Friday, February 25, 2011

Oil That Is, Black Gold, Texas Tea.


Come and listen to a story about a man named Jed
A poor mountaineer, barely kept his family fed,
Then one day he was shootin at some food,
And up through the ground came a bubblin crude.

Oil that is, black gold, Texas tea. 
"The Ballad Of Jed Clampett"


Even after all these years I'm still amazed at how rapidly events can change our perspectives on the markets, and how rapidly the level and volume of noise can rise. At the beginning of the year no one was predicting that before the end of February the dictators in both Tunisia and Egypt would be gone. That Libya would be engulfed in civil war. That civilian protests would escalate in Bahrain, Algeria, Morocco, North Korea, and Wisconsin. That banks would be closing in South Korea. Whew, and that's just the new stuff to add to the continuing problems in Europe, the continuing housing decline, and the continuing debasement of the US dollar accelerating global inflation. Almost makes you want to hit the beach somewhere in the Caribbean. 
I've often found that when the noise level increases it is generally useful to step back and look at the big picture. Is the noise impacting our portfolios, and how? 
First lets look at the unrest in Northern Africa. Clearly it is too early to determine whether new rulers will be better than old rulers, or if they will we be pro or anti westerners, time will tell. But it is pretty evident that a lot of the worlds oil resides in that part of the globe, and we westerners tend to consume a lot of it (the US has 5% of worlds population but consumes 25% of worlds oil). So any increased uncertainty of the steady supply of oil will cause the prices to rise. In the last 12 months oil has gone from about $75 to $100 per barrel, with most of that increase in the last two weeks. 
Why is oil so important? Well, oil supplies about 40% of the worlds total energy needs, and an astounding 95% of the fuel used to transport people and goods. Oil discovery peaked in the mid-1960's and by the early 1980's we were consuming more oil than we found. Today we consume about 4 to 6 barrels of oil for every new barrel discovered. How much oil is left to be discovered? Who knows, experts argue and argue this point. The simple fact is that most easy discoveries have long been made (i.e., Jed Clampett shooting rabbit, only to find some bubblin' crude), US oil production peaked in 1971. But there is still plenty of oil out there, some experts project as much as three to four times what has already been discovered. The problem is that this yet to be discovered oil is going to be very hard to extract. Think deep, deep, water off-shore drilling, or tar-sands, where the energy used to extract the oil almost equals the energy extracted. In other words, most new discoveries will only be made if oil is selling for a lot more than todays price. 
In summary; Unrest in the Middle East = Higher Oil Prices, which = slower economic growth, which = is usually not too positive for Equities. 
Investment Implication; Maintain exposure to commodities and gold (the yellow kind and the black kind).

The following chart does a great job showing the history and future of oil (click on it and zoom in).     





The Dollar Is Impacted By Oil Too: 
Over the last several years the US dollar has actually been perceived as a safe haven in times of turmoil. Even though the US clearly has it's issues, it was perceived as the best looking dog in the pound. During the financial crisis it rallied 24% against a basket of major currencies, and appreciated 10% during the latest European sovereign debt crisis. But not this time. An oil crisis strikes right at the heart of what drives (literally & figuratively) the American economy. Again, we have 5% of the worlds population but consume 25% of its oil. Increases in the price of gasoline hit our economy faster than about any other factor, and there is very little the Fed can do about it. Simple math, if you drive an SUV with a 25 gallon tank, and gas is $4 per gallon, it now costs you a crisp $100 bill to fill-er-up! 
Investment Implication; diversify your US dollar exposure, the Aussie dollar and Brazilian Real are good alternatives. 

