[Monday]
Markets in Europe are finishing the day up an astonishing 10% after the announcement of a new round of actions designed to stabilize financial markets. The European Central Bank, the Bank of England, and the Swiss National Bank said they will put no limits on loans of dollars to the banks, and the swap line between the Federal Reserve and the corresponding central banks will be increased to accommodate whatever quantity of dollar funding is demanded. The Bank of Japan is considering similar measures, while the Bank of Australia said it will guarantee lending between banks. Although counterparty risk remains high and banks continue to hold onto cash due to fears that a borrower may collapse taking the funds with them, the three-month Libor lending rate and lending rates across Europe eased following the massive new injections of liquidity and the extraordinary measures taken to restore confidence.
In order to restore confidence, drive short term rates to more normal levels, and encourage lending, Germany said it will guarantee up to 400 billion euros in lending between banks and offer recapitalizations of up to 80 billion euros. And France said it will provide a total of 320 billion euros in guarantees and an extra 40 billion euros to help recapitalize banks.
The UK will inject 37 billion pounds ($64 billion) into Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS $1), HBOS (HBOOY $2), and Lloyds TSB Group (LYG $13) to keep the banks afloat. US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson also intends to present plans to inject capital directly into banks later this week, the Wall Street Journal reported. Plans have not yet been finalized, but the Treasury Department said early this morning that the government is looking at varying ways to provide capital for banks. Schwab's Chief Investment Strategist Liz Ann Sonders pointed out this morning in her Breaking Commentary, What a Difference a Weekend Makes, that guidelines are being developed that will govern the purchase of bad assets, and the plans will include stock-buying efforts. She also details the major events that unfolded in Europe over the weekend and in early morning action. Ms. Sonders remarks are also available on Schwab.com.
Meanwhile, the G7 meeting in Washington that concluded on Friday night was short on specifics but finance ministers said in their communique that the current situation calls for "urgent and exceptional action." The nations must use "all tools" to support systemically important financial institutions and prevent their failure, and take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets. Separately, Phillips Electronics (PHG $20) is trading solidly lower after posting a drop in profits and saying its healthcare unit had seen a slowdown in orders in the past weeks, mainly due to the US. Phillips said it will slow its share buyback. Elsewhere, Russia's benchmark index closed down 6% since authorities had closed the market on Friday, and traders were unable to react to Friday's debacle in Asia. Iceland's market remained closed but is scheduled to re-open on Tuesday.
Schwab Center for Financial Research - Market Analysis Group
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Monday, October 13, 2008
Dow's biggest day
The blue chip index had its biggest one-day point gain and largest percentage gain since 1933. Governments around the world race to help rebuild the financial markets. Mitsubishi UFJ closes its deal to buy a stake in Morgan Stanley.
The Dow closed 11.1% to 9,388, its biggest percentage gain since March 15, 1933 when the index gained 15.3% and its fifth largest percentage gain ever.
The Dow closed 11.1% to 9,388, its biggest percentage gain since March 15, 1933 when the index gained 15.3% and its fifth largest percentage gain ever.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Cramer says 5886
The Dow lost 2,000 points this week, making it the worst sell-off since 1933, Cramer said. He doesn’t think we’re done, though.
Today’s late-day rally brought us too far too fast, he said, and bottoms rarely happen on Fridays anyway. Main Street isn’t paying attention, they find out what happened over the weekend, and then Monday they start to sell.
Keep this in mind as next week starts. Cramer can’t decide if this market is closer to 1987 or 1929, but he’s pretty sure bad news from Morgan Stanley and lack of good news from the world’s industrialized nations could cause a sizable drop in the markets on Monday and Tuesday. The Dow could go as low as 5,886, he said.
That’s what happened during the crash of 1987: The Dow lost 508 points from Friday’s close to the session-ending bell on Black Monday. Then Terrible Tuesday saw an intraday low 339 points below that before the market turned up. If this is how the present market plays out, Cramer wants investors to use a quarter of the cash he’s been urging them to raise each day to buy certain stocks on weakness. He thinks we might have come down enough to put some money back to work.
Why risk it? Because even people who bought stocks on the Friday before Black Monday broke even after a year. And those that bought during the lows of Monday and Tuesday saw some terrific gains 12 months later.
Today’s late-day rally brought us too far too fast, he said, and bottoms rarely happen on Fridays anyway. Main Street isn’t paying attention, they find out what happened over the weekend, and then Monday they start to sell.
Keep this in mind as next week starts. Cramer can’t decide if this market is closer to 1987 or 1929, but he’s pretty sure bad news from Morgan Stanley and lack of good news from the world’s industrialized nations could cause a sizable drop in the markets on Monday and Tuesday. The Dow could go as low as 5,886, he said.
That’s what happened during the crash of 1987: The Dow lost 508 points from Friday’s close to the session-ending bell on Black Monday. Then Terrible Tuesday saw an intraday low 339 points below that before the market turned up. If this is how the present market plays out, Cramer wants investors to use a quarter of the cash he’s been urging them to raise each day to buy certain stocks on weakness. He thinks we might have come down enough to put some money back to work.
Why risk it? Because even people who bought stocks on the Friday before Black Monday broke even after a year. And those that bought during the lows of Monday and Tuesday saw some terrific gains 12 months later.
Seth Klarman's biggest fear
Biggest fear was buying too soon and on way down, from up in over-valued levels. Knew market collapse was possible and sometimes imagined I was back in 1930. Surely there were tempting bargains and just as surely would have been crushed after decline of next 3 years. A fall from 70 to 20 and fall from 100 to 20, would feel almost exactly the same. At some point being too early becomes indistinguishable from being wrong.
Getting in too soon brings risk to all investors. After a stock market has dropped 20% – 30% there is no way to tell when the tides will change. It would be silly to expect that every bear market will turn into a great depression. Yet fair value from under-valued can’t be predicted, and would be equally wrong.
As market descends you are tempted with purchasing companies. You will be bombarded with tempting opportunities. You never know how low things will go. When credit contracts and tide goes out on liquidity. At these times recall the wisdom of Graham and Dodd. At this time, you should not market time, but stick to your value convictions. You will see tempting bargains and value imposters. Ignore macro and look to buy cheap.
Stand against the prevailing winds, selectively and resolutely. Yet for a while a value investor will under-perform. Interim price declines allow you to average down. Do not suffer the interim losses, relish and appreciate them.
Controlling your process is essential.
A. Be focused on process, not outcome.
B. Do not judge a decision based on its outcome.
C. During periods of under-performance it is easy to change your process.
-- Seth Klarman at CIMA Conference 10/2/08
Getting in too soon brings risk to all investors. After a stock market has dropped 20% – 30% there is no way to tell when the tides will change. It would be silly to expect that every bear market will turn into a great depression. Yet fair value from under-valued can’t be predicted, and would be equally wrong.
As market descends you are tempted with purchasing companies. You will be bombarded with tempting opportunities. You never know how low things will go. When credit contracts and tide goes out on liquidity. At these times recall the wisdom of Graham and Dodd. At this time, you should not market time, but stick to your value convictions. You will see tempting bargains and value imposters. Ignore macro and look to buy cheap.
Stand against the prevailing winds, selectively and resolutely. Yet for a while a value investor will under-perform. Interim price declines allow you to average down. Do not suffer the interim losses, relish and appreciate them.
Controlling your process is essential.
A. Be focused on process, not outcome.
B. Do not judge a decision based on its outcome.
C. During periods of under-performance it is easy to change your process.
-- Seth Klarman at CIMA Conference 10/2/08
funds are selling (to who?)
Buffett's been busy lately putting his money where his mouth is. He has made high-profile investments in General Electric and Goldman Sachs' preferred stock, and he's likely licking his chops right now at the prospect of deploying capital in this target-rich environment.
So if Buffett's buying, why aren't fund managers following suit?
Many fund managers likely agree with Buffett's sentiments. And at today's prices, they wish they could be like Buffett and buy stocks. However, due to a panicked investing populace, that's simply not possible.
You see, when individual investors elect to withdraw their money from a mutual fund, the fund manager must quickly come up with the cash to redeem those investors. For the week ended Oct. 8, equity investors withdrew a whopping $43 billion from mutual funds, spurring a wave of selling by fund managers -- even though those managers likely still believed in the prospects of the stocks they were selling!
As Morningstar's Director of Equity Research Pat Dorsey explained in a recent video, these stock sales had "nothing to do with fundamentals, nothing to do with the underpinnings of our economy ... no matter what the stocks are, no matter how attractive those assets may be, [fund managers] have to sell them because they need to raise the cash to send those checks out" to their investors.
And that $43 billion figure doesn't even include hedge fund managers who are forced to sell stocks due to investor redemptions and margin calls!
As master money manager Ken Heebner -- skipper of the CGM Focus fund -- told USA Today, "The reason for the sharp decline is massive selling from hedge funds, not because they want to, but because they have to reduce their leverage ... it's the biggest margin call since 1929."
This indiscriminate selling likely explains why shares of quality companies have stumbled over the past month, even though the prospects of many of these companies have remained strong.
Mutual fund and hedge fund managers can't buy shares in these companies right now -- but you can. If you have money sitting around that you're comfortable committing for the next three to five years, and if you can stomach a little short-term volatility, now is a great time to scoop up shares of quality companies on the cheap.
[unless the market crashes further on Monday of course]
So if Buffett's buying, why aren't fund managers following suit?
Many fund managers likely agree with Buffett's sentiments. And at today's prices, they wish they could be like Buffett and buy stocks. However, due to a panicked investing populace, that's simply not possible.
You see, when individual investors elect to withdraw their money from a mutual fund, the fund manager must quickly come up with the cash to redeem those investors. For the week ended Oct. 8, equity investors withdrew a whopping $43 billion from mutual funds, spurring a wave of selling by fund managers -- even though those managers likely still believed in the prospects of the stocks they were selling!
As Morningstar's Director of Equity Research Pat Dorsey explained in a recent video, these stock sales had "nothing to do with fundamentals, nothing to do with the underpinnings of our economy ... no matter what the stocks are, no matter how attractive those assets may be, [fund managers] have to sell them because they need to raise the cash to send those checks out" to their investors.
And that $43 billion figure doesn't even include hedge fund managers who are forced to sell stocks due to investor redemptions and margin calls!
As master money manager Ken Heebner -- skipper of the CGM Focus fund -- told USA Today, "The reason for the sharp decline is massive selling from hedge funds, not because they want to, but because they have to reduce their leverage ... it's the biggest margin call since 1929."
This indiscriminate selling likely explains why shares of quality companies have stumbled over the past month, even though the prospects of many of these companies have remained strong.
Mutual fund and hedge fund managers can't buy shares in these companies right now -- but you can. If you have money sitting around that you're comfortable committing for the next three to five years, and if you can stomach a little short-term volatility, now is a great time to scoop up shares of quality companies on the cheap.
[unless the market crashes further on Monday of course]
Friday, October 10, 2008
Dow dips below 8000
The Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged nearly 700 points in the first minutes of trade to trade below the 8,000 mark for the first time since April 1, 2003, before bouncing back and erasing two thirds of its opening losses. The Dow industrial last traded down 247 points, or 3%, at 8,323. It earlier fell 697 points to a low of 7,882. The S&P 500 index ($SPX) was down 24 points, or 2.3%, at 889, while the Nasdaq Composite (COMP) fell 21 points, or 1.3%, to 1,625.
In the first five minutes of trade Friday the Dow plunged 697 points, falling below 7,900 to the lowest point since March 17, 2003. The Nasdaq and S&P also hit more than five-year lows. But stocks recovered abruptly, with the Dow erasing losses. The afternoon saw the Dow make violent swings back and forth across the breakeven line, toppling as much as 600 points and rising 322 points.
The Dow has now tumbled for eight consecutive sessions, losing nearly 2,400 points, or 22%, as panicked investors ditched stocks across the board.
For the week, the Dow fell just over 1,874 points, or 18%, its worst weekly decline ever on both a point and percentage basis. Wall Street lost roughly $2.4 trillion in market value during the week, according to losses in the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, the broadest measure of the market.
In the first five minutes of trade Friday the Dow plunged 697 points, falling below 7,900 to the lowest point since March 17, 2003. The Nasdaq and S&P also hit more than five-year lows. But stocks recovered abruptly, with the Dow erasing losses. The afternoon saw the Dow make violent swings back and forth across the breakeven line, toppling as much as 600 points and rising 322 points.
The Dow has now tumbled for eight consecutive sessions, losing nearly 2,400 points, or 22%, as panicked investors ditched stocks across the board.
For the week, the Dow fell just over 1,874 points, or 18%, its worst weekly decline ever on both a point and percentage basis. Wall Street lost roughly $2.4 trillion in market value during the week, according to losses in the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, the broadest measure of the market.
Pabrai on short selling
A good example to see how effective a ban on short-selling would be is to look at the Chinese stock market, where shorting stocks is illegal altogether. You can't short at all. Until recently, China just had ridiculous stock pricing, and even with their permanent short-selling ban, it didn't stop stocks from falling a tremendous amount.
This all reminds me of a comment made by Charlie Munger a few years back. He said that England, after the South Sea bubble, made publicly held companies illegal. They made them illegal for 100 years. They thought, "It's a casino, it's all nonsense," and they just got rid of the entire system. There was no stock market for 100 years.
Here's what's important: when they got rid of publicly traded companies, it made no difference in terms of the way commerce progressed. The GDP of England grew dramatically during those 100 years. The English people weren't bad at forming companies -- businesses still flourished -- and entrepreneurs could still raise capital from private sources.
Anyways, what Munger's point was is that many of the financial instruments that we think we need, we really don't need. They don't make a positive difference in commerce.
This all reminds me of a comment made by Charlie Munger a few years back. He said that England, after the South Sea bubble, made publicly held companies illegal. They made them illegal for 100 years. They thought, "It's a casino, it's all nonsense," and they just got rid of the entire system. There was no stock market for 100 years.
Here's what's important: when they got rid of publicly traded companies, it made no difference in terms of the way commerce progressed. The GDP of England grew dramatically during those 100 years. The English people weren't bad at forming companies -- businesses still flourished -- and entrepreneurs could still raise capital from private sources.
Anyways, what Munger's point was is that many of the financial instruments that we think we need, we really don't need. They don't make a positive difference in commerce.
The Real Great Depression
our current period is unlike the pre-1930s depression era. That depression was triggered by the crash of 1929 but primarily caused by bad monetary policy that exacerbated the debt deflation that followed from consumer over-indebtedness. Weakly structured consumer lending and manufacturing sectors led a sudden decline in consumer purchasing power. Demand crashed. The US depression was then quickly transmitted throughout the world via financial markets, then more slowly through disturbances in trade, which were multiplied by politically motivated disastrous trade policies, and finally war.
Our current episode has more in common with the 1870s depression which, as Nelson notes, was considerably worse. It was primarily caused by over-indebtedness in the commercial real estate sector, which mortgages were based on new forms of financing which were intermingled on the balance sheets of commercial banks with less rarefied assets that the banks added by making business loans. The era, as the poster to the left depicts, was one of broad based public participation in credit financed asset price inflation and speculation. When the commercial real estate market crashed, it took down the banks and caused the market for commercial credit to seize up, much as we are seeing today. Small businesses were hit especially hard. Unemployment spiked and a severe and lengthy depression ensued as financial markets throughout the world suffered, followed by international trade. The crisis emanated from Europe. It was the beginning of the end of Europe's dominance as the center of global economic power.
