|
In the early fall of 1998, I remember being on a flight to Bermuda from
New York. I was upgraded and sat next to a very distinguished looking
gentleman. He was going to a conference about re-insurance and I was
going to speak at a large hedge fund conference. We hit it off, and
began a very interesting conversation, one that still burns in my mind
today. It turns out that he was vice-chairman of one of the largest
insurance firms in the world, and was a real financial insider,
seemingly knowing every big name on Wall Street personally. After he had
a few drinks (he was clearly somewhat stressed), he began to talk about
the Long Term Capital Management fund and the problems in the markets.
He had had a ring side seat at the Fed-sponsored bailout proceedings.
"We came to the edge of the abyss in the financial markets this week,'
he told me, "and then we looked over. The world does not understand how
close we came to a total meltdown of the markets."
This week we look at the similarities and the differences between the
credit crisis that is going on today and what happened in 1998, take a
quick look at the threat from China to the dollar and see what exotic
fish and exotic bonds have in common. There is a lot of ground to cover,
so let's jump right in.
China - Upping the Rhetorical Ante
Early this week the currency markets were roiled as not one but two
senior Chinese officials publicly advocated using China's large dollar
reserves as a political weapon should the US attempt sanctions on
Chinese goods if the renminbi is not valued higher against the dollar.
The two were senior officials at Chinese think tanks. Shifts in Chinese
policy are often signaled through key think tanks and academics.
He Fan, an official at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, used
uncharacteristically strong language, letting it be known that Beijing
had the power to set off a dollar collapse if it choose to do so.
"China has accumulated a large sum of US dollars. Such a big sum, of
which a considerable portion is in US treasury bonds, contributes a
great deal to maintaining the position of the dollar as a reserve
currency. Russia, Switzerland, and several other countries have reduced
their dollar holdings.
"China is unlikely to follow suit as long as the Yuan's exchange rate is
stable against the dollar. The Chinese central bank will be forced to
sell dollars once the yuan appreciated dramatically, which might lead to
a mass depreciation of the dollar," he told China Daily. (London
Telegraph)
This comes as the US Congress will consider legislation that will
implement tariffs on Chinese goods if China does not revalue its
currency. Given the level of rhetoric from both political parties and
presidential candidates, it is no wonder that China is finally
responding with a little rhetorical shot of its own. After smiling at
the editorial cartoon below, let's look at the likelihood of such an
event.

China has an estimated $900 billion in US dollar reserves. There is no
doubt that if they did decide to sell a few hundred billion here or
there, they could push the dollar down against all currencies and not
just the renminbi. That would also have the effect of increasing US
interest rates on not just government bonds, but mortgages, car loans
and all sorts of consumer credit.
Given the current state of the credit markets, that is not something
that would be welcome. But it is not likely for several reasons. First,
it is not in their best interests to do so. It would hurt the Chinese as
much as the US, as it would devalue their entire dollar portfolio and
clearly do damage to their number one export market - the US consumer.
Secondly, it is unlikely that the US will actually be able to get such
legislation passed into law. Even if such legislation passed Congress
(an admitted possibility) it would be vetoed by President Bush. That
means that any real change would not be possible until some time in the
middle of 2009.
The renminbi has already dropped almost 10% in the last two years since
the Chinese started their policy of a crawling peg. For reasons I
outlined at length a few weeks ago, it is likely that the Chinese are
going to increase that pace over the next two years, for their own
internal reasons. A higher renminbi valuation helps them slow their
economy down from its way too fast pace of growth that is evident today.
(If you would like to see that analysis,
click here.)
By the time any real legislation could get passed, the renminbi will be
very close to the level where the China bashers in Congress want to see
it, if it is not already floating. Hardly enough to want to start a
trade war at that time.
But let's look at what the bi-partisan economic illiterates in Congress
are actually advocating. First, they whine about lost American jobs. But
a 25% higher renminbi is not going to bring any manufacturing jobs back.
China is no longer the low cost labor market. There are other Asian
countries with lower labor costs. We just will not be able to
competitively manufacture products that have high unskilled labor costs.
But we will continue to manufacture high value added items in a host of
industries where skill and talent are required. Even though
manufacturing as a percentage of US GDP is down, our actual level of
exports and manufactured products is up by any measure. It is easy to
write about the closing of a plant, and it makes the headlines, but the
fact is that free trade has created more jobs by far than we have lost.
