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... Corp America responds to distorted incentives
of speculative financial system; Sarbox counterproductive
3/8/06 Reuters "Enron's Fastow says Lay lied about company problems" link "Ken
Lay, a former chief executive of Enron Corp., repeatedly lied to investors
about the company, portraying it as financially sound even as it spiraled
toward bankruptcy in 2001, the company's former finance chief, Andrew Fastow,
testified on Wednesday."
I'm leading with the Enron trial story today to make a very key point for
the prosperity of the global economy, but there's no need to read the new stories
on the trial, they're basically old re-runs that still completely miss the
critical point.
The corporate scandals of 2001-2002 during the crash of the TMT equity bubble
led to the passage of Sarbanes-Oxley (Sarbox). The Wrong Solution to
corporate governance problems such as those exposed at Enron is to saddle productive
corporate America with all sorts of very burdensome busywork bureaucratic rules
and regulations, a la Sarbox.
That is extremely counter-productive, especially for innovative and/or small
companies which help drive the U.S. economy. E.g. I recall an accounting firm
study that said the biotech industry, one of the key industries for the future
of the U.S. economy, lost more than $6 billion in 2004, I believe, and about
$1 billion of that was due to the costs of Sarbox compliance. (I will give
the old link if I can track it down.)
Besides being economically counter-productive, Sarbox is also very unfair
and not in the American tradition of presumed innocence and fair dealing. Corporate
America, which all but an infinitesimally small part of (on which the mass
media focused) is honest, productive and well-meaning, was put in the perpetual
Sarbox penalty box.
It is simply NOT fair and honest to punish very hard-working entrepreneurs,
executives and managers with this onerous regulatory burden when they have never done
anything wrong, and never will.
Sarbox has just been the Wrong Solution to the Wrong Problem all along.
Unfortunately, nothing has really changed to address the Real Problem since
the corporate scandals of 2001-02. Yes, Sarbox was passed, but it was simply
a knee-jerk political response--just what you would expect--most definitely
barking up the wrong tree.
The Real Problem running through all the corporate scandals of 2001-02,
which the mass media NEVER got right despite the huge coverage, was, and still
is, that corporate America, through the direct link via CEO stock options to
actions to maximize short-term shareholder value, for many years now has been
explicitly governed to slavishly respond to the grossly distorted price signals
and profit incentives created by global speculative financial markets. (See
my 3/6 review of Jim Cramer's "Real
Money" on how the hedge-fund dominated
equity market currently really works.)
This very close corporate governance-global capital markets link might be
fine if the latter were operating properly. But they are not, they are clearly
very overly speculative, hence they are misallocating real activity and real
resources in the real economy via the distorted financial signals that the
corporate CEOs are responding to.
My key point is that the TMT equity bubble essentially Caused the corporate
governance scandals, not the other way around. If the banks, the vc's and
Greenspan had taken away the bubble, which they were not motivated to do
(since the financial system has no real anchor), then that would have had
the effect of also taking away the distorted market incentives that led to
the corporate scandals.
I would guess that most of the corporate executives who went astray during
the TMT equity bubble, especially those at more mainline firms, did so because
they saw their peers becoming so extraordinarily wealthy so quickly and easily,
especially those in newly formed IPO's that didn't have profits or even viable
business plans. Take away that source of greed and jealously, and corporate
America probably would have acted its normal self.
In Enron's case, it was no surprise, in fact it was almost inevitable, that
bubble's perverted market incentives (which culminated in and was best exemplified
by the merger of "new, new thing" AOL and real thing Time Warner) is what people
like Skilling, Fastow, Lay, et al would respond to, in the way that they did.
So did all the investment bankers and venture capitalists complicit in issuing
hundreds of essentially fraudulent, if legal, IPOs, during that period, which
also was almost inevitable under the circumstances. NASDAQ lost 78% and the
equity markets $8 trillion in market cap, March 2000 top to October
2002 bottom, one of the two largest crashes in history, and during that time
most IPO's lost far more than the market averages.
I apologize to those, especially fair, honest people in the financial industry,
who may take exception to such a strong characterization, I fully realize that
most probably believe the "irrational exuberance" explanation of that bubble.
Since this is not the time nor place to rehash that discussion, I hope they
will continue to read on.
A Main Solution to the Real Problem that caused the corporate scandals,
and this is where most readers might start to disagree with me if they haven't
done so already, must address the core issue of the increasingly pressing need
to start to rein in the worst excesses of the global speculative financial
system.
