Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Notes on visiting an Herbalife nutrition club in Queens


I visited a Herbalife nutrition club in Queens. There is plenty wrong with this company – but this is not a post about the things that are wrong with the company (most of those I will leave for other people to think about). This is simply a post about what I observed and the implications for Bill Ackman's Herbalife thesis.

(a). There are a lot of Herbalife nutrition clubs in Queens. This is an Hispanic area and within the US Herbalife is mainly an Hispanic phenomenon. If you use Google satellite navigation on your phone you will find lots Herbalife clubs (dozens are listed around Corona Queens) though some of the ones you try to locate will not be there any more (suggesting they have either moved or closed).

(b). I was told the best time to visit a nutrition club was between 7 AM and 9 AM so I dutifully arrived at about 7.15. The club was empty. I was told to go with a Spanish speaker because the clubs were pretty close to mono-lingual Spanish. The club was not signposted from the street and coloured paper made opaque the windows so a passer by would not know what was in there.

(c). I was served “all three” meaning an aloe drink, a diet suppressing tea and the protein shake.

(d). This was the first time I had drunk a protein shake. I can tell you they suck - so does the tea for that matter. This stuff tastes unbelievably bad. It is flat-out-gross. I sent an email (with the trusty smart-phone) to a friend in Asia explaining where I was and told him how gross it was. He puzzled: he asked if I was a virgin. He explained that when he was a competitive lightweight rower (he rowed for an Ivy League university) he used to live on protein shakes as he had to keep his weight within the limits. And he exercised extensively on them. Exercise and protein shakes is a well-worn and proven weight loss combination. But they do taste gross. [I have been informed that Herbalife taste slightly better than some protein shakes at the cost of adding some sugars – also I have been informed the texture is much improved by blending in a banana or even a mango....]

(e). There were no visitors prior to 8 AM. By 8 AM I was going to sell my entire Herbalife long and give up on the position. My Spanish translator talked to the guy running the place and he told us roughly how many visitors he got a day and told us the time they came in – and that it really started by about 8 AM.

(f). The translator was correct. The visitors started around 8 and in the next 75 minutes over twenty came in. They came in roughly to his schedule suggesting that they were regulars. They spoke in Spanish and he spoke to them as friends. Most of them were either no longer obese or in the transition from being morbidly obese to (merely) rectangular shaped.

(j). The key product: the proprietor/distributor greeted the visitors as friends and offered moral support as they drank the tea and the shake.

(k). There was a series of before and after photos on the wall. They were impressive – many of the customers – and the husband and wife team that ran the club – had gone from balloon shaped to roughly rectangular. [I gather before and after photos are impressive at other weight-loss groups such as Weight Watchers - however in this case there were a lot of impressive photos for a very small club.]

(l). The husband and wife who ran the shop had been Herbalife customers for about five and a half years and had been running the club for about eighteen months. They were true believers in the product – extolling its virtues and also repeating mostly in Spanish but also in Spanglish the benefits of the Herbalife system. [In their case they also also extolled the virtue of replacing the fat-and-cheeze laden meals that were non Herbalife with something more nutritious and the virtue of some exercise even if it was just walking further.]

(k). The benefits of the Herbalife program in the wife's case were real. The wife had gone from a three insulin shot per day diabetic to a half insulin shot per day diabetic. [Statistically this should add over 15 years to her life expectancy.] Her prior body was balloon shaped.

(l). On the wall was a list of the seventy odd people who regularly attend this Herbalife club. There was a list of gold stars against the names with weight-loss and Herbalife consumption targets on them. Clearly the gold stars were part of the reward system. This looked a little like primary school.

(m). We asked if he had any “downline”. He explained to us that every one of his core customers was also a distributor – and they were a distributor to get the 25 percent discount on stuff they took home.

Observations

This club was not a club selling diet drinks (but it clearly did that). It was a club selling the social support group necessary to drink diet drinks. These diet drinks work (especially when combined with a modicum of exercise). What happens though is that normal people do not have the will-power to maintain a diet drink and exercise regime. My friend in Singapore did – but then he rowed competitively and people into rowing are austere driven people (think all those 4 AM starts).

But I am a fairly disciplined person and - without social support I could not drink these shakes.

In the richer-parts of our society we have a solution to diet-and-exercise will-power problem. We hire a personal trainer (usually someone cheerful, younger and good looking) and they cajole us into weight-loss. This is a “for-hire” personal support group.