US Market Up 100% in 102 Short Weeks: 
The last 102 weeks have certainly been pretty special, the S&P 500 has doubled! The only other time the market has appreciated so much in such a short time was coming out of the Great Depression in 1934 and 1937. Below is a great table and chart from the Chart Store that shows just how rare this event is. Unfortunately, the average return on the market after such explosive moves was -10.35% over the next 26 weeks, and -20.78% over the next 52 weeks. Since all of these samples occurred during a three year period in the mid-'30's it is hard to say how relevant they are today, but when you factor in the fact that today's hyper-rally was Fed engineered (read "not natural") they do become a bit ominous. 
Again, I'm not reading too much into this other than the fact that we are living in some pretty interesting times. 
Investment Implication; Still fully invested in US equities, but sitting here with an itchy trigger finger. 
Well the first thing you know ol Jed's a millionaire: 
The pension battles flaring up in Wisconsin and other states are just the beginning of the end of the entitlement generation. This will be a very long and drawn out battle, the simple fact is that our governments are broke, they cannot make good on their promises. We have been living on borrowed time and borrowed money and the game is coming to an end. I think New Jersey's Governor Christie put it best in a speech to 7,500 firefighters after he proposed raising their retirement age, eliminating the cost-of-living adjustment, increasing employee pension contributions, and rolling back a 9% pay increase. 
He was roundly booed as he took the stage. He crumpled up his prepared remarks and threw them on the floor, and in a rather loud voice gave the following speech. "Here's the deal: I understand you're angry, and I understand you're frustrated, and I understand you feel deceived and betrayed. For 20 years, governors have come into this room and lied to you, promised you benefits that they had no way of paying for, making promises they knew they couldn't keep, and just hoping that they wouldn't be the man or women left holding the bag. I understand why you feel angry and betrayed and deceived by those people. Here's what I don't understand. Why are you booing the first guy who came in here and told you the truth?"
He told them there was no political advantage in being truthful: "The way we used to think about politics and, unfortunately, the way I fear they're thinking about politics still in Washington involves the old playbook which says, lie, deceive, obfuscate and make it to the next election. I've seen a study that said New Jersey's pensions may go bankrupt by 2020. A friend told me not to worry, you won't be governor then. That's the way politics has been practiced in our country for too long. . . You may hate me now, but 15 years from now, when you have a pension to collect because of what I did, you'll be looking for my address on the Internet so you can send me a thank-you note."  
The battle in Wisconsin centers on collective bargaining powers for public service employees. The inherent problem with collective bargaining for public employees is that these employees can choose their bosses (via elections), and those bosses tend to be beholden to those who elected them. Can you imagine the power you might have if you got to choose who you wanted as your boss? In Milwaukee the average school teacher makes $56,500, but total compensation with benefits is $100,005. That's right, for every $1 in salary the teacher gets an additional 74.2 cents in benefits. For a private sector worker that ratio is about 24.3 cents in benefits for every $1 in salary. 
Investment Implications; Austerity means that we all have to cut back and live within our means, not living within our borrowing power. Unfortunately this leads to slower growth, but real sustainable growth versus artificial growth. In the Muni-bond world this means avoiding the biggest debtors and watching for those babies being thrown out with the bath water.
Well now its time to say goodbye to Jed and all his kin.
And they would like to thank you folks fer kindly droppin in.
You're all invited back again to this locality
To have a heapin helpin of their hospitality

Hillybilly that is. Set a spell, Take your shoes off.

Y'all come back now, y'hear? 
Be careful out there, and keep the light's on,




Chris Wiles, CFA
412-260-7917


For prior Rockhaven Views visit:

This article contains the current opinions of the author but not necessarily those of the Rockhaven Capital Management.  The author’s opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein are based upon proprietary research and should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.






Friday, February 18, 2011

I Know, Everybody Funny, Now You Funny Too


I come home one particular evening
The landlady said, you got the rent money yet?
I said no, can't find no job
Therefore I ain't got no money to pay the rent
She said I don't believe you're tryin' to find no job
Said I seen you today you was standin' on a corner
Leaning up against a post
I said but I'm tired,

one bourbon one scotch one beer  by George Thorogood and The Destroyers

Not your fathers (nor grandfathers) recession:








































So this is it, this is all we get after $800 billion in stimulus and $2 trillion in dollar printing, a measly 36,000 net jobs last month, not enough to keep up with births. In December American companies hired 4,184,000 workers, while another 4,162,000 either quit or were fired. See if you can guess whether those fired made more than those hired? No, this isn't a typical cyclical recession, something much bigger than lost housing bubble jobs is at work here. Companies have come to realize that employing people is very expensive; regulations, taxes, health care costs, etc. Some of them have decided to hire people outside the US, but more and more have realized that increases in computing power have significantly decreased the need for flesh & blood.

This week IBM's supercomputer Watson has successfully held its own against the smartest Jeopardy champions of all time. Watson utilizes 90 servers to mimic the lightning fast intuition of humans, scary good. The interesting thing about Watson's power is that it will probably be available on your laptop/smart phone in the next five years. The beauty of cloud computing is that it allows users to tap into the vast knowledge of mankind in milliseconds. Our local library here in Mt Lebanon has cut its staff from 50 to 36 (-28%) and is still struggling to keep its doors open. No librarian can compete with a Google search that gives you thousands of results in 0.14 seconds. My daughters do 100% of their research on the internet, the only times they use the library is when a teacher clinging to the past makes them. 