[via chucks_angels]
Our current episode has more in common with the 1870s depression which, as Nelson notes, was considerably worse. It was primarily caused by over-indebtedness in the commercial real estate sector, which mortgages were based on new forms of financing which were intermingled on the balance sheets of commercial banks with less rarefied assets that the banks added by making business loans. The era, as the poster to the left depicts, was one of broad based public participation in credit financed asset price inflation and speculation. When the commercial real estate market crashed, it took down the banks and caused the market for commercial credit to seize up, much as we are seeing today. Small businesses were hit especially hard. Unemployment spiked and a severe and lengthy depression ensued as financial markets throughout the world suffered, followed by international trade. The crisis emanated from Europe. It was the beginning of the end of Europe's dominance as the center of global economic power.
[via chucks_angels]
be in the game
This past Thursday, Columbia Business School held a conference on value investing to commemorate the publication of the revised edition of Benjamin Graham's classic volume, "Security Analysis." Seth Klarman of Baupost Group in Boston is an editor of the book and one of the leading value investors in the country.
"Normally, as a buyer you have to compete with a lot of very, very smart competitors," said Mr. Klarman. "But many of the smartest people are on the sidelines now because of redemptions, margin calls or panicked-out-of-their-mind selling. So you don't have to be as smart as you did before. You just have to be in the game."
The day Mr. Klarman spoke, the Dow fell an additional 348 points, and 658 stocks, or more than 15% of the total, hit new 52-week lows on the New York Stock Exchange. Yet the word Mr. Klarman and several other speakers kept using was "excited."
That is because investments everywhere are priced as if the whole solar system were going out of business. U.S. stocks have lost 24% since Jan. 1; foreign stocks are off 32%; emerging markets, nearly 40%; junk bonds are down 13%; even municipal bonds have fallen almost 10%. Money is pouring into U.S. Treasury debt -- so much so that stocks now offer more income than bonds do. The dividend yield on the Dow Jones Industrial Average is currently at 3.14%, higher than the 2.68% yield on the five-year Treasury note.
With so many professional money managers afraid to act, with most of the public in the grip of fear and anger, you should put your cash and your courage to work.
[via chucks_angels]
"Normally, as a buyer you have to compete with a lot of very, very smart competitors," said Mr. Klarman. "But many of the smartest people are on the sidelines now because of redemptions, margin calls or panicked-out-of-their-mind selling. So you don't have to be as smart as you did before. You just have to be in the game."
The day Mr. Klarman spoke, the Dow fell an additional 348 points, and 658 stocks, or more than 15% of the total, hit new 52-week lows on the New York Stock Exchange. Yet the word Mr. Klarman and several other speakers kept using was "excited."
That is because investments everywhere are priced as if the whole solar system were going out of business. U.S. stocks have lost 24% since Jan. 1; foreign stocks are off 32%; emerging markets, nearly 40%; junk bonds are down 13%; even municipal bonds have fallen almost 10%. Money is pouring into U.S. Treasury debt -- so much so that stocks now offer more income than bonds do. The dividend yield on the Dow Jones Industrial Average is currently at 3.14%, higher than the 2.68% yield on the five-year Treasury note.
With so many professional money managers afraid to act, with most of the public in the grip of fear and anger, you should put your cash and your courage to work.
[via chucks_angels]
stock market value to GDP ratio?
Ratio Of GDP ($14.3 trillion) to total stock market value($11.8 trillion) now stands at 82.5%. This compares to 139.1% a year ago and 190% in 2000. Buffett said in 2001 that satisfactory investment results could be expected when the ratio “70% to 80% area”
In 1974 the ratio was below 50%, but long treasuries were yielding 11% and sucking money from equities. You can argue that it is still too soon to buy, but I see lots of individual prices that are cheap and have started to commit some cash.
I think that even if it is too soon to buy, it is way, way too late to sell.
[via chucks_angels]
[later in the thread]
This is not correct. Buffett uses GNP:
You are right. I wrote my question incorrectly. I meant to ask Losch why he used GDP instead of GNP. That only makes sense given the context of the exchange.
Also, I am genuinely interested to find out how to get up to date and accurate numbers for total stock market capitalization. When I made a post on this topic a couple of days ago, a poster wrote me an email asking why I used the quoted index number for the Wilshire 5000. I made that assunmption given the index's description of itself being a good dollar for dollar measure of the US stock market. But after thinking about it for a while, I am not convinced that is a good approximation of total market capitalization. It definitely does not include the pink sheet or the OTC markets, and there could be other problems with the weighting et cetera. I figured if anyone could clear my misunderstanding up on the board, Losch could.
If my method was right (Wilshire 5000 quote divided by government GNP numbers), on the other hand, Losch is understating the general attractiveness of stocks by almost 25% using this value metric. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
* * *
I was wondering about the same thing. I found this in Wikipedia, but of course don't know how reliable it is:
"One index point corresponds to about US$1 billion. Hence the value of the index, multiplied by one billion dollars, roughly equals the total capitalization of the US stock market."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilshire_5000
If that were true, then 9,200 bn Total Market Cap would be around 65% of 14,300 bn GNP.
[stay tuned?]
In 1974 the ratio was below 50%, but long treasuries were yielding 11% and sucking money from equities. You can argue that it is still too soon to buy, but I see lots of individual prices that are cheap and have started to commit some cash.
I think that even if it is too soon to buy, it is way, way too late to sell.
[via chucks_angels]
[later in the thread]
This is not correct. Buffett uses GNP:
You are right. I wrote my question incorrectly. I meant to ask Losch why he used GDP instead of GNP. That only makes sense given the context of the exchange.
Also, I am genuinely interested to find out how to get up to date and accurate numbers for total stock market capitalization. When I made a post on this topic a couple of days ago, a poster wrote me an email asking why I used the quoted index number for the Wilshire 5000. I made that assunmption given the index's description of itself being a good dollar for dollar measure of the US stock market. But after thinking about it for a while, I am not convinced that is a good approximation of total market capitalization. It definitely does not include the pink sheet or the OTC markets, and there could be other problems with the weighting et cetera. I figured if anyone could clear my misunderstanding up on the board, Losch could.
If my method was right (Wilshire 5000 quote divided by government GNP numbers), on the other hand, Losch is understating the general attractiveness of stocks by almost 25% using this value metric. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
* * *
I was wondering about the same thing. I found this in Wikipedia, but of course don't know how reliable it is:
"One index point corresponds to about US$1 billion. Hence the value of the index, multiplied by one billion dollars, roughly equals the total capitalization of the US stock market."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilshire_5000
If that were true, then 9,200 bn Total Market Cap would be around 65% of 14,300 bn GNP.
[stay tuned?]
Thursday, October 09, 2008
quick drops
[yesterday]
The S&P 500 has dropped 18% in just seven trading sessions. The Dow sliced through 10,000 as though it wasn't even there, and has lost more than 15%. The Nasdaq? Off more than 20%. In just a week and a half.
If you didn't think stocks were risky before, you certainly know better now. Is it time to get off the ride before things get even worse?
What history really says
You've already heard all the basic talk about how historically, big market plunges are a great time to buy. That's easy to say looking back, but a lot harder to believe when you're in the middle of a plunge. So let's take a closer look at some similar periods in the past 20 years or so when stocks fell sharply:
Dates of Drop % Drop on S&P 500 % Change After 6 Months
7/12-7/23/2002 (13.4%) 11.2%
9/5-9/21/2001 (14.7%) 19.5%
4/3-4/14/2000 (9.9%) 2.2%
8/26-9/4/1998 (10.1%) 28%
8/15-8/23/1990 (9.7%) 19.2%
10/5-10/19/1987 (31.4%) 14.7%
Source: Yahoo! Finance.
Note that in terms of short-term drops, the past two weeks have been extraordinary -- only the 1987 crash exceeds the speed of the declines we've seen. Also, it's reassuring to see that after big drops, the market tended to do reasonably well in the near future. That even includes drops early in the bear market of 2000-02, when those short-term gains would later give way to further declines before hitting bottom in late 2002.
The S&P 500 has dropped 18% in just seven trading sessions. The Dow sliced through 10,000 as though it wasn't even there, and has lost more than 15%. The Nasdaq? Off more than 20%. In just a week and a half.
If you didn't think stocks were risky before, you certainly know better now. Is it time to get off the ride before things get even worse?
What history really says
You've already heard all the basic talk about how historically, big market plunges are a great time to buy. That's easy to say looking back, but a lot harder to believe when you're in the middle of a plunge. So let's take a closer look at some similar periods in the past 20 years or so when stocks fell sharply:
Dates of Drop % Drop on S&P 500 % Change After 6 Months
7/12-7/23/2002 (13.4%) 11.2%
9/5-9/21/2001 (14.7%) 19.5%
4/3-4/14/2000 (9.9%) 2.2%
8/26-9/4/1998 (10.1%) 28%
8/15-8/23/1990 (9.7%) 19.2%
10/5-10/19/1987 (31.4%) 14.7%
Source: Yahoo! Finance.
Note that in terms of short-term drops, the past two weeks have been extraordinary -- only the 1987 crash exceeds the speed of the declines we've seen. Also, it's reassuring to see that after big drops, the market tended to do reasonably well in the near future. That even includes drops early in the bear market of 2000-02, when those short-term gains would later give way to further declines before hitting bottom in late 2002.
credit default swaps (CDS)
How do credit default swaps work?
Don’t let anyone tell you CDSs are too complex for you to understand – they’re not much different from the insurance you purchase on your home or your car, except it’s bonds that are being insured.
Say you are the nervous owner of $10 million in face value of Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) bonds and you fear the bank could go belly-up, putting the value of your bonds at risk. One solution is to purchase protection in the form of a credit default swap.
Last Thursday, credit default swaps on Morgan Stanley’s debt were trading at 975 bps. In plain terms, in order to insure $10 million in face value of bonds against the risk that Morgan Stanley won’t meet its obligations, credit default swap buyers were willing to pay an annual premium of:
($10,000,000) * (9.75%) = $975,000
This premium is on top of an up-front payment -- last Monday, that sum was a whopping 12% of the total face amount being insured. In return, the credit default swap seller guarantees the bonds’ payments or their value in the event of default or bankruptcy.
Don’t let anyone tell you CDSs are too complex for you to understand – they’re not much different from the insurance you purchase on your home or your car, except it’s bonds that are being insured.
Say you are the nervous owner of $10 million in face value of Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) bonds and you fear the bank could go belly-up, putting the value of your bonds at risk. One solution is to purchase protection in the form of a credit default swap.
Last Thursday, credit default swaps on Morgan Stanley’s debt were trading at 975 bps. In plain terms, in order to insure $10 million in face value of bonds against the risk that Morgan Stanley won’t meet its obligations, credit default swap buyers were willing to pay an annual premium of:
($10,000,000) * (9.75%) = $975,000
This premium is on top of an up-front payment -- last Monday, that sum was a whopping 12% of the total face amount being insured. In return, the credit default swap seller guarantees the bonds’ payments or their value in the event of default or bankruptcy.
coordinated rate cut
[yesterday]
In an historic move, the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and many of the word's major central banks enacted a rate cut designed to contain the global credit crisis and support the worldwide economy. Stocks were initially higher following the coordinated actions, and markets in Europe pared losses. But the initial enthusiasm is being tempered by a lack of confidence in the credit markets and concerns the global economy is teetering on the edge of a recession.
Historic global rate cut
The Federal Reserve, along with the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Sweden, the Bank of Canada, and the Swiss National Bank acted together to cut rates as the Fed said that the recent intensification of the financial crisis has augmented the downside risks to growth and has diminished the upside risks to price stability. The Fed cut rates by 50 basis points to 1.5%, and the European Central Bank, which has resisted rate cuts this year, cut its key rate by 50 bp to 3.75%. The Bank of England, the Swiss National Bank, Bank of Canada, and Swiss National Bank also reduced their key rates by one-half percentage point.
The Bank of Japan welcomed the action but noted that at 0.50%, its main lending rate is already "very low." Shortly after the decisions were released, the central bank in Hong Kong acted in a similar fashion and slashed rates by 50 basis points. The People's Bank of China also reduced interest rates and cut its reserve requirement amid signs that the fast-growing economy is slowing. The unprecedented global action speaks volumes about the severity of the financial crisis and the desires of central banks to unthaw frozen credit markets and prevent the financial crisis from escalating.
UK rescue plan
European stocks have significantly pared losses following the global decision to slash interest rates but remain lower due to worries that the financial and banking woes are escalating. The UK said it will inject 50 billion pounds ($87 billion) in the banking system in order to recapitalize banks and prevent a breakdown in its banking system. Institutions that are included in the rescue plan include Barclays (BCS $18), the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS $2), and six other major banks. The Bank of England also said it will provide at least 200 billion pounds to banks under a special liquidity scheme in order to encourage intra-bank lending. The initial reaction did little to help credit markets as the overnight Libor lending rate surged from 3.93% to 5.38% and the three-month Libor rate rose from 4.32% to 4.52%.
Elsewhere, the global panic in emerging markets forced down Russian stocks by more than 10% in the first 30 minutes of trading before authorities halted trading. Ukraine, Romania, and Indonesia also stopped trading as shares plunged amid worries about the global banking system and expectations that worldwide growth is poised to slump. Commodities, which drive a significant portion of developing economies, continue to fall, but persistent anxieties are supporting gold prices.
Tokyo shattered
Rising worries about a global recession knocked down the Nikkei 225 Index in Tokyo by 9.4%, the worst decline since 1987. Shares of Toyota (TM $68) extended losses for the fifth consecutive day and fell 11% after the Nikkei financial daily said the leading automaker might lower its full-year profit outlook, but near the close, a senior executive said the company was not contemplating a reduction in its current forecast. Meanwhile, the growing financial crisis and recession fears leaned heavily on stocks, with South Korea losing nearly 6% and shares in Hong Kong falling over 8%.
Schwab Center for Financial Research - Market Analysis Group
In an historic move, the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and many of the word's major central banks enacted a rate cut designed to contain the global credit crisis and support the worldwide economy. Stocks were initially higher following the coordinated actions, and markets in Europe pared losses. But the initial enthusiasm is being tempered by a lack of confidence in the credit markets and concerns the global economy is teetering on the edge of a recession.
Historic global rate cut
The Federal Reserve, along with the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Sweden, the Bank of Canada, and the Swiss National Bank acted together to cut rates as the Fed said that the recent intensification of the financial crisis has augmented the downside risks to growth and has diminished the upside risks to price stability. The Fed cut rates by 50 basis points to 1.5%, and the European Central Bank, which has resisted rate cuts this year, cut its key rate by 50 bp to 3.75%. The Bank of England, the Swiss National Bank, Bank of Canada, and Swiss National Bank also reduced their key rates by one-half percentage point.
The Bank of Japan welcomed the action but noted that at 0.50%, its main lending rate is already "very low." Shortly after the decisions were released, the central bank in Hong Kong acted in a similar fashion and slashed rates by 50 basis points. The People's Bank of China also reduced interest rates and cut its reserve requirement amid signs that the fast-growing economy is slowing. The unprecedented global action speaks volumes about the severity of the financial crisis and the desires of central banks to unthaw frozen credit markets and prevent the financial crisis from escalating.
UK rescue plan
European stocks have significantly pared losses following the global decision to slash interest rates but remain lower due to worries that the financial and banking woes are escalating. The UK said it will inject 50 billion pounds ($87 billion) in the banking system in order to recapitalize banks and prevent a breakdown in its banking system. Institutions that are included in the rescue plan include Barclays (BCS $18), the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS $2), and six other major banks. The Bank of England also said it will provide at least 200 billion pounds to banks under a special liquidity scheme in order to encourage intra-bank lending. The initial reaction did little to help credit markets as the overnight Libor lending rate surged from 3.93% to 5.38% and the three-month Libor rate rose from 4.32% to 4.52%.
Elsewhere, the global panic in emerging markets forced down Russian stocks by more than 10% in the first 30 minutes of trading before authorities halted trading. Ukraine, Romania, and Indonesia also stopped trading as shares plunged amid worries about the global banking system and expectations that worldwide growth is poised to slump. Commodities, which drive a significant portion of developing economies, continue to fall, but persistent anxieties are supporting gold prices.
