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The "Bailout Plan" was passed. Will it work? The answer depends on what your
definition of "work" is. If by work you mean no more government intervention
and no further costly programs and a functioning market, then the answer is
no. But there are things it will do. This week I try to help you see what might
lie ahead around the Curve in the Road. We look at how the rescue plan will
function, see what is happening in the economy, and finally muse as to whether
Muddle Through is really in our future. It will make for an interesting, if
not very upbeat, letter, so strap in. I would like your promise to not shoot
the messenger. I am just trying to give you some of my thoughts as to what
may lie in our future. And remember, as you read this, we will get through
it. There are better days "a'coming."
But first, a few housekeeping items. Let me welcome some 200,000 new readers
from EQUITIES Magazine. I have recently joined EQUITIES Magazine as a regular
contributing editor. My column, Back to the Frontline, is featured in both
their print publication and at equitiesmagazine.com. I am excited to be associated
with this esteemed magazine with a rich history covering the global markets
for over 57 years.
They've once again agreed to offer any reader of mine a free subscription
to EQUITIES Magazine. For those who did not take advantage of the free subscription
the first time, here is your chance. You can go to http://www.equitiesmagazine.com/mwi and
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And now, let's jump in to the letter.
The Curve in the Road
When you are out driving on a strange new road, you can't see around the curve
ahead. But you can read the warning signs to get an idea of what might be coming.
And while we can't really know how the developments in the economic world will
actually unfold, there are some signs we can point to that might give us a
few ideas.
First, let's look at the "rescue plan" as passed by Congress. As I pointed
out last week, this is a bad bill. But it was necessary to pass something,
and soon. Earlier this week I sent out a report that reviewed a study of 42
major baking crises. The conclusion: navigating them successfully depended
upon quick action.
As everyone should know, the credit markets are almost completely frozen.
LIBOR is bid only, no offers. Commercial paper markets are imploding. And what
is trading is often at rates that are much higher than they were a few months
ago. Corporations are being strangled on high rates. Corporations have little
or no access to normal credit markets, and they will face massive problems
when it comes time for them to roll over short-term debt.
LIBOR has gone crazy. This is not an orderly market.

Look at the following chart from friend Greg Weldon. For most readers, the
commercial paper market is something you don't think about. But it is the lifeblood
of business. We have seen this market drop by almost 30% in a year and by 10%
in just the last three weeks! I simply cannot overstate how serious this is.
Left unchecked, business activity in the US would soon slow enough to bring
thoughts of the Great Depression. It will not be left unchecked.

The credit crisis is not simply a Wall Street issue. It has fast become a
Main Street issue. And Main Street is where jobs are created and maintained.
As I have said repeatedly for months, the problem is that financial institutions
are having to deleverage. They have massive losses and simply have to raise
capital in order to survive. If you can't raise equity capital (and most can't),
one of the ways you do that is to make fewer loans and to take less risk. You
also charge more for the loans you do make.
Larger institutions cannot raise capital on competitive terms. GE is an AAA-rated
company. Yet they had to pay Warren Buffett 10% to get $5 billion, plus in-the-money
warrants worth at least another 10%. Buffett is likely to double his money
on this deal over 4-5 years. A short while ago, GE could get short-term commercial
paper for a few percentage points. That difference is going to significantly
impact GE's bottom line. But they had no real choice. They took the money.
As did Goldman Sachs. Yet another Buffett $5 billion preferred-share purchase
(with more warrants) at a rate that even Goldman will find it hard to make
money on. But they had to raise capital quickly, and they had little choice.
I had lunch with Michael Lewitt and Joe Harch yesterday. They were in town
to meet with a client, and we took the opportunity to get together and share
notes. They run (among other things) a collateralized loan obligation fund.
They buy bank and corporate debt. They now have the opportunity buy well-collateralized
loans from rated companies at prices well below par. They related story after
story of debt from quality, highly rated companies selling below $.90 on the
dollar, and some much lower.
