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This week we look at the possible latest entry into the hedge fund world,
The People's Republic of China; review the cockroach principle of subprime
mortgages; and investigate the possibility of whether we need more derivatives
and not less than the $283 trillion or so we now have. It's a lot to cover,
but it should all be interesting.
But before we get into the meat of the letter, I want to announce a brand
new web site. For the last six months, we have been in the process of creating
a Chinese language web site of Frontline Thoughts. I have wanted to do this
for years, and we are finally ready to go public. If you would like to read
this weekly letter in Chinese, you can go to www.frontlinethoughts.cn.
You will be prompted to click on English or Chinese and then enter your email
address. You must have cookies enabled.
We will then send you the weekly letter in Chinese, just like we do the English
version. The translation in Chinese will have the English version appended
to the end of the letter. Of course, it takes my translator a few days, so
typically you will get it on Monday rather than Saturday morning.
I started this letter six years ago with about 2,000 email addresses I had
gathered from various writings I had done over the previous years. I launched
a hard-copy letter at the same time (how quaint that seems now). The free e-letter
took off. The paper letter was too expensive to market and produce. Now the
e-letter goes to over 1,000,000 readers each week and has completely changed
my business model for the better.
I had no idea of the international business opportunities that would open
up to me when I started this letter, let alone the growth of my US business.
Candidly, I am not sure what the response will be, if any, to a Chinese version.
I do know there are 110,000,000 Chinese on the internet just in China, and
many millions more around the world. Will they be interested in a letter on
economics and finance written by an American? We will see.
If you have friends you think might be interested in the Chinese letter, please
forward the above link to them. The letter will of course be free. I will keep
you posted from time to time as to the response.
China and the Hedge Fund Dragon
And speaking of China, we all read the stories about the rapid growth of the
economy, the increasing percentage of the growth in demand for commodities
and energy that comes because of that growth, the increased trade deficit with
the US, and the rapid increase in foreign reserves. China today has over $1
trillion in foreign reserves, much of it invested in low-yielding US bonds.
This has served to keep US interest rates low and allow American consumers
to borrow at cheap rates and not coincidentally buy a mountain of Chinese products.
These reserves have mostly been managed in a benign fashion. But some recent
speeches by high-level Chinese leaders suggest that period may be coming to
an end. In a report this week from my friends at Stratfor, we read that:
"The vice chairman of China's National People's Congress, Cheng Siwei, said
March 8 that the Chinese government needs to put some of its mammoth $1 trillion
(as of Jan. 1) in currency reserves to better use. Cheng said he broadly agrees
with International Monetary Fund assessments that China needs to keep 'only'
about $650 billion as reserves, and should apply the remaining amount to more
efficient purposes. While Cheng is not ultimately the decision-maker for the
reserves, his statements are just the latest in a series of leaks that point
to an imminent change in the way Beijing manages its currency reserves. Whatever
decision Beijing makes, it will shake the world."
There are precedents for more efficient management of reserves by governments.
Singapore invests its reserves in stocks and bonds, as well as the outright
owning of a wide variety of businesses. Norway has US$289 billion in stocks
and bonds under management in its Government Pension Fund. (Note that Norway
only has about 4.6 million people.) The fund can invest up to 50% of its assets
on the international stock market.
It makes sense from a Chinese point of view to try and get a better return
on its assets than US treasuries, especially given the fact that over time
the dollar is going to depreciate against the Renminbi. The Chinese allowed
their currency to start floating within a specified band in the summer of 2005.
After an initial drop of a few percent, the dollar has slowly moved down since
that time. If you are only getting a 5% yield on your US bonds and giving up
3% on currency depreciation for a net 2%, that is not a strong argument for
continued investment in the dollar.
U.S. Dollar to Chinese Yuan Exchange Rate

$650 billion is a strong reserve cushion that would allow the Chinese to be
more creative and long-term in their management. They would not need to necessarily
only invest in liquid investments. As an example, the total foreign investment
in all of Africa in 2006 was only $38 billion. China could easily increase
that number by investing in oil projects, farmland, mining, and other infrastructure
projects that would guarantee it sources for the materials, commodities, and
food that a growing economy is going to need.
But $350 billion is just the beginning. China is adding at least another $100
billion each year. How do you put that to work? Of course, you continue to
invest in your own economy, but China is going to need a lot of material and
food in the coming years. They will not only compete for resources with the
slower growing economies of the US, Europe, and Japan, but with the rapidly
growing economies of the developing world and especially Asia.