In this credit cycle, these excesses may be even more out of control than
during the TMT equity bubble. But up until now, they remain far more hidden
from the media and public view in the credit and derivative markets (hence
the credit excesses may have a chance to build up to dangerous levels before
recognized by investors in public markets that may be affected, similar to
an undetected gas leak that results in an inadvertent explosion).
A Secondary Solution, the one that interests honest investors like Buffett,
is to focus on excessive CEO compensation in relationship to subpar performance,
and perhaps to lessening the overly strong short-term link to equity markets'
obsessive focus on quarterly earnings reports and "guidance."
I should make it clear, especially to new readers of this blog, that I am
not an uncritical cheerleader for Corporate America, which has its hands full
dealing with an intense global competitive environment.
E.g. elsewhere on my blog, I have been very critical of excessive executive
compensation, as has Warren Buffett, the world's second wealthiest man and
most successful investor, most recently in his "Chairman's Letter" in the just
released "2005 Berkshire Hathway Annual Report." link (Also
see the 2004 book "Pay Without Performance: The Unfulfilled Promise of Executive
Compensation" by two respected academics and published by Harvard University
Press link.)
I have been particularly critical of excessively compensated CEO's asking
working Americans, whose average real weekly earnings have declined 17% since
1972 (see "2006 Economic Report of the President," Table B-47, pg 338) to "give
back" hard-earned gains in binding legal contracts, often under the threat
of outsourcing or bankruptcy.
Intense corporate competitive pressures notwithstanding, I simply don't think
that's a fair and honest way to deal with things, and again not in the American
tradition of fair dealing.
I also think it has unnecessarily and greatly damaged the credibility of Corporate
America with ordinary Americans, which came back to haunt Corporate America
with the passage of Sarbox, and could do so again with even more onerous laws
and regulations in the future. "Enlightened capitalists" should take heed and
learn that lesson before it's too late.
Imho, the Real Scandal of the corporate scandals is that the major
global financial institutions got off with essentially light slaps on the wrists
(in terms of fines compared with their enormous profits), and have been free
to go on their merry way (with some regulations that they have said they don't
like), creating even larger credit excesses than during the TMT equity bubble.
For the past five years, global speculative financial markets, with the help
of their good friends at the central banks, have deliberately created a global
real estate-led consumer boom, hence that is what corporate America is currently
responding to, again directly through the incentive link of CEO stock options.
At some point, who knows when, it is likely that those new excess credit chickens
will come home to roost, just as they did previously with the Enrons of the
corporate world. Hopefully, whenever the next crisis hits, it will be handled
better than the crash of the TMT equity bubble and the corporate scandals.
Those credit excess problems in the last cycle were financially "papered over," so
to speak, in the new cycle by a massive expansion of credit into the global
real estate markets, and also by a government-mass media shift in focus away
from the corporate "bad guys" at domestic places like Enron, to terrorist "bad
guys" at very foreign places like Iraq and now Iran.
But that has just resulted in more credit excesses to ultimately be resolved,
without other obvious, at least not to me, areas of potential credit expansion
on a large enough scale to take up for any slack in global real estate, along
with a lot of very costly, thorny geopolitical issues contributing to mounting
government debt and declining U.S. leadership in world public opinion polls.
The deliberate opacity of the credit and derivative markets (which is being
addressed behind the scenes in places such as the Counterparty Risk Management
Policy Group) thus makes the current credit excesses potentially dangerous,
especially given the unfathomable size of the markets (derivatives are $300-400
trillion in notional value).
Meanwhile, the big speculators in these markets ultimately expect to get bailed
out, yet once again, should their overly leveraged trades ever blow up in their
faces, e.g. as they have been going all the way back to the Latin American
debt crises of the 1980s, through the S&L crsis, the Mexican bond crisis,
Asian financial crisis, Russian default crisis, Brazil and Argentive crises,
and ultimately the TMT equity crash, in the last case through Greenspan's negative
real interest rates for three years igniting a global real estate boom and
Japan's zero rates funding speculative global "carry trades." Yes, it'a long
list, and these bailouts have been a bipartisan political policy.
This combination of enormous gains on opaque private trades with the public
providing implicit insurance against economically-destabilizing losses (the "too
big to be allowed to fail syndrome," a la the LTCM precedent in October 1998)
is blatantly NOT fair and honest and creates immense "moral hazard" which
greatly distorts global capital flows into speculative activity and away from
real productive uses.
Frankly, I doubt that the Real Problem will be adequately addressed before
the next crisis happens. The global speculative financial vested interests
are too powerful; whatver alternatives that exist are far too weak and unorganized;
and it is just human nature for most people not to face up to the most difficult
issues until a crisis forces them to do so.
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