Web Hosting

Your Ad Here




Mr. Soros: I'm only rich because I know when I'm wrong.

Friday, October 31, 2008

How Much For The Wall Street Rescue??

Here's an excellent article posted on Forbes. ( Source: here )

  • Calculating The Cost Of Wall Street's Rescue

    Consider the numbers: $29 billion for the Bear Stearns mess; $700 billion to buy spoiled assets; $200 billion to buy stock in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; an $85 billion loan to AIG insurance; another $37.8 billion for AIG; and $250 billion for bank stocks. Hundreds of billions in guarantees to back up money market funds and to guarantee bank deposits. And who knows what expenses are still to come.

    All this financial rescue spending recalls the quote attributed to the late Sen. Everett Dirksen: "A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."

    Today, substitute trillion.

    How will the U.S. pay for it all? Answer: by borrowing--raising worries about how the country's ballooning annual budget deficits and aggregating debt will affect the economy and financial markets. Some guidelines, such as interest rates and the ratio of debt and deficits to gross domestic product, suggest the new debt will be digested easily. But some experts think those guidelines are misleading, warning that obligations are piling up like tinder on a forest floor.

    "This kind of accounting that the government does--if they did it in the private sector, they would go to jail," says Kent Smetters, a professor of insurance and risk management at Wharton.

    Like many experts, Smetters is not as concerned about the current deficit and debt as about the long-term obligations that include monumental sums for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid as baby boomers age. "The problems that we face right now are trivial--they are just an appetizer for the big show," he predicts.

    What will the financial rescues cost? A tally can't be figured by simply adding the sums for each response. Many of the figures, such as the $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program to buy illiquid mortgage-backed securities from financial firms, are upper limits set by lawmakers or regulators who hope that less will be spent. Some figures overlap. The $250 billion bank investment is to come out of the TARP fund, for example.

    And much of the spending is to purchase assets that could eventually be sold, offsetting all or part of the cost and perhaps even turning a profit. That includes mortgage-backed securities and derivatives for TARP, as well as ownership stakes in banks and Fannie ) and Freddie. Some funds, like the money for AIG, are for loans the government expects to be repaid, with interest--unless the borrower defaults. Others are guarantees that will be tapped only in an emergency--the $29 billion for Bear Stearns and hundreds of billions to raise confidence in the safety of money markets and bank savings.

    Opening 'Pandora's Box'

    Wharton finance professor Richard Marston notes that more taxpayer-financed rescues are likely to come. General Motors and Chrysler, now in merger talks, are said be running out of cash and in line for early access to a federal loan fund. Like the financial giants already helped, might any or all of the Big Three U.S. automakers be considered too big to fail? The California state budget is in the red, and other states may follow.

    "I don't think we've seen the end of this," Marston predicts. "It's going to be real expensive next year. ... There's no way the federal government is not going to bail out General Motors and Ford. ... We have opened a Pandora's box."

    Though the eventual tally is impossible to pinpoint, some experts suggest the annual deficit--the amount borrowed to make up the differences between spending and revenue--will soar. In an early October television interview, Peter Orszag, director of the Congressional Budget Office, forecast that rescue spending and falling tax revenue from a recession could create a $750 billion deficit in the current fiscal year, up from the $455 billion of the just-ended year. The deficit was about $163 billion in 2007. The Concord Coalition, a non-partisan deficit-fighting organization, says next year's figure could exceed $1 trillion. As it approved rescue packages, Congress last summer and this fall raised the debt ceiling to $11.3 trillion from $9.8 trillion. Currently, the debt stands at just over $10 trillion.

    The debt is the build-up of annual deficits, which run in cycles, says Marston. During recessions, tax revenue falls along with economic activity, causing deficits to rise. Deficits are typically gauged as a percentage of the gross domestic product, and economists generally worry when this figure exceeds 3%. In 2007, it was 1.2%; in 2008, it jumped to 3.2%. A trillion dollars would be 7%--or more if the economy shrinks--the highest since the 6% of the 1980s. Before 2008, deficits had fallen for several years because the relatively strong economy lifted tax revenues. In recent years, the deficit has been relatively low by historical standards. It has averaged just over 4% of GDP since World War II. The budget was in surplus from 1998 through 2001.

    "Even without the bailouts, we would have had a serious deterioration of the deficit," Marston notes. "We always do at the beginning of a recession. Now you have the bailout. ... The big story in terms of deterioration is the cyclical movements. Tax revenues are just plummeting."

    Though the total federal debt stands at about $10 trillion, nearly half is debt one part of government owes another. Economists focus on the "debt held by the public," which is what the government owes to debt holders like Treasury bond owners. That stands at about $5.4 trillion, about 38% of gross domestic product. The percentage has been higher during most of the past 70 years, with the exception being the 1970s. At the end of World War II, the debt exceeded 100% of GDP, and the post-World War II average is around 43%. The low was 24% in 1974. Many developed countries carry much heavier debt loads relative to GDP.

    Seen in the context of GDP, deficits and debt have not been terribly alarming in recent years, and even the expected spike in the deficit would appear to leave the debt in manageable territory. But that's not to say these obligations don't matter. "If the ratio is going up over time, we've got a problem," according to Wharton finance professor Marshall E. Blume. "If it's going down over time, it's not as much of a problem."

    Debt has to be paid off with interest. The bigger the debt-service bill, the harder it is for government to pay other expenses without raising taxes. In fiscal 2008, interest on the debt cost the government about $234 billion, or 8% of total spending. "It seems to me it is going to restrain what the next president is going to be able to do," Blume calculates. "We may be able to handle it, but it will cost us in other areas."

    Moreover, if Treasury sales are soaking up investor dollars, that money is not available for other investments that drive economic growth, such as stocks or corporate bonds. High government debt reduces economic growth. "It's called 'crowding out,' " Blume says. "The government is crowding out the private sector."

    A Deficit of Confidence in the Numbers

    Smetters thinks the debt-related problems are far worse than government numbers indicate. If the government followed the accounting required of corporations, it would include as a liability the present value of future expenses for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. That would have made the 2006 deficit $2.4 trillion instead of $248 billion. The current debt would be around $68 trillion, not $10 trillion. "The bottom line is that they just don't have forward-looking measures."

    Marston and Blume, too, argue that these future costs present an immense problem. Dealing with it will require some combination of raising taxes or cutting benefits--or "monetizing" the problem. Essentially, that means printing money to raise inflation, which should push tax revenues up (although higher inflation also could raise Social Security and Medicare expenses, offsetting the benefit). "With the liquidity that's being pumped into the system, and the loose credit that the Treasury and Fed are trying to create, down the line we are going to have to worry about inflation," Marston suggests.

    Nearly all economists agree entitlements are a looming threat, according to Marston. "It doesn't matter what the political persuasion is. We are much more worried about the entitlement issue than we are about the cyclical deficit and interest rates."

    But if the problem is so serious, why are the financial markets not signaling alarms by raising interest rates? In the traditional view, growing deficits and debt work to drive interest rates upward, because the government, like a desperate gambler turning to a loan shark, must offer higher yields to attract lenders--the investors who buy Treasury bonds. But Treasury yields are not rising substantially. "We're paying no penalty at all for the increase in government spending," Marston notes, arguing that other factors are offsetting the interest-heightening influence of debt.

    He and Blume point to the global savings glut--a mountain of money seeking investments and turning to U.S. Treasuries, considered among the safest holdings in the world. This high demand offsets the growing supply of Treasuries, which include bills, notes and bonds, allowing the government to sell them with low yields. The 30-year Treasury bonds yield a paltry 4.2%

    The worldwide "flight to safety" is underscored by the dollar's recent rise against the euro, which has been a strong competitor to the U.S. currency in recent years, Marston observes. The dollar's rise is caused by heavy demand for Treasuries. "The Treasury, in this crisis, is being viewed as the safest harbor in the world. And that is an eye-opener. I wouldn't have predicted that--particularly against the euro."

    According to Smetters, interest rates should not be seen as the canary in the coal mine, an infallible early warning system. "The common belief that capital markets cannot fail is precisely the reason why they can," Smetters wrote in a 2007 article in Financial Analysts Journal, "Do the Markets Care about the $2.4 Trillion U.S. Deficit?" Smetters and his co-author, Jagadeesh Gokhale, a Cato Institute fellow, wrote that "the United States has never faced anything close to the unbalanced balance sheet it now confronts--not even during World War II." They conclude that fixed-income investors "reveal enormous myopia about the implications of the financial problems facing the federal government."

    Herd instincts cause these investors to reinforce one another's views that nothing is wrong because the low interest rates say so, he and Gokhale wrote. Their article was written before the current financial meltdown--largely caused by the financial markets' failure to identify rising risks by pushing interest rates up. Many experts' faith in the predictive value of interest rates has been shaken over the past two years. Deficits and debt do matter--if not today, someday, Smetters says.

    To economists, the most frightening fact is that the enormous cost of today's financial rescues is just a drop in the bucket.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Shipping Giant Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) Warns of Losses!

Amidst the plunging global shipping rates (see Baltic Dry Index Closes At 982 And Britannia Holdings Faces Loans Defaults!! and also note the links within), Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) warns that it will likely see operating loss in the current quarter.

Posted on Business Times:
NOL warns of losses as choppy seas loom

  • NOL warns of losses as choppy seas loom

    Q3 net profit falls 82% - but the real trouble starts now

    By VINCENT WEE

    (SINGAPORE) The global shipping industry is headed for a situation 'never seen before' and the US$35 million profit that Neptune Orient Lines (NOL) still managed to turn in for the third quarter will likely turn into an operating loss in the current quarter, group president and CEO Ron Widdows warned yesterday.

    Net profit fell 82 per cent from US$191 million in the previous corresponding quarter while revenue rose 16 per cent to US$2.35 billion from US$2.03 billion previously.

    'The group continued to generate a profit in the third quarter despite the deterioration of conditions in the container shipping market,' said Mr Widdows. 'Reduced demand in key trade lanes, combined with cost increases and worsening global economic conditions have adversely impacted our profit performance in the third quarter,' he added.

    Mr Widdows warned that more trouble lay ahead. 'Clearly, the pace of trade flows are going to diminish in the not too distant future and some of that has found its way into third-quarter results but it will only be towards the later part of this year and earlier into next year that you will really see the slowdown,' he said.

    For the third quarter, NOL's container shipping business APL saw a 10 per cent rise in volumes to 622,000 forty foot-equivalent units (FEUs) and average revenue per FEU rose 8 per cent to US$3,127. Total revenue rose 22 per cent to US$2.04 billion but lower core freight rates in the Asia-Europe trade took a bite out of profit, with Ebit (earnings before interest and taxation) falling 95 per cent to US$9 million.

    Core Asia-Europe headhaul freight rates (excluding bunker adjustment factors) came under severe downward pressure on softer demand and ahead of expected capacity overhang in 2009/2010, NOL said.

    This trade will likely see negative volume growth on a full-year basis and it is reasonable to assume that it will turn further negative next year, Mr Widdows said.

