Wednesday, October 22, 2008
It's about the real economy now
Friday, October 17, 2008
Why Lehman mattered
Read my post on the 1934 Act first… this will not mean much to you unless you have done so… and after that get ready for some seriously wonky stuff…
I was chit-chatting with a very prominent NYC financial journalist the other day and gave him the accepted view – which is that the decision to let Lehman fail was a big mistake.
He asked quickly and fairly why it was a big mistake.
I had to confess that I did not know. Just the facts on the ground since that decision have confirmed that it was a mistake. That hardly seemed satisfactory to me or to him.
At the time of the decision I thought that whilst the decision was risky Paulson had made the correct call. Lehman was – he thought and I thought – just not important enough. I blogged about constructive uncertainty and unfortunately I was wrong.
Krugman (who I admire almost to the point of idol worship even though I think he wrong often) had an editorial in the New York Times which said that Paulson was playing with a loaded gun – but Krugman was not then prepared to call it a mistake (though he has since). (Score Krugman 1, me 0).
But I now I think I know why letting Lehman fail was a mistake. It was the absence of suitable broker-dealer regulation in the
The 1934 Securities Act was written with recent memory of what it means for a major broker-dealer to fail. Indeed legislators were so scared of this they enacted two pieces of legislation – the first ring fenced the broker deal from all the other business of the broker (the 1934 Act) and the second (Glass Steagall) prohibited combining any of it with a conventional bank.
It turns out I think that the Great Depression double-separation was overkill – and you could do without the Glass Steagall legislation. But you could not do without the 1934 Act.
Anyway Lehman had lots of assets pledged to its European broker dealer which they could in turn repledge to finance client business (as would be possible in the
Now it turns out that many of the most levered books were resident in the
Lehman
Several hedge funds (notably led by Harbinger) are trying to investigate these transactions and have made requests to the
But let’s see it as it now is. The assets and liabilities of these highly levered hedge funds became assets and liabilities of Lehman in bankruptcy. [The entire books effectively were hocked to Lehman creditors…] The leverage had to come off – and fast.
And so what the Lehman bankruptcy did was trigger waves of delivering – and it did it through the mechanism of
The European trade de-jour – run at high leverage through the UK Broker Dealer was long Porsche, short Volkswagen. Porsche (a very fine company indeed) owns a very large amount of Volkswagen (read General Motors for
And so – after the Lehman bankruptcy – this trade exploded. VW went up every day – Porsche went down and the ratios became totally absurd. Go look – either Porsche is absurdly cheap or VW is absurdly expensive or both. Anyone that believes in the rational market hypothesis (and there are plenty of them out there) would have a real problem with this data as there is no way the movement is explained by rational valuation…
Anyway Porsche Volkswagen example of massive deleveraging – but it was perhaps the most spectacular. It happened across the board – and anyone who was levered to anything that looked like an obvious position had their backsides thrashed following Lehman. It did not matter if they were housed at Goldman Sachs because enough people would have had the position on at Lehman London to get market prices to administer the thrashing.
There was a day when high short interest stocks started rising in a falling market for no reason. Almost all high short interest stocks. Why? My guess is because someone at Lehman London was short them and Lehman started covering the positions in bankruptcy. The move was big enough to destroy some levered players. But it also happened to stocks into which people were levered long.
Soon delivering took on its own dynamic because people who were housed way-away from Lehman but were still over-levered got themselves in the vortex.
Finally the redemptions are coming – and if you were not over-levered before the redemptions you can be over-levered after them. Redemptions have their own dynamic.
The leverage of course was not only in equity markets – leverage is much more pronounced in debt markets because debt markets typically only have a couple of points of spread and you need to lever that seven to twenty times to get a reasonable ROE. Moreover Lehman was always primarily a debt house, not an equity house – and the debt-arb funds were far-more-likely to be housed at Lehman than the equity guys…
The deleveraging of debt markets following the Lehman failure left everyone (maybe except Uncle Warren) hoarding cash. [It also ran the Federal Reserve out of balance sheet in a single day – something that I will come back to in a later post…]
Lehman’s failure cracked this market – and it did so because the
It was the failures of
John
PPS. This is a good summary of the legal issues as they are now... http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/10/16/business/NA-US-Lehman-Brothers-Bankruptcy.php
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
The 1934 Securities Exchange Act and all that
When you sign up to a margin account in almost all cases you pledge your securities to the broker with the ability for them to repledge.
The reason to broker-dealer must be able to repledge is that it needs to finance the loans to you – and to reduce the cost of that financing it needs to offer collateral.
So, when I take my million dollars worth of securities to the broker and borrow 100K on my margin account it looks like I have pledged a million dollars to a broker who might be questionable in order to get 100 thousand worth of financing.
There is one word for this. Dumb. They can – on face of it – take your assets and pledge them to finance their risky business.