But Herbalife is another valid mechanism of getting personal support – and it clearly worked on the customers I saw. Personally I find it very difficult not to endorse a product that reduced to one sixth a person's insulin injection requirement. If Bill Ackman thinks America would be better off without Herbalife he could politely explain that at the woman's funeral.

I will - in the interest of fairness - include the main negative observation: the man who ran this shop covered his rent (we worked that out) but he was cheerful man working hard (80 plus hours a week) and making an amount that was less than minimum wage. I gather than many (possibly a majority) of Herbalife clubs do not cover rent (consistent with the observation that there are lot of Herbalife clubs in Google maps that no longer seem to exist). Minimum wage appears to be the upside.

This showed both the benefit and problems with multi-level marketing. The benefit is that it allows a company (in this case Herbalife) to get deep into a community and that is a necessary part of the product – the product they are selling is community support for weight loss and they can't do that without getting into the community. The problem is that the company actively recruits distributors to the point that it is impossible for the distributors to be good businesses. Indeed as the rewards to many people in the chain are on recruitment (and you can't make it up the chain without a substantial “down-line”) it is likely that recruitment will continue until the distributors make nothing (or less than nothing when convinced to sign up by hard-sell rather than rational argument).

There were so many Herbalife clubs around Queens that I suspect on average the Herbalife shops make something near nothing or less than nothing. The profile of a Ferrari driving Herbalife distributor that Mr Ackman presented was – at least compared to what I saw – ludicrous.

wrote once about income distribution in the US by working out how cheap my laundry was in Brooklyn and working out that it was being done in a sweat-shop with illegal Chinese workers paid under minimum wage. [I got a lot of flack for that post from my libertarian readers.] The Herbalife distributor I met (who may also have been an illegal) had a better life than those illegal sweat-shop workers. He did not earn much more money – but his job was community based and he interacted as a friend with a great many customers. That I think was personally satisfying and he clearly was happy with his lot. And the product saved his wife's life which trumps most things.

Herbalife as exploitative in a Marxist sense

Herbalife is clearly an exploitative system in the Marxist sense. The head-honcho is paid well over $70 million derived from a vast network of people earning minimum wage or less. Dan Loeb (who now controls 8 percent of Herbalife) is someone who often attacks excessive salaries for senior executives. This could become quite amusing.

Some comments on Bill Ackman's thesis

It was striking how totally Bill Ackman's thesis fell apart from observing for just a few hours in a nutrition club.

The best way of analysing Herbalife that I can find is as alcoholics anonymous for fat (and very often Hispanic) people. I joke: “my name is Jose and I am fat”.

Herbalife works in the same way as alcoholics anonymous – by supplying (and in this case selling) a support group to help you kick the “fat addiction”.

Like Alcoholics Anonymous it has millions of members and looks – at least externally – a bit like a cult.

Herbalife like Alcoholics Anonymous has millions of members because it works. It does not work because one nutrition powder is better than another (indeed some nutritionists argue soy based powders are inferior). Herbalife works because of the support group.

AA is probably the single most effective way devised by humanity to cure alcoholics. It is far more effective than any drug developed by pharmaceutical companies and if a drug were devised as effective as and as free of side effects as AA then it would be worth tens of billions of dollars. Even then AA probably fails a majority of times. Herbalife is among the more successful ways of curing morbid obesity (but even then it probably fails a majority of times). [I shudder to think what a weight-loss drug as effective as the Herbalife support system would be worth though - considerably more than Herbalife's market cap.]

The biggest difference that I can see between AA and Herbalife is that Herbalife is (emphatically) a for-profit institution (and possibly quite an exploitative for profit institution) whereas AA is just a club.

Lets run through Ackman's presentation by section

Ackman on Herbalife as a commodity

From Page 21 to 26 of the presentation Bill Ackman “demonstrates” that Herbalife's products are not unique – and from that he argues that they do not maintain their price position by being a “proprietary product”. He compares the product to GNC and other brands and notes the price per serve or the price per calorie is higher.

This is a complete misunderstanding of Herbalife's product. GNC and other brands are sold as commodities. Herbalife is sold with a community support mechanism.

In Central Park anyone can go and have a run. It is free. It costs you $20 an hour if you exercise with a personal trainer. Comparing the price of Herbalife (sold through a network) to the GNC (sold without a network) is like comparing the cost of a run through the park without and with a personal trainer.

