Solas!
The on going thoughts & musings (sometimes random, sometimes not) of Lumen Capital Management,LLC.
Friday, November 28, 2008
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Why So Few Got This Economic Crisis Right.
Article in Tuesday's Financial Times about why so few saw this financial crisis coming. I've linked to it here:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/1c1d5a9e-bb29-11dd-bc6c-0000779fd18c.html?nclick_check=1
Three excerpts. The first deals with rationalization of events.
".....The natural tendency {is} to seek rationales for events as they unfold, rather than question whether they are sustainable. Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard professor who is also a former IMF chief economist, thinks the tendency to look on the bright side is particularly prevalent on Wall Street, where “it is difficult to make a living as a mega-bear”. "
The 2nd deals with those few Cassadras who manage to get the gist of a crisis right.
"Still, you might think there would be large rewards for those who succeed in anticipating these events. You would be wrong. People who worried before 2000 that the “new economy” was a bubble, or warned of the terrorist threat before September 11 2001, or saw that credit expansion was out of control in 2006, were not popular. They were killjoys.
Nor were they popular after these events. If these people had been right, then others had been blind or negligent, and the latter preferred to represent themselves as victims of unforeseeable events. As John Maynard Keynes observed, it is usually better to be conventionally wrong than unconventionally right."
The 3rd deals with the thought process of mean reversion & extrapolation in forcasting events.
"{E}conomic crystal ball-gazing remains unscientific. The trend is the forecaster’s friend. Extrapolation assumes that the future will be like the past, only more so. We project current preoccupations – the rise of China and India, global terror, climate change – with exaggerated speed and to an exaggerated degree. We forget that our preoccupations change. The people who worry about these issues today would 20 years ago have worried about the coming economic hegemony of Japan and the cold war. These issues were resolved in ways that few predicted......
...If extrapolation is the forecaster’s friend, mean reversion is the forecaster’s crutch. Much of the time, you can predict that next year’s figure will be somewhere between this year’s level and the long-run average. But mean reversion never anticipates anything out of the ordinary. Every few years, out-of-the-ordinary things happen."
Happy Thanksgiving
We at Lumen Capital Management, LLC want to wish all of you a very Happy Thanksgiving. Drive safe, eat all you want and play some football. Perhaps some of you can root on the Irish with me when they play vs. USC. I know my friend the Captain will be in attendance at the game. Fág an Bealach!
There will be few or no posts until Monday of next week due to the holiday.
P.S. Dad if they let you read this upstairs go ahead and have the extra potatoes this year when you break bread with your folks for the first time in ages. You deserve it!
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Big Investors Brought To Their Knees!
Doug Kass over at Realmoney.com {Subscription Required} highlights how some of the brightest on Wall Street have been beaten with Mr. Market's ugly stick. Below is an excerpt from his post.
Green Highlights are mine.
"The Smart Guys Continue to Lose 11/26/2008 8:01 AM EST
By Doug Kass. http://www.thestreet.com/b/dps/te/theedge1.html (as I said subcription required so this link might not work.)
Learn from their mistakes.
I am particularly struck by the recent series of high-profile investor blunders by the "smart guys" -- namely, large corporations, entrepreneurs (especially of a real estate kind) and savvy investment and hedge fund managers -- which are proof positive how difficult 2008 to 2009 might end up being for investors. -- Doug Kass, The Edge (Jan. 7, 2008) Back in January, I wrote that smart guys were losing their shirts, a sign for us mere mortals that the going was getting tough this year and next.
Below are some examples that I cited 10 months ago of large investment boners made by some smartypants, even before the credit market disaster spilled over and doomed equities (with updates in parentheses):
~In August 2007, Bank of America (BAC) acquired a $2 billion minority stake in Countrywide Financial at $18 per share. (Countrywide no longer trades as Bank of America acquired the company at less than $5 a share.)
~In late November 2007, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority acquired $7.5 billion of Citigroup (C) stock convertible at $37 and higher. (Citigroup's shares now trade at $6.)
~During the course of the past six months, entrepreneur Joe Lewis has acquired nearly 10% of Bear Stearns. It is not clear what his average cost is -- around $100 is a reasonable guess -- but he is believed to have a paper loss of at least $250 million. (Bear Stearns has since filed for bankruptcy.)
