Feb 02, 2023
  • After the Darkest Hour Comes the Dawn https://t.co/RbSkvVGTo3  European Value looks promising Jan 31, 2023
  • European de-equitisation comes of age https://t.co/d8KHqn7eR9  Interesting, probably positive for European stocks. Jan 31, 2023
  • The Forgotten Lessons of 2008: Seth Klarman https://t.co/BwtgKTbq21  Worth reviewing. Valuations are still stretched, and debt levels are high, though not at the banks. Jan 31, 2023
  • Heard on the Street: After an epic 15-year run, hedge fund Universa’s Mark Spitznagel says the financial system is poised for a crisis—eventually https://t.co/YobK8GMFHH  Has anyone gotten a look at what Spitznagel uses for hedging? I assume credit default swaps, but am I right? Jan 31, 2023
  • How Do Active Managers Invest Their Own Money? @ritholtz https://t.co/OrOH6x4j1F  Many active managers invest passively. I invest over 90% of my liquid assets in my active strategies. It would be dishonest for me not to have significant skin in the game as an active value manager. Jan 31, 2023
  • Pension-fund investment in private-market loans reached an eight-year high in 2022, even as banks pulled back on lending and default rates inched upward https://t.co/Ke7N42SMx9  If CALPERS has shown up, the bull cycle is near its peak. Jan 30, 2023

Companies

  • British companies are starting to pay a premium for staff who work five days a week in the office, according to recruitment giant Reed https://t.co/S1TAegZiZC  This shouldn’t be a surprise. Being able to interact more freely is valuable. Feb 02, 2023
  • A startup that sells $555,000 flying motorbikes will soon start trading on Nasdaq, making it the rare Japanese company to trade on the American bourse https://t.co/X7hU6RFRYk  Not useful in its present form, but with improvements who knows what this could bring? Feb 02, 2023
  • Industrial companies like Caterpillar, UPS and Dover appear to be moving full steam ahead on investments amid chatter about a downturn https://t.co/icbGmSukui  I would be skeptical for this to persist Feb 01, 2023
  • Blackstone’s $69 billion real estate trust hit a monthly redemption limit in January, ramping up the pressure on the massive vehicle for wealthy individuals https://t.co/UINfs7x4Le  Get out if you can. Feb 01, 2023
  • AIG Terminates Interim Finance Chief Mark Lyons https://t.co/j5r5pNwWhy  Odd. $AIG Jan 31, 2023
  • Why Does It Feel Like Amazon Is Making Itself Worse? https://t.co/18JZI92WOm  Interesting thought. As a facilitator of third party sellers, $AMZN works less well than as a first party seller. But maybe they just want to be a middleman. Jan 31, 2023
  • Lawler: D.R. Horton (DHI) Net Order Price Declined “Roughly” 10% from Peak https://t.co/AofAP4Hh8C  Housing prices continue to sag Jan 30, 2023

Non-US

  • Ghana plans to convert an estimated $3.3 billion of loans owed to its central bank into bonds, making it the single biggest holder of domestic government securities and exposing it to an ongoing debt restructuring, sources say https://t.co/eHkTOgg9bB  No free lunch Feb 03, 2023
  • Maybe sending tanks and escalating in Ukraine is the only way to end the war. But Western leaders haven’t earned the benefit of the doubt https://t.co/3YG0EfLg4M  This does need to be talked about more as the EU & the US are depleting stockpiles of armaments… is this worth it? Jan 30, 2023
  • Parts of Johannesburg are being subjected to renewed water-supply cuts as ongoing electricity shortages disrupt pumping operations https://t.co/HpuzaIrv3j  Theivery & corruption plague Eskom. When will S. Africa’s leaders focus on the good of the nation and clean up Eskom? Jan 30, 2023
  • Will accusations of dirty governance tactics in India spur global investors to change course? @shuli_ren https://t.co/HqEmEeOSFX  Given the complex holding company structure, how much debt might not be disclosed because of joint ventures, etc? Jan 30, 2023
  • For Russian gas to reach India, it will have to build pipelines through Afghanistan and Pakistan, writes @JLeeEnergy. Good luck with that. https://t.co/ZQuFDe6PN6  Putin does not care for his own people. He has semi-permanently damaged his own economy. Jan 30, 2023