Bill Ackman has just missed the point.

Ackman on Herbalife's lack of advertising

From pages 27 to 31 Bill Ackman notes the lack of advertising expense on Herbalife (which he argues is very little) and says that they cannot maintain their price premium that way.

This is of course garbage. Herbalife has the best advertising possible – word of mouth. People will pay huge sums to Facebook for the hope of getting someone to “like” a product online and hence endorse it to their friends. Herbalife has far more powerful advertising support than that – it is deep in the community.

Alcoholics Anonymous has 2 million members and I have never seen an advertisement for the product. However like you I have heard of AA. Brand recognition for community based products is (naturally) very high. I suspect almost every reader of my blog has heard of Alcoholics Anonymous without ever seeing an advertisement.

That said Herbalife does sponsor one of the biggest football teams in the world (Barcelona). It also sponors LA Galaxy but nobody cares about them!

Bill Ackman on Herbalife's research and development

From page 35 to 50 Bill Ackman tells us all about Herbalife's (very thin) research and development program.

He is of course right that relative to its claims Herbalife has a very thin research and development program. So what: Alcoholics Anonymous – relevant to its claims – has a very thin research and development program. And yet it is known to work for a lot of people and the results are well known.

There is plenty of research that says social cues are important in whether you take drugs or not, whether you drink. And social cues are important as to whether you stay fat or not.

You don't need a lot of research to tell you that.

As Bob Dylan says: you don't need a weatherman to tell which way the wind blows.

The main Bill Ackman mistake

Page 164 of the Bill Ackman presentation lays out the key criteria for determining whether Herbalife is illegal. Here is the slide:



I will quote this as it is the core criteria for determining whether Bill Ackman is right:

The critical question for the FTC is whether the revenues that primarily support the commissions paid to all participants are generated from purchases of goods and services that are not simply incidental to the purchase of the right to participate in a money-making venture.
Bill Ackman spends most of his presentation arguing that Herbalife's product is the business opportunity. He argues for instance that most the product is sold to "distributors". This was clearly true in the Herbalife club I visited. Almost every customer was also a distributor. They however were clearly customers - they came in - they paid their money - they drank their shake. They look like customers because they were customers.

Bill Ackman calls these distributors victims of a false "business opportunity". Facts on the ground: they are customers.

That fact is very inconvenient for Bill Ackman because if they are customers then Herbalife is legal and Ackman's thesis falls apart totally.

Bill Ackman's logic as to why these distributors could not be customers is disarmingly simple - and amazingly erroneous. Bill Ackman argued that it was illogical for someone to sign up as Herbalife distributor for the 25 percent discount because even with a 25 percent discount the product was more expensive than commodity product available from GNC and other suppliers. [My Spanish translator came back to me with an errata on this point: he says that some of his downstream were considering the business opportunity - but the majority were distributors without any plans at all on the business opportunity.]

That is true. But it misses the point.

Remember those gold stars and the support group. If you buy weight loss shakes from GNC you do not get the gold stars. Buy the product from GNC and you are not part of this Latino self-help group. By not understanding Herbalife as a social support group for weight loss and by analysing the product as a commodity Bill Ackman has failed to observe what globally would add up to millions of customers. Real customers. The customers that make Herbalife legal.

What this story is really about

Herbalife is a company which combines a lot of good (think the life-saved diabetic above) with some pretty ugly features.

But this is not really a story about Herbalife - Herbalife will survive globally. Like all multi-level marketing schemes it will have its ups and downs. There will be all sorts of problems (such as tax compliance throughout the scheme, cash handling, perhaps even using Herbalife accounts to launder money).

What this has (deservedly) become is the story about how Bill Ackman can be so wrong. He spent (by his own admission) a year and a half analysing this company and his thesis can be falsified by visiting a few clubs in his home city. Bill Ackman's thesis is the most easily falsified bear-thesis I have seen from a major hedge fund ever.

You have to wonder how this happened. So I am going to tell you: 

Bill Ackman a Harvard educated (magna cum laude) billionaire New York hedge fund manager bet over a billion dollars on a short position (imperilling his fund and his reputation) without checking the facts.

And he did not check the facts because he was so rigid with a misplaced silver spoon that he could not stoop to sit on a subway for thirty minutes and talk with poor people for ninety minutes.



