q-ratio, Enterprise Value, and more…

When Valuing Wall Street was published in 2000, it went largely un-noticed for 2 reasons: first, no one wanted to hear about the stock market being overvalued, and second, it was overshadowed by the more famous Irrational Exuberance. But I recently went back to the book to see if there were any lessons to be gleaned, either for stock selection or asset allocation for the current environment.

The study has led me to some interesting discussions and some new sources, so I’ll try to keep it coherent.

The q-ratio, also known as Tobin’s q, after the man who laid the foundations, is a simple ratio of the value of the stock market to corporate net worth. As with so many things in life, it’s simple, but extremely powerful. This ratio has some interesting characteristics. For starters, it seems (based on a few hundred years of data) to be mean-reverting. It makes sense that the ratio can’t be too extreme, for some logical economic reasons which we won’t discuss here. Second, unlike P/B, it doesn’t depend on listed cost basis, but rather can account for replacement value and inflation. Third, it appears to have been a useful tool at market turning points. So far so good. We’ll get back to some other positives in a bit, but what about issues?

The single biggest issue is one of timing. q-ratio appears to be more than a little off, making it incredibly hard to use as a predictive tool. That’s a big one. Second, we like seeing scalability in robust factors. That is, we would want the same factor to be valid for a company, an industry, and a market (fractability). Because of the disparate value of intangibles, especially across industries, q fails on the company level. Click here for a discussion of intangibles and q.

Going back to q’s positive attributes . . . I was struck by the simple logic of the ratio, and the implications for allocation that it provides. In the end, valuation metrics attempt to do the same thing: find robust ratios between current prices, assets, and earnings streams. Going back to some of the work I’ve done on stock selection and criteria, I went back to the idea of an enterprise multiple. For an academic review of EV, click here.

That, not surprisingly, took me back to Prof. Shiller’s CAPE and a look at today’s markets. Confirmatory bias? Definitely. But it also gave me an idea for our site. I won’t reveal it now, but look for an added section in resources in the next couple of weeks.

For now, I’ll leave you with this:

q and CAPE

“On 10th December, 2009 the S&P 500 was at 1102. At this level both q and CAPE show the market to be 48% overvalued.” Definitely visit the source for this chart: http://www.smithers.co.uk/page.php?id=34

Is Oregon a sign of things to come?

From the wsj.com:

…Oregon voters approved two special tax measures Tuesday designed to close a $733 million state budget gap. With 91% of the vote counted, Measure 66 garnered 54% of ballots and Measure 67 received 53%, the Associated Press reported…

…Measure 66 increases Oregon’s personal-income-tax rate by two percentage points for households earning over $250,000 a year. Measure 67 calls for an increase in the state’s minimum corporate income tax, currently $10 a year, and imposes a tax on gross revenues for corporations that don’t report a profit.

…”Passage of these measures means we keep core services of education, health care and public safety that Oregon families, businesses, and communities count on,” said Oregon House Speaker Dave Hunt, a Democrat who represents Clackamas County. Defeat, he said, would have forced the state to cut nearly a billion dollars more from such services.

The twin ballot measures also served as a gauge of anti-business populism and highlighted a nationwide debate over whether to fix state budgets by targeting the affluent. But they also fueled resentment of “tax and spend” legislators, as well as public-employee unions whose members enjoy job security at a time when thousands here have lost jobs.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704094304575028951284541726.html?mod=WSJ_hps_MIDDLEThirdNews

Increasing our subsription price

Dear readers,

Due to an increase in traffic and in order to keep our site limited to active traders, hedge fund managers, finance professionals, etc. we are increasing our monthly subscription price starting on February 15th. Any existing subscribers will not have any changes in the subscription plans and we will not increase the price for anyone subscribing by February 15th.

After February 15th, our subscription price will increase to $175/month with a two-week trial.

We will  continue to make improvements and hope to roll out our next iteration in the coming weeks, but in the meantime, we appreciate your continued trust and encouragement. As always, we hope that we can stimulate some new discussions, new ideas, and help generate new trades and investments.

We look forward to continuing our conversations.

Regards,

Yaron Sadan on behalf of The Hard Trade Team!

Is deflation winning out?

In the ongoing debate between inflation and deflation, we’ve heard both sides, tried to look to the historical record for guidance, sought comfort from statistics and experts, yet in the end have come up with strong arguments on all sides. We’re not even sure all the information is conflicting anymore, but in the end, we have to define and quantify a bias, a world view, a story that binds the different pieces together. We find ourselves continually biased towards deflation. It’s colored our decisions, and impacted our investments, and still we find ourselves now with seemingly conflicting investing ideas: short bonds and long metals sounds like it might be inflationary trades, underweight equity and long cash sound like they are deflationary trades. Underweight real estate, overweight India and zero weight to China – how do those all fit in? Are they hedges against each other? Compounding each other?