    Increasingly, the long-leg Intra-Asia trades have also been affected, as they are hit by capacity cascaded from other trades, principally Asia-Europe.

    Average headhaul utilisation had already started to come down to 90 per cent in the third quarter from 99 per cent previously.

    Significantly, headhaul volumes in APL's key TransPacific trade contracted during the quarter and this may be compounded by the global financial crisis and economic slowdown, NOL said. In addition, Japan's No 2 line Mitsui OSK Lines announced that it would resign from the Transpacific Stabilization Agreement.

    'We are acting quickly and decisively to trim capacity and reconfigure our service networks, adjusting port calls and service loops and withdrawing a number of vessels from service. These actions will reduce our costs and better align APL's service networks to the lower demand levels currently being experienced,' said Mr Widdows.

    He said APL's capacity in the Asia-Europe trade would be reduced by close to 25 per cent, with around 20 per cent of the company's TransPacific tonnage also to be removed from service.

    Key changes are also underway in the Intra-Asia trades, he added. Together with APL's alliance partners, this translates into about 40 ships that will be taken out of service, Mr Widdows said.

    APL Logistics delivered a 42 per cent increase in Ebit to US$17 million for the third quarter, although logistics revenues registered a slight one per cent decline to US$315 million. The terminals business saw Ebit rise 5 per cent to US$23 million on one per cent increase in revenue to US$146 million.
    NOL shares closed 7 cents higher at $1.17 yesterday.

Apollo Food's'Investments' In The Share Market

I had posted on local company dabbling in the share markets recently and as posted in the following posting, Listed Companies Investments: Yung Kong Galvanised Steel , I made the following remarks.

  • I have always felt uneasy seeing our local listed companies dabbling with their excess money. Sometimes they invest in the share market and sometimes they just invest! And one of the most disturbing issue is that there is ZERO transparency!
Today, I came across the following announcement from Apollo Food Holdings. Now I would applaud Apollo Food Holdings for being transparent.

See APOLLO FOOD HOLDINGS BERHAD ("APOLLO" or "the Company") - Dealing in quoted shares (Do click on the excel file attached!!! )

However, let me stress again, I am uneasy with Apollo Food's involvement in the share market.

Excess money should be return to the shareholders and I do not think it's right that this company should be dabbling in the stock market.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

About Hedge Funds And Meltdown In Euroland!

A couple of interesting postings on UK Telegraph.

GLG chief Emmanuel Roman warns thousands of hedge funds on brink of failure


  • 24th October 2008

    Emmanuel Roman, of GLG Partners, said 25pc-30pc of the world’s 8,000 hedge funds would disappear "in a Darwinian process", either going bust or deciding meagre profits are not worth their efforts.

    "This will go down in the history books as one of the greatest fiascos of banking in 100 years," said Mr Roman, who with Noam Gottesman, co-runs GLG, a former division of Lehman Brothers Holdings with assets of $24bn (£14.8bn). "There need to be some scapegoats, and the regulators are going to go hunt people. That will be good in the long run."

    His views were echoed by Professor Nouriel Roubini, a former US Treasury and presidential adviser known for his accurate prediction of financial crises, who estimated that up to 500 hedge funds would fail within months.

    Both men were speaking at the same hedge fund conference in London yesterday, and Prof Roubini said he would not be surprised if the US and other countries soon had to close their stock markets for more than a week to halt descent into "sheer panic".

    The economist warned that the world is heading for a protracted recession that will end the US’s financial dominance.

    "It’s the beginning of the decline of the US financial empire. The Great Depression ended in a massive war. I hope that’s not going to happen but it’s pretty ugly now," Prof Roubini said.

    He added that turmoil over world trade, currency markets and debt is likely to cause geopolitical tensions between the Western world and emerging superpowers such as Russia, China and "a bunch of unstable oil states".

    The conference saw analysts, economists and hedge fund managers discussing the possibility that global recession could now last two years on fears that government bail-outs and nationalisations have failed to stop the markets slumping.

    "We’re now paying the price for the biggest asset and credit bubble in history," Prof Roubini said, advising investors to stay clear of risky assets and keep money in cash. "The bail-outs have not worked because the markets are no longer rallying, and the policy-makers have run out of options."

    The global financial meltdown accelerated this month, with the UK and US governments being forced to take stakes in some of the world’s biggest banks. Stock markets around the world have fallen sharply this month as investors’ concern switches to the impact on the wider economy.

    "It’s like we’re walking blind in a minefield," said Prof Roubini. "Every situation has become risky and no one can trust each other. The banks are too big to be allowed to fail, but they’re also too big to save."

    Research from Hedge Fund Intelligence (HFI) shows that despite one of the worst months on record for credit funds, US hedge funds alone still have $1.7trillion (£1trillion) in assets.

Europe on the brink of currency crisis meltdown

  • 26th October 2008

    The financial crisis spreading like wildfire across the former Soviet bloc threatens to set off a second and more dangerous banking crisis in Western Europe, tipping the whole Continent into a fully-fledged economic slump.

    Currency pegs are being tested to destruction on the fringes of Europe’s monetary union in a traumatic upheaval that recalls the collapse of the Exchange Rate Mechanism in 1992.

    “This is the biggest currency crisis the world has ever seen,” said Neil Mellor, a strategist at Bank of New York Mellon.

    Experts fear the mayhem may soon trigger a chain reaction within the eurozone itself. The risk is a surge in capital flight from Austria – the country, as it happens, that set off the global banking collapse of May 1931 when Credit-Anstalt went down – and from a string of Club Med countries that rely on foreign funding to cover huge current account deficits.

    The latest data from the Bank for International Settlements shows that Western European banks hold almost all the exposure to the emerging market bubble, now busting with spectacular effect.

    They account for three-quarters of the total $4.7 trillion £2.96 trillion) in cross-border bank loans to Eastern Europe, Latin America and emerging Asia extended during the global credit boom – a sum that vastly exceeds the scale of both the US sub-prime and Alt-A debacles.

    Europe has already had its first foretaste of what this may mean. Iceland’s demise has left them nursing likely losses of $74bn (£47bn). The Germans have lost $22bn.

    Stephen Jen, currency chief at Morgan Stanley, says the emerging market crash is a vastly underestimated risk. It threatens to become “the second epicentre of the global financial crisis”, this time unfolding in Europe rather than America.

    Austria’s bank exposure to emerging markets is equal to 85pc of GDP – with a heavy concentration in Hungary, Ukraine, and Serbia – all now queuing up (with Belarus) for rescue packages from the International Monetary Fund.

    Exposure is 50pc of GDP for Switzerland, 25pc for Sweden, 24pc for the UK, and 23pc for Spain. The US figure is just 4pc. America is the staid old lady in this drama.

    Amazingly, Spanish banks alone have lent $316bn to Latin America, almost twice the lending by all US banks combined ($172bn) to what was once the US backyard. Hence the growing doubts about the health of Spain’s financial system – already under stress from its own property crash – as Argentina spirals towards another default, and Brazil’s currency, bonds and stocks all go into freefall.

    Broadly speaking, the US and Japan sat out the emerging market credit boom. The lending spree has been a European play – often using dollar balance sheets, adding another ugly twist as global “deleveraging” causes the dollar to rocket. Nowhere has this been more extreme than in the ex-Soviet bloc.

    The region has borrowed $1.6 trillion in dollars, euros, and Swiss francs. A few dare-devil homeowners in Hungary and Latvia took out mortgages in Japanese yen. They have just suffered a 40pc rise in their debt since July. Nobody warned them what happens when the Japanese carry trade goes into brutal reverse, as it does when the cycle turns.

    The IMF’s experts drafted a report two years ago – Asia 1996 and Eastern Europe 2006 – Déjà vu all over again? – warning that the region exhibited the most dangerous excesses in the world.

    Inexplicably, the text was never published, though underground copies circulated. Little was done to cool credit growth, or to halt the fatal reliance on foreign capital. Last week, the silent authors had their moment of vindication as Eastern Europe went haywire.

    Hungary stunned the markets by raising rates 3pc to 11.5pc in a last-ditch attempt to defend the forint’s currency peg in the ERM.

    It is just blood in the water for hedge funds sharks, eyeing a long line of currency kills. “The economy is not strong enough to take it, so you know it is unsustainable,” said Simon Derrick, currency strategist at the Bank of New York Mellon.

    Romania raised its overnight lending to 900pc to stem capital flight, recalling the near-crazed gestures by Scandinavia’s central banks in the final days of the 1992 ERM crisis – political moves that turned the Nordic banking crisis into a disaster.

    Russia too is in the eye of the storm, despite its energy wealth – or because of it. The cost of insuring Russian sovereign debt through credit default swaps (CDS) surged to 1,200 basis points last week, higher than Iceland’s debt before Götterdammerung struck Reykjavik.

    The markets no longer believe that the spending structure of the Russian state is viable as oil threatens to plunge below $60 a barrel. The foreign debt of the oligarchs ($530bn) has surpassed the country’s foreign reserves. Some $47bn has to be repaid over the next two months.

    Traders are paying close attention as contagion moves from the periphery of the eurozone into the core. They are tracking the yield spreads between Italian and German 10-year bonds, the stress barometer of monetary union.

    The spreads reached a post-EMU high of 93 last week. Nobody knows where the snapping point is, but anything above 100 would be viewed as a red alarm. The market took careful note on Friday that Portugal’s biggest banks, Millenium, BPI, and Banco Espirito Santo are preparing to take up the state’s emergency credit guarantees.

    Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas, says there is an imminent danger that East Europe’s currency pegs will be smashed unless the EU authorities wake up to the full gravity of the threat, and that in turn will trigger a dangerous crisis for EMU itself.

    “The system is paralysed, and it is starting to look like Black Wednesday in 1992. I’m afraid this is going to have a very deflationary effect on the economy of Western Europe. It is almost guaranteed that euroland money supply is about to implode,” he said.

    A grain of comfort for British readers: UK banks have almost no exposure to the ex-Communist bloc, except in Poland – one of the less vulnerable states.

    The threat to Britain lies in emerging Asia, where banks have lent $329bn, almost as much as the Americans and Japanese combined. Whether you realise it or not, your pension fund is sunk in Vietnamese bonds and loans to Indian steel magnates. Didn’t they tell you?

Baltic Dry Index Closes At 982 And Britannia Holdings Faces Loans Defaults!!

This was very much expected given the dramatic plunge in the index in recent weeks.




Again note the warnings of the possibility of shipping companies failing and the problems with Britannia Bulk Holdings in the following news report on Bloomberg.

  • Baltic Dry Index Drops Below 1,000 for First Time in Six Years

    By Alistair Holloway

    Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- The Baltic Dry Index, the benchmark for commodity shipping costs, fell below 1,000 for the first time in six years as the lack of credit curbed global trade and shipowners threatened to shun orders.

