Monday, September 22, 2008

Moral Suasion and the Markets

Note: As most of you regular readers know, I have taken to the habit of posting clips of important news to your financial future at the beginning of my post. Because of the recent events there is quite a run-up from August 05, my last posting to this post. These clips are a fascinating story unfolding of to the lead up to the biggest market collapse since the Great Depression. See the financial storm brewing. After these news clips is my commentary. For those of you new to this blog, the current theme about the economy began in April of ’08. To get an in depth analysis of what is going wrong and why the rules are changing, begin in April.

Inflation outpaces rise in U.S. consumer spendingConsumer spending grew by 0.6% in June, but that gain was wiped out by inflation rising by 0.8%, the biggest monthly increase since September 2005. "That real consumer spending is down two-tenths in June is not a good thing in and of itself, but it also is a bad thing for what it means for third-quarter consumption," JPMorgan Chase economist Michael Feroli said. The New York Times (05 Aug.)

U.S. home prices could fall additional 33%, analyst saysU.S. home prices could fall by an additional one-third before mortgage lending resumes with gusto, a widely respected analyst said. "Home prices are going to fall much more than people expect," Oppenheimer analyst Meredith Whitney said. CNBC (04 Aug.)

What sounded alarmist a year ago is fairly accurate nowAs the Financial Times continues its look back over the credit crunch that began one year ago, it delves even further back into the recent history of investment banking, hedge funds and how the financial industry has changed. "This has been a very deep and unusual crisis that involves the unwinding of a decade of excess. The impact on the financial sector has been 7 on the Richter scale (a 'major' earthquake), as dramatic as anything for 25 years," said Bill Winters, co-head of the investment bank at JPMorgan Chase. Financial Times (04 Aug.)

IMF reduces forecast for growth in BritainThe International Monetary Fund dashed Alistair Darling's hopes for a quick recovery of the U.K. economy by lowering its forecast for growth and by warning of two more years of economic woes. Additionally, the fund said rising inflation gives the Bank of England little room to adjust monetary policy to bolster growth. The IMF also said the Treasury is on course to reach next year the national-debt limit of 40% of GDP, in a warning to the chancellor that he won't be able to borrow his way out of economic pain. The Times (London) (07 Aug.)

Credit crisis persists as banks take more hitsThe credit crisis continues to affect some of the biggest banks on Wall Street. UBS, Citigroup and Merrill Lynch have taken massive write-downs, and investors are still worried about more subprime costs. Although lower oil prices have lifted stocks, it apparently will take more than cheaper energy to boost consumer spending and business. CNBC/Reuters (12 Aug.)

U.S. health care expenses expected to jump 10.6%Health care costs in the U.S. are predicted to increase 10.6% next year. Employers have lowered many costs of health coverage with sizable investments in wellness programs that help prevent expensive critical care. FinancialWeek (12 Aug.)

Federal Reserve's concern about inflation continuesThe Federal Reserve said inflation is still a top concern, even as energy prices fell recently. Given the unimpressive growth rate, plus inflation, a recession is still possible for the U.S., although some officials see declining oil prices as keeping inflation under control. Reuters (12 Aug.)

The Cold, Hard Numbers on the Credit Crunch
RealtyTrac shocked Wall Street with the most explosive news imaginable:
U.S. home foreclosures skyrocketed an astonishing 55% in July ...
One in every 464 American homes went into foreclosure last month alone ...
A staggering 750,000 abandoned homes are now begging for buyers nationwide — a clear sign that prices will continue to plummet and that ever-increasing numbers of homeowners will walk away in the months ahead ...

Fed Loan Officer Survey Shows Widespread Tightening!
Every quarter, the Fed releases a report called the "Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices." It quantifies how many banks are tightening standards, and on which types of loans. The third-quarter survey was conducted in July; 52 domestic banks and 21 foreign banks with operations here in the U.S. responded.

Some 74% of banks surveyed said they're tightening standards on prime mortgages, up from 62.3% in the second quarter of 2008. A net 84.4% said they were cracking down on nontraditional financing, up from 75.6%. And a net 85.7% said they were tightening on subprime loans, up from 77.7% a quarter earlier.

These numbers are off the charts. The previous record for the home mortgage category was 32.7% in 1991. So in plain English, you have more than twice as many banks tightening standards now than EVER before.

* The trend is spilling over into commercial real estate. This is no longer just a subprime mortgage crunch. In fact, it's not even a residential real estate crunch. The Fed's commercial real estate (CRE) figures prove it.

A net 80.7% of survey respondents said they were tightening standards on CRE loans. That was up from 78.6% a quarter earlier and the highest on record.

* Consumer credit is tougher to come by. The story is the same for credit cards, auto loans, boat loans, and other forms of consumer credit. Some 66.6% of lenders said they were tightening standards on credit card borrowers. That was up from 32.4% a quarter earlier and the highest since the Fed began collecting data in 1996. 67.4% are making it tougher to get other consumer loans, up from 44.4% and another record. Money and Markets by Mike Larson August 15, 2008

Economists: Taxpayers likely to bail out Fannie, FreddieThe consensus of 53 economists polled by the Wall Street Journal is that there is a nearly 60% chance that U.S. taxpayers will have to prop up Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The main mortgage-finance providers in the U.S. should be pushed to raise capital privately, said seven out of 10 economists surveyed. One in three said Freddie and Fannie should be nationalized and then sold off in smaller chunks when the housing market recovers, the newspaper reported. Bloomberg (15 Aug.)

Gas more expensive than cars for U.S. consumersIn May and June, U.S. dollars spent on gas surpassed money spent on cars and parts for the first time since 1982. The last time gasoline was such a large component of personal spending was in September 1982 during an energy crisis set off by the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran, the second-largest oil producer of OPEC. Record prices at the pump have decreased U.S. gasoline demand, at a five-year low, and also affected consumer spending, including auto sales. Bloomberg (15 Aug.)

Concerns mount with U.S. inflation still on the riseMany were betting that slowing consumer demand coupled with declining energy prices would help smooth inflationary pressures, but last month saw U.S. consumer prices rise twice as fast as predicted, in the largest surge since 1991. This situation further emphasizes the predicament of the Federal Reserve as it tries to balance the risks of increasing cost of living with growing unemployment, the credit crunch, and a weakened consumer. Financial Times (14 Aug.)

Signs of economic slowdown pile up in Asia, EuropeGermany's economy is contracting, the Bank of England offered a dismal outlook and Japan seems to be near a recession. More bad economic news is expected in Europe this week. Although commodity prices are starting to come down, consumers are feeling the pressure from financial crises in the U.S. and elevated inflation. Experts said the U.S. economic slowdown is spreading through Europe and Asia. International Herald Tribune (14 Aug.)

Shrinkage of U.S. money supply causes further concernWith the U.S. money supply seeing its most acute contraction in modern history, there is a more heightened risk than ever of a severe economic slowdown. This comes on top of the current credit crisis and at a time when overall debt burden in the U.S. economy is at record levels. The acuteness of the drop, versus the absolute level, is what monetarists find most disturbing. Telegraph (London) (19 Aug.)

Former IMF economist predicts failure of large U.S. bankFormer International Monetary Fund chief economist Kenneth Rogoff expects to see a large U.S. bank fail in the next few months, estimating more trouble for the U.S. economy. "I think the financial crisis is at the halfway point, perhaps. I would even go further to say, 'The worst is to come,'" he said at a financial conference. Rogoff also said the Federal Reserve was wrong to slash interest rates as "dramatically" as it did. Reuters (19 Aug.)

Freddie Mac's bond sale underscores severity of crisisFreddie Mac paid a yield of 4.172%, 113 basis points over Treasuries, on a five-year debt issue to raise $3 billion. It is the highest risk premium that Freddie has paid, highlighting the severity of the U.S. housing crisis. Investors have demanded higher yields because of uncertainty in the market as well as questions about moves that the government might make regarding the government-sponsored enterprise. Financial Times (20 Aug.)

U.S. walks tightrope between inflation, recessionThe U.S. is battling inflation and a recession simultaneously as higher costs for food and energy affect nearly all products, increasing consumer prices. Some economists see the slowdown as an antidote for inflation; others see inflation as a continuing threat. Options for the average American are that either inflation will reduce their buying power or rising prices will spell the end of some jobs and businesses. The New York Times (19 Aug.)

SEC plans to broaden short-selling ruleThe Securities and Exchange Commission aims to propose a new short-selling rule in upcoming weeks, broadening an emergency order -- covering 19 financial stocks -- that ended last week. SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said the proposal "will focus on marketwide solutions" and possibly require more transparency in disclosing to the public significant short positions in stocks. Reuters (19 Aug.)

Cramer of CNBC suspects insider trading of Fannie, Freddie: CNBC's Jim Cramer called for a suspension in trading Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stocks on the grounds that insider information was circulating. Cramer blamed the Securities and Exchange Commission and the New York Stock Exchange for not taking action when it seemed obvious that insider trading was happening. CNBC (20 Aug.)


Gold becomes solid as oil prices climb, dollar dropsThe combination of a falling dollar and higher oil prices has raised gold's appeal as the precious metal is expected to have its largest weekly gain in seven years. "In the short term, at least for another month or so, gold will stay in this consolidatory phase of rebounding on price drops and falling when gains get too much," said Lin Yuhui of China International Futures. "These movements will largely continue to be driven by movements in the U.S. dollar and crude oil." Bloomberg (22 Aug.)

Libor-OIS spread indicates credit crunch to continueThe spread between the three-month London interbank offered rate for dollars and the overnight indexed swap rate is at 77 basis points, up from 24 basis points in January. By mid-December the spread is expected to widen to 85 basis points. Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, said the spread should indicate when the markets have returned to normal. According to forward markets, that won't be for quite some time. "It's like an ongoing nightmare and no one is sure when we're going to wake up," said Stuart Thomson, a money manager at Resolution Investment Management. "Things are going to get worse before they get better." Bloomberg (25 Aug.)
Banks, firms pay more to raise money in bond markets Dismal economic conditions around the world, increasing default rates and concerns about the health of financial institutions are forcing yields to rise as bond investors demand higher spreads. According to Lehman Brothers, risk premiums for investment-grade companies and banks in the U.S. recently reached their highest level since the 1990s. Spreads in Europe and Asia for some investment-grade companies have hit 10-year highs as well. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (22 Aug.) , Financial Times (24 Aug.)

