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I have had so many letters of late asking me what I think of and/or know about
the existent of the so-called Plunge Protection Team, that mysterious group
of government officials who secretly prop up the stock market when it drops
too much, that I am going to jump in where wiser minds would just leave the
subject alone. It will offer a good opportunity for you to understand concepts
of arbitrage and how the markets really work. Plus, if you can prove me wrong,
I will show you how to get a quick $100,000.
Following the stock market crash in 1987, the government created something
called the President's Working Group on Financial Markets. The group, which
includes the Treasury secretary, Federal Reserve chairman, chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission and chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, was formed to ensure the smooth operation of financial markets.
Citing a Washington Post article, Carol Baum recently wrote about a 1997 article: "The
Working Group's main goal, officials say, would be to keep the markets operating
in the event of a sudden, stomach-churning plunge in stock prices -- and to
prevent a panicky run on banks, brokerage firms and mutual funds..."
"The thrust of the article is official's efforts to avert a liquidity crisis,
which is exactly what the Fed did when it flooded the banking system with reserves
following the 508-point plunge in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Oct.
19, 1987. How an effort to ensure adequate access to credit to prevent a domino
effect in the event of market meltdown morphed into a cabal to prop up the
stock market is anybody's guess. For a window into the depths of the conspiracy
theory, type "plunge protection team" into Google and see what comes up."
Every time the market drops and then "mysteriously" rallies, knowing individuals
look at each other and nod, seeing the handiwork of the PPT (plunge protection
team).
Let's say it straight out. The plunge protection team does not exist. It is
an urban myth. Let me step by step prove it does not exist, and see if we can
learn something in the process.
Supposedly the PPT manipulates the market by buying S&P 500 and DOW and
NASDAQ futures when the market is dropping. Somehow, this supposedly forces
the market back up. The problem is that buying futures cannot drive the stock
market, which is obvious to real traders.
I talked with a few good friends about this article prior to writing it, to
get some background and ideas. Art Cashin, of CNBC fame, and one of the real
veterans of the markets, who ahs seen it all, wrote me the following very clear
thoughts:
"Suppose you have a lot of cash and would like to buy the S&P Index. In
the old days (circa 1980), you had two choices. You could buy each of the stocks
in the S&P according to its weighting. Then you would own a "basket" of
the 500 stocks. Or you could buy an S&P futures contract on the S&P.
Which should you choose?
"If you bought the 'basket' of stocks, you would get whatever aggregate price
improvement (or loss) that occurred while you owned the basket. In addition,
you would get any dividends paid. A slight negative would be that it required
500 transactions (1 for each stock) and thus 500 commissions.
"If you bought the "futures," it would give you similar price action since
it would mirror the ups and downs of the basket and the index. A negative would
be that you would not get the dividends. Positives would be a single transaction
with more favorable margin requirements.
"By constructing a formula of the variables - total dividends, time left to
expiration and interest rates, etc. - you can determine if one of these choices
is cheaper than the other. This is called arbitrage.
"An old example of arbitrage was gold. If gold was selling at $300 in Paris
and $350 in London, one Rothschild might send in a pigeon to another Rothschild
suggesting A buy in Paris while B sold in London allowing the firm to pocket
the $50 (less transportation and currency conversion).
"The futures/basket formula gives you equilibrium or Fair Value. If stocks
(the basket) go up faster than the futures, you might sell the expensive stocks
and buy the cheaper futures. If the futures ran faster then you would, do the
opposite. This is called index arbitrage or sometimes program trading....
"Anyway, the arbitrage between baskets and futures is now much bigger thanks
to the addition of Exchange Traded Funds (ETF's). So now you can "arb" the
basket against the futures or the S&P Index (ETF) (or any combo thereof).
It is a huge market."
* Trading desks do arbitrage program trading for a fraction of a percent on
a trade. Any attempt by the Fed to manipulate the market would just make a
lot of money for hedge funds and trading desks.
* The amounts of money required to attempt such a manipulation would be huge.
We are talking tens of billions of dollars if there was a true collapse going
on. The collective size of the trading community in the world (hedge funds
and "prop" desks - a prop desk is a proprietary desk for an investment bank
or broker-dealer) is in the multiple hundreds of billions. It would require
the willingness to lose billions of dollars every time you took the plunge,
so to speak.
* If the Fed or Treasury or some slush fund did buy stocks, it would inject
liquidity or more total money into the financial system or money supply. Since
the Fed openly manipulates the money supply every day in transactions that
everyone can see, in order for the Fed to hide the activity of the PPT, they
would have to take out liquidity by selling treasury notes. Otherwise, the
numbers at the end of the day or week would not add up, and someone would notice.
But if they were taking out liquidity and the money supply did not go down,
then someone would know something was up. You can't hide these numbers, unless
you can get a lot of clerks at the Fed and elsewhere to agree to lie.