~Real estate developer Harry Macklowe acquired a number of trophy midtown Manhattan office properties from Equity Office Properties at the height of the market's values and before the seizure in the credit markets. An inability of rolling over the debt could crush the Macklowe real estate empire. (It almost did bankrupt him.)
~In May 2007, ESL's Ed Lampert announced that it acquired an initial stake worth about $800 million in Citigroup. At that time, the shares traded about $53. He is generally believed to have substantially added to his holdings in Citigroup since then. (Again, Citigroup's shares now trade at $6.)
~Pershing Square's William Ackman acquired 10% of Target (TGT). Ackman first disclosed his position in July 2007, when the shares traded at about $65. (Target's shares now are priced at $32.)
~Former SEC commissioner and now hedge fund activist Richard Breeden has raised his stake in Zale (ZLC) to almost 6 million shares -- he first filed with about 4 million shares in September 2007 -- or over 13% of outstanding common stock. SAC's Steve Cohen, the very best hedgie extant, also made a 13D filing back in September 2007. Back then, Zale shares traded in the mid-$20s. (Zale's shares closed at $5 yesterday, and more on that below.)
~Less than one month ago, Warburg Pincus acquired $1 billion of MBIA (MBI) at $31 per share. (MBIA's shares now trade at $5.) For those reasons and others, in late November 2007, I suggested that we had entered "The Hardest Stock Market to Navigate Ever."
Since my column on the smart guys losing appeared on these pages in January, many more previously well-regarded hedge funds and acquisitive smart guys in the chase for superior investment performance and concentrated ownership positions, with the most conspicuous example perhaps being Ed Lampert in his ownership of Sears Holdings (SHLD), have lost a boatload of money.
Yesterday, I was especially struck by the news that the shares of Zale dropped by 40%, to a multidecade low.
My long held view has been that the jewelry market's competitive landscape had changed with the emergence of formidable online competitors, such as Blue Nile (NILE) and others, and that Zale's business model would be challenged and its secular profit growth diminished.
Former SEC Commissioner Richard Breeden apparently didn't agree with me. As mentioned previously, his Breeden Capital Management established an 8-million-share position (25% of the outstanding) in Zale. Since the initial 6-million-share stake was established in 2007, Breeden Capital acquired another 3.45 million shares in late December/early January between $13.42 and $16.21 per share. Zale's shares closed at $5.38 a share yesterday.
The smart guys are continuing to lose big.
Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK.A) Warren Buffett might be one of the only exceptions to the rule whereby an investment manager prospered by taking concentrated invested positions; most just don't.
Indeed, the bear market of 2008 has brought many of them to their knees, uncovering some naked emperors in their faulty company analyses and far too aggressive acquisition of shares at overvalued price levels.
Learn from their mistakes.
Stay diversified, keep investing/trading positions small, and be opportunistic."
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
A Case For ETFs vs. Mutual Funds
November 25, 2008
by Alexander Green
Even if you lack the cash - or the willpower - to buy into this market, there is still a very smart move you can make: switch.
Switch from your poor-performing, high-cost, tax-inefficient stock and bond mutual funds to index funds or exchange-traded funds [ETFs].
Why Choose Exchange Traded Funds Over Mutual Funds?
Compared to exchange traded funds, most mutual funds are a lousy deal, here’s why:
Each year more than three-quarters of them fail to match the performance of their benchmarks.
Many are loaded with front-end or back-end loads, 12b-1 fees, high management costs and other expenses.
Moreover, even when these actively managed funds fall sharply, they still often distribute annual capital gains to shareholders, in effect handing shareholders a paper loss and a tax bill at the same time.
Don’t stand for it. Now is your chance to fight back.
Switching to Exchange Traded Funds Will Save On Taxes
Switch from your underperforming mutual funds to index funds and exchange-traded funds - and save yourself thousands of dollars in taxes in the process.
The IRS allows you to take losses each year to fully offset any realized capital gains, and also allows you to take capital losses to offset up to $3,000 in earned income.
Monday, November 24, 2008
Mutual Fund Performance 2008.
Every Stock Mutual Fund Has Lost Money in 2008, Except One
Posted by: Lauren Young on November 21
In other words, just one fund hasn’t lost money this year—and that is the APX Mid Cap Growth Fund, which was flat through Thursday’s close. That’s right, folks, its return—or lack thereof—is a mere zero thus far in 2008.
