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April 2008
Wagging
The Dog
Wagging
The Dog...Assessing
what we know and what we don't know is the ever-present and
ongoing psychological battle in investment management, now isn't
it? Trying to make an assessment of the fundamental facts
and then reconciling this view of life with the reality of very
short term financial market outcomes can be quite the trying
challenge psychologically, emotionally, and even physically, to be
honest. If we accept the fact that the financial markets are
theoretically always looking ahead (which we do) and discounting
in current price what they are seeing in the future provides the
perfect backdrop for of the moment personal tension in trying to
"guess" what the markets may be seeing ahead that we
cannot amidst the day-to-day of current reality that presents
itself to us in economic stats, corporate earnings reports, etc.
Nothing like starting the discussion with a bit of personal
philosophical meandering, now is there?
But in this very special current environment, we suggest
we need to broaden our thinking and “field of vision”, if you
will. Although
traditional and time-tested financial market signposts are indeed
quite important to monitor, we suggest that the financial market
environment of the moment has the capability to perhaps blur or
bend our vision in a manner unlike anything we have lived through
in many a moon, if ever. This
is what we want to briefly discuss.
Okay,
at least from our perspective, here's what we think we
"know" about the present. It's our view that until
proven otherwise, we are in a macro bear market for equities.
We detailed in a discussion on our subscriber site literally on
the first day of this year that collectively all of our favorite
long-term equity market indicators have turned bearish. Not
a few, not a lot of them, ALL of them. Trying to keep it
simple, we will not argue with unanimity in longer-term market
message. In terms of the macro, it's a time for meaningful
caution regarding equities. Secondly, we believe the US economy is in recession
right now. Although we've detailed so many of the now
current reasons why in discussions over the recent past, a
standout anecdote is the fact that the LEI (leading economic
indicators) report for February that hit the Street a few weeks
back has now shown us a consistent five straight months of
decline. We'll spare you an exhaustive look at historical
precedent when we tell you that the LEI of the last half year is
completely consistent with initial recessionary periods past.
In essence, it's corroborating the fact that recession
has already arrived, although "officially" that fact
will be revealed some time in the future when its usefulness as a piece
of factual investment information will be essentially useless.
By the way, if the LEI deteriorates meaningfully further from here
in the coming months ahead, it will be suggesting a severe or
lengthy recession to come, as opposed to the mild recession we
believe the consensus is expecting (if any recession at all) and
the LEI suggests for now.
As
we've bludgeoned you to death with far too many times now, the
evolutionary character of the credit markets is THE issue to focus
upon, an issue that is clearly driving both broader financial
market and real economic outcomes of the moment. It's our
belief that a credit cycle of really generational proportion has
now given way under its own weight to an elongated process of
systemic deleveraging. A process that has really just
begun. In question ahead will be the sustainability of the very props that built
this credit cycle, such as the entire concept and faith in
securitization, the integrity of and trust in the credit rating
agencies, the trustworthiness of the brokers/investments banks,
and faith in the regulatory oversight of the US financial system
itself. Against
this backdrop we also do indeed know that literally ALL guns are
being brought to bear upon the continually unfolding credit market
issues of the day by the Fed/Treasury/Administration.
In the past seven months, the Fed has cut
the Funds rate 300 basis points (a near 60% decline) and the
discount rate 375 bps. For the first time in the illustrious
history of the Fed, these merry pranksters have truly flown over
the cuckoo's nest and will now accept asset-backed commercial
paper and mortgage-backed securities as collateral for borrowing
at the discount window. The TAF (Treasury Auction Facility)
has been set up along with the TSLF (Treasury Secured Lending
Facility) to swap sows ears for silk purses, at least for a while.
Moreover, the Fed has remodeled and essentially put in a larger
discount "window" borrowing mechanism in place to now
include the primary securities dealer participation (the first
time in the history of the venerable Fed whereby they have acted to
financially backstop the non-bank financial system). As you
know, this has been termed the PDCF (primary dealer credit
facility). More broadly, the government has kindly offered
to drop tax rebates in $600 increments to various wealth
demographics using the US mail as opposed to helicopters.
And perhaps one of the largest "stimulus plans" of all
has been to have the OFHEO (regulator of Fannie and Freddie)
acquiesce in terms of lowering the capital requirements of the two
mortgage credit market behemoths in allowing them to immediately
expand their already questionable balance sheets. With the
relaxing of these capital ratios, these two fun loving mortgage
paper collectors and guarantors will be more highly levered than
Bear prior to that company going on to its greater rewards.