If you do not believe it is dumb have a look at my post on Opes Prime, a small broker-dealer that went down in
The
Enter the
What the broker dealer act does is (a) ring fence the
I am hardly a lawyer – so take the bush lawyer caveat – but the way it works is that the broker dealer may not borrow against your securities to finance their own business, only client business. So Lehman Brothers US broker dealer could take collateral of securities and if they had 100 million out on client margin loans the most that they could raise using client securities is 100 million and not a brass razoo more. This is really important because it meant that client assets were not used to finance Lehman’s disastrous commercial real estate and other businesses.
Moreover when you deposit a million dollars at the broker dealer and give them the right to repledge those securities they can only rehypothecate 140 percent of your outstanding balances.
If you have 1 million deposited and you have 100 thousand borrowed then only 140 thousand can be rehypothecated and the rest must sit in a segregated client account. [If your broker wants to steal from the segregated client account there are precious few defences – but…] You can not contract out of this requirement.
So (provided the broker is not acting criminally) you should get the bulk of your money back if the broker dealer fails. And provided the capital requirements are adequate (and they mostly are) the broker dealer won’t fail. Even the Drexel Burnham Broker Dealer did not fail.
Goldman Sachs claims that they can determine the capital requirements of their broker dealer intra-day. I have no proof of this claim – but in this age of computers that is plausible.
The result. Whilst Lehman brothers went bust Lehman US broker dealer did not. This pretty well saved the
In some sense this is the end of the City of
I am on record as saying the
But now with the biggest bank in the world by balance sheet (Royal Bank of Scotland) effectively nationalised and the and a large part of the UK hedge fund community lying with open veins it looks a little stupid.
This puts in a different light the 8 billion dollars that Lehman London transferred to the
So here is a plea for US Depression style financial regulation. Some of it (such as the Broker Dealer regulation) was well thought out and should be duplicated. (Some of it was less sensible…)
If I have a plea to my home country (
As for
John Hempton
Monday, October 13, 2008
Fred Goodwin hangs tough
You worked for an inconsequential arm of National Australia Bank.
You walked to an historic but small bank in Scotland.
You went on a binge of overpriced and insane acquisitions and turned your tiny bank into the world's largest by balance sheet.
The bank failed at huge risk to the global economy and required government to bail it out.
And you did not resign and instead hung tough for a golden parachute.
I have said that you are the worst CEO of any major bank anywhere. Vindication I claim.
Resign and waive the right to any package. It is simply indecent to charge a parachute to the taxpayers.
John
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Bakkavor Group, an Icelandic follow up...
For those that want to know, the balance sheet is written in pounds. It is serious money. Almost 2 billion dollars in debt for a token Icelandic food processing company.
It is the corporates, not the banks that are going to send this around the world. I noted the list of principal bankers contain more usual suspects – they are Barclays, RBOS, Rabobank, Mizuho, Fortis, ABN Amro, Bank of America Securities and HSBC.
The Icelandic confessional has included Erste Bank in Austria (a crash large enough to close the Austrian exchange) and various UK banks and will include others.
But more, still more, will come to the confessional...
J
Iceland denies the airbase link
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/bronwen_maddox/article4916541.ece
But it is clear the Russians have an agenda. What it is is unclear.
Iceland however needs the foreign currency desperately and should take it.
Welcome to the 21st century...
British deposits in Icelandic banks
They now say they intend to honour them.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601102&sid=aXXW.vOmh8Ao&refer=uk
Intention is fine. They do not have the cash.
J
Funny reaction as to the prostitution comment
The email however is suddenly running very supportive.
The purpose of the post is and was to make sure everyone knows just how important and nasty financial crises are.
If I have offended people doing that I am sorry, but the crisis is the central fact in what will be modern Icelandic history...
The central policy question raised by the Asian crisis was 'why did the market deal such harsh punishment for so minor economic crimes?'
This will be the question asked by Icelandic people too. And it is a question that should be asked of all those who subscribe to the dumb doctrine that is Austrian economics...
In Asia they ran large current account deficits caused mostly by good excess investment... it still crashed (and recovered).
The stakes here are very high. Iceland is a nasty case but there is no 'Icelandic exceptionalism' and there will be no 'Australian exceptionalism' if we stuff up either. Australia is warmer than Iceland and that is a darn good thing. But it is a small thing.
So, please take my hot headedness as it is intended, which is to outline the stakes...
********************
There is a long history of financial crises, there is a long history of the aftermath. I made a semi-flippant comment about part of the aftermath. It has sent my email and the comments wild. I have gone from 1 regular Icelandic visitor who knew my views in detail because he asked to hundreds of Icelandic visitors. The comment was about financial crisis and prostitution.
I know of no crisis where pretty women have not prostituted themselves out of desperation or for advantage. There are people who have emailed me who can confirm this first hand for Argentina, both as clients and as good Catholic girls turned to distasteful work. Do not think for a moment that I am pleased by these stories...
The journalist whose story of the Russian crisis was one of pretty women aspiring to be dollar whores said it as a matter of fact...
This is not new.