John

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Bill Ackman either lacks imagination or has a touching faith in government

There is a wonderful Bloomberg story today about the more-to-come in the Bill Ackman vs Herbalife saga.

There is however one quote in the article which exposes the flaw in Bill Ackman's position:

“We can’t imagine how the SEC or the Federal Trade Commission or any other relevant regulator will ignore what we have said.” 

Either Bill Ackman lacks imagination or has a touching faith in government or both.

In the comments people might put a list of things you might think that Government could never possibly ignore but do. I will start with climate change. There are plenty of others: the range of government failures covers the whole political and policy spectrum.





John

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Ackman's Herbalife thesis: someone from the government will help poor people and billionaire hedge fund managers...


I was just on CNBC talking about Herbalife. Nervous as they come and was propped the wrong way by the sound guy (and hence never looked at Herb Greenberg who interviewed me).

But here is the quick summary.

I agreed with Bill Ackman that Herbalife is mostly about ripping off distributors and people at the end of the chain. The product is more than twice as expensive as competitor shakes. I called Herbalife "scumbags".

But they are highly cash flow positive scumbags and they will use the cash flow to buy back shares. Over the past five years the share count has gone from 140 million to 108 million and will fall further.

They are scumbags then - but they are scumbags working for stock market investors.

That I pointed out was similar to tobacco companies. Tobacco companies kill 5 million people globally per year - 400 thousand of them in the USA. Is anyone stupid enough to think the government would close them? That has been a bad short thesis for decades!

Bill Ackman is shorting a profitable company - and his argument is that they run an illegal pyramid scheme. By implication his argument that the government is going to somehow close them down.

That is a really truly awful short thesis - the short thesis that Government is going to come and help poor people and a billionaire hedge fund manager! Normally neither group is high on the agenda!

---

I said that I had reported many frauds to the SEC. Sometimes the SEC acted. Mostly it did not. When it acted it was often after the stock had gone to zero.

If my thesis was the government was going to help me then I got it wrong!

Bill Ackman has that one wrong!

---

I did not state other important parts of the argument.

(a). Being wrong on crowded shorts is very dangerous indeed. Herbalife is a crowded short - the short is however mostly one person - Bill Ackman - who has a massive position.

(b). The nutrition clubs have some merit. I once shared house with a lesbian Avon lady. She sold a couple of hundred thousand dollars worth of make-up a year. Her shtick was simple. She visited women stuck in outer-suburbia - the land of the 3 hours of daily commute. Their husbands were away from them for 11 hours a day and they were very stuck. She would play with them - putting makeup on them like 14 year old girls put makeup on each other. She would tell them they were beautiful and be supportive. This was multi-level marketing as decentralized support mechanism and it worked.

The nutrition clubs are like that. Fat men turn up and share a shake with other fat men and support each other to lose weight. It is sort of a Hispanic obese person's version of alcoholics anonymous. Mostly Hispanic anyway - as it started in the Hispanic community. Guys turn up and they say something like "My name is Jose and I am fat". It works.

The Manhattan version of support for weight loss is a highly priced gymnasium with a personal trainer to push you to remove the pounds. But it is blindingly arrogant to believe that that is the only valid sort of support group for weight loss.

---

I also did not say what I think Herbalife's strategy should be. They are going to offer a defence. I think it should be bland - simply a statement of profits and maybe the merit of the system.

Anything to allow Herbalife to buy back more stock. Herbalife has a lot of capacity to buy back stock as it is very cash flow positive. The more stock they buy back the better for remaining shareholders.

I might wind up a remaining shareholder. So I hope they buy a huge quantity of stock back - and the easiest way to do that is to do that when the stock is cheap - that is right now.

---

As per usual on this blog I could be wrong. The government might just decide to help a billionaire hedge fund manager out and save Bill Ackman from his oversized position.

That however is something I am willing to bet against.




John

Friday, December 28, 2012

Hewlett Packard Pension Fund - a final post

I have written three posts on HPs pension fund. I also wrote to HP outlining several of my main concerns.

HP filed a 10K and gave me a detailed response to other concerns. They also hired external audit people to check.

First observation: A good proportion of the gains were from total return swaps on very long US government bonds. I thought that unlikely - but many of my blog readers (correctly) guessed it.

Second observation: All my other concerns appear groundless. (I am not going to bother detailing them as they were groundless.)

I was wrong. It happens a lot unfortunately.

