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October 2008 Archives

October 1, 2008

Mark-to-market

Blame the accountants. At least, that's what we're being told. If only the green eyeshade brigade didn't require mark-to-market accounting there would be no financial crisis.

Brian Wesbury, chief economist at First Trust Portfolios L.P. captures the basic complaint about mark-to-market accounting on the opinion page of today's Wall Street Journal.

...Financial problems have not yet dragged down the economy, but it is also true that the economy is not the cause of financial-market problems. Most of the loans that have been going bad in recent months would have gone bad even if the economy had been growing twice as fast. So what is to blame for the "worst financial crisis since the Great Depression"?

The answer seems simple. Mark-to-market accounting rules have turned a large problem into a humongous one. A vast majority of mortgages, corporate bonds, and structured debts are still performing. But because the market is frozen, the prices of these assets have fallen below their true value. Firms that are otherwise solvent must price assets to fire-sale values. Not only does this make them ripe for forced liquidation, but it chases away capital and leads to a further decline in asset values....

Newt Gingrich agrees.

But I'm with .JPMorgan Chase & Co analyst Dane Mott who was recently quoted in a Bloomberg newswire story, that "blaming fair-value accounting for the credit crisis is a lot like going to a doctor for a diagnosis and then blaming him for telling you that you are sick.''

The best explanation of mark-to-market accounting I've read--and why the growing chorus of criticism is deeply flawed--is by Nicole Gelinas, a City Journal contributing editor and the Searle Freedom Trust Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. He's also Chartered Financial Analyst. You can read the whole article here.

You may ask: What the heck is "mark-to-market" accounting? The people who write and enforce our national accounting standards mandate that publicly traded financial companies must report some of their assets (things like mortgage-backed securities) and liabilities (like money they've borrowed from other institutions) at "marked-to-market" values. That is, if you bought a certain security at $100 last year, but you can't find anyone to buy it this year for more than $40, you've got to report its worth as $40, since, unless you plan to build a time machine, that's the "fair-value market price" it would command.

Contrary to popular belief, mark-to-market accounting isn't new. Financial institutions have reported many financial instruments this way for decades, usually because they wanted to. Their desire makes intuitive sense. If much of your business is borrowing huge amounts of money and then buying and selling securities to exploit and magnify small price changes in those securities, then you've got to have a way of telling the world how much money you've made this quarter doing just that. Informing your investors that Joe's mortgage is still worth the same $250,000 it was 10 years ago (when somebody else lent him the money), minus Joe's previous payments, doesn't advance that goal. But telling them that you made $50 million on Joe's mortgage and thousands of others like it this month by exploiting small changes in interest-rate expectations does.

He gives several reasons why the balme-mark-to-market-crowd is exaggerating the impact of the accounting rule. Take AIG, for example:

Finally, even if standard bearers and regulators suspended fair-market rules today, banks would still be wedded to fair-market principles, at least until all of today's complex securities are unwound. Consider credit-derivative securities, a form of insurance against debt default. AIG, which holds half a trillion dollars in such obligations, would have gone bankrupt last week without government help. But AIG's problem wasn't some accounting rules. Even without them, AIG's trading partners would have demanded higher cash collateral from the firm as ratings agencies downgraded the firm, due in part to their own private assessment of the chance that AIG would actually have to pay out on those claims. The same was true at firm after firm: risks increased and counterparties demanded more cash, as called for in private contracts. Changing the accounting rules midstream can't change that.

In the end, the only thing that was wrong with "fair value" accounting was that it was a mirror of the modern financial industry. Financial institutions thought that they could trade anything, anywhere, at any time, safely and virtually risk-free and for an instant profit. It turns out that they couldn't. Fair value's sin was in exposing that failure spectacularly.

There is no easy magic wand way out of this mess.


October 2, 2008

More evidence that reaching for yield doesn't pay....

...at least not with "safe" money. The auction rate preferred market froze up. Now, a number of colleges and universities are scrambiling for cash, according to this story in today's Wall Street Journal.

A fund that invests cash for about 1,000 colleges and private schools suddenly froze withdrawals this week, leaving school finance managers scrambling to make sure they have enough money for payroll and other bills.

For 34 years, colleges and schools parked cash in the now $9.3 billion fund, which offered returns slightly above U.S. Treasury bills. That it now might take years for the institutions to get all of their money back shows how widely credit-market woes are reverberating beyond Wall Street.

Monday, Wachovia Corp., the fund's trustee, said it was terminating the fund, liquidating its assets, distributing the proceeds and resigning as trustee, "to ensure that all investors would get equal treatment and that there would be orderly and equal distributions," says Laura Fay, a Wachovia spokeswoman. That stunned some of the colleges, which had believed they could get immediate access to the money if needed....

The Short Term Fund is offered by Commonfund, a Wilton, Conn., nonprofit that advises colleges and schools on money management. Verne O. Sedlacek, Commonfund's chief executive, says 85% of the fund was in "high-quality" commercial paper from blue-chip issuers. The rest is largely in securities backed by assets like mortgages -- the kind of investments that are being especially shunned in the credit crisis. He estimates those are selling for about 89 cents on the dollar....

The fund's fate shows how investors who stretched for a modestly better return by taking on what they thought was almost no additional risk have been burned. At first, colleges Monday were told they could redeem only 10% of their holdings, but the figure has since risen to 33%. Schools will be able to withdraw at least 57% of their money by year end and the rest in installments through 2011, Commonfund says.

You can read the full story here.

What the bailout means for Minnesotans

I participated in a roundtable discussion last night with a number of Minnesotans, including a community bank president, a medical device entrepreneur, retiree, and a diversity consultant. The topic: the impact of the credit crunch and the bailout on their lives. What were they seeing? What troubled them?

It was a good conversation. You can listen to the broadcast on Minnesota Public Radio it here.

October 3, 2008

The House votes

It still looks like the House will vote on the bailout bill today. I hope the vote-counters do their job before bringing it to the floor.