* You could not keep something of this size secret. Period. The orders would
have to be entered somewhere. The theory is that Goldman Sachs or Citibank
(or pick a firm) is part of this conspiracy. That means that multiple traders
and officers would have to be in the know. You cannot mask trades of that size
because it would essentially be the largest hedge fund in the world. Someone
would spill the beans. Can you imagine the signing bonus from a book publisher
if you could prove the existence of the PPT?
I hereby offer a $100,000 advance against 50% of the royalties to anyone who
can "show me the trades." Give me names and dates. I will write the book, and
we both become famous.
Further, can you imagine what political hay the opposition political party
would make of the proven existence of a PPT? Do you think that the Dems wouldn't
love to embarrass Bush with "proof" of his manipulation of the market? Can
you imagine Newt Gingrich or Tom DeLay (Republicans) not beating up Clinton
and Robert Rubin for crimes against the market and for losing billions of dollars
of tax-payer money?
If the President's Working Group was really the PPT, do you think every former
SEC and CFTC Commissioner (and there are maybe a dozen) would all keep silent
after they are out? Do you think their wives (or husbands) would not tell all
in a divorce hearing? Do you really think that if Harvey Pitt would have allowed
George W. to fire him if he could blow the whistle?
A Hedge Fund's Secret Wish
* I don't doubt there are all sorts of secrets that officials in our government
keep from us, and that all sorts of untoward things are done every day in
the government, that if we found out we would be shocked.
But if the PPT existed, it would be just too big to keep secret. If it were
small enough to be secret, it could have no effect upon the market. I don't
doubt for a second that if the Fed decided to buy stocks and was willing to
risk losing hundreds of billions, they could move the stock market up for a
period of time. But then what do they do? They own a bunch of stocks. Could
they ever sell without causing a crash?
Furthermore, if there is a PPT, they are the most incompetent team in the
world because the markets have indeed plunged. I can guarantee you this: it
is every hedge fund's most fervent wish that there was a plunge protection
team, because it would be a license to print money trading against them. Imagine,
having someone on the market with an unlimited bank account whose objective
was to lose money? Could it get any better?
Some would argue that the PPT does not lose money - that they are so good
they buy the stocks and wait until the market goes back up before they sell.
If there were individuals who had such god-like insight into the future direction
of the market, they would be running their own funds, making tens of millions
in annual fees, far more than they would make as a bureaucrat. Further, as
the bear market has moved the market down, the losses would be in the hundreds
of billions by now. That much loss cannot be hidden, even if you have a printing
press.
* If you believe in the PPT, it probably would do no good to mention that
the rules under which the Fed operates makes it illegal for them to participate
in such an operation, since you would assume they would not follow their own
rules.
Let's look at the Crash of 1987. At the end of the day, there was a huge amount
of futures buying, which some say is evidence of the Fed or other group stepping
in and stopping the bleeding. What really happened is that the futures got
so out of whack with the physicals that it was an obvious arbitrage position,
and Paul Tudor Jones, one of the largest and certainly one of the more highly
respected traders stepped in and began to cover his huge short position. Jones
was a legend. Once the word hit he was covering, the crowd stormed in. No conspiracy.
No hidden machinations. Just some traders taking monster profits.
And that often is what you see when there are large and strange moves. Just
traders taking profit, either on the long side or short side. It is what Chris
Fuligni calls his TFTF trade: Too Far Too Fast. When the market moves too much
in one direction, traders take profits.
In my opinion, and as I have made the case for several years, this market
is too high compared to historical trends of value. In my opinion, it has much
further to go on the downside. But secular bear markets do not go straight
down to "fair value." It takes years of going down, with large rallies back
up and then more down before the bottom is finally reached. At every step,
there are advisors and investors who decide that "now" is a good time to invest.
There is no mass consensus.
Remember, over half the years within a secular bear market cycle are up years,
and most of those are up by 20% or more. As the fairly bearish Dan Denning
wrote in Strategic Investment today: "...confidence can be a heady thing. If
Hussein ends up dead and Osama bin Laden is captured, look for 10,000 on the
Dow in short order. Euphoria is a powerful emotion."
Those who feel the market is over-valued have ample justifications. You can
go to Standard and Poor's website and look at their valuations. If you take
pro forma earnings (that is Earnings Before Interest and Hype) the current
P/E ratio is 18, which is high, but certainly within historical norms. But
if you look at actual "as reported" earnings, the P/E ratio jumps to 30.29.
That is in nose-bleed territory to the historical average of 15.
If you look at core earnings, the number is over 35. Core earnings subtract
options expense and pension fund overstatements. The new accounting standards
will probably mandate firms to start subtracting these items, so the core earnings
P/E ratio is a number that is increasingly going to be seen by the investor.
Not fair, say the bulls. To get true historical comparisons, you have to compare
apples to apples. The new standards distort the actual profitability of a company,
and give us no fair historical comparison.
