Tuesday, December 22, 2009

December 22, 2009

average retail investor has not participated in rally. Net outflows for equity mutual funds are huge for 2009. Short the dollar trade has helped the market this year. $400B in '09 into Bond funds.

We are close to full valuation based on technicals. We have 0% interest rates, market momentum and huge cash on the sidelines. Market could move another 15% which puts Dow at 12000. We are about 18% above 200 day moving average.

Incremental revenue will drop directly to bottom line b/c of extreme cost cutting in past 12-18 mos.

We have never had a double dip recession with these kind of low yields.

We like to see strengthening dollar with a rising equity market.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

March 26, 2009

Overall, more than 1400 hedge funds were forced to closed, with nearly half of those coming solely in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Bond auctions are moving the stock market – 7 yr

Yrs are so low in sovereign sec people are moving to corporates

Traders are forced to cover. Traders have dramatically increased their short positions – financials, etc

Quantitative easing trumps fundamentals. Relation trade points to commodities.

Largest rally in 17 yrs

Market was up big without the help of financials

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

March 25, 2009

Smart stuff - Google is joining a $5.75 million investment round in Pixazza, a start-up that hopes to profit by overlaying photos on the Web with links that let people buy the products in the images.

Treasury Secretary Geithner said the dollar will remain the world's dominant reserve currency, after earlier comments about a Chinese proposal weighed on the dollar.

New-home sales climbed for the first time in seven months during February, another favorable sign for the housing sector, but the data also showed prices tumbled. Separately, durable-goods orders unexpectedly climbed during February, but demand in the prior month was revised down deeply, an adjustment countering the idea of a rebound in the slumping manufacturing sector.

Mark to Market Accounting and a True-Up Provision: With the FASB board set to vote April 2nd on potential changes to FAS 157, support is building to allow banks a one-time recovery of equity capital from recent OTTI charges related to fair value accounting. Retroactive accounting pronouncements are rare and often not supported by the accounting industry. However, a so-called true-up of capital lost through fair value accounting would be a tremendous boost for many banks especially those that took the charges in 4Q-2008. The Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle is perhaps the best example of the stereotypical business that would benefit from a true-up provision. The Seattle bank took an OTTI charge of $304.2 million in 4Q on private label mortgage-backed securities classified as HTM-Held-To-Maturity even though it had identified just $12.0 million in principal loss. That charge forced a net loss of $241.2 million in the quarter and resulted in a $78.9 million accumulated deficit as of Dec. 31, 2008. Federal Housing Finance Agency regulations prohibit an FHLB with an accumulated deficit from issuing dividends, meaning any bank with a borrowing relationship with the Seattle bank now has capital tied up in a non-earning asset. Beyond the Seattle bank, any institution that took an OTTI charge in 4Q could stand to benefit significantly if a true-up provision is allowed. If that were to occur, some institutions would be trading at substantial discounts to tangible book value.

Will Banks Want To Play In The Treasury's New Sandbox? This week the public received details from the U.S. Treasury on two separate Public-Private Investment Programs for legacy loans and securities. Of the two programs, we view the Program for Legacy Loans as potentially beneficial to most community banks by providing liquidity and price discovery on a levered basis for distressed loans and other assets. A general recap of the program is that the Treasury will provide a matching contribution for equity capital raised by public-private investment funds (PPIFs). The FDIC will then provide guarantees on debt financing of up to 6x invested capital, with leverage based upon third party valuations that will determine appropriate leverage for each pool of assets based on such factors as expected cash flows, risk, expected lifetime losses, location, maturity, etc. To be sure, banks will now have a market in which to remove troubled assets from their books and levered financing should create higher bids than what can be found today as well as remove uncertainty regarding value of assets on banks' books possibly increasing investor interest, BUT with this comes risks which we outline below:
• Banks who decide to participate in the Legacy Loan Program will have the pool of loans which are priced through a third-party valuation firm engaged by the FDIC that will provide valuation advice and initial views on appropriate leverage. As the FDIC wants to avoid risk of loss, we doubt that full 6-to-1 leverage would actually be provided for most loan purchases reducing the potential value of offered bids. In addition, the FDIC will charge a debt guarantee fee, as yet undisclosed, plus be reimbursed for program oversight expenses both of which will be paid by PPIFs. It is certain these fees would be factored into asset bids made by PPIFs, thus further reducing the value of offered bids.
• The bids provided by PPIFs will in most cases be no greater than the valuation determined by the third party valuation firms, and more likely than not would be a discount to the valuations provided.
• Whether or not a bank decides to accept an offered to bid on assets auctioned, they cannot erase the fact that a market price has been established for their assets (i.e., no longer does ignorance = bliss). Technically, the assets would need to be marked down to this price on the balance sheet whether they are sold or not. Banks will need to have the capital capacity to take necessary marks against these assets.
• If the bank does sell the assets, the purchase price received will be paid in cash for the equity portion, and in FDIC guarantees for the debt portion of the financing, which the banks will be able to resell into the market if they choose. Should the market determine for whatever reason a discount is necessary on these FDIC guarantee debt securities, banks will lose even more money if the need to sell the securities arises in order to free up cash for liquidity purposes.
• We believe it's possible that (a) some banks will be reluctant to access the program because of the definite mark on distressed loans that will be established; and (b) payment of the purchase price in FDIC guarantees may not create the liquidity to lend as the Treasury hopes. However, we do like the FDIC guarantee as it sufficiently leverages taxpayer resources to address the enormous industry-wide loan and securities issues. Moreover, it seems possible to us that banks may be able to sell their guarantee (more details to follow here - the language reads as if the guarantee could be transferrable).
• Don't forget, one of Treasury's goals is to maximize taxpayer return and ensure through private sector price discovery the Treasury does not overpay for assets. Nowhere is there a goal to minimize losses to banks.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