Let’s start with some basics. Deflation happens when an organization loses pricing power. It happens when organizations need to find lower market clearing prices. It can happen in positive ways (for example, by paying $500 for a laptop with the computing power that cost $5,000 a few short years ago) or negative ways (for example, when you’re house sells for 15% less than it did 3 years ago). It is initially painful to the seller, and especially painful to the levered seller. For the buyer, it feels great – initially. Until it doesn’t. At some point, the buyer decides that it’s worthwhile to wait longer for an even better deal. At some point after that, the buyer realizes that whatever product of service he/she is selling will probably also need to be discounted in order to clear, at which point a bit of fear sets in. And there’s the danger. On a more macro level – organizations that lose pricing power face a squeeze on margins. Those that are levered then face a squeeze on financing. On a more macro level – trade goes down, protectionism looks like a good idea, and then it’s over. At some point market clearing prices are reached, companies that survive with strong balance sheets regain pricing power, etc.

Why go through this exercise? Let’s think through the organizations we have to analyze: people, households, companies, governments. As we go through each organization, we find deflationary forces:

  1. People – labor is not in control these days. Wages are stagnant, at best. Unemployment is at 10% and if you’re using good statistics, closer to 18%. If anything, wages will be put under pressure in the near future.
  2. Households – continue to be indebted, even though many are trying to lower it. Residential real estate has been nationalized, with 95% of new mortgage originations occurring through GSE’s. Real estate has not stabilized, and commercial real estate is about to roll over.
  3. Companies – retails has actually held up better than expected, but credit card defaults are rising and the consumer will require more and more sales (deflation) to purchase. Internal demand from Asia hasn’t materialize (yet). Most importantly, margins have risen to such high levels off the back of squeezing costs. Margins going forward will be tough without an increase in revenues, which hasn’t come.
  4. Governments – governments can lose pricing power as well. Japan has been a startling anomaly, but I wouldn’t depend on it continuing or working for others. With debt to GDP starting to hit important levels, government bonds will lose their appeal, and with it, their pricing power. So, prices will have to go on sale. We’re seeing it already in the municipal bond market. We’re seeing it with sovereigns like Greece. We’ll see it with Treasuries as well. If the US government loses pricing power, won’t the dollar fall as well? Actually, it might not. The dollar will still be needed for trade, for a safe haven, and as a relative trade against the worse government situations in Japan and Europe, so we can have a situation where the dollar is up and the Treasuries are down.

All of these organizations seem to me to point to a contraction of margins on all fronts, loss of pricing power, consolidation, retrenchment, and balance sheet rewinds to the pre-”stock option/insanely low interest rate/agency-moral hazard games of manager vs. owner/etc.” times.

We continue to mistrust rallies at these valuations, and are wary of people screaming to buy the dips.

Suburbanization of Poverty

What are the policy implications of this study? I’m not sure, but I can see strains on local governments, especially with reduced tax collections. A recent column on CBS Marketwatch concludes that muni’s might be a better deal right now, but given the strain on local governments and the inability to print their way out, maybe the bond market is trying to tell us that local governments are in deeper trouble than we might think (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/surprise-munis-yield-more-than-treasurys-2010-01-26).

The Suburbanization of Poverty: Trends in Metropolitan America, 2000 to 2008

Elizabeth Kneebone, Senior Research Analyst, Metropolitan Policy Program
Emily Garr, Senior Research Assistant, Metropolitan Policy Program

The Brookings Institution

January 20, 2010 —

An analysis of the location of poverty in America, particularly in the nation’s 95 largest metro areas in 2000, 2007, and 2008 reveals that:

By 2008, suburbs were home to the largest and fastest-growing poor population in the country. Between 2000 and 2008, suburbs in the country’s largest metro areas saw their poor population grow by 25 percent—almost five times faster than primary cities and well ahead of the growth seen in smaller metro areas and non-metropolitan communities. As a result, by 2008 large suburbs were home to 1.5 million more poor than their primary cities and housed almost one-third of the nation’s poor overall.