If GE and Goldman are paying 10%, what do you think it costs a firm with "only" a
B rating? 15%? More? Junk bond yields have simply gone ballistic. Firms which
used the credit market to access capital now are simply shut out. If they are
a small public company, they can go to what are known as PIPE hedge funds (Private
Investment in Public Equity) and sell equity at usurious rates (which is what
Buffett does but on a larger scale). But a small or medium-sized private company?
It is a hard time to go looking for money.
Left alone for the markets to work out, the economy of the US and the world
would be in a depression within two quarters and would need years to recover.
Think Japan.
Necessary but Not Sufficient
Now for the bad news. The Rescue Plan was necessary but not sufficient to
fix the crisis. There is going to have to be more heavy lifting, I am afraid.
Let me offer a few ideas about what possible actions might be taken in the
future. I am not advocating these actions, I am simply telling you what might
happen. These are possible, because authorities will do whatever they deem
necessary to avoid a systemic economic meltdown and a potential depression.
If you are a large investor or sovereign wealth fund which put money into
banks last year, you are down anywhere from 35-50% (unless you invested in
Washington Mutual, and then you are down 100%). You are unlikely to invest
more in any financial institution without some very real understanding of what
is on the balance sheet of the bank that is asking for your money. What the
Paulson plan potentially does do is remove the questionable debt. The bank
may have to write down assets in order to sell the debt to the government,
but they end up with a transparent balance sheet with hopefully known risks.
Then they can go to the market and try and raise capital. Shareholders will
get diluted. Such is the way of the world.
Sidebar: taxpayers really must demand that someone like Bill Gross of PIMCO
and/or other savvy market specialists run this new government operation. He
offered to do it, and I think we should take him up on his offer. Taxpayer
losses should be kept to a minimum, and I believe someone like Gross would
do his best to see that would be the case. The point of this exercise is to
restart the frozen credit markets, NOT to bail out banks. Some banks may get
bailed out in the process, but it should be at a cost to their shareholders
and management, not to the taxpayer.
I am asked, why can't private money solve the problem? Because there is simply
not enough private money. Buffett offered to take 1% of the new government
pool. If that is all the largest pile of free money in the world can take,
why does anyone think there is enough private capital to take the other 99%?
Insuring the mortgage bonds is not sufficient, because there is not enough
money to buy them in this market. When things have sorted themselves out in
a few years, I think the bonds can be insured and sold, and likely at a profit
if bought correctly. But we do not have the luxury of waiting a few years.
Between the relaxation of the mark-to-market rules and removing ambiguously
priced loans from financial institutions at prices which allow the government
pool to make a small profit, if held for five years, that part (the lack of
a known price) of the problem can be solved. Banks can hopefully buy themselves
time in which to work their way out of the problems they created.
It is much like 1982, when every major US bank thought it was a good idea
to loan lots of money to Latin American countries. It was a most profitable
business, right up until the countries decided to default. Then every US bank
was more than just technically bankrupt. In a mark-to-market world, every large
US bank would have collapsed. It would have been the end of the world as we
knew it.
What did they do? The Fed let the banks keep the loans on their books at face
value. Over time, they worked their way through the debt, making enough money
to be able to write down the loans. That was done simply to give the banks
the ability to buy time.
We are in a very similar situation. We have to buy some time in order for
financial institutions to heal.
Why the Government Had to Step In
I had a lot of readers write me very nice letters this week, starting out
with how much they like my letter, my insights, etc. Then they (mostly - but
not all - and politely) launched on me for backing the rescue plan. Many of
you had much better ideas than what was passed by Congress, which is not surprising.
I really do hate the idea of having to support a rescue plan. It goes against
my every instinct. But I also know that doing nothing would result in an economy
which would blow right through 10% unemployment within a few quarters, and
take years to recover. The stock markets and the savings of millions of retirees
would be wiped out. Home values would really go into a tailspin. Being right
in theory is not worth seeing that kind of devastation.
Herbert Hoover sat by and decided to let the market solve the problems of
1929. He decided to run budget surpluses and ignore collapsing institutions.
Combined with disastrous Federal Reserve policy (raising rates in a recession)
and Smoot Hawley (which caused major trade wars and a slowdown in global trade),
what should have been a serious recession turned into the Great Depression
and resulted in the conditions for World War II.