We could go on and on, but you get the picture. We're
witnessing unprecedented action right before our very eyes.
And
it's against this set of "what we think we know"
circumstances that we try to assess and make sense of the
day-to-day movement in financial asset prices. What we don't know is when what we believe to be a bear in
equities and an economic recession stateside will end.
Sooner? Later? We have no idea. What we don't
know is whether what has been brought to bear on the problem by
the Fed/Treasury/Administration will be effective in turning the
credit market, and by direct linkage real world broader economic
health, anytime soon. Will broadened
lending/investment/financial guarantee limits of Fannie and
Freddie truncate and turn the physical housing price
reconciliation cycle set against the truly powerful forces of debt
deflation? Can all of these monetary policy and
GSE balance sheet expansion/explosion efforts act as a spark to
reaccelerate and return the now crippled US credit cycle to its
former unfettered and "sky's the limit" glory?
Will leveraged asset backed credit securities buyers who have not
already been taken off the playing field on stretchers remerge
from their newly dug bomb shelters, confident in the knowledge
that the Fed/Treasury/Administration now really, really has their
collective backs and will essentially monetize any and all losses?
For the answer to some of these questions, we necessarily have to
watch and listen to what the financial markets are telling us, all
the time realizing that short-term investment performance is THE
only concern of so many investment "professionals" in
the modern era. Whoever said life was easy?
The
Dream Team...Having said all of this, we have to say that the financial market
events of the last month particularly paint quite the important and relatively
large question mark. How about the largest one day drop in
the gold price in over a quarter century? Did that catch
your attention? Or was it the intra-week doubling (from low
to high) in stock prices of some of the financial sectors finest
such as Lehman, Fannie, Freddie, etc. that you might have seen out
of the corner of your eye? Regular ho-hum everyday type of
market events, no? Of course what accompanied these more
than noticeable events, as well as many others, were cries from
far and wide that the Fed has restored financial market confidence
by its decisive actions (panic), the Fed is correct in its
assessment that inflation will fall as witnessed by the commodity
price bludgeoning late in the month, and maybe most importantly
that THE bottom is in on the stock market given that the
financials appear to have been saved and the fact that we never
violated the January lows. Wow, from the end of the world to
an all-new magnificent bull market and economic/credit cycle
recovery in one short trading month. Imagine that. Are
the Fed, Treasury and Administration official’s miracle workers,
or what? Once again, the dream team has saved the world!!!!
Kinda makes you proud to be an American. Don'tcha wish every
kid could be one?
The
point of this discussion is to blatantly remind you that we need
to think long and hard about what we are “seeing” as we
monitor ongoing and short term financial market activity in our
current circumstances. Again,
at least in our minds, incredibly important in the current
environment. Specifically,
intermarket cause and effect, intended and unintended
consequences, and even direct cross asset class pricing fallout has been
and will continue to shape equity and bond market outcomes in what
remains a very important forward macro environment of credit cycle
reconciliation and broad investment constituency deleveraging.
Before rushing to judgment about new bull markets and new
cycle credit market and economic expansions based on what we may
have "seen" in short term financial market movement, at
least personally, we're going to need a little more corroboration.
Yes, call us conservative. Yes, call us skeptical.
Extremely guilty as charged. Why? First have a peek at
the following table.
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Asset
Class/Investment Vehicle
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Price
Change From 9/18/07 to 3/14/08
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Gold
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38.1%
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Crude
Oil
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35.5
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Natural
Gas
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38.0
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CRB
Index
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30.0
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XLF
- Financials
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(30.2)
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XLY
- Consumer Disco
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(19.9)
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XBD
- Brokers
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(33.8)
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FRE
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(63.7)
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FNM
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(63.6)
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US
Dollar
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(9.5)
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Philly
Housing Index
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(24.2)
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Now
imagine for a second we could turn back the hands of time to the
date of the first Fed rate cut in September of last year.
Imagine further that you had suddenly and miraculously been
blessed with omniscient financial market foresight that was set to
expire, if you will, on Friday the 14 of March in this year.