Anyway, I think Paul Krugman has it right in today's New York Times. Hold your nose, and vote "yes".:

The House will probably vote on Friday on the latest version of the $700 billion bailout plan -- originally the Paulson plan, then the Paulson-Dodd-Frank plan, and now, I guess, the Paulson-Dodd-Frank-Pork plan (it's been larded up since the House rejected it on Monday). I hope that it passes, simply because we're in the middle of a financial panic, and another no vote would make the panic even worse. But that's just another way of saying that the economy is now hostage to the Treasury Department's blunders.

For the fact is that the plan on offer is a stinker -- and inexcusably so. The financial system has been under severe stress for more than a year, and there should have been carefully thought-out contingency plans ready to roll out in case the markets melted down. Obviously, there weren't: the Paulson plan was clearly drawn up in haste and confusion. And Treasury officials have yet to offer any clear explanation of how the plan is supposed to work, probably because they themselves have no idea what they're doing.

Despite this, as I said, I hope the plan passes, because otherwise we'll probably see even worse panic in the markets. But at best, the plan will buy some time to seek a real solution to the crisis.

October 6, 2008

More job losses to come...

...that's what the Conference Board predicts. It's a business oriented think tank. here's the key part of today's release.

The Conference Board Employment Trends Index (ETI)™ continued its decline in September, suggesting even more losses to come in the labor market. The index fell in September to 108.4, down 0.8 percent from the August revised figure of 109.3, and down almost 10 percent from a year ago.

"The deterioration in the Employment Trends Index has become very pronounced, suggesting that the unemployment rate may very well exceed 7 percent as early as the second quarter of 2009," said Gad Levanon, Senior Economist at The Conference Board. "The persistent slackening in labor market conditions, worsened by the financial crisis, has reached a level that in the past led to significantly slower wage growth across most industries."

The 14-month fall in the Employment Trends Index (ETI)™ is seen in all eight of its components, most notably over the past six months in temporary-help hires and part-time workers for economic reasons.

I wonder if this prediction is too low considering the drop in the price of oil, other commodities, and stock markets around the world.

The sky will fall on many people

That's the title of an essay by Henry "Bud" Hebeler. You can read his financial advice at www.analyzenow.com. This is the part of the essay that deals with his "where to put the money" now that we're going through this credit crunch, recession, bailout, and fiscal nightmare.

"...The only people who may come out of this situation with some semblance of the American Dream are those who have already saved and those who will start saving and stop spending NOW! That's true if we don't have something like the revolt against imperial Russia where real estate ownership disappeared, homes were shared by many families assigned by the government, and savings were taken away and consumed largely by the government.

Those that will save, and those who already have saved, will be asking, "Where shall we put our money?" I certainly don't see the financial market future any better than anyone else, so I can only tell you what I am doing. I effectively divide my investments into three parts. The first part assumes that I want to be able to live through the Great Depression II. The second part assumes that it will take people a number of years to wake up to the problems, so this part is very conventional mix of stock and bond funds. The third part assumes that we will have hyper inflation. Only the Great Depression II and hyper inflation provide environments to solve the huge debt problem: the former by defaulting on loans and the latter by so cheapening the value of the payments that debt payments are a small part of a huge income denominated in almost worthless money.

The largest part of my own investments is conventional, but the amount I have in the hyper inflation portion and Great Depression II are sufficient to get me by, especially if the conventional part ends up having some value and not wiped out entirely. Those who would do similar splits would end up with the sizes of the three parts dependent on the extent of their savings, age, employment security, expectations for the future and probably lots of other factors.

Understand that I don't pretend that I am wise about what to do in either of these extremes. Still, my own choices for a hyperinflation scenario include candidates like leveraged real estate, stocks, I Bonds, TIPS and inflation-adjusted immediate annuities. I have been thinking about this for years and so built up my supply of I Bonds when you could buy large amounts at interest rates of over 3% plus inflation. I know that others more venturesome than I am would now add commodities as well as metals such as gold and platinum. Very wealthy people often gain inflation protection by saving valuable art and rare collectibles. Art and collectibles are beyond my financial capability, just as some of my choices are beyond the capability of other people. For example, a young person probably doesn't have the resources to buy an immediate annuity and should never buy one in the first place.

The Great Depression II portfolio is much more difficult. My choices here would include money markets, CDs, EE Bonds, treasuries and debt-free real estate. I know that my parents would add another category. My parents were struggling young adults during the great depression and gave us children strong encouragement to learn at least one musical instrument so we could earn something even if we lost our regular jobs. I played the piano, flute and trumpet--not knowing what I might need. I learned something about diversification even then.

Perhaps the best protection during the Great Depression II outcome would be strong and varied work skills. Even non working spouses and older children should learn some work skills that could bring income if necessary. Think Rosie the riveter during World War II as opposed to soccer mom. Learning to be frugal combined with doing as many home, car and clothes repairs yourself is important in a depression environment as could be supplementing your food supply with a home garden. You might want to store some vegetable seeds for next year.

The nation's debt problems are so large that the sky will fall on the majority. I firmly believe that to survive, people will have to save--lots. They will also have to invest it well. We can't tell which direction the economy will turn, but we know it has to make drastic changes. Hence, in addition to having good work skills and savings lots, it's important to be well diversified and include some things that might help in the Great Depression II or hyper inflation...."

.


Presidential prediction markets

I'm listening to a discussion about the presidential election, and the commentators are dwelling on the polls..

Curious, I pulled up the Iowa electronic presidential futures market. The results took me by surprise. The polls show that Obama has taken a lead with all the economy's troubles. But the bettors in the futures market are giving Obama a 75% chance of winning in November.

Dublin-based Intrade has been consistently less positive on Obama's chances than Iowa's market, but even it now gives him a 68% chance of winning.

October 7, 2008

Third Bank of the United States?