Central bankers acknowledge uncertainty of crisis: At the gathering of central bankers and other economic experts in Jackson Hole, Wyo., this weekend, the consensus was uncertainty as to how the credit crisis and other woes will ultimately affect the global economy. Policymakers from around the world seem conflicted as to whether resilience in the global economy will win out or if the worst is yet to come. Financial Times (24 Aug.)

Analysis: U.S. economic woes hinge on home buyersThe difference between a mild downturn of the U.S. economy and a severe recession depends on the ability and willingness of consumers to quickly return to the housing market, according to this Reuters analysis. In order for home prices to be in balance with incomes and rents, economists say they need to drop another 10%. However, prices could fall even further if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac meltdown, or if private lenders tighten requirements. Depending on how far home prices fall, the U.S. could suffer a consumer-led recession. Reuters (25 Aug.)

Economists: Inflation tops credit crunch as greatest threatA survey of the members of the National Association of Business Economists showed inflation to be the chief concern, ahead of the mortgage and credit crises. Of the respondents, 15% see overall inflation as the greatest threat to the economy, and 16% find energy prices to be the greatest short-term threat. CNN (25 Aug.)

White House to keep pushing for stronger yuanThe Bush administration said it will continue pressing China to allow the yuan to appreciate more quickly. The yuan has strengthened 6.7% this year against the U.S. dollar and has appreciated 17% in the past two years. Bloomberg (26 Aug.)

Banks report second-lowest quarterly earnings since 1991Banks posted their second-lowest earnings performance since 1991 for the quarter from April to June, the FDIC reported. Earnings for the quarter tumbled 86.5%, from $36.8 billion a year ago to $5 billion this year. MarketWatch (26 Aug.)

British pound sliding toward $1.50 against dollarThe British pound could fall as low as $1.50 against the U.S. dollar in the next few years. The pound fell to $1.8386, the first time it slid to less than $1.84 since mid-2006. The decline came as the economic slowdown continues and foreign investors increasingly pull out of Britain's economy. Telegraph (London) (26 Aug.)

Canada doesn't meet forecast for quick growth in Q2Canada's economy apparently grew less quickly in the second quarter than the Bank of Canada predicted. In July, policymakers forecast that GDP would expand at an annual rate of 0.8% in the second quarter. The bank gave no new expectation for growth. The Globe and Mail (Toronto) (26 Aug.)

Retail stock ownership in U.S. falls to record lowRetail investment in U.S. stocks has hit a record low, showing that institutional investors will play a bigger role in domestic equity markets. At the end of 2006, the last year for which figures were available, individual investors owned 34% of all shares and 24% of stock in the top 1,000 companies, and institutions held 76% of the shares, up from 61% in 2000, according to a report. Financial Times (01 Sep.)

U.S. takes over Fannie, Freddie to stabilize mortgage market Source: CNBC The U.S. government placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in a conservatorship Sunday and replaced their CEOs in a drastic move to stabilize lending in the mortgage market. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the rescue is necessary because allowing either company to fail would trigger worldwide market turmoil. "This turmoil would directly and negatively impact household wealth: from family budgets, to home values, to savings for college and retirement," Paulson said. CNBC (07 Sep.) , The New York Times (registration required) (07 Sep.) , Financial Times (08 Sep.) , Bloomberg (07 Sep.)

In July, consumers borrowed about half as much as forecastConsumers in the U.S. borrowed about $4.6 billion in July. The median estimate of 35 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was an increase of $8.5 billion in consumer credit for the month. Consumers borrowed $11 billion in June. "A slowdown in the supply of credit is one of several factors that we think argues for a slowdown in consumer spending," said Zach Pandl, a Lehman Brothers economist. "There will be a period of weak consumer spending ahead." Bloomberg (08 Sep.)

Former Fed official calls Fannie, Freddie takeover a "stopgap": The government's seizure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is an attempt to keep them running into next year, when the new president and Congress can determine their future. "Some of this is a stopgap to try to prevent the mortgage market from falling apart," said William Poole, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Poole also said it is "an unacceptable situation" to have a shareholder-owned company with taxpayers covering risks. Bloomberg

Interbank lending dries up over renewed fearsInternational money markets are once again under severe pressure as fears about the financial system were renewed with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and other developments. "Sentiment is incredibly negative. It is getting much harder to raise money with the cost of funding getting more expensive," said Dominic White of fund manager Morley. "Banks are reluctant to lend out cash in this climate. It is difficult to predict whether the strains will increase or ease, but it is likely to remain difficult for some time for most institutions that want to raise cash with this much uncertainty." Financial Times (15 Sep.)

Analysis: Fed may cut interest rate after drama on Wall StreetFederal Reserve officials met Monday after the weekend's dramatic events in the financial industry and discussed an interest-rate cut, possibly in conjunction with other central banks. Before the latest turmoil on Wall Street, most officials speculated that the next move would be a rate increase. But after the weekend's events, there are concerns about a downward spiral, and a rate cut is more likely. Financial Times (15 Sep.)

Fed loosens emergency-lending standards in Lehman's wakeThe Federal Reserve dramatically loosened standards for emergency loans to investment banks to head off concerns in Monday's markets about fallout from Lehman Brothers' Chapter 11 filing. The central bank said it will not offer cash to potential buyers of Lehman. Meanwhile, 10 major banks worldwide agreed to contribute $7 billion each to an emergency fund that could be used if any of them faces problems similar to those facing Lehman. The New York Times (15 Sep.)

Central banks prepare to counter potential financial turmoilIn the wake of the U.S. banking crisis, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England announced that they are prepared to intervene in financial markets if necessary. "The ECB stands ready to contribute to orderly conditions in the euro money market," the ECB said. The Bank of England said it will carefully monitor the sterling money market. The ECB also announced that it will offer markets unlimited overnight liquidity. Financial Times (15 Sep.)

SEC to strengthen rule on short sellingThe Securities and Exchange Commission plans to move forward on creating permanent regulations for abusive short selling. The SEC will likely underscore the short-selling rule as well as shorten the time in which traders must buy back stock if they fail to deliver a security by the settlement date. The plans came about after Lehman Brothers was forced to file for bankruptcy and the U.S. government took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Reuters (15 Sep.)

Regulators propose rule changes to deal with crisisRegulators at four U.S. agencies proposed rule changes this week to stabilize financial markets and beef up the balance sheets of financial institutions. Regulators and the White House decided to ease accounting rules to help the banking industry cope with issues that some experts said stemmed from deregulation. The Securities and Exchange Commission issued guidelines for propping up money-market accounts and imposed new short-selling limits. The New York Times (free registration) (17 Sep.)

Voters, businesses appear to welcome more regulation: The Federal Reserve's rescue plan for AIG, coupled with a similar plan by the Treasury Department for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, could mark the end of 30 years of deregulation by the federal government. The government's involvement in financial markets follows similar shifts in food safety, airlines and trade and signals that increased regulation is now more acceptable to businesses and voters. BusinessWeek (18 Sep.)

CDS market to take hit from Lehman's bankruptcyMarkets are about to see just how accurate Warren Buffett's statement is about derivatives being "financial weapons of mass destruction," as fallout from Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy begins. The Economist explained how a bankruptcy of this size may affect the market for credit-default swaps, an arena that grew in recent years to a $62 trillion behemoth. The Economist (18 Sep.)

Emerging markets saddled with backlog of maturing debtDuring the next year, emerging-market economies will need to refinance about $111 billion of bonds, raising the likelihood of defaults and other problems. "Many corporates and banks in the emerging markets are highly levered without cash to fall back on. These will struggle should they need to raise money in the markets," said David Spegel, ING's global head of emerging markets strategy. "The bond and loan markets are much harder to access now, and it could get worse, which means there will be defaults." Financial Times (21 Sep.)

Moral Suasion and the Markets

Bigger than the dot-com bust? Yeps. Bigger than Black Monday in 1987? Yes. Bigger than the oil shock of the 1970s? Yes.

Well, this has been quite a year for your portfolio! If you have been following this blog since April, you understand what has happened and why. Simply, Government has created an empire of debt that has to be managed. Clearly, it has been mismanaged. People are responsible, and herein is the problem. “We” keep changing the rules to worship a GROWTH economy, rather than a SUSTAINABLE one. Good stewardship of the land, the sky and the seas is what “we” don’t do. “We” don’t hold ourselves accountable to the value of sustainability. We buy and sell our way into the value of a short-term growth economy at the expense of our children’s future, don’t “we”?

That’s the way this system works, like it always has, until it doesn’t. Don’t we continually change the rules to serve special interests where the rich get richer, and you know the rest? Don’t we invest for a gain in value, and don’t we look first at an investment’s financial return, and then the fundamentals to answer the question, is it sound? Do we ever ask if it serves our environment sustainability criteria first? If it does, then it follows that it would also stand to benefit the good of our communities, the infrastructure of our society, as well as individual shareholder value.
There is a disconnect between our ability to comprehend a financial economy in the context of an environmental one. This is not only GREEN but it is social responsible behavior to our future generations. The core problem is that it is our nature to “misplace” our values when it comes to the ethical choices we make in the name of the dollar first.

I am guilty of this. I want more… stuff. And it is easy for me to enjoy these tangible things, even if I know that they don’t serve the environment or my children’s future in a friendly and sustainable way. I want more return too. Oil is an obvious example of this trade off between the short-term positive return from the financial investment and the long-term negative return to the environment. Additionally, our short-term thinking colludes with our short-term greed and then there is at some level, a sell out to the value of sustainability. There is no surprise that the current market mess is in the financial sector and that it is in the Empire of Debt.

This current market crisis is precisely why those who espouse the virtues of a free market - need regulation, most especially, short-term speculators! Because short-term speculators in the market are allowed without regulation, to take enormous leveraged positions ($57.9 trillion), they threaten to undermine the very system that ironically supports them and gives them the freedom and power to do this. Today, with that power unchecked and with a government policy of deregulation all the way back to Regan economics we have this problem, 30 years in the making.