Tokyo shattered
Rising worries about a global recession knocked down the Nikkei 225 Index in Tokyo by 9.4%, the worst decline since 1987. Shares of Toyota (TM $68) extended losses for the fifth consecutive day and fell 11% after the Nikkei financial daily said the leading automaker might lower its full-year profit outlook, but near the close, a senior executive said the company was not contemplating a reduction in its current forecast. Meanwhile, the growing financial crisis and recession fears leaned heavily on stocks, with South Korea losing nearly 6% and shares in Hong Kong falling over 8%.
Schwab Center for Financial Research - Market Analysis Group
Martin Weiss' target = 7200
[Tuesday 10/7]
Today’s 508-point plunge brings the Dow closer to our long-standing target of 7,200. But to get there, it still has a long way to fall — over 2,200 points.
And if credit markets continue to shut down the U.S. economy, it’s not safe to assume that 7,200 will be the ultimate bottom.
* * *
That's it. Change your target as it gets closer..
Note: With two more days of declines, only 1400 points to go..
* * *
[10/10/08] Roubini has revised his target from 8500 to 7000
Today’s 508-point plunge brings the Dow closer to our long-standing target of 7,200. But to get there, it still has a long way to fall — over 2,200 points.
And if credit markets continue to shut down the U.S. economy, it’s not safe to assume that 7,200 will be the ultimate bottom.
* * *
That's it. Change your target as it gets closer..
Note: With two more days of declines, only 1400 points to go..
* * *
[10/10/08] Roubini has revised his target from 8500 to 7000
tax-exempt municipals
As with stocks and other investments, rates in the money market world tend to rise as risk increases. So ultra-safe money market funds that hold only Treasury debt have extremely low yields -- around 1.5% to 1.7%. Higher-yielding money market funds that hold corporate debt pay a bit more -- around 2.3%.
Those small differences in rates make plenty of sense -- in a tight credit environment, corporate issuers have to pay a premium to get investors to own their debt. But where traditional rate relationships have broken down is in the tax-exempt municipal money market. Although you might consider state and local governments to be no riskier than corporate issuers, the rates governments are having to pay for short-term borrowing have gone sky-high -- above 5% as of yesterday.
When you consider that interest on tax-exempt municipals is free from federal income tax, making that 5% equivalent to nearly 7.7% in a taxable investment for someone in the 35% tax bracket, you can see that things don't make sense right now. Are munis a great opportunity, or the latest value trap?
Those small differences in rates make plenty of sense -- in a tight credit environment, corporate issuers have to pay a premium to get investors to own their debt. But where traditional rate relationships have broken down is in the tax-exempt municipal money market. Although you might consider state and local governments to be no riskier than corporate issuers, the rates governments are having to pay for short-term borrowing have gone sky-high -- above 5% as of yesterday.
When you consider that interest on tax-exempt municipals is free from federal income tax, making that 5% equivalent to nearly 7.7% in a taxable investment for someone in the 35% tax bracket, you can see that things don't make sense right now. Are munis a great opportunity, or the latest value trap?
Dow dives below 9,000
The Dow Jones industrials fell under 9,000 this afternoon for the first time since the summer of 2003 as investor confidence that markets would stabilize appeared to collapse.
The S&P fell under a closely monitored support level of 960. A support level is important because it is supposed to trigger new buying.
At those levels, the crash of 2008 has left the Dow 39% below its record close of 14,164.53 and the S&P 500 down 41% from its record close of 1,565.15. Ironically, both records were set exactly one year ago today.
The S&P fell under a closely monitored support level of 960. A support level is important because it is supposed to trigger new buying.
At those levels, the crash of 2008 has left the Dow 39% below its record close of 14,164.53 and the S&P 500 down 41% from its record close of 1,565.15. Ironically, both records were set exactly one year ago today.
people depressed
Nearly six out of ten Americans believe another economic depression is likely, according to a poll released Monday.
The CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll, which surveyed more than 1,000 Americans over the weekend, cited common measures of the economic pain of the 1930s: 25% unemployment rate; widespread bank failures; and millions of Americans homeless and unable to feed their families.
In response, 21% of those polled say that a depression is very likely and another 38% say it is somewhat likely. The poll also found that 29% feel a depression is not very likely, while 13% believe it is not likely at all.
But economists, even many who feel current economic risks are dire, generally don't believe another depression is likely.
The CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll, which surveyed more than 1,000 Americans over the weekend, cited common measures of the economic pain of the 1930s: 25% unemployment rate; widespread bank failures; and millions of Americans homeless and unable to feed their families.
In response, 21% of those polled say that a depression is very likely and another 38% say it is somewhat likely. The poll also found that 29% feel a depression is not very likely, while 13% believe it is not likely at all.
But economists, even many who feel current economic risks are dire, generally don't believe another depression is likely.
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
no bottom in sight
The bear market that is ravaging investor portfolios is now one of the worst in modern U.S. history and has wiped out more than $7 trillion in shareholder value, with no bottom clearly in sight.
A year ago Thursday, Wall Street was celebrating the fifth anniversary of a bull market that had created $10 trillion in shareholder wealth since 2002. The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index hit all-time highs on Oct. 9, 2007.
A headline in USA Today captured the prevailing sentiment: "Market's run could keep going for a while."
In fact, the party was over. The subprime mortgage problem that was laid bare by a decline in home values developed into a much broader credit crisis that toppled giant banks and financial institutions.
Panicked investors have been fleeing from stocks. The S&P is down 37 percent from its peak of 1,565 a year ago, closing at 985 on Wednesday, and the Dow has tumbled 35 percent from 14,164 to 9,256.
Most experts don't see a recovery until there's greater stability in the housing market, banks are lending freely and employment improves.
Unlike other periods that saw precipitous drops, this one is rooted in foundering credit markets. That makes predictions more difficult than if the plunge were based on company profits or stocks alone.
"When you have an environment like this where the crisis is so deeply rooted from the credit standpoint, it adds an extra layer of ambiguity and ultimately of uncertainty," said Mark Freeman, portfolio manager for Westwood Holdings Group Inc. "That is what the markets are struggling with."
No turnaround is seen before 2009 or later. And there is a wide divergence of opinion on the future of this bear market, which feels unlike any other because of the $700 billion federal bailout and the collapse of investment banks.
This bear market — a term often defined as a prolonged drop in stock prices of 20 percent or more — already is harsher than most of the 10 bear markets since the 1930s. Those markets have lasted an average of about 16 months from peak to trough, with average stock losses of 31 percent, based on S&P data.
Since the record 83 percent plunge in 1929-32, the current market is exceeded only by the drops of 49 percent in 2000-02 during the tech stock implosion and 48 percent in 1973-74 during a recession and energy crisis.
[posted 11/2/08]
A year ago Thursday, Wall Street was celebrating the fifth anniversary of a bull market that had created $10 trillion in shareholder wealth since 2002. The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index hit all-time highs on Oct. 9, 2007.
A headline in USA Today captured the prevailing sentiment: "Market's run could keep going for a while."
In fact, the party was over. The subprime mortgage problem that was laid bare by a decline in home values developed into a much broader credit crisis that toppled giant banks and financial institutions.
Panicked investors have been fleeing from stocks. The S&P is down 37 percent from its peak of 1,565 a year ago, closing at 985 on Wednesday, and the Dow has tumbled 35 percent from 14,164 to 9,256.
Most experts don't see a recovery until there's greater stability in the housing market, banks are lending freely and employment improves.
Unlike other periods that saw precipitous drops, this one is rooted in foundering credit markets. That makes predictions more difficult than if the plunge were based on company profits or stocks alone.
"When you have an environment like this where the crisis is so deeply rooted from the credit standpoint, it adds an extra layer of ambiguity and ultimately of uncertainty," said Mark Freeman, portfolio manager for Westwood Holdings Group Inc. "That is what the markets are struggling with."
No turnaround is seen before 2009 or later. And there is a wide divergence of opinion on the future of this bear market, which feels unlike any other because of the $700 billion federal bailout and the collapse of investment banks.
This bear market — a term often defined as a prolonged drop in stock prices of 20 percent or more — already is harsher than most of the 10 bear markets since the 1930s. Those markets have lasted an average of about 16 months from peak to trough, with average stock losses of 31 percent, based on S&P data.
Since the record 83 percent plunge in 1929-32, the current market is exceeded only by the drops of 49 percent in 2000-02 during the tech stock implosion and 48 percent in 1973-74 during a recession and energy crisis.
[posted 11/2/08]
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
It Will Be Better
... In a Few Years, writes Joe Ponzio.
From its peak on January 11, 1973, the Dow began a two year, 47% slide from 1,067 to its December 9, 1974 low of 570. With no internet or stock market channel, most people continued on saving and investing, cognizant of the losses but not completely panicked or terrified.
Today, the doomsday crowd is calling for the end of the world and a total and final financial collapse. If we were to drop 47% from our high, the Dow would be 2,300 points lower at 7,568. Possible? Absolutely. Anything is possible.
But, like we did after the Great Depression and the 47% drop in 1973 and 1974, and like after so many other times throughout history, we will get through this, great businesses will be more valuable five- and ten-years from now, and price will eventually follow value.
Believe me — there are some very attractive bargains developing in this market, and you should look for them the same way you looked for them when the Dow was at 14,000.
From its peak on January 11, 1973, the Dow began a two year, 47% slide from 1,067 to its December 9, 1974 low of 570. With no internet or stock market channel, most people continued on saving and investing, cognizant of the losses but not completely panicked or terrified.
Today, the doomsday crowd is calling for the end of the world and a total and final financial collapse. If we were to drop 47% from our high, the Dow would be 2,300 points lower at 7,568. Possible? Absolutely. Anything is possible.
But, like we did after the Great Depression and the 47% drop in 1973 and 1974, and like after so many other times throughout history, we will get through this, great businesses will be more valuable five- and ten-years from now, and price will eventually follow value.
Believe me — there are some very attractive bargains developing in this market, and you should look for them the same way you looked for them when the Dow was at 14,000.
Monday, October 06, 2008
Dow dives below 10,000
The Dow Jones industrials plunged below 10,000 today for the first time since October 2004 as markets struggled to cope with continued fallout from a global credit crunch.
The sell-off wiped out more than $2.5 trillion in wealth, and it pushed the losses sustained by major indexes in the United States since their peak in October 2007 to more than 30%. The Dow's loss is about 31%, with the S&P 500 down 33.8% and the Nasdaq down 36%.
The sell-off wiped out more than $2.5 trillion in wealth, and it pushed the losses sustained by major indexes in the United States since their peak in October 2007 to more than 30%. The Dow's loss is about 31%, with the S&P 500 down 33.8% and the Nasdaq down 36%.
Friday, October 03, 2008
Rescue Package (aka Bailout Bill)
In a decisive vote, the Senate passed the $700 billion rescue package by a vote of 74 to 25, including a provision to raise FDIC coverage to $250,000, but a raft of tax cuts unrelated to the financial crisis could hamper chances in the House of Representatives. Persistent tightness in credit markets, nervousness over eventual passage of the bill, and worries about the economy are weighing on shares. Furthermore, losses accelerated after jobless claims unexpectedly rose. Still, House leaders are cautiously optimistic they can win passage of the package. [Schwab Alerts]
* * *
In a 263-171 vote, Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008in the hopes of unfreezing the credit markets. It will also hopefully reverse the panic that erupted after the plan failed to pass the House on Monday. As most of you know, the legislation authorizes the government to buy troubled assets from financial institutions.
The bill had $149 billion in tax breaks added to it since Monday’s no-vote, some of which were ridiculous earmarks as I touched on earlier this week. As unfortunate as this situation is – with the largest government intervention since FDR’s New Deal – passing this bill was absolutely the right thing in our opinion. We needed to stop the panic.
No, the plan’s not perfect. But the problem was that if we waited to act until a new, better version of the plan was constructed, a complete financial system breakdown was all-but inevitable. Anecdotal evidence of just how dire the situation had become probably swayed some votes into the yes camp. Even well-qualified borrowers being shut out of credit; small companies are finding they no longer have ANY access to their existing credit lines; and the market for commercial paper – short-term borrowing by businesses – suffered the biggest one-week drop on record. Businesses cannot function without access to credit, and the majority of the House finally came around to this realization.
Terrible “marketing” job
Part of the problem getting a majority of politicians and the public to rally around this plan was its poor “marketing” by the media and politicians themselves. The fact that the term “bail-out” has been used so ubiquitously is a frustration. No one is being bailed out and it’s not going to “cost” the taxpayer $700 billion. The U.S. government (taxpayers) is not handing the money to financial institutions … it is buying distressed assets with the money, and if structured properly the government (taxpayers) stands to ultimately benefit from the deal. That’s why Warren Buffett himself has said he’d like to get in on the deal with a 1% stake.
[Liz Ann Sonders, Charles Schwab & Co.]
* * *
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- After two weeks of contentious and often emotional debate, the federal government's far-reaching and historic plan to bail out the nation's financial system was signed into law by President Bush on Friday afternoon.
"By coming together on this legislation, we have acted boldly to prevent the crisis on Wall Street from becoming a crisis in communities across our country," Bush said less than an hour after the House voted 263 to 171 to pass the bill.
The House vote followed a strong lobbying push by the White House and other supporters of the bill. The House rejected a similar measure on Monday - a defeat that shocked the markets and congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle.
The law, which allows the Treasury Secretary to purchase as much as $700 billion in troubled assets in a bid to kick-start lending, ushers in one of the most far-reaching interventions in the economy since the Great Depression.
* * *
In a 263-171 vote, Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008in the hopes of unfreezing the credit markets. It will also hopefully reverse the panic that erupted after the plan failed to pass the House on Monday. As most of you know, the legislation authorizes the government to buy troubled assets from financial institutions.
The bill had $149 billion in tax breaks added to it since Monday’s no-vote, some of which were ridiculous earmarks as I touched on earlier this week. As unfortunate as this situation is – with the largest government intervention since FDR’s New Deal – passing this bill was absolutely the right thing in our opinion. We needed to stop the panic.
No, the plan’s not perfect. But the problem was that if we waited to act until a new, better version of the plan was constructed, a complete financial system breakdown was all-but inevitable. Anecdotal evidence of just how dire the situation had become probably swayed some votes into the yes camp. Even well-qualified borrowers being shut out of credit; small companies are finding they no longer have ANY access to their existing credit lines; and the market for commercial paper – short-term borrowing by businesses – suffered the biggest one-week drop on record. Businesses cannot function without access to credit, and the majority of the House finally came around to this realization.
Terrible “marketing” job
Part of the problem getting a majority of politicians and the public to rally around this plan was its poor “marketing” by the media and politicians themselves. The fact that the term “bail-out” has been used so ubiquitously is a frustration. No one is being bailed out and it’s not going to “cost” the taxpayer $700 billion. The U.S. government (taxpayers) is not handing the money to financial institutions … it is buying distressed assets with the money, and if structured properly the government (taxpayers) stands to ultimately benefit from the deal. That’s why Warren Buffett himself has said he’d like to get in on the deal with a 1% stake.
[Liz Ann Sonders, Charles Schwab & Co.]
* * *
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- After two weeks of contentious and often emotional debate, the federal government's far-reaching and historic plan to bail out the nation's financial system was signed into law by President Bush on Friday afternoon.
"By coming together on this legislation, we have acted boldly to prevent the crisis on Wall Street from becoming a crisis in communities across our country," Bush said less than an hour after the House voted 263 to 171 to pass the bill.
The House vote followed a strong lobbying push by the White House and other supporters of the bill. The House rejected a similar measure on Monday - a defeat that shocked the markets and congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle.