What if China takes half its growth in foreign reserves and puts it to work?
You could be talking US$1 trillion by the end of the next decade. That is a
massive amount of investments. As Stratfor notes, that will make a mighty big
splash in the pond; but as yet, no one knows where the splash will be. It is
just speculation as to where.
But just as it is logical for individuals to plan for their future, it is
also logical for governments to do so. Anyone with an Excel spreadsheet can
predict the demand for materials and food for the total world at current growth
levels. While I am a believer that the free market will find a way to supply
that demand (of course, price is the issue), a reliable supply of energy, commodities,
and food will be an increasing focus of attention on the part of many world
governments. China's huge reserves offer it a way to secure that supply line
in a way not afforded to many nations. I see no reason for them not to use
it. I would if I were them.
Of course, that has ramifications for the rest of the world. I would not expect
China to move all at once, as that is not the Chinese way. But over time the
results could be significant.
As an aside, there is a lot of breathless speculation about the Chinese moving
a significantly larger portion of their reserves into euros. If I was the European
Central Bank, I would want to discourage that. Since the Renminbi and the US
dollar are more or less linked, a significant move into euros would strengthen
the euro against both currencies, increasing the US and Chinese export advantage.
It seems to me that it makes more sense, from a Chinese viewpoint, to put
spare reserves into higher-producing assets than US or euro bonds. China may
be about to start down the path to becoming the world's largest private-equity
hedge fund.
To put that into perspective, at an Akin-Gump seminar on hedge funds I attended
yesterday, one speaker asserted that we will soon see a deal for a single $50
billion private-equity fund. Combine that with leverage and you could see a
fund with $200 billion of buying power. And that is just one fund! There are
many others likely to be funded in "lesser" amounts as well. So China's $350
billion is big, but there are also a lot of very big "beasts" that will be
vying with the Chinese dragon for opportunity.
And since we are talking about very large numbers, let's stop using billions
and go to trillions. As in $283 trillion.
The Need for More Derivatives
Look at the following two charts which show the growth in derivatives over
the last 20 years, sent to me by Ray Lombardo of UBS in Newport Beach, California.
The data is from an ISDA market survey and the International Monetary Fund
GDP. You can see the explosive growth. Note that there are now 6 times the
amount of derivatives as the total world GDP. Isn't that a bubble? What would
happen if it pops?


Ray helpfully sent me the underlying data as well. The vast majority and the
source of the growth in derivatives are interest-rate and currency derivatives,
currently at $250 trillion. There is $26 trillion in credit-default and $6
trillion in equity derivatives.
A derivative is a financial contract whose value is based on, or "derived" from,
a traditional security (such as a stock or bond), an asset (such as a commodity),
or a market index. Derivative instruments are contracts such as options and
futures whose price is derived from the price of an underlying financial asset.
Just as you buy insurance on your house or health, derivatives can be a form
of insurance. If you are a farmer, you want to know what the price of corn
is going to be a year from now, so you can lock in the price. If you make cereals,
you want to know what your costs are going to be, so you lock in your price.
Speculators come in and provide liquidity for the natural hedgers.
If you are an international company, you want to hedge out your currency risk.
If you lend money, you want to buy insurance (credit default swaps) on your
portfolio. You sell options on your stocks, or buy options to provide more
leverage on a possible move up. You can hedge against a drop in the market.
Many mutual funds are nothing more than derivative portfolios.
One of the more important books that you can read is Peter Bernstein's Against
the Gods - The Remarkable Story of Risk. In it he details how humankind
developed concepts of risk. The odds on dice weren't even known until the
Middle Ages. Lloyds came along in the 1600s and allowed merchants to hedge
the considerable risks of financing a trading ship.
Insurance and hedging are at the heart of the global marketplace and the collective
growth in the world economy. And derivatives are another form of insurance.
Yes, there is a great deal of speculation, but that provides liquidity and
over time lowers the cost of such insurance, although at certain inflection
points it can wildly skew the prices.
I was having a conversation with Dr. Woody Brock last week. He has given me
permission to use his essay on why we need more derivatives and not less. It
will be a future Outside the Box. We talked about the risk of a blowup. One
of his concerns is not the systemic risk that comes from the large users of
derivatives, as authorities in extreme cases can move to stem the problems,
as in the Long Term Capital Crisis.
What if the risk is not from major players but from smaller users that are
harder to identify and deal with? I will let his essay outline his thinking
in a few weeks, but the point is that the true systemic risks of the growth
in derivatives may not come from the sources that we are currently concerned
about, hedge funds and large investment banks.