Forget blue-collar and white-collar to define jobs, the present and future are about "creators" and "servers". As author of "Eat People" Andy Kessler explains; "creators" are the ones driving productivity, writing codes, creating drugs, running search engines...creating. "Servers" are the ones who service the creators; building homes, providing food, financial service, and legal advice. Many "servers" are being replaced by computer enhanced machines, and this trend is in its infancy. The world needs less servers and more creators.

As my oldest daughter enters high school later this year we are already trying to figure out what to do about college. Colleges are "servers", yes they have pockets of creativity, but by and large they are there to serve, and frankly they've done a horrible job. During the thirty years that I've been out of college the cost of living (inflation) has gone up by 106%, health care costs have risen 251%, but college expenses have ballooned by 439%! Yes, the college graduate makes more than the high school graduate, but no where near enough to cover the astronomical increase in cost. As a parent there is a bright spot to this hyper growth in computing power, online education. Many believe that the shakeout that has happened in corporate America is just starting to happen in academia, and that big college campuses will soon be relics. Over 30% of all college students currently take at least one class online. An online self-paced calculus class costs $70, while a similar class on the campus of a private school runs about $3,000. Certainly the social aspects of a college education are extremely valuable, but probably not $50,000 per year valuable. We as consumers will have choices for advanced education, and unemployment among college employees will grow.

The creative destruction caused by e-commerce continues to move through our society. As more and more people shop online we need fewer and fewer stores, just look at this weeks Boarders bankruptcy, those jobs are not coming back. As research firm ISI puts it, we are not overstored, we are underdemolished. By saying overstored you are hoping that someday those stores will be occupied, that just isn't going to happen. 33% of households have made purchases on their smartphone or iPad, and that number is growing at a 20% clip, while brick and mortar retail store sales are growing at a sub 1% clip. 

Obviously the biggest group of servers in the country are government employees, (contrary to what you may have heard the government does not create jobs). Even here, with their strong unions and political clout we are finally seeing some serious cut backs. Some are happening because the government is broke, but a large number are happening because of technology. Here in Pittsburgh our local branch of the Federal Reserve bank announced last week that the 200 employees that worked in the savings bond department would all lose their jobs as the Fed goes to paperless savings bonds (I couldn't believe that they had 200 employees in that department to begin with). 

Unfortunately for those unemployed, they will not see these jobs come back. They are gone forever. This is the difference between cyclical unemployment and structural unemployment. 

Technology marches on, and we lowly humans have to march with it or get left behind. Just look at the wonderful changes taking place as oligarchs lose power to the internet enabled masses. Literacy and access to information spread around the globe lifting millions out of poverty. Knowledge is power. Creative destruction is a wonderful thing, as long as you can move fast enough to stay on the winning side of that destructive process. Focus your energies on being a creator and you should survive.

Nope, No Inflation Here. Move Along.











Recent headlines below (courtesy of Sovereign Man):
“World Bank: Global food prices are rising to dangerous levels”
“Sysco declares force majeure, raises grocery prices”
“The J. M. Smucker Company Announces Coffee Price Increases”
“Kraft warns on price increases”
“Kellogg says it will raise prices”
“Sara Lee to raise prices again on higher commodity costs”
“Bridgestone To Raise Prices”
“Goodyear will raise tire prices up to 6%”
“Allstate rates rise; patience with execs runs thin”
“State Farm wants 28 percent rate increase in Fla.”
“Blue Shield to delay Calif. health rate hikes [for only 60 days]”
“Wellmark [Midwest division of Blue Cross] Rate Hike Approved”
“Abercrombie & Fitch CEO says retailer will have to raise prices”
“Sprint bumps up its smart-phone data plans $10 a month”
And then there’s this quote to tie it all together:
“Overall inflation is still quite low and longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.” — Ben Bernanke, February 9, 2011
Overall, if you live in a warm weather nudist colony, grow your own food, and walk everywhere you need to, then Bernanke is correct. Core CPI, ex-food, and energy, has only risen 1.0% in the last twelve months. Nope, no inflation here. This is why I own TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities) with trepidation. In theory TIPS should protect you from increases in inflation. The problem, and hence the trepidation, is that the guys calculating the official CPI are the same guys issuing the securities. You might say that they have a vested interest in keeping the published official CPI a tad understated. Oh well, they should still outperform regular treasuries in an inflationary environment, just don't expect them to be a real money maker. 