The law, which allows the Treasury Secretary to purchase as much as $700 billion in troubled assets in a bid to kick-start lending, ushers in one of the most far-reaching interventions in the economy since the Great Depression.
Thursday, October 02, 2008
Sweden 1991
"Risky lending practices, poor reporting transparency, and a booming real estate market led to a major meltdown in a large, established banking system. A weak regulatory framework was in dire need of an overhaul, and the government had no choice but to step in and take direct action in the banking sector."
That paragraph is about Sweden in 1991, but I'd forgive you for thinking "Washington, D.C. last week."
This time, there's a Greek chorus of respectable voices behind me, too. Bloomberg, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal all ran similar opinion pieces last week, pointing out the similarities between "the here and now" and "Scandinavia in the early 1990s."
In short, the credit crisis described above was stopped in its tracks by unblinkingly severe action among the Swedish, Norwegian, and Finnish central banks. Some of the largest Scandinavian banks were taken over by the local governments, while others were simply allowed to fail, but with government guarantees for their debt payments. All of the central banks raised interest rates to shockingly high levels. When the central lending rate sits at 500% -- however briefly -- you might as well just shut down bank lending altogether.
It was tough. It was expensive. Unemployment rates soon exploded, and the stock markets in Oslo, Helsinki, and Stockholm suffered dearly. But five years later, these banking systems were back on their feet and started lending out money again. Finnish phone giant Nokia (NYSE: NOK) was a 20-bagger in five years, starting in 1995, while rivals such as Motorola (NYSE: MOT) merely doubled. The Swedish precursor to today's pharmaceutical titan AstraZeneca (NYSE: AZN) tripled in three years, keeping up with American contemporaries such as Merck (NYSE: MRK). The crisis was over.
That paragraph is about Sweden in 1991, but I'd forgive you for thinking "Washington, D.C. last week."
This time, there's a Greek chorus of respectable voices behind me, too. Bloomberg, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal all ran similar opinion pieces last week, pointing out the similarities between "the here and now" and "Scandinavia in the early 1990s."
In short, the credit crisis described above was stopped in its tracks by unblinkingly severe action among the Swedish, Norwegian, and Finnish central banks. Some of the largest Scandinavian banks were taken over by the local governments, while others were simply allowed to fail, but with government guarantees for their debt payments. All of the central banks raised interest rates to shockingly high levels. When the central lending rate sits at 500% -- however briefly -- you might as well just shut down bank lending altogether.
It was tough. It was expensive. Unemployment rates soon exploded, and the stock markets in Oslo, Helsinki, and Stockholm suffered dearly. But five years later, these banking systems were back on their feet and started lending out money again. Finnish phone giant Nokia (NYSE: NOK) was a 20-bagger in five years, starting in 1995, while rivals such as Motorola (NYSE: MOT) merely doubled. The Swedish precursor to today's pharmaceutical titan AstraZeneca (NYSE: AZN) tripled in three years, keeping up with American contemporaries such as Merck (NYSE: MRK). The crisis was over.
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
The Bailout: Myths, Half-Truths, and Inconsistencies
The mother of the mother of all bailouts is quickly turning into not just one of the largest financial events in history, but a heated political argument as well. As we head into a vote on Capitol Hill this week, many, many questions still remain unanswered about how this plan is structured and whether it should be implemented at all.
You're bound to get a different viewpoint from almost anyone you ask, but here are a few thoughts on four of the chief areas of debate getting tossed around.
Myth: The proposed bailout will cost taxpayers at least $700 billion
The proposed $700 billion isn't a donation, a grant, or a gift -- it's an investment. The money will be used to purchase assets from banks at a steep discount to nominal value, and then sold down the road once the smoke clears. The proceeds from those sales will ... say it with me ... go back to the Treasury and pay off the debt issued for the bailout. It's completely reasonable to assume taxpayers could in fact profit from this venture in years to come if done properly.
Half-truth: This is a bailout of Wall Street
Oh boy, I can already hear the keyboards furiously punching out the hate mail on this one, but, please, hear me out. This is not a bailout of Wall Street: It's a bailout of the American financial system from a problem caused by Wall Street (as well as Main Street). There's a tremendous difference between the two.
Inconsistency: The economy won't implode if a big bank goes under
After all, we hear that, "Lehman Brothers was allowed to go bankrupt and the world didn't come to an end." I can see why this is a widely held belief, but let's dig a little further into the events of two weeks ago. Lehman Brothers went belly up sometime Sunday afternoon. By Sunday evening, Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) had to be hastily thrown into Bank of America's (NYSE: BAC) arms. By Tuesday, AIG had imploded. By Thursday, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) were on the brink of collapse.
I'll go out on a limb and assume that four once-in-a-lifetime events happening within 96 hours of each other wasn't a coincidence. The only thing that stopped the domino-style financial meltdown was word that the mother of all bailouts was taking shape. Like it or not, many of these firms truly are too big to fail.
Inconsistency: Let 'em fail, the sooner they die, the sooner we recover
Hogwash. "Tough medicine" makes sense insofar as the medicine isn't so tough that it kills you. The big factor that needs to be addressed here is that foreigners own more than one-quarter of all the public debt in America, which in effect gives them the ability to send the financial system into Armageddon if they sense our financial fortitude teeters on collapse.
Any large-scale fallout in the financial sector could give foreigners a good reason to start dumping treasuries en masse, causing a bank run on the largest debtor in the world: the U.S. government. There is no doubt that such a run would push the value of the dollar to unimaginable lows, as well as cause a domestic credit crisis to boil into a currency meltdown. Such a meltdown would make any recovery several orders of magnitude more difficult than it would be with the bailout.
* * *
[9/25/08] Confident but not yet celebrating, congressional leaders agreed Thursday on a multibillion-dollar bailout plan for Wall Street aimed at staving off a national economic catastrophe. President Bush brought the two men fighting to succeed him to a historic White House huddle on how to sell a deal to lawmakers who were still resisting.
Under the tentative plan, the government would buy the toxic, mortgage-based assets of shaky financial institutions in a bid to keep them from going under and setting off a cascade of ruinous events, including wiped-out retirement savings, rising home foreclosures, closed businesses, and lost jobs. Bush warned darkly in a prime-time address Wednesday night, "Our entire economy is in danger."
While lawmakers engaged in nitty-gritty dealmaking, Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain, who have each sought in their own ways to distance themselves from the unpopular Bush, prepared to sit down together with the sitting president at the White House for an hourlong afternoon session apparently without precedent. By also including Congress' Democratic and Republican leaders in the meeting, much of Washington's political power structure was to be gathered at one long table in a small West Wing room.
You're bound to get a different viewpoint from almost anyone you ask, but here are a few thoughts on four of the chief areas of debate getting tossed around.
Myth: The proposed bailout will cost taxpayers at least $700 billion
The proposed $700 billion isn't a donation, a grant, or a gift -- it's an investment. The money will be used to purchase assets from banks at a steep discount to nominal value, and then sold down the road once the smoke clears. The proceeds from those sales will ... say it with me ... go back to the Treasury and pay off the debt issued for the bailout. It's completely reasonable to assume taxpayers could in fact profit from this venture in years to come if done properly.
Half-truth: This is a bailout of Wall Street
Oh boy, I can already hear the keyboards furiously punching out the hate mail on this one, but, please, hear me out. This is not a bailout of Wall Street: It's a bailout of the American financial system from a problem caused by Wall Street (as well as Main Street). There's a tremendous difference between the two.
Inconsistency: The economy won't implode if a big bank goes under
After all, we hear that, "Lehman Brothers was allowed to go bankrupt and the world didn't come to an end." I can see why this is a widely held belief, but let's dig a little further into the events of two weeks ago. Lehman Brothers went belly up sometime Sunday afternoon. By Sunday evening, Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) had to be hastily thrown into Bank of America's (NYSE: BAC) arms. By Tuesday, AIG had imploded. By Thursday, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) were on the brink of collapse.
I'll go out on a limb and assume that four once-in-a-lifetime events happening within 96 hours of each other wasn't a coincidence. The only thing that stopped the domino-style financial meltdown was word that the mother of all bailouts was taking shape. Like it or not, many of these firms truly are too big to fail.
Inconsistency: Let 'em fail, the sooner they die, the sooner we recover
Hogwash. "Tough medicine" makes sense insofar as the medicine isn't so tough that it kills you. The big factor that needs to be addressed here is that foreigners own more than one-quarter of all the public debt in America, which in effect gives them the ability to send the financial system into Armageddon if they sense our financial fortitude teeters on collapse.
Any large-scale fallout in the financial sector could give foreigners a good reason to start dumping treasuries en masse, causing a bank run on the largest debtor in the world: the U.S. government. There is no doubt that such a run would push the value of the dollar to unimaginable lows, as well as cause a domestic credit crisis to boil into a currency meltdown. Such a meltdown would make any recovery several orders of magnitude more difficult than it would be with the bailout.
* * *
[9/25/08] Confident but not yet celebrating, congressional leaders agreed Thursday on a multibillion-dollar bailout plan for Wall Street aimed at staving off a national economic catastrophe. President Bush brought the two men fighting to succeed him to a historic White House huddle on how to sell a deal to lawmakers who were still resisting.
Under the tentative plan, the government would buy the toxic, mortgage-based assets of shaky financial institutions in a bid to keep them from going under and setting off a cascade of ruinous events, including wiped-out retirement savings, rising home foreclosures, closed businesses, and lost jobs. Bush warned darkly in a prime-time address Wednesday night, "Our entire economy is in danger."
While lawmakers engaged in nitty-gritty dealmaking, Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain, who have each sought in their own ways to distance themselves from the unpopular Bush, prepared to sit down together with the sitting president at the White House for an hourlong afternoon session apparently without precedent. By also including Congress' Democratic and Republican leaders in the meeting, much of Washington's political power structure was to be gathered at one long table in a small West Wing room.
What Next?
Schwab's Liz Ann Sonders writes..
Regardless of the remedies proposed and tried, it’s becoming more and more likely we’re facing a global recession. As you know, that’s been our view. We’re seeing a collapse in global industrial demand as evidenced by oil, coal and steel declines yesterday. Here in the United States, a lot of economic news is being pushed to the back pages, but it’s grim nonetheless. First of course is the impact of the stock market correction: the 9% drop we saw yesterday wiped out $1.3 trillion in value for equities’ holders (twice the value of the failed rescue plan). August’s personal income and spending numbers were out yesterday and they showed real spending unchanged last month, weaker than expected. It now appears that third quarter consumption will fall at a 2% annualized rate, which would be the worst performance since the end of 1991. A lot of the pressure is coming from autos, but consumers are cutting back broadly. And of course, we have the monthly jobs report this Friday, which will capture the market’s attention given the recent acceleration in the deterioration of employment conditions.
When the market moves dramatically in a single day, the volatility index (VIX) gets a lot of attention. Yesterday saw a big move in the VIX. According to Bespoke Investment Group, the 34% move yesterday was the sixth largest ever on a percentage basis. Large moves in the VIX aren’t necessarily indicative of any future direction in the market. Following the 10 largest one-day percentage moves since 1990, the S&P 500’s performance in the following day, week, month and quarter is mixed.
While large one-day moves tell little about the future direction of the market, the S&P 500’s performance following a high absolute reading in the VIX, more specifically above 40, is more consistent. Yesterday, the VIX closed at 46.7, which is the highest level in the index’s history. Since 1990, there have been four other periods when the VIX closed above 40. Following each period, the S&P 500’s performance was mixed the following week, but over the following month and quarter, the S&P 500 had consistently positive returns.
But before getting too excited, let me make one final comment on yesterday’s stock market action. It’s very rare to see selling pressure this great when the market is diving to a fresh 52-week low. It has only happened once in history and that was the crash of 1987. Historically, when we’ve seen similar action, the precedent is for a short-term bounce followed by extreme volatility which has typically, though not always, led to a medium-term lower low.
Regardless of the remedies proposed and tried, it’s becoming more and more likely we’re facing a global recession. As you know, that’s been our view. We’re seeing a collapse in global industrial demand as evidenced by oil, coal and steel declines yesterday. Here in the United States, a lot of economic news is being pushed to the back pages, but it’s grim nonetheless. First of course is the impact of the stock market correction: the 9% drop we saw yesterday wiped out $1.3 trillion in value for equities’ holders (twice the value of the failed rescue plan). August’s personal income and spending numbers were out yesterday and they showed real spending unchanged last month, weaker than expected. It now appears that third quarter consumption will fall at a 2% annualized rate, which would be the worst performance since the end of 1991. A lot of the pressure is coming from autos, but consumers are cutting back broadly. And of course, we have the monthly jobs report this Friday, which will capture the market’s attention given the recent acceleration in the deterioration of employment conditions.
When the market moves dramatically in a single day, the volatility index (VIX) gets a lot of attention. Yesterday saw a big move in the VIX. According to Bespoke Investment Group, the 34% move yesterday was the sixth largest ever on a percentage basis. Large moves in the VIX aren’t necessarily indicative of any future direction in the market. Following the 10 largest one-day percentage moves since 1990, the S&P 500’s performance in the following day, week, month and quarter is mixed.
While large one-day moves tell little about the future direction of the market, the S&P 500’s performance following a high absolute reading in the VIX, more specifically above 40, is more consistent. Yesterday, the VIX closed at 46.7, which is the highest level in the index’s history. Since 1990, there have been four other periods when the VIX closed above 40. Following each period, the S&P 500’s performance was mixed the following week, but over the following month and quarter, the S&P 500 had consistently positive returns.
But before getting too excited, let me make one final comment on yesterday’s stock market action. It’s very rare to see selling pressure this great when the market is diving to a fresh 52-week low. It has only happened once in history and that was the crash of 1987. Historically, when we’ve seen similar action, the precedent is for a short-term bounce followed by extreme volatility which has typically, though not always, led to a medium-term lower low.
The Cramer and the Dow
Without the Paulson plan, or if the plan is so watered down and delayed, I have been saying all bets are off and we could be in for a huge swoon. How huge?
I like to sit down and noodle on the actual components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average to give you a real sense of what can go wrong. And there is so much going wrong.
I don't want to bury the punchline, but when you add these worst-case prices together you get Dow Jones 8378, which, reluctantly, I admit is where we are going if everything fails with the plan and the economies here and worldwide are left to their own devices.
[10/10/08] Now that it has been hit, Cramer now says his worst case scenario was too bullish.
I like to sit down and noodle on the actual components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average to give you a real sense of what can go wrong. And there is so much going wrong.
I don't want to bury the punchline, but when you add these worst-case prices together you get Dow Jones 8378, which, reluctantly, I admit is where we are going if everything fails with the plan and the economies here and worldwide are left to their own devices.
[10/10/08] Now that it has been hit, Cramer now says his worst case scenario was too bullish.
Monday, September 29, 2008
biggest point loss ever
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks skidded Monday, with the Dow slumping nearly 778 points, in the biggest single-day point loss ever, after the House rejected the government's $700 billion bank bailout plan.
The day's loss knocked out approximately $1.2 trillion in market value, the first post-$1 trillion day ever, according to a drop in the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, the broadest measure of the stock market.
The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) lost 777.68, surpassing the 684.81 loss on Sept. 17, 2001 - the first trading day after the September 11 attacks. However the 7% decline does not rank among the top 10 percentage declines.
The Standard & Poor's 500 (SPX) index lost 8.8% and the Nasdaq composite (COMP) fell 9.1%. The S&P 500's loss was its largest point loss ever and its biggest percentage loss since the 1987 market crash.
The carnage was broad, with all 30 stocks in the Dow showing losses, along with just 497 stocks in the S&P 500.
