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After a wild week in the markets, there is so much to write about, it is hard
to know where to start. The headline number says jobless claims fell 20,000.
That would be good news, if it were true. Sometimes you need to look behind
the curtain to see how these statistics are made. As we will see, claims were
actually up by 26,000. I wrote in my annual 2008 predictions that the big story
of the year would turn out to be credit default swaps and counter-party risk.
I will admit to thinking it would take more than a few weeks for that to happen.
And the Senate is hampering the ability of the Fed to work, and doing so for
blatant political purposes, in an effort to reduce the independence of the
Fed. There is that and a lot more to cover in what should be an interesting
letter.
But first, let me briefly mention my upcoming 5th annual Strategic Investing
Conference (co-hosted with my US partners Altegris Investments). It will be
April 10-12 in La Jolla, and is shaping up to be the best conference we have
ever done. Paul McCulley, Louis Gave, Rob Arnott, George Friedman of Stratfor,
and several more well-known names who I expect will commit this next week are
on tap, as well as some of the smartest hedge fund managers I know. Find out
how these guys are taking advantage of the volatility in what is clearly becoming
a bear market, and what you can do to join them.
Although it frustrates me, we have to limit attendance to investors with a
net worth of more than $2,000,000, for regulatory reasons. Invitations will
be sent out soon. If you would like to go and have not signed up for my free
accredited investor letter, you can go to www.accreditedinvestor.ws and
sign up. One of my partners from around the world will contact you. (Again,
for regulatory reasons we have to talk with every individual who plans to attend,
as private offerings and hedge funds will be presented, and we have to make
sure that the legal requirements for such presentations are met.)
I should note that conference attendees resoundingly tell me this is the best
conference they attend. Space is limited and will fill up, so save the dates.
Democrats Ready to Politicize the Fed
Good friend and fishing buddy David Kotok recently brought a very disturbing
item to my attention, and feel I need to pass it on. Senator Chris Dodd, Democrat
from Connecticut, he who aspires to be president, is seriously hampering the
ability of the Fed to respond to the current crisis and threatening the independence
of the Fed in the process, all for a little partisan gain. His fellow Democrats
are going along with him.
Basically, there are two vacant seats on the Fed. President Bush has nominated
two very qualified people with distinguished records and backgrounds who have
hands-on experience in real-world banking, as opposed to being academicians.
These are not political appointments, but serious economists.
Dodd refuses to allow these nominations, or any others, to move forward. Plus,
Dodd has let it be known that he will not hold a confirmation vote on current
Fed governor Randy Krozner, whose expertise is mortgage markets, when his term
ends January 3.
Under current rules, since there are now just five Fed governors instead of
the normal seven, you cannot have just three governors on a conference call,
as that would be a violation of the public meeting rules, since three would
constitute a quorum and potential majority. That clearly makes communication
difficult. It also means that the current governors, who already have tight
schedules, have to take on extra duties.
Why would Dodd do this? He has made it clear that he is not happy with Fed
policy, as has his counterpart in the House, Barney Frank; so some of this
is just personal pique. They want the Fed to respond to their political goals.
But some of it is clearly partisan. If there is a Democratic president, they
would be able to immediately nominate three new governors, and would not have
to reconfirm Ben Bernanke as chairman, which means he would leave and the new
president would appoint the chairman.
Dodd clearly wants a say in this, and wants a Fed that will pay attention
to his politically driven needs. This would mean the Fed would be short-staffed
for at least another 18 months, which is not a good thing. The Fed does more
than just hold eight meetings and set monetary policy. They have real work
that needs to get done.
Whoever the new president is, they will get to nominate who they like as governor
terms come to an end. But to act as Dodd is currently doing threatens the independence
of the Fed, which is a critical part of the economic world. You can criticize
the Fed and their policies, and I often do, but every right-thinking person
agrees that Fed policy should not be set in Congress and subject to political
whim. The last time we had a Fed chairman who let politics suggest policy was
William Miller under Jimmy Carter, and that did not turn out well.
Dodd is sending a message that is not appropriate. These should not be political
appointments. These appointments have serious economic consequences. Shame
on Dodd for holding hostage an economy which is in crisis for his own political
advantage, and shame on a Democratic Senate leadership which goes along with
him.