From economist Ed Yardeni:

In the United States, the Fed is rapidly becoming the true bank of America. The Fed has responded to the credit crisis by creating a bunch of lending facilities to provide liquidity on a term basis to commercial and investment banks. They came too late for Bear Stearns, and they chose not to save Lehman. But the Fed had no problem approving requests for bank charters by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley in record time over the weekend two weeks ago. Now the Fed is working on a new facility to fund commercial paper. Earlier this year, when the Fed started to exchange its Treasury security holdings for the doggy assets of the banks, I suggested that we rename it "Feddie." Now, I think a more descriptive name is the Third Bank of the United States. The First Bank of the United States was a bank chartered by Congress on February 25, 1791. The charter was for 20 years. The bank was created to handle the financial needs and requirements of the federal government. Previously, the 13 individual colonies had their own banks, currencies, and financial institutions and policies. The Second Bank of the United States was a bank chartered in 1816, five years after the expiration of the first one. It was founded out of a desperation to stabilize the currency by the administration of US President James Madison. President Andrew Jackson had a famous dispute with the bank's president, Nicholas Biddle. It lost its federal charter in 1836, and ceased operations in 1841. The Third Bank is working 24/7 to provide all the credit that the economy needs to avert a depression and revive growth.

October 8, 2008

A turning point?

The news is gloomy, but I wonder if it adds up to a turning point in containing the global credit crunch. But this is only in the sense of preventing a systemic collapse and bringing liquidity back to the markets. The global recession will get worse.

First, central banks around the world are now truly coordinating their actions. Most importantly, the European Central Bank is acting in concert with its peers around the world rather than putting out increasingly other worldy statements about fears of inflation. Deflation is the far bigger risk today with asset prices imploding than inflation.

The bailout bill has been passed. The Fed and the Treasury are supporting both money market mutal funds and commercial paper.

An anecdote: A Hispanic immigrant family here in the Twin Cities bought a home a few years ago. Like many Hispanic families, soem family members are legal and some illegal. A few have returned to Mexico, and the remaining occupant coulnd't keep up the mortgage. She called the bank, apologized, and told them she couldn't keep making the payments. The bank said we'll work with you. She said, I really don't make enough to pay the mortgage. The bank's response: No, you don't understand. We want you to stay in the house. We will work out a deal. I think the bank's have finally figured out that foreclosed homes drive down home values, which leads to more foreclosed homes, which further drives down home values, and so on. It has taken too long but my guess is that a lot more will follow the lead of Bank of America and cut down the mortgage.

In a depressing story about the current state of the home market, the Wall Street Journal has this important statistic:

On a national basis, home prices peaked in mid-2006 after rising 86% since January 2000, according to the First American index. Since peaking, that index has fallen 13%.

The declines have made homes more affordable, bringing prices in many areas closer to their long-term relationship to incomes. In the second quarter, the median home price of about $203,000 was 1.9 times average pretax household income, according to Economy.com. That was close to 1.87 times income for 1985 through 2000, prior to the housing boom.

The housing market could start attracting buyers with numbers like that.

A financial crisis doesn't stop immediately. The recession will be deep and long, and the recovery anemic. But we may be at or near bottom when it comes to "the worst financial crisis since the great depression." Let's hope so.


Presidential futures market after debate

The political futures market votes on last night's debate. In the Iowa market, Obama is now given a 77% chance of winning by bettors, up from 75% yesterday. In Inrade, traders now give him a 73% probability of winning, up from 68%.

Risk capital is down

This is worrisome. Angel investors--wealthy entrepreneurs that invest in other entrepreneurs--are getting wary. Angel investors are critical to innovation and new business creation.

Here is an excerpt of today's press release from the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

According to the analysis, "Angel Investors Steady But More Cautious in First Half of 2008," total investments in the first and second quarters of 2008 were $12.4 billion, an increase of 4.2 percent over the same period last year. A total of 23,100 entrepreneurial ventures received angel funding in the first half of 2008, a slight decrease of 3.8 percent from the same period last year, and the number of active investors was 143,000 individuals, an increase of 2.1 percent over the same period in 2007.

"The modest increase in total dollars and angel investors, coupled with the decrease in investments resulted in a larger deal size for the first half of 2008 (8 percent)., These data indicate that angels are exhibiting a cautious approach to investing in light of the recent volatility in the economy and reducing their individual risk exposure by including more angels in each deal," said Jeffrey Sohl, director of the UNH Center for Venture Research at the Whittemore School of Business and Economics.

October 10, 2008

Nebraska calling

Last night I did a statewide public tv and public radio question and answer hour on personal finances in light of the global financial crisis. It was for NET Nebraska. You can listen to it here.

October 13, 2008

What comes next?

Clive Crook of the Financial Times captures the essence of the government rescue plan at home and abroad.

Sorting out the details of the response will be messy but the principles are now clear and policy is forming around them. First, address illiquidity in the market for mortgage-backed securities. Second, inject public capital on a huge scale, drawing in new private capital at the same time. Third, revive the inter-bank market with temporary guarantees. Fourth, especially in the US, step up efforts to slow mortgage foreclosures, to relieve the distress and stop house prices undershooting.

Britain was first to put most of these elements in place. It helps to have an impotent legislature. The US administration has to ask Congress first, so these things take a little longer. Washington will argue about whether the rescue package, together with the Federal Reserve's existing powers, leave enough wiggle room for all of the above. But Hank Paulson, reeling from this week's turmoil on Wall Street, is on board. Those four complementary parts, backed before this is over with a trillion or two of taxpayers' money in the US alone, have every chance of limiting the damage to the real economy to a bad recession, as opposed to a new Depression.

He also has some intriguing thoughts on how big the regulatory response will be after the bailout succeeds. He's skeptical that much will change. He also asks the right question: What is the future of financial innovation?

There is a broader point. The financial crisis was indeed a failure of regulation. The system was overwhelmed by innovation. Regulators are going to have to catch up and, you could say, try to hold innovation back. But finance is not a normal industry. The question to ponder is this: in which other industries will curbing innovation - also known as market forces - strike governments or voters, in the US or anywhere else, as a good idea?

The start of the end of the financial crisis?