Central Banking

  • Understanding the FOMC through the eyes of a child https://t.co/yV3G6wDvV8  Avoiding bravery and panic — be humble. https://t.co/OrNU6vBsyS  Feb 01, 2023
  • ‘Colossal’ central bank buying drives gold demand to decade high https://t.co/enUPd28Dad  Gold is a nice neutral asset to hold, particularly during wars and trade wars Jan 31, 2023
  • Banks tighten lending standards in an uncertain economy https://t.co/qF6FEzgBQ6  Credit deteriorating on the low end Jan 31, 2023
  • The Goose That Stopped Laying Golden Eggs https://t.co/8P3aOUZE4g  Central Banks should keep their assets short, and not play around with the yield curve. Jan 31, 2023
  • The Fed Is Asleep At The Wheel And Americans Are Feeling The Consequences https://t.co/qRWqSx032A  Falling M2 and ODL, inverted yield curve, weakness in housing and autos. Time to cut rates. Drive through the windshield, not the rearview mirror Jan 31, 2023

Legal

  • A former Allianz fund manager says the lawyers who were engaged to represent him in a fraud investigation switched sides to become government informants https://t.co/YA8HSihKdn  Maybe we are getting to the point where employees need to purchase their own E&O policies. Feb 03, 2023
  • A derivative lawsuit in Delaware seeks to hold McDonald’s directors and officers liable for failing to sufficiently intervene in a sexual-harassment scandal. https://t.co/9vAJDklSRo  If appealed, it will likely be reversed. In other news: D&O insurance premiums rise again. Feb 03, 2023
  • A court ruled that Johnson & Johnson can’t use the bankruptcy system to administer tens of thousands of talc claims because the fund the company created to pay claimants had too much money. https://t.co/ZLQ19Ldgrh  To me it seems like a form of fraudulent conveyance of a liability Feb 03, 2023
  • Johnson & Johnson will probably face years of litigation in courts around the US before it can resolve baby-powder lawsuits https://t.co/utpZ8D5wyq  Until now, it has been difficult to deny a bankruptcy petition, even from solvent entities Feb 03, 2023

Crypto

  • New York Digital Investment Group, one of the largest crypto lenders, is repossessing 27,403 mining machines from bankrupt miner Core Scientific https://t.co/J44Dyp7kW8  If selling the machine isn’t profitable, why should running them be profitable? Feb 03, 2023
  • A trader faces criminal charges for allegedly manipulating the decentralized exchange Mango Markets and draining more than $110 million of cryptocurrency https://t.co/Lv4MUKJAoE  Some may think “code is law,” but there are more general laws that exist outside computer code Feb 03, 2023
  • When a one-time TV and film producer’s company bought Farmington State Bank, it got a name change and a new shareholder: Sam Bankman-Fried’s Alameda Research https://t.co/3iqIKi0PVl  Could be wrong, but crypto can’t be a reserve asset at a bank. Maybe it could be held as surplus Feb 03, 2023
  • Crypto’s Tax Shelter Problem https://t.co/V6X2S0G0Mo  Secrecy on the part of tax havens compounds the difficulty of getting money back Feb 01, 2023

Financial Plumbing

  • The glitch at the New York Stock Exchange has become a pawn in the ongoing battle over a rewrite of stock-trading rules proposed by US regulators https://t.co/JsCnvxwy2x  One central order book would be nice Feb 02, 2023
  • “We are at the beginning of a reckoning.” Scott Peng, one of the first people to call out Libor, is now sounding the alarm over its successor https://t.co/3ot0DVxfzm  “Corporate borrowers… can’t enter into paid term SOFR swaps, given the ARRC’s recommendations” #liborwasbetter Feb 01, 2023
  • Smart money is betting on insurance money to fund fast growth https://t.co/zJyogt1VbS  The bad old days for life insurers returns. Insurers/reinsurers are taking too much asset risk. Some regulators should disallow reserve credits for insuring asset performance by weak reinsurers Jan 31, 2023
  • if I wanted to talk to an institutional expert on deep out-of-the-money put options, who should I talk to? Feb 01, 2023

Politics

  • Biden administration proposed an end to an exemption allowing health plans to exclude coverage of no-cost birth control on moral grounds, part of work to protect access to contraception since Roe v. Wade was overturned https://t.co/yPPi43RP3n  Supreme Court already ruled on this Feb 03, 2023
  • How Biden Officials Bungled a Better Vaccine https://t.co/xgUujkehiy  Argues that C19 isn’t merely seasonal, & that the J&J vaccine offers more durable immunity FD: + $JNJ Jan 30, 2023
  • Missouri Camping Ban Squeezes Rural Homeless Population https://t.co/ENuahUJzJX  This fits my ruralization of poverty theme, and now rural areas fight back. Jan 30, 2023