Kudos to HP on transparency

I have written many letters to companies before - most to very dodgy companies. I have never received a response as transparent as HP. Kudos to them.

As for Gretchen Tai. Her asset management looks pretty good.



John

Bill Ackman enters the city of Stalingrad


A few days ago I wrote a post describing shorting multi-level marketing schemes as akin to the Battle of Stalingrad.

Little did I know that Bill Ackman was shorting well over a billion dollars in Herbalife stock. [If you need the figure you can back work it out from comments in this BBC interview.]

Ackman has publicly said his target for the stock is zero - and the size of his position (huge both with respect to the company and his fund) and the ferocity of his attack means that his only honourable out is the total collapse of Herbalife.

Moreover Ackman is a very wealthy man controlling funds considerably larger than Herbalife's resources. He has said he can't be bought off. The only way Herbalife is going to get rid of him is by totally defeating him.

This is the hedge-fund equivalent of Stalingrad. Someone is going to lose big. And the victor will be so bloodied that the word victory will sound hollow...

For a short-seller who is as risk-averse as me watching this is pure hedge-fund porn.







John

PS. I am utterly convinced by everything in Bill Ackman's presentation except the final conclusion - that Herbalife's stock will collapse. I took a long position on Christmas Eve. I suspect that Herbalife is so profitable and so powerful they will see Mr Ackman's attack off - and the easiest way to do that is to buy back stock (and make the stock go up). Mr Ackman has given them the incentive to return their huge (but tainted) profits to shareholders (and I plan to be a recipient shareholder).

PPS. Ten years ago Ackman's old fund (Gotham Partners) wrote a defence of a multilevel marketing scheme called Pre-Paid Legal Services. They were long (which turned out OK in the end). The PDF document was called: "A Recommendation for Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc". If anyone has a copy of the original PDF I would appreciate it. These days the report is only remembered because Gotham wrote the bullish report and sold stock into the subsequent rise. Elliot Spitzer investigated (an investigation that went nowhere).

J

Monday, December 24, 2012

Fushi Copperweld: A Christmas present from the China Development Bank and Abax Captial to arb funds

For the record: I lost on this one. See SEC filing...


Fushi Copperweld - a small cap Chinese stock specializing in bimetallic wire - is going private - purchased by "Green Dynasty" - a vehicle funded by Abax Capital and China Development Bank. The deal was supposed to close in the week of 11 December 2012 according to a press release filed with the SEC.

It never closed.

The following Monday (before market) Fushi released an update regarding the merger. The press release has so far not been filed with the SEC. To quote: "[b]ased on information provided by Green Dynasty, the Company anticipates closing of the transaction by or on Monday, December 24, 2012."

If the deal closes it will be a nice Christmas present from the Chinese to various arb funds because this deal has had a fat spread for much of its existence.

History of this transaction

This transaction has history. It was first proposed by the chairman in November 2010 at $11.50 - but later withdrawn. The Chairman came back with a $9.25 offer and revised that offer to $9.50 which was accepted.

The stock is not without controversy. Muddy Waters (of Sino Forest fame) has alleged Fushi is a fraud. Bronte was short a small amount well before the Muddy Waters announcement (and shorted the original $11.50 offer) because the accounts were a little unusual. This was a stock on which we won-some, we lost some.

Even if the company is a fraud that does not mean the deal will not close. There were credible allegations of fraud against Harbin Electric and the accounts were decidedly funky - but the deal did close and many shorts (including Bronte) received a nastier than usual flogging.

Moreover Harbin was taken private by Abax Capital backed by China Development Bank. The same combination taking Fushi private. That I am short again (and in this time in quantity) indicates that I am some kind of masochistic sucker for punishment.

Why fraudulent Chinese companies were taken private

There is a theory as to why some Chinese companies with fraudulent accounts were taken private. About a decade ago you could not buy industrial land around Shanghai and other cities unless you had a business to put on that land.

So people invented fictional businesses to buy real land.

Later they reverse merged those fictional businesses into the US and sold shares in the fictional businesses. In some cases the land appreciated enough to make the stock worthwhile even though the accounts are fictional. I know this to be true in at least one case (a case on which I lost money). I am not sure whether it is true of Harbin but Harbin Electric did own lots of land.

There is another reason why Chinese companies are taken private. And that is the operation was originally the children of Chinese elites ripping off Western stock markets (by selling fraudulent stocks). When that no longer worked they had no shame. Now they ripped off Chinese banks by getting them to finance LBOs. I know of at least one fraud run by a child of a central committee member that received a bid from a well connected Chinese private equity fund.

