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April 25, 2008 Banks, Brokers and Bullsh1t - v.3.1 |
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This is part of my continuing diatribe on the state of the US and global banking system. As a backgrounder, and to get caught up on where I am coming from, see:
In my most recent post, I admitted to being disappointed in myself for allowing volatility to drop my personal investment results below my internal 110% annualized return goal. This volatility stemmed from financials and the broad market rallying due to the "alleged and percieved mollification of systemic financial system failure". Now, I never believed we were at risk of systemic failure. That was just the fodder of tabloidal media outlets. Asset securitization and OTC counterparty credit risk management is on the verge of systemic failure, though, and these are significant portions of our financial system. I don't think these failures will bring the whole financial system down, just the portions that need it. We were, and still are, at risk of a correction where the excesses of the past will be shaken out and weaknesses in our system will break and then be eliminated, bringing down the players that were overly reliant on those weaknesses. Examples of these weak points are:
A quick perusal of this weeks news and analysis pretty much reveals what I thought to be the case - this bear market sucker's rally will probably end in a deep downturn and entrance (continuation of) a prolonged bear market. These wide swings are the cause and source of the volatility that has now forced me to implement return robbing dampeners to quell these wide swings. I am also in a quandary. Should I allow the volatility to persist, for the aggregate risk adjusted return is still way above most other's efforts and alpha is being generated over both broad market and hedge fund indices, or should I spend the time and money to dampen both volatility and return to make everything look pretty and ease my own stomach? The answer really relies on who sees my returns and what kind of observers they happen to be. I think that too many investors are trying to mimic the steady fixed income-like and large cap returns that are the bread and butter of many institutions. The problem with that is that it actually reduces returns over the long run and introduces risk. I don't have time to get into this now, but it will definitely be on the table for a future blog posting. Now, back to this week's events: Credit risk as measured in CDS markets recedes significantly after Fed bail-out of Bear Stearns and introduction of discount window and long-term swap facilities by central banks in UK, EMU, and U.S. Some analysts see this as evidence for receding systemic risk and the beginning of the end of the credit crisis. Since I never saw the risk as "the end of the world", but more as "the end of the world as we know it" (not catastrophic, but both systemic and necessary), I won't get into this debate here and now. Just realize the risk is truly significant, and has yet to be purged. As I have always alleged, this is a solvency issue, not a liquidity issue and the Fed is trying to extend the banks lifelines in the form of liquidity to allow them to earn their way out of the solvency hole. The problem is that the hole is so big, more than Bear Stearns is likely to fall into it - AND - this is the end of the high profit portion of the Wall Street business cycle and we are trendind downwards. They will not be able to earn their way out of it in a down business cycle. As a matter of fact, after forenscically reviewing the latest earnings reports of Lehman and Morgan Stanley (the Street's Riskiest Bank), you will find more public relations, marketing, one time non-cash gains and shenanigans than actual cash earnings - see Shenanigans at Morgan and Lehman. Commercial and regional banks are sitting on the fastest growing pile of NPAs and the thinnest capital ratios since the S&L crisis, which we are most likely doomed to repeat - The worst is behind us, unless massive bank failure is considered a bad thing. In "Why
this Crisis is Far from Finished", Mohamed El-Erian chimes in agreement
with me, which shows just how smart he is Commercial Banks Step to Fed Window: U.S. commercial banks this week increased their use of the Federal Reserve's discount window while investment banks cut their use of a direct-lending program, a sign that the focus of credit strains may be shifting from brokers to depository institutions. Like clockwork, as I comment on and short the regional and commercial lenders, there issues come out to the forefront. Here's the take from Insitutional Risk Analytics :
I've been beating this drum since I started this blog. You cannot lever up at the top of an asset bubble, allow that bubble to pop, and expect to delever and wait for asset values to return to bubble top prices. It they ever return to those prices, it will probably be a long ways off. The best way to explain this is with a visualization. We are now at the top of that big spike you see at the right of the graph. There is no way in hell we are going back there any time soon, and if you borrowed 8 to 30x your equity to buy stuff at that peak, you're done - plain and simple. Look back 115 years. For over a decade, and since the remnants of the US gold rush, we have never seen a spike off of costs on a nominal or real basis as we have seen over the last 7 years. Mark to market losses will be real credit losses in just a few more quarters - believe it. The Ambac, MBIA AAA fallacy is just that - a fallacy and those mark to market losses are already becoming actual operating losses at a much quicker pace than nearly all but a small handful of us believed - Ambac does it again. Who are the biggest counterparties to these guys? See Banks, Brokers, & Bullsh1+ part 2 and I know who's holding the $119 billion dollar bag! Alas, I digress, and back to the interview with IRA:
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Reggie
Middleton
Well, I fancy myself the personification of the free thinking maverick, the ultimate non-conformist as it applies to investment and analysis. I am definitively outside the box - not your typical or stereotypical Wall Street investor. I work out of my home, not a Manhattan office. I build my own technology and perform my own research - in lieu of buying it or following the crowd. I create and follow my own macro strategies and am by definition, a contrarian to the nth degree. Since I use my research as a tool for my own investing to actually put food on my table, I can stand behind it as doing what it is supposed too - educate, illustrate and elucidate. I do not sell advice, I am not a reporter hence do not sell stories, and I do not sell research. I am an entrepreneur who exists just outside of mainstream corporate America and Wall Street. This allows me freedom to do things that many can not. For instance, I pride myself on developing some of the highest quality research available, regardless of price. No conflicts of interest, no corporate politics, no special favors. Just the hard truth as I have found it - and believe me, my team and I do find it! I welcome any and all to peruse my blog, use my custom hacked collaborative social tools, read the articles, download the files, and make a critical comparison of the opinion referencing the situation at hand and the time stamp on the blog post to the reality both at the time of the post and the present. Hopefully, you will be as impressed with the Boom Bust as I am and our constituency. I pay for significant information and data, and am well aware of the value of quality research. I find most currently available research lacking, in both quality and quantity. The reason why I had to create my own research staff was due to my dissatisfaction with what was currently available - to both individuals and institutions. So here I am, creating my own research for my own investment activity. What really sets my actions apart is that I offer much of what I produce to the public without charge - free to distribute and redistribute, as long as it is left unaltered and full attribution is given to the author and owner. Why would I do such a thing when others easily charge 5 and 6 digits annually for what some may consider a lesser product? It is akin to open source analysis! My ideas and implementations are actually improved and fine tuned when bounced off of the collective intellect of the many, in lieu of that of the few - no matter how smart those few may believe themselves to be. Very recently, I have started charging for the forensics portion of my work, which has freed up the resources to develop the site to deliver even more research for free, particularly on the global macro and opinion front. This move has allowed me to serve an more diverse constituency, which now includes the institutional consumer (ie., investment turned consumer banks, hedge funds, pensions, etc,) as well as the newbie individual investor who is just getting started - basically the two polar opposites of the investing spectrum. I am proud to announce major banks as paying clients, and brand new investors who take my book recommendations and opinions on true wealth and success to heart. So, this is how I use my background and knowledge in new media, distributed computing, risk management, insurance, financial engineering, real estate, corporate valuation and financial analysis to pursue, analyze and capitalize on global macroeconomic opportunities. I have included a more in depth bio at the bottom of the page for those who really, really need to know more about me. Visit his blog Boom Bust Blog. Copyright © 2007-2009 Reggie Middleton Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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