March 24, 2009

The Obama administration's Public-Private Investment Program aims to spur purchases of soured loans and real-estate-related securities. The two-part plan will use up to $100 billion of bank-rescue funds from the Treasury, as well as financial guarantees from the Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Funds will be set up to buy and manage mortgage securities and the government will also provide financing to private investors to purchase the loans.

Up to five managers will help the government manage pools of assets that will be created by the plan.


A cap is a legal limit on pollution. There is no guessing what will happen -- the level of emissions is set in law, and enforcement of that limit proceeds accordingly. No air pollution problem has ever been solved except by imposing a legal limit on emissions. The essential nature of a cap-and-trade system is positive and therefore much more powerful than a tax. Behavior shifts not only to avoid the cost of emissions, but to achieve additional reductions below the required levels, which can be sold to others as carbon credits. The system directly engages the profit motive in pursuit of the environmental goal. In addition, establishing the cap level in law will give companies the certainty necessary to make major, job-creating capital investments now.

Environmental taxes have worked well to raise revenue, but without a cap they inevitably become a license to pollute in unlimited amounts.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

March 18, 2009

Yesterday legislation was proposed in the U.S. Senate to reinstate the so-called "uptick rule," requiring short sales to be executed only when prices are moving higher. The rule was scrapped in July 2007 as the SEC recognized its irrelevance in the age of electronic trading and decimalization. Since then the S&P 500 has lost over 50% of its value, which some lawmakers and regulators attribute to "abusive" short selling, "tantamount to fraud."

"We believe the ability to achieve private equity-like returns at an even more senior position in the capital structure provides a significant opportunity for the fund." Leave it to GS - Goldman Sachs is looking to raise as much as several billion dollars from outside investors for a new global fund that will invest in the debt of troubled companies, The Financial Times reported.

tech companies adopt quicker to econ slowdowns and they lead the way out of recoveries. What is starting to work now would be commodities, emerging markets and global tech.

What the fed did today is forcing people to go further out on the curve. They want to reinflate the economy, which will hurt the dollar.

Per Stocktrading.com - intent of the government to inflate the economy, the investment implications are many. In an inflationary environment, Treasury bonds will suffer. Currently, the 2 year Treasury pays 1.45% and the 10 year Treasury pays 3.49%. The initial steps of an orchestrated increase in inflation will be led by a Federal Reserve (Fed) interest rate reduction. When it occurs, you should expect Treasury yields to decline further. At that moment, I would exit these positions as increasing inflation will erode the value of the bonds.

The largest beneficiary of increased inflation will be hard assets and related companies. Gold offers the purest exposure, but all commodities should do well. Equities that either supply commodity producers (i.e. -fertilizer companies such as POT) or currently possess abundant commodity reserves (i.e. - oil companies such as XTO) should see their shares perform well. Real estate should begin to bottom and then eventually outperform.

Government bond prices surged. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, tumbled to 2.48 percent from 3.01 percent late Tuesday. The yield on the three-month T-bill, considered one of the safest investments, slipped to 0.21 percent from 0.22 percent late Tuesday.

The Fed said Wednesday it will pump about $1 trillion into the economy, including the purchase of up to $300 billion of long-term Treasury securities over the next six months, as it works to revive the housing market and halt a punishing recession.

Specifically, the Fed will purchase up to an additional $750 billion of agency mortgage-backed securities. Furthermore, the Fed will purchase up to $300 billion of longer-term Treasury securities over the next six months.

In all, the Fed announced it would buy $750 billion in mortgage-backed securities and $300 billion in longer-term Treasuries in a push to loosen credit markets and restart lending, which froze as the financial crisis erupted last autumn.

Friday, March 6, 2009

March 06, 2009

The blue-chip measure, which fell to the lowest intraday level since April 15, 1997 on Friday, fell 6.2% this week, underscoring the relentless pressure stocks have been under since the eruption of financial and economic crisis last fall.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

March 04, 2009

Clearly, big issues of coming years will be the survival of the European Monetary Union and the Euro.

Banks in Austria, Italy, and Sweden lent heavily to Eastern European nations, often in the lending country currency. After the collapse of many Eastern European currencies, these loans are now more expensive to repay.

As our readers know, we believe that corporate profits are the key determinate of stock market appreciation or depreciation.

For those who sell short - retail, finance, and real estate continue to be attractive industries from which to pick short sales.
In the U.S., calendar 2009 could easily see a $2 trillion budget deficit. The budget's official projection is for $1.75 trillion, but the actual number will be higher due to the traditional rosy scenario modeling with unrealistic assumptions about tax receipts.

Cyclical rally in a bear market or reflation trade - opposite of deflation. The aggressively loose monetary policy is only starting to seep into the economy. As the year goes on, the substantial reflation efforts engineered by the Fed should start to show results. Reflation policies can include reducing taxes, changing the money supply and lowering interest rates.