"I know, everybody funny, now you funny too"























This market is certainly funny, not ha-ha funny or clown funny, but funny in a head scratching way. The S&P 500 is up 6.5% in the first 39 trading days of this year, if it continues at this pace we'll be up 42% for the year. You can almost taste the animal spirits, the warm spring air, the caution to the wind attitude of traders everywhere. Bad news is shrugged off on a daily basis; uprisings in the Middle East, Iranian war ships on the move, inflation bubbling up, and union protests in the US, none of it means anything as the market continues to melt-up. Week after week, the market has been moving up without any major setbacks. The S&P 500 is up 30% from July 2 to Feb. 15, and has only fallen 1% or more 13 times during that period. Based on that measure of volatility, stocks haven't risen this much with such narrow price swings since 1971.
One simple explanation is the Feds super-easy monetary policy, that has instilled a sense of confidence/arrogance among market participants. Don't get me wrong here, I'm not bearish. All of my equity and commodity indicators are decidedly bullish and we are at maximum weight in those assets, but I am increasingly nervous. I've lived through several episodes of animal spirits running amok, and while its fun on the upside, it can be pretty painful on the downside. 

Tread carefully, and as George Thorogood so eloquently said, "I want one bourbon, one scotch and one beer." 
Be careful out there, and keep the light's on,



Chris Wiles, CFA
412-260-7917


For prior Rockhaven Views visit:




This article contains the current opinions of the author but not necessarily those of the Rockhaven Capital Management.  The author’s opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein are based upon proprietary research and should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.

Friday, February 11, 2011

The lack of humility uh...staggers me.


The lack of humility before nature that's being displayed here, uh... staggers me.
Dr. Ian Malcolm - Jurassic Park



One of my all time favorite movies is Jurassic Park - The believable audacity, the study of complex systems, chaos theory, and the law of unintended consequences, all mixed together with fabulous effects and action. It is really one of the greatest movies of all time.

"Living systems are never in equilibrium. They are inherently unstable. They may seem stable, but they’re not. Everything is moving and changing. In a sense, everything is on the edge of collapse." 
— Michael Crichton (Jurassic Park)

What brings me back to this subject are the events taking place in the Middle East. Who could have imagined that one frustrated Tunisian street vendor igniting himself would have touched off the overthrows of both the Tunisian government and the Egyptian government. Thats the amazing part of living systems, you just don't know what will happen. The other interesting part of living systems is man's (and woman's) hubris when it comes to trying to forecast what will happen next. Many of us, especially those who've spent most of their adult lives in academia, believe that since we are smart we should be able to see into the future. Unfortunately, it just ain't so. So when you hear the talking heads on TV telling you that the downfall of Mubarak is positive, or negative, remember that they don't know. All they are offering is an opinion, nothing more.

While we're on the subject of hubris, I keep coming back to Fed Chairman Bernanke's outrageous statement on 60 Minutes back on December 5, that he is 100% confident in his ability to keep inflation in check. Wow, 100%. I don't know about you, but the older I get the more certain I am that I'm not 100% certain of anything. Bernanke testified to Congress this week that inflation in the US remains "quite low". He blamed higher prices on food and commodities on fast growing emerging markets, not the Fed's trillion dollar printing press. There may be riots around the globe, but it certainly has nothing to do with the world's reserve currency (the US dollar), being devalued. How do we know there is no inflation? Because the man who failed to see the biggest housing bubble of all time, is 100% certain that he has it all under control. 

"The purpose of life is to stay alive. Watch any animal in nature--all it tries to do is stay alive. It doesn't care about beliefs or philosophy. Whenever any animal's behavior puts it out of touch with the realities of its existence, it becomes exinct." 
— Michael Crichton (Congo)

If the purpose of life is to stay alive, then the purpose of investing is to keep your portfolio alive. Survival should be your investment objective. To protect and grow that nest egg in the face of the many forces trying to kill it. Forces such as; inflation, deflation, currency devaluation, sovereign defaults, and corporate defaults, to name a few of the big ones. This is our challenge, and it is the principal objective here at Rockhaven. 