Guess what is the quick, politically expedient short-term solution? Why it is massive infusions of inflationary new capital, $1 trillion in more debt to still more future generations and while all this is preoccupying our attention, there is the negative consequences to our environment that we think we don’t have to be responsible to till we take care of our current problem. Am I right?
Philosophy and history lessons behind us, if you have your money in some financial institutions you may be thinking, how did this happen. Well, it relates to the collapse of the home mortgage market and derivatives. These are essentially bets on interest rates, foreign currencies, stocks or specific events like the bankruptcy of a particular company. The interest rate-related bets are by far the biggest. But the bets on bankruptcies — called credit default swaps — are the fastest growing and the most volatile.

These derivatives were originally designed to help hedge investments reduce risk — like insurance policies. But in practice, they've been increasingly used to leverage investments, increasing the risks of participants, again, all for short-term gain.
For a relevant explanation I defer to Mike Larson. In his most recent email he writes and explains this.

“It's been quite the eventful week on the bailout front. The Treasury and Federal Reserve drew the line at Lehman Brothers, allowing the fourth-largest broker in the U.S. to file for bankruptcy.
Then a couple days later, the Fed backtracked and arranged an $85 billion bailout of American International Group. The idea is to keep AIG afloat while it sells assets to raise money.
As I've been discussing for a long-time, crummy residential mortgages ... troubled commercial mortgages ... and all kinds of other souring loans are causing a huge chunk of the problems in the banking and brokerage industry. But in the case of AIG, something else is at work. It's an obscure kind of contract that, behind the scenes, is wreaking havoc throughout the financial industry.

And I want to talk about these "CDS" — or Credit Default Swaps — today.
How Credit Insurance Works
I'm sure you know how traditional insurance works. After all, you have some combination of homeowners insurance, life insurance, auto insurance, and maybe even a policy on an RV, a boat, or a motorcycle. You pay a monthly, semi-annual, or annual premium to an insurance company. And the company invests that money to generate returns. If a catastrophe strikes — you get in a car crash, your house burns down, or you die — the insurance company pays you or your heirs a lump sum of money.

It's a pretty straightforward business.

But in the past few years, many Wall Street firms, hedge funds, and companies like AIG plunged headlong into the Wild West World of CDS.

CDS operate like insurance on a bond or other security. Let's say you're a portfolio manager who owns $100 million in XYZ Corp. bonds. You read the paper, and you see that the industry XYZ is in is faltering, with sales declining and profits falling.

As a result, you might be concerned about the possibility that XYZ will default on the bonds you're holding. But for one reason or another, you don't want to sell your bonds and move on. So instead, you go into the market and buy CDS to protect you against the possibility of default.
You — the credit protection buyer — would pay periodic premiums (just like you and I do on life or car insurance) to a credit protection seller. If XYZ does NOT default, then the seller just collects his premiums and makes a decent return. If XYZ does default, then the seller either takes the bonds off your hands, paying you face value (regardless of where they're trading), or he pays you a cash settlement that makes you whole.

Either way, you as the buyer are protected from catastrophic loss — just like a homeowner is protected from catastrophe by his policy when his home burns down.

The Flaws in the System
Sounds good, right? But here are the problems...

First, CDS aren't highly regulated like the traditional insurance market is at the state level. In fact, the CDS market isn't really regulated at all. "Complacency is now unprecedented and regulators are asleep at the switch. The Securities and Exchange Commission says it has no direct supervision of trading in credit derivatives. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission also says it isn't responsible. The International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) says the industry can policy itself. We're not so sure."

Second, the CDS market exploded in size over the past several years. According to the British Bankers Association, the CDS market expanded from just $180 billion in 1996 to a stunning $20 trillion a decade later. That's a 111-fold expansion in this esoteric, opaque market. And by all accounts, it continued to grow LAST year as well — to a whopping $57.9 TRILLION, according to the Bank for International Settlements.

Third, the CDS market morphed into a vehicle for massive speculation on corporate credit rather than a way to hedge downside risk. Investors started buying CDS on companies with worsening credit — expecting those contracts to rise in value — and selling CDS on companies with improving credit — expecting to record a gain as those contracts declined in value.

Fourth, the quality of counterparties in the CDS market deteriorated substantially. What do I mean? When you bought your last homeowners or life insurance policy, you probably checked the credit rating of the company selling that policy. After all, what good is insurance if the company standing behind it can't make good on claims?

The problem is that more and more CDS were being bought and sold by hedge funds and other thinly capitalized companies during the boom days. This excerpt from a recent Minyanville column pretty much sums up the problem:

"A hedge fund trader once told me that they insured/sold 50 times their capital in CDS with the counterparty being a very large, well-known investment bank. "When I asked him if he was worried about that kind of leverage, he responded by saying that is the bank's problem because if he is wrong about writing all these insurance policies (in the form of CDS), they can only lose their investment capital in the fund." Comforting, eh?

The Fallout is Spreading
So how does AIG fit into all this?

Well, it sold protection on a mind-boggling $441 billion of fixed income securities. $441 billion! According to Bloomberg, almost $58 billion of those contracts referenced securities tied to subprime mortgages. That's what really brought AIG to its knees — the exposure to the CDS market.

Who else has massive exposure to credit derivatives?
According to a Fitch Ratings report from last year, the top five counterparties on CDS contracts (as of 2006) were:
Morgan
Stanley,
Goldman Sachs,
JPMorgan Chase,
Deutsche Bank, and
ABN Amro.

It's impossible to know exactly how these institutions are positioned, how those rankings have changed since then, and so on. What we do know is that this garbage paper is spread throughout the system, that the underlying securities that CDS insure are plunging in value, and that the financial tally from this whole mess is rising month in and month out.

To understand why, put yourself in the shoes of a senior derivatives trader at a big firm like Morgan Stanley (which has $7.1 trillion in derivatives on its books and about $10 billion in capital).

Let's say you're personally responsible for $500 billion in derivatives contracts with Bank A, essentially betting that interest rates will decline. By itself, that would be a huge risk. But you're not worried because you have a similar bet with Bank B that interest rates will go up. It's like playing roulette, betting on both black and red at the same time. One bet cancels the other, and you figure you can't lose.

Here's what happens next...
Interest rates go up, reflecting a 2% decline in bond prices. You lose your bet with Bank A.
But, simultaneously, you win your bet with Bank B.

So, in normal circumstances, you'd just take the winnings from one to pay off the losses with the other — a non-event.

But here's where the whole scheme blows up and the drama begins: Bank B suffers large mortgage-related losses. It runs out of capital. It can't raise additional capital from investors. So it can't pay off its bet. Suddenly and unexpectedly ... You're on the hook for your losing bet. But you can't collect on your winning bet. You grab a calculator to estimate the damage. But you don't need one — 2% of $500 billion is $10 billion. Simple.

Bottom line: In what appeared to be an everyday, supposedly "normal" set of transactions ... in a market that has moved by a meager 2% ... you've just suffered a loss of ten billion dollars, wiping out all of your firm's capital.

Now, you can't pay off your bet with Bank A — or any other losing bet, for that matter.
Bank A, thrown into a similar predicament, defaults on its bets with Bank C, which, in turn, defaults on bets with Bank D. Bank D has bets with Morgan Stanley as well ... it defaults on every single one ... and it throws your firm even deeper into the hole.”

And so it goes, until it doesn’t! Enter the Fed bailout, yet again, this time we are in for a one trillion dollar bailout, increasing liquidity in the system for the short term. Again, this is short-term, inflationary and we haven’t even talked about commercial real estate foreclosures, energy prices or the environment, they are next. Keep you power dry and keep smiling… until next time.

Monday, August 04, 2008

The World We Invest In, Go Figure Volatility... And Black Swans

The news this past month:


Report shows consumer borrowing rose more than expected A report from the Federal Reserve shows that U.S. consumer borrowing increased by $7.78 billion in May. Analysts surveyed by Reuters had expected consumer debt to rise by $7 billion. April's figures were revised from an increase of $8.95 billion down to $7.76 billion. CNBC/Reuters (08 Jul.)

Fed hovers between a rock and a hard place Although the U.S. has thus far avoided recession, it is precariously poised to fall at any time. The situation puts the Federal Reserve and its chairman, Ben Bernanke, in a tough position as dismal economic data continue to mount. Even the resilience of the economy in the first half of this year may be more worrisome than previously thought. The Economist (subscription required) (17 Jul.)

Paulson: Months of work ahead to get through crisis Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson expects it to take months to work through the financial crisis. He made his comments as he sought to reassure the public that the banking system is sound. "Our regulators are on top of it. This is a very manageable situation," Paulson said. CNNMoney.com (20 Jul.)

Pimco head sees $1 trillion in U.S. mortgage losses The manager of the world's biggest bond fund said sliding U.S. home prices will wipe about $1 trillion off the balance sheets of the world's financial firms. About 25 million U.S. homes are at risk of negative equity, which could lead to falling home prices and more foreclosures, said Bill Gross of Pacific Investment Management Co. These factors could lead to less lending and a downward economic spiral. Bloomberg (24 Jul.)
Distressed sales more common on housing market: Four out of 10 homes sold in California and Nevada last quarter were foreclosures or some other distressed sale. BusinessWeek.com and Moody's Economy.com ranked 20 states where home sales were most influenced by forced sales. Michigan and Ohio, which did not have the overbuilding of Sun Belt states but continued to suffer big job losses, made the top 10. Affluent Connecticut was in third place. Massachusetts was No. 8. BusinessWeek (25 Jul.)

Mortgage rates up because of trouble at Fannie, Freddie Mortgage rates approached a five-year high as regulators and the White House strive to rescue Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Trouble at the mortgage giants could compound problems in the already-struggling housing market. HSH Associates said the average interest rate on a 30-year fixed-rate home loan increased from 6.44% on Friday to 6.71% on Tuesday. The New York Times (registration required) (23 Jul.)

Mortgage losses spur banks to reduce corporate loans Banks are significantly reducing forms of credit vital to American companies in the backlash from the subprime-mortgage crisis, and the slowdown threatens to further hamper the U.S. economy. Even healthy businesses are finding it difficult to borrow money as banks, burned by the fallout from looser lending standards, overcorrect and take a much closer look at repayment ability. The New York Times (28 Jul.)

Inflation presses reluctant retailers to raise prices As major manufacturers prepare to raise prices yet again, retailers that have avoided passing the increases to consumers may soon find themselves left with little choice. Retailers walk a fine line between keeping prices steady and reducing profits or raising prices and risking decreased sales. BusinessWeek/Associated Press (27 Jul.)