Secondly, if our cost of imports were to rise by 20-25%, that cannot be
understood as anything but inflationary. And it would not just be
Chinese products, but the products of all developing countries. Many
Asian countries manage (manipulate) their currencies to keep them
competitive against each other and the Chinese. You can bet that if the
renminbi rises another 20%, there is the real prospect that they all
will.
And much of what China and the rest of Asia produces is bought by those
on the lower economic rungs of the US ladder. So, if Congress gets its
way, they would be advocating putting pressure on those least capable of
paying higher prices. But no one lobbies for the little guy.
Congressional members can pander to their local unions and businesses
without having to answer for what would be higher prices.
And higher prices means more inflation which means that interest rates
have to be higher than they should, which means higher mortgage rates,
etc. Protectionism has a very high cost. Free markets create more jobs
everywhere.
Finally, we should hope the Chinese continue to allow their currency to
rise slow and steady. Neither country needs the turmoil a rapid rise
would induce. The world needs a stable China. We are watching world
credits markets freeze up because things went very bad very quickly in
the relatively small subprime world. A 20% drop in the dollar in a few
months would be even more catastrophic. Senators Lindsey Graham and
Chuck Schumer are competing to be this century's Smoot and Hawley that
creates a depression from trade wars where none should be.
The danger in all this is that politicians who have little economic
literacy create a hostile environment with their rhetorical poison, with
both sides feeling the need to play to their "home crowd." That is a
very dangerous environment.
It won't happen, but I would like to see the following question asked in
the presidential debates to those (like Hillary Clinton, Obama and Dodd,
etc.) who basically advocate a weaker dollar.
"Why are you advocating a weak dollar policy? Why do you want American
wage earners to pay 25% more for the goods we buy from foreign
countries? Do you really think there is no connection between the value
of the Chinese currency and the rest of the currencies of the world? Do
you think American consumers need to send even more money overseas and
get less for our dollars? Do you think the American consumer is so well
off they can afford to pay more and that it will have no affect on the
US economy? Do you realize that a 25% lower dollar will mean a rise in
world oil prices? Do you think there is no connection between the value
of the dollar and US prosperity?"
I won't hold my breath.
Back to 1998
Let's get in the Wayback Machine and revisit 1998. (For reference for my
foreign readers, the "Wayback Machine" originally referred to a
fictional machine from a segment of the cartoon
The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show used to
transport Mr. Peabody and Sherman back in time.)
First, there was the Asian currency crisis and then Russia looked like
it would default on its debt, causing a crisis in the credit markets. A
hedge fund called Long Term Capital Management had leveraged their bond
positions about 80 to 1 based upon the relationship between certain
types of bonds always, emphasize always, converging upon a certain
price. They diversified on bonds throughout the world as an "extra"
protection.
Except that the markets in the fall of 1998 were not acting as they had
in the past. The relationships changed just a very small amount, but if
you are leveraged 80 to 1, then small is enough to wipe you out. The
Nobel Prize winners who designed the system overlooked the possibility
that the market could become irrational.
Fast forward to 2007. Again, the credit markets are in turmoil, and the
subprime mortgage problems are spreading, as predicted here last
January. Let's look at some things that are similar to 1998.
First, normal relationships between certain types of bonds have been
turned on their head. For many companies who go into the credit markets,
there are different types of debt they sell. Certain types of bonds or
loans are considered "senior" because in the event of the company going
bankrupt, they get paid first. Then debt that is subordinated to the
senior debt gets paid, and lastly the shareholders get to split what is
left over, if anything.
So, clearly, it stands to reason that senior debt is more valuable than
subordinated debt. Why would you pay more for the riskier debt? So, if
you want to put on a hedge, you can "go long" the senior debt and "go
short" the subordinated debt. And in the past, that works.
Except not this time. There are a number of funds that are having real
problems and are being met with high redemptions because they are
exposed to the subprime markets. But no one is buying the subprime debt,
so they have to sell what they can to meet redemptions. And what sells?
The quality senior debt. At a discount, of course.