Investors around the world are heartened. There are more bank failures to come, and the financial crisis is far from over. But I think the economists at UBS are right:

With global financial markets in "free fall", we believe that we are moving rapidly
towards the end-game: full-scale state recapitalisation of the banking system to
ensure sector solvency and restore market confidence. In our view, the
nationalisation of parts of the banking system in the US and Europe could be
viewed as the defining moment that marked the start of the end of the financial
crisis.

The next crisis: Deflation?

Several years ago I wrote a book, Deflation: What Happens When Prices Fall. I don't think we are going to have another Great Depression. The monetary and fiscal authorities will make sure of that. Nevertheless, the recession in the U.S. will be severe. Asset prices are sharply lower. The banking system is constrained. And the competition for markets and profits will heat up in the global economy as growth slows worldwide. Taken altogether, it's a recipe for deflation, or an overall decline in the price level.

My guess is right around when Fed chairman Ben Bernanke thinks he can relax at least a bit, he'll face the prospect of falling prices--something the Fed hasn't confronted since the 1930s.

Deflation, not inflation, is the big risk.

Universal health insurance

One common criticism of universal health insurance is that we can't afford it. That argument no longer holds after the trillions spent on the banking bailout, including taking over of from Freddie and Fannie, as well as the coming partial nationalization of the banking system.

We can afford universal health coverage.

October 14, 2008

What a headline....

Did you ever think you would read a headline like this?

U.S. Announces Plan to Buy Stakes in Largest Banks
Recipients Include Citi, Bank of America, Goldman; Government Pressures All to Accept Money as Part of Broadened Rescue Effort.

This one is from today's Wall Street Journal.

It's a good move.

Futures market

The bettors on the Iowa Electronic market now place the odds of Obama winning at 85%.

And they earned this because...?

The Institute for Policy Studies has estimated the CEO pay of the top semi-nationalized banks. It's a combined total of $289 million for 2007.

Nationalized banks
CEO in 2007, total compensation in 2007

Merrill Lynch,
John Thain
$83,092,713

Goldman Sachs
Lloyd Blankfein
$53,965,418

Morgan Stanley
John Mack
$41,734,815

J.P. Morgan Chase
James Dimon
$28,856,330

Bank of New York Mellon
Robert Kelly
$20,515,810

State Street
Ronald Logue
$19,551,400

Wells Fargo
Richard Kovacevich
$18,510,694

Citigroup
Vikram Pandit*
$3,160,000

Bank of America
Kenneth Lewis
$20,040,000

Total: $289,427,180

* Pandit was promoted to CEO in Dec. 2007, 8 months after joining Citigroup.
Source: Associated Press inter-active online survey. Includes stock options grants.

The Intrade bettors

Bloomberg has a good story on what the bettors at Intrade are predicting when it comes to the presidential election:

Barack Obama is likely to pick up 364 Electoral College votes, far surpassing the 270 needed to claim the presidency, by winning battleground states including Virginia, Ohio, Florida, and Colorado, online traders say.

Bettors on the Dublin-based Intrade's political futures market believe Obama, the Democratic presidential candidate, will prevail in all the states won by party nominee John Kerry in 2004, in addition to picking up other previously Republican strongholds such as Nevada and Missouri. Arizona Senator John McCain, the Republican nominee, would pick up 174 Electoral votes, winning states such as Texas, Indiana and West Virginia.

The bettors are speculating that Obama has a nearly 78% chance of winning the White House come November.

I tend to follow the Iowa political futures market more than Intrade because it's much harder for U.S. investors to place their bets with the Dublin based company. (It's considered offshore betting.) The big advantage of Intrade, however, is that its based on Electoral College votes. Either way, I don't understand why political coverage doesn't pay at least as much attention to both futures markets as they do to the polls--if not more.

Such markets have been more accurate than polls in past elections. In part, that's because people are placing money on what they expect to happen as opposed to what they would like to happen and who they plan to support.

J.P. Paulson? And a global central bank?

It was one of the most dramatic moments in U.S. financial history: The financial panic of 1907.

The U.S. economy boomed in the early 1900s. The demand for credit was enormous. Corporate America was in the midst of one of the largest merger and acquisition waves in U.S. history as financiers tried to stem ruinous price competition in industry after industry. Financial speculation was rampant, much of conducted through trust companies.

The economy slowed in 1906 and 1907, and money drained out of the U.S. as Britain and Germany hiked interest rates to fund their imperialist wars. Investors were also unsettled by the Roosevelt Administration's attacks on Big Business and Big Money.

The trigger point for the panic of 1907 was the unraveling of a scheme by speculators F. Augustus Heinze and Charles W. Morse through various trust companies to corner the stock of United Copper Company. Depositors rushed to take their money out of the trusts.

To stem the tide, seventy year old J.P. Morgan established himself in the library in his New York house. The U.S. government and all of Wall Street relied on Morgan's formidable reputation and acumen. The U.S. Treasury put $25 million at Morgan's disposal. Morgan invited reluctant trust company presidents into his ornate library to contribute another $25 million. Eventually, Morgan put paper and pen into the hand of Edward King, leader of the New York trusts, saying, "Here's the place, King. And here's the pen." The deal was signed and the panic over.

"The 1907 panic persuaded many skeptics that the country needed a central bank and couldn't rely upon the theatrics of aging tycoons any longer," says Ron Chernow, author of The House of Morgan. The Federal Reserve Board, America's central bank, was created in 1913.

Now, a century later, a similar tale unfolds. According to a story in today's Wall Street Journal, here's what transpired when the U.S. decided to take a stake in major banks:

On one side of the table sat U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, flanked by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair.

On the other side sat the nation's top bank executives who had flown in from around the country, lined up in alphabetical order by bank, with Bank of America Corp. at one end of the table and Wells Fargo & Co. at another.

It was Monday afternoon at 3 p.m. at the Treasury headquarters. Messrs. Paulson and Bernanke had called one of the most important gatherings of bankers in American history. For an hour, the nine executives drank coffee and water and listened to the two men paint a dire portrait of the U.S. economy and the unfolding financial crisis. As the meeting neared a close, each banker was handed a term sheet detailing how the government would take stakes valued at a combined $125 billion in their banks, combined with new restrictions over executive pay and dividend policies.