Analysis: Despite inflation, Fed likely to hold rates Inflation is at its highest level in 17 years, but the Federal Reserve is unlikely to change interest rates unless it makes a sudden, drastic leap. Oil and commodity prices, which are the underlying causes of the weak economy and high inflation, are directing the Fed's expected decision to keep rates at 2%. Reuters (29 Jul.)

Poll: Economy lost 75,000 jobs in July Economists expect a government report, scheduled for release Friday, to show that the U.S. economy lost jobs for a seventh straight month in July. A median estimate of 80 economists expects the report to show 75,000 lost jobs, which followed a decline of 62,000 in June. Bloomberg (01 Aug.)

Hedge funds suffer worst first half since tracking began Hedge funds have suffered an average year-to-date loss of 0.75%, their worst first-half performance since Hedge Fund Research started tracking returns in 1990. In 2002, the $1.9 trillion industry recorded its only losing year. Antonio Munoz of EIM Management USA in New York said investors have shifted assets to traders who have proven that they can succeed in turbulent markets. "We don't see investors pulling the plug across the board and putting their capital into cash," he said. Bloomberg (09 Jul.)


The World We Invest In, Go Figure Volatility… and Black Swans


It is always nice to check the news, the noise we live with, but what if we could suddenly soar to 10,000 feet and see the whole playing field below, see through the lens of some of this century’s greatest thinkers and then know, that you can’t know.


My grandmother told me that, on her deathbed, she said, “Danny, some things in life are a mystery, and that’s OK!”


Well, trying to make sense of the stock markets is a mystery too. Is that OK, I don't think so, so let’s get into it!


“Black Monday” on the 19th of October in 1987 provides a memorable starting point. On that single day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped an astonishing 25%, nearly twice the drop of the largest previous daily decline of 13% back on the 24th of October 1929, known as “Black Thursday”. On that single day in 1987 the total stock market value lost $1 Trillion dollars, erased.


The point is not only can anything happen in the stock market, but anything does happen. What’s more, changes in the nature and structure of our equity market and a radical shift in its participants are making shocking and unexpected market aberrations ever more probable, ever more predictable.

For example, just recently:
SEC lengthens ban of short sales to mid-AugustThe Securities and Exchange Commission, which plans to implement broader rules to avert stock manipulation, announced that it is extending to Aug. 12 a ban on "naked" short sales of shares in 17 brokerages as well as troubled lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The ban intends to protect companies of which collapse might lead to losses for the U.S. government. Bloomberg (30 Jul.)

Congress passes bill to rescue housing marketThe broad housing-rescue legislation passed by the House on Wednesday and the Senate on Saturday offers emergency funding to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac along with establishing a $300 billion fund to help struggling homeowners. President George W. Bush, after dropping his opposition to the bill last week, is expected to sign the bill quickly. Reuters (26 Jul.)

Paulson unveils rescue plan for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac After a weekend of discussions with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and New York Fed chief Tim Geithner, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced a plan for the government to support Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Fed will give the mortgage giants access to emergency funds similar to the access that banks have. Meanwhile, the government will ask Congress for permission to lend money to Fannie and Freddie. Most market participants did not expect such an aggressive plan, which reflects the authorities' fears about the consequences if one or both of the companies should fail. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (14 Jul.) , Financial Times (14 Jul.) , The Washington Post (14 Jul.)

Freddie, Fannie draw big bets on bonds Some of the world's biggest bond investors are snapping up debt sold by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as the best alternative in troubled times. Not only has the U.S. government agreed to back the beaten-down housing-finance companies but their yields compared with Treasuries also make the bonds a bargain. Bloomberg (28 Jul.)

And during 2007 we witnessed an unprecedented series of amazing market swings. In the 1950s and 60s, the daily changes were in the level of stock prices changing more than only 2%, only three or four times a year. In the second half of 2007 alone, we saw 15 such swings, 9 downward and 6 upward. Based on past experience, the probability of that happening was… zero.

The point is that the application of the laws of probability to our financial markets is badly misaligned. The truth is that an event, although never happening in the past, is not reason for such an event happening in the future.

Black Monday, then, is a rarity, an extreme event. Now, everyone knows that swans are white, right? So, a black swan would be an extremely rare event, like Black Monday.

And just because it has never happened doesn’t necessarily mean that it can’t happen, and conversely, just because an event is expected to happen, doesn’t mean it does. Unlike the 1929 antecedent, Black Monday did not prove to be an omen of dire days ahead, in fact, quite counter-intuitively, a harbinger of the greatest bull market in recorded history, ending when, in 2008?

None the less, despite the recent wild disturbances in both the stock and bond markets, market participants seem confident that future returns will resemble those of the past.


For example, Investors see huge GM losses as temporary The third-worst quarterly loss in General Motors' 100-year history left investors sobered but optimistic about the automaker's prospects. GM announced that its second quarter ended with a $15.5 billion loss, four times more than analysts expected, but that included $9.1 billion in one-time charges and expenses in North America. "That was about as ugly as you can get," said Mirko Mikelic of Fifth Third Asset Management. "But they did throw a lot of junk in there." ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (04 Aug.) , Detroit Free Press (02 Aug.)

IMF backs U.S. measures, thinks upturn a year away The U.S. economy has been more resilient than expected but probably won't improve until the middle of 2009, as losses in home values depress consumption and worsen credit conditions, according to the International Monetary Fund. The dollar was near its equilibrium, though still overvalued by as much as 10%, the IMF said. Officials said they are in favor of new housing-support legislation. Reuters (30 Jul.)


And so the knowledge that black swans can and do occur, according to the work of Sir Karl Popper (1902 – 1994) holds important lessons for how we should think about risk. Writing about, Sir Karl Popper,in the New Yorker, journalist Adam Gopnik (2002) described Popper’s reasoning in this way:

No number of white swans could tell you that all swans were white, but a single black swan could tell you that they weren’t… Science, Popper proposed… didn’t proceed through observations confirmed by verification; it proceeded through wild, over-arching conjectures, which generalized way “beyond the data”.

Yet most of us, in our investment ideas and in our political ideas do exactly the reverse of this “scientific thought” that Popper pointed out, that is we continue to expect to see, in all probability, a white swan; that is, we remain confident that future returns will resemble the past. We search for facts to confirm our beliefs and hopes, not for facts that would negate them. For example, the news stories I started this article out with, which for most of us, negates what we want.

Thus, in the markets, few theories are advanced with the search for what is wrong with our ideas, because the language of finance uses terms like forecasts and probabilities. We are talking about probability, and probability is a slippery concept when applied to our financial markets. We use the word “risk” all too casually and the word “uncertainty” all too rarely.

The distinction was made first by Frank H. Knight, (1885 – 1972). In Knight’s view, the two things, risk and uncertainty are different. Risk is properly used as a measurable quantity to which probabilities and distributions are known (as with the roll of dice). Uncertainty is immeasurable, and therefore, not subject to probabilities.

According to Peter Bernstein, “Considering the consequences of being wrong is essential in decision-making under uncertainity”. In 2004, Glyn A. Holton pointed out in an article that uncertainty accounts for only one aspect of the idea of risk. The second aspect is exposure. People must have a stake in the outcome; it must matter to them.

Applying abstract theories of Popper and Knight to financial markets is what people do. That’s what Benoit Mandelbrot, the inventor of fractal geometry, did. Fractal geometry, simply defined, is about patterns that repeat themselves continually scaling up or down. This is observed in nature as well as geometry, where growth is not linear, but logarithmic.

Mandelbrot applied this concept to the daily price movements of the Dow. Since 1915, the standard deviation of the Dow has been 0.89 %, that is two-thirds of the fluctuations were within the 0.89 percentage points of the average daily change of 0.74%. None-the-less, the occasions when the standard deviation has been as high as 3 or 4 have been frequent; occasions when it has exceeded 10 have occurred infrequently, only once, and that was on that Black Monday back in 1989. The odds against such a happening are about 10 to the 50th power.

The fact is that the infrequent but extreme daily changes in the stock market can overwhelm the frequent, but usually humdrum fluctuations that take place each day within normal ranges. For example, since 1950, the S & P 500 Index has risen from a level of 17 to a recent level of 1,260. But, if we deduct the returns achieved on only the 40 market days in which the S & P 500 had its highest percentage gains, 40 out 14,588 days, then the level drops to 288. Contrarily, if we eliminate the 40 worst days, the S & P 500 will be sitting at 11,550.

That so much can happen on so few days and so unpredictably, suggests the perils of jumping into and out of the market and the value of simply staying the course. Put another way, investors are more volatile that investments. Economic reality governs the long-term returns earned by our businesses, and black swans in business are unlikely. But emotions and impressions, the tides of hope, greed and fear among the participants in the financial system govern the short-term returns generated in the markets. These emotional factors magnify or minimize the central core of economic reality, and in such an environment, a black swan may appear at any time.

More than 70 years ago, the great British economist John Maynard Keynes (1883 – 1946) recognized the critical distinction between the rational and the irrational in the stock market. And he remarked that in American markets, the influence of speculation is enormous. It is rare for an American to invest for “income” only, rather, he will probably purchase an investment in his hope for capital appreciation. This is another way of saying that the American is attaching his hopes to a favorable change in the conventional basis of valuation based on enterprise, to one based on speculation. This also was Keynes’s great concern.

Corporate earnings in the United States have grown with remarkable consistency at about the rate of the U.S. GDP. There have been no black swans in long-term U.S. investment returns. However, having said that, certainty about the future never exists, nor are probabilities always borne out, so applying reasonable expectations to both investment and speculation returns combined, has proved to be the sensible approach to projecting returns to the stock market over decades. In deed, despite the black swans of the stock market history, ownership of U.S. business of investors who have stayed the course has been a remarkably successful strategy.


Then along comes a U.S. economist Hyman Minsky (1919 – 1996) who observed the fundamental link between finance and economics with these words: “The financial system swings between robustness and fragility, and these swings are an integral part of the process that generates business cycles.” He noted the symbiotic relationship between finance and industrial development which came to a head in the 1980s when institutional investors became the largest repositories of savings in the country and exerted there influence on financial markets and the conduct of business enterprises. Minsky’s key concept was that the financial economy, focused on speculation, should not be considered separate and distinct form the productive economy, focused on enterprise. This expectation and fear of Minsky, like that of Keynes, was that speculation would come to overwhelm enterprise. Recent history seems to confirm their fears, as rampant speculation in the markets has added a new elements of uncertainty into our economy.