    The index, watched by banks including UBS AG as an economic indicator, fell 66 points, or 6.3 percent, to 982 points, the lowest since Aug. 8, 2002. The gauge has dropped 89 percent this year, driving down the combined market capitalization of the 12- company Bloomberg Dry Ships Index, led by Athens-based Diana Shipping Inc., to $5.5 billion from $32 billion a year ago.

    ``You are getting very, very close to the cost of just crewing and running a ship,'' Richard Haines, a senior director at London-based shipbroker Simpson, Spence & Young Ltd., said in an interview today.
    ``It can't go much lower than this without owners deciding they don't want their ships employed.''

    The International Monetary Fund predicts the world's advanced economies will next year grow at the slowest pace since 1982.
    The Bank of England today estimated losses on asset-backed debt, corporate bonds and other securities in the U.K., U.S. and Europe had more than doubled since April to about $2.8 trillion.

    Zodiac Maritime Agencies Ltd., the shipping line managed by Israel's billionaire Ofer family, said this month it may idle 20 capesize ships, which typically haul coal and iron ore. That's about 5 percent of the fleet operating in the spot market.

    Shipowners are also slowing down vessels to cut fuel costs. The average capesize is sailing at 8.54 knots, down from 10.33 knots in July. Capesizes are attracting rates of $7,340 a day, close to daily operating expenses of about $6,000, according to Henrik With, a shipping analyst at DnB NOR Markets ASA in Oslo. Daily rates for smaller panamaxes fell 8.1 percent to $6,413.

    Failing Shippers

    Fearnley Fonds ASA, an investment bank specialized in shipping, energy and oil services, expects a ``significant'' number of commodity shippers to fail within two years.

    Britannia Bulk Holdings Inc. has ``severe'' financial difficulties and a ``very high risk'' of being in default on a $170 million loan, the London-based commodities shipping line said in a statement distributed by Market Wire today.

    Industrial Carriers Inc., a Ukrainian operator of about 55 vessels, filed for bankruptcy this month.

    The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, fell 4 basis points today to 3.47 percent for three-month loans, the British Bankers' Association said. It was the 12th straight drop.

    The three-month Libor for dollars remains 197 basis points above the Federal Reserve's target rate for overnight loans of 1.5 percent, up from 81 basis points about three months ago. At the start of the year, the spread was 43 basis points.

    Awaiting Recovery

    Credit markets began seizing up after BNP Paribas SA halted withdrawals on three funds in August 2007. They froze after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed on Sept. 15.

    Shipping lines also have to contend with slowing growth in demand for most commodities. The S&P GSCI index of 24 raw materials has dropped 31 percent this month, its worst performance since at least 1970. Any turnaround for shipping markets may not come this year, according to Stuart Rae, joint managing director at M2M Management Ltd. in London.

    ``Towards the early part of next year I think we will have more liquidity and cash in the market, and more trading being done and the market picking itself up from the floor,'' Rae said in an interview today.

    OAO Severstal, Russia's largest steelmaker, and other producers are cutting output, sapping demand for iron ore and coking coal. The two commodities will account for about a third of the 3.2 billion metric tons of dry bulk goods shipped this year, according to Drewry Shipping Consultants Ltd.

See also article on Forbes: The Waves Rule Britannia

  • A falling tide sinks all ships. With global economic growth slowing and international finance grinding to a halt, no industry has been harder hit than the dry-bulk shipping business. As business evaporates, shipping companies are anchoring their boats and hoping to ride out the financial storm.

    The question is, which ones will have strong enough balance sheets to do so.

    On Tuesday we learned that Britannia Bulk Holdings is not one of those tough-as-nails companies.
    The dry-bulk shipping outfit, which had its initial public offering in June at $15.00 per share, announced on Tuesday that it would post a whopping third-quarter loss and that it is considering alternatives including liquidation or bankruptcy protection. Investors weren’t understanding. Britannia’s shares plummeted 86.8%, or $1.65, to 25 cents.

    Britannia said that there was a “very high risk” of default for its loan facility with Lloyds TSB Bank and Nordea Bank Denmark. The company is in discussions with lenders but said there can “be no assurance that a resolution of the issues surrounding the facility will be reached.”

    “The company is considering its alternatives if it is unable to reach an accommodation with the lenders, including liquidation or protection under applicable bankruptcy or insolvency laws,” the company said.

    Britannia, which transports good in and out of the Baltic region and has 13 dry bulk vessels, blamed its third-quarter loss on the substantial drop in shipping demand and a related decline in chartering rates. Dry-bulk rates on Capesize vessels -- those ships so large that they can't fit in canals -- sank 8.7%, to $7,340 on Tuesday, down from $8,042 on Monday and from $179,887 in the prior year.

    When Britannia arrived on the market in June it looked as if shipping rates could go nowhere but up. Another blow to the company is that it paid more to retain shipping vessels than it received for chartering them to customers. Add to that a misplaced bet on oil prices: fearing they would rise, Britannia hedged at prices substantially above the current level, and now it doesn't need all that much fuel.

    That Britannia's future is dim seems a foregone conclusion. The big question is: who is next? (See “
    High and Dry In Dry Bulk.”).

    Investors seem to have lost faith in DryShips and Navios Maritime Holdings since those two stocks sank significantly in late trading on Tuesday, both falling around 7.0% despite a rally in the overall market.

    Yet if you have a strong stomach, a long-term view, and any reason to believe that the global economy will rebound, now’s the time to buy.

    Meanwhile, the Baltic Dry Index, which measures dry bulk shipping rates on 40 routes across the world, tumbled 6.3%, to 982 on Tuesday--its 17th straight daily decline, down from 1048 on Monday, according to TradeTheNews.com. (See “
    Shipping Stocks Sink.”) . This is the first time the index sank below 1,000 since August 2002.

Other recent postings made on the Baltic Dry Index:

1. Views On Current Weakness On Baltic Dry Index
2.
The Collapse of the Baltic Dry Index
3.
Goldman Downgrades Bulk Shippers!
4.
Baltic Dry Index Keeps Falling!
5.
Baltic Dry Index Stages Strong Rebound!
6.
Baltic Dry Index Set For Strong Recovery???
7.
Baltic Dry Index Plunges To Seven Month Lows!
8.
The Baltic Dry Index Keeps On Plunging!
9.
Baltic Dry Index Continues To Plunge
10.
The Plunging Baltic Dry Index And The Dangers Of Using Forward PE!
11.
Baltic Dry Plunges Below 2000!!!
12.
Admist The Plunging Baltic Dry Index, Dr. Marc Faber Warns That Some Shipping Lines Could Go Bankrupt!
13.
Comments Heard Admist The Plunging Baltic Dry Index ( recommended reading!)

Monday, October 27, 2008

Marc Faber: Not Much Incentive To Hold Equities!

Published on CNBC.


  • The wave of stock selloffs sweeping world markets may be partially caused by the fact that many governments increased guarantees for bank deposits, making them a much safer investment, Marc Faber, author of the "Gloom, Doom and Boom Report," told CNBC Monday.

    "Now that deposits are guaranteed, basically I as an investor have no incentive to hold equities so I sell them and put my money in bank deposits," Faber told "Squawk Box Europe" by telephone.

    The other measures taken by various governments to try and prop up ailing markets have had the opposite effect, he added.

    "The interventions, they actually have increased volatility. It’s impossible to forecast market movements when you have interventions," Faber said.

    The next stage of the crisis may be that companies may have to adjust their book value as it happened during the bear markets of the 70s and 80s, when book value was overstated.

    "If the global economy slows down by as much as I think it will… then a lot of book values will have to be adjusted downward quite substantially," he said.

    And central banks cutting rates based on the assumption that the downturn will dampen inflationary effects will have another headache when the worst of the crisis is over, Faber warned.

    "I think first we’ll have a bout of deflation that will actually be quite substantial… but then the budget deficits will go through the roof and the Fed will print even more money … and then later on we'll have very high inflation," he said.

Source: Governments May Have Caused Stocks Selloff: Dr. Doom

Crisis Hit Arab Nations, Sending Stocks Into Tailspin

Posted on VoiceOfAmerica: Stock Markets Across Middle East Fall Again

  • Stock markets in the Gulf and across much of the Middle East experienced another day of dramatic drops Sunday, amid a backdrop of falling oil prices, despite OPEC's decision to cut production. Stock markets in the Asia-Pacific region have opened slightly lower Monday, amid indications governments will take additional measures to prop-up the global financial system. Edward Yeranian reports for VOA from Cairo.

    Stock markets in Abu Dhabi and Dubai lost between four and five percent, Oman and Qatar lost between eight and nine percent, and the Egyptian stock exchange dropped more than six percent.

    Mohammed Burhan, the executive editor of CNBC al Arabiya network, based in Dubai, said in a telephone interview, he thinks that Gulf markets are reflecting the global economic crisis.

    He says, whatever affects global markets affects Gulf Arab markets, as well. He says, "the crisis in the Gulf began a bit ahead of the global crisis, when foreign investment funds began to pull out of the local market," and this affected stock prices.

    The Arab daily Asharqalawsat reports that Gulf Finance Ministers and Central Bank chiefs held a closed door meeting Saturday in the wake of investor fears.

    In Kuwait, the Central Bank intervened Sunday to halt trading in one of the country's largest banks, after it incurred major losses in currency and stock trades.

    A top Gulf economic expert, Wadah el Taha, told Al Arabiya Television that he thinks much of the crisis is the result of widespread investor panic, and that some steps have already been taken, like the insuring of bank deposits in the United Arab Emirates, and the pumping of more liquidity into the system:

    He says it is critically important to restore confidence and take steps to support the banking system.
Posted on ArabNews.Com: Kuwait guarantees deposits

  • JEDDAH: Kuwait moved to prop up one of its banks yesterday as the global financial crisis spread to the Gulf, sending stocks into a tailspin.

    The Kuwaiti central bank was forced to step in to support Gulf Bank, which was hit by losses from trading in currency derivatives after the dollar rose, prompting the government to announce it would guarantee local bank deposits.

    Gulf Bank, Kuwait’s fifth-largest bank by market value, had suffered two straight quarters of falling profit due to bad debt and the impact of weak markets on its investment portfolio.

    Yesterday, the central bank halted trading in Gulf Bank’s shares and appointed a supervisor to oversee its treasury, foreign exchange and financial markets trading operations. The central bank said trading in Gulf Bank stocks would remain suspended until the probe was completed.

    Gulf Bank ran into trouble after some of its clients refused to cover their losses from currency derivatives trades, leaving the bank to foot the costs until a deal was reached.

    Chief Executive of the National Bank of Kuwait, the country’s biggest bank by assets, Ibrahim Dabdoub put the losses at 150 million to 200 million dinars, but Gulf Bank General Manager Fawzy Al-Thunayan dismissed the comments as too early.

    “We don’t know yet. Dabdoub can say what he wants,” Al-Thunayan said, speaking in front of the bank’s headquarters where a crowd gathered, adding that deposits were safe. He said the full extent of losses would not be known until today, when the bank closes its currency positions abroad.