The participants, among the nation's best deal makers, were in a peculiar position. They weren't allowed to negotiate. Mr. Paulson requested that each of them sign. It was for their own good and the good of the country, he said, according to a person in the room....

Does a global central bank come out of this crisis? Is that the new mission of the IMF?

October 16, 2008

Social Security and inflation

Social Security says that benefits will increase by 5.8% in 2009. Social Security is really the only retirement product that offers genuine inflation protection.

Protecting retirees from inflation is a factor other retirement savings plans should take into account. But most don't.

October 22, 2008

Read it--and weep

These numbers from Alicia Munnell, economist at Boston College, are unbelievable.

The stock market, as measured by the broad-based Wilshire 5000, declined by 42 percent between its peak in October 9, 2007 and October 9, 2008. Over that one-year period, the value of equities in pension plans and household portfolios fell by $7.4 trillion. Of that $7.4 trillion decline, $2.0 trillion occurred in 401(k)s and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), $1.9 trillion in public and private defined benefit plans, and $3.6 trillion in household non-pension assets.

Yes, you read that right. The average American worker is exposed to too much risk when it comes to their retirement savings.

You can read the full report here.

October 24, 2008

Barton Biggs

Peter Coy of Business Week has a good story on surviving the recession in the magazine's latest issue. He starts off with an anecdote from Barton Biggs, the veteran investor--and, it turns out, optimist:

When conditions are dire and people are losing their nerve, Traxis Partners hedge fund manager Barton Biggs pulls out a chart of the London stock market's performance during World War II. The fever line plunges as the German army invades Poland, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France. Then an odd thing happens. Just when the mood is darkest--in June 1940, as Adolf Hitler is inspecting conquered Paris--the market finds a bottom and begins a long, steep rebound. It's almost as if investors sense that somehow, some way, Hitler is destined for defeat.

As those doughty Brits demonstrated nearly 70 years ago, fortune favors the bold.

Bloomberg also talked to Biggs:

U.S. and European stocks are "very, very cheap" after the Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 40 percent this year, the worst annual drop since 1931, according to Barton Biggs, managing partner at hedge fund Traxis Partners LLC.

"U.S. and European markets have blown out to record levels of attractiveness versus bonds," Biggs said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. "We're at very, very cheap levels."...

"One of these days, even if the world is going to hell, we will have a tremendous run-up," said Biggs, 75. "There is an extreme level of pessimism and almost despair. As long as I have been in the business, those have always been good signs."

Is the crisis moving to emerging markets?

Economist Dani Rodrik, one of the country's leading international and development economists, thinks so. After a day like today it's a chilling post:

One can make a decent argument that the financial crisis has bottomed out in the advanced countries (with the real-economy consequences still to come of course). But it is barely starting in the emerging markets, and it could get much, much worse.

Some of these economies are hurt by (now) declining commodity prices; others by large existing current account deficits; and if you do not have a problem on either account, you are (like China) dependent on export markets in the advanced countries that are about to dry up. These fundamentals are greatly magnified by risk assessments in financial markets. Now that advanced countries have bailed out and guaranteed vast portions of their financial systems, there is a much greater demarcation between "safe" and "risky" assets, with emerging markets in the second category. The flight to safety is already taking a huge toll on them. And the worst is likely to come when domestic residents join en masse in the capital flight.

All of this means that governments in these economies will be under pressure to mimic the public guarantees and bailouts that we have seen in the U.S. and the EU. But there is a big difference. Emerging markets for the most part have weak and fragile fiscal systems, and the magnitude of the potential run is huge relative even to the large mountains of reserves that many of them have built up. Socialization of private liabilities may enhance confidence in the rich countries; it will likely magnify the run in emerging markets. So we are talking about economic collapses that could be significantly bigger than what the rich countries will experience. And this time developing countries can legitimately say: it wasn't our fault!

Rodrik goes on to discuss why the IMF is going to have to take a leading role to contain the crisis.

October 25, 2008

Joseph Nocera is upset...

...with good reason. Among the best columnists in the business, Nocera believes the banks aren't going to make new loan with the money they are getting from the U.S. taxpayer, and he makes a credible case. He also believes that the markets are losing confidence in the Paulson-led Treasury.

Nocera listened into a JP Morgan employee conference call. Its a strong bank, and it is a recipient of a $25 billion infusion from taxpayers:

"Chase recently received $25 billion in federal funding. What effect will that have on the business side and will it change our strategic lending policy?" It was Oct. 17, just four days after JPMorgan Chase's chief executive, Jamie Dimon, agreed to take a $25 billion capital injection courtesy of the United States government, when a JPMorgan employee asked that question. It came toward the end of an employee-only conference call that had been largely devoted to meshing certain divisions of JPMorgan with its new acquisition, Washington Mutual....

"Twenty-five billion dollars is obviously going to help the folks who are struggling more than Chase," he began. "What we do think it will help us do is perhaps be a little bit more active on the acquisition side or opportunistic side for some banks who are still struggling. And I would not assume that we are done on the acquisition side just because of the Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns mergers. I think there are going to be some great opportunities for us to grow in this environment, and I think we have an opportunity to use that $25 billion in that way and obviously depending on whether recession turns into depression or what happens in the future, you know, we have that as a backstop."

Read that answer as many times as you want -- you are not going to find a single word in there about making loans to help the American economy.

Nocera is right to be upset, and the whole article is worth thinking about.

But this is what got me upset: A high level banker uses the word "depression" in a serious manner. In his answer the unnamed manager says "...depending on whether recession turns into depression or what happens in the future...."

This is a remarkable unscripted moment. And it shows that the unthinkable--another depression--is now considered a possibility when a pinstripe banker runs through a list of options. This isn't the ramblings of a crazy forecaster.

My own guess is that this will turn out to be the first synchronized global downturn since the Great Depression.


October 26, 2008

What caused the Great Depression?