This change in the structure of capitalism has been dramatic. A half-century ago, individuals owned 92 % of US stocks and institutions owned but 8%. Currently, individuals own 26% and institutions own 74%. Critically, in this new environment for money managers, where they are held accountable for the maximization of the value of investments made by their clients as measured in periods as short as years or even quarters. This means that institutional managers have turned increasingly to speculation (versus investment) just as Keynes had predicted and business executives became increasingly attuned to short-term profits and the stock market valuations of their companies.

This brings us up to our current situation, with the growing role of institutional investors to foster continued evolution of the financial system by providing a ready pool of buyers of securitized loans, structured finance products, and a myriad of other exotic innovations whose complex risks are shaking the financial markets of today.

Indeed, over the past two centuries the United States has moved from an agricultural economy to a manufacturing economy, to a service economy, and to what is predominantly a financial economy. The U.S. is becoming a country where no business actually makes anything. Where we merely trade pieces of paper, swap stocks and bonds back and forth with one another, and pay the financial croupiers a veritable fortune. Led by Wall Street’s investment bankers and brokers and mutual funds, followed by hedge funds, pension fund managers, financial advisers and all the other participants in the system. These costs have soared to staggering proportions. Aggregate annual costs incurred by market participants have risen from an estimated $2.5 billion as recently as 1988 to something like $528 billion in 2007, an increase of more than 20 times.

Even more staggering is the increase in financial transactions of all types, a global phenomenon whose implications are far from clear. Although the world’s GDP is about $60trillion, the aggregate nominal value of global financial derivatives is said to be $600 trillion, fully 10 times larger than all the goods and services produced in our entire world. Among the riskiest of these derivatives are credit-default swaps, which alone total $45 trillion, an amazing 9 fold increase in the last three years. These swaps are five times the size of the U.S. national debt and three times the U.S. GDP.

What do they look like? Consider the CDO, collateral debt obligations, which became more and more complex and more and more concealed. The US SEC registered rating agencies placed their imprimatur on hundreds of new issues of CDOs that were created entirely out of subprime mortgages that would likely been considered as rated B, C or even D in quality and then transformed 75% of them into series (traunces) of AAA, 15% into A and 5 percent were rated BBB. Only a remaining 5% carried a rating of B. One might as well call this magical conversion of low quality into high quality akin to turning lead into gold.


We all know, by early 2007, when mortgage defaults started to snowball, that the financial crisis in mortgages was upon us, and at great and growing cost to U.S. citizens and society. This crisis, although not yet a black swan, is a classic example of the impact of the financial economy on the real economy. Issuance of such bonds in the United States in the past five years totaled $2 trillion, of which the investment banks generated an estimated 80 billion. I conclude with Oscar Wilde, that the only thing that the banks could not resist was temptation.

And again, risks in our financial sector are not the only risks investors face. Some huge, seemingly unacknowledged risks also characterize U.S. society. Consider: the Social Security and Medicare payments committed to by our national government; the string of huge deficits in the U.S. federal budget; our enormous expeditions (soon to reach $1 trillion) on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; terrorism; the threat of global warming and the cost of dealing with it; unfettered global competition, our trade deficit, and the decline in the value of the US dollar.

Other risks are more subtle in nature: a political system dominated by money and by vested interests; a Congress and an administration seemingly focused entirely on the short term, the vast chasm between the wealthiest among us and those at the bottom of the economic ladder (the top 1% holds more than 33% of our total wealth), our self-centered, “bottom-line” society focused on money over achievement, charisma over character, and finally the paucity of leaders who are willing to lead, to defy the conventional financial wisdom of these times, and to stand up for what is right and noble and true.

Whatever the case, some surprising event out there, far beyond our expectations, will surely come to pass, an event that will carry an extreme impact, and one for which, once it happens, we’ll quickly concoct an explanation as to why it was so predictable after all. That event, if and when it comes, will just be one more black swan, something akin to “Disaster Capitalism” perhaps.

So, be watchful of the news and the noise of the news, and look into it not to support what you want to believe and hope for, but for what is actually happening. And to this end, I return you to the clips from recent news stories as I have come to collect and present in my blog lately.

Keep your powder dry and recognize that these times, they’re a’changing.

Credit crisis far from over, IMF warns Citing "fragile" global financial markets and softening European home prices, the International Monetary Fund warned that further reductions in U.S. credit growth are possible. The July update to the fund's Global Financial Stability Report reiterated the IMF's contention that losses this cycle could reach as much as $945 billion as the subprime-mortgage crisis continues to reverberate. Financial Times (28 Jul.)

Industry insiders expect more bank failures After the seizures of First National Bank of Nevada and First Heritage Bank of California, market professionals said more bank failures are expected before a recovery in the financial markets. "My real concern is that we're not finished," said Kathy Boyle, president of Chapin Hill Advisors. "Wall Street would like to think that the worst is over, but we've been saying that for a while." CNBC (28 Jul.)

And yet, More U.S. banks to issue covered bonds Three more U.S. banks said they would begin issuing covered bonds, a tool common in Europe that could free up mortgage financing. Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo said they would begin issuing the debt. The bonds are backed by mortgages but kept on a bank's books and backed by a layer of high-quality mortgages. Bank of America and Washington Mutual previously issued the bonds, but their appeal was limited because of regulatory uncertainty about where investors stand if a bank collapses. The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) (29 Jul.)

Investors worldwide bet big on plummet of stock pricesAround the globe, investors have wagered more than $1 trillion by speculating that the price of stocks will drop. In July, managers made at least $1.4 billion on bets against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Bloomberg data show. Hedge funds and other financial firms have made large sums by short selling. "It's a huge amount of money," said Peter Hahn, a research fellow for Cass Business School. "Shorts have come a long way. They are getting into the mainstream, and long holders need to understand the shorts are not evil." Bloomberg (21 Jul.)

Analysis: Liquidity takes priority in Fannie, Freddie rescueThe U.S. government has made preventing a crisis in liquidity its top priority in rescuing troubled lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and rightly so. But policymakers shouldn't overlook the longer-term problems of capital and structure that must be addressed if the two government-sponsored enterprises are to survive. Financial Times (15 Jul.)

Soros warns of more crises to come after Fannie, FreddieBillionaire investor George Soros said the latest financial crisis involving Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will not be the last. Soros labeled the turmoil in the markets that has marred the last year as "the most serious financial crisis of our lifetime." He also said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke might not be able to prevent the U.S. economy from deteriorating even further. "His options are limited -- he is boxed in," Soros said. Reuters (15 Jul.)

G-8 leaders indicate inflation is primary concernLeaders from the Group of Eight said the global economy is being threatened by rising oil and food prices. "We have strong concerns about the sharp rise in oil prices," they said in a statement before their annual summit. "The world economy is now facing uncertainty, and downside risks persist." The leaders proposed holding a discussion between consumers and energy producers with a focus on energy efficiency. "Production and refining capacities should be increased in the short term," the group said. Bloomberg (08 Jul.)

World Bank predicts 8%-plus inflation in Latin AmericaHigher food prices will push Latin America's inflation to an average of more than 8% this year, the World Bank's chief economist for the region said. The rapid rise in commodity costs will especially hurt importers in Central America and the Caribbean, while boosting major oil exporters such as Venezuela and Mexico. Bloomberg (30 Jul.)


Author’s note: This discussion paper is for the dental audience and is largely re-edited content taken from CFA Institute's private wealth resources which include edited portions of a speech delivered to the Risk Management Association on 11 October, 2007 by John C. Bogle. Its academic use and private study is permitted under the "fair dealing" guidelines which allow for its use here for the purposes of criticism and review.

Friday, July 04, 2008

What About Inflation And My Retirement Plans?


Are you reading the news? Take a look at how inflation is raising its ugly head. Then read what this means to your retirement plans.

U.S. trade gap rose 7.8% in April


The U.S. trade deficit jumped in April as a weak dollar pushed the costs of importing foreign oil to record levels. The trade gap rose by 7.8% to $60.9 billion, the largest deficit in 13 months, the Commerce Department reported. U.S. export sales of $155.5 billion were led by commercial aircraft, farm machinery, medical equipment and computers. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (10 Jun.) , The Washington Post/Associated Press (11 Jun.)

Paulson to press Chinese for trade changes


With legislation that would punish China for keeping its currency undervalued now unlikely to pass Congress this year, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is vowing to press Beijing for change. Paulson and other members of the George W. Bush administration will meet with Chinese counterparts next week in the latest round of high-level economic talks. U.S. officials say China seems to be using regulation and other barriers to protect Chinese companies from foreign competitors. International Herald Tribune (10 Jun.)

Asian central banks fight dollar climb


Central banks in Thailand and South Korea have sold dollars to support their currencies as recent comments by U.S. leaders drive up the dollar's value. U.S. leaders have geared up for "outright intervention" in world currency markets to break a linkage between a weak dollar and high oil prices, said Stephen Jen, chief currency strategist at Morgan Stanley in London. Bloomberg (11 Jun.)

Canadian central bank swings to inflation-fighting stance


Canada's central bank decided to keep interest rates on hold after months of cuts designed to insulate the country's economy from the spillover of a possible U.S. recession. A statement indicated the Bank of Canada now sees inflation as the main economic threat, putting it in line with the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank. The Globe and Mail (Toronto) (10 Jun.)

Fitch says more U.S. LBO debt is troubled


The debt behind U.S. LBOs deteriorated more than other sectors of the debt market, and debt-burdened companies continue to find the lending window closed, Fitch Ratings said in a study released Thursday. Troubles in the economy and credit markets have led to more downgrades and defaults this year for LBO-financed deals. "The vast majority of the downgrades were driven by weak cash flows and weak revenue generation," Fitch Ratings senior director William May said. Financial Times (11 Jun.)

Survey finds confidence in global economy falls


Confidence in the global economy has dropped as central banks prepare to battle inflation, which will likely force down stocks and bonds. The Bloomberg Professional Global Confidence Index declined from 22.7 to 21 in May, with anything below 50 indicating a negative sentiment. Confidence had been rebounding after the index reached a low in March. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (11 Jun.) , Bloomberg (12 Jun.)