Annette Larson, who is Morningstar’s chief data cruncher, has worked at the Chicago firm since 1994. “I’ve never seen it this bad before,” she says. In fact, she was certain she made a mistake when she analyzed the most recent mutual fund data. “I thought to myself: ‘This cannot be right,’ so I did it again, and again, and then I realized all but one fund is negative. I’m in awe,” Larson says.
Not every fund company provides closing data to Morningstar on a daily basis, so there is a chance other funds are in positive territory for the year. But given the overall dismal return of stock funds in 2008, there is an even bigger chance those funds are down, too.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Market Valuation: Back Of The Envelope
Some quick thoughts on the S&P 500 based on Friday's trading close of roughly 800 and using differing levels of combined earnings.
EPS of 50........E.Yield of 6.25%......PE of 16.00..........Possible Valuation Range: 500---800
EPS of 55....... E.Yield of 6.88%......PE of 14.55..........Possible Valuation Range: 550---880
EPS of 60.......E.Yield of 7.50%....PE of 13.34........Possible Valuation Range: 600---960
EPS of 65.......E.Yield of 8.12%....PE of 12.30........Possible Valuation Range: 650-1,040
EPS of 70.......E.Yield of 8.75%....PE of 11.40........Possible Valuation Range: 700-1,120
EPS of 75........E.Yield of 9.38%......PE of 10.67..........Possible Valuation Range: 750-1,200
EPS of 80........E.Yield of 10.0%......PE of 10.00..........Possible Valuation Range: 800-1,280
Shaded areas indicated the most likely earnings range where I think S&P 500 companies will report in 2009.
Earnings range is based on a low of 10 was the indicated number and 16x the indicated number.
EPS=Earnings Per Share.
E.Yield= Earnings Yield-a bond yield substitute and the inverse of a company's PE ratio.
PE=Price to Earnings ratio.
*Long various ETFs related to the S&P 500 for client accounts.
Flashback: Why You Liked the 90's Better.
http://lumencapital.blogspot.com/2006/03/why-you-liked-90s.html
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Meanwhile Down On The Farm
It is just their luck that as they are bringing in record crops, buying extra seed, planting more land, and getting new tractors, that the need for their corn and wheat has fallen.
All those people on the bread lines and poor citizens who need a break on food and gas prices are getting some relief now. Farmers may have to take out more loans, but,on balance, the economy is better off if an ear of corn does not cost $10.
The first knee-jerk reaction from economists is that low food prices are a recipe for deflation. The argument has some benefit, but not as much as keeping people who don't have any money from going hungry.
Deflation may cut corporate sales and earnings down the road. In theory, that will cause more job losses. No one can be sure. Time will tell. But, in a very bad economy, the distance people are willing to look into the future is not much further than the end of their noses. Anything beyond is simply too bleak.
From that perspective, cheap food looks good."
Source: Douglas A. McIntyre http://www.247wallst.com/2008/11/farmers-face-do.html
http://www.247wallst.com/
Friday, November 21, 2008
Stock Market Corrections.
Source - Dow Jones & Chart of the Day.
Bring Back The Uptick Rule!
Thursday, November 20, 2008
an tSionna 11/20/08: Erasure
3 month Bills.
Treasury market back to crisis levels. Current yield of a 3 month treasury is 3/100's of 1% or .015%. Incredible people damn near paying the Government to take their money!
Hedging Gas-Just For Fun.
And Another Thing.
Cumulative world wide stock losses from last year's peak is in excess of 9 trillion dollars as of last night's close. {Source CNBC 11/20/08}.
Mutual Fund Performance.
Morningstar, a firm that tracks mutual fund performance is reportedly saying today that the average year to date return for over 10,000 mutual funds is -44%. It further says that no funds are in the black for the year. I haven't verified if this is all correct. I will try to find it out. But that's just a stunning indictment of the mutual fund industry if true.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
New Web Site {Beta}
an tSionna: 11/19/08
SEC 30 Day Yield Explained
I was asked what is the SEC 30 day yield. Here is the abridged definition from Wikipedia.
30-day yield is a standardized yield calculation for bond funds. It's formula is specified by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The formula translates the bond fund's current portfolio income into a standardized yield for reporting and comparison purposes.
Because the 30-day yield is a standardized mandatory calculation for all United States bond funds, it serves as a common ground comparison of yield performance. Its weakness lies in the fact that funds tend to trade actively and do not hold bonds until maturity. In addition, funds do not mature. For this reason, analysts often consider a distribution yield to be a better measure of a fund's income-generating potential.