Harvard University economist Greg Mankiw has a good column of the origins of the Great Depression in today's New York Times.

For my book from several years ago, "Deflation: What Happens When Prices Fall" I took a particular perspective on the cause of the Great Depression. I'm no scholar of the 1930s, but it's my take after reading the literature (or at least some of it).

The bottom line: There are worrisome parralels to now.

WHAT CAUSED THE GREAT DEPRESSION?

Booms and busts are inevitable with capitalism--it is in the nature of the beast. The National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit organization and the official arbiter of the American business cycle, lists 16 downturns between 1854 and 1919. Deflations were commonplace whenever the economy turned down in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Indeed, during the short, sharp depression of 1920-21, prices fell by some 56% from mid-1920 to mid-1921, perhaps the steepest price plunge in U.S. history.

The question economists have long grappled with is what transformed a severe recession into the worst depression on record. The controversy has been fierce, fascinating, and illuminating. Among some well-known explanations: John Maynard Keynes blamed a collapse in business confidence and private investment in The General Theory of Interest, Money, and Employment. Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz scorched an inept Federal Reserve; Peter Temin emphasized a collapse in consumer spending; Joseph Schumpeter argued the economy was plagued by "underconsumption" as highly productive business flooded the market with more goods than consumers had income; John Kenneth Galbraith's culprit was the bursting of an immense stock market bubble; Ben Bernanke subtly stressed the impact of credit expansion and contraction; and Charles Kindleberger identified the worldwide fall in commodity prices.

Each of these interpretations resonates, and much of the economic debate has been over primacy--the stock market crash? the banking panics? a deflationary spiral?--rather than role. The answer is unusually important, however. Trying to understand the Great Depression is no abstract puzzle. No one wants to go through another era where a quarter of the workforce is out of work, or create the kind of economic upheaval that gave a tragic opening to extremists like the Bolsheviks in Russia and the Nazis in Germany.

A common framework for understanding the causes of the tragedy has emerged among economists in recent years. Among the seminal contributors are Barry Eichengreen of the University of California, Berkeley, Peter Temin of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University, and Michael Bordo of Rutgers University. The literature begins with the global nature of the depression. And as Eichengreen and Temin emphasize that means putting the international gold standard and central banks at the center of the story. "The constraints of the gold-standard system hamstrung countries as they struggled to adapt during the 1920s to changes in the world economy. And the ideology, mentalite and rhetoric of the gold standard led policymakers to take actions that only accentuated economic distress in the 1930s. Central banks continued to kick the world economy while it was down until lit lost consciousness... The modern literature on the Great Depression emphasizes mentalite, discourse, mass politics, and the eclipse of the nation state."

The gold standard was much more than a system for managing exchange rates and ensuring stable currency values. It had evolved into a totem, a secular religion, an ideological mindset that gave coherence to the world economy and trust in financial transactions. The experience of the latter part of the 19th century and early 20th century was that the gold standard played a vital role in the long boom of that period. Now, the gold standard had been discontinued during the First World War. But after the war, political and financial elites saw restoring the gold standard as critical for restoring healthy international relations among war weary nations. It was a reasonable, and disastrous, belief. For instance, the British government established in 1918 the Cunliffe Commission, headed up Lord Cunliffe, the former Governor of the Bank of England, to make currency recommendations once the war was over. The final report made clear that the only acceptable choice was a return to gold: "The adoption of a currency not convertible to gold or other exportable gold is likely in practice to lead to over issue and so to destroy the measure of exchangeable value and cause a general rise in all prices and an adverse movement in the foreign exchanges."

The Cunliffe Commission reflected the mentalite of the gold standard. The mindset of policymakers limited their choice of what was possible, and abandoning the gold standard during peacetime heresy. If gold was leaving a country, the right response for preserving the value of capital was to restrict credit with higher interest rates and reduce costs and prices by deflating the economy. The discourse of the gold standard reflected the reverence elites shared for the metal. The gold standard stood for everything that was good in society. Thrift. Sobriety. Civilization. International harmony. Abandoning gold meant giving in to society's worst tendencies, the license of the mob and the destruction of capital. The idea was so heretical that many elites couldn't even of not rushing to reestablish the gold standard now that war was over.

That's why policymakers couldn't grasp that the world economy had changed in fundamental ways that meant actions taken to shore up the system had the exact opposite effect. The First World War changed the face of politics. Before the Great War, a political, military, financial, and business elite dominated their nations, supported by the moneyed, property owning middle class. But the Victorian and Edwardian eras disappeared after traditional elites lost credibility with their blundering into a war that is still largely inexplicable, as well as and tolerating an unimaginable slaughter on the battlefield, from the Battles for Ypres to the Battle of Somme. An estimated 10 million soldiers were killed, twice that seriously wounded, and casualties among civilians totaled some 30 million. Says Ronald Jepperson, professor of sociology at Tulsa University: "World War I shattered the European Old Regime, the aristocratic political order that had persisted into the 20 century. The elites that had thrust their populations into war were thoroughly discredited as well as demoralized."

Britain's David Lloyd George captured this context in 1919, writing that "The whole existing order in its political, social, and economic aspects is questioned by the masses of people from one end of Europe to the other." The wartime mobilization of the population, coupled with the massive disruptions and widespread discontent, spawned populist movements of all colorations: liberal and soft-socialist parties in the more democratic countries; autocratic nationalist parties (both Left and Right) in the more authoritarian ones. "In all cases, if in different ways," adds Jepperson, "'public opinion' was now in part mass opinion--the latter a new restraint upon policy-making, as well as a new source of power for would-be reformers and revolutionaries of all stripes."

Revolution was in the air. The "lower classes" gained a voice after the First World War. Their opinions could no longer be ignored following the enormous sacrifices of the war. Membership in unions grew. Socialist and communist parties attracted followers, especially after the 1917 Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia, and fascists competed for support among the same disillusioned masses. Agitation for the right to vote rapidly spread. Women in the U.S. won the right to vote in 1919, and in England universal suffrage came about in 1927. As Keynes noted in 1923 "the conditions of the future are not those of the past."