Analysts see housing slump continuing


U.S. homes may lose a third of their value as a result of the market slump caused by subprime-mortgage defaults, and the slide will probably last another two years until credit loosens again to attract new borrowers, top credit analysts say. "There are a lot more mortgage defaults to come," Fitch Ratings managing director Glenn Costello said. Reuters (11 Jun.)


Lieberman would ban institutional investors from commodities


U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., said he will propose banning institutional investors from the commodities markets. A committee he chairs meets next week to examine whether speculation has driven the prices of crops and fuel to record levels. Another proposal would strengthen regulations limiting the stake that each speculative investor can hold in a given market, Lieberman said. The New York Times (12 Jun.)

BRIC countries raise borrowing costs to cool inflation, economies


The Reserve Bank of India unexpectedly increased borrowing costs on Wednesday to battle inflation. The increase in the repurchase rate, following similar action by Brazil, Russia and China, adds to concerns about a slowdown in the fastest-growing economies in the world. "The BRICs are better placed to withstand a slowdown, but that doesn't mean they won't feel it," said Jay Bryson, global economist at Wachovia. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (11 Jun.) , Bloomberg (12 Jun.)

Hedge funds lending to cash-starved companies


As shaken and risk-shy banks cut back on lending to companies, hedge funds are stepping in. More than 100 funds already specialize in lending, usually at interest rates much higher than those charged by banks. Big funds such as Fortress Investment Group and Citadel Investment Group are joining in. The New York Times (13 Jun.)

Lehman Brothers ousts president, demotes finance chief


After posting a $2.8 billion quarterly loss, Lehman Brothers ousted Joe Gregory, president since 2004, and demoted CFO Erin Callan, who was once viewed as a potential CEO. It is the latest management shake-up on Wall Street as banks continue to suffer heavy losses. Lehman's quarterly loss raises speculation about its future, and analysts question whether the changes will relieve pressure on CEO Dick Fuld. Financial Times (12 Jun.)

Fuld said to be actively listening to offers for Lehman: Richard Fuld, CEO of Lehman Brothers, is pondering takeover offers and large investments in the troubled bank, sources say. Lehman's future is in doubt following its disclosure that it may lose $2.8 billion in the second quarter and that it has undergone a management shake-up. CNBC/Reuters (12 Jun.)

SEC may require ratings firms to disclose more


The SEC has proposed new rules that would force agencies that rate bonds to make more information about their work publicly available. The SEC would require ratings firms to make a clear distinction between corporate or government bonds and the structured products at the center of the subprime credit crisis. The three largest ratings agencies welcomed the SEC action. The CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity and the Council of Institutional Investors said investors would benefit from greater transparency and separate measures for structured-finance bonds. The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) (12 Jun.)


Pressure mounts on oil speculators


The chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee added his weight to the legislative push against commodities speculation. U.S. Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., and the committee's top Republican co-sponsored a bill to allow the Energy Department to gather data on factors influencing oil prices from federal agencies and commissions. The bill is among many proposals to pare the influence of energy speculators on price-setting. But the efforts to rein in bets on oil prices are still too far from reality to affect prices, analysts say. MarketWatch (12 Jun.)


Bernanke warns of growing cost of health care


Increasing government spending on health care threatens to endanger economic stability, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned Monday. "Soon it will begin to have effects on interest rates, it will have effects on economic growth, and on stability," he said. The cost of health care amounts to more than 15% of the entire U.S. economy and there is scant evidence spending will slow, he said. Reuters (16 Jun.)


Iran pulls $75 billion out of Europe


Iran has pulled about $75 billion in assets from Europe rather than risk seeing the money frozen in retaliation for continuing its uranium-enrichment program. Iran is refusing to kill its nuclear ambitions despite Western governments warning of new punitive steps. "Part of Iran's assets in European banks have been converted to gold and shares and another part has been transferred to Asian banks," deputy foreign minister Mohsen Talaie was quoted as telling a moderate Iranian weekly paper. Reuters (16 Jun.)


Speculators and their role in food, fuel prices


Who are the speculators blamed for boosting global food and energy prices independent of fundamental supply and demand? Speculation is a part of the daily business of farmers, investment bankers, bakery entrepreneurs and hedge fund managers. While farmers and bakers have long hedged against price increases, criticism focuses on financial enterprises. Banks holding the savings of small investors and hedge funds have piled into the business, potentially adding turmoil to food prices and markets. Spiegel Online (13 Jun.)



G-8 leaders warn of growing inflation threat


Finance ministers from the Group of Eight industrialized nations warned at their weekend meeting that inflation presented an increasing risk to their economies. The comments matched inflation warnings by central bankers in the past two weeks. The IMF improved its outlook on the U.S., Europe and Japan, saying all had done better than expected in the first quarter. But IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said pain remains in the forecast. "Even if the slowdown is not going to be very deep, it is going to be protracted," he said. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (16 Jun.) , Financial Times (16 Jun.)



Fed's comments on inflation hinder housing rebound


Anti-inflation rhetoric from U.S. Federal Reserve officials has had a chilling effect on the country's struggling housing market. Hawkish comments by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Vice Chairman Donald Kohn led money markets to see an interest-rate hike in August as a near certainty. That produced a steep rate increase for fixed-rate mortgages, a drop in mortgage applications and a plunge in home-loan refinancing. Reuters (19 Jun.)



Global trade tilts in favor of unprepared U.S.


The cost advantage Chinese manufacturers used to enjoy is disappearing with rising fuel and labor costs and the appreciation of the yuan. This creates an opportunity to rebalance global trade, an opportunity the U.S. hasn't seen in a generation. But U.S. companies can't adapt overnight. Withered factories and supply networks will need abundant time and capital to rebuild before the U.S. can become a major force again. BusinessWeek (19 Jun.)


Factory activity down, jobless claims dip


Factories in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region have yet to see an expected boost from export demand. Figures from the Philadelphia Federal Reserve showed business activity fell for a seventh month. Meanwhile, the number of U.S. workers filing new claims for jobless benefits totaled 381,000 last week. "This is recession territory, at least if the experience of 2001 is a guide," said economist Ian Shepherdson of High Frequency Economics. FinancialWeek/Reuters (19 Jun.)



Paulson says Fed should have broader emergency powers


The U.S. Federal Reserve might need to make money available to a broader range of financial institutions if there is a market meltdown, and that could mean offering emergency funding to investment banks, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said. U.S. lawmakers are considering whether to give the Fed explicit authority to take emergency action in case of a threat to financial stability. Reuters (19 Jun.)

Regulators threaten to get tough on shadow banking


Shadow banking has become a $10 trillion market and a vital source of funds to spur the U.S. economy, but the subprime meltdown exposed major flaws. "The shadow banking system model as practiced in recent years has been discredited," said Ramin Toloui, executive vice president at Pimco. Industry observers say Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and other large brokerage firms may have the most to lose if regulators tighten the reins on shadow banking. MarketWatch (19 Jun.)


Big businesses pass cost of inflation on to customers


Big businesses are passing on higher costs to their customers, increasing concern that this is the beginning of an inflationary spiral. Dow Chemical and South Korean steelmaker Posco announced dramatic price increases Tuesday. Mining giant BHP Billiton said the near-doubling of iron ore prices achieved by rival Rio Tinto on Monday was not enough. Companies faced "tremendous cost pressures" and had the "obligation" to raise their prices in response to higher costs, DuPont chief executive Charles Holliday said. Financial Times (24 Jun.)



Greenspan sees U.S. recession more likely than not


There is a greater than 50% chance that the U.S. will slide into recession as inflation makes further interest-rate cuts unlikely, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said. "A rebound at this stage is not something I think is in the immediate outlook," he said. Reuters (24 Jun.)
Smaller central banks hesitate in inflation fightCentral bankers in developing nations are reluctant to join a push for higher interest rates that could curb inflation but would also hurt their poor. Their inaction could play a growing role in spiraling global inflation. "If emerging markets don't tighten, then advanced economies import more inflation," said Arvind Subramanian, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. The Globe and Mail (Toronto) (25 Jun.)



Fed expected to signal anti-inflation bias


The Federal Reserve's rate-setting committee will leave the key U.S. interest rate unchanged at 2% after Wednesday's meeting, all 102 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News said. The Fed instead appears to be laying the groundwork for a shift to an anti-inflation stance and future rate increases. Bloomberg (25 Jun.)



Buffett offers little economic cheer


Billionaire investor Warren Buffett says he can't predict when the U.S. economy will recover from its current slump. "It's not going to be tomorrow, it's not going to be next month, and may not even be next year," he said. The country is in the middle of a period of stagflation, with the economy slowing at the same time inflation worsens. "I think the `flation' part will heat up and I think the `stag' part will get worse," Buffett said. Bloomberg (25 Jun.)
Inflation adds to credit-crisis woesRising worldwide inflation is promising to be a greater worry than the credit crisis. "A lot of companies are ill-positioned to deal with an additional whammy of rising costs," Barclays credit analysis head Mark Howard said. Industries that are able to pass along higher prices are in better shape, including companies in agriculture, biotech, and utilities, he said. FinancialWeek (26 Jun.)



Japan's inflation hits 10-year high


Japanese households cut their spending by 3.2% in May, the government said Friday, adding a further drag on the world's second-largest economy. Households account for nearly 55% of the Japanese economy. Their spending pullback is a further recession warning since corporations are already struggling against skyrocketing energy and raw-material costs. Forbes/Thomson Financial News (27 Jun.)


Central bankers agree on inflation threat


Central bankers from around the world seem to share the view that inflation is their biggest economic challenge. Bankers meeting in Switzerland concurred that booming food and energy costs are related to demand and might not be temporary. Once industrial countries have managed the financial turmoil of the past year, "the issue that is remaining and that is becoming more important is containing inflationary pressures," Chile central bank president José de Gregorio said. CNBC (30 Jun.) , The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) (30 Jun.) , Reuters (29 Jun.) , Bloomberg (29 Jun.)

So what does this mean to your retirement plans?

Defined-contribution plans can enable dentists to accumulate tax-deferred savings that far exceed their expectations. On retirement, however, they may be shocked to discover how a seemingly ample savings amount translates into only a modest level of sustainable annual income on an after-tax, after-inflation basis. How shocked, well, let’s see.

Most dentists, even those who are relatively knowledgeable, do not recognize how a large savings accumulation can translate into a relatively modest annual flow of payments. Additionally, this “annuity shock” can actually be exacerbated by the success of tax-deferred accounts, such as 401(k) plans and IRAs. How so?