Yes, if your fund or bank loses money, you as an individual investor are not
happy, but that is the market risk you take. Look at the major hits the market
has taken and didn't even slow down or look back. Refco? Amaranth? It is precisely
the dispersal of risks among more and more individuals, funds, and banks that
helps cushion the system.
Cockroach Principle and the Subprime Mortgage Market
The Cockroach Principle says there is never just one cockroach. If you see
one running across the room, that means there are many more in the walls and
behind the counters. I have been highlighting the problems in the subprime
space for a long time. As I wrote months ago, this is going to be a major scandal.
It is the main (and almost only) reason that I think we are going to have a
recession in the US.
Last week www.lenderimplode.com listed
28 subprime mortgage firms that were shut down or taken over. The count is
now 34. Yesterday the third largest lender of subprime mortgages, New Century,
stopped accepting new loan applications. The shares were once at $50. Now they
are under $4 and falling. The Financial Times reports that they cannot
meet their margin calls from their lenders.
Essentially, New Century has been shut out of the capital markets. They are
being hit with a wave of lenders who are demanding they take back the mortgages
they sold, and my guess is that they do not have the capital they need. Maybe
they can sell assets and get them. Who would take their paper or their mortgages
today, knowing the problems? The money available to subprime lenders is rapidly
evaporating, and until the lending standards are tightened considerably, it
will remain that way. Many of the buyers of the Mortgage Backed Securities
are going to lose some money.
Option One is an Irvine, California-based subprime lender. Yesterday they
stopped doing 100% loans on the value of a home. CEO Steve Nadon pointed to
an increase in loan submissions as a result of many of the company's competitors
running into funding problems.
"We are getting a lot of 80/20s and 100% CLTV deals that used to go to our
competitors," the letter said. "While there is nothing inherently wrong with
those types of loans from a pure credit standpoint, right now they have a fundamental
flaw that we simply cannot overcome. That is the almost complete lack of appetite
for the product by the bond market... To originate a loan product that no investor,
in today's market, wants to buy is irresponsible."
Consider even a lender like Countrywide which only had about 10% of its portfolio
in subprime. They can probably weather the storm, as their main business is
prime mortgages. But the founder and CEO, Angelo Mozilla, has sold $140 million
of his personal holdings, and almost $600 million of insider stock at Countrywide
has been sold in the past two years.
I have highlighted this problem before, so will not go into it in detail again.
Subprime mortgages are pooled and divided into different risk tranches, with
the most risky being the "equity" portion of the pools, typically about 4%,
and these equity portions are again put into pools with 80% of these equity
portions now getting investment-grade ratings. These latter pools are going
to lose money, if not go bust outright. The rating agencies are going to have
major heartburn over this failure to adequately see the risks. Cue the lawyers,
stage right.
The following note is from good friend Dennis Gartman (The Gartman Letter).
He could not reveal his source or vouch for the accuracy of the story, but
it is like other anecdotal stories I read.
Let's say you have a good credit history. You pay your bills and get a nice
credit score. But let Dennis tell the story:
"However, in the past several years, mortgages were made to people who should
never have gotten one. Homes were built for people who could not afford them.
Decisions were made that shall prove to be utterly ill advised and in some
instances almost evil in intent, and were it not so sad, some of these loans
would be comical in nature. Some are already going bad. These are the first
'cockroaches.' More shall... indeed many, many more shall. These are the other
'cockroaches' hidden now from view, but which shall come sadly to view over
the next many months.
"Thus we note for our clients a piece sent to us by one of our readers yesterday
which may or may not be factual, but which tells the story of what has happened
in the mortgage business in recent months, and which tells us what is about
to happen. With that in mind, please read on:
"A 'customer' bought his house in '05 for $650,000. The house was new and
he blatantly over-paid. He put no money down and the builder paid his closing
costs. Just so we're clear, he didn't bring one red cent to the deal at any
point. He got a no-doc loan. Just so we're clear about what no-doc is, he didn't
even fill out the income or asset sections of the 1003. This man didn't lie
about how much he made or had. He simply made no representations on the subject.
He had 'perfect' credit. Just so we're clear, 'perfect' credit in this case
consisted of +24 months of clean payments on two credit cards with high limits
of $3K and $4K.