    Kuwaiti traders staged another walkout yesterday and protested outside the stock market. The traders, who deserted the stock market on Thursday, the business week’s final day, left the trading chamber again after the index dived more than 300 points a few minutes after the opening.

    About 30 of the traders marched to the nearby Council of Ministers building where the Cabinet was holding an emergency session to discuss a bill to guarantee bank deposits.

    “We want the government to intervene to rescue the bourse and traders. We want the government to buy stocks. This month, I have already lost half of my investments in the bourse,” one of the protesters, Hussein Tubayekh, said.

    The Kuwaiti government also set up a special task force yesterday headed by the central bank governor to deal with the impact of the financial crisis.

    The actions spooked investors. Gulf markets tumbled to multi-month lows yesterday. The Kuwait Stock Exchange Index shed 3.5 percent to finish at 10,114.30 points, its lowest level since April 2007.

    The Dubai Financial Market Index closed down 4.75 percent at 3,102.65 points.

    The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange dived 4 percent with the key real estate sector down 6.5 percent and banking 5.5 percent.

    The Doha Securities Market dived a massive 8.93 percent to end the day below the 7,000-point mark at 6,892.95 points. The tiny Muscat Securities Market dropped 8.3 percent to 6,506.03 points, while the Bahrain Stock Exchange lost 3.7 percent.

    Saudi Arabia’s index slipped 1.66 percent after an 8.7 percent slide on Saturday.

    The Tadawul All-Share Index (TASI) closed 93.10 points down at 5,531.57. The stock market turnover was over SR5.56 billion compared to over SR4 billion on Saturday.

    “The market is looking for confidence-building measures. They shouldn’t take actions that damage another country’s deposit base,” said John Sfakianakis, chief economist at SABB bank, referring to Kuwaiti central bank’s action. “As they face this global uncertainty, the central banks need to have a uniform position.”

    Adding to Kuwait’s headaches, a Parliament member said he would submit a request to question the country’s prime minister partly over his handling of the financial crisis.

    In the past, such requests have led to ministerial resignations and brought down the government.

See also article on CNN: Crisis moves to Gulf Arab nations

Here is how Gulf Bank is doing.

1 year..


5 year..

Here is how Kuwait stock has done..


1 year..


5 year..





Here is how Saudi Arabia Stock Exchange (Tadawul) has done..

1 year..


5 year..


Regarding KNM's Sell Down!

Blogged the other day. KNM Comments About BTimes Article

Got one interesting set of comments.

  • Naruto said...
    THE SHARES WERE SOLD BY FINANCIER WHICH IS NOW RESOLVED. How was this resolved? By company Share Buybacks? By Mr Lee's own purchase? Or by Financier's repurchase? And the announcement did not disclose the actual problem of this financier, whether the disposal is purely margin call, financier liquidation due to credit crisis or actual share disposal by shareholder.

Yes, this is also why I am lost here.

Mr. Lee has gone massive length in attempting to made a point over the size of EPF's shareholding stake and the PE yardstick but as pointed out by Naruto..

1. What about the massive 'disposal of shares sold down by financer' on Inter Merger Sdn Bhd the other day?

2. How's this resolved?

3. Why did the sell down happened?

4. And that share buyback.. the timing of the buybacks and the selldown simply arouses suspicion, yes?

5. Shouldn't Mr. Lee directly address these issues, instead?

How?

Anyone got any answers?

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Bill Gross Says Bull Market Is Imminent

Posted on CNBC.

  • A bull run will begin for the stock market once major financial institutions have deleveraged, Bill Gross, head of bond titan Pimco, said on CNBC.

    While warning of the implications of shedding bad debt, Gross said the market may be nearing a point where it comes out of a severe bear market and makes a run higher.

    "Bull run, yes, but to what extent in terms of the total return, I don't think it would be typical of prior cycles, because this is a secular delevering," he said. "It's never occurred before—at least it hasn't occurred since the 1930s—and it will carry with it implications for corporate profits, for margins and for ultimately a significantly delevered system not just in the United States but globally."

    "To the extent that that happens, not only is the financial marketplace not prepared for it but the global economy is not prepared for it," he added. "We will have to see how it all adjusts going forward. But yes, from a certain price point here and we may be close, a bull market is imminent."

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27363513

Having A Flexible Investing Mindset

Great advice posted by Brian Pretti on his editorial posted on FinancialSense market wrap: Changing the Frequency

  • I could go on and on with the examples of this concept, but you get the point. Remaining flexible here is key. Remember, I said flexible, not cocky. And not contrary just to be contrary. We have some bad economic numbers to come. Consumers are hurting with very little relief in sight. The financial sector remains a mess, and in a number of specific cases, perhaps a few black holes. As I said, real marginal change may be years away for all I know. Personally, I don’t see any yet. But, that doesn’t mean I’m not starting to look. In fact this is exactly what I’m doing. At worst, I’m wasting my time. Quite the inexpensive exercise in monetary terms. But I don’t consider it a waste at all. In my mind, real change at the margin is almost always unseen by the crowd. But importantly, it is seen and discounted by the markets. I just need to remind myself in periods such as this that remaining absolutely rigid and unbending in any one direction is a poor investment stance. Humility and flexibility - don’t forget.

Friday, October 24, 2008

KNM Comments About BTimes Article

Posted on Business Times: SC probes KNM's abnormal intra-day trading

  • SC probes KNM's abnormal intra-day trading
    By Francis Fernandez Published: 2008/10/24

    Dealers say the intra-day trading pattern of KNM shares in recent weeks mirrors that of Iris at its peak a few years ago, with massive swings to the downside followed by upward buying momentum

    THE Securities Commission (SC) has initiated a probe into the abnormal intra-day trading activities of KNM Group Bhd shares.

    "We are examining the announcements made by the company (KNM) on Bursa Malaysia. If there are any indications of wrongdoing or breaches of securities laws, then appropriate regulatory action will be taken," an SC spokesperson told Business Times.

    The company was queried on October 15, following a sharp decrease in price and high volume of its shares. In its reply then, KNM said it was unaware of the cause for the unusual market activity.

    On Bursa Malaysia yesterday, KNM was the second most active stock, with 45.79 million shares traded. It closed RM0.035 lower at RM0.595. Its intra-day high and low were RM0.605 and RM0.580 respectively.

    KNM, which controls three per cent of the world's process equipment market, was the hottest oil and gas stock last year, helped by a growth story and backed by a string of overseas acquisitions.

    That strategy helped KNM, which has an order book of RM4.7 billion, to grow its profit over the past five years to RM188.3 million for the year ended December 31 2007 from RM25.57 million in 2003, as well as raise more than a billion ringgit this year from script issues.

    Nonetheless, long term shareholders such as the Employees Provident Fund and Fidelity International Ltd have been net sellers in recent weeks.

    Dealers say the intra-day trading pattern of KNM shares in recent weeks mirrors the trading pattern of Iris Corp Bhd shares at its peak a few years ago, with massive swings to the downside, followed by upward buying momentum.

    From September 2005 to May 2006, Iris rose from an eight sen a share stock to RM1.36 per share, with an average 200 million shares being traded daily.

    The Iris gravy train eventually left investors teary-eyed after market regulators designated the stock, and filed civil suits against Datuk Tan Mong Sing, Low Thiam Hock and Aeneas Capital Management, a US hedge fund, for market manipulation.

    KNM, like Iris, has 10 sen shares, with huge paid up capital base of 3.95 billion and 1.36 billion respectively. However, unlike Iris, big ticker houses such as UBS and JP Morgan are bullish on KNM. Bloomberg records show all major research firms are recommending investors to buy KNM, with a price target of above RM1.

Today KNM posted a reply on Bursa Malaysia:

(click on the image for a much larger view)

Actually I am lost!

Perhaps its my eyes but there seems to be a disconnect between what BTimes published and KNM's reply, for I see no where did BTimes mentioned anything about PE multiples!

Perhaps KNM management was referring to this article:
15-10-2008: Major shareholders exit KNM

  1. Announcements to Bursa Malaysia indicate that the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) disposed of about eight million shares in the company on Oct 8, trimming its shareholding to 272.8 million shares or 6.9% of the share capital.

    EPF had come into KNM with a 5.3% shareholding in mid-June last year and had been trading the company’s shares heavily but had never disposed of such a big block.

    An analyst from a local broking house said that the major sell-down could also be due to KNM’s foreign shareholders dumping their shares in the open market. “They are getting out of emerging markets and pulling back funds to their original country in a bid to support their own economy,” he told The Edge Financial Daily.

    The analyst was referring to Boston-based FMR LLC and Bermuda-incorporated FIL Ltd (Fidelity).

(It would have been nice that the writer named who the analyst is! Yes quote the source!)

Or perhaps KNM was referring to this article: 16-10-2008: KNM comes under selling pressure

Or perhaps KNM was referring to this article: Is the sharp drop in KNM's share price justified?

I really do not know! I am simply so confused!

Anyway what was interesting for me was the following:

What was interesting for me personally was this announcement posted by KNM,
Changes in Sub. S-hldr's Int. (29B) - Inter Merger Sdn Bhd

This is a company in which Mr.Lee has interest in and if you see
Changes in Director's Interest (S135) - Lee Swee Eng


The following was most interesting:

  • Acquired 23/10/2008 11,376,000
    Disposed 16/10/2008 72,271,600

Disposal was massive!

And did you see the point 2? Disposal of 72,271,600 shares - sold down by financier which is now resolved

And more interestingly, the company DID a share buyback during this same period! Notice of Shares Buy Back by a Company pursuant to Form 28A

Look at the details.



Date of buy back from : 16/10/2008
Date of buy back to : 22/10/2008

Total number of shares purchased (units) : 22,190,200
Minimum price paid for each share purchased (RM) : 0.415
Maximum price paid for each share purchased (RM) : 0.690
Total amount paid for shares purchased (RM) : 13,544,216.13

Reading Artice: Take Heart: Why the Malaysian Bear Market is Common

Here is an article for weekend reading: Take Heart: Why the Malaysian Bear Market is Common

Cheers!

Credit Crunch Jokes!



  • A trader: "This is worse than a divorce. I've lost half my net worth and I still have a wife."

    President Bush said clients shouldn't be concerned by all these bank closings. If the bank is closed, you just use the ATM, he said.

    George Bush said that he is saddened to hear about the demise of Lehman brothers. His thoughts at this time is to go out to their mother as losing one son is hard, but losing two is a tragedy.

    The problem with investment bank balance sheets is that on the left side nothing is right and on the right side nothing is left.

    In maths there are 30 billion prime numbers below 700 billion. The rest are all subprime.

    How do you define optimism? A banker who irons 5 shirts on a Sunday.

    What do you call 12 investment bankers at the bottom of the ocean? A good start.

    Why are all MBAs going back to school? To ask for their money back.

    For Geography students: What's the capital of Iceland ? Answer: About Three Pounds Fifty...

    If you want to gamble, go to Las Vegas . If you want to trade in derivatives, God bless you.

