Tuesday, 28 October 2008
The incredible shrinking funds- from The Economist
This time, however, it really is different. Bans on short-selling have made many strategies unworkable. Poor management by hedge funds may be partly to blame: the industry has more than its fair share of illiquid assets that have been hammered during the crisis. But it also appears that forced sales of assets by hedge funds have driven prices lower, in turn hurting performance—a typical case of contagion. The 30 core American equity holdings of the biggest hedge funds, tracked by analysts at Merrill Lynch, have underperformed the stockmarket since the end of August.
What is the cause of the fire sales that seem to be at the root of the industry’s problems? The obvious answer is a withdrawal of credit, which has in turn forced hedge funds to offload assets. Sceptics have long argued that for all the skill they claim to possess, hedge funds just use cheap money to amplify mediocre returns. By this account they are simply another part of a vast, debt-dependent ecosystem that is now being starved of oxygen. Yet the role leverage has played in bringing the industry to its knees is subtler than this. And there is another prime suspect for hedge funds’ suffering: their own clients.
Wednesday, 22 October 2008
Anatomy of a bottom: Psychological characteristics of capitulation are largely absent
But capitulation is something different, as I have learned in recent weeks as I have read more and more about the subject.
Capitulation has a number of distinguishing psychological characteristics, such as investor disgust and exhaustion. Having been burned by the market for so long, investors capitulate by resolving never, ever, to trust the market again.
In the wake of capitulation, therefore, interest in the market declines. Apathy rules. To be sure, this definition cannot be mechanically measured. It is hard to pinpoint when investors become maximally dejected and apathetic. But my hunch is that we have yet to experience capitulation.
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Tuesday, 14 October 2008
The Difference is, American Banks Allowed to Fail
On the surface, the American and British programs on bank capitalization look pretty similar, but key differences are apparent.
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Monday, 13 October 2008
Best Market Reentry Indicator: Reduced Counterparty Risk
Suppose you are watching US equity markets. You could be thinking of bailing out. You might be someone who has been in cash, but you do not want to miss the "bottom." Whatever your position, you seek some magic indicator.
We have already provided the basics that should help readers make this decision. Here is some extra color, but still not the full picture. We are sorry. It has been a busy time.
Meanwhile, here is some help.
The Key Question
The key question is the freeze-up in credit markets. If ordinary businesses cannot get loans, holiday retail and auto is affected. If the commercial paper market dries up, ordinary commerce cannot take place.
This is not a matter for political posturing or personal opinions. Many people who have never run a business or a bank seem to have a strong opinion on how much leverage, how much liquidity, and what duration is "correct." We think that anyone offering such an opinion should show some expertise and/or a successful business model to prove it.
Meanwhile, it is pretty obvious what the market wants:
- Participants want to know that there is no counter-party risk, something that we highlighted for you last week.
- People will not lend without knowing they will get paid back. It freezes commercial paper. It escalates LIBOR, and it causes a spike in CDS swaps.
So that is the problem, the most important problem, and possibly the only significant problem. If it is not solved, the economy may get much worse. If it is, we may escape with a milder recession.
Sunday, 12 October 2008
Bargain Buys for Patient Investors-Barron's
The credit crisis has shifted emphasis back to the importance of a strong balance sheet, something many investors willfully forgot about during the bull market through 2007. Those same investors, who once urged CEOs to take on debt to buy back stock, are now focused on upcoming debt maturities and refinancing fears. With the markets taking a bruising and most major stocks now valued at less than 10 times estimated 2008 earnings, this could be a historical opportunity to buy stocks at bargain-basement prices and wait for a recovery. Barron's Andrew Bary highlights twenty-five cash-rich companies that patient investors can pick up on sale.
Exxon Mobil (XOM) leads the cash race with $30B, Corporate America's largest cash hoard. At $62, it trades at just seven times projected 2008 earnings market value. The firm may shift some of its cash from a stock buyback program to an acquisition, as some independent energy firms face debt refinancing troubles.
Smaller companies may have less cash on hand in real terms, but their holdings make up a greater percentage of their market values. IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI) and KBR (KBR), for example, both have cash holdings that account for over half their market values.
Once criticized as overly conservative for holding too much cash, several tech leaders are now seeing those cash holdings pay off. Apple (AAPL) and Dell (DELL) have cash equal to over 25% of their market values. Motorola (MOT) and Electronic Arts (ERTS) have cash positions worth 30% of their market values. Yahoo (YHOO) has around $2/share in cash and another $3/share in investments.
Microsoft (MSFT) has a strong balance sheet with $23B in cash and another $6B of equity investments. It also has a monopoly software business and a P/E of just over 10, the lowest in its history. Microsoft may miss its FY 2009 earnings target, but trading at $21.50, one could argue that a miss is already reflected in the stock price.
Industrial stocks have been hurt lately as investors worry about domestic recession and a drop in global demand, leading to P/E ratios at their lowest levels in years. Caterpillar (CAT) trades at just seven times 2008 estimated earnings, United Technologies (UTX) trades at less than ten times earnings, and Deere (DE) at eight times earnings. Citigroup analyst David Raso set a price target of $65 for Deere (currently at $38) and $72 for Caterpillar (currently at $43).
Jim Paulsen, of Wells Capital Management, succinctly said "assets are being given away." He added, "they may not do well in the next several months, but looking ahead two or three years, investors may see some of the best opportunities of their lives."
- The rest of the list: L, NTE, TEX, PCAR, INTC, EBAY, NVDA, BRCM, NOVL, RNWK, CMI, HON, ITW
Saturday, 11 October 2008
Collateral Damage- Hedge Funds: An Industry Struggles
To be fair to them, hedge funds have not been allowed to hedge. The restrictions on short-selling (betting on falling prices) imposed by regulators round the globe have played havoc with managers’ strategies in recent weeks.
Take the worst-performing strategy, convertible arbitrage, which lost the average fund 12% in the month. Convertible bonds are fixed-income securities that can be exchanged for shares in the issuing company. Historically, these bonds have been underpriced, because too low a value has been placed on the right to convert them to equity. So arbitrage managers have tended to buy the bonds and sell short the shares. Thanks to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s ban on the shorting of more than 900 stocks from September 19th to October 8th, that strategy no longer worked. And since the managers could not short the shares, they had to sell the bonds. As a result, the bonds’ prices plunged.
Friday, 10 October 2008
Blocked Pipes- When banks find it hard to borrow, so do the rest of us
At the moment, these markets are well and truly bunged up. In the words of Michael Hartnett, a strategist at Merrill Lynch, “the global interbank market is effectively closed.” The equivalent of a run on banks has been taking place, without the queues of depositors seen outside Northern Rock, a British mortgage bank, last year. This stealthy run has been led by institutional investors and by banks themselves.
Many banks have had to be rescued by rivals or the state. This week the Irish government felt compelled to guarantee the deposits and some other liabilities of the country’s six largest banks. Surviving banks have become ultra-cautious—“just taking things one day at a time,” says Matt King, a strategist at Citigroup.
The effect has been most dramatic in the overnight rate for borrowing dollars. Bank borrowing costs reached 6.88% on September 30th, more than three times the level of official American rates, while some were willing to pay a remarkable 11% to borrow dollars from the European Central Bank (ECB). Banks have become so risk-averse that they deposited a record €44 billion ($62 billion) with the ECB on September 30th even though they could have earned more than two extra percentage points by lending to other banks. It was the last day of the quarter and, for balance-sheet reasons, banks were particularly keen to have cash on hand. (Overnight rates fell back on October 1st, but one-month rates rose further, indicating that the crisis had not eased.)