The rescue plan does not address the need for the increased levels of capital
needed by banks. As noted above, it simply creates the conditions under which
capital might be raised. Banks have already raised $440 billion. They have
written down $590 billion. Losses are estimated from a mere $1 trillion to
as much as $2 trillion. About half of those losses would be in banking institutions
worldwide. That means anywhere from $200 to $400 billion more must be raised
in order for banks to get back to capital adequacy. It is probably closer to
the latter number.
Until banks are adequately capitalized, they are not going to be able to do
normal business lending. Further, large deposits are fleeing banks. Even with
the new level of $250,000 of FDIC insurance, there is $1.9 trillion in uninsured
deposits. These are mostly deposits of small to large businesses and financial
institutions, which can leave a bank at the push of a button.
Nouriel Roubini tells us that there are 800 billion dollars deposited in US
banks by foreign counterparties. Up until this week, if you were a foreign
operation, would you rather be in large money-center US banks or European banks?
Tough choice, but on balance you would pick the US. Then this week Ireland
decided to simply insure every deposit in Irish banks, no matter the size.
Predictably, money started flowing from all over Europe into Ireland. National
banks and finance ministers are furious with Ireland.
However, Ireland may have no choice but to backstop its own depository institutions
to keep them from losing deposits and becoming insolvent from a bank run by
corporations acting in their own best interests. Belgium, The Netherlands,
and Luxembourg each took 49% of their respective parts of Fortis Bank in return
for a massive injection of capital, declaring the bank too big to fail - also
wiping out a lot of already diminished shareholder equity. Europe has its own
quite serious problems.
But what if the various countries, one by one, decide to guarantee deposits
in order to protect their own banks? If you are an international corporation,
especially if you are outside the US, do you want your $10 million in Europe
or the US if Europe guarantees your deposits with no limit? Could we see silent
runs on US banks?
I think it is about an even chance that the government will have to guarantee
for a period of time (say 6 months to a year) every bank deposit, regardless
of size, in the US.
That is a staggering thought. The potential will be large for almost-insolvent
banks to pursue risky behavior to try and work their way through problems.
If such a policy is pursued, tight controls must be administered so risky banks
do not offer high CD rates in order to garner assets. The FDIC must closely
monitor such activity. Perhaps such guarantees should be for existing depositors
and not new customers. Insolvent banks and those on the edge must be shut down
quickly in such an event, to prevent risky behavior.
Unthinkable? I bet you there is a working committee of government and Fed
officials thinking about just that very thing and how to do it. It would be
even more scary if there is not one. We are in completely uncharted waters,
and every contingency needs to be thought through well in advance. We simply
don't need more last-minute Paulson plans.
In the next few weeks and months, I think you can count on more extraordinary
actions by the Fed and Treasury to try and jump-start the credit markets. Actions
which were highly improbable a few months ago will be on the table. Will the
Fed open its balance sheet to non-banks? Possibly. If they can guarantee money
markets, will there be a scheme to insure commercial paper at some price? Not
out of the question. Will European governments take more equity in large European
banks? Very likely. Will the Fed and/or the Treasury invest even more capital
in larger financial institutions? Given that We the People now own 80% of AIG
and 100% of Fannie and Freddie, it is certainly within the realm of possibility
that we will be the proud owners of even more private institutions.
Again, this is not just a US issue. We will likely see similar actions in
Europe and some of the developing world. This is a worldwide crisis, and the
response will be from central banks all over the world.
Understand, I am not advocating these actions. I am simply trying to help
you understand what actions might be put into place by the various government
of the world in an effort to avoid systemic economic collapse.
All The King's Horses
The reality is that the rescue plan does not fundamentally alter the US economic
landscape. There can be no doubt we are in a recession. I think it will be
dated from the beginning of the year, notwithstanding the odd 2nd quarter growth.
The manufacturing ISM was a dismal 43.5 (under 50 means a contracting US manufacturing
industry). Such a level is typically associated with recessions, as the chart
below shows. Given the financial crisis and the freefall in auto sales, this
index is likely to fall further.