You are a hedge operator and need to structure a leveraged
portfolio for this duration of time. As you already know by
now, the absolute dream levered portfolio would have been long
oil, gold, commodities in general, and short financials,
discretionary stocks, the brokers, the GSE's and the housing
related stocks. You would not have hit a home run with a
portfolio like this, but rather would have been viewed on par with
the second coming of the Messiah. Long the top four asset
classes you see above and short the bottom five could have been
close to a career maker for many an investor up until a few
Friday's ago. Do you think what have been over time trends
in these asset class prices escaped the notice of the levered
speculating community? Do you believe those chasing short
term performance would not have signed over their first born
children to have participated heavily in these trends? Do
you really think the ship was not meaningfully listing to one side
by those who had collectively put this very trade on since the
first Fed rate cut?
Before
answering these questions, have a look at the next table.
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Asset
Class/Investment Vehicle
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Price
Change From 3/14/08 to 3/20/08
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Gold
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(8.0)%
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Crude
Oil
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(6.3)
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Natural
Gas
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(8.2)
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CRB
Index
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(7.0)
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XLF
- Financials
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10.6
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XLY
- Consumer Disco
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4.2
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XBD
- Brokers
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3.7
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FRE
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53.8
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FNM
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53.4
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US
Dollar
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1.5
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Philly
Housing Index
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9.2
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We're
sure you are fully aware of what we are getting at here.
What occurred in the week after the Bear Stearns debacle was
simply the dream levered hedge portfolio of the last six plus
months being turned completely on its head. And what it
clearly suggests as one potentially very meaningful driver of
performance during that week was levered speculating community
leverage unwinding. A leverage unwind that is not
finished. As we're sure you already know, if
indeed you were a levered fund either choosing or being forced to
unwind a portfolio perhaps due to the heavily increased
margin/collateral capital calls from the prime broker community in
the wake of Bear's sudden submergence, the influence of collective
levered portfolio unwinding (raising liquidity) might have looked
exactly as is detailed in the table above. To delever you
would have sold what you were long and bought what you were short.
So although the CNBC fan club may indeed have tried to celebrate
the big bear market bottom for the financial markets, what we may
have indeed experienced is simply more significant major macro
credit cycle reconciliation - levered investment position
unwinding (the hedge and levered speculating community).
Seems relatively logical, no?
And this is the very reason
why we suggest meaningful reluctance in proclaiming an all healed
and ready to head higher credit cycle that has all of a sudden
been reborn due to the fact that a few financial stocks jumped off
of their collective death beds. Although the Fed members
have apparently been reannoited as miracle workers, have they
really addressed and/or ameliorated THE real problem of the moment
which is financial sector balance sheets still loaded with problem
credits? Balance sheets now problem long and capital
short. Quite unfortunately, and we simply wish along with
the Street that it weren't true, a one week change in stock prices
does not change balance sheet asset values, especially those
values tied to real world residential real estate prices and
increasingly commercial real estate values. So for now,
despite the emotional and financial price roller coaster ride of
recent weeks, we reserve judgment on the true character of
fundamental credit market, financial market and real economic
change that has taken place. We watch and learn.
"Bear"ied Below
The Headlines?...We want to briefly take these comments just
one step further in light of a number of financial sector
acquisitions we have witnessed this year that would most clearly
have had an influential outcome in a good number of credit default
swap positions. Further, why the credit default swap market
may indeed be influencing financial market outcomes well beyond
the singular world of derivatives. We'll make this quick.
You may remember that just last month we devoted an entire
discussion to credit default swaps, the leverage that had been
built up inside of these contracts, and the potential for risk and
unintended consequences therein. We showed you US banking
system derivatives exposure numbers through the third quarter of
2007, as well as what has been the growth in this segment of the
broader derivatives world globally. Please remember, as we
described, this derivatives neck of the woods has moved well
beyond simply acting as a form of insurance against long oriented
bond or credit market positions held by investors to a world of
growth in credit default contracts outstanding dedicated to
nothing more than the trading of these vehicles themselves.
As we told you then using GM as an example, the credit default
vehicles written against real world outstanding company bonds is
probably near three times the volume of actual bonds outstanding.
Like many derivatives vehicles, these derivatives products have
become an end in and of themselves as opposed to the purity of use
of these vehicles to simply insure or hedge against adverse
outcomes protecting larger financial asset positions actually
held. Simple translation? The credit default swaps
world has taken on a life of its own.