Consider a postretirement investment having a 6 percent nominal earnings rate subject to 20 percent taxes and 3 percent inflation.

A $300,000 accumulation would be able to fund an after-tax, after-inflation 20-year annuity of only $16,000 from a tax-deferred account and $18,000 from a taxable account.

Many dentists would be shocked to learn that what they might consider a rather significant sum would generate such a modest level of sustainable annual income. Another source of surprise is that it does not matter a great deal, under these conditions, whether the $300,000 is lodged within a tax-deferred account or in a taxable savings account lying outside any tax shelter.

It should be emphasized that, although tax-deferred and taxable savings face roughly similar annuity factors. It is worth trying to understand why these factors are so much lower than many would expect. In the taxable account, the 6 percent interest rate — including the 3 percent inflation component — is first subject to a tax payment of 20 percent that reduces the after-tax earnings rate to 4.8 percent. The insidious “tax” from inflation then strikes a second time to take away another 3 percent each period, reducing the nominal 6 percent to a net rate of 1.8 percent. It is the convergence of effective rates of return due to takes and inflation, under our baseline assumptions, that leads to the taxable and tax-deferred accounts of having virtually the same net annuity factors.

Higher Taxes and Inflation RatesThe preceding discussion focused on an effective tax rate of 20 percent. Higher tax rates erode the net payments and consequently lead to lower annuity factors. Higher tax rates would also lead to a wider differentiation between taxable and the tax-deferred accounts, with higher taxes having the more deleterious impact on the tax-deferred account. So now you know how taxes and inflation can lead to a misperception of what constitutes an ample level of savings.

Although the tone of the preceding comments may have been rather grim, there is some good news in these annuity factors. Suppose an individual also receives a stream of annual nominal or inflation-indexed payments from a corporation or some government entity, e.g. social security. This is in effect a Defined benefit stream of income and it will grow larger in present-value terms. For example, a 30-year stream of fully indexed payments that starts at $15,000 would be equivalent, under the baseline assumptions, to a tax-deferred accumulation of $370,000. The size of this implicit sum might be a pleasant surprise to you. Do you want to know more about this? https://www.cfainstitute.org/memresources/communications/privatewealth/june08/article_1.html


Do you want to make it even better?

Social Security’s handbook contains 2,728 rules. One of these — Rule 1516 — permits Social Security recipients to repay all benefits received in the past on their earnings records and reapply for much higher benefits from scratch.


Social Security charges no interest on the repayment, and the IRS allows the recipient to deduct the repayment or take a tax credit for the extra taxes already paid because of past receipt of Social Security benefits.


Yes, this is hard to believe. But it is true. Repayers need to file Social Security Form 521, and IRS Publication 915 discusses the tax deduction/credit. The gains from taking this option can be sizeable. Take Peter and Kate, who are 70-year-old retirees with $200,000 in regular assets and $200,000 each in retirement accounts. They invest all these regular and retirement account assets in safe assets yielding 3 percent after inflation. Peter and Kate will each receive $13,250 this year in Social Security retirement benefits.


Peter and Kate took Social Security when they were age 62 and have been kicking themselves ever since. Had they waited until now to apply, they would each be eligible for $20,693 per year — their full retirement benefit adjusted by Social Security’s Delayed Retirement Credit; that is, they would be receiving 56.2 percent more in real Social Security benefits this year and every year in the future.


But dreams can come true, and thanks to Rule 1516, Peter and Kate can secure this benefit increase. True, they will each have to repay $94,556 in past benefits received. But it is worth it. Their sustainable consumption expenditure rises, on balance, by 21.7 percent!
How else could Peter and Kate raise their living standard by 21.7 percent? Well, they could find $220,000 lying on the street. With $420,000 in regular assets rather than $200,000, they would be able to sustain the same living standard through age 100 as they would by simply repaying and reapplying for Social Security — something that will take them all of an hour.
What Age Groups Stand to Gain from Repaying and Reapplying?


The results for the other assumed initial ages indicate that households ranging from their mid-60s to mid-70s may gain significantly from this option. Buying inflation-indexed annuities from a reliable, low-cost provider can raise one’s living standard. But buying such annuities from the safest and lowest cost provider, namely, Social Security, can raise one’s living standard in this by a lot more than buying form a commercial annuity broker which would cost you about 40% more than repaying your social security and reapplying.


What is the Gain from Taking Benefits at 62 and Repaying and Reapplying at 70?


If Peter and Kate are age 62, what are their living standard gains from taking their benefits at age 62 and then at age 70, repaying them and reapplying for higher benefits? Taking their benefits at age 62 and never repaying entails a sustainable spending level of $50,410. Taking their benefits starting at age 70 offers an 11.8 percent higher level of sustainable spending. But taking them early, at age 62, and then repaying and reapplying at 70 offers an even better deal — a 15.8 percent higher sustainable spending level than simply taking benefits at age 62. But again, this third option will only be an option if Social Security preserves Rule 1516! Want to learn more about this? https://www.cfainstitute.org/memresources/communications/privatewealth/june08/article_5.html


Author’s note: This discussion paper for the dental audience is largely re-edited content taken from CFA Institute's private wealth resources. Its academic use and private study is permitted under the "fair dealing" guidelines which allow for its use here for the purposes of criticism and review.




Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Trends? Is US Economy affecting your practice?

Asian shares follow Wall Street down
Asian stock markets dropped broadly on Monday, following heavy losses on Wall Street last week linked to a surge in oil prices. Energy companies rose as crude oil neared $138 a barrel. MarketWatch (09 Jun.)

Wall Street slumps on increase in oil, jobless rate
U.S. stock markets suffered one of their worst days of the year Friday after oil prices skyrocketed by about $11 a barrel and May unemployment surged more than expected. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and the Nasdaq composite each lost about 3%. All 30 companies in the Dow Jones industrial average fell. CNNMoney.com (06 Jun.)

World leaders focus on inflation
Inflation is the main economic threat to the world, corporate executives and government officials concluded during a meeting in Russia. "We are facing a very dangerous situation caused by these tremendously increasing prices for commodities, food and oil," German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck told the gathering. ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (09 Jun.) , Bloomberg (09 Jun.)

Medvedev blames U.S. policies for financial crisis: Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Moscow's growing economic influence could help resolve the global financial crisis, which he blamed on "aggressive" U.S. policies. "Failure by the biggest financial firms in the world to adequately take risk into account, coupled with the aggressive financial policies of the biggest economy in the world, have led not only to corporate losses," Medvedev said. "Most people on the planet have become poorer." Reuters (08 Jun.) , Deutsche Welle (07 Jun.)

Global financial crisis to help BRICs grow
Jim O'Neill, the Goldman Sachs economist who coined the term BRIC, said that the ongoing financial crisis would help Brazil, Russia, India and China take a larger share of the global gross domestic product. "On a relative basis it definitely allows the BRICs to develop faster as they are going to take an even bigger share of GDP sooner," O'Neill said. "This is a financial crisis of the West and we must not forget that of the world's 6 billion people most of them are not affected by this." Reuters (08 Jun.)

Worldwide consumer generation to keep prices high
"Generation A" -- the 400 million people aged 30 to 40 -- may become the world's most important economic force. They earn only about £2,000 a year on average, but they have a refrigerator and want much more, analysts at Macquarie Group say. These consumers represent a looming explosion in demand, suggesting that the soaring prices of food, metals, energy and transport are unlikely to fade. The Times (London) (09 Jun.)

SEC rules may target ratings agencies
The SEC this week may bar ratings agencies from advising investment banks on how to earn top rankings for asset-backed securities. "They basically sold ratings to the highest bidder without any regard to the performance of the rated securities," said Joseph Mason, chairman of the banking department at Louisiana State University's business school. Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings also could be forced to disclose all the data used for a rating so competitors can grade bonds even if they weren't paid. Bloomberg (09 Jun.)

Shanghai, Hong Kong lead decline in Asian markets
On the first day of trading since China's central bank announced that it would increase the reserve ratios of most commercial banks, Shanghai's Composite Index dropped 4.6%. Most other Asian markets were down as well. The Shenzhen stock market's benchmark index plunged 5%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 3.3% and the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index declined 4.7%. MarketWatch (09 Jun.)

Paulson refuses to rule out intervening to stabilize dollar
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who is going to Japan this week to the Group of Seven meeting of financial chiefs, said he would not rule out an intervention in the currency markets to help stabilize the dollar. "I would never take intervention off the table, or any policy tool off the table," Paulson said. "I just can't speculate about what we will or won't do." Paulson said the White House is "focused" on the dollar and soaring oil prices. Reuters (09 Jun.)

Saudis call for global oil summit
Saudi Arabia has called for an oil summit so that oil-producing countries, consuming countries and petroleum companies can grapple with record prices for crude. "Current oil prices are unjustifiable in terms of petroleum facts and market fundamentals," the Saudi cabinet said in a statement. Consuming countries want OPEC to increase its output to drive down oil prices. OPEC blames the weak dollar, speculation and political tension for the price spiral. Arab News (Saudi Arabia) (10 Jun.)

Trends? Is US Economy affecting your practice?

Of course it is…
In my opinion, when there's an economic shift, it's a huge OPPORTUNITY – it just depends upon how you choose to see it.

Times like we're experiencing now are a huge advantage to anyone in a position to assist and leverage change! The real question is, “Where do you want to “go” with your practice?”

We have seen quite a few economic and political gyrations. Remember all the hype about Y2K, and the possibility of the world's power grid coming unglued. In the wake of 9/11 there was unprecedented levels of fear and uncertainty.

The thing to remember is that everything is always changing.

While currently there is a lot of concern in various parts of the world regarding noticeable economic slow down, we still live in huge economies. (The US GDP is over $13 trillion, the EU GDP is now over $16 trillion.) Even in times of slow down or recession, the vast majority of people (over 95% in most developed economies) have jobs and continue to buy what they need. Life and business go on.

It is a very big and ever changing world. With any change there are short-term winners and losers. If you are affected by changes in your market, simply step back, reassess, and find out where the new opportunities are. If you are finding your usual patients a little harder to come by, look at it as an opportunity to go after better markets. Times of change always bring an invitation to step out of your comfort zone, let go of the old ways, grow, become better at marketing yourself, and generally play a much bigger game in the world.