"There is no consideration about how much credit he could or had been able
to handle. He received 80/20 financing. The 80% first is a negative amortization
loan. Today he wants to get a fixed-rate loan to pay down principal. The problems:
He made the minimum payments on his negative amortization first. He now owes
+$37K more than he originally did. On top of the fact that he overpaid, the
house hasn't appreciated. He probably owes in the neighborhood of $100K more
than the house is worth (and that's before estimating any negative impact on
price if he goes to foreclosure), and 37 houses are for sale in his immediate
neighborhood. The big punch line? He is a 26-year-old, single busboy for a
catering firm. He makes $33K per year.
"Heaven help us!!!! What more really can we say, other than 'What's your bid
for this busboy's house?' Our bid is something south of $300K, and we are not
all that certain that we'd make that bid stand for more than a day, fearful
of being hit... fiscally and physically... by the busboy.... AND the lender."
The lower end of the housing market is going to find a dearth of buyers, as
they will not get financing and a lot of homes are coming back onto the market.
It is going to be very hard to get a floating-rate mortgage turned into a fixed-rate
mortgage, and consumers are going to see their payments soar. Foreclosures
area at an all-time high and rising. Cue the congressional hearings, stage
left.
A special advisory committee of the Federal Reserve warned Thursday of a rise
in the number of foreclosures, as new guidelines were issued. Subprime mortgages,
about 20% of the total market, were 50% of the foreclosures last year. That
is set to rise this year.
As the problem spreads, it is going to hit home values and that is going to
limit the amount of money that can be borrowed by consumers as Mortgage Equity
Withdrawals. It is not just a problem with subprime mortgages, it is starting
to hit the prime mortgage world. Indeed, friend Hugh Moore at Guerite Research
writes today about what he calls Prime Mortage Home Equity Withdrawals (PMHEW):
"Based on data from FHLMC (Freddie Mac), PMHEW grew from an average 0.55%
of GDP between 1993 and 2000 to an average 1.93% between 2001 and 2006. It
reached an astonishing 2.93% of GDP in the second quarter of 2006. However,
Freddie Mac is projecting that PMHEW will decline 20% in 2007 and an additional
30% in 2008; 43% below 2006 levels. Such a drop could reduce GDP by 1% to 2%
over a two-year period of time. The decline in PMHEW is due to the fact that
the mortgages most likely to be refinanced in 2007, 2008 (and 2009) were originated
in 2004 and 2005 and housing prices have appreciated little since then. In
short, those homeowners most likely to refinance are running out of excess
equity."
Look at the chart which shows that Freddie Mac expects MEW to drop by over
50%. And that is on today's home valuations:

In short, consumer spending is going to take a hit. How much? No one knows,
but this is a problem that is not in the index of leading economic indicators.
Will it be enough to send the US into a mild recession? I still think so. We
will see.
Scotland, London, Malta and Geneva
It is time to hit the send button, so I will stop here and pick up next week.
And for those who keep asking about my next book, it is coming along slower
than I like, but it is coming. It is the 800-pound gorilla in my weekly schedule.
No one will be happier than me when I finish it (well, maybe my long-suffering
editor, Debra Englander at Wiley). But it is going to be a good one, I think.
The general topic is about how the world will look in 20 years. The more I
write and research, the more optimistic I get. Yes, there are some real problems;
but given the opportunities, I am looking forward to it.
I agreed to go to Scotland for a speech in late May, and I have to attend
a board meeting for a fund I work with in Malta, so it looks like I am going
to Europe for a week. Of course, there will be stops in London and probably
a trip to Geneva. It should be a great time to go to Europe. I have never been
to Scotland and am looking forward to it. I hope to take an extra day or two!
I think this will make around 43 countries to which I have traveled.
Looks like my daughter's cheerleading career has been extended least one more
game, as ORU (men and women) got into the NCAA playoffs. Depending on where
that is, I may be making a quick trip next weekend. We'll see.
I have decided to move into a high rise in what is known as Uptown in Dallas,
just north of downtown Dallas. I have always wanted a major city view at night,
and this place boasts a great one. Again, I am leasing. I looked at several
comparable places to buy, and leasing is still a cheaper option, at least for
me. And there is so much building going on in the area, I think I will let
the market sort itself out. Plus it will let me decide if I will like central
urban living as much as I think I will. It's not New York, but that may be
a good thing. I don't want to know what a comparable view and 3,000 square
feet would cost in Manhattan.
Have a great week. And I hope you decide to have some fun with family and
friends. There's nothing subprime about that!
Your anticipating the future more positively than ever analyst,
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