Back to Fushi Copperweld. 

The Fushi Copperweld saga is long running. Now it is a simple question of whether the deal will close and today is the day of truth.

It is likely to close. It is not over until the fat-lady sings - but she is clearing her throat.

But imagine it does not close. Then it will likely be because the fraud allegations are substantially correct and the stock should eventually trade at pennies. There will be a few arb funds with some 'splaining to do. (See this disclosure from Centaurus Capital for an example.)

Boiler plate

When examining situations like this its best to read the boiler plate.

The boiler plate in various disclosures has changed recently.

A press release dated 28 June 2012 and filed with the SEC says categorically:
There is no financing condition to completion of the merger. Mr. Fu and Abax have secured fully committed debt financing from China Development Bank Corporation Hong Kong Branch to finance the transaction.
The press release of 11 December 2012 says that the deal will close "this week" (a week now well and truly past). However it introduces a new paragraph into the boiler-plate forward looking statements.
A number of the matters discussed herein that are not historical or current facts deal with potential future circumstances and developments, in particular, whether and when the transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement will be consummated. The discussion of such matters is qualified by the inherent risks and uncertainties surrounding future expectations generally and also may materially differ from actual future experience involving any one or more of such matters. Such risks and uncertainties include: any conditions imposed on the parties in connection with consummation of the transactions described herein; satisfaction of various other conditions to the closing of the transactions described herein; and the risks that are described from time to time in the Company's reports filed with the SEC.

The press release of 17 December 2012 - the one not filed with the SEC - but which postpones closing until 24 December says:

"As previously announced, on December 11, 2012, the Company's stockholders approved the Merger Agreement.  Green Dynasty has advised the Company that it is in the process of effecting the satisfaction of all conditions to draw all necessary funds pursuant to the facility agreement with the China Development Bank in order to consummate the proposed merger.  Based on information provided by Green Dynasty, the Company anticipates closing of the transaction by or on Monday, December 24, 2012."

"Effecting the satisfaction of all conditions necessary to draw all necessary funds" is a somewhat weaker statement than "there is no financing condition to completion of the merger".

All I can say for the arb funds involved. This better close. Or you are holding a very weak hand indeed.

But then I have never seen a deal fail so near the line. It should close and by close of business today the stock will have disappeared and shareholders will be entitled to receive $9.50 per share from the clearing corporation. And I will have lost a few pennies on my short (just in time for Christmas).

Whatever happens - I hope you all have a merry and safe Christmas (or festive season if Christmas is not your thing).




John

PS. After market now. So far the fat lady has not sung...


PPS: On Friday - just before closing - the market got a little jittery about this. Check out the one-day chart. Someone panicked. (I was shorting earlier in the week.)


Hewlett Packard's total return swaps

I have just been sent a list of the total return swaps in the Master Trust for the HP Pension Plan. These TRS (standing for Total Return Swaps) were interlaced with tens of pages of other assets and not in the pension plan form 5500 but in the (separate) Master Trust form 5500.

This is the list:

Security ID  Description 1                Description 2                     Cost  Current Value
99QABN497    TRS FL BARCLAYS 20+ INDEX    P USD-LIBOR-BBA 3M 2011 DEC 01    -     - 
99QABN5B1    TRS EL_BARCLAYS 20+ INDEX    P USD-LIBOR-BBA 3M 2011 DEC 01    -     18,592,748 
99QABNCM9    TRS FL BARCLAYS 20+TSY       P USD-LIBOR 3M 2011 OCT 31        -     - 
99QABNCN7    TRS EL BARCLAYS 20+TSY       P USD-LIBOR 3M 2011 OCT 31        -     52,221,457 
99QABQ219    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+ TSY   P USD-LIBOR3M 2012 FEB 23         -     - 
99QABQ227    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+ TSY   P USD-LIBOR3M 2012 FEB 23         -     6,586,388 
99QABSRK6    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR3M-22BP 2011 NOV 09    -     23,247,808 
99QABSTE8    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR3M-22BP 2011 NOV 09    -     - 
99QABT767    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+INDX   P USD-LIBOR 3M 2012 JAN 04        -     - 
99QABT775    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+INDX   P USD-LIBOR 3M 2012 JAN 04        -     (10,219,797)
99QABTJ98    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 1M 2011 DEC 07        -     - 
99QABTKA3    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 1M 2011 DEC 07        -     (7,136,997)
99QABTWR3    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 3M 2011 DEC 06        -     - 
99QABTWS1    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 3M 2011 DEC 06        -     4,426,796 
99QABUZ63    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-3M LIBOR 2012 JAN 09        -     - 
99QABUZ71    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-3M LIBOR 2012 JAN 09        -     (4,403,910)
99QABXAB3    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+       P US0003M -25BPS 2012 MAR 07      -     - 
99QABXAC1    TRS-EL UL BARCLAYS 20+       P US0003M -25BPS 2012 MAR 07      -     5,022,105 
99QABYJD8    TRS EL UL BARCLAYS 20+ TS    P USD-LIBOR3M 2012 MAR 28         -     (5,357,109)
99QABYJE6    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+ TS    P-USD-LIBOR3M 2012 MAR 28         -     - 
99QABZA02    TRS FL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 3M 2012 APR 26        -     530,370 
99QABZA10    TRS-EL UL BARCLAYS 20+TSY    P USD-LIBOR 3M 2012 APR 26        -     -