More BLS BS
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that jobless claims dropped
a significant 21,000 in the last week to 310,000 and down by 56,000 in the
last four weeks. As a Bear Stearns analyst wrote: "Although claims are volatile
early in the year, and in recent years have been prone to upward revision,
the magnitude of the decline in initial jobless claims in the first two weeks
of the year suggests that job creation did not deteriorate further in January."
However, this claims data does not square with the employment numbers which
came out last week and showed a significantly weaker jobs picture. Note that
continuing claims is in a decided rising pattern, while initial claims seem
to have turned back down.

So what gives? It seems that BLS statistics, like making sausage, is a very
messy process. The key factor here is that the number (301,000) is seasonally
adjusted. This means the BLS smoothes the data on an annualized basis, which
makes the number less volatile from week to week. And as you might guess, that
process of seasonally adjusting looks at prior data points and projects future
trends
This of course leads to large revisions at turning points. For example, the
BLS is now indicating it expects to revise the year ending in March of 2007
downward by some 300,000 jobs. And you can expect further downward revisions
as time goes on.
But let's return to the initial claims data. Every week I get an analysis
of the claims data from long-time reader John Vogel. Mostly it is not very
exciting, but he does a very thorough job of examining the actual data and
comparing it to previous years. Stick with me here as I run through a few numbers.
Last week there were actually 521,280 initial claims. That number rose to
547,637 this week. So why didn't the seasonally adjusted number rise? Because
in week three of previous years the number dropped, often considerably. In
2007 the number was essentially flat. But in 2006, the drop in the third week
was 116,000 and in 2005 it was 226,000. There were also big drops in 2004 and
2003, 187,000 and 172,000 respectively.
So, when you smooth the number out by making seasonal adjustments, you expect
a large drop in week three from week two. Except that we did not get that drop,
we got a rise of 26,000, which is clearly not the trend for the last five years.
That also squares with last week's employment survey which shows job weakness.
So, why use the seasonally adjusted number? Because the actual number is very
volatile. Last week's number was considerably lower than the years of 2003-5,
by an average of 175,000 or so. That would be considered good, yes?
But this week's number is the highest since 2002. That would be considered
bad, of course. What it really means is that the BLS numbers should be taken
with a huge grain of salt around periods when the economy is changing, as it
is now. And using them to make a case that the economy is not weakening, as
a number of pundits did, could be considered misleading. But now, gentle reader,
if that did not put you to sleep, you know more than most pundits.
Let me make a quick point. The staff at the BLS does a very good job in a
very difficult environment. As time goes on, they revise their statistics into
something that is accurate and useful. But to use the data as it is initially
reported to make investment decisions is not a wise thing. The data is not
intended for that purpose.
Credit Default Swaps: The Continuing Crisis
As noted above, I said three weeks ago that the big story for 2008 would be
the counter-party risk for credit default swaps. That story is coming faster
and larger than I thought. Bill Gross of Pimco suggests that the ultimate cost
could be another $250 billion dollars on top of the $250-plus billion in subprime
losses. That means we have only seen the tip of the iceberg in write-offs in
the financial sector.
The real problem is the "monoline insurers" like ACA, Ambac, and MBIA. Here's
a quick primer on how they work. Let's say you are a small municipality and
want to borrow $10,000,000 for a bond offering to build a road or a water treatment
plant. If you went to the market with your credit rating, it would be a low
rating and the cost of the money would be high. But if you get one of the seven
monoline insurers to guarantee your bond, then you get whatever their credit
rating is. The fees for such insurance are lower than the savings you get on
the bond, so everyone wins.
But over the years, most of the monocline insurers went from boring municipal
bonds and jumped into the mortgage-backed security markets, selling credit
default swaps that significantly juiced up their earnings. But it also added
a lot of risk that they clearly, in hindsight, did not understand.
ACA has already seen its rating go from A to CCC, which is basically junk.
This puts it out of business, as no one will pay to be rated as junk. ACA now
has only $425 million in capital to cover the $69 billion in mortgage and corporate
bonds they insure. Interestingly, they added $20 billion of that between April
and September of last year. Talk about doubling down on a losing trade. Merrill
wrote down almost $2 billion in bonds that were insured by ACA. They will not
be alone.