Stocks tumbled ahead of the vote and the selling accelerated on fears that Congress would not be able come up with a fix for nearly frozen credit markets. The frozen markets mean banks are hoarding cash, making it difficult for businesses and individuals to get much-needed loans. (Full story)
"The stock market was definitely taken by surprise," said Drew Kanaly, chairman and CEO of Kanaly Trust Company, referring to the House vote. "If you watched the news stream over the weekend, it seemed like it was a done deal. But the money is being held hostage to the political process."
The day's loss knocked out approximately $1.2 trillion in market value, the first post-$1 trillion day ever, according to a drop in the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, the broadest measure of the stock market.
The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) lost 777.68, surpassing the 684.81 loss on Sept. 17, 2001 - the first trading day after the September 11 attacks. However the 7% decline does not rank among the top 10 percentage declines.
The Standard & Poor's 500 (SPX) index lost 8.8% and the Nasdaq composite (COMP) fell 9.1%. The S&P 500's loss was its largest point loss ever and its biggest percentage loss since the 1987 market crash.
The carnage was broad, with all 30 stocks in the Dow showing losses, along with just 497 stocks in the S&P 500.
Stocks tumbled ahead of the vote and the selling accelerated on fears that Congress would not be able come up with a fix for nearly frozen credit markets. The frozen markets mean banks are hoarding cash, making it difficult for businesses and individuals to get much-needed loans. (Full story)
"The stock market was definitely taken by surprise," said Drew Kanaly, chairman and CEO of Kanaly Trust Company, referring to the House vote. "If you watched the news stream over the weekend, it seemed like it was a done deal. But the money is being held hostage to the political process."
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Wamu, the largest bank to fail
As the debate over a $700 billion bank bailout rages on in Washington, one of the nation's largest banks -- Washington Mutual Inc. -- has collapsed under the weight of its enormous bad bets on the mortgage market.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. seized WaMu on Thursday, and then sold the thrift's banking assets to JPMorgan Chase & Co. for $1.9 billion.
Seattle-based WaMu, which was founded in 1889, is the largest bank to fail by far in the country's history. Its $307 billion in assets eclipse the $40 billion of Continental Illinois National Bank, which failed in 1984, and the $32 billion of IndyMac, which the government seized in July.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. seized WaMu on Thursday, and then sold the thrift's banking assets to JPMorgan Chase & Co. for $1.9 billion.
Seattle-based WaMu, which was founded in 1889, is the largest bank to fail by far in the country's history. Its $307 billion in assets eclipse the $40 billion of Continental Illinois National Bank, which failed in 1984, and the $32 billion of IndyMac, which the government seized in July.
Monday, September 22, 2008
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are now ordinary banks
The Federal Reserve said it has approved, pending a statutory five-day antitrust waiting period, the applications from Goldman Sachs (GS $128) and Morgan Stanley (MS $30) to become bank holding companies. Goldman said its decision was "accelerated by market sentiment" but provides it with access to permanent liquidity and funding. Morgan Stanley said the move offers the marketplace certainty about the strength of its financial position and its access to funding.
By scrapping their current structures, the two investment banks will be able to gather deposits and reduce their reliance on short-term funding markets. During the transition, the Fed said it will extend funding to broker-dealer subsidiaries of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. With over $150 billion in assets, GS Bank USA will be one of the ten largest banks in the US. Goldman Sachs is trading lower.
By scrapping their current structures, the two investment banks will be able to gather deposits and reduce their reliance on short-term funding markets. During the transition, the Fed said it will extend funding to broker-dealer subsidiaries of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. With over $150 billion in assets, GS Bank USA will be one of the ten largest banks in the US. Goldman Sachs is trading lower.
Friday, September 19, 2008
short selling ban
The federal government, trying to boost investor confidence in the face of a market crisis, took the dramatic step Friday of temporarily banning a practice of betting against financial stocks.
The move by the Securities and Exchange Commission will temporarily ban what is called short selling of nearly 800 financial stocks.
The 799 companies covered by the ban are an A-to-Z of the nation's financial institutions, including the powerhouse investment banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (nyse: GS - news - people ) and Morgan Stanley (nyse: MS - news - people ) and commercial banks running the gamut from Bank of America Corp. (nyse: BAC - news - people ) to Cape Fear Bank Corp. (nasdaq: CAPE - news - people )SLM Corp. (nyse: SLM - news - people ), which is known as Sallie Mae and is the biggest U.S. student lender is on the list, as are Charles Schwab Corp. (nasdaq: SCHW - news - people ), Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (nyse: BRK - news - people ) and Principal Financial Group (nyse: PFG - news - people ) Inc.
Washington Mutual Inc. (nyse: WM - news - people ), the nation's largest thrift, which has lost billions from subprime mortgage exposure and seen its shares plunge in recent weeks, also is on the SEC list.
The move by the Securities and Exchange Commission will temporarily ban what is called short selling of nearly 800 financial stocks.
The 799 companies covered by the ban are an A-to-Z of the nation's financial institutions, including the powerhouse investment banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (nyse: GS - news - people ) and Morgan Stanley (nyse: MS - news - people ) and commercial banks running the gamut from Bank of America Corp. (nyse: BAC - news - people ) to Cape Fear Bank Corp. (nasdaq: CAPE - news - people )SLM Corp. (nyse: SLM - news - people ), which is known as Sallie Mae and is the biggest U.S. student lender is on the list, as are Charles Schwab Corp. (nasdaq: SCHW - news - people ), Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (nyse: BRK - news - people ) and Principal Financial Group (nyse: PFG - news - people ) Inc.
Washington Mutual Inc. (nyse: WM - news - people ), the nation's largest thrift, which has lost billions from subprime mortgage exposure and seen its shares plunge in recent weeks, also is on the SEC list.
The Mother of all bailouts
Even after committing $285 billion over the past couple of weeks to bail out mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and insurer AIG, the Federal Government is now looking to fork over more — much more.
The Treasury Department and Federal Reserve now are making plans to buy troubled mortgage securities en masse from banks and other financial firms. This would amount to moving from ad hoc loans and bailouts to a more systematic approach to resolving the bad-debt problems at the heart of the current financial crisis. Systematic apparently sounds good — the Dow jumped 400 points after CNBC first reported Thursday that such an effort was in the works, and on Friday, markets around the world opened sharply higher. But the price tag could be steep. "We're talking hundreds of billions," Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said at a press conference Friday morning. "This needs to be big enough to make a real difference and get at the heart of the problem." The more alarmist economists are saying the cost of resolving the current crisis will exceed $1 trillion. To put that in context, total U.S. government spending in 2007 was $2.7 trillion.
* * *
Speaking in Green Bay, Wisc., Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain said Friday that the Federal Reserve should stop bailing out failed financial institutions.
The Republican presidential hopeful said the U.S. central bank must get back to "its core business of responsibly managing our money supply and inflation." He laid out several recommendations for stabilizing markets in the financial crisis that has rocked Wall Street and taken over the presidential campaign.
McCain renewed his call for tighter regulation of financial markets, even though he has generally championed deregulation throughout his career in the Senate and as chairman of the influential Commerce Committee.
The Treasury Department and Federal Reserve now are making plans to buy troubled mortgage securities en masse from banks and other financial firms. This would amount to moving from ad hoc loans and bailouts to a more systematic approach to resolving the bad-debt problems at the heart of the current financial crisis. Systematic apparently sounds good — the Dow jumped 400 points after CNBC first reported Thursday that such an effort was in the works, and on Friday, markets around the world opened sharply higher. But the price tag could be steep. "We're talking hundreds of billions," Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said at a press conference Friday morning. "This needs to be big enough to make a real difference and get at the heart of the problem." The more alarmist economists are saying the cost of resolving the current crisis will exceed $1 trillion. To put that in context, total U.S. government spending in 2007 was $2.7 trillion.
* * *
Speaking in Green Bay, Wisc., Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain said Friday that the Federal Reserve should stop bailing out failed financial institutions.
The Republican presidential hopeful said the U.S. central bank must get back to "its core business of responsibly managing our money supply and inflation." He laid out several recommendations for stabilizing markets in the financial crisis that has rocked Wall Street and taken over the presidential campaign.
McCain renewed his call for tighter regulation of financial markets, even though he has generally championed deregulation throughout his career in the Senate and as chairman of the influential Commerce Committee.
AIG booted from Dow, replaced by Kraft
A week of pain and ignominy for American International Group Inc. (NYSE:AIG - News) took another hard turn on Thursday when it got booted from the Dow Jones industrial average, ending the shortest term any company has spent in the blue-chip index since the Great Depression.
Taking its place come Monday's opening bell is Kraft Foods Inc. (NYSE:KFT - News), the first pure food company in the index in 23 years. Emblematic of the current market turmoil, the maker of such comfort foods as Oreo cookies and Kraft Cheese was apparently seen as a better fit for the world's most-watched stock index than another risky financial company.
AIG, which required an $85 billion government bailout to avert bankruptcy earlier this week, was added to the Dow in April 2004 and was touted at the time as representative of the growing importance of financial services to the U.S. economy.
[via chucks_angels]
Taking its place come Monday's opening bell is Kraft Foods Inc. (NYSE:KFT - News), the first pure food company in the index in 23 years. Emblematic of the current market turmoil, the maker of such comfort foods as Oreo cookies and Kraft Cheese was apparently seen as a better fit for the world's most-watched stock index than another risky financial company.
AIG, which required an $85 billion government bailout to avert bankruptcy earlier this week, was added to the Dow in April 2004 and was touted at the time as representative of the growing importance of financial services to the U.S. economy.
[via chucks_angels]
Thursday, September 18, 2008
a crazy day at the markets
An early rally in stocks that pushed the Dow up by 215 points soon after the open, fell apart by noon. Forty-five minutes later, the Dow was suddenly down as many as 150 points. But the situation reversed again, largely on news that the United Kingdom's securities regulator said it would ban short-selling of all financial stocks until Jan. 19.
Then, a huge rally erupted in American stocks this afternoon on reports that the Treasury Department was working on a plan to take bad assets off the books of financial institutions.
News of the plan was first reported by CNBC around 3 p.m., and stocks immediately shot higher. A At the close, the Dow Jones industrials were up 410 points, or 3.9%, to 11,020. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 50 points, or 4.3%, to 1,206, and the Nasdaq Composite Index was up 100 points, or 4.8%, to 2,199.
The idea, as reported by CNBC, would involve creating a federally-chartered company that would take over the bad assets of banks, investment banks and others. The financial institutions would then be able to raise new capital and lend money and finance new ventures.
It's been that crazy.
Then, a huge rally erupted in American stocks this afternoon on reports that the Treasury Department was working on a plan to take bad assets off the books of financial institutions.
News of the plan was first reported by CNBC around 3 p.m., and stocks immediately shot higher. A At the close, the Dow Jones industrials were up 410 points, or 3.9%, to 11,020. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 50 points, or 4.3%, to 1,206, and the Nasdaq Composite Index was up 100 points, or 4.8%, to 2,199.
The idea, as reported by CNBC, would involve creating a federally-chartered company that would take over the bad assets of banks, investment banks and others. The financial institutions would then be able to raise new capital and lend money and finance new ventures.
It's been that crazy.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
financial crisis
Here's what currently in-vogue economist (and NYU professor) Nouriel Roubini posted to his popular blog back in August, and again the day after Wall Street's latest Black Monday:
This is by far the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, not as severe as the Great Depression but second only to it. ... We are only barely midway in the meltdown of U.S. and global stock markets.
Professor Roubini is currently in vogue for good reason. The guy has basically been right about everything since the financial crisis began to unfold in earnest, penning a paper back in February that scripted (per its subtitle) "The Twelve Steps to Financial Disaster" -- steps that, alas, have indeed been taken.
* * *
The Biggest Financial Story of the Past 50 Years
Wow.
That about sums up the events of this past weekend, which saw the following events transpire:
● After failing to finagle a government bailout, Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH) filed for bankruptcy protection.
● Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) spurned Lehman Brothers and instead agreed to acquire Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER).
● Insurer AIG (NYSE: AIG) begged the Federal Reserve for as much as $40 billion of assistance.
This is bigger than either JPMorgan Chase's (NYSE: JPM) buyout of Bear Stearns or the government bailout of Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE). Our colleague Bill Mann, in fact, has deemed this weekend's credit-crunch-inspired string of bailouts, buyouts, and bankruptcies "the biggest financial story of the past half century."
Bigger than the dot-com bust? Yep. Bigger than Black Monday in 1987? Yep. Bigger than the oil shock of the 1970s? Mmmhmm.
NYU economics professor Nouriel Roubini, George Soros, and the International Monetary Fund have all called the overall credit crisis the worst since the Great Depression.
This is by far the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, not as severe as the Great Depression but second only to it. ... We are only barely midway in the meltdown of U.S. and global stock markets.
Professor Roubini is currently in vogue for good reason. The guy has basically been right about everything since the financial crisis began to unfold in earnest, penning a paper back in February that scripted (per its subtitle) "The Twelve Steps to Financial Disaster" -- steps that, alas, have indeed been taken.
* * *
The Biggest Financial Story of the Past 50 Years
Wow.
That about sums up the events of this past weekend, which saw the following events transpire:
● After failing to finagle a government bailout, Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH) filed for bankruptcy protection.
● Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) spurned Lehman Brothers and instead agreed to acquire Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER).
● Insurer AIG (NYSE: AIG) begged the Federal Reserve for as much as $40 billion of assistance.
This is bigger than either JPMorgan Chase's (NYSE: JPM) buyout of Bear Stearns or the government bailout of Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE). Our colleague Bill Mann, in fact, has deemed this weekend's credit-crunch-inspired string of bailouts, buyouts, and bankruptcies "the biggest financial story of the past half century."
Bigger than the dot-com bust? Yep. Bigger than Black Monday in 1987? Yep. Bigger than the oil shock of the 1970s? Mmmhmm.
NYU economics professor Nouriel Roubini, George Soros, and the International Monetary Fund have all called the overall credit crisis the worst since the Great Depression.
money fund breaks the buck
Extraordinary events are piling up on Wall Street so fast, it's hard to know where to focus. Forgetting the prospective bailout of AIG for a moment, since every media outlet is on that one, the most shocking development of the day for me is news that a $60 billion money market fund "broke the buck" on Monday due to losses in Lehman Brothers paper that it held. So much for the safety of "cash".
The Reserve Primary Money Fund (RPFXX) has become the first money-market fund in more than a decade to lose money because its board was forced to write down $785 million worth of LEH debt to zero. The fund has reportedly seen assets plunge by 60% to $23 billion in the past two days after holders got wind of the fact that it would have to cut its net asset value to less than its usual $1 per share.
[9/25/08] Help is on the way for some money market investors: TD Ameritrade says it's going to put up $50 billion to make sure its brokerage customers who have money in the Reserve Primary Fund suffer no losses. A drop in the fund's net asset value last week left investors with less than $1 for every dollar invested. Meanwhile, Ameriprise Financial says it'll backstop losses with up to $33 million. The firms said those amounts represent the cost of making up the 3 cents per share their customers stand to lose (the fund's net asset value dropped to 97 cents a share last week).
The Reserve Primary Money Fund (RPFXX) has become the first money-market fund in more than a decade to lose money because its board was forced to write down $785 million worth of LEH debt to zero. The fund has reportedly seen assets plunge by 60% to $23 billion in the past two days after holders got wind of the fact that it would have to cut its net asset value to less than its usual $1 per share.
[9/25/08] Help is on the way for some money market investors: TD Ameritrade says it's going to put up $50 billion to make sure its brokerage customers who have money in the Reserve Primary Fund suffer no losses. A drop in the fund's net asset value last week left investors with less than $1 for every dollar invested. Meanwhile, Ameriprise Financial says it'll backstop losses with up to $33 million. The firms said those amounts represent the cost of making up the 3 cents per share their customers stand to lose (the fund's net asset value dropped to 97 cents a share last week).
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Dow 8360?