Alright, fine, so how does the
credit default swap market relate to equity market sector
volatility of the moment? It is absolutely clear that the
"acquisition" of Bear avoided triggering Bear Stearns
related credit default swaps and swaps against CDO, SIV,
etc. positions they may have held (assuming a potential Bear BK
would have forced a mark to market event), which would indeed have
happened had Bear formally entered bankruptcy and their bonds/debt
became potentially very meaningfully
impaired. There is simply no question whatsoever in our
minds that this was the key reason a theoretical acquisition of
Bear HAD to happen. Remember the details. JPM took out
Bear for a couple of hundred million at the headline $2 per share
initial offer level, but concurrently announced it was going to
need to charge off about $6 billion as a result of the so-called
acquisition. Even at the ultimate $10 level (which is
basically shut up money offered to help prevent litigation, which
might also have led to asset price discovery) JPM was
"telling" us Bear was worth far less than zero by the
charge-off number alone. Of course the truth simply had to
be that if Bear had filed bankruptcy and the credit default swaps
written against their bonds/debt/asset positions had been
triggered, the credit default swap liabilities in the market would
have been well north of a $6 billion hit to whomever had written
those Bear specific CDS contracts. Well north. And
that simply could not have been allowed to happen. By the
way, just as an item of curiosity, JP Morgan has exposure to over
55% of the total banking system credit default swaps outstanding.
Are we connecting the dots clearly enough for you?
Sorry, back to the issue at
hand. So Bear avoids formally blowing up and the credit
default swaps written against their liabilities/investment
positions, etc. now become a moot point as JP Morgan (or for the
true problem credits, should we say the Fed) is the new
creditor and market based asset price discovery is avoided.
Hurrah for those folks who had written these default swap
contracts. They dodged a massive bullet that was heading one
hundred miles per hour directly to a certain spot between their
eyes. But what about those "investors" who had
purchased the CDS contracts/insurance against a potential Bear
default? Whether they did this against existing credit
market investment positions for insurance reasons or were simply
holding them as a trading position is immaterial. Those CDS
contracts purchased which probably had been very profitable, and
zoomed straight up in value as Bear was in the process of
disintegrating, became worthless with the stroke of a pen (and a
$6 billion write down to come).
Now put yourself in the
position of a meaningfully levered hedge fund who had purchased
CDS contracts against Bear credit vehicles. You had levered
up against what was continually becoming very profitable CDS
positions or credits as Bear was heading nose first into the
tarmac. Who knows, you might have even increased the
position prior to the weekend based on info your fellow good buddy
hedgies were feeding you about Bear's imminent demise. When
those long CDS contracts against Bear credits/positions went to
zero virtually the Monday after the JPM acquisition announcement,
all you were left with was massively deflated CDS asset values
relative to the prior Friday and still in place leverage. So
what do you do when you get up in the morning on Monday after the
Bear acquisition announcement (assuming
you slept Sunday night, that is)? You start delevering.
You start unwinding in place inflation themed trade positions to raise
liquidity. You sell what assets you can (gold, oil, commod's,
etc.) and get less short those sectors you have heavily shorted
(financials, brokers, consumer, etc.) to raise liquidity and
decrease total leverage against a now immediately diminished asset
base. Who knows, maybe this was exacerbated if your already
freaked out prime broker sponsor put in a call or two demanding
more margin now that your assets had deflated post the Bear
related CDS contracts nose diving.
And it was not just Bear
credit default swaps that plummeted. As you know, with the
Bear deal the Fed put in place the primary dealer credit facility,
minutes before both Lehman and Goldman showed up at the window
with hands held straight out. Unquestionably CDS values related to Lehman,
Merrill, Goldman, etc. evaporated for many a levered investor long
those contracts. And wouldn't ya know it, it was only one
week later, after their earnings were reported, that S&P
revised its "outlook" for both Lehman and Goldman to
negative from stable. And that, folks, is how it works.
Without question, the fallout from cascading CDS values for Bear
and the other assorted brokers could easily have caused
liquidation of meaningfully levered equity positions, both short
and long, causing the very movement in sector prices we saw in the
latter weeks of last month.
Believe us, we're dragging you
through this line of reasoning because we believe in the current
environment it is nothing short of critical to understand and keep
in mind these very important intra market relationships. We
need to understand how what we see in one sector of the financial
market can have meaningful implications for asset price movement
in many other parts of the very same broader financial market.
What we see in the headlines on TV is shallow, and what we
"hear" on CNBC is almost meaningless. It is the
actions and unintended consequences underneath the headlines that
are crucial to "see" and understand. Can the CDS
and other derivative markets influence equity market outcomes?
The derivatives tail is indeed wagging the greater financial
market dog. And it is understanding this that we believe is the key
to both risk management and successful investment outcomes as
the process of credit cycle deleveraging and reconciliation is
sure to continue to play out ahead. Be surprised at
nothing. Do not let short term financial asset price
movements that appear illogical throw you off emotionally from
remaining focused on the greater credit cycle reconciliation and
deleveraging environment that now reigns the day.