Personal Finance

  • Most Americans stayed the course with their retirement savings in 2022, even as the stock market fell and inflation rose https://t.co/1kmr4sqigB  Retail investor driving through the rear-view mirror, which is temporarily self-reinforcing Feb 03, 2023
  • Penalties on early 401(k) withdrawals stop some workers from putting money away because they fear they won’t be able to access it https://t.co/wpMqKLcr68  This is the price of getting tax deferral. Sorry, this is fair. Feb 02, 2023
  • In the event of an emergency, you can crack your nest egg, but financial advisers say it should be a last resort. https://t.co/keHuFmuUWF  Think hard before doing this. It might be better to do a home equity loan, or borrow from the 401(k). But sometimes the present trumps future Feb 02, 2023

Energy

  • Models of collapsing oil demand look increasingly at odds with short-term trends https://t.co/YDN6mmjV4c  If the end of 2022 didn’t teach us that the transition will be slow, what will? Feb 02, 2023
  • Diesel prices have receded from record highs, but pressures on supply signal that gains at the pump may have run out. https://t.co/IoGwx0s6yD  Diesel supplies are tight, especially on the east coast, which spills into jet fuel pricing https://t.co/n7X7Me2SGi  Feb 02, 2023

Credit

  • Another company could be pulling a J. Crew https://t.co/IGsDlbtsYa  What you get for lending without significant protection from covenants Jan 30, 2023
  • Worries loom for used-car market https://t.co/rK8o23mFYT  More downward pressure on prices Jan 30, 2023

Odds & Ends

  • 17 Most Dangerous Toys of All Time – Banned Kids Toys https://t.co/l1tbGC3HCP  I remember catching a Jart in my hand after an errant throw had it flying at my face. That hurt a lot, but healed well. That said, it was a fun game, and played it many times without accident. Feb 03, 2023
  • The 31 Most Hard-to-Pronounce Words https://t.co/NozETlULPg  Aside from 2 ridiculous words that I never heard of, I think most well-educated people pronounce these correctly Feb 03, 2023
  • 26 Ridiculously Hard Jeopardy! Questions to Stump Your Brain https://t.co/Evqk8kqQ28  I got 5 right, 3 wrong, and 18 I had no idea Feb 03, 2023
  • This ‘airliner of the future’ has a radical new wing design https://t.co/L3NZBQvFrs  Looks flimsy. Feb 03, 2023
  • “The more you put in the store, the more bandwidth it requires,” said Ahold Delhaize USA CIO Rom Kosla https://t.co/dYXVUeYEgs  Tech equipment is inexpensive for what it can do & there are many alternatives for how to do it. This shouldn’t be so tough. Feb 02, 2023
  • U.S. home prices declined in November from the prior month as higher mortgage-interest rates made home purchases less affordable for home buyers https://t.co/Kaufh1fxEW  Absent economic weakness, mortgage rates are at their lowest level in 5 months. Price declines should slow Feb 02, 2023
  • “Miracle Mineral Solution,” or MMS, is easy to find on Amazon despite FDA warnings on how toxic and dangerous the potion can be https://t.co/R3khPhWkz2  Astounding that people would drink bleach. Feb 01, 2023
  • It’s the new chicken-and-egg question: Should I just buy some birds? Some shoppers thought that was the answer to record egg prices. It’s often not so simple. https://t.co/ILUzbLmmSk  There are simpler ways to save money. Jan 31, 2023
  • Medical Schools Bail on Academic Merit and Intellectual Rigor https://t.co/Lzp8C3xNMU  This is a place where you should value competence over ideology. Jan 30, 2023

The Effect of Democratic Delegate Allocation Rules

Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore || Unless things change, Democratic Party Elites should get comfortable with Sanders being their nominee for President

This is a rare post on politics at Aleph Blog. I am not taking a position on any candidate here, nor their effect on the economy. As an applied mathematician, I want to point out the implications of three factors:

  • Bernie Sanders is getting roughly 30% of votes in the primaries/caucuses, and the next five split the rest in an uneven way.
  • These Democratic contests typically award delegates based on the vote in each area as defined by a state, and the state as a whole. The delegates get split pro-rata to a candidate’s share of the vote in each area if the candidate gets over 15%. It’s a little more complex than that if no one gets more than 15% of the vote, but that’s not likely to happen in 2020.
  • If Sanders gets over 35% of all the pledged delegates, it will get increasingly ugly to not give him the nomination the nearer his delegate total gets to 50% of pledged delegates. No one wants a convention where over 1/3 of the delegates feel cheated. If you need examples where there wasn’t cheating, but there were sure a lot of hard feelings, you can think of Ford/Reagan in 1976, Carter/Kennedy in 1980, and Clinton/Sanders last election.