A market that falls below its 200-week (3.8-year) average usually heads straight for its 200-month (16-year) average. I learned this concept from Belkin during the past bear market, and it was great guidance to the then-shocking deterioration in Intel (INTC, news, msgs), Cisco Systems (CSCO, news, msgs) and Oracle (ORCL, news, msgs). Lest you think that's a crazy idea, the Philadelphia KBW Bank Index ($BKX), which encompasses Bank of America and Wachovia, already is well below this level. So are General Motors (GM, news, msgs), insurer American International Group (AIG, news, msgs), International Paper (IP, news, msgs) and Merck (MRK, news, msgs). General Electric (GE, news, msgs) is close. Moreover, you should know that the 200-month average was the exact spot where the plummeting Nasdaq Composite Index ($COMPX) finally bounced and recovered in 2002. The 200-month averages for the big indexes now are 981 for the S&P 500 Index, 1,771 for the Nasdaq and 8,360 for the Dow industrials.
The average bear market of the past century has lasted less than a year and generated losses of 30%. But ones that lasted more than 12 months showed an average loss of 42%. All of these figures are averages with relatively few examples, however, and thus deceiving in their exactitude. The current bear market was caused by a perfect storm of trouble: a real-estate collapse, a credit disaster, an oil price mega-spike, recession and inflation. Will it persist for only an average amount of time and decline by only an average amount? That's an open question. Put me down as doubtful. For your score card, this bear market has so far lasted 12 months and generated a loss of 17%.
A reversal higher can be swift and big, and it is usually disbelieved at the start. Eventually, all bear markets end -- very often with a roar and when least expected. The only statistical measure that I have seen work effectively in the past 20 years to signify the end of a major bear phase is a one-two punch in which the market experiences a session in which 90% of prices and 90% of volume is to the downside, and then, within three days, the opposite occurs: a 90% upside day. Most recently, this measure -- invented by the nation's oldest technical research firm, Lowry's Reports -- kicked in to signify the end of a 3-year-old bear market in late March 2003. When that massive buying occurs, most investors don't believe the inflection point is really occurring and consider it just one more rally to sell into or short. But in reality, that has been the signature of the end of a bear. Despite recent highly volatile up-and-down trading, this combination has not yet occurred.
[via doctorm_33139]
The average bear market of the past century has lasted less than a year and generated losses of 30%. But ones that lasted more than 12 months showed an average loss of 42%. All of these figures are averages with relatively few examples, however, and thus deceiving in their exactitude. The current bear market was caused by a perfect storm of trouble: a real-estate collapse, a credit disaster, an oil price mega-spike, recession and inflation. Will it persist for only an average amount of time and decline by only an average amount? That's an open question. Put me down as doubtful. For your score card, this bear market has so far lasted 12 months and generated a loss of 17%.
A reversal higher can be swift and big, and it is usually disbelieved at the start. Eventually, all bear markets end -- very often with a roar and when least expected. The only statistical measure that I have seen work effectively in the past 20 years to signify the end of a major bear phase is a one-two punch in which the market experiences a session in which 90% of prices and 90% of volume is to the downside, and then, within three days, the opposite occurs: a 90% upside day. Most recently, this measure -- invented by the nation's oldest technical research firm, Lowry's Reports -- kicked in to signify the end of a 3-year-old bear market in late March 2003. When that massive buying occurs, most investors don't believe the inflection point is really occurring and consider it just one more rally to sell into or short. But in reality, that has been the signature of the end of a bear. Despite recent highly volatile up-and-down trading, this combination has not yet occurred.
[via doctorm_33139]
Monday, September 15, 2008
Dow drops 500
Stocks tanked Monday, as investors reeled amid the fallout from the largest financial crisis in years after Lehman Brothers filed for the biggest bankruptcy in history and Bank of America said it would buy Merrill Lynch in a $50 billion deal.
Treasury prices rallied as investors sought the comparative safety of government debt, sending the corresponding yields lower. Oil prices tumbled, falling well below $100 a barrel on slowing global economic growth. The dollar rallied versus other major currencies and gold prices spiked.
The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) lost 500 points, or 4.4%, according to early tallies. It was the biggest one-day point decline for the Dow since Sept. 17, 2001, when the market reopened for trading after having been closed in the aftermath of 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Treasury prices rallied as investors sought the comparative safety of government debt, sending the corresponding yields lower. Oil prices tumbled, falling well below $100 a barrel on slowing global economic growth. The dollar rallied versus other major currencies and gold prices spiked.
The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU) lost 500 points, or 4.4%, according to early tallies. It was the biggest one-day point decline for the Dow since Sept. 17, 2001, when the market reopened for trading after having been closed in the aftermath of 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Lehman files bankruptcy
Stocks plunge as worries now mount about AIG's future. Lehman Bros. files for bankruptcy. Bank of America will buy Merrill Lynch.
The fate of Lehman Bros. (LEH, news, msgs) and Merrill Lynch (MER, news, msgs) is sealed, with Lehman filing for bankruptcy and Merrill agreeing to be sold to Bank of America (BAC, news, msgs).
Wall Street is now watching and wondering what will happen to insurance giant American International Group (AIG, news, msgs), whose stock plunged $6.16, or 50.7%, to $5.98 this afternoon.
Shares of Lehman plunged $3.44, or 94.3%, to 21 cents per share after the company this morning filed for bankruptcy protection.
Wall Street is now left with two brokerages: Goldman and Morgan Stanley.
The fate of Lehman Bros. (LEH, news, msgs) and Merrill Lynch (MER, news, msgs) is sealed, with Lehman filing for bankruptcy and Merrill agreeing to be sold to Bank of America (BAC, news, msgs).
Wall Street is now watching and wondering what will happen to insurance giant American International Group (AIG, news, msgs), whose stock plunged $6.16, or 50.7%, to $5.98 this afternoon.
Shares of Lehman plunged $3.44, or 94.3%, to 21 cents per share after the company this morning filed for bankruptcy protection.
Wall Street is now left with two brokerages: Goldman and Morgan Stanley.
Friday, September 12, 2008
Asia stumbles
A 3.3% slide in the Shanghai Composite Index in China led a sell-off in Asia, sending shares to the lowest level in 21 months. Worries about asset quality at some of the major banks in China and fears growth is slowing were responsible for the latest slide. According to the Financial Times, Beijing is coming under increasing pressure to enact measures to stop the slide in stock prices, but so far, authorities have done little to signal any actions to prop up the market. Since peaking in October, Chinese shares have lost an astonishing 66%.
-- Charles Schwab, Morning Market View, September 11, 2008
-- Charles Schwab, Morning Market View, September 11, 2008
gurufocus stock performance
It has been a very tough year in the market. The S&P500 is down about 15% as of Sept. 10. Here we like to review the performances of our model portfolios. Each model portfolio consists of the top 25 stocks top ranked with its criteria. How did the model portfolios do in such a market?
All four model portfolios were rebalanced on Jan. 2, based on the close prices of Dec. 31, 2007 . Although all four model portfolios are down for this year, they all outperformed the S&P500.
* * *
In case you were wondering if there is any stock on all four lists, yes there is one. That stock is SHLD which has gone down from 116.01 to 99.09 (-14.58%) since being bought on 1/2/06. There are two stock on three of the lists. C has gone from 47.87 to 18.61 (-61.12%) since being bought on 1/2/06. CMCSK has gone from 17.3067 to 21.42 (+23.77%) since being bought on 1/1/06. Stocks that are on two of the lists are AXP, BRK.B, BSX, CNQ, HD, KO, LOW, MSFT, PENN, TGT, UNH, WB, WFC, WMT, XOM.
All four model portfolios were rebalanced on Jan. 2, based on the close prices of Dec. 31, 2007 . Although all four model portfolios are down for this year, they all outperformed the S&P500.
* * *
In case you were wondering if there is any stock on all four lists, yes there is one. That stock is SHLD which has gone down from 116.01 to 99.09 (-14.58%) since being bought on 1/2/06. There are two stock on three of the lists. C has gone from 47.87 to 18.61 (-61.12%) since being bought on 1/2/06. CMCSK has gone from 17.3067 to 21.42 (+23.77%) since being bought on 1/1/06. Stocks that are on two of the lists are AXP, BRK.B, BSX, CNQ, HD, KO, LOW, MSFT, PENN, TGT, UNH, WB, WFC, WMT, XOM.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
large cap value down again
According to Fama & French, large-cap value stocks have fallen for two consecutive years only five times in the past 100 years:
Great Depression: 1929-1932
World War II: 1939-1941
Arab oil embargo: 1973-1974
Collapse of the Internet bubble: 2001-2002
Collapse of the housing bubble: 2007-2008
It's rare, but this kind of marketwide value depression is a golden opportunity.
Great Depression: 1929-1932
World War II: 1939-1941
Arab oil embargo: 1973-1974
Collapse of the Internet bubble: 2001-2002
Collapse of the housing bubble: 2007-2008
It's rare, but this kind of marketwide value depression is a golden opportunity.
buying low p/e stocks
While it is not the end-all-be-all metric, the beauty behind the P/E ratio is its simplicity. Logic would argue that a stock trading at a lower P/E than its peers could be mispriced and therefore a potential value. Finding mispriced stocks is a fundamental principle of value investing, and there is plenty of evidence that low-P/E stocks outperform higher-P/E stocks over the long haul.
Despite the evidence that low-P/E stocks outperform their high-P/E counterparts, it's not enough to simply pick stocks with the lowest P/E ratio. It is important to look a company's risk and growth potential along with the quality of its earnings.
Despite the evidence that low-P/E stocks outperform their high-P/E counterparts, it's not enough to simply pick stocks with the lowest P/E ratio. It is important to look a company's risk and growth potential along with the quality of its earnings.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
raising and cutting dividends
Remarkably, Schwab research has found that stocks that have raised their dividends in each of the past five years have underperformed all other dividend-paying stocks by almost 3% annually since 1990! What's more, stocks that cut dividends in the prior year have outperformed all other dividend-yielding stocks by about 2.5% per year over the same time—possibly because investors view dividend cuts as a signal that management is serious about addressing financial difficulties facing the firm.
Saturday, September 06, 2008
institutional selling
At Legg Mason (NYSE: LM), for instance, there was $18.4 billion in net redemptions in the quarter ending in June. Amazingly, that was an improvement from the $19.2 billion in the previous one. The fund run by Bill Miller, whose legendary 15-year streak of beating the market was unparalleled in recent times, represented around $2.4 billion worth of Legg Mason's first-half redemptions.
As investors' money leaves an institution's control, fund managers can be forced to sell stock to meet those redemptions. When billions of dollars flow out of a fund, its manager is left with no choice but to sell some of the stocks it holds to come up with the cash. Since many of these funds share the same holdings, all of that forced selling drives their prices down.
In a perfect world, a fund manager would be able to pick which shares to sell based on valuation. The more expensive a stock relative to its true worth, the more of it the fund manager would sell, thereby minimizing the long-term damage to the fund. In the real world, however, a fund manager facing huge redemptions will sell whatever stocks happen to be liquid enough to support it.
There aren't all that many stocks with enough trading volume to support a sell-off of that magnitude. Over the past month, for instance, there have only been 69 individual company stocks across the U.S. and Canada with at least half a billion dollars' worth of average daily trade volume. They're virtually all names you know.
If a single fund manager needs to sell tens of millions of dollars in a single day just to meet redemptions, these highly liquid stocks are about the only ones that manager can easily sell. Multiply that impact by all the fund managers who face redemptions in a generally declining market, and you can see how stock prices can quickly plummet.
... As an individual investor managing your own money, you're not beholden to the redemption pressure that massive mutual funds feel. On the contrary, you can do what those fund managers only dream of doing: buy into an irrational, forced sell-off.
As investors' money leaves an institution's control, fund managers can be forced to sell stock to meet those redemptions. When billions of dollars flow out of a fund, its manager is left with no choice but to sell some of the stocks it holds to come up with the cash. Since many of these funds share the same holdings, all of that forced selling drives their prices down.
In a perfect world, a fund manager would be able to pick which shares to sell based on valuation. The more expensive a stock relative to its true worth, the more of it the fund manager would sell, thereby minimizing the long-term damage to the fund. In the real world, however, a fund manager facing huge redemptions will sell whatever stocks happen to be liquid enough to support it.
There aren't all that many stocks with enough trading volume to support a sell-off of that magnitude. Over the past month, for instance, there have only been 69 individual company stocks across the U.S. and Canada with at least half a billion dollars' worth of average daily trade volume. They're virtually all names you know.
If a single fund manager needs to sell tens of millions of dollars in a single day just to meet redemptions, these highly liquid stocks are about the only ones that manager can easily sell. Multiply that impact by all the fund managers who face redemptions in a generally declining market, and you can see how stock prices can quickly plummet.
... As an individual investor managing your own money, you're not beholden to the redemption pressure that massive mutual funds feel. On the contrary, you can do what those fund managers only dream of doing: buy into an irrational, forced sell-off.
Are the banks cheap?
Since the beginning of the credit crisis last summer, bank stocks have been absolutely murdered -- the KBW Bank index, which tracks 24 of the most prominent U.S. commercial banks (including Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup (NYSE: C), and JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM)) is down more than 40% from a year ago, at levels not seen in almost a decade.
Prior to 2008, the last time the Bank index was at this level was the fourth quarter of 1998. Russia had defaulted on its debt over the summer, precipitating the meltdown of hedge fund LTCM. In response, the Fed organized a private rescue of LTCM by a consortium of 14 banks and broker-dealers -- the fund’s massive positions were thought to threaten the stability of the financial system.
If that sounds familiar, it should -- the summer of 1998 offers direct parallels with the current environment. In March, for example, the Treasury facilitated JPMorgan Chase’s rescue of Bear Stearns on the assumption that the troubled broker’s failure posed an unacceptable risk to the financial system.
As serious as the current problems are, when a bubble deflates, it’s common for sentiment to shift from unbridled optimism to exaggerated pessimism. That spurred my curiosity: What is a fair value for the KBW Bank Index?
* * *
[9/8] Which banks to buy?
Prior to 2008, the last time the Bank index was at this level was the fourth quarter of 1998. Russia had defaulted on its debt over the summer, precipitating the meltdown of hedge fund LTCM. In response, the Fed organized a private rescue of LTCM by a consortium of 14 banks and broker-dealers -- the fund’s massive positions were thought to threaten the stability of the financial system.
If that sounds familiar, it should -- the summer of 1998 offers direct parallels with the current environment. In March, for example, the Treasury facilitated JPMorgan Chase’s rescue of Bear Stearns on the assumption that the troubled broker’s failure posed an unacceptable risk to the financial system.
As serious as the current problems are, when a bubble deflates, it’s common for sentiment to shift from unbridled optimism to exaggerated pessimism. That spurred my curiosity: What is a fair value for the KBW Bank Index?
* * *
[9/8] Which banks to buy?
Fannie and Freddie
The government has formulated a plan to put troubled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under federal control, dismiss their top executives and prop them up financially, federal officials told the two companies yesterday, according to three sources familiar with the conversations.
Under the plan, which could prompt one of the most sweeping government interventions in the workings of financial markets in U.S. history, federal officials would place the firms under a conservatorship, a legal status giving the government the option and time to restructure and revive the companies, the sources said. The value of the companies' common stock would be diluted but not wiped out; while the holdings of other securities, including company debt and preferred shares might be protected by the government.
[9/8] What's all this mean to shareholders?
Under the plan, which could prompt one of the most sweeping government interventions in the workings of financial markets in U.S. history, federal officials would place the firms under a conservatorship, a legal status giving the government the option and time to restructure and revive the companies, the sources said. The value of the companies' common stock would be diluted but not wiped out; while the holdings of other securities, including company debt and preferred shares might be protected by the government.
[9/8] What's all this mean to shareholders?