Okay, now that we've dragged
you through this, let's have a quick look back at another
"acquisition" of a financial services company clearly on
the ropes earlier this year - Countrywide. On January 11 of
this year, BofA announced the shotgun marriage of the two.
And what did we see after that? Have a look at the table
below.
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Asset
Price Movements Post the 1/11/08 BofA Acquisition of
Countrywide
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Asset/Investment
Vehicle
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Price
Movement
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|
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Crude
Oil
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(7.0%)
in 6 trading days
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CRB
Index
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(2.2%)
in 8 trading days
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Gold
|
(4.4%)
in 6 trading days
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XLF
- Financial Sector ETF
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7.9%
in 15 trading days
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XBD
- Broker/Dealer Index
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9.7%
in 15 trading days
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XLY
- Consumer Discretionary ETF
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8.6%
in 15 trading days
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Notice
anything special? In
the spirit of complete honesty, we intentionally picked a few
subsequent price high and low points for each asset class really
in order to get the point across that short term events in the CDS
market can indeed influence broader financial market outcomes.
With the decline in gold and oil in the week after the Countrywide
acquisition (which would likewise have shattered Countrywide CDS
values), was it really the beginning of a straight downhill run
for each asset class from there to the present? Far from it as both turned
right around and ran to all time new highs before the recent
corrections. How about the
financials, brokers and discretionaries? Was this three week
nicely positive move the bottom of the bear market and economy
with an all new bull market commencing thereafter? You get
the picture. As you know, we wish we knew with absolute
certainty where the equity market and the economy are headed, but
no one does. We just need to have a broad enough field of
vision to hopefully ask the right questions. And one
question of the moment is the influence of interconnected leverage unwinding and
derivatives markets on more conventional equity and bond market
short term pricing outcomes.
If
we are even close to being correct in terms of this interpretation
of CDS and leverage unwinding fallout effects, we need to watch
firms such as Wamu, Indymac, etc. They might not be too big
to fail as corporate entities in and of themselves, but are the
CDS and other assorted derivative contracts written against or
with folks like this too big to allow them to fail and trigger default swap contracts and/or counter party failures? Talk about the derivatives market
tail wagging the proverbial financial market dog. This is
where we are.
So as we move
forward in the conventional US equity and debt markets, we need to
remember that THE BIG INVESTMENT THEME we are going to be living
with for some time to come will be deleveraging.
The wild west, devil may care credit cycle the US has grown
to know, love and embrace over the last few decades is over.
We are now embarking upon and in the midst of important
secular credit cycle change.
Change which will bring with it important consequences and
opportunities very different than what we have come to know and
expect over the past. Will
the short-term influence of now in place systemic deleveraging
affect short term financial market pricing outcomes as we have
already seen in recent months and as we tried to describe in this
discussion? You bet.
Please keep this in mind as you watch the blinking lights
on the screen day-to-day. We
suggest that continually remembering the big and now primary investment theme of
deleveraging will serve us very well in the months, quarters, and
yes even years ahead. What
we are living through now is unlike any cycle of the past few
decades where credit cycle reacceleration was key to forward
outcomes. Stand that
on it’s head. That’s
in the past. Deleveraging
is the future. The
world is not about to come to an end, just the type of thinking
and actions of the last few decades in response to the greater
credit cycle that has peaked.
Bank Shots…We’ll
leave you with one last thought about the near term before signing
off. Indeed it
appears as though at times over the past month, we have been
staring into the financial system abyss, so to speak.
Why has it felt this way?
Probably because in many senses we have been staring into
the abyss. Right to
the point, at least in our minds, the near term critical issue for
the financial markets is bank capital.
The commercial and investment banks absolutely must raise
capital. And that’s not going to be a fun experience.
Fed actions are only buying time.
Watch for this to come and soon.
Lehman's quarter end announcement simply reinforces this
message/theme in our minds.
Why? Because
if the banks/investment banks don't act to raise capital and do it
quickly, financial market and credit cycle troubles will
accelerate meaningfully downward.
If indeed the capital raising process comes to pass, as we believe, the markets
will stop trying to discount a crisis environment and can more
realistically begin to asses by sector the implications of a very
slow and drawn out economic recovery brought to you by the key
investment theme of the moment which is deleveraging.
You know we’ll be talking a lot more about this ahead.
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