  • Midwestern cities and suburbs experienced by far the largest poverty rate increases over the decade. Led by increasing poverty in auto manufacturing metro areas—like Grand Rapids and Youngstown—Midwestern city and suburban poverty rates climbed 3.0 and 2.2 percentage points, respectively. At the same time, Northeastern metros—led by New York and Worcester— actually saw poverty rates in their primary cities decline, while collectively their suburbs experienced a slight increase.
  • In 2008, 91.6 million people—more than 30 percent of the nation’s population—fell below 200 percent of the federal poverty level. More individuals lived in families with incomes between 100 and 200 percent of poverty line (52.5 million) than below the poverty line (39.1 million) in 2008. Between 2000 and 2008, large suburbs saw the fastest growing low-income populations across community types and the greatest uptick in the share of the population living under 200 percent of poverty.
  • Western cities and Florida suburbs were among the first to see the effects of the “Great Recession” translate into significant increases in poverty between 2007 and 2008. Sun Belt metro areas hit hardest by the collapse of the housing market saw significant gains in poverty between 2007 and 2008, with suburban increases clustered in Florida metro areas—like Miami, Tampa, and Palm Bay—and city poverty increases most prevalent in Western metro areas— like Los Angeles, Riverside, and Phoenix. Based on increases in unemployment over the past year, Sun Belt metro areas are also likely to experience the largest increases in poverty in 2009.

Over the course of this decade, two economic downturns translated into a significant rise in poverty, nationally and in many of the country’s metropolitan and non-metropolitan communities. Suburbs saw by far the greatest growth in their poor population and by 2008 had become home to the largest share of the nation’s poor. These trends are likely to continue in the wake of the latest downturn, given its toll on traditionally more suburbanized industries and the faster pace of growth in suburban unemployment. This ongoing shift in the geography of American poverty increasingly requires regional scale collaboration by policymakers and social service providers in order to effectively address the needs of a poor population that is increasingly suburban.

http://www.brookings.edu/papers/2010/0120_poverty_kneebone.aspx?p=1

John Mauldin’s “Outside the Box” – Commercial Real Estate

John Mauldin distributed the following piece yesterday and I thought it was worthwhile to post it in full. While the information shouldn’t be new nor surprising to regular readers of our letter, I think it’s always important to hear it in different ways. One of the pillars of a sustainable turnaround will be the stabilization of the real estate market, which we do not believe has materialized, contrary to the popular press. In this piece, Andy Miller (who’s being interviewed) goes through his impression of the commercial real estate market and comes out with a similar conclusion. Of particular note is Andy’s mention of the bond market hitting a wall. We agree! When the bond market no longer absorbs the government auctions, reality will set in across asset classes.

Volume 6 – Issue 7
January 25, 2010

An Insider’s View of the
Real Estate Train Wreck
By David Galland

I have been writing for a very long time about the coming debacle that the commercial real estate problem is going to be. This week’s Outside the Box is an interview that my good friend David Galland did with Andy Miller, a man on the inside of the coming commercial real estate crisis. I thought it was very revealing, as there are so many nuances to the problem. For instance, in some cases, if you default and walk away from the loan you may trigger huge taxes as the loan loss to the bank is now considered income to you. Ouch! So many strings to unravel as you figure this one out.

I asked David if I could use this as an Outside the Box, and he agreed. This was from Casey Research, a very good source for non-mainstream investment ideas. You can learn more or subscribe at a discount here.

I really think you will find this a very easy and informative read. Have a great week.

Your writing from Monaco on my way to Zurich analyst,

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box

An Insider’s View of the Real Estate Train Wreck
By David Galland, The Casey Report

The first time I spoke with real estate entrepreneur Andy Miller was in late 2007, when I asked him to serve on the faculty of a Casey Research Summit. As John Mauldin, a former faculty member himself, knows, we’re very selective with our speakers. And there was no one in the nation I wanted more than Andy to address the critical topic of real estate.

My interest in Andy was due to the fact that he has been singularly successful in pretty much all aspects of the real estate market, including financing and developing large projects – such as shopping centers, apartment communities, office buildings, and warehouses – from one end of the country to the other. His expertise has also allowed him to build an impressive business providing assistance to large financial institutions that need help in dealing with problem commercial real estate loans. As you might suspect, business is booming.

Back in 2007, however, what most intrigued me about Andy was that he had been almost alone among his peer group in foreseeing the coming end of the real estate bubble, and in liquidating essentially all of his considerable portfolio of projects near the top. There are people that think they know what’s going on, and those who actually know – Andy very much belongs in the latter category.

In fact, he initially refused to speak at our event, only agreeing very reluctantly after I had hounded him for several months. The reason for his refusal, I later found out, was that he had spoken at several industry events before the real estate collapse and had been all but booed off the stage for his dire outlook.

The happy ending of this story is that Andy’s speech at our Summit was a rousing success, and he enjoyed it so much that he has now spoken at several, and has kindly agreed to sit for periodic interviews to keep our readers up to date on the latest developments in this critical sector. So far, Andy’s real estate forecasts continue to come true.