    Whats the difference between a guy who just lost everything in Vegas and an investment banker? A tie.

    Whats the difference between a bond and a bond trader? A bond matures.

    Lehman have changed their recommendation on Lehman from hold to sell.

    Forty years ago I sold fifty shares of my company stock and had enough money to purchase a brand-new 1967 Ford pickup. Last week, I checked it out, and if I sold another fifty shares, Id have enough money to buy a 1967 Ford pickup. So, the market has stabilized.

    What have an Icelandic bank and an Icelandic streaker got in common ? They both have frozen assets.

    A Director decided to award a prize of £50 for the best idea of saving the company money during the credit crunch. It was won by a young executive who suggested reducing the prize money to £10.

ps: Chelski play LFC this weekend, m8! How? Comeon United!

Jeremy Grantham Joins The Bullish Camp!

Yes, Jeremy Grantham of GMO has joined the Bullish Camp!

Yes, another of the legendary investors has joined the bullish camp. ( Can you count how many already?)

However, before anyone jumps the gun, perhaps it's best we understand what Jeremy is saying here!

Several interesting issues he has written. Firstly I agree very much with his current assessment on what has happened. Here are his ten points.

  • The time to blame should be past, or at least in abeyance until the crisis is past, but I find it impossible to avoid it completely. Sorry. In any case, just to set the scene, it is necessary to review briefly the poisonous wind that we all sowed.

    1. We had an extended period of excess increase in money supply, loan growth, leverage, and below normal interest rates.

    2. This combined with a remarkably lucky global economic environment that we described as “near perfect” to produce a bubble in asset classes, as such a combination has done without exception according to our research. Since all these factors were global, the combination produced what we have called “the first truly global bubble” in all assets everywhere with only a few modest exceptions.

    3. While these asset bubbles were inflating, facilitated by easy money, the authorities – the Fed, the SEC, the Treasury, and Congress – rather than tightening existing regulations, partially dismantled them. They freed commercial banks while further reducing controls on investment banks, allowing leverage to take wing. More recently they almost gratuitously, without being pressured, removed the uptick rule for shorting. And this is just a sample. Simultaneously, attempts in some quarters to address growing risks were beaten back or diluted by Democrats and Republicans alike. Examples here include early efforts to rein in stock options and the attempt to add controls to Fannie and Freddie. (I’m biting my lip not to name names.) Worse yet, the regulating authorities appeared to encourage the worst excesses by admiring the ingenuity of new financial instruments (okay, that was Greenspan), and by repeating their belief that no bubbles existed (or perhaps could ever exist) and that housing at the peak “merely reflected a strong U.S. economy.” Finally, as the bubbles inevitably began to break, all was said to be contained and the economy was claimed to be strong.

    4. The combination of favorable conditions and irrationally exuberant encouragement from the authorities produced an even more poisonous bubble – that in risk-taking itself. Everybody, and I mean everybody, got the point that risk-taking was asymmetrical and reached to take more risk. The asymmetry here was that if things worked out badly they would help you out (this sounds very familiar!), but if all went well you were on your own, poor thing. Ah, the joys of pure capitalism!

    5. In this regard, some deadly groundwork had been laid by the concept of rational expectations, or market efficiency. This argued that we were all far too sensible for major bubbles to appear. This is a convenient theory for mathematical treatment, but obviously totally unconnected to the real world of greed and fear. It dangerously encourages the belief that if you take more risk you will automatically receive more reward. That condition might often, even usually, be the case because in normal quiet markets a rough approximation of that relationship is usually priced into the markets. But in wildly-behaving markets where risk is mispriced, it is not true. From June 2006 to June 2007 on our seven-year data, investors lulled by these beliefs and the conditions of the market were actually paying to take risks for the first time in history.

    6. Just as all bubbles have broken, these bubbles did. Far from being a surprise, the bubbles breaking were absolutely not outlier events, contrary to protestations. The bubbles forming in 1998 and 1999 and in 2003 through 2007 were the outlier events. The U.S. housing market, which was a clear bubble with prices at least 30% above a previous very stable trend, is well on its way back to normal, and equities and risk-taking may well have made it all the way back.

    7. The stresses on the financial and economic world of these bubbles breaking was always going to be great. To repeat a comment I made 18 months ago, “If everything goes right (as a bubble breaks) there will always be lots of pain. If anything is done wrong there will be even more. It is increasingly impressive and surprising how much we have done wrong this time!”

    8. By far, the biggest failing of our system has been its unwillingness to deal with important asset bubbles as they form (see last quarter’s Letter). I started a long diatribe on this topic in 1998 and 1999 and reviewed it in Feet of Clay (2002), which is aimed at my arch villain, Alan Greenspan. With the housing bubble even more dangerous to mess with than equities, Bernanke joined my rogues’ gallery. If we change our policy and move gently but early to moderate bubbles, this crisis need never be repeated. There are signs that the previously intractable authorities are reconsidering their bone-headed position on this topic. If they change, all this pain will not have been totally in vain. (See Part 2 of this Letter, titled “Silver Linings,” in two weeks or so.)

    9. The icing on the cake as far as the bust is concerned has been provided by Buffett’s “financial weapons of mass destruction” – the new sliced and diced packages of loan material so complicated that, shall we say, few understood them. The uncertainties and doubts generated by their complexities were impressive. Trust and confidence are the keys to our elaborate financial structure, which is ultimately faith-based. The current hugely increased doubt is a potential lethal blow to the system and must be addressed at any cost as fast as possible. Concern about moral hazard is secondary and must be put into abeyance for the time being. Wall Street leaders are in any case now fully scared and are likely to stay that way for a few years!

    10. To avoid the development of crises, you need a plentiful supply of foresight, imagination, and competence. A few quarters ago I likened our financial system to an elaborate suspension bridge, hopefully built with some good, old-fashioned Victorian over-engineering. Well, it wasn’t over-engineered! It was built to do just fine under favorable conditions. Now with hurricanes blowing, the Corps of Engineers, as it were, are working around the clock to prop up a suspiciously jerry-built edifice. When a crisis occurs, you need competence and courage to deal with it. The bitterest disappointment of this crisis has been how completely the build-up of the bubbles in asset prices and risk-taking was rationalized and ignored by the authorities, especially the formerly esteemed Chairman of the Fed.

And for the investor in you and me, the following two passages are of great read!

And I do think that his 'ask yourself what it is that you really know or think you really know' is absolutely spot on!

  • Basics
    At times like this it is good to ask yourself what it is that you really know or think you really know. For us (in our asset allocation division) it is defi nitely not the ins and outs of the financial system, although we’re trying harder and harder. The financial system is so mind-bogglingly complex that very few, even those with far deeper backgrounds than ours, fully understand it. Puzzlingly, despite our relative ignorance of financial details, we were more accurate than many experts in the last year about the big picture, and we can speculate why. First, as historians, we recognized that when bubbles break they almost invariably cause more pain than expected.

    Second, we are Minsky mavens and believe that, with sadly defective humans making up the markets, Minsky was right to see periodic financial crises as well-nigh inevitable. Thus in the middle of last year when the experts at Goldman Sachs said they expected write-downs of $450 billion, I immediately wrote that we’d be lucky if it wasn’t a trillion. I was playing off their detailed expertise and adding a generalized historical observation as I had done with the prediction that “at least one major bank – broadly defined – would fail,” and that half of the hedge funds would be gone in five years. In previous banking crises, major banks had failed, and this crisis seemed likely, to us semi-pros, to be worse than most. So we studied in broad strokes previous crises and armchaired that we should up the ante. We got lucky in an area in which we were not real experts, and we know we were lucky. We will attempt to keep the luck and hedge our bets by also increasing our skills. The addition of Edward Chancellor, an experienced financial journalist/historian with a focus on credit crises, has been a very helpful start.

    In contrast, what we do know, I believe, is asset class pricing and the behavior of bubbles, which are both derivatives of our single, big truth: mean reversion. for moderately more real growth in recent years. In the six years since October 2002, the trend line has risen to 975 (plus or minus a little – we are constantly fine-tuning a percent here or there). Needless to say, two weeks ago the market crashed through that level, producing Exhibit 1. So now all 28 burst bubbles are present and accounted for. Long live mean reversion!

Yes, nothing absolutely last forever, especially bubbles. Ask yourself, were you too bullish on your stocks, neglecting the fact that the earnings was boosted mainly by the insane bull run in your stock operating environment? And when bubbles burst, it is perhaps best we acknowledge that earnings will contract sharply!

And lastly this passage should be acknowledged by value investors!

  • The Curse of the Value Manager

    We at GMO have a strong value bias, and our curse, therefore, like all value managers, is being too early. In 1998 we saw horribly overpriced stocks that at 21 times earnings equaled the two previous great bubbles of 1929 and 1965. Seeing this new “peak,” we were sellers far, far too early, only to watch it go to 35 times earnings! And as it went up, so many of our clients went with it, reminding us that career risk is really the only other thing that matters. The other side of the coin is that only sleepy value managers buy brilliantly cheap stocks: industrious, wide-awake value managers buy them when they are merely very nicely cheap, and suffer badly when they become – as they sometimes do – spectacularly cheap. I said as far back as 1999, while suffering from selling too soon, that my next big mistake would be buying too soon. This probably sounded ridiculous for someone who was regarded as a perma bear, but I meant it. With 14 years of an overpriced S&P, one feels like a perma bear just as I felt like a perma bull at the end of 13 years of underpriced markets from 1973-86. But that was long ago. Well, surprisingly, here we are again. Finally! On October 10 th we can say that, with the S&P at 900, stocks are cheap in the U.S. and cheaper still overseas. We will therefore be steady buyers at these prices. Not necessarily rapid buyers, in fact probably not, but steady buyers. But we have no illusions. Timing is difficult and is apparently not usually our skill set, although we got desperately and atypically lucky moving rapidly to underweight in emerging equities three months ago. That aside, we play the numbers. And we recognize the real possibilities of severe and typical overruns. We also recognize that the current crisis comes with possibly unique dangers of a global meltdown.
    We recognize, in short, that we are very probably buying too soon. Caveat emptor.

Click here for his newsletter: http://www.gmo.com/websitecontent/JGLetter_3Q08.pdf

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Would You Buy MaeMode?

I made a quiz the other day: Would You Buy This Stock?



And reader
valuelife made the following comments..

  • Based on these data, Definitely NOT a Buy 4 me!!

    Net debt too high, capital intensive stock??

    Receivables showed big jump, helped by loans??

Sometimes if we take OUT the stock name, things can be rather clear. The underlining fundamental weakness in the stock simply stood out like sore thumb.

I will paste what Kenanga Research said about this stock!

  • 1QFY09 in line. Revenue and net profit of RM127.8m and RM5.2m was 23.6% and 20.8% of our forecast respectively. Better results were driven by higher contract values being executed.