Today, Fitch downgraded Ambac Financial Group two notches from AAA to AA.
That doesn't seem like a lot, until you realize that 74% of their revenue comes
from that AAA rating that covers $556 billion in municipal and structured finance
debt. Fitch did so because Ambac decided not to do an equity offering for $1
billion to stem the bleeding. Six months ago Ambac was at $96 or thereabouts.
Today it is as $6.20. Its market cap is only $629 million, so a $1 billion
offering would dilute current shareholders by around 70%. Ouch. And you can
bet any offering they do now will be on terms that shareholders will not like,
most likely a convertible offering that dilutes current shareholders even more.
Oh, and that means that 137,990 municipalities that were insured by Ambac
will see their credit ratings drop and their costs rise. Think their customers
will hang around?
Moody's says it is going to review MBIA. MBIA, which is rated AAA, raised
$1 billion last week from Warburg Pincus and did another offering for surplus
notes for $1 billion at 14%. As Michael Lewitt noted, that means 14% is the
new price for AAA bonds. Except that today it is 23%. If you bought that note,
you are not looking good right now. They are trading at 70 cents on the dollar.
Of course, that is better than Ambac's 30-year bonds, which are trading at
35 cents on the dollar.
When Warren Buffett bought Gen Re, the large re-insurer, five years ago, he
presciently made the decision to reduce their exposure to credit default swaps.
It took them four years to reduce the number of contracts from 23,218 to just
197 at the end of 2006.
"We lost over $400 million on contracts that were supposedly 'safe and properly
priced' and we did it in a leisurely way in a benign market," says Mr. Buffett. "If
we had to unwind it today in one month, who knows what would have happened?" (The
Wall Street Journal)
If you are a bank or regulated entity, and you have mortgage-backed securities
that have been written by a AAA monocline company, you can carry that debt
on your books as AAA. But as the companies get downgraded, you have to write
down the potential loss. Quoting from a recent note from Michael Lewitt:
"MBIA's total exposure to bonds backed by mortgages and CDOs was disclosed
to be $30.6 billion, including $8.14 billion of holdings of CDO-squareds (CDOs
that own other CDOs, or mortgages piled on top of mortgages, or, to quote Jeff
Goldblum's character in Jurassic Park again, 'a big pile of s&*^').
MBIA was being priced as a weak CCC-rated credit when it issued its bonds last
week; it is now being priced for a bankruptcy. MBIA's stock, which traded just
under $68 per share last October, dropped another $3.50 this morning to under
$10.00 per share.
"The bond insurers' business model is irreparably broken. In HCM's
view, it will be all but impossible for these companies to raise capital at
economic levels for the foreseeable future and certainly in enough time to
work out of their current difficulties. The performance of MBIA's 14 percent
bond issue will prove to have been the death knell for this business. The market
needs to come to the realization that the so-called insurance that these companies
were offering is not going to be there if it is needed. The fact that these
companies were rated AAA in the first place will remain one of the great puzzles
of modern finance for years to come."
You can bet that the $8 billion in CDO-squareds is gone. It is a matter of
time. MBIA's market cap is about $1 billion. Current shareholders will be lucky
if they only get diluted 75%.
Watch Warren Buffett swoop in and take that boring old municipal bond insurance
business. Watch a few large hedge funds buy the remains of the monoline carriers
to get their staff and experience (especially the municipal sales teams), and
launch new companies with pristine credit.
If you have Ambac or MBIA insurance, as a bank you have not yet written down
any debt they insured. They are still rated AAA. But that re-rating is coming.
And what about the monster CDS business in the hedge fund world? Who wins and
loses? There will be huge winners, and there will be total wipe-outs. There
are going to be more losses in the biggest banks, and even bigger investments
by Sovereign Wealth Funds. Count on it. This is a story we will return to time
and time again.
A Stimulating Political Package
Today President Bush proposed a $150 billion package to stimulate the economy.
There is no telling what the final package will look like. Bush is seeking
something rather simple and direct, but proposals for all sorts of complicated
goodies started to immediately surface, some of which is clearly not stimulus
but political opportunism.