Central banks are also critical to this accounting of the unprecedented collapse. Focusing on the United States, any analysis of the Great Depression today has to take into account Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz's, A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960. The authors argue that the Federal Reserve transformed a cyclical contraction into a depression. In essence, the Great Depression stems from a decline in the money supply. The public lost confidence in banks. Depositors wanted their money back. The money supply contracted. Bank deposits weren't being used to expand credit and economic activity but to meet the public's panicked need for cash. Incomes fell, economic activity plummeted, more banks went out of business, yet the Fed refused to break the cycle of fear by acting as lender of last resort "[T] the experience was a tragic testimonial to the importance of monetary forces," write Friedman and Schwartz. "The drastic decline in the quantity of money during those years and the occurrence of a banking panic of unprecedented severity were not the inevitable consequences of other economic changes. They did not reflect the absence of power on the part of the Federal Reserve System to prevent them. Throughout the contraction, the System had ample powers to cut short the tragic process of monetary deflation and banking collapse. Had it used those powers effectively in late 1930 or even in early to mid-1931.... Such action would have eased the severity of the contraction and very likely would have brought it to an end at a much earlier date."

With the benefit of hindsight, it's unbelievable that the Fed would allow for the destruction of wealth, enterprise, and employment. Friedman and Schwartz strongly emphasize the ineptness of the Fed, and a struggle for power between the Federal reserve bank of New York and the Federal Reserve Board in Washington D.C. The scholars believe that had Benjamin Strong, the forceful head of the New York Fed not died in 1928, he might have taken the kind of bold action necessary to stem the depression's downward spiral. "The shift of power from New York to the other Banks might not have been decisive, if there had been sufficiently vigorous and informed intellectual leadership in the Board," write Friedman and Schwartz. "However, no tradition of leadership existed within the Board. It had not played a key role in determining the policy of the System throughout the twenties... There was no individual Board member with Strong's stature in the financial community or in the Reserve System, or with comparable experience, personal force, or demonstrated courage."

In sharp contrast, Eichengreen and other scholar's emphasize the rationality of the decisions made by the Fed in light of the dictates of the gold standard. When the Fed was confronted with an outflow of gold, as it was in the fall of 1931 and in early 1933, maintaining true to logic of the gold standard meant raising U.S. interest rates even though some 13 million Americans or about a quarter of the workforce were unemployed. Yet the gold standard precluded central bankers from expanding the money supply to encourage domestic demand because, horror of horrors, that could lead to inflation. Remember, this is at a time when prices were falling at as high as a -10% annual rate. "Policies were perverse because they were designed to preserve the gold standard, not employment", says Eichengreen and Temin.

The mindset of financial and policy elites sheds light on one of the most infamous statements about letting the Depression run its course without government interference: "Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate," said Andrew Mellon, President Herbert Hoover's treasury secretary. Following the boom of the 1920s, he believed the downturn "will purge the rottenness out of the system. High costs of living and high living will come down. People will work harder, live a more moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wrecks from less competent people." Sure, that's an easy perspective for one of the nation's wealthiest men to hold. Problem is, many of the best minds of the era also valued depressions as purgatives wiping away speculative excesses created during booms. The "depression is good for you: crowd included legendary economists like Joseph Schumpeter, Friedrich Hayek, and Lionel Robbins, according to a fascinating paper by Brad Delong, economist at the University of California, Berkeley and deputy assistant secretary in the Clinton Administration's Treasury Department.

Schumpeter, everyone's favorite economist during the heady years of the 1990s, was of the opinion that "depressions are not simply evils, which we might attempt to suppress, but... forms of something which has to be done, namely, adjustment to change." His contemporary Lionel Robbins wrote, "Nobody wishes... bankruptcies. Nobody likes liquidation as such... [But} when the extent of mal-investment and over-indebtedness has passed a certain limit, measures which postpone liquidation only make matters worse."

The experience of the 19th century also suggested that busts weren't all bad. Investment booms surrounded new technologies, but the return on investment is always uncertain. How many miles of canals should be dug? How many lines of railroads makes competitive sense. Which city will grab enough business to justify building skyscrapers? Business entrepreneurs and financial speculators gambled, sometimes going too far, excess capacity would be liquidated, creating conditions for another technology-led investment spree. Here's Brad DeLong on the pre-World War 1 business cycle. "There was uncertainty about the long run growth of the American economy, especially when settlement of the West is concerned. Railroads are sensitive to the growth of the regions they serve. Entrepreneurs did risk their fortunes and futures on their assessment of the quasi-rents to be earned from a particular line. Sometimes they guessed wrong: Jay Cooke and Co. failed because it had advanced more money for the construction of the Northern Pacific than it could recoup by selling Northern Pacific bonds. Its failure ushered in the panic of 1873 and the subsequent depression, which did not lift until five years had passed and construction resumed. Thus railroad booms and busts of the late nineteenth century are not inconsistent with a 'liquidationist' perspective. When long run rates of growth are unstable, investment for the future ought to be jagged, and ought to see periods of rapid expansion coupled with periods of quiescence and disinvestment."

This isn't to say the liquidationists were right. Just that the business cycle experience and the gold standard combined to drive central bankers in the U.S., as well as in Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and elsewhere to take the wrong actions.
Gradually, however, the human and productive toll grew too great, and the political agitation to insistent to ignore. In 1931, 47 countries adhered to the gold standard; by the end of 1932 the only major countries left were Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzerland, and the United States. Britain abandoned it commitment to gold in the fall of 1931. The United States went off the gold standard in 1933 with the election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who ignored the pleas of his predecessor Herbert Hoover to stick with gold. The rest of the gold bloc countries had abandoned the standard by the end of 1936. Indeed, the nation's that shook off their "golden fetters" first were also first to leave the Great Depression behind.

The election

The Iowa futures market now has Obama with an 87% chance of winning in November. The bettors at Intrade give Obama the same odds (even though there is evidence that for awhile someone was trying to manipulate the Intrade market to give McCain better odds; the manipulation failed, and some traders made a nice piece of change taking advantage of the attempted manipulation.)