As you’ll read in the following excerpt from my latest interview with Andy, who now spends considerable time each day helping the nation’s biggest banks cope with growing stacks of problem loans, he remains deeply concerned about the outlook for real estate.

David Galland

No one has been more right on the housing market in recent years. So, what’s coming next? Some of the housing numbers in the last few months look a little less ugly. Could housing be getting ready to get well?

MILLER: I don’t think so.

For all intents and purposes, the United States home mortgage market has been nationalized without anybody noticing. Last September, reportedly over 95% of all new loans for single-family homes in the U.S. were made with federal assistance, either through Fannie Mae and the implied guarantee, or Freddie Mac, or through the FHA.

If it’s true that most of the financing in the single-family home market is being facilitated by government guarantees, that should make everybody very, very concerned. If government support goes away, and it will go away, where will that leave the home market? It leaves you with a catastrophe, because private lenders for single-family homes are nervous. Lenders that are still lending are reverting to 75% to 80% loan to value. But that doesn’t help a homeowner whose property is worth less than the mortgage. So when the supply of government-facilitated loans dries up, it’s going to put the home market in a very, very bad place.

Why am I so certain that the federal government will have to cut back on its lending? Because most of the financing is done via the bond market, through Ginnie Mae or other government agencies. And the numbers are so big that eventually the bond market is going to gag on the government-sponsored paper.

The public doesn’t have any idea of the scale of the guarantees the government is taking on through Fannie, Freddie, and FHA. It’s huge. If people understood what the federal government has done and subjected the taxpayers to, there would be a public outrage. But you can’t get people to focus on it, and it’s very esoteric, it’s very hard to understand. But it’s not something the bond market won’t notice. The government can’t keep doing what it has been doing to support mortgage lending without pushing interest rates way up.

Refinancings of single-family homes are very interest-rate sensitive. Consumers have their backs against the wall. They have too much debt. Refinancing their maturing mortgages or their adjustable-rate mortgages is very problematic if rates go up, but that’s exactly where they’re headed. So anyone who’s comforted by current statistics on single-family homes should look beyond the data and into the dynamics of the market. What they’ll find is very alarming.

On that topic, recent data I saw was that something like 24% of the loans FHA backed in 2007 are now in default, and for those generated in 2008, 20% are in default, and the FHA is out of money.

MILLER: Fannie Mae had a $19 billion loss for the third quarter of 2009, and they are now drawing on their facility with the U.S. Treasury. We have all forgotten that Fannie and Freddie are still being operated under a federal conservatorship. On Christmas Eve, the agency announced that they were going to remove all the caps on the agencies.

So what about commercial real estate?

MILLER: When I saw what was happening in the housing market, I liquidated all my multifamily apartments, shopping centers, and office buildings. I liquidated all my loan portfolios, and I’m happy I did.

Then it occurred to me in 2005 and 2006 that the commercial world had to follow suit. Why? Because it’s a normal progression. Obviously, when single-family homes decline in value, multifamily apartments decline in value. And when consumers hit the wall with spending and debt, that’s going to have an impact on retailers that pay for commercial space.

Furthermore, the financing for retail properties had gotten ludicrous. The conduits were making loans that they advertised as 80% of property value when they originated them, but in reality the loan-to-value ratios were well over 100%. And I say that to you with absolute, categorical certainty, because I was a seller and nobody knew the value of the properties that I was selling better than I did. I had operated some of them for 20 years, so I knew exactly what they were bringing in. I knew what the operating expenses were, and I knew what the cap rates were. And, you know, the underwriting on the loan side and the purchasing side of these assets was completely insane. It was ludicrous. It did not reflect at all what the conduits thought they were doing. They were valuing the properties way too aggressively.

I became very bearish about the commercial business starting in late ‘05. In fact, I think I was in Argentina with Doug Casey, sitting on a veranda at one of the estancias, and he and I were lamenting what was going on in the real estate business, and I said there was going to be a huge adjustment in the commercial market.

Beyond the obvious, that the real estate market has taken pretty significant hits and some banks have been dragged under by their bad loans, what has really changed in real estate since the crash?

MILLER: I think the first thing that changed was that people learned that prices don’t go up forever. Lenders also saw that underwriting guidelines for commercial real estate loans, especially in the securitization markets, were erroneous. They realized that some of their properties had been financed too aggressively, but still, I don’t think even at the fall of Lehman, anybody was predicting a wholesale collapse in commercial real estate.

But they did see they should be more circumspect with loan underwritings. In fact, after the fall of Lehman, they completely stopped lending. I think they realized we had been living in fantasy land for 10 years. And that was the first change – a mental adjustment from Alice in Wonderland to reality.