Sunday, August 31, 2008
The BMW Method
Jim Schout believes he's uncovered a trick to finding long-term winning stocks that have temporarily stumbled -- and he needs the potential for 25% annual returns before he becomes interested in a stock.
Granted, the investing industry abounds with prophets touting "winning systems" -- for a price -- but what grabbed my attention at a recent conference was that Jim doesn't charge a penny for his system. He's happy to exploit it for his own gain. We'll get to several stocks Jim likes -- and doesn't like -- shortly.
From its beginnings 13 years ago, Jim's "BMW" method has steadily gained adherents, blossoming into a self-propelled mini-industry of message boards (the BMW Method board is a staple of the Fool community), websites, conference calls, annual meetings, and T-shirts. Not to mention what seem to be great investing returns.
Invited to the 2007 BMW method conference to both speak and listen, I came away intrigued -- and armed with an interview from Jim Schout, the man who scoffs at 24% returns. (Note: This interview was first published Dec. 14, 2007.)
James Early: In a nutshell, what is the BMW method?
Jim Schout: The BMW method is about exploiting something in plain view, yet something the market seldom looks at: the really big picture. In the short run, the market may be very irrational, but the market is always correct in the long term. Like a band in formation, or sports fans collectively spelling out enormous words at a stadium, investors often don't see the big picture -- but with a bird's-eye view, it's easy to spot.
I achieve this by applying lines of constant growth to a stock's long-term price data. Let's say a company's stock price has average growth of 12% annually over the past two or three decades. I might apply lines representing 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, and 14% growth to the chart. What often jumps into view is [that] the share price continually rises after reaching the 10% CAGR line. The price tends [to] "bounce" up from that low growth line over and over again. That is the BMW method in a nutshell. It is quite simple to spot underpriced equities this way.
If a stock is presently priced at its historically low CAGR, what's wrong? I'll dig deeper here with due diligence to determine if I think the problem is temporary. It's essential to see if there has been a fundamental shift in the company's ability to add value. Maybe a law changed, or a technology became obsolete. More often, Wall Street has decided to act irrationally and undervalue the shares. I love it when that happens.
At the end of the day, if I believe that the underperformance is temporary, or it exists for reasons that make the downturn irrational from an investing sense, then I will buy that stock.
Granted, the investing industry abounds with prophets touting "winning systems" -- for a price -- but what grabbed my attention at a recent conference was that Jim doesn't charge a penny for his system. He's happy to exploit it for his own gain. We'll get to several stocks Jim likes -- and doesn't like -- shortly.
From its beginnings 13 years ago, Jim's "BMW" method has steadily gained adherents, blossoming into a self-propelled mini-industry of message boards (the BMW Method board is a staple of the Fool community), websites, conference calls, annual meetings, and T-shirts. Not to mention what seem to be great investing returns.
Invited to the 2007 BMW method conference to both speak and listen, I came away intrigued -- and armed with an interview from Jim Schout, the man who scoffs at 24% returns. (Note: This interview was first published Dec. 14, 2007.)
James Early: In a nutshell, what is the BMW method?
Jim Schout: The BMW method is about exploiting something in plain view, yet something the market seldom looks at: the really big picture. In the short run, the market may be very irrational, but the market is always correct in the long term. Like a band in formation, or sports fans collectively spelling out enormous words at a stadium, investors often don't see the big picture -- but with a bird's-eye view, it's easy to spot.
I achieve this by applying lines of constant growth to a stock's long-term price data. Let's say a company's stock price has average growth of 12% annually over the past two or three decades. I might apply lines representing 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, and 14% growth to the chart. What often jumps into view is [that] the share price continually rises after reaching the 10% CAGR line. The price tends [to] "bounce" up from that low growth line over and over again. That is the BMW method in a nutshell. It is quite simple to spot underpriced equities this way.
If a stock is presently priced at its historically low CAGR, what's wrong? I'll dig deeper here with due diligence to determine if I think the problem is temporary. It's essential to see if there has been a fundamental shift in the company's ability to add value. Maybe a law changed, or a technology became obsolete. More often, Wall Street has decided to act irrationally and undervalue the shares. I love it when that happens.
At the end of the day, if I believe that the underperformance is temporary, or it exists for reasons that make the downturn irrational from an investing sense, then I will buy that stock.
Where have we heard this before?
Here's a couple of predictions I recently came across:
"We are in the early stages of a long cycle of generally accelerating inflation."
"If we do not solve the energy crisis, the American Dream is over."
Where'd I find these bearish remarks? They weren't part of a Jim Cramer rant or a Barack Obama speech. In fact, they weren't made by anyone contemplating recent headlines.
Nope -- these are from the pages of Howard Ruff's 1981 book, Survive & Win in the Inflationary Eighties. These eerie predictions -- which sound like they were stripped from the front page of a recent Wall Street Journal -- are nearly 30 years old!
"We are in the early stages of a long cycle of generally accelerating inflation."
"If we do not solve the energy crisis, the American Dream is over."
Where'd I find these bearish remarks? They weren't part of a Jim Cramer rant or a Barack Obama speech. In fact, they weren't made by anyone contemplating recent headlines.
Nope -- these are from the pages of Howard Ruff's 1981 book, Survive & Win in the Inflationary Eighties. These eerie predictions -- which sound like they were stripped from the front page of a recent Wall Street Journal -- are nearly 30 years old!
Charlie Munger quotes
Had Warren Buffett never been born, there's a good chance we'd award the "world's greatest investor" honor to his right-hand man, Charlie Munger. Not only is Berkshire Hathaway's (NYSE: BRK-A) co-chairman a phenomenally talented investor, but he'd probably school almost anyone in a debate about philosophy, biology, physics, or just about any other topic. The man's disturbingly smart.
I'd continue this introduction, but as Munger might bluntly say, "Nobody would listen." Without further ado, here are five Munger quotes you should study before making another investment decision.
[9/5/08] Five more Munger quotes
I'd continue this introduction, but as Munger might bluntly say, "Nobody would listen." Without further ado, here are five Munger quotes you should study before making another investment decision.
[9/5/08] Five more Munger quotes
Da Bear
If we exclude the two most extreme bears -- the grinder of 1973-1974 and the dot-bomb bear of 2001-2003 -- some fairly consistent patterns emerge. The total market declines from top to bottom ranged from 21.5% to 36.1%. Yet while the typical length of bear markets ranged from just over three months to more than a year and a half, they usually ended within six months after hitting that 20% decline.
Compare with where we are now: about 1.5 months past the 20% marker, almost 11 months of bear-dom so far, and the low point so far (as of this writing) was 22.4% off the high, set on July 15. All of which is right in the historical ranges -- so far, this bear isn't extraordinary by any means.
Compare with where we are now: about 1.5 months past the 20% marker, almost 11 months of bear-dom so far, and the low point so far (as of this writing) was 22.4% off the high, set on July 15. All of which is right in the historical ranges -- so far, this bear isn't extraordinary by any means.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
bearish sentiment
A recent New York Times article pointed out that bearish sentiment, as measured by the Conference Board, has hit an all-time high. Fully 55% of the people questioned in July expect the stock market to decline over the next 12 months.
Why is this important today? Because each time the bearish sentiment has exceeded 35% over the past 21 years, the market has confounded that sentiment by gaining ground over the following year, at an average pace of 20.5%.
Why is this important today? Because each time the bearish sentiment has exceeded 35% over the past 21 years, the market has confounded that sentiment by gaining ground over the following year, at an average pace of 20.5%.
10 Things Millionaires Won't Tell You
7. "I was a B student."
Mom was right when she said good grades were the key to success — just not necessarily a big bank account. According to the book "The Millionaire Mind," the median college grade point average for millionaires is 2.9, and the average SAT score is 1190 — hardly Harvard material. In fact, 59 percent of millionaires attended a state college or university, according to AmEx/Harrison.
When asked to list the keys to their success, millionaires rank hard work first, followed by education, determination and "treating others with respect." They also say that what they absorbed in class was less important than learning how to study and stay disciplined, says Jim Taylor, vice chairman of the Harrison Group.
Mom was right when she said good grades were the key to success — just not necessarily a big bank account. According to the book "The Millionaire Mind," the median college grade point average for millionaires is 2.9, and the average SAT score is 1190 — hardly Harvard material. In fact, 59 percent of millionaires attended a state college or university, according to AmEx/Harrison.
When asked to list the keys to their success, millionaires rank hard work first, followed by education, determination and "treating others with respect." They also say that what they absorbed in class was less important than learning how to study and stay disciplined, says Jim Taylor, vice chairman of the Harrison Group.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
How are oil prices set?
Crude is a commodity, a raw material like natural gas, corn, wheat, gold, coffee, and cattle used to produce other goods. The costs of extracting oil from its source could vary widely from $5.26 a barrel in the Middle East region to $63.71 for U.S. offshore crude, based on 2004-6 averages from the EIA. Petroleum is bought and sold under exotic names like Nigerian Bonny Light, North Sea Brent Blend, and West Texas Intermediate on a variety of futures markets -- where traders deal for the rights to buy and sell product at a specific price on a future date -- around the world and governed by the rules of a particular country.
"The energy markets are among the largest and most liquid," says Timmer. "The oil market is no different from the stock market in that oil futures are traded on exchanges where buyers meet sellers." For an outsider, however, locating precise figures to explain how crude is currently priced is harder to unearth than a gusher in Central Park.
Generally, there are two ways to trade commodities: either market trading or over-the-counter trading (OTC). Market trading takes place through the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and is self-regulated with oversight by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the government agency charged with regulating the commodities markets. In contrast, OTC trading is conducted without any such regulatory controls.
Only about 25%-35% of all energy trading occurs on the NYMEX,4 which means up to 75% of all oil contracts go unchecked by the federal government. Because OTC trading is unregulated, the exact volume of trades -- not to mention the legality -- is unknown. To compound matters, despite growing activity in the commodities markets, the CFTC has a staff of less than 500, compared to 3,700 for the Securities & Exchange Commission.
Other legal escape routes allow energy trading on so-called "dark markets," exchanges not subject to the transparency and accountability laws governing U.S. exchanges. For example, the "foreign markets loophole" lets investors buy and sell millions of barrels of U.S.-bound oil multiple times overseas before ever reaching American shores, thereby driving up the price with each change of hands.
The standards for trading crude oil and setting prices should be, theoretically, consistent among different international market regulators. However, recent U.S. congressional hearings have introduced terms like "dark markets" and "swaps loopholes" used by some investors to skirt largely toothless government controls. Oil speculators -- typically hedge funds and investment banks -- have come under a spotlight amid allegations of exploiting gaps in the regulatory system.
According to the CFTC, the government agency charged with regulating the commodities markets, the percentage of petrol contracts controlled by speculators has surged to 71% in 2008 from 37% in 2000.
The International Monetary Fund has concluded that speculation has played a significant role in the run-up of oil prices, according to testimony at a June 23 House Energy & Commerce subcommittee. Also at that meeting a Lehman Brothers analysis suggested that more than half of the price of a barrel of oil may be attributed to speculation. Even the Saudis, the world's largest oil producer of 9.7 million barrels a day as of July, contend that supply-and-demand seems to be in balance and that there is no substantive basis for current price levels.5
At this stage, however, no one knows for sure if any improper oil transactions have been executed. In part, that's because American authorities can neither fully police nor gain access to data in most overseas commodities markets.
"The energy markets are among the largest and most liquid," says Timmer. "The oil market is no different from the stock market in that oil futures are traded on exchanges where buyers meet sellers." For an outsider, however, locating precise figures to explain how crude is currently priced is harder to unearth than a gusher in Central Park.
Generally, there are two ways to trade commodities: either market trading or over-the-counter trading (OTC). Market trading takes place through the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and is self-regulated with oversight by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the government agency charged with regulating the commodities markets. In contrast, OTC trading is conducted without any such regulatory controls.
Only about 25%-35% of all energy trading occurs on the NYMEX,4 which means up to 75% of all oil contracts go unchecked by the federal government. Because OTC trading is unregulated, the exact volume of trades -- not to mention the legality -- is unknown. To compound matters, despite growing activity in the commodities markets, the CFTC has a staff of less than 500, compared to 3,700 for the Securities & Exchange Commission.
Other legal escape routes allow energy trading on so-called "dark markets," exchanges not subject to the transparency and accountability laws governing U.S. exchanges. For example, the "foreign markets loophole" lets investors buy and sell millions of barrels of U.S.-bound oil multiple times overseas before ever reaching American shores, thereby driving up the price with each change of hands.
The standards for trading crude oil and setting prices should be, theoretically, consistent among different international market regulators. However, recent U.S. congressional hearings have introduced terms like "dark markets" and "swaps loopholes" used by some investors to skirt largely toothless government controls. Oil speculators -- typically hedge funds and investment banks -- have come under a spotlight amid allegations of exploiting gaps in the regulatory system.
According to the CFTC, the government agency charged with regulating the commodities markets, the percentage of petrol contracts controlled by speculators has surged to 71% in 2008 from 37% in 2000.
The International Monetary Fund has concluded that speculation has played a significant role in the run-up of oil prices, according to testimony at a June 23 House Energy & Commerce subcommittee. Also at that meeting a Lehman Brothers analysis suggested that more than half of the price of a barrel of oil may be attributed to speculation. Even the Saudis, the world's largest oil producer of 9.7 million barrels a day as of July, contend that supply-and-demand seems to be in balance and that there is no substantive basis for current price levels.5
At this stage, however, no one knows for sure if any improper oil transactions have been executed. In part, that's because American authorities can neither fully police nor gain access to data in most overseas commodities markets.
dividends and growth
In 2003, Rob Arnott -- former editor of the Financial Analysts Journal, a publication of the CFA Institute -- and Clifford Asness, managing principal at AQR Capital Management, looked at dividend yields and subsequent 10-year earnings growth. Their findings? Amazingly, earnings growth increased with dividend payout, right up to the highest payers having the highest next-10-year earnings growth.
a long bear
From 1959 to 1974, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained precisely 0%. It has gone down as one of the longest and most painful bear markets of recent history.
The Nasdaq is currently in what is shaping up to be an even longer bear market. It's down around 50% from its peak of more than 5,000 in March 2000, and I would argue that it's likely to take another 12 years -- until 2020 -- to reach that level again. That would mean a roughly 20-year period of 0% returns for the index. Like the 15-year bear market from 1959 to 1974, it will go down as one of the biggest bear markets of all time.
But the truth is, there's still money to be made in bear markets.
... the first thing about making money in this bear market is clear: Don't buy and forget. Monitor your existing holdings, sell if your thesis has radically changed, keep cash ready to pounce on new opportunities, and put that money to work on a regular basis. It may seem obvious, but an individual investor would have made far more money by investing throughout the bear market than during the irrational exuberance of the bull.
The Nasdaq is currently in what is shaping up to be an even longer bear market. It's down around 50% from its peak of more than 5,000 in March 2000, and I would argue that it's likely to take another 12 years -- until 2020 -- to reach that level again. That would mean a roughly 20-year period of 0% returns for the index. Like the 15-year bear market from 1959 to 1974, it will go down as one of the biggest bear markets of all time.
But the truth is, there's still money to be made in bear markets.
... the first thing about making money in this bear market is clear: Don't buy and forget. Monitor your existing holdings, sell if your thesis has radically changed, keep cash ready to pounce on new opportunities, and put that money to work on a regular basis. It may seem obvious, but an individual investor would have made far more money by investing throughout the bear market than during the irrational exuberance of the bull.
The Secret of Dividends
Between January 1926 and December 2006, 41% of the S&P 500's total return sprang not from the price appreciation of the stocks in the index but from the dividends its companies paid out.
That's right -- a cool 41%. Annualized, that amounts to 4.4 percentage points. To put it in dollars-and-cents terms, consider this: An investment of $10,000 over that stretch would have grown to $1,013,000 without dividends. With dividends kicked in and reinvested, however, that same sum would have been worth a whopping $24,113,000 by the end of the period.