On a more local level, looking at the Minnesota Senate race, the polls show its a close race between Rep. Norm Coleman and De, Al Franken. But futures traders on the Iowa market seem to think the polls are too timid. Traders give Franken nearly 67% odds of winning...

When the election is over, there should be some interesting academic studies into the different messages of the polls and futures. I'm no expert, and I only check-in occasionally, but it seems that the futures markets have been saying it hasn't been a close race for some time. The polls keep reading it as a close race and there has been a lot of ink spilled on whether there will be a Bradely effect or not.

My guess is that the presidential prediction markets are better indicators of what will actually happen in the voting booth.

October 27, 2008

Other post World War ll depressions

"Prosperity is just around the corner," President Herbert Hoover infamously remarked in 1930. The magnitude of Hoover's wrong forecast has gone down in history, but what's forgotten is that his prognostication was quite reasonable. Business activity in the U.S. had fallen only seven years from 1869 to 1929 (excluding the years of the First World War). The average annual decline in real gross domestic product was 1.6%, with one downturn of 5.5%, according to Peter L. Bernstein in "Against the Gods: A History of Risk." But six decades of economic experience proved irrelevant during the catastrophe known as the Great Depression.

While fascinating to think about, the odds of another great depression in the U.S. have long seemed remote. After all, a whole set of institutions from federal deposit insurance to unemployment insurance were established to prevent another calamitous breakdown.

Of course, now it appears that the risk of a global recession, let alone a depression, is at least possible. That's why I pulled out an essay I wrote after 9/11 on a collection of economic essays that suggest great depressions have been far from relics of the past. Indeed, there have been several in the developing world--a number in the very recent past.

Here's the relevant part:

The contributors to "Great Depressions of the Twentieth Century," study nine severe downturns. Several papers delve into the classic interwar depression of Europe and the U.S. But other scholars looked into the depressions of Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Chile in the 1980s. These countries all suffered declines in economic activity comparable in magnitude to Canada, France, Germany, and the U.S. in the 1930s. New Zealand and Switzerland may have experienced depressions, and Japan is certainly sinking into an economic abyss. "The notion that the Great Depression is from the 1930s, and we don't have to worry about that now is wrong," says Timothy J. Kehoe, economist at the University of Minnesota and a contributor to the volume.

How do Kehoe and his co-author Edward C. Prescott define a great depression in the introduction? They take the U.S., the world's technological and economic leader, as their baseline. The long-term secular growth rate in output per working age person in the U.S. is 2% a year. A great depression is defined as a sharp and huge deviation from this 2% trend--a drop of at least 20%. They only include in their study nations with a relatively modern economy. In other words, their database includes Mexico but excludes Botswana. By their definition, New Zealand experienced a depression from 1974 to 1992 since output per working age person fell by 32%. But Japan has steered clear of a depression after taking trend growth into account. Japan's output per working age person is down 13% from 1992 to 2000.

The authors use the classic general equilibrium growth model as their framework for studying great depressions. They do find that the quantity of savings is not a problem and subsidies to investment are not the solution. Labor policies do matter, but not in all cases. Collectively, they are intrigued that government policies that affect productivity and hours per working age person are critical when examining great depressions. Their suspicion is that keeping competition among firms intense and letting inefficient companies fail has major consequences for productivity. Government attempts to limit competition and failure can backfire badly.

For instance, both Chile and Mexico had great depressions in the early 1980s, with output falling 30% below trend within a few years. Both countries were large international debtors. They were also hit by similar shocks, higher real interest rates (the interest rate after taking inflation into account) and lower commodity prices (copper for Chile and oil for Mexico). Yet productivity growth recovered fairly quickly in Chile but not in Mexico. The reason, the authors speculate, is that Chile reformed its banking and bankruptcy procedures and Mexico did not. Chile let unproductive firms go bankrupt while the government dominated banking system in Mexico channeled low interest rate loans to unproductive firms.

Kehoe and Prescott's contribution is a welcome reminder that depressions are not an economic catastrophe of the distant past. Their paper is also a timely nod that government policy combating a downturn is much more than fiscal and monetary stimulus. Open borders and a well-functioning bankruptcy system matter too. Policymakers should continue to stimulate the economy. But they should also ignore calls to close borders to goods and immigrants, as well as calls to bail out the many industries hammered by the drop-off in economic activity since September 11.

October 28, 2008

Nobel laureates and their money

Read and watch what three Nobel laureates in economics--Robert C. Merton, Robert Solow and Paul Samuelson--are doing with their money in light of the global crash. The answer is, not much.

It's from a recent conference at Boston University on investing over a lifetime.

October 29, 2008

A sobering statistic

Ross Levin is one of the nation's premier financial planners. He's based in Edina, Minnesota. Here's a sober bit of number-crunching:

"And for those clients who say, "This is just like the Great Depression". The correct answer is, "No, this is worse". The 1999-2008 return stands at an annualized -2.23%. 1929-1938 was only -.87%."

However, the good news is that "the markets should return 6.7% over the next five years to match the 15 year rolling average from 1929-1943 (assuming the SP 500 stays at this level for the rest of 2008). 2008 numbers do not include dividends."

October 30, 2008

Fleeing equity mutual funds

Earlier this afternoon, I posted a figure on the "getting personal" blog that investirs had withdrawn almost $68 billion from stock mutual funds, year-to-date as of August. The figures come from the Investment Company Institute, the Washington D.C.based trade group for the mutal fund industry. It just came out with the year-to-date figures through September: Investors have taken a net $124 billion out of equity mutual funds.

 
 

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Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk
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The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
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Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits
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The Intelligent Investor
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More Than You Know: Finding Financial Wisdom in Unconventional Places
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Smart and Simple Financial Strategies for Busy People
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Stocks for the Long Run
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The Random Walk Guide to Investing: Ten Rules for Financial Success
by Burton Malkiel

 
The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need
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Unconventional Success: A Fundamental Approach to Personal Investment
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