    QoQ, 1Q09 revenue rose 7.0% while EBIT margin improved to 10.2% from 8.9%, lifted by various cost efficiency measures taken to counter the rising cost environment. As a result, pre-tax profit was also higher by 19.2% even after accounting for higher financing costs (1Q09: RM4.1m vs 4Q08: RM3.2m).

    YoY, 1Q09 revenue surged 26.2% on the back of higher contribution from bulk material and warehousing logistics division which accounted 41% and 29% of group’s 1Q09 revenue . Both EBIT and pre-tax margin was stable at about 10% and 7% respectively. Net profit was however fl at at RM5.2m, mainly due to one-off expenses amounted to RM4.7m incurred in restructuring of loan facilities and higher tax provision.

    Construction for the Suqian plant in China is on track to meet first phase opening by 1Q2009. The plant when ready by 2011 will double group’s current capacity and lift group’s profile as a global player in the material handling business.

    No slowdown in coal exploration activities despite easing of commodity prices. Supply of coal is expected to remain tight with robust demand underpinned by developing countries especially China and India. Recent RM41.5m contract clinched for the construction of coal handling facility at Asam-Asam port should cement group’s position as the leading supplier in Indonesia. Management is confident that group is well positioned to secure more similar contracts in future.

    We continue to like Maemode for its China expansion and exposure in the higher end products including warehousing logistics and bulk material systems, which will drive a net profit CAGR of 22.7% for the next 3 years. With an order book of RM360m lasting up to 2010, group is still actively bidding for more than RM1b jobs which should further boost its order book given a historical 38% strike rate. Maintain forecasts and reiterate BUY with target price of RM1.58 based on CY09 PER of 6x.

Yes the stock name is MadeMode!

Past postings on MaeMode:

1. A look at MaeMode again

2. Mae, I hope I am not WRONG!

3. Reply to Mae, I hope I am not WRONG!

4. MaeMode Again

5. The Trade Receivables In MaeMode



Here's the full table highlighting MaeMode's recent performance.



Just for the record: MaeMode is at 1.17 and MaeMode warrant is at 17 sen.

Comments Heard Admist The Plunging Baltic Dry Index


Yes, the Baltic Dry Index continued its plunge yet again.


I have collected some of the recent comments heard around...

  • China is expecting a severe downturn in shipping. China Shipping Container Lines, China's second-largest container line, expects a 10% volume shrinkage this year. Bloomberg quoted Zhang Denghui, assistant president, saying that "Traffic will drop at least 10% for the full year. An even much larger drop is possible, as the full impact of the global economic turmoil is yet to come."
  • Khalid Hashim, managing director of Precious Shipping, Thailand's second-largest shipping company, said in Singapore yesterday. "Nothing is moving because the trader doesn't want to take the risk of putting cargo on the boat and finding that nobody can pay."

Source: Crisis Hits World Shipping ( Oct 20 )

  • He says another reason for the big fall in the index has been a number of new ships have arrived on the market just as global trade is slowing down. - David Osler of the Lloyds List shipping journal

Source: Baltic Dry Index actually drying up

  • "The global economic slowdown will push some shipping lines into bankruptcy," Marc Faber, a famed investor and editor of the "Gloom Boom & Doom" report, told AFP.
  • Malaysia's Port Klang said it had been hit by a decline in cargo handling since the start of October, blaming a retail downturn and lower vehicle sales in the United States and Europe.
    Shanghai International Port said that growth in cargo traffic dropped sharply to 9.9 percent in the first half of 2008 on the "increasingly grave global economy and trade situation".
    "Faced with the severe economic situation at home and abroad, the port industry has met with the most complicated operation environment in recent years," it said.
  • "We are seeing a rapid decline in the volume of exports," an official with the Japanese Shipowners' Association said of the decline in demand.
  • "It's a safe statement that no carrier is operating profitably in the eastbound transpacific market today," said Ron Widdows, chairman of the Transpacific Stabilization Agreement -- a forum of major shipping lines.

Source: Asian shipping slows

  • “Shipping is an entrepreneurial game, and there are people losing their shirts at the moment,” executive director of the Australian Shipowners Association, Teresa Hatch, says. “But it might be the bust that we had to have. "Shipyards have been so far behind on meeting demand, people have been waiting up to four years for a ship.”
  • Whole shipping lines have frozen up, according to a Business Spectator report on Tuesday, because shipowners don’t want to take the risk of carting cargo for clients that may not be able to pay because of the credit crisis.
    “Like many of the other clogged arteries of global finance, letters of credit and therefore global shipping could presumably unclog fairly quickly if the interbank credit market got moving again,” wrote the article’s author, Alan Kohler.
    “But a big fall in shipping rates, as measured by the key price indicator, the Baltic Dry Index, is always a harbinger of a downturn in trade and therefore economic activity.”

Source: Lift for exports as shipping prices plunge

  • A trade adviser based in Sydney, Sri Annaswamy, wrote to me last night to correct me, explaining that it’s not that shipping is being affected by the credit crisis – it’s that banks don’t want to open or honour letters of credit “that they know would ultimately be defaulted upon due to the Chinese buyer’s refusal/inability to accept the shipment (that’s the core of the problem)”.

Source: What's really happening in China

  • “Traders who hire ships on spot basis are facing difficulties to secure letters of credit from banks,” said an executive at Chowgule Steamships Ltd, who did not want to be named. Letters of credit assure a shipper of payment for a cargo after it is loaded on a ship, but before the buyer receives it.
    The squeeze on trade credit is also restricting commodities shipments. Around 90% of the world’s $14 trillion (Rs683 trillion) trade is handled via trade credit, the SCI official said.
    “You don’t know the credit worthiness of the guy hiring the ship... The best and the biggest of names are defaulting,” said an executive at Apeejay Shipping Ltd, who too did not want to be named.

Source: Shipowners see business slowing as funds dry up, confidence ebbs

Other recent postings made on the Baltic Dry Index:

1. Views On Current Weakness On Baltic Dry Index

2. The Collapse of the Baltic Dry Index

3. Goldman Downgrades Bulk Shippers!

4. Baltic Dry Index Keeps Falling!

5. Baltic Dry Index Stages Strong Rebound!

6. Baltic Dry Index Set For Strong Recovery???

7. Baltic Dry Index Plunges To Seven Month Lows!

8. The Baltic Dry Index Keeps On Plunging!

9. Baltic Dry Index Continues To Plunge

10.The Plunging Baltic Dry Index And The Dangers Of Using Forward PE!

11. Baltic Dry Plunges Below 2000!!!

12. Admist The Plunging Baltic Dry Index, Dr. Marc Faber Warns That Some Shipping Lines Could Go Bankrupt!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Dr. Marc Faber On Why There Will Be A Slowdown In Asia

The following passage is from CNBC interview.

  • He sees the same slowdown in Asia.

    “The U.S. produces very little," he said. "Asia is the producer for the United States and it is also the region that has very large capital spending. So when there is a slowdown in the U.S., it’s not good for the U.S., but it’s basically a disaster for Asia. Because of reduced demand in Asia it’s an even greater disaster for the resource producers of the world: the Middle East, Russia, Brazil. The whole world goes into a vicious down cycle economically, and the U.S. is relatively better off.”

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27295113

David Webb's Time-Bomb Warning On Citic Pacific Should Not Be Dismissed

The following editorial from David Webb should be read in full!

  • It turns out that little old ladies buying minibonds aren't the only ones to have been taken in by structured financial products. Hang Seng Index member (for now) CITIC Pacific Ltd (CP, 0267.HK) stunned the market this evening with the extremely late announcement that they are sitting on realised and unrealised losses of HK$15.5bn (US$1.99bn), due to foreign exchange exposures the Company was aware of six weeks ago (although the losses have grown) but had failed to tell investors until now.

    The losses involve exotic foreign exchange forward contracts such as "dual currency target redemption forward contracts", where they get a limited upside (due to a knock-out clause) and an unlimited downside, being required to take the weaker of the Australian dollar and Euro. Another series of "AUD target redemption forward contracts" involves receiving up to AUD9.05bn in monthly instalments up to October 2010. The counterparty bank(s) for these contracts have not been disclosed, and CP did not say when the contracts were entered into. They should tell investors how long this time-bomb was ticking. If the exposure pre-dates the interim report for 30-Jun-08 or even the audited annual report for 31-Dec-07 then it raises additional questions. On this, the two reports said (p120 of the
    annual report):

Read rest of article: http://webb-site.com/articles/citicbomb.htm

And of course the key issue was:

  • Why did CITIC Pacific's board wait 6 weeks before telling investors that it had a huge exposure to exotic foreign exchange forward contracts? What does this say about the quality of its board, and the independent directors on its audit committee who, according to a separate statement by the Chairman, found time to complete an investigation of the incident even before the incident was announced?

Even Clare Barnes from Apollo Investment has something to say too!

  • Mainstream press reports of CITIC Pacific's US$2bn losses on FX contracts are inadequate. The contract details are interesting (and the losses relative to upside should be salutary), but this is of wider importance for Hong Kong corporate governance: read David Webb on CITIC Pacific's time bomb. This news update mentions counterparties including HSBC, BNP, and Citigroup, and the interesting term "accumulator", which some would associate with the racetrack...

Warren Buffett's Three Market Buy Calls

The following passage is taken from CNBC article

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27286066

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Would You Buy This Stock?

Let me try something different. Something new!

Here's a set of table showing the financial health of a company.


Would you buy this company XYZ stock at any price?

Interview On CNN: Alice Shroeder Talks About Warren Buffett

CNN today has published an interview with Alice Schroeder, author of The Snowball: Warren Buffett And The Business of Life.



Commentary: Buffett's career a battle of greed vs. principles

  • (CNN) -- Since the start of the financial crisis, the world's wealthiest man, investor Warren Buffett, has been front and center

    He's advised Sen. Barack Obama on economic policy. He urged Congress to pass the $700 billion bailout bill. He bought stakes in Goldman Sachs and General Electric.

    He wrote an op-ed piece in the New York Times saying he's buying stock in American companies now because he believes they will do well in the long run, citing as his rule: "Be greedy when others are fearful."

    Buffett's name came up in the second presidential debate when the candidates agreed he'd be a good choice for treasury secretary. His fortune was estimated at $62 billion by Forbes in March.

    Alice Schroeder got Buffett's cooperation in writing her new book, "The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life" (Bantam Books). Schroeder, who worked on Wall Street as an insurance industry analyst, met Buffett 10 years ago when his company, Berkshire Hathaway, bought a big insurance company.

    Schroeder says she suggested he write a book about his life, and the 78-year-old Buffett turned the tables, urging her to do it instead. Schroeder estimates she spent about 2,000 hours with Buffett and interviewed 250 people for the book. Now on a tour to promote her book, Schroeder is in a unique position to speak about Buffett at a time when many media outlets are seeking his views.

    "I have about 300 hours of recorded interviews and the rest of the time I observed him, I watched him make decisions and talk on the phone, went through files. I got to sit in his office for weeks, I ate steaks with him," says Schroeder, who's 51. "If it ever said moo, he'll pretty much eat it. He likes his steaks bloody rare and hanging off the plate, they're so big."

