Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Be wary of the man who urges an action in which he himself incurs no risk.

Be wary of the man who urges an action in which he himself incurs no risk.
-Joaquin Setanti

Last week I had the privilege of speaking at a local college on the subject of business ethics. We spent some time talking about the need for "moral hazard" in order for capitalism to work. Moral Hazard generally refers to a party being insulated from risk. In other words, they get to participate in the rewards, and suffer little if any pain when things go astray. The risk-reward balance is thrown asunder. CEO's who are paid annual salaries north of $1 million, and are able to cash out with $5 to $10 million if they are fired, are a good example of the lack of moral hazard. 

Below is an article by Barry Ritholtz, of The Big Picture, that addresses this topic on a national level. I couldn't agree more with his thesis that we need to "take the loss" in order to bring risk-reward back into balance. What Barry doesn't mention is that we the taxpayers get stuck paying for this unwillingness to "take the loss". Make the risk takers (CEO's, stock and bondholders) take the loss, and they will think twice about who they invest money with.

Take The Loss

 
By Barry Ritholtz - September 28th, 2011, 7:21AM
Here is something that you may not think about often enough: Taking losses.
Its something that every rookie trader must learn to do — and all of the TBTF banks refuse to do. Even sovereign nations seem unwilling to accept this simple fact of financial life.
There will be losses. How you handle them determines your fortune, your fate and your future.
Seeing how people handle losses is revealing of their character and integrity. Hiding losses is what rogue traders do. Its also what rogue banks do, and apparently, rogue nations.
$2.3 Billion in losses hidden from UBS sights by a rogue trader is chicken feed. But ponder how many $100s of billions of dollars in mortgage losses are hidden from view? The real rogues are America’s largest banks, and their enablers in Congress. .
When the TBTF banks (via their purchased Congressman) forced the Financial Accounting Standards Board to pass a rule allowing them to hide their mortgage losses  — FASB 157 — it showed the dishonest nature of these entities. It was revealing of the lack of integrity of all of the institutions involved — from Congress to the banks to FASB.
When Bear Stearns first began to wobble in 2007, the initial error in this era of bailouts was in rescuing their bondholders. Instead, in 2008, they should have been forced to take the loss.
Its the same for creditors of Citi, Bank of America et. al. — instead of rescue packages, their creditors should have had to take the loss.
Mortgage delinquencies growing? More and more defaults in the pipeline? We can extend & pretend, or we can take the loss.
Note that via the FDIC, some bank lenders did take the loss. Washington Mutual’s collapse led it to being bought by JPM. Wells Fargo picked up Wachovia. Other examples abound, In each case where losses were forced to be realized, we ended up with a healthier few banks, and no moral hazard.
Zombie banks get created when they do not take the loss.
Now we have the European crisis, wherein all of the parties involved refuse to (say it with me) take the loss.
Greek debt piling up? You can restructure, renegotiate, reneg, or you can take the loss. Portugal’s balance sheet a problem? Well, the ECB can kick the can down the road, or they can force lenders to take the loss.
The model for not taking the loss has to be Japan. Look at their stock market since 1989 and you will see the net result of not taking the loss. The Japanese have suffered through lost decades as a result of their refusal to take any write-downs, propping up their Keiretsu.
Until we purge the bad debt from the financial system, we will be stuck with a long and painful de-leveraging.
Please, won’t someone in Washington or Brussels or Tokyo understand the importance of this simple trading rule? Take The Loss already!

Highlights from Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher:

Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher is, in my opinion, not only one of the most outspoken Fed presidents, he is certainly one of the most enlightening.

Yesterday, Fisher stepped to the podium again, and began his speech with the following analogy, and a photo of desolate Jan Mayen Artic Weather Station.

  • Jan Mayen is a desolate volcanic island located about 600 miles west of Norway’s North Cape. It is the home of a meteorological and communications station manned in the harshest of winters by 17 hearty members of the Norwegian Armed Forces. If you read Tom Clancy’s Hunt for Red October, you would know it as “Loran-C,” a NATO tracking and transmissions station. In the video game Tomb Raider: Underworld, Lara Croft visits Jan Mayen in search of Thor’s Hammer, considered the most awesome of weapons in Norse mythology, capable of leveling mountains and performing the most heroic feats.
  • My brother Mike recently visited this station on Jan Mayen. This is the sign that greeted him.
  • In norsk, it reads as follows:
  • “Theory is when you understand everything, but nothing works.”
  • “Practice is when everything works, but nobody understands why.”
  • “At this station, theory and practice are united, so nothing works and nobody understands why.”
  • My wry brother implied that this about summed it up for monetary policy. Drawing on theory and practice, the 17 members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) have been working in the harshest economic environment to harness monetary theory and lessons learned from practice to revive the economy and job creation without forsaking our commitment to maintaining price stability. But the committee’s policy has yet to show evidence of working and nobody seems to quite understand why.

Let’s repeat that last sentence one more time for emphasis. “But the committee’s policy has yet to show evidence of working and nobody seems to quite understand why.”