Add in one more bit of data — in an internet age, it is easy to keep a campaign on life support. Candidates with low funds can nominally hold on for a long time subsisting off of what free media and a skeleton staff can give them.

I ran a few simple simulations yesterday. With six main candidates altogether, if Sanders gets 30% of the vote on average, and the other five split the rest in a lopsided way, on average Sanders will end up with roughly 45% of all of the delegates. But suppose one of Sanders’ opponents drops out, and the other assumptions remain similar — Sanders would get 36% of the delegates. If one more opponent drops out, the effect is a lot smaller — Sanders would get 33% of the delegates.

The most unlikely assumption not to change is that Sanders doesn’t pick up support from voters when opponents of his drop out, particularly if the ones dropping out would be Warren or Buttigieg. I would expect that Sanders might pick up more support if one of them dropped out, as opposed to Biden, Bloomberg or Klobuchar.

But the main effect going on here is with so many opponents to Sanders splitting the remaining votes, few of them get above the 15% threshold, and Sanders gets a decidedly higher allocation of delegates than what he got in the popular vote — not as big of a difference as in the GOP’s winner-take-all primaries, but this is still a considerable advantage unless one of his challengers breaks out of the pack.

Thus, when I read an article like No,?You?Drop Out: Why Bernie?s Rivals Are All Stubbornly Staying in the Race I realize that most of Sanders’ opponents would like others to drop out of the race, but no one sees a decent reason to do so. Everybody thinks it’s nice to get more cars off the crowded highway, as long as it is not them.

Thinking back to 2012 when I wrote Searching for the Not-Romney, I noted how virtually every GOP candidate had had a surge and fall versus Romney. After each surge, there wasn’t a second surge. Voters had given them a limited window of time when they reviewed them — they weighed them in the balance, and found them wanting. No second chances.

I don’t think that’s a perfect paradigm. Second chances ARE possible for the opponents of Sanders, but I think they are unlikely. The candidate would have to give voters a reason to think, “Huh, I guess I didn’t understand him right the first time.” Getting a lot of people to change their minds is difficult after a first impression is made. Thus in the present state of matters, I assume that Sanders will be the nominee of the Democrats.

And, since I can’t resist making at least one comment regarding the economic implications of that, yesterday the market went down hard because of the coronavirus, something that I think is transitory, and should have little effect. Perhaps the drop was due to Sanders’ convincing win in Nevada. That would certainly have more effect on the economy, particularly profits, for a longer period of time.

It might be wise to check your risk position, and ask yourself whether you feel comfortable given an increased likelihood of Sanders being the next President of the USA.

All for now.

Improving Liquidity for Small Cap Stocks

Picture Credit: OTA Photos || This is easier said than done!

The SEC is seeking ideas on how to make small cap stocks more tradable. Let me quote the closing of an article from the Wall Street Journal:

In soliciting the proposals, the SEC laid out a number of possible approaches, without endorsing any of them.


One such approach would limit trading in low-volume stocks to the exchange where they are listed. Nasdaq Inc. has promoted a similar plan, arguing that it would create deeper markets for small-cap stocks by concentrating the trading of their shares on one venue. But critics, including some rival exchanges,?
have attacked Nasdaq?s plan?as anticompetitive, saying it would benefit big exchanges like Nasdaq.

In another approach floated by the SEC, trading in low-volume stocks would take place in periodic auctions, separated by discrete time intervals, instead of continuously throughout the trading day.

SEC Seeks Ideas For Improving Trading in Small-Cap Stocks

I’m not sure that any of these proposals will work. Longtime readers know that I think that liquidity is hard to permanently increase, or decrease for that matter.

By nature, small cap stocks have smaller floats. There’s less information about them Many accounts and managers have mandates that don’t allow them to purchase small cap stocks. Bid-ask sizes and spreads tend to be smaller and larger respectively than those of large caps. That’s largely a function of floating market cap and the underlying riskiness of the company in question. Market structure plays less of a role.

The composition of investors does matter. It typically doesn’t change that much; it is cyclical. Horizons shorten as volatility rises, and vice-versa.