The "good news" is that the service portion of the economy is right at 50,
which means that at least that important area is not contracting.
Unemployment rose by 159,000, with nearly every sector affected. Almost 1,000,000
jobs have disappeared over the last 12 months, and it is likely that we will
lose another 1,000,000 jobs in the coming year. Since December, the ranks of
the unemployed have grown by 1.8 million, and those not in the labor force
but wanting a job by 370,000. Almost 3/4 of the increase in the unemployed
have been job losers, with half the increase from permanent job losers (not
temporary layoffs). (The Liscio Report)
Next week we will explore the economic landscape in detail, but let me provide
a few thoughts. As I have said for a long time, we will be talking about deflation
this time next year. Recessions are by definition deflationary events. Given
that we have had two bubbles burst (housing and credit), there is even more
potential for deflationary pressures. Add into the mix the deleveraging process,
which will take years to finally abate, and the recent bout of price inflation
caused by energy and food will pass, as demand destruction for oil will hold
oil prices in check.
As I have said for a long time, the next move of the Fed is likely to be a
cut. We are now close to such an action. A 1% Fed funds rate is again a real
possibility. I am not sure it will help as much as some market participants
think, but I think it likely the Fed will move before the end of the year,
if not much sooner.
Europe and Japan are also probably in recession, and it is likely we are going
to see a worldwide global slowdown. It would be nice if the European Central
Bank, the Bank of England, and the Fed could coordinate a joint rate cut to
signal that they are working together on the problems. I would not want to
be short the markets that day.
At the beginning of the year, I was predicting a small recession with a lengthy
and slow recovery period. I now think that the recession could be deeper than
a 1% contraction. I think we could see a rather lengthy recession. Quite simply,
the credit crisis has been allowed to spin out of control. That Congress almost
failed to act is beyond belief. Given the above circumstances, it is not out
of the realm of possibility that a recession lasts through the middle of 2009.
As recessions go, that is a long time. But trust me on this, it will pass.
The recovery will be a slow Muddle Through affair, though. It will be a few
years before we are growing at a sustained 3%. Over the next few weeks, we
will look at what that means for earnings and the stock markets. Investors
who utilize a traditional 60% stocks, 40% bonds portfolio are not going to
be pleased. We will look at alternatives.
Stay tuned.
How Can I Be 59?
This has been a particularly hard letter to write, as I know it is rather
gloomy, and I wish had more encouraging news. I have been writing this letter
for over eight years. Every letter since the beginning of 2001 is in the archives,
so my record is open for inspection. I have no particular axe to grind. Since
I basically help investors (in conjunction with my partners) find investment
managers and funds, we can adjust the choice of funds and management ideas
to suit the times, and frequently do make changes in the mix. My goal in this
letter is to help us all think about the economy and our investments and to
be as "right" as I possibly can. Sometimes, like today, that means not being
very upbeat. But it also means looking for ways to go with the tide rather
than against it. I actually hope I am wrong and the bulls are right. But that
is not the way I see it tonight.
Tomorrow is my birthday. The years seem to roll by at an ever accelerating
pace. (I had the reason this happens explained to me once. When you are 10,
a year is 10% of your life. When you are (sigh) 59, it is 1.6% of your life.
It makes some sense.) It is hard to believe I am 59. Maybe it is because I
am around my kids so much, but I don't feel that old. Seven kids from 31 to
14 (plus assorted spouses and their friends) can do that. And they are all
coming to town to celebrate next weekend, so tomorrow will be a quiet day.
And Tiffani is already planning for a serious 60th birthday weekend next year.
Life has been good to me, for all its ups and downs. And I firmly believe
that my best years are ahead of me. I am simply having more fun than at any
time in my life, with more opportunities than I know what to do with. I am
blessed with great business partners. I have the best readers of any analyst
anywhere. One million closest friends. I am truly one of the world's wealthiest
men when it comes to friends and family, and at the end of the day that is
what counts.
Thanks for being part of my life. I plan on writing for a long time, so take
care of yourself so you can keep reading. And have a great week!
Your actually optimistic analyst,
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