So, if you are another fund holding that debt instrument that just
traded down, you just saw the value of your high quality loan or bond
drop. But because the subordinated debt you sold as a hedge is not
trading, there is not a price for it, so you can't show the profit there
should be on the pair trade. Your fund is down for the month. Bummer.
Now, if you are not over-leveraged and forced to sell, you can wait a
few weeks or a month and the normal relationship will come back. And you
may even benefit as quality will rise even as the riskier instruments
fall. But until there is a price made on your hedges, you cannot just
make up a price based upon normal rational markets.
And if you are in the lucky position of having cash, you can go in and
buy very good debt at a fire sale price today. There are a lot of debt
instruments of very good and profitable companies that is on the market
for much less than what it will be in a few months when things get back
to normal. And if you are a company with cash, you may be able to go
back in and buy your debt at a discount.
The End of the Quantitative World
I should first note that the average hedge fund made money in July, and
some did quite well. There are a number of hedge fund strategies that
have the potential to benefit in this type of environment. That being
said, if a fund has invested in the subprime mortgage space (unless they
are short), they are losing money. It is easy to see the relationship
between the subprime mess and the funds that invested in it. But there
are other funds which are losing money, and the connection to the
subprime markets is less clear.
There are any number of statistical relationships which have simply not
functioned as they have in the past. Large quantitative hedge funds that
employ teams of mathematicians and physicists to develop complex "black
box" trading programs to computer trade on these relationships are
finding themselves losing money. As Spencer Jakab writes:
"Quantitative hedge funds running 'black box' models are primarily
market neutral, seeking to exploit small inefficiencies in valuations
and historical volatility between similar securities. A period like the
last few weeks would have typically seen such funds outperform most of
their peers in the hedge-fund community, but they have instead shocked
investors with steep losses.
"Because risk managers were able to demonstrate that they were less
risky, on paper at least, they were allowed to use far more borrowed
money than other leading hedge fund strategies. Some are clearly
overextended. 'The inherent leverage is killing them,' said a broker at
a major investment bank who deals with hedge funds."
"Analyst Matthew Rothman of Lehman Brothers wrote that the models are
working in exactly the opposite way they should to protect a black box
fund in an up or down market. 'It is not just that most factors are not
working but rather they are working in a perverse manner,' wrote
Rothman. 'The names that are short are outperforming, often notably,
while the names that are long are underperforming, although less
severely.'"
Goldman's Global Alpha, which has been losing money for two years, is
down 26% for the year and down almost 40% since the end of July. It is
not surprising they are being hit with redemptions. And that forces them
to sell. Many of the largest hedge funds are the very quantitative funds
that are being forced to sell, putting pressure on the markets.
In 1998 problems in Asia and Russia spread to the rest of the markets,
affecting Norwegian bonds and US stocks. It took a few months to sort
out, and a lot of people lost money. Today, problems in the subprime
mortgage markets spread to other credit markets and the affect is
spilling over into stock markets.
But there is a difference. Today, instead of one fund that was at the
epicenter of the problem, the problems are spread around the world among
scores of funds and permeate the largest institutional and pension
funds. While that means the losses are spread among thousands of
investors, it also means that central banks can't bring everyone to the
table to "fix" the problem.
The problem of the last two days was triggered by BNP Paribas telling
investors in three of their funds that they would not be allowed to
redeem. This simply froze the European markets. The European Central
Bank has injected $211 billion into their system. Central banks have put
$339 billion into the world system in the last 48 hours. And you should
be very glad they did, by the way.
I heard on TV that some are saying the Fed is bailing out banks. Not
they way I read it. They are simply taking short term "repo" paper for a
few days to inject liquidity. If you are going to have a central bank,
then this is a proper action. The fact that the excess liquidity which
produced the bubbles can be laid at the Greenspan Federal Reserve's feet
is a topic for another day.
And while we are on the topic, I think BNP Paribas probably did the
right thing. They have funds which have invested in all sorts of credit
vehicles. Nothing is trading, so if they tried to meet redemptions, they
would have to sell assets at much distressed prices, and then guess at
what prices the other assets should be valued at in the absence of a
market price. If they guessed to little, then those exiting would lose
too much, notice their losses were too high and sue. If they guessed too
high, then those remaining would notice that they lost more than they
should have and then sue. BNP was in a no win situation. To be fair to
all investors, they have to wait until the market prices the assets in
their portfolio.