While some fear the great apocalypse with every patient departure, others are out there simply looking to see where the world needs them now. And the world still needs lots of great dentists.

Yet Fear has raised its ugly head and opened its ugly mouth…
The gods of Greed - they promised economic stability, order and prosperity but instead the world's bankers have delivered chaos, debt and uncertainty - and then blamed the feeble governments that surrendered control of the global economy to them....”

Some say speculation has left the global economy more vulnerable to a financial collapse than at any time since 1929. They said the same, however, about the stock market crash of 1987, the collapse of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management in 1998 and now the subprime crisis. The obvious conclusion is that these models are flawed. Even so, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently described this current crisis that erupted last August as "the largest financial shock since the Great Depression". George Soros, the billionaire speculator who knows a thing or two about financial upsets, says the world is facing the "most serious crisis of our lifetime", hmmm.

At any time, you can look at the world and find many reasons to get very afraid, some reasons are real, most are imagined. Einstein once said that the most important decision you will ever make is deciding whether or not you live in a friendly universe. Don't let fear make you small or avoid social realities. Instead, recognize the need for significant change in society, lobby for social justice and "be the change you want to see in the world". Another one of Einstein's quotes I like is, "problems are never solved at the same level of thinking that gave rise to them."

Well, I don’t know where you live, but my world is far from perfect. I have doubts, fears and disappointments in my life too. I also need sources of inspiration to keep me on the right track, and remind me about what matters most in my life, and that is finding joy. Click Here To Watch a 3 minute movie and remember, “even if you are on the right track, you will get run over if you just sit there” – Will Rogers.









Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Crazy Markets You Are Invested In (Part 2)

The Negative trade balance began in the mid-70s, less than 30 years later both the government and consumers were running up debt at an alarming rate. See Chart on the left-hand side of this page.The only way America can continue in its role, is to borrow. How is this borrowing made possible? Let’s first look at gold.

Gold has a past and a present and it has not been a great preserver of wealth during the last 30 years and in this respect it has not been any better than paper money. A bull market in gold or in technology shares or in real estate are all the same, no real wealth is being created, people are just switching their preferences. In the end, trust in gold is the same as trust in paper money until you go back even further in history and then you realize that gold has a much longer history than the paper dollar and because of this, both gold and paper dollars have a future, but gold has much more of it.

Jesus said, “Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s” referring to gold and silver coins with Caesar’s head on it. America has dead presidents on its money too but the difference is that a gold denarius is worth today, in terms of buying power, what it was worth 2,000 years ago. And US paper dollars lose 2 to 5 percent of their purchasing power every year. What do you think they will be worth 10 years in the future?

The world’s two largest currencies, the US dollar and the British Pound have both lost 95% of their value in the past century, which is especially remarkable because gold was linked to these currencies for most of this time. For the dollar the final link with gold finished 37 years ago. 70% of the world’s central bankers and Warren Buffet have been increasing their reserves in Euros since 2005.

That is not so surprising given this background of rising debt against the dollar. The dollar is in fact and rational thought, nothing more than electronic information that exists to keep track of it. Relatively few dollars ever make it to paper and many end up in the pockets of drug lords and African politicians. Therefore, most of the US dollars made are not even useful for starting a fire because they do not even tangibly exist.

Gold is the only money that exists in tangible form. Sure it goes up and it goes down just like money say the economists. You can protect yourself from inflation in other ways say the speculators. Gold pays no dividends or interest, gold will not make you happy, but it is better in the long run than anything else. Longevity is not the best recommendation, especially if you do not live as long as the ½ life of gold which is already inert, or nearly immortal. But this feature, gives it staying power, and this is what gives it virtue.

Gold is money that no central bank promotes and none destroys. The world’s improvers will always be with us. They spend more than they have to boss us around, they use civil service jobs and bombs to get their way. Given enough money, the poor can be fed and housed, the middle class can be given free medical, low cost housing loans and social security, and the rich get contracts and favors. Enemies can be created, then bombed, and then reconstructed into seeing the world from our point of view. It is all a circus show and it all costs money.

How do you get more money for these spectacles? Gold refuses to cooperate. US dollars and other paper money barely needs encouragement, the printing presses are already hot. But everything in life has a beginning, a middle, and an end, just as surely as each day passes. Each day that passes in which the present trends don’t come to an end brings us a day closer to when they will end. Stability, leads to instability. The longer things remain stable, the more people are convinced that they will never change.

Today’s house flippers are taking on riskier positions, instead of buying one house, they buy two. Instead of living modestly, they live large, they gush in the direction that the market leads them. What does this really mean? It means that investor’s perceptions of risk are over influenced by recent history. It means that people look for meaning in things where there is none, that they misapprehend the randomness of events. Over the broad sweep of market history, prices have gone up from barely 100 after the crash of 1929 to over 10,000 where it is today. However, adjusted to inflation, the Dow is only about 500, and most of that increase is cyclical.

The Dow, having moved from under 1,000 to over 10,000, from 1982 to 2008 investors would have to believe that the tendency is to go up, that’s its recent history, right? Today’s current investors have made their bets as to whether prices will go up or down, and this is reflected in the stock market or real estate markets currently. Some believe it will go up and some believe it will go down and so the cycle repeats itself as investors eventually come to realize (by a feeling) that they are paying too much for the opportunity to follow the prices going up, and then, some event, and things tend to crash.

Over the last 100 years the average price investors tend to pay for $1 of stock market earnings is $12. Today, investors are paying $20 on the S & P 500. They believe it will go up, they are not wrong, they are just paying too much to find out when. What were the odds that Bear Stearns would disappear this year, let alone in 2 weeks? A crash in the stock market would be accompanied by the usual complaints, but a crash in the real estate market would be much worse.

Households that have come to rely on equity build-up to keep themselves solvent will have to cut back on consumption. This would produce job loss, personal bankruptcies, mortgage failures, and falling prices. We know how America was built on debt and an increase in the money supply to feed it. We don’t know how it will end or when it will end. It is rather like thinking about your own death, you would rather not, and generally you tend to avoid the subject. Still, it is the kind of thing you ought to be prepared for! A sensible man may not know the hour, the day of his demise, but he does not doubt that it is coming! He does not want to wake up to a market crash with a portfolio of junk bonds, tech stocks, multiple homes or US dollars. He wants to pour himself a drink of Tequila Gold.

After 20 years of mostly falling interest rates, mostly falling inflation rates, and mostly rising asset prices (stocks and real estate) Americans have come to believe that this is the way the world works. Interest rates mostly go down, real estate prices mostly go up. It’s a beautiful thing. What would happen if real estate prices start to go down as they already are? The answer is, nobody knows. Everyone is scrambling to add more money, re-write the rules, and change the benchmarks.

Go figure, the world richest economy lives off the savings of the world’s poorest. Americans buy what they cannot afford, and the Chinese build factories to produce stuff that we cannot afford, but buy anyway. It is the dandiest thing, the whole global “economy” advances apparently so long as U.S. Housing prices continue to rise, as long as more and more money is made.

Whatever this new “economy” is, it is not a traditional economy. Income that should be helping consumers spend is not there, manufacturing jobs are disappearing or being outsourced overseas. Savings have disappeared. Most of what we read is “noise” – more meaningless stuff. In America the average home went up in value 44% in real terms between 1995 and 2005. People buy property now like they did in the tech stock bubble, there are demographic factors they say, earning don’t matter. It is all a greater fool’s game, betting that someone else will come along and pay you more for it. There is no real economy in that. How the new homeowners are going to pay higher prices on falling incomes is not clear, is it?

Remember when people felt the reason why stocks would continue to go up was because baby boomers must save money and they had to put it somewhere? Then, when stocks went down after 2000, they reasoned for the same reasons, why real estate prices would go up, and so they end up chasing bubbles while the real story of what is happening in America is lost in the “noise”.

Well, after an unprecedented rise in real estate, the biggest boom ever, twice as big as the last one in 1980s according to the FDIC, we are nearing, one day at a time, the edge of the abyss. Perhaps the real story is prices for houses have risen in real terms 66% since 1890, but most of the increases happened in two periods: right after WW II and since 1998. Other than these two periods the real prices for real estate have been either flat or going down. Today lenders have come up with creative means to lend money to people who can’t pay it back. Go Figure, and now maybe you can understand why the Fed has increased our money supply and reduced interest rates, to keep the consumer economy working, to increase our apparent standard of living at the expense of great indebtedness (40trillion) payable ultimately, by the many generations of the non-voting unborn.

Things have changed since the last real estate bubble in the 1940’s, then the U.S. economy was growing and healthy. America had a positive trade balance, the biggest in the world. Wages were going up, families were expanding. Now, families are getting smaller, incomes are stable or declining, and for culture of consumers who spend more than we earn, we desperately need housing prices to go up in value and we need the saving of the poor in China and elsewhere in the 3rd World.

The more things change the more things remain the same. The time is now, the rational man and the prudent man get prepared while the crowds wait anxiously for the next signal.
The probable reality is that the Feds will “fix” the problem by throwing more money at it, continuing to devalue the US dollar knowing it holds a trump card in its military that has a vested interest into convincing the rest of the world from seeing things from the American point of view, and that is to keep using the US dollar.

This means that the dollar continues to be the world’s primary currency, backed by a stable government of laws and order. You see, our US dollar is really the equivalent to Imperial currency. As long as it is the world primary currency and everybody wants it to trade with, then it has intrinsic value to foreigners. This is also why it is in the US military’s strategic interest to advance a net work of trade routes around the world, so the 3rd world will continue to invest their savings in US dollars and so the American consumer will continue to consume, so long as housing prices keep increasing and so the dance goes until it stops and it always will.

Purchasing Power Meltdown
Since the US dollar began falling and emerging markets began booming in 2003:
Corn is up 39.5%
Coffee is up 71.1%
Wheat is up 133.9%
Crude Oil is up 140.8%
Gold is up 149.8%
Soybeans are up 159.2%
Gasoline is up 203.6%
Platinum is up 224.2%
Silver is up 257.7%

And thousand s of products that contain these things cost you more everyday.
Cheers!


Author’s note: This discussion paper for the dental audience is largely re-edited content taken from Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis by Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin, 2006, John Wiley & Sons. Its academic use and private study is permitted under the "fair dealing" guidelines which allow for its use here for the purposes of criticism and review.


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