Today it’s clear that commercial properties are not performing and that values have gone down, although I’ve got to tell you, the denial is still widespread, particularly in the United States and on the part of lenders sitting on and servicing all these real estate portfolios. People still do not understand how grave this is.

Right now there are an awful lot of banks that do an awful lot of commercial real estate lending, and for about a year now you’ve been telling me that you saw the first and second quarter of 2010 as being particularly risky for commercial real estate. Why this year, and what do you see happening with these loans and the banks holding them?

MILLER: It’s an educated guess, and it hasn’t changed. I still think that it’s second quarter 2010.

The current volume of defaults is already alarming. And the volume of commercial real estate defaults is growing every month. That can only keep going for so long, and then you hit a breaking point, which I believe will come sometime in 2010. When you hit that breaking point, unless there’s some alternative in place, it’s going to be a very hideous picture for the bond market and the banking system.

The reason I say second quarter 2010 is a guess is that the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve, and the FDIC can influence how fast the crisis unfolds. I think they can have an impact on the severity of the crisis as well – not making it less severe but making it more severe. I will get to that in a minute. But they can influence the speed with which it all unfolds, and I’ll give you an example.

In November, the FDIC circulated new guidelines for bank regulators to streamline and standardize the way banks are examined. One standout feature is that as long as a bank has evaluated the borrower and the asset behind a loan, if they are convinced the borrower can repay the loan, even if they go into a workout with the borrower, the bank does not have to reserve for the loan. The bank doesn’t have to take any hit against its capital, so if the collateral all of a sudden sinks to 50% of the loan balance, the bank still does not have to take any sort of write-down. That obviously allows banks to just sit on weak assets instead of liquidating them or trying to raise more capital.

That’s very significant. It means the FDIC and the Treasury Department have decided that rather than see 1,000 or 2,000 banks go under and then create another RTC to sift through all the bad assets, they’ll let the banking system warehouse the bad assets. Their plan is to leave the assets in place, and then, when the market changes, let the banks deal with them. Now, that’s horribly destructive.

Just to be clear on this, let’s say I own an apartment building and I’ve been making my payments, but I’m having trouble and the value of the property has fallen by half. I go to the bank and say, “Look, I’ve got a problem,” and the bank says, “Okay, let’s work something out, and instead of you paying $10,000 a month, you pay us $5,000 a month and we’ll shake hands and smile.” Then, even though the property’s value has dropped, as long as we keep smiling and I’m still making payments, then the bank won’t have to reserve anything against the risk that I’ll give the building back and it will be worth a whole lot less than the mortgage.

MILLER: I think what you just described is accurate. And it’s exactly a Japanese-style solution. This is what Japan did in ‘89 and ‘90 because they didn’t want their banking system to implode, so they made it easier for their banks to sit on bad assets without owning up to the losses.

And what’s the result? Well, it leaves the status quo in place. The real problem with this is twofold. One is that it prolongs the problem – if a bank is allowed to sit on bad assets for three to five years, it’s not going to sell them.

Why is that bad? Well, the money tied up in the loans the bank is sitting on is idle. It is not being used for anything productive.

Wouldn’t banks know that ultimately the piper must be paid, and so they’d be trying to build cash – trying to build capital to deal with the problem when it comes home to roost?

MILLER: The more intelligent banks are doing exactly that, hoping they can weather the storm by building enough reserves, so when they do ultimately have to take the loss, it’s digestible. But in commercial real estate generally, the longer you delay realizing a loss, the more severe it’s going to be. I can tell you that because I’m out there servicing real estate all day long. Not facing the problems, and not writing down the values, and not allowing purchasers to come in and take these assets at discounted prices – all the foot-dragging allows the fundamental problem to get worse.

In the apartment business, people are under water, particularly if they got their loan through a conduit. When maintenance is required, a borrower with a property worth less than the loan is very reluctant to reach into his pocket. If you have a $10 million loan on a property now worth $5 million, you’re clearly not making any cash flow. So what do you do when you need new roofs? Are you going to dig into your pocket and spend $600,000 on roofing? Not likely. Why would you do that?

Or a borrower who is sitting on a suburban office property – he’s got two years left on the loan. He knows he has a loan-to-value problem. Well, a new tenant wants to lease from him, but it would cost $30 a square foot to put the tenant in. Is the borrower going to put the tenant in? I don’t think so. So the problems get bigger.

Why would the owner bother going through a workout with the bank if he knows he’s so deep underwater he’s below snorkel depth?