Talk about the miracle of compound interest!
That's right -- a cool 41%. Annualized, that amounts to 4.4 percentage points. To put it in dollars-and-cents terms, consider this: An investment of $10,000 over that stretch would have grown to $1,013,000 without dividends. With dividends kicked in and reinvested, however, that same sum would have been worth a whopping $24,113,000 by the end of the period.
Talk about the miracle of compound interest!
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
300 Point Rallies
We're in a very confusing atmosphere. People didn't really know what to make of a 300-point rally in the Dow the other day, but my main message was that 300-point rallies from the Dow don't happen in bull markets. In fact, they never happened in the bull market from October '02 to October '07, but it has happened 6 times in this bear market and happened 12 times in the last bear market. You don't get moves like that in bull markets. As Rich Bernstein has said time and again, "This is the hallmark of a recession and a hallmark of a bear market."
Monday, August 18, 2008
Mauldin not bullish (surprise)
I think we are likely to stay in recession for perhaps the rest of the year and well into 2009 before we start a very slow recovery. It is not time to get bullish on stocks, as I have been writing for the past few months. Earnings are going to continue to come under pressure, and earnings are what drive the stock market over the long term. We could see total S&P 500 as-reported earnings drop below $50. You do the math. Even with a 20 multiple, that does not yield a pretty picture.
I think we are going to test the recent lows and then watch the market go lower as the market gets disappointed in the earnings from the third quarter, and re-test those lows again. We are in for an extended period of Muddle Through, while we wait for the housing market to find a bottom and the credit crisis to abate. Banks and other institutions have written off about $500 billion. There is at least another $500 billion to go. The amount of capital that is going to need to be raised is astronomical, and it is going to be very dilutive to current shareholders.
I think we are going to test the recent lows and then watch the market go lower as the market gets disappointed in the earnings from the third quarter, and re-test those lows again. We are in for an extended period of Muddle Through, while we wait for the housing market to find a bottom and the credit crisis to abate. Banks and other institutions have written off about $500 billion. There is at least another $500 billion to go. The amount of capital that is going to need to be raised is astronomical, and it is going to be very dilutive to current shareholders.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
gurufocus financial data and charts
About two months ago, we informed our users that we have licensed 10-year financial data. The data is now available to all users. Here we like to introduce the features in the new page.
The Accidental Billionaire
About 10 years ago, Forbes Magazine ran an article about an "accidental billionaire" named Franklin Otis Booth Jr.
In the early 1960s, Booth tried to buy a printing company that contracted with The Los Angeles Times. The deal fell through, but he became good friends with the lawyer working on the case.
After discovering they had similar investment philosophies, they partnered up to build a 40-unit condo complex in Pasadena, Calif. -- and managed to double their money in just two years.
Booth decided he wasn't up for pursuing further real estate development, but he did agree to put $1 million into an investment partnership the lawyer put together. Thirty-five years later his stake was worth $1.2 billion.
The cynics and risk-takers among you will undoubtedly chalk Booth's success up to "luck."
Granted, his is a case of being in the right place at the right time, but the actual process that grew his fortune had very little to do with luck.
He didn't dump his money into penny stocks that took off. He didn't get in on the ground floor of Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) or IBM (NYSE: IBM). He didn't make smart options trades.
What he did do was hand his $1 million over to that lawyer and a "clever young fellow." They, in turn, made big bets on unexciting businesses with wide moats that were selling at a discount to their fair value. These businesses all had strong brands, outstanding returns on capital, consistent or improving profit margins, and substantial cash profits.
That's all -- big bets on great companies selling at good prices.
Of course, by now I'm sure you know that the lawyer was Charlie Munger and the clever young fellow he teamed up with was none other than Warren Buffett.
* * *
The Accidental Billionaire
In the early 1960s, Booth tried to buy a printing company that contracted with The Los Angeles Times. The deal fell through, but he became good friends with the lawyer working on the case.
After discovering they had similar investment philosophies, they partnered up to build a 40-unit condo complex in Pasadena, Calif. -- and managed to double their money in just two years.
Booth decided he wasn't up for pursuing further real estate development, but he did agree to put $1 million into an investment partnership the lawyer put together. Thirty-five years later his stake was worth $1.2 billion.
The cynics and risk-takers among you will undoubtedly chalk Booth's success up to "luck."
Granted, his is a case of being in the right place at the right time, but the actual process that grew his fortune had very little to do with luck.
He didn't dump his money into penny stocks that took off. He didn't get in on the ground floor of Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) or IBM (NYSE: IBM). He didn't make smart options trades.
What he did do was hand his $1 million over to that lawyer and a "clever young fellow." They, in turn, made big bets on unexciting businesses with wide moats that were selling at a discount to their fair value. These businesses all had strong brands, outstanding returns on capital, consistent or improving profit margins, and substantial cash profits.
That's all -- big bets on great companies selling at good prices.
Of course, by now I'm sure you know that the lawyer was Charlie Munger and the clever young fellow he teamed up with was none other than Warren Buffett.
* * *
The Accidental Billionaire
yields are high
It's looking gloomy out there. The S&P 500 is down 12% year to date, led by the financial sector, which has lost one-fourth of its valuation.
Amid all the doom and gloom, one silver lining has drawn little attention: Dividend yields are the highest they've been more than a dozen years.
The recent market plunge has increased the S&P 500's dividend yield to 2.2%, its highest level since December 1995. Not even during the aftermath of the tech bubble collapse in the fall of 2002 -- when the S&P 500 traded at a paltry 815 -- did the yield break 2.0%.
But high dividend yields aren't the only reason this is a great time to be in the market -- stocks are also cheaper than trusty bonds.
The 10-year Treasury bond currently yields 4%. The equivalent measure of return for stocks is the earnings yield (earnings divided by price) -- and it currently stands at 5.5% for the S&P 500.
This divergence is unusual -- and a potential boon for investors. According to renowned value investor Arnold Van Den Berg of Century Management, (whose firm returned 13% net of fees vs. 6% for the S&P 500 over the past 10 years):
The usual difference between a bond yield and stock earnings yield is about 1%. For example, if investors can get 6.3% on a guaranteed bond they are willing to accept 1% less, or a 5.3% earnings yield on a stock. The reason for this is that if you have a 5.3% stock earnings yield and it is growing at 7%, it will equal your 6.3% bond yield in about 3 years. Anytime thereafter, the stock earnings yield will increase by 7% per year.
Investors are usually willing to accept a lower yield in stocks, because of the presumption of future growth. Right now, however, investors can get that growth at a better price than bonds -- and with the added bonus of high dividend yields.
Earnings yields like this suggest the market thinks earnings are likely to fall. But I would counter that even if earnings fell, the S&P 500 still would yield almost equal to the Treasury bond rate.
The combination of high dividend and earnings yields relative to bond yields means that this is a great time to buy dividend stocks.
Amid all the doom and gloom, one silver lining has drawn little attention: Dividend yields are the highest they've been more than a dozen years.
The recent market plunge has increased the S&P 500's dividend yield to 2.2%, its highest level since December 1995. Not even during the aftermath of the tech bubble collapse in the fall of 2002 -- when the S&P 500 traded at a paltry 815 -- did the yield break 2.0%.
But high dividend yields aren't the only reason this is a great time to be in the market -- stocks are also cheaper than trusty bonds.
The 10-year Treasury bond currently yields 4%. The equivalent measure of return for stocks is the earnings yield (earnings divided by price) -- and it currently stands at 5.5% for the S&P 500.
This divergence is unusual -- and a potential boon for investors. According to renowned value investor Arnold Van Den Berg of Century Management, (whose firm returned 13% net of fees vs. 6% for the S&P 500 over the past 10 years):
The usual difference between a bond yield and stock earnings yield is about 1%. For example, if investors can get 6.3% on a guaranteed bond they are willing to accept 1% less, or a 5.3% earnings yield on a stock. The reason for this is that if you have a 5.3% stock earnings yield and it is growing at 7%, it will equal your 6.3% bond yield in about 3 years. Anytime thereafter, the stock earnings yield will increase by 7% per year.
Investors are usually willing to accept a lower yield in stocks, because of the presumption of future growth. Right now, however, investors can get that growth at a better price than bonds -- and with the added bonus of high dividend yields.
Earnings yields like this suggest the market thinks earnings are likely to fall. But I would counter that even if earnings fell, the S&P 500 still would yield almost equal to the Treasury bond rate.
The combination of high dividend and earnings yields relative to bond yields means that this is a great time to buy dividend stocks.
Wednesday, August 06, 2008
quote of the month
"Wouldn't it be great if we could buy love for $1 million. But the only way to be loved is to be lovable. You always get back more than you give away. If you don't give any, you won't get any. There's nobody I know who commands the love of others who doesn't feel like a success. And I can't imagine people who aren't loved feel very successful." Warren Buffett
-- Warren Buffett Monthly Newsletter Issue #27
-- Warren Buffett Monthly Newsletter Issue #27
what is growth and income exactly?
Generally, a Growth and Income play will have healthy balance sheets, consistent dividend payments, quality products and services and experienced management teams. Usually Growth and Income companies are industry leaders, displaying steady earnings growth.
Companies that continually exhibit stable earnings growth, more than anything else, are ones that should hit the radar screens of Growth & Income investors. After all, companies exhibiting all of the characteristics mentioned earlier should have no problem producing a steady stream of profit growth, right? Analysts will subsequently grow more optimistic about the future earnings potential of the company and adjust their estimates up accordingly.
Growth & income investors get a dual benefit from following earnings estimate revisions. First, positive estimate revisions help investors buy shares in the companies with the best chances to outperform the market. Second, positive estimate revisions provide the easiest means to monitor the health of companies, providing a rather clear signal when the time has come to abandon ship. Companies experiencing upward estimate revisions will generally enjoy positive momentum going forward. Rarely will a stock suffer a significant price decline in the face of improving fundamentals. Add it all up and it’s clear that Growth and Income investors should only buy shares in companies enjoying upward earnings estimate revisions.
[says Zacks]
Companies that continually exhibit stable earnings growth, more than anything else, are ones that should hit the radar screens of Growth & Income investors. After all, companies exhibiting all of the characteristics mentioned earlier should have no problem producing a steady stream of profit growth, right? Analysts will subsequently grow more optimistic about the future earnings potential of the company and adjust their estimates up accordingly.
Growth & income investors get a dual benefit from following earnings estimate revisions. First, positive estimate revisions help investors buy shares in the companies with the best chances to outperform the market. Second, positive estimate revisions provide the easiest means to monitor the health of companies, providing a rather clear signal when the time has come to abandon ship. Companies experiencing upward estimate revisions will generally enjoy positive momentum going forward. Rarely will a stock suffer a significant price decline in the face of improving fundamentals. Add it all up and it’s clear that Growth and Income investors should only buy shares in companies enjoying upward earnings estimate revisions.
[says Zacks]
The bear market is official ... now what?
One of the saving graces to having officially entered a bear market (a >20% drop) in mid-July is that we no longer need to debate whether we're going to get one or not. Based on long-term averages, we may have more to go with this bear both in terms of damage and duration but, as always, we caution investors about full-scale bailing out of the market at this point.
History has shown that typically, once the –20% threshold has been hit, the majority (two-thirds) of the decline is in the past. [The median bear market lost 33.5% and lasted 250 days.] And, of course, timing the bottom is nearly impossible.
History has shown that typically, once the –20% threshold has been hit, the majority (two-thirds) of the decline is in the past. [The median bear market lost 33.5% and lasted 250 days.] And, of course, timing the bottom is nearly impossible.
The bible talks business sense
Invest systematically: “He who gathers money little by little makes it grow.”—Proverbs 13:11
Pay tax: “Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar...”—Luke 20:25
Avoid debt:The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender.”—Proverbs 22:7
Save: “The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer.”—Proverbs 30:24
Diversify: “Divide your portion to seven, or even to eight, for you don’t know what misfortune may occur on the earth.”— Ecclesiastes 11:2
[from livemint.com via Chirag@investwise]
Pay tax: “Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar...”—Luke 20:25
Avoid debt:The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender.”—Proverbs 22:7
Save: “The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer.”—Proverbs 30:24
Diversify: “Divide your portion to seven, or even to eight, for you don’t know what misfortune may occur on the earth.”— Ecclesiastes 11:2
[from livemint.com via Chirag@investwise]
Monday, August 04, 2008
who's blog?
While googling around, I noticed there's a blog by veryearly1 called Finance and Philosophy Blog. At first I thought this was the blog of veryearly1 of chucks_angels. After all, there is a lot of information pertaining to investing, in particular on Buffett and Munger. And the guy who's writing it is reflective and sounds quite intelligent.
But now, I don't think it's actually THE veryearly1. The guy writing the blog is a software engineer, while VE1 has a financial background and worked at a hedge fund or something. Also I believe VE1 is a now a full-time private investor whereas this guy works for some engineering (or some such) firm. Also it seems that VE1 apparently used to live in Japan. No mention here of that. (It's kind of scary that I seem to know this much about VE1. :$
In any case, the blog is still pretty interesting and thoughtful.
But now, I don't think it's actually THE veryearly1. The guy writing the blog is a software engineer, while VE1 has a financial background and worked at a hedge fund or something. Also I believe VE1 is a now a full-time private investor whereas this guy works for some engineering (or some such) firm. Also it seems that VE1 apparently used to live in Japan. No mention here of that. (It's kind of scary that I seem to know this much about VE1. :$
In any case, the blog is still pretty interesting and thoughtful.
Friday, August 01, 2008
rating CAPS ratings
despite all of the recent market turmoil, five-star stocks outperform the market by 12%, while one-star stocks underperform by roughly 11%. According to this data, investors would do well to look for new ideas among five-star stocks, while potentially unloading one-star stocks.
what is Morningstar good at?
A couple of clear trends emerge from this data. The first is that we're pretty darned good at picking wide-moat stocks--the wide-moats in the Buy at 5 Stars, Sell at 1 Star portfolio have outperformed our wide-moat coverage universe in all trailing periods, and in every calendar year but one. This conclusion is also supported by the performance of our Wide Moat Focus Index (WMW), which consists of the 20 cheapest wide-moat stocks. The Wide Moat Focus Index was off only about 5% in the first half of 2008--compared with a 12% loss for the market--and it has posted returns of about 11% annually over the past five years.
The second trend is that we have not been very good at separating winners from losers among the no-moat companies that we cover. Our performance in this area leaves much to be desired, and (so far) 2008 is the first year in which our no-moat 5-star stocks have outperformed our no-moat stocks as a group. Narrow moats are a toss-up--we have added value over some time frames, but not overall.
We've thought a lot about the causes for this divergent performance, and while it's a complex issue, I think a lot of it boils down to the simple fact that no-moat companies are more difficult to forecast and value. They're more volatile, they often have weaker balance sheets, and they are more frequently affected by tough-to-forecast external factors like commodity prices.
The second trend is that we have not been very good at separating winners from losers among the no-moat companies that we cover. Our performance in this area leaves much to be desired, and (so far) 2008 is the first year in which our no-moat 5-star stocks have outperformed our no-moat stocks as a group. Narrow moats are a toss-up--we have added value over some time frames, but not overall.
We've thought a lot about the causes for this divergent performance, and while it's a complex issue, I think a lot of it boils down to the simple fact that no-moat companies are more difficult to forecast and value. They're more volatile, they often have weaker balance sheets, and they are more frequently affected by tough-to-forecast external factors like commodity prices.
Estate-Planning Pitfalls
H. Susan Jones, a top estate-planning attorney based in the Chicago suburbs, discusses some of the most common pitfalls of estate planning and how to avoid them, as well as some underutilized estate-planning maneuvers.