They have not said what those assets are. If they are not US mortgage
related it is likely they will turn out ok. If there is subprime in the
mix, they will take significant losses.
Subprime for a Long Time
And one last difference between 1998 and today. Back then, the problems
in the markets became known and were priced into the markets in
relatively short order. It is going to be several years before we know
the extent of the subprime losses. Remember the table that I used last
week which showed the bulk of subprime mortgage interest rate resets was
not until the first half of 2008. It is going to take years for the
markets to know what the losses on the subprime will actually be.
And it is not as if it should be a total surprise. Any investor can go
to their Bloomberg and pull up a listing of subprime Residential
Mortgage Backed Securities. There are 2,512 of them. If you sort by the
ones with the most loans over 60 days past due, you find that the
average RMBS has 12.39% of their mortgages over 60 days, and 2.39% have
already been repossessed (REO in the next table), with almost 5% in
foreclosure.
The table below shows the RMBS with the highest level of 60 day past due
(or worse) mortgages in them. Yes, the worst two offenders are the 2006
vintage of RMBS. But notice that a lot are from 2000, 2001, 2003 and
earlier, well before the supposedly lax standards of the past few years.
The third listed RMBS, the INHEL 2001-B is selling at 18 cents on the
dollar (you can't see this from the table), and has been dropping since
2003. Over 25% of the mortgages in that portfolio have already been
repossessed or are in foreclosure, with another 25% past due for over 60
days. Can you say ugly?
But you can also find paper from 2001 that is not doing badly. It should
be clear to anybody who did a little due diligence a few years ago that
there were problems in the subprime RMBS markets. There was a great deal
of difference in the quality of various offerings. So it paid you to do
some homework. If you could not get transparency, then you were taking a
gamble.
That being said, many of the European and Asian institutions who bought
this paper relied on the credit rating agencies. They relied on the
models built by the investment banks that put this paper together. As I
have written, they sold their AAA rating but put legal language buried
in the documents that basically said, "OK, this is not what we mean by
AAA in our other ratings." The document for the RMBS mentioned above was
300 pages of fine print. I will bet you that the vast majority of people
buying this paper did not read it or understand what they were reading
if they did.
You can bet lawyers all over the world will look at this same screen I
show below. They are then going to ask the bankers and credit agencies
how they could put such a high rating on the paper seeing the problems
in these securities? "Really, you didn't look at the lending standards?"
It's all hindsight, of course. But that's what lawyers do. And in front
of a jury, it will be a tough day for the banks and credit agencies.

And let's close with a few paragraphs written by my friend and partner
Jon Sundt of Altegris Investments. I think this is one of the better
pieces I have seen looking at the complex environment we are in today.
Most of the press tends to greatly oversimplify and lump all funds,
banks and bonds into one category, when the truth is there is a lot of
difference. Full disclosure, Jon and I and the rest of my international
partners are in the business of finding hedge funds for clients, so we
have both an inside view into what is going on, as well as a clear bias.
I am proud of the job that Jon and his team have done and happy to be
associated with them. That being said, let's read Jon's take on the
situation.
The Fugu Ultimatum

"Indeed, if you look at the indices for different hedge fund strategies
out there, you will find a large dispersion of results for July, with
some strategies gaining money and some losing money. The differences
between a long/short US manager, a multi-strategy Asia manager, and a
leveraged CDO manager are too numerous to mention in this article, but
the press would have you believe that these managers are all bound
together.
"Let me reinforce my point with a basic but very appropriate analogy. In
Japan, there is a distinctive puffer fish called the Fugu. It is served
in special sushi restaurants by master chefs. Fugu tingles in your mouth
when you eat it. It is supposed to be an exotic aphrodisiac in Japan,
where diners spend hundreds of dollars a serving to eat it. The problem
is that eating Fugu can kill you. There is an old saying in Japan, 'I
want to eat Fugu, but I don't want to die.' People have been known to
literally drop dead in sushi bars from cardiac arrest and pulmonary
failure if the Fugu they ate wasn't prepared correctly. You have to be a
specially trained and licensed Fugu chef to prepare and serve it.
Personally, I would want to see the stats of the chef before eating
Fugu...just a simple 'number of customers killed' would work for me.