MILLER: It’s always in your interest to delay an inevitable default. For example, the minute you give the property back to the bank, you trigger a huge taxable gain. All of a sudden the forgiveness of debt on your loan becomes taxable income to you. Another reason is that many of these loans are either full recourse or part recourse. If you’re a borrower who’s guaranteed a loan, why would you want to hasten the call on your guarantee? You want to delay as long as possible because there’s always a little hope that values will turn around. So there is no reason to hurry into a default. None.

So that’s from the borrower’s standpoint. But wouldn’t the banks want to clear these loans off their balance sheets?

MILLER: No. The banks have a lot of incentive to delay the realization of the problem because if they liquidate the asset and the loss is realized, then they have to reserve the loss against their capital immediately. If they keep extending the loan under the rules present today, then they can delay a write-down and hope for better days. Remember, you suffer if the bank succumbs and turns around and liquidates that asset, then you really do have to take a write-down because then your capital is gone.

So here we are, we’ve got the federal government again, through its agencies and the FDIC, ready to support the commercial real estate market. They’ve taken one step, in allowing banks to use a very loose standard for loss reserves. What else can they do?

MILLER: Well, obviously nobody knows, but I can guess at what’s coming by extrapolating from what the federal government has already done. I believe that the Treasury and the Federal Reserve now see that commercial real estate is a huge problem.

I think they’re going to contrive something to help assist commercial real estate so that it doesn’t hurt the banks that lent on commercial real estate. It’ll resemble what they did with housing.

They created a nearly perfect political formula in dealing with housing, and they are going to follow that formula. The entire U.S. residential mortgage market has in effect been nationalized, but there wasn’t any act of Congress, no screaming and shouting, no headlines in the Wall Street Journal or the New York Times about “Should we nationalize the home loan market in America.” No. It happened right under our noses and with no hue and cry. That’s a template for what they could do with the commercial loan market.

And how can they do that? By using federal guarantees much in the way they used federal guarantees for the FHA. FHA issues Ginnie Mae securities, which are sold to the public. Those proceeds are used to make the loans.

But it won’t really be a solution. In fact, it will make the problems much more intense.

Don’t these properties have to be allowed to go to their intrinsic value before the market can start working again?

MILLER: Yes. Of course, very few people agree with that, because if you let it all go today, there would be enormous losses and a tremendous amount of pain. We’re going to have some really terrible, terrible years ahead of us because letting it all go is the only way to be done with the problem.

Do you think the U.S. will come out of this crisis? I mean, do you think the country, the institutions, the government, or the banking sector are going to look anything like they do today when this thing is over?

MILLER: I know this is going to make you laugh, but I’m actually an optimist about this. I’m not optimistic about the short run, and I’m not optimistic about the severity of the problem, but I’m totally optimistic as it relates to the United States of America.

This is a very resilient place. We have very resilient people. There is nothing like the American spirit. There is nothing like American ingenuity anywhere on Planet Earth, and while I certainly believe that we are headed for a catastrophe and a crisis, I also believe that ultimately we are going to come out better.

________________________________________

Andy Miller is the co-founder of the Miller Frishman Group (www.millerfrishman.com), which includes three companies serving different sectors of the real estate market – from mortgage brokerage and banking, to the building, management, and marketing of commercial real estate across the United States. His firm is currently deeply involved in the distressed real estate business, assisting lenders across the nation with their growing portfolios of non-performing loans.

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Return-Free Risk

Treasury sells $10 bln in 1-month bills at 0%

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — The Treasury Department sold $10 billion in 1-month bills on Tuesday at a rate of 0%, the fourth time since December that the government has sold the short-term securities for no yield at all. Bidders offered to buy 5.55 times the amount of debt being sold. Later in the session, the government will auction $44 billion in 2-year notes.

Click here for source story.

Pulling back

Is this the beginning of the end for the government spending craze?

Obama to propose three-year budget freeze: WSJ
By Myra P. Saefong

TOKYO (MarketWatch) — President Barack Obama plans to propose a three-year freeze on spending that accounts for one-sixth of the federal budget, in a move to tackle the $1.4 trillion deficit, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. The proposed freeze on $447 billion in discretionary spending is unrelated to the military, veterans, homeland security and international affairs, the report said, citing senior administration officials. Social Security, Medicare and other big programs would also be untouched, it said. The freeze is expected to save $250 billion over the coming decade.

Click here for source.