To that, I politely say bunk. Pre-1990, pension benefits did not have nearly
the impact that it does today, as there was not that much over-funding and
estimates of future earnings were far more conservative. It is only in the
decade of financial engineering, where a CEO could create a 10% rise in his
company earnings just by changing the assumptions of his company pension fund
that these elusive pension fund earnings started to show up in the books in
a significant way.
Of course, that helped the CEO's personal options, which again the company
did not have to expense. Options were not a big deal prior to 1980 and not
all that significant even until 1990.
Accounting standards always tighten up in bear markets. Investors become more
conservative. They are not willing to project earnings growth far into the
future. That is why the market drops.
If you go to Decisionpoint.com, you can see in one of the many hundreds of
charts available that if the P/E ratio for the S&P 500 were 15, about average
for the last century, the market would be at 420 today. As markets have always
over-corrected, generally to below single digit P/E ratios, if it went to 10,
the S&P 500 would be at 280, down 68% from here. That is pretty ugly.
I believe we are going to single digit ratios. I also believe it will take
a decade or more. In that time, earnings will grow, and probably double or
more without having to be too optimistic. What happens in secular bears is
that earnings grow and P/E ratios drop. But it does not happen all at once.
It takes time.
We can be thankful for that, because if the markets were to drop 68% today,
we would be facing a depression as severe as our grandparents faced. It would
be ugly, ugly, ugly. Thus, in a kind of perverted logic, we should be grateful
for market cheerleaders, as they prop up the economy and stave off a disaster
scenario. But as individuals, we don't have to listen to them.
The point is that there are those who see the market as under-valued. When
it does not go up they blame hedge funds, short sellers and wicked analysts
for their losses. There are those who see the market as over-priced and want
the market to conform to their worldview, and they see rallies as evidence
of the Plunge Protection Team. The world is not as it should be, and there
must be some secret reason. That is especially true if they are short and the
market goes up.
The real reason is what Richard Russell says over and over, "The market is
the market. It just is." In a real sense, this is more scary than the possible
existence of a plunge protection team. It means we are subject to the vagaries
of a market which is out of anyone's ability to control. I bet there have been
a few times you wish someone could have made the market go back up. In a world
where anything can happen, risk control is everything. It would be nice to
know that I could count on some secret group to protect my funds, but it doesn't
exist. I am responsible for my own risk protection and personal portfolio.
Randomness and Responsibility
Thus, we return to Art Cashin's final bit of wisdom: "People can't stand two
things - randomness and responsibility. On the first point we again cite Voltaire: "If
God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him." The premise is obvious
and a truism - life must have order. The class needs rules and a teacher. An
occasional accident is acceptable, though maybe not understandable. The logical
(for many of us) existence of a deity transmutes in the secular world into
- someone is in charge. (The government, the moneyed interests, some religious
or ethnic group, etc.)
"Now factor in the inability to accept responsibility.
"If my horse doesn't win - the race was fixed - the horse was doped. The variations
are myriad. It can never be my fault or my miscalculation. That could mean
I was careless, or confused or hasty or maybe even wrong. The latter is unacceptable
so it must be someone else.
"Thus conspiracy theorists and the plunge protection theme. In four decades,
I've heard hundreds of theories. The collapse of the Hunt Brothers' silver
bubble was roundly blamed on a government conspiracy. As time went on it was
obvious there was no conspiracy - not there or in hundreds of other cases.
But....when your perfect game is ruined in the final frame (bowling) or the
final inning (baseball) - dashed hopes demand a villain - an evil deus ex machina.
They stole it from me, I tell ya!!"
Time Out
It is late on a Friday evening. I have had more distractions on my Friday e-letter
writing afternoon than any time in recent memory. There are a dozen other
topics that deserve mentioning. Steve Roach of Morgan Stanley now predicts
the world will slide into a double dip recession as the SARs virus hits the
world economy. Housing remains strong, yet the IMF warns of a bubble in housing.
Dennis Gartman reports shipping rates and shipping is up, which means world
trade may be improving. Unemployment is up, manufacturing is down, and the
service industry is in contraction mode.
In short, it does not look good for my Muddle Through scenario. While I clearly
think we will have another recession, at the beginning of the year, I thought
we could avoid it for 2003. Now, I seriously have questions about that prediction.
And yet, the economy will probably have grown a little more than 1% in this
last quarter, and it looks to do so in the second quarter. Could an end to
the war create that euphoria Denning mentioned. Stay tuned, as I will just
have to address this next week.
Speaking of conspiracies, my Dallas Mavericks lost to the Lakers last night.
I was right down front, and I can tell you that there was clearly a conspiracy
among the referees to allow Shaq to get away with anything. You could see them
looking at each other. I saw all sorts of winks and hand signals. We were robbed.
Your ready for the weekend analyst,
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