    CNN: Why are people so interested in Warren Buffett?

    Schroeder: I think he's transcended business to become a national figure because of people's trust in him as a symbol of stability and a symbol of someone who knows how to manage risk and avoid catastrophe and of how to run a business on principles.

    CNN: Is there any realistic possibility of him taking a government position?

    Schroeder: No, none. What he really likes to do is run Berkshire Hathaway, and he's not going to let anything take him away from that. He's also not going to let anyone spend his day filled up with meetings or schedule his time, he's too independent.

    CNN: You make clear that in the 1990s tech boom, Wall Street turned away from Buffett and there was some criticism of him. Do you think that now, because of the market downturn, people will look to him more to set a standard of how the market operates?

    Schroeder: I think it's fair to say that throughout his career, every time there's been a bubble and it's burst, his reputation has grown. That happened in the 1960s, when the bubble burst in the 1970s, it happened again after 1987. It happened again after the savings and loan crisis. ... It happened again after the Internet bubble and it's happening now.

    CNN: It doesn't seem to have had a lasting effect, since we keep going back into another boom period or bubble.

    Schroeder: He would say that human nature doesn't change, and that fear and greed are always the two drivers of the market. And there are people who listen when he gives learnings, but that the market will always be ruled by cycles driven by fear and greed.

    CNN: Have you talked to him about the current market turmoil?

    Schroeder: Last spring, when Bear Stearns was being taken over by J.P. Morgan ... he talked about the dominoes falling, and how, if that happened, the government could face some very unpleasant choices and have to take drastic measures. With hindsight it looks really prescient.
    In 2002, he talked about derivatives as financial weapons of mass destruction.

    More recently, his observation was that there was a lot of anger and denial at first about what was going on, and that people were not quite grasping the gravity of the situation and how quickly and dramatically they needed to move.

    He always says, don't sell into a panic, don't let the fear and the emotions of the market change how you feel. If you own good stocks in good companies or you own an index of the markets, and you see it getting cheaper, that's a reason to be happy, not to panic and sell. ... The idea is buy low, sell high -- not buy high, sell low.

    He understands the factors that are burdening the country, the federal deficit, the consumer debt, the infrastructure spending that we're going to have to do, but he has a belief in American ingenuity which over the long term has enabled our country to solve problems that seemed insurmountable in the past. For example, in the 1970s, it looked like the country could not ever dig its way out of the mess. So he does have a faith in the long-term prospects of the country.

    CNN: Is he a gambler?

    Schroeder: No, he's a handicapper -- big difference. A handicapper is somebody who understands odds-making. A gambler is somebody who bets but may not even understand the odds. Warren believes in a margin of safety, he doesn't bet unless the odds are overwhelmingly in his favor. When he goes to Vegas he does not gamble, he goes to see the shows.

    CNN: What are his flaws?

    Schroeder: He is somebody who can be very tough in business and very impersonal, including with people he likes. And in personal relationships, he negotiates as if it were a business relationship

    When he was putting Berkshire Hathaway together, as [his business partner] Charlie Munger puts it, he was an implacable acquirer. The book refers to him, in my words, as a great white shark, and the book describes the battle between his avarice and his higher principles. At times, his avarice won.

    And over his lifetime, it's been essentially a progress during which his higher principles have increasingly had the upper hand. But when he was in junior high, he was a shoplifter. He was a juvenile delinquent. He sold his sister's bicycle. It's been pretty much uphill from there, but it hasn't been a straight line.

    CNN: In his adult life, was there a time when his avarice won out over higher principles?

    Schroeder: Absolutely, he's made investments that he shouldn't have made, for example, when he invested in Salomon. He was criticizing Wall Street and saying if you want to make a lot of money, hold your nose and go to Wall Street, and at the same time he was already there. Berkshire owned $700 million of convertible preferred [stock] in a major Wall Street bank. And he was sort of mentally distancing himself from a business that he was invested in.

    That kind of separation is something that's very hard to maintain. And in the end, he had to become interim chairman of Salomon to rescue the firm. Psychologically, he was trying to distance himself from it because the two sides of him were at war.

    CNN: Is he still critical of Wall Street?

    Schroeder: You've got an economy in which financial intermediaries who don't add anything to the economy ... have in the past two decades stripped off huge amounts of fees, particularly buyout funds, and hedge funds and funds of funds, and he's very, very critical of the amount of fees that have been taken out.

    He has no problem with executive pay when it's related to performance. He thinks in most cases executives are being paid to sit in a chair whether they perform or not. And he's pointed out that these people are not like major league baseball players, who get recruited away by other teams. When CEOs get fired and they get these golden parachutes, you don't normally see them winding up somewhere else, right?

    So they're getting paid these huge amounts of money as an incentive to stay and then they get paid the consolation prize when they get fired. The pay is always getting ratcheted upward, they're getting paid to incent them to stay and they're getting paid to console them when they leave, no matter what the shareholders are getting. It's not aligned with anything the shareholders get, that really bothers him.

    CNN: What would he say about coping with an economic downturn?

    Schroeder: That people should think for the long run and make their personal decisions for the long run and build a margin of safety into their lives as best they can.

    Think about what could go wrong. Don't assume the best-case scenario. If you've got debts, your first thought should be how to pay them off, and negotiate with creditors if you're struggling, because they'll usually be flexible. And be realistic about what you can afford, because having a financial cushion means you can sleep at night, and that's worth more than a big-screen TV.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Andrew Lahde's Farewell Note

Ok, I am sure you be asking Andrew who?

Well Google and of course Wikipedia are our bestest friends!

Nov 2007, Andrew Lahde: The Hedge Fund Manager With a 1000% Return

And here is Wikipedia's entry on Andrew, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Lahde

  • Andrew Lahde (b. 1970 or 1971) was a California-based hedge fund manager who in 2007 earned some fame for achieving return rates in the vincinity of 1000%[1] with his Lahde Capital, based in Santa Monica, California. The fund speculated on increases of U.S. subprime mortgage defaults[2]. Because of the subprime mortgage crisis, which caused several major banks to fail, Lahde's fund probably was the one that profited the most during its existence.
  • Lahde earned a Bachelor's degree in Finance from Michigan State University and an MBA from the Andersen School of Business at the University of California Los Angeles.[3].
  • In September 2008, Lahde closed his fund, telling investors that credit problems - the basis of his profits - were likely to continue, but that possibility of defaults by counterparties was too high.[4] On October 17, he released an open good-bye letter to his investors, in which he said that the "low hanging fruit, i.e. idiots whose parents paid for prep school, Yale, and then the Harvard MBA, was there for the taking." Lahde criticized the harried life of the rich, and said that "Capitalism worked for two hundred years, but times change, and systems become corrupt." He suggested that George Soros "start and sponsor a forum for great minds to come together to create a new system of government that truly represents the common man’s interest". He concluded his letter by proposing to legalize hemp, saying that it been used for at least 5,000 years for cloth and food, as well as just about everything that is produced from petroleum products, and thus should be part of making the U.S. "truly become self-sufficient".[5][6]

Anyway, the following is Andrew's farewell note. It's an incredible read.

  • Today I write not to gloat. Given the pain that nearly everyone is experiencing, that would be entirely inappropriate. Nor am I writing to make further predictions, as most of my forecasts in previous letters have unfolded or are in the process of unfolding. Instead, I am writing to say goodbye.

    Recently, on the front page of Section C of the Wall Street Journal, a hedge fund manager who was also closing up shop (a $300 million fund), was quoted as saying, "What I have learned about the hedge fund business is that I hate it." I could not agree more with that statement. I was in this game for the money. The low hanging fruit, i.e. idiots whose parents paid for prep school, Yale, and then the Harvard MBA, was there for the taking. These people who were (often) truly not worthy of the education they received (or supposedly received) rose to the top of companies such as AIG, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers and all levels of our government. All of this behavior supporting the Aristocracy, only ended up making it easier for me to find people stupid enough to take the other side of my trades. God bless America.

    There are far too many people for me to sincerely thank for my success. However, I do not want to sound like a Hollywood actor accepting an award. The money was reward enough. Furthermore, the endless list those deserving thanks know who they are.

    I will no longer manage money for other people or institutions. I have enough of my own wealth to manage. Some people, who think they have arrived at a reasonable estimate of my net worth, might be surprised that I would call it quits with such a small war chest. That is fine; I am content with my rewards. Moreover, I will let others try to amass nine, ten or eleven figure net worths. Meanwhile, their lives suck. Appointments back to back, booked solid for the next three months, they look forward to their two week vacation in January during which they will likely be glued to their Blackberries or other such devices. What is the point? They will all be forgotten in fifty years anyway. Steve Balmer, Steven Cohen, and Larry Ellison will all be forgotten. I do not understand the legacy thing. Nearly everyone will be forgotten. Give up on leaving your mark. Throw the Blackberry away and enjoy life.

    So this is it. With all due respect, I am dropping out. Please do not expect any type of reply to emails or voicemails within normal time frames or at all. Andy Springer and his company will be handling the dissolution of the fund. And don't worry about my employees, they were always employed by Mr. Springer's company and only one (who has been well-rewarded) will lose his job.

    I have no interest in any deals in which anyone would like me to participate. I truly do not have a strong opinion about any market right now, other than to say that things will continue to get worse for some time, probably years. I am content sitting on the sidelines and waiting. After all, sitting and waiting is how we made money from the subprime debacle. I now have time to repair my health, which was destroyed by the stress I layered onto myself over the past two years, as well as my entire life -- where I had to compete for spaces in universities and graduate schools, jobs and assets under management -- with those who had all the advantages (rich parents) that I did not. May meritocracy be part of a new form of government, which needs to be established.

    On the issue of the U.S. Government, I would like to make a modest proposal. First, I point out the obvious flaws, whereby legislation was repeatedly brought forth to Congress over the past eight years, which would have reigned in the predatory lending practices of now mostly defunct institutions. These institutions regularly filled the coffers of both parties in return for voting down all of this legislation designed to protect the common citizen. This is an outrage, yet no one seems to know or care about it. Since Thomas Jefferson and Adam Smith passed, I would argue that there has been a dearth of worthy philosophers in this country, at least ones focused on improving government. Capitalism worked for two hundred years, but times change, and systems become corrupt. George Soros, a man of staggering wealth, has stated that he would like to be remembered as a philosopher. My suggestion is that this great man start and sponsor a forum for great minds to come together to create a new system of government that truly represents the common man's interest, while at the same time creating rewards great enough to attract the best and brightest minds to serve in government roles without having to rely on corruption to further their interests or lifestyles. This forum could be similar to the one used to create the operating system, Linux, which competes with Microsoft's near monopoly. I believe there is an answer, but for now the system is clearly broken.