Be careful out there, and keep the lights 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.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Weekend Reading

Just a couple of interesting pieces for your weekend enjoyment:

I first watched this in 2005, but recently watched it with my girls. It is Steve Jobs 2005 Commencement address delivered at Stanford University. This was about a year after he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. At that time he was only given a few months to live. It's simply amazing to look back over the last six years at whats he's accomplished.

I especially liked the following:

No one wants to die. Even people who want to go to heaven don't want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life's change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new. Right now the new is you, but someday not too long from now, you will gradually become the old and be cleared away. Sorry to be so dramatic, but it is quite true.
Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.
Watch the entire address, and share it with your children...Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement Speech 2005 - YouTube

The next is an article from today's WSJ, an interview with Nobel-winning economist Robert Lucas. Here's a taste:

For the best explanation of what happened in Europe and Japan, he points to research by fellow Nobelist Ed Prescott. In Europe, governments typically commandeer 50% of GDP. The burden to pay for all this largess falls on workers in the form of high marginal tax rates, and in particular on married women who might otherwise think of going to work as second earners in their households. "The welfare state is so expensive, it just breaks the link between work effort and what you get out of it, your living standard," says Mr. Lucas. "And it's really hurting them."

And lastly a little humor from Stephen Colbert:


Have a great weekend.

Be careful out there, and keep the lights 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, September 23, 2011

Grab That Cash With Both Hands

Money, get away
Get a good job with more pay, and you're okay
Money, it's a gas
Grab that cash with both hands and make a stash


The longer I'm in this business the more I like cash. Pure green cash. When I was young I thought that every penny had to be invested, but after you've gone through enough bear markets you start to realize that your "emotional" return is just as important as your "financial" return. And I'm not alone. A recent survey of floor traders revealed that a majority of their assets were in cash. Most portfolio managers I know also have a very heavy cash allocation. Corporate America is also sitting on a ton of cash. And cash earns nothing, in fact it has a negative real return.

Why? Why would so many professional investors have so much allocated to cash? Why do you think? Cash doesn't get deployed when you believe the risk is greater than the potential reward. If the rewards are paltry, the risk just isn't worth taking. Emotional return. This business is a constant battle between risk and reward, a very delicate balancing act. While its nice to seek reward, sometimes its just not there. Now is one of those times.

In our Global Tactical Asset Allocation portfolios we are now at 41% cash equivalents. About 25% of my net worth is in GTAA portfolios.

My personal asset allocation looks something like this:

Real Estate 20%
Municipal Bonds 15%
Bonds 15%
Gold 10%
US Equities 5%
Int'l Equities 5%
Commodities 5%
Cash 25%

That's a pretty defensive asset allocation, but when the reward isn't there, why take the risk.

Untwisting the Twist:

So the Bernanke decides to get his groove on with a little portfolio shifting & twisting. This was accomplished by not renewing his commitment to the short-end of the curve, and instead focusing on buying treasuries in the 6 to 30 year range. The goal here is bring down long-term rates to make things like mortgages more affordable. Job accomplished. Yields on treasuries plummet to record lows. The 30 year bond yields 2.8% and the 10 year yields 1.7%. It also means banks will be less profitable since their spreads narrow. (Bank of America trades at lowest level since March of 2009).
Unfortunately the Bernanke also said that the economy sucks (my words), and that the Fed really can't do much about it (again my words). The equity markets throw a two day hissy fit, falling over 5%. Throw in a growth slowdown in China, and a pending Greek default, and you get liquidations in everything that can be sold. Can you smell that whiff of deflation in the air? Hedge funds caught precariously on the wrong side of the inflation/deflation seesaw run to liquidate anything they can. Gold has its worst week in 25 years, down 10%, silver drops 25%, and copper falls to nearly two year lows. 

Cash is king, even if its denominated in US dollars.

Wake up Call For Pension Plans:

Jim Leach, head of Ontario's Teachers Pension Plan said, "To expect more than 3.25% or 3.50% growth, you have to be smoking something."
The average pension plan is still using a return assumption of 8%! With 10 year treasuries returning 1.7%, and stocks returning ?? how do you get to 8%?
This failure to embrace reality will lead to significantly higher funding demands paid for by you the tax payer.
What are they smoking?




"Money, it's a crime
Share it fairly, but don't take a slice of my pie"

Mr. Buffett and President Obama are partially right. It is an injustice that Warren pays 17% of his income in taxes, and his secretary pays over 20%. But the remedy is not to increase Warren's tax but instead to lower his secretary's. Before we go any further lets get our facts straight. Warren Buffett is an anomaly, even for rich people. He only pays himself $100,000, and takes the vast amount of his income from capital gains on his billions of Berkshire Hathaway stock. Here are the actual facts from the IRS on who pays what (after deductions & exclusions).