United States money market funds report a 7 Day SEC Yield. The rate expresses how much the fund would yield if it paid income at the same level as it did in the prior month for a whole year. It is calculated by taking the sum of the income paid out over the period divided by 7, and multiplying that quantity by 36500 (365 days x 100).
The SEC yield calculation for a bond fund is essentially a yield to maturity for the bond portfolio. Because bond funds trade actively and prices fluctuate, the rate may not be a good indicator of future results. However, because the calculation is standardized, it provides a good comparison measure for funds.
For you formula wonks Wikipedia says the calculation for SEC 30-day yield is:
Yield = 2[{(a-b)/cd+1}^6-1] Where:
a = dividends and interest
b = accrued expenses
c = average daily number of outstanding shares that were entitled to distributions
d = the maximum public offering price per share on the last day of the period
So there you have it.
Game plan: Yield
Here for a comparison basis is a selected list of securities and their current investment or SEC yields in the case of ETFs. For the record clients of Lumen Capital Management, LLC currently own some or all of these securities in their accounts, although positions can change at any time. We'll look at other examples of this at some other time.
S&P 500 Trust {SPY} 3.54%
Dow Jones Select Dividend Index Fund {DVY} 5.31%
Power Shares Preferred Portfolio {PGX} 10.32%
General Electric {GE} 7.70%
Wisdom Tree Dividend Top 100 {DTN} 5.74%
I Shares S&P 100 Index Fund {OEF} 3.54%
I-Boxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund {LQD} 7.57%
And for comparison:
10 Year US Government Treasury 3.57%.
Hedge Fund 13-F filings.
Some selected hedge funds and how much they've sold in this quarter or how hard they've been hit by stock's decline. Fuel for the fire if & when the big boys decide to jump back in the pool?
Atticus Capital reduced its holdings from $8.1 billion to $510 million.
Tudor Investment from $5.7 billion to $453 million.
SAC Capital Advisors holdings of U.S.-based stocks (and options and converts) were $7.7 billion vs. $14.4 billion last quarter.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
PPI: Addendum.
One of the things that contributed to the decline in PPI prices was an almost 25% decline in gasoline prices!
PPI Numbers Signal Deflation.
PPI prices declined 2.8% today and signals a current and deep deflationary spiral. According to Tony Crescenzi, chief bond market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co., LLC, this drop beats the previous record drop of 1.6% set in October 2001 and is the largest since record-keeping began in 1947.
The deflation picture is most glaring in the prices of goods in earlier stages of the production process. Intermediate goods prices, which reflect the prices of goods at the middle stage of the production process also fell 3.9% overall, a record drop that beat the previous record of -2.3% set in April 2003.
The massive declines in prices at earlier stages of production underscore the deflationary tendency that exists in the economy at the moment and which will exist for many months to come.
Source: Huge Deflation Seen in the PPI Details, Tony Crescenzi, RealMoney.com contributor, 11/18/2008 9:21 AM EST
50 & 200 Day Moving Averages.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Time Magazine Covers.
Buffett Revisited
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Oh India!
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601091&sid=aGnhfqtiHogU&refer=india
Click on the link for an article on how the decline in India's markets have hit its wealthiest citizens. I don't mean to pick on India, other foreign markets have had equally similar disastrous years. But Newsweek never put them on their cover.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
an tSionna: So What Did Stocks Return Anyway?
Friday, November 14, 2008
More Proof Of Recession: Labor Stats.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
an tSionna: 11/13/08
You can click on this chart of SPY to expand it. The market has now retested its October lows three times. Each time it has managed to rebound although technically today on an intraday basis the market breached its Oct. 10th low. Each time it has rebounded on greater than average volume. {See Red Arrows}. The market's next big test will be to see if it can penetrate through these trendlines to the upside. It was repelled in its first two attempts {Red Circles}. Either way it looks like some resolution to our current range could be ending soon.
*Long SPY in certain client accounts.
More Tax Statistics
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Scenarios. Mr. Positive.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Buffett & Goldman Sachs
Regarding Valuation. What Could Go Wrong?
A synopsis of questions from yesterday. Regarding equity valuation who says stocks can't trade lower? Have they ever traded lower historically?
First there is no law that says stocks can't go lower. I repeat. There is no law that says stock prices cannot go lower.