Let Goldman go private

Goldman went public in order to take risks that the partnership didn’t want to take on, and in the process also found a way to compensate managers for doing things the partners would never have allowed – so let them go private. If Goldman wants to leverage 30 to 1, and all they are leveraging is partner capital, let them. They didn’t do it in the past. Why would they now. When did they increase leverage and VAR and other risk measures? When there was a disconnect between the capital providers and the managers. Not only that. Let them go private and ensure that government won’t provide a backstop. Just like any hedge fund, Goldman will end up doing a lot of risk adjustments if the partners are on the line (remember, in a partnership, they’ll also have some personal liability). If I were a Goldman spouse, I’d be thrilled, because suddenly, all the assets will go into the spouse’s names and the divorce lawyers, pre-nup attorneys, etc. will have exponentially more work (true, it will be the equivalent of a one-off event, but in this market, who cares).

So, let them do it, and don’t fall into the trap of thinking that they will, nor that it will provide a bid for the stock. This market will move with the regulatory winds, and is just a speculators game.

The beginning of the end?

I don’t know, but it has to come at some point. The main thing to watch here is not earnings, not Bernanke, and not your statements. The main thing to watch is the bond market. Bonds are holding relatively stable, 10 yr yield is even slightly down. What does this tell us? For starters, it tells us that the money being pulled out is not being directly put into long Treasuries. We’ll know in the next few days if it goes there to park, but why go long in this environment? All along, we’ve been saying the market might go up, but the fundamentals suggest otherwise. We continue to see downside risk across asset classes.

We’re holding our large cash positions and not putting it to work here. Maintaining position in the metals, but it’s a small portion of our portfolios, but it’s been getting hurt the past couple of days. Long term, we continue to believe a small allocation is appropriate. We have been conditioned to buy the dips, but it doesn’t work if the fundamentals are against us. Maybe in the short term, but…

Now, back to this Bernanke thing. This might be the first time in history that a Fed chairman isn’t reconfirmed. Poor Ben. The politicians who are more responsible than him, like all the senators who for years accepted kickbacks from Fannie and Freddie, are trying to use him as a scapegoat. Let’s see if Obama can save him. If not, it will be another blow for Obama & Co.

Obama & Co. are scrambling: Banks and political games

So Mass. went to the Republican candidate, for the first time in 40 odd years. Brown won Ted Kennedy’s seat and in the process upset Obama’s drive for healthcare reform. Pelosi and Obama will probably not be able to push through any legislation in the next couple of week, so it means that we’re now in a holding pattern. Turns out markets tend to do better when governments are gridlocked, mostly because politicians can’t do as much damage.

So now that he’s been stymied on one end, Obama has to show progress on another, so back comes Volcker. He was marginalized, but now is being made the poster boy in high-stakes political game that might leave Geithner and Bernanke in trouble. The Democrats were sent a message in Mass. and they need to scramble. Bernanke might be made the whipping boy, although Geithner is scared too.

So where does that leave us? In limbo-land. Banking regulations will re-instate some form of Glass-Steagall. They have to. The public is angry that tax payers money went into the pockets of executives and the risk taking behavior is back with a vengeance. So the big banks ROE will be even worse going forward and stocks need to reflect the uncertainty, so for now, why speculate? Not worth it.

On another note, I think all of this posturing, and all these announcements and speeches, and all of these Geithner vs. Volcker games, all of it is part of a game of obfuscation. We are being toyed with, and once again, the issue is government entities. Before Christmas, we wrote that Congress passed (hoping to be unnoticed) legislation that provided more funding to Fannie and Freddie. Now, Fannie and Freddie need to be put on the Fed’s books, increasing the government’s liabilities by a few billion dollars, and no politician wants to be the one to say it and bring it to light. So they’re playing a game of diverting our attention. In reality, Fannie and Freddie are already liabilities of the Fed, but they aren’t being counted. Bringing them onto the Fed’s balance sheet will balloon liabilities and make the government more than the lender of last resort. It will make the Fed responsible for mortgages and servicing. Do you really think politicians will allow Fannie and Freddie to foreclose on homeowners? How will their debt be serviced? Only two options: printing or taxing, since repossessions will be impossible. End game: I don’t even want to theorize, but I’m not a big fan of the GSE bonds.

In a related note, the Swiss are flexing their muscles and standing up to US disclosure requirements. Translation: the rich will still be able to shield money away from the hands of Uncle Sam. Expect to see more assets move offshore if taxes go up. Law of unintended consequences.

China reigns in monetary policy…

and the world catches a cold. We wrote about this a few weeks ago, whereby the Fed’s fear of being 1937′ers is completely misguided given that China might thwart any efforts to re-inflate. We are no longer living in a world where domestic monetary policy is sufficient. Interestingly enough, for you gold bugs out there, it is a better argument than historically for using physicals (gold being the most prominent) as the reserve currency. So China is telling banks to slow, or even halt, lending.