Just a few thoughts. $150 billion is about 1% of total GDP, so the hope would
be that you get a 1% boost in GDP. But that is not reality. In 2001, Bush and
Congress instituted a huge stimulus program, sending out billions. Academic
studies found that most of the money went into savings, which is hardly a stimulus.
Further, we are in far worse credit shape now than then. How much of the $150
billion would be spent to pay down credit card debt? That would be a good thing,
except that it's not stimulus. And it looks like the payments will come around
April 15. Care to guess how much of that will go to paying taxes?
In short, I rather doubt the stimulus package will do much good, except that
it allows politicians to demonstrate they are concerned about our problems,
and willing to spend taxpayer money to prove their concern.
The Economy Continues to Weaken
Briefly, the data is suggesting continued weakness. Even the perma-bullish
Art Laffer last night threw in the towel and said on Larry Kudlow's show that
we are in the beginning of a recession.
The Philadelphia Fed's Business Survey is suggesting that activity is down
to levels not seen since the last recession in 2001. Twice as many firms reported
a decrease in business as reported an increase. Employment was down for the
first time in years, and new orders were negative. Oh, and 49% of firms said
prices paid were up. Last August only 16% said that. Only 2% said they were
paying lower prices for input materials. The following chart from Greg Weldon's
latest piece says it all:

The market has been dropping not just in the US but all over the world. Gentle
reader, this is what the beginning of a bear market looks like. This is a chart
of the last ten years of the S&P 500. Notice that when the bear market
started in the fall of 2000, there were numerous periods where there were 10-15%
gains which eventually faded away.

I keep hearing that traders want to see capitulation. Unless we are in a brave
new world, you don't see capitulation in one month. This is a longer process,
and it will work out in ways that confound us all. Future earnings are going
to be under stress as the economy slows. We will get a series of earnings warnings
at the end of this quarter, which will further weaken the market. Rebounds
are to be sold in this environment.
And I can't resist. The following pictures of Ben Bernanke are from his recent
Congressional testimony, courtesy of Bill King. This is a man who is not happy.


I guess it was a rough day at the office.
Europe, Phoenix, and My New Chair
I am off to Switzerland, Spain, and London tomorrow. Four cities in six days,
which is not a thing I would recommend. The schedule is pretty full, but I
am really going to try and get some rest and work out as much as possible.
This is the year I am going to lose that last eight pounds, and to do that
I am going to have to be more disciplined on the road.
I am going to be in Phoenix February 9-10, speaking several times at the Cambridge
House Resource Investment Conference. This is a large, free conference with
an outstanding line-up of speakers, mostly focused on natural resources and
gold. If you are in the area, or simply looking for more information on gold
and natural resources, you should consider attending. As noted, the conference
is free if you pre-register. You can find out more by going to: http://www.cambridgehouse.com/mauldin/access.html and
clicking on "Phoenix."
I recently wrote about a new chair that I am quite enthusiastic about. I have
spent an embarrassing amount of money looking for a chair that would help my
back. I found it in The Health Chair, and mentioned it in this letter. Lots
of people responded and got the chair, and the accolades are coming in. Freddy
V from Switzerland wrote the designer the following letter, which says it all.
"... recently I had to do some truly tedious work on the compy. I sat for
days and consequently for long stretches of hours on my new chair. After a
few hours my back started with familiar symptoms of pain coming from the muscles.
What did I do? I simply moved the back supporters into different positions
and wowie, the pain disappeared without me noticing first. I never had to pause,
to interrupt my work. I sat for hours and hours and could do the job without
being bothered by any kind of tiredness or pain. Am I a fan of your health
chair, this is simply outstanding and unbelievable! Congratulations from my
side and a huge thank you for making this possible. I will stay grateful for
a long time. I only hope this chair is surviving me, it will be the most precious
thing my heirs have to fight about. Unless the other two kids opt for one too...
Freddy."
You can read more about the chair by going to: http://www.thehealthchair.com/jmep.html.
Your back will thank you.
It is time to hit the send button. I am actually looking forward to Europe.
I will be meeting with old friends, new friends, and some very interesting
people. Other than the airports, it is fun. Have a good week, and keep your
hedges fully loaded.
Your can't believe what a ticket to Europe costs analyst,
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