"Now imagine a family in your town called the Griswolds. (You may
remember them from the National Lampoon 'Vacation' films.) Suppose for
their next trip, the Griswolds decide to travel to Japan and pursue some
gastronomical thrills and eat the infamous Fugu. So they do some cursory
research, march into a Tokyo Fugu restaurant, plunk down $1,000 and
order a huge plate of Fugu. And die on the spot.
"The next morning as you sit at your breakfast table sipping coffee, you
read the following headline:
"LOCAL FAMILY DIES EATING EXOTIC POISONOUS FISH IN TOKYO"
"You think to yourself, no problem... you continue sipping coffee... and
maybe mutter... 'They should have known better.'
"Now imagine instead that you read the following headline:
"LOCAL FAMILY DIES IN FISH RESTAURANT"
"Your reaction may be very different. You are likely going to cancel
your reservation at the local sushi bar until you hear more. What if all
fish are tainted? Or is it just that restaurant? Or is it a specific
type of fish? You'll have lots of questions, and you might assume, until
you know more, that no fish are worth eating.
"My point is that events like these and potential losses should not come
as a surprise to knowledgeable and well-educated investors, whether in
Bear Stearns' funds (the current focal point of media attention) or
other funds. The name of one of the Bear Stearns' funds was 'The
High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage Fund.' If this
name alone didn't suggest possible concentrations in potentially
high-risk investments, I don't know what would. According to one
Citibank report, the fund at one point was 80:1 leveraged! In March of
this year, the subprime story was all over the news. At a time when most
news sources were already talking about interest rate increases hurting
subprime borrowers, Bear Stearns appears to have been marketing a fund
that invested in illiquid/exotic mortgage credit instruments with high
levels of leverage.
"While I don't personally know the full details behind the reasons Bear
sponsored this fund, it is clear in my mind that investors seem to have
been taken by surprise as to what they had invested in. As I see it, and
to return to my analogy, this fund may have been serving up large plates
of Fugu to investors clamoring for a bite. The 'diners' appear to have
either been unaware of the risks, or more likely, had not seriously
considered what could, and in fact did, go wrong.
"Not all CDOs have danger written all over them, but those backed by
subprimes would, with the benefit of hindsight, seem to have been quite
clearly headed for trouble. It is a very narrow and specialized breed of
hedge fund that trades in such a space. Like a sushi 'Fugu' bar, such
investing is not typical of all hedge funds. That doesn't mean there
aren't billions of dollars exposed to it... it just means it isn't your
everyday long/short hedge fund."
90 Years and Still Going Strong
It's time to hit the send button. Tomorrow is my mother's 90th birthday.
She is still going strong, with two new knees and two new hips. She had
an amazing and difficult life. Born on a Mississippi cotton farm, she
joined the Women's Army Corp (yes, my mother wore combat boots) and met
my Texan Dad in Europe. Dad became an alcoholic when I was young and
mother had to assume the responsibility for many years to support three
kids until Dad joined AA and was able to work steadily again.
She never complained. She just met her life with a simple faith and
trust. I remember getting up every morning in Bridgeport, Texas. In the
winter we would stand shivering in front of the Dearborn gas heater
while she read the daily bible passage. I learned to work watching her,
and learned to love to read when our TV died and we were too poor to
have it fixed. Life was good.
I leave for Europe in ten days. After meetings in London and a speech in
Copenhagen for Jyske Bank, I am going to visit Poland and the Czech
Republic, two countries that I have wanted to visit for a long time. It
will be fun to be tourist for ten days and lots of new friends to meet.
I usually like to read sci-fi when I am on vacation, but there is not a
lot that interests me now that I have not already read. So, I will do
some more serious reading. I will pack The Black Swan. I am going to
look for a biography of George Washington. And I am looking for another
biography or two to take as well. I am open to suggestions.
Have a good week. And remember that family and friends are the most
valuable credit you can have.
Your planning on making it to 90 and beyond myself analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
If you would like to reproduce any of John Mauldin's E-Letters you must include the source of your quote and an email address (John@FrontlineThoughts.com) Please write to info@FrontlineThoughts.com and inform us of any reproductions. Please include where and when the copy will be reproduced.
John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.
Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA
registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered
with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave
Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.
PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.
|