Those families making more than $1 million in annual taxable income (235,000 hard working Americans) paid taxes at a rate of 28.9% on average.
Those other rich folks making between $200,000 and $500,000 paid taxes at a rate of 24.6%.
Those making between $50,000 and $75,000 paid taxes at a rate of 11.6%.
Those making under $35,000 (about 46% of the population) paid no taxes on average.
These are the facts from actual IRS returns. You can dig into it here - Tax Stats at a Glance

Now on to the bigger question, "Who deserves our money?" Us or the Government? You see, America was founded on the principal that individual human rights come first, not the governments rights. Now of course we live in a collective society, and there is a minimum level of public services that we need. We as citizens get to decide what those services are and how much money the government will have to accomplish their task. The government does not "deserve" anything, they get what we as citizens have determined they need to accomplish our goals, not theirs. When the government starts determining how much of our money we "deserve", then we have lost our freedom. 

When it comes to tax fairness, the only system that even comes close is a flat tax. Eliminate all deductions, exclusions, and loopholes, and charge everyone the same rate, say 17%. The guy who makes $1 million pays $170,000, and the guy who makes $35,000 pays $5,950. That is simple and fair, and of course it will never happen. The reason it will never happen is that it will take power out of the politicians hands. No longer will they be able to trade tax dollars for votes. If they can't trade someone else's tax dollars for someone else's votes, what platform would they run on? 

"Money, so they say
Is the root of all evil today"

Be careful out there, and keep the lights 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.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Simple Kind Of Man

Forget your lust for the rich man's gold
All that you need is in your soul,
And you can do this if you try.
All that I want for you my son,
Is to be satisfied.
And be a simple kind of man.


As I try to survive and prosper in such a complex world, I constantly remind myself to be "a simple kind of man". It's easy to get caught up in the flood of news and opinions, and lose sight of the big picture. Sometimes we search for more clarity only to find that the picture is never clear. Investing is like that, you never know all the answers, and if you wait for clarity you will be paralyzed into inaction.

Greece is simple...they are going to default. Below is the yield on two year Greek bonds. One year bonds yield over 100%. Default is a certainty. What's next?

  

When Greece defaults the Euro banks will take hits on their Greek debt, the stronger ones will be fine, the weaker ones will get support from their governments, and the weakest ones will fail.
The Greeks will do what we all do when we can't pay our bills, they'll sell stuff and be willing to work for less in order to move forward. It will be a good time to vacation in Greece. 
If the bankruptcy is handled in an orderly fashion, then the template can be set for the rest of the PIIGS. If not, then we may have some chaos. 
Will we see Greece kicked out of the Euro? I don't think so. A more effective solution would be to create a new Euro for those countries that will actually honor their fiscal commitments. The old Euro would be allowed to devalue relative to the new Euro. In a complex world the simple solutions are generally the best.

Here is a great (simple) video that describes the Greek Crisis:


"The Buffett Tax"

President Obama's new class warfare tax on millionaires is interesting. While pandering to the populace is always a politicians first instinct, these idiotic proposals often have unintended consequences.
While we don't have details yet, it seems that Obama wants to raise the tax on those earning a million or more to 35%, no matter where that income comes from. If the income comes from wages it is already taxed at 35%, so it appears that he is seeking to tax that portion of income that comes from capital gains. Currently the capital gains tax rate is 15%. Here comes the unintended consequence. If you have large capital gains and you know that the amount you will have to pay the government is about to rise from 15% to 35%, you might be inclined to realize those gains sooner rather than later. Generally large amounts of selling translate into falling stock prices and a lower net worth for all of us. This seems to fly in the face of Ben Bernanke's two and a half year project to raise equity values and thereby create a "wealth effect". 
In the spirit of keeping it simple, higher taxes on capital investment lead to less capital investment. It's that simple.

Where we stand:

Even after the equity markets short-covering 5% rally last week, we are still very defensively positioned. Cash equivalents are at 38%, and are probably headed higher before they go lower. US and International equities remain at our minimum 5% targets.
I simply don't want to lose much money here.

Be careful out there, and keep the lights 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.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Come Together

He say "One and one and one is three"
Got to be good looking 'cause he's so hard to see
Come together right now over me.


One and one and one may be three, but something in the market just doesn't add up. Namely stock picking. It is harder and harder to be a stock picker in today's stock market. Fundamentals have taken a back seat to Euro solvency, Fed speeches, jobs reports, you name it. Stocks have "come together" and now trade alike no matter the fundamentals. 
The correlation of stocks in the S&P 500 is the highest ever, nearly 90%! That's higher than the crash in 1987 or 2008.



For most of history the correlation between stocks was 40% - 50%, but after 2000 we've seen a steady climb higher.



There's been a lot written about why this is happening, index funds, ETF's, high frequency trading, asset allocators, you name it. 
It really doesn't matter why stocks have "come together", all that matter's is that we are aware of this fact.
This high correlation may help create buying (or selling) opportunities in individual stocks, but only if the correlation subsides.

As long as this correlation continues we'll continue with our global tactical asset allocation strategy, and search for those rare uncorrelated assets.

Be careful out there, and keep the lights 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.