My main question is why now? Depending on your frame of reference…

If you believe the Chinese government is ahead of the curve, then China is reigning in inflationary pressures, making sure it’s banks are in strong shape, and this is a net benefit to China. Conversely, if you believe the Chinese command economy is not as strong as the numbers suggest, then this might be a sign that government officials are scrambling because the proverbial “stuff” is about to hit the fan, and they are scared. Guess what I think…

China needs a way to save face as it’s numbers start to come down quickly. If it’s part of a design, they might look smart. The growth stats are going to come down one way or the other, the only question is who will get blamed, which politicians will be lost along the way, and how the government squelches social unrest.

This is net positive for gold (although it doesn’t seem that way today), maybe USD (flight to safety?), and net negative at least in the short term for Asian block. Also, I think here a negative for China, might end up being a positive for India

Soon, it might be cheap to go to Europe

I top-ticked it, pretty much, by going to Europe this summer. A cup of coffee was over $7 USD. Meals at cafes were obscene. And the list goes on. Forget about taxis to meetings. Had I waited a few months, I would have gotten a nice discount. If I wait a few months from now, I might even find a bargain.

The euro is not a currency. It is a global experiment. There is a mismatch between fiscal, political, and monetary policy on a scale that is much bigger that when dealing with a single country. It is an experiment that is bound to fail at some point, except that it has had a lot of positive impacts for European investors. For one, they have ease of comparison. Sounds simple, but is quite important for business and trade. Second, the capital markets are now bigger, broader, and most importantly, deeper, with companies able to access previously difficult markets. For example, imagine that you are a company based in Italy. Previously, your capital markets, lending activity, securitization, etc. were pretty much domestically based. Germany was the only country that was large enough to have deep capital markets. So the euro worked on that level. Another benefit is the benefit to countries that wanted an alternative to the dollar. In my mind a flimsy benefit, not because everyone should love the dollar, but because they could have managed a portfolio of smaller currencies and it might have actually had a net benefit.

So again, we might turn the Euro around? Short term, obviously a pickup in world trading activity. Political will to cut social programs. Breaking the unions. Natural resource discoveries. Long term, either we’ll see a common political structure develop (highly unlikely, except in war) or the euro will be doomed – slowly, but surely.

Crude Oil

If crude hasn’t gone down by now, do you think it will? Unless demand crumbles, what will push it down from here? Oil is now in limbo and I believe geopolitical tensions will provide a support.

Here are a couple of scenarios:

We’ve seen inflation remain tame. If jobs do not pick up, inflation may remain tame (Phillips curve), at which point oil should stay stable, as it has. If jobs do pick up, then inflationary pressures may ensue, at which point you probably want to be long oil. So let’s assume that oil goes down to 30% from here to the $55 range, which isn’t unlikely if there’s major deflation or continued global economic slowdown. If there’s inflationary pressures and even some geopolitical plays, then oil could easily surpass any previous high. Then you have to put weights to get an expected return. It appears to me that at this stage, the risk/reward for oil might be attractive. I do not have any direct exposure at the time of this writing, but this is one of the areas we’re exploring now.

For those interested in Phillips Curve stuff, click here for the latest research from the San Fran Fed.

Why I rewrote an article

I had an article written on thoughts for the week ahead, which included thoughts about the big direct bidder in the Treasury market (sovereign, PIMCO-like institution, big bank, short covering?), thoughts on PALL and PPLT (I have positions in both), dollar, etc. but I scrapped it because of talk of stabilization.

The market goes through turmoil. People become afraid. Stock market goes down. Stock market rallies. People begin to believe that we’re stabilizing. M&A picks up. Real estate speculators have infomercials on CNBC teaching you (again) how to make millions without working. Etc. WRONG! We have 10% unemployment and it’s not picking up except in specific industries (government and healthcare) that shouldn’t be growing right now, certainly not as a percentage of GDP. Commercial real estate has NOT been marked properly, but will in the next couple of quarters, and when it is, the regional banks that everyone is talking about being great deals, will be hurt badly. Credit is contracting. Interest rates are not going down, and if anything, will rise, certainly on the long end. Now, even if things were improving, valuations are NOT cheap. The market might have 10-20% upside, but the downside is greater.

Volatility seems relatively cheap, which means downside protection is relatively cheap. I just heard on Bloomberg a Citi bull speaking. A big MAYBE at best. Massachusetts is about to vote in a Republican!! What a statement to the Democrats, when MA, the state that lead the way in forced universal healthcare, votes against the Decomocratic Party’s platform and asks for change. Of course healthcare is rallying today.

Anyway, for our readers, if you’re going to discuss stabilization and why I should be buying here, please include some rational arguments that include potential upside, downside, and valuation metrics. Anything else is just speculation.