Step one in protecting any portfolio is diversification, and not just "asset" diversification but "risk" diversification. When constructing a portfolio you need to first look at the specific risk presenting itself and determine what securities might protect you. Let's take inflation as our first potential risk. I know that the Bernanke says its not a risk we should worry our little heads over, but humor me. 
In inflationary times the asset most at risk is any longer-term fixed income instruments. The 3% interest you receive on that bond is worth less and less in an inflationary world, therefore limit your exposure to long-term bonds. Equities generally do well during the initial stages of inflation as they become relatively more attractive than bonds, and hopefully the companies will have pricing power to keep up with inflation. TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities) should do well in an inflationary period. I say "should" because they are priced off of the CPI numbers that the government calculates, clearly the government has a strong incentive to make sure that the "official" CPI numbers are low. Real estate tends to do better during inflationary times, as long as wage inflation comes with commodity inflation. Not sure this will happen with 17% real unemployment. The inflating commodities themselves are a good hedge. As is gold, that other currency.

After you've thought about inflation risk you now need to head over to deflation risk. I hear you, "Why do we need to protect against deflation when inflation is the risk?" Who said inflation is "the" risk, it is just one of many unknown risks. Managing money is not about forecasting, it is about surviving. Your portfolio does not care about your beliefs or philosophy, it only cares about survival. 

Well, this is the task at hand, portfolio survival. If you need a hand with your risk diversification give me a buzz.

Where we stand today:

1) Cheap Money = Speculation - 
Since late last year the massive liquidity of QE2 has kept a firm bid under this market. Losses have been modest to minuscule, and selling pressure well contained. Merger & Acquisition activity has also picked up. Even dips are an excuse to buy. The S&P 500 is now up over 100% since its March 2009 lows, which compares rather favorably to the 107% average of the 18 prior cyclical bull markets since 1932. 
The bears are bloody but unbowed, they know a correction is imminent. The bulls have heard the bears lament for nearly two years, but still the markets power higher; easy money is a bulls best friend. The bears have been early and wrong, but eventually the grizzlies will be fed. The trillion dollar question is "when?"

2) Inflation is the Fed's Destination
 - The Fed is hoping that all of this excess liquidity finds its way into capital spending and job creation, and it appears that some of that is happening. The problem arises in the fact that they can't control where that liquidity ultimately flows, or where the jobs may be created. Unintended consequences (like a revolution in Egypt) are one of the nasty side-effects of a loose monetary policy.  This is resulting in inflation (sometimes rather dramatic) in consumable resources (sugar, cotton, rice, oil, etc). 

US Equities -- 
Bullish, stocks are showing no signs of weakening yet.
Int'l Equities -- 
Bullish, both emerging markets, and developed markets, but the emerging markets are showing signs of weakening due to inflation fighting rate hikes.
US REITs --  
Bullish, but showing some signs of tiredness.
Int'l REITs -- 
Bullish, but nearing neutral.
Gold -- Bullish, but moving towards neutral with recent sell-off. 
Commodities -- 
Bullish, but overbought.
US Fixed Income -- Bearish, minimal weight in US fixed income but neutral in TIPS.
Int'l Fixed Income -- Neutral, after a recent rally.
Cash Equivalents & Currencies -- Currently at 13%, divided between US, China, Australia, and Brazil.
 
The government assisted rally in equity markets and commodities may continue, but I wouldn't be at all surprised to see a noticeable pullback over the next several weeks that may knock us down to neutral exposures in those markets.

Some great comments to Congress from President of the Dallas Fed Richard Fisher:   

“But here is the essential fact I want to emphasize and have you think about today: The Fed could not monetize the debt if the debt were not being created by Congress in the first place.The Fed does not create government debt; Congress does. Deficits and the unfunded liabilities of Medicare and Social Security are not created by the Federal Reserve; they are the legacy of Congress. The Fed does not earmark taxpayer money for pet projects in local communities that taxpayers themselves would never countenance; only the Congress does that. The Congress and administration play the dominant role in creating the regulatory environment that incentivizes or discourages job creation.
We shall see if the new Congress will prove worthy of the power the American people have “loaned” them, and, together with the president, actually draw the spirits of fiscal reform and sanity from the “vasty deep” to at long last implement meaningful fiscal and regulatory policy that incentivizes private-sector job creation here at home while arresting the hemorrhaging of our Treasury. If they do, then more Americans will find work and be better off, better paid and freer to make their own decisions about the economy. 
If they don’t, then woe to our children, their children and the American Dream."

You can read the whole speech at the Dallas Fed website  

Be careful out there, and keep the light's on,

Chris Wiles, CFA
412-260-7917


For prior Rockhaven Views visit:

This article contains the current opinions of the author but not necessarily those of the Rockhaven Capital Management.  The author’s opinions are subject to change without notice. This article is distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein are based upon proprietary research and should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.