They are all returns for the very long bond (entirely Barclays 20 plus year index).

The current value of these bears no resemblance to how profitable the position appears to have been in aggregate or how profitable it would have been over 12 months.

The 20+ Barclays index returned high teens percent during the year until October 2011 - which is consistent with the results achieved.

The 2011 results are thus mostly explained by a huge derivative position on the long bond as several of the commentators guessed.

Strangely the fund also carried interest rate swaps (separately disclosed) on which they lost money.

That said, the HP Pension Fund got almost entirely out of equities in 2007 and almost entirely into long bonds (via swaps) just as the yields collapsed.

The former was disclosed contemporaneously. The latter was not disclosed.

The result is impressive: at minimum a very well timed form of liability driven investing.


John

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Clouds

The (very late) Go Betweens...



I was in the audience...




John

Monday, December 17, 2012

Trade total return swaps like Gretchen Tai: a follow up on the HP Pension Fund post



In my last post I detailed the very fine performance by Gretchen Tai, the asset manager for the Hewlett Packard defined benefit fund. I was trying to work out how it was achieved.

Being ignorant in these matters I did not even know the defined benefit fund had to file detailed accounts at the Department of Labor on form 5500.

My readers are smarter than me. So they pointed me the right direction.

Now we can work out in much greater detail how the returns were made.

The pension fund is invested in a "Master Trust". Here is a statement of the assets and liabilities of the master trust:



Its pretty clear. There are $2.9 billion in US Government Securities, $3.2 billion in corporate bonds, $2.1 billion in common stock as well as a whole lot of other things ($0.3 billion in common collective trusts, $1.6 billion in limited partnerships and venture capital funds, $0.7 billion in registered investment companies, $0.6 billion in 103-12 entities and some derivative assets).

There is also some securities lending collateral which they are obliged to return.

The next page gives net income for the Master Trust by category.



We know now the government bonds appreciated by 157 million, the corporate bonds by 104 million and interest was earned of 167 million. That appears to be the bulk of the return on the $6125 million bond portfolio. That is about 7 percent - roughly the return I might have expected from a diversified bond portfolio provided they held some duration.

Much better returns are obtained from the limited partnerships and venture capital funds. They had a return of 263 million on 1383 million in starting capital. That is a very sweet 19 percent. Gretchen Tai chose funds well.

But the eye-popping number is the return of $543 million in swaps and other derivatives. This is after a more modest 152 million gain. This woman swaps cash flows amazingly well.

Breaking up the swaps return

The accounts are kind enough to give us a list of derivative exposures (at least in some aggregated form):



There is $2.8 billion up from $2.5 billion in total return swaps.

They are also kind enough to tell us the P&L for each of these types of derivatives (none of which are designated as hedges and hence all of which are marked to market).




Those total return swaps made $561 million - 22 percent return on the starting derivative asset. Its pure alpha too - the fund needs to pay out the return on the (similar sized) liability they swapped.

And so now we know at least of part of Gretchen Tai's secret. She is the wickedest, meanest and most effective trader of total return swaps I have ever seen. A good proportion of my readers would want to hire her immediately.

So here is an aspiration in life: work out what she does - learn to trade total return swaps like Gretchen Tai. (Or just hire her.)






John

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