The more buy-and-hold investors there are, the more liquidity decreases. The more traders with short time horizons there are, the more liquidity increases. Commissions declining will possibly make time horizons a little shorter for day-traders, but I can’t imagine that the effect will be that big.

As a smaller investor, I do like the concept of a central order book that would have a monopoly on trading a stock, because it would remove an informational edge that high-frequency traders [HFT] have. I don’t think it would increase liquidity much though. It would change where the trades happen, and perhaps who makes the trades. I think that some less technologically inclined investment advisors would be willing to put up larger bids and asks in such a context, but they would mostly replace lost volume from HFT.

I also think that having more auctions during the day would be a good idea, say like one every half hour. I don’t think it would increase liquidity, though. Trading would become more sparse away from the auctions.

I own four illiquid stocks for my stock strategy clients, and one less liquid closed-end fund for my bond clients. I can trade them if I need to. I just have to be more patient with those securities, and break trades up into bite-size pieces.

For me, trading is a way of implementing changes to the portfolio. If any of the proposed changes happened, my trading would not change much at all. I suspect that would be true for all but the investors with the shortest time horizons, but I think that could go either way. We have lower commissions on one hand, and disadvantages for HFT on the other. Could be a wash.

Enough rambling. I don’t see a lot of likely change here, and liquidity should not be the highest priority at the SEC. Rather than facilitating more secondary trading, it would be nice to see more private firms going public. SEC efforts on that would get my attention.

Book Review: The Difference

Book Review: The Difference

In general, I don’t like books on personnel management. ?That’s mostly because good management techniques are mostly obvious, and there are typically a lot of good strategies that are somewhat different, and most of them will work, if applied with a little common sense. ?Pick one. ?Apply it. ?Be consistent. ?Get feedback. ?Adjust. ?Repeat.

No one has the “holy grail.” ?That is true of this book also. ?What I appreciate about “The Difference” is its emphasis on creating a good culture. ?I’ve worked in companies with good cultures, bad cultures and mixed cultures. ?What?Subir?Chowdhury gets right is the key difference is attitude, and it flows from the top.

Some?firms fail because employees are afraid to tell the truth. ?That was true within areas of AIG when I worked for it. ?Do you want?a culture based on truth? ?Be honest, ask for it from your bosses, and expect it from your subordinates. ?Don’t punish anyone for telling the truth; instead reward it.

Some firms fail because of a lack of emphasis on quality. ?The need for short-term profits outweighs quality products and services. ?Low quality is a cancer — it can spread from employee relationships to products, services, accounting, vendor relations, marketing, etc. ?Cultural change is needed, starting at the top. ?If management doesn’t put quality ahead of short term profits, quality will not characterize a company. ?Management has to lead efforts on quality by example, instructions, and rewards. ?Employees won’t care about quality if management doesn’t care about them, and reward them for stopping bad quality even if it slows production.

The book takes an approach like this, only much better than I can. ?It provides a cutesy acronym to summarize the approach for creating a great corporate culture, which to me trivializes ideas, but aids memory for others.

The author peppers the book with his experiences in his life ?and work, from youth to the present. ?I found those to be a mixed bag. ?Like most people, a lot of it sounds like he is tooting his own horn repeatedly. ?Many of them are quite instructive, a few aren’t. ?I particularly found his example of giving to beggars to be weak. ?Yes, the poorest need money, but what they need more is relationships. ?The poorest lose relationships due to disease, accidents, substance abuse, selfishness on the part of their family and their own selfishness, an attitude of blaming the world around rather than look at their own failures, and more.

Giving them money does not break the problem; it often feeds the problem. ?Creating relationships for them can allow them to reboot their lives, if they want to live a new life. ?Don’t get me wrong; I’m no great shakes here. ?I just know that the poorest need radical personal change if they ever want to escape their poverty. ?Money won’t make the difference necessary most of the time.

That last rant aside, I liked the book and would recommend it. ?It’s kind of expensive for its size, but maybe you want a short book that you can read in 1-2 hours. ?You’ll get enough to make you think, and maybe make a difference. ?It’s “good enough” to help you, but not outstanding.

Quibbles

Already mentioned.

Summary / Who Would Benefit from this Book

You may not need another management book. ?If you need something short to motivate a need for corporate and personal change, this could be the book for you.? If you want to buy it, you can buy it here: The Difference: When Good Enough Isn’t Enough.

Full disclosure:?The publisher asked me if I wanted a free copy and I assented.

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