They most certainly will decline if the recession is deeper than most of us think right now. There is also nothing that says that stocks have to trade at multiples close to their historic standards-perhaps we will be in an era that owing to the higher levels of volatility stocks multiples will contract. Our numbers are our baseline scenario that we review all the time and change when needed.
You want a nightmare scenario here it is: Earnings collapse and S&P 500 earnings don't trough out until sometime in 2010. The economy enters a low to no growth era. Unemployment remains stubbornly high. Throw in an unexpected political crisis, a foreign policy crisis or an unforeseen natural disaster-seems we haven't had a Katrina or an earthquake recently. Then look out! The S&P could in that instance trade down to its historic trough multiples which would likely equate to S&P 500 stocks at some point trading down to between 600-700. That is the potential for stocks to fall another 35% from here. Stocks have seen valuation levels that low before in both 1974 and in 1982. One difference though was back then government bonds yielded substantially more than they do now and inflation was a significant problem. In 1974 bonds yielded 8.4% and in 1982 they yielded 14.6% on the 10 year. Today that less than 4% yield ought to give us some floor higher than where we are now. Again I don't think this is the likely scenario but it is out there and it is one we can't completely dismiss, particularly as we draw up the game plan for 2009.
Remember our Vets!
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved, and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Why Obama Really Won!
Theres no one as Irish as Barack OBama- Hardy Drew Irish Obama Song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Xkw8ip43Vk
& Then There's This.....
"I would be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that this is categorical evidence of Mr. Obama's link to this part of the world," the rector said.It was initially believed the would-be president's great-great-great-grandfather Fulmuth Kearney was the only one of his family to have sailed from Ireland to New York at age 19 in 1850. But the newly uncovered records show other family members had in fact emigrated to America since the 1790s. They also reveal that Fulmuth's father, Joseph, was a shoemaker — a wealthy skilled trade at the time, the newspaper reported."They would have been among the upper echelons of society back then," said Neill.Obama was born in Hawaii to a black man from Kenya and a white woman — with Irish links — from Kansas."I've got pieces of everybody in me," he has been quoted as saying.The Sun-Times published also published a breakdown of Obama's ancestry, which, according to the newspaper, included: American Indian, Irish, Kenyan, English/Pilgrim and Scottish.
President-elect of the United States of America Barack Obama's great great great grandfather, Falmouth Kearney, emigrated from Moneygall to New York City at the age of 19 in 1850 and eventually resettled in Tipton County, Indiana.[2] Kearney's father had been the village shoemaker, then a wealthy skilled trade. {Source Wikipedia}
Stock Price Evaluation-A Starter.
Sunday, November 09, 2008
an tSionna: S&P 500 Weekly Chart
A weekly chart gives a better perspective of the damage done to stocks this year. You should be able to click on this and expand it. My reading of these entrails is still the same: A market potentially trying to find some sort of bottom by establishing a trading range. Of note is the current level of volatility. Simply put it's at levels most of us have never seen with the possible exception of the trading periods right after the 1987 crash.
Saturday, November 08, 2008
Taxes: Who Pays Them.
Vince Farrell of CNBC fame and currently Chief Investment Officer for Soleil Securities is out with an interesting thought on taxes yesterday.
"President-elect Obama promised 95% of the people a tax cut. That would require raising taxes on the other 5%. Raising taxes during economic hard times is never a good idea."
According to Vince, here is how taxes currently break out using the last full year of data available which was 2006:
*The top 1% of all wage earners make at least $364,657. That group earned 22% of all income and paid 40.4% of all taxes levied on individuals. The top 1% paid almost as much as the lower 95%. The percent of taxes paid by the top 1% has increased from 19% of all taxes to the current 40% over the last 25 years.
*The top 5% of all wage earners made at least $145,283. The top 5% paid 60% of all taxes.
*The top 10% of all wage earners brought home at least $103,912. The top 10% paid 70% of all taxes.
*The top 25% of all incomes made at least $62,066. They paid 86% of all income taxes.
*Almost 40% of all American earners are currently scheduled to pay no income tax by 2009.
We always say follow the money. I think it's going to be almost impossible given all the money we've spent to give 95% of us a tax cut based on what we know today and the current income statistics. Watch for a certain amount of hedging on this to creep into the new Obama Administration's rhetoric over the coming weeks.
#Source: Soleil Securities, Perspective: Taxes, Vincent Farrell, 11/06/08.