I have now had so many emails and comments that tell me that Icelandic women would rather shoot me and eat me than prostitute themselves that I am sick of it. It may be true but it is not an option open to most Icelandic people.
Financial crises are pernicious affairs. And if there is something about Icelandic exceptionalism I do not see it in the market place. Take your Icelandic exceptionalism and stick it with what is left of your Krona.
I do not mean to be tough. I think that the US should bail out Iceland. Its a democracy full of fundamentally decent people and they deserve much better than what is about to befall them. If the goal of US policy is to make the world safe for democracy fixing Iceland is a cheap shot.
But the US is not going to bail out Iceland. And life is going to be very tough indeed. Tough enough to undo all Iceland's excessively high opinion of itself.
For that I am sorry.
Australia also has a high opinion of itself, and an unsustainable current account deficit. Not as unsustainable as Iceland but bad. I would not like it at all if what is about to befall Iceland befell my home town.
John
PS. My view is not fundamentally different from this view in the British press...
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/fear-on-streets-of-reykjavik-as-country-can-only-go-to-imf-for-financial-bailout-957876.html
Friday, October 10, 2008
Iceland the absurd
I mentioned
The first time I mentioned
Later I mentioned – but only in the comments – the raid on the
I wrote a post about high rate deposits (Wachovia will walk over you) and I confess that I had an ulterior motive – I was looking for someone to tell me how much the Icelandic banks were raiding the deposit market of
But this post is an ex-post analysis of just how absurd
Firstly the Russian loan (5.4 billion) is really big. The population of
It is pretty hard to see how an economy that has functionally destroyed itself is going to pay that back. Whatever it looks like a darn big loan to a very dodgy credit – and I presume that there is a non-financial motive for granting it.
In my quick post on
That is plausible because there is no obvious financial motive for this loan. But there is an alternative theory doing the rounds – which is that one of the Icelandic banks was closely tied to the Russian Mafia – and the loan by the Russian Government is just make-good. [The implication being that the Russian Government is just another arm of the Russian Mafia.] Again I have no proof for that hypothesis – however as you need a non-commercial explanation of the loan its as good as most. [Access to military bases however looks more likely…]
But you got to realise just how big the Icelandic problem is relative to the Icelandic economy. Kaupthing Edge and IceSavings raided the
So
Bakkavör Group sticks in mind – just because it was so levered in such an ordinary business – processed fresh food. The five year summary is as follows:
Yes – it does have quick ratios of less than one, current ratios of less than one and ebit of only about a ninth of outstanding debt.
It might be possible to survive that – but it will be tough.
And whilst the investment bank is Kaupthing with whom it shares multiple board members – the list of “principal bankers” contains more usual suspects – they are Barclays, RBOS, Rabobank, Mizuho, Fortis, ABN Amro, Bank of America Securities and HSBC.
Oh
==========
It is also worth considering what happens to Iceland in the absence of new funding... It has no banking system left. There is nobody much willing to take Icelandic Kroner. The country has no reserves of hard cash that matter. Its winter coming.
They can sell fish and energy intensive manufactures (their main exports) for hard currency. But this is not like Australia - when the going got really tough in Australia in the depression you gave up and went and hunted (feral) rabbits for food.
Iceland is a little colder.
My guess - and it said only half in cynicism - the women are beautiful in Iceland - the place just pushes out Miss World winners. Its almost as close to NYC as Vegas. Sex Tourism for hard cash will be their next export industry.
If they adopt the Vegas slogan will it work for financial crisis as well? What happens in Iceland/Vegas ...
J
Thursday, October 9, 2008
The Bronte Capital thesis breaks down
This blog has an over-arching thesis – which is that current account deficit countries are going to have bad banking systems – but current account surplus countries are going to be sort-of-OK.
This post was outlined in the second substantive post on this blog in which I said:
But I was pretty happy with the banks in current account surplus countries – although their profitability was limited.
Well – the facts on the ground look much uglier than that.
Sure the failure in
But my problem is that the banks in current account surplus countries are behaving very badly. The relatively well run
This is significant and signifies either irrational panic or the thesis being wrong.
Thoughts please.
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The content contained in this blog represents the opinions of Mr. Hempton. You should assume Mr. Hempton and his affiliates have positions in the securities discussed in this blog, and such beneficial ownership can create a conflict of interest regarding the objectivity of this blog. Statements in the blog are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and other factors. Certain information in this blog concerning economic trends and performance is based on or derived from information provided by third-party sources. Mr. Hempton does not guarantee the accuracy of such information and has not independently verified the accuracy or completeness of such information or the assumptions on which such information is based. Such information may change after it is posted and Mr. Hempton is not obligated to, and may not, update it. The commentary in this blog in no way constitutes a solicitation of business, an offer of a security or a solicitation to purchase a security, or investment advice. In fact, it should not be relied upon in making investment decisions, ever. It is intended solely for the entertainment of the reader, and the author. In particular this blog is not directed for investment purposes at US Persons.