    Lastly, while I still have an audience, I would like to bring attention to an alternative food and energy source. You won't see it included in BP's, "Feel good. We are working on sustainable solutions," television commercials, nor is it mentioned in ADM's similar commercials. But hemp has been used for at least 5,000 years for cloth and food, as well as just about everything that is produced from petroleum products. Hemp is not marijuana and vice versa. Hemp is the male plant and it grows like a weed, hence the slang term. The original American flag was made of hemp fiber and our Constitution was printed on paper made of hemp. It was used as recently as World War II by the U.S. Government, and then promptly made illegal after the war was won. At a time when rhetoric is flying about becoming more self-sufficient in terms of energy, why is it illegal to grow this plant in this country? Ah, the female. The evil female plant -- marijuana. It gets you high, it makes you laugh, it does not produce a hangover. Unlike alcohol, it does not result in bar fights or wife beating. So, why is this innocuous plant illegal? Is it a gateway drug? No, that would be alcohol, which is so heavily advertised in this country. My only conclusion as to why it is illegal, is that Corporate America, which owns Congress, would rather sell you Paxil, Zoloft, Xanax and other additive drugs, than allow you to grow a plant in your home without some of the profits going into their coffers. This policy is ludicrous. It has surely contributed to our dependency on foreign energy sources. Our policies have other countries literally laughing at our stupidity, most notably Canada, as well as several European nations (both Eastern and Western). You would not know this by paying attention to U.S. media sources though, as they tend not to elaborate on who is laughing at the United States this week. Please people, let's stop the rhetoric and start thinking about how we can truly become self-sufficient.

    With that I say good-bye and good luck.

    All the best,

    Andrew Lahde
Source: http://www.portfolio.com/html/assets/AndrewLahdeFarewell.pdf

A Look At Coastal Contracts

Dear valuelife,


  • Whats your view on Coastal?managemt and outlook?

Do understand that I am not a legal INVESTMENT advisor and all I can do is offer you some second opinions, ok?

Here's the data for Coastal Contracts that I have compiled from Bursa Malaysia website.


Do click on the picture itself for the larger view.

1. First thing, there was a massive five for one split back announced back in 2004. ( see
announcement here ) ( The important note for me in such announcement is the total number of shares after assuming everything proceed as announced and for Coastal the number of enlarged shares after end of the exercise is 460.920 million shares)(Note also, at this moment of time, Coastal number of shares in the market is 352.786 million shares)

2. The big change in fortunes happened after its fy 2006. Hence it would be useful if one reads what was announced in its Q4 earnings notes.


  • The Group registered profit before tax of RM12.3 million (from both continuing and discontinued operations), up 38% from RM8.9 million (excluding negative goodwill) achieved in the preceding quarter. When compared with the RM2.0 million recorded in the corresponding quarter a year earlier, current quarter's profit before tax has increased over six-fold. This was vastly due to higher number of vessels sold in the current quarter. On the whole, current quarter's profit margin before tax of 21% was on par with that in the previous quarter. Profit margin before tax in the same period last year was lower at 13% owing to relatively higher costs.

3. Coastal performance for its fy 2007 was just as impressive (2007 Q4 earnings was announced back in Feb 2008).

Here is a screenshot from its earnings notes.


4. As you can see clearly on the TTM line (trailing twelve months) line in the first table, despite the record earnings, Coastal Contracts balance sheet has actually gone weaker and weaker. Look at the cash vs total loans.

5. The Trade receivables really jumped in its last reported quarterly earnings. Why? I do not know but if you are interested in the stock, this is an issue, yes?

6. I would look at Coastal's Segmental Reporting made in its most recent quarterly earnings. Why? It's always good to understand where and how the money is made. That's my opinion.

The following is the screenshot from Coastal last reported quarterly earnings.




And as you can see shipbuilding and ship repairs is its bread and butter.

And this is a mega big business but the issue that comes straight to mind is the credit issue problems for global shipping companies mentioned in my Baltic Dry Index postings. And in the world where global credit is a problem, I cannot help but be sceptical and advise caution. For example, we have already seen that trade receivables soared in Coastal's last reported quarterly earnings and then we need to take into consideration that Coastal's cash flow is not one to be proud off and that despite the record earnings recorded by Coastal, Coastal cash balances had actually deteriorated over the years.

And what about the correlation between Coastal's recent earnings with the recent grandest bull run in commodity prices? Didn't Coastal benefited from it? And now that a clear and drastic reversal has been seen, surely one would be weary? And with global shipping charter rates plunging, surely this would have a bad impact on Coastal Contract's customers and if its customers are hit, then surely Coastal Contracts would be impacted too!

These are some of the issues regarding Coastal for me. I hope my second opinion helps and as always, do understand I am just another person like you and I could always be flawed in my thinking.

And oh yes, the earnings growth recorded by Coastal had been impressive over the years but there are some notable underline weakness.

Ps. I am well aware of the recent plunge in Coastal's share price too! Coastal last traded price is 1.38! Cavaet my friend.

Technicals On Commodity And Correlations Charts Between Eur/USD vs Oil and Oil vs Baltic Dry Index

Posted on CNBC.com

  • The price of a barrel of crude could lose another $20 and the broader commodity market could slump by a third as the recent downtrend is set to intensify, Phil Roberts, technical analyst from Barclays Capital, told CNBC.

    The commodity market is still very much pricing in a further slow down and the signs we're seeing at the moment suggest that the process is intensifying rather than diminishing," Roberts said while taking a technical look at the Goldman Sachs Commodities Index.

    The GSCI, which tracks a broad basket of commodities including oil, wheat and lean hogs, could lose another 30 percent to 40 percent, according to Roberts.

Check out the source which also includes a video clip: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27235187

And ironically, dearest Kathy has loaded two simple charts indicating the correlation of oil prices and EUR/USD. see: http://www.kathylien.com/site/us-dollar/why-is-the-eurusd-not-rallying

There are two charts to note, the daily chart: http://www.kathylien.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/eurusdoil101608_daily.jpg and the hourly chart http://www.kathylien.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/eurusdoil101608.jpg

And lastly, I would also note the correlation chart drawn on the oil and BDI from Kathy also. See posting http://www.kathylien.com/site/us-dollar/chiming-in-on-the-baltic-dry-index for the correlation chart: http://www.kathylien.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/baltic101608.jpg

Some Quick Technical Notes On Gold Bugs

The following technical commentary on Gold comes from Tim Woods posted on FinancialSense.com.

  • I have also been asked about gold and gold stocks. Well, I have been telling my subscribers for months that the evidence suggests that the 9-year cycle in gold has peaked, and through my eyes this is why gold has been declining. As for gold stocks, below I have a monthly XAU/Gold ratio chart along with my Trend Indicator. When price is moving up on this chart it is telling us that gold stocks are out performing physical gold, which is bullish for gold and the gold stocks. When price is moving down, the opposite is, of course, true. As an example of this, let’s look at the period between the May 1996 top and the August 1998 top. During this timeframe gold fell from roughly 410 to 271, or 35%. All the while, the XAU fell from 150 to 51, or 66%. So, as this chart suggested, the XAU was the weaker of the two. If we take the bullish period between October 2000 and May 2002, gold advanced from 266 to 331, or some 24%. But during that same period, the XAU advanced from 41 to 84, which was up some 105%. As this chart suggested during that timeframe, the XAU was the strongest. More recently, the monthly Trend Indicator turned back down in October 2007. This downturn served as a warning of a pending top in gold and gold stocks, which occurred in March 2008 at the 9-year cycle top. Since that time gold is off some 21% and the XAU is off just over 57%. So again, the downturn of price on this chart, along with the downturn of the monthly Trend Indicator, serves as evidence that we have been, and so far continue to be, in an environment in which gold stocks will be weaker than gold. This is in turn a bearish environment for gold and I do not look for this to change until we see an upturn on this chart that is confirmed by an upturn of the monthly Trend Indicator.

Source : It Still Ain't Gonna Work: Plus, A Quick Technical Look at Gold

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Air Asia Now Remains TIGHT-LIPPED On It's Privatisation Plan Details!

Blogged the other day: Did Tune Air Said It Was Thinking Of Making a GO for Air Asia?

Today's Business Times published the following article
AirAsia tight-lipped on privatisation

  • BUDGET airline, AirAsia Bhd, remains tight-lipped on its privatisation plan details.

    “It (privatisation) is in the process. We are working on it, we are looking at the options,” said its chairman Datuk Aziz Bakar, declining to reveal the reasons as to why AirAsia is being taken private.

    A lot of factors were taken into account before the decision was made to privatise the low-cost carrier, including the current volatile financial market, he said when met at Sime Darbys Hari Raya open house.

    “Hence, we can’t pin down the timeframe (by when it will be done),” Aziz said.

    Asked whether AirAsia will be listed on other bourses after privatisation, he said: “We have not gone that far yet.”

    Early this month, AirAsias major shareholder, Tune Air Sdn Bhd,
    said it may take the airline private at an indicative price of RM1.35 per share.

    Tune Air told Bursa Malaysia in reply to a query on Thursday it was one of the options the company was developing to optimise and expand the airline’s operations.

    The company, however, said the price was subject to change, depending on the market conditions at the point of decision.

    “It must be emphasised that this option is subject to availability of financing on acceptable terms from financial institutions and other potential investors in these challenging times as well as conducive market and industry conditions,” Tune Air told Bursa Malaysia. — Bernama

My comments?

I think what has happened is totally unacceptable. No concrete plans have been drawn and what's incredible is that Tune Air understands that currently the AVAILABILITY OF FINANCING is such a massive issue and since they understand, why the need to shoot out lout the privatisation price of rm 1.35 earlier? And now it has NO comments? Huh?

Again I would like to reproduce the remarks I made the other day, Did Tune Air Said It Was Thinking Of Making a GO for Air Asia?

  • Well said Errol! It's sure is baffling!!!!!!!!!!!

    Do investors and minority shareholders benefit from being told the price, considering that it is a moving target and that it is possible that the exercise may not materialise? In fact, it may even lead to investment losses if Tune Air’s plans change.

    I fully agree with what Errol is saying here.

    Well isn't this basically a deal where the left hand (Tune Air) says it was thinking of a plan to take right hand (Air Asia) private!!!!!!!!!!! (Both Air Asia and Tune Air have the same bosses!)

    Well... I can think of so many things in my life and I am sure that the janitor downstairs also can. However, most of the time we don't mumble out extremely loud of what we think of.

    From a simple business perspective, surely from a Tune Air perspective, there has to be monetary benefit from taking Air Asia private, yes?

    Think of it.. if no money can be made from this exercise, why bother then?

    Which sane people would want to embark on a corporate exercise that has ZERO monetary value, right?

    Yes?

    So if Tune Air sees monetary benefit from this GO exercise, why bother with SHOUTING OUT LOUD the GO price? Why? Why? Why?

    Does it make any sense?

    And with such an exercise, surely many would accuse Air Asia of trying to create an artificial price support for the stock. By naming out the price, aren't they telling in an indirect manner not to thrown this stock, especially so in a plunging global market?

    And is Air Asia even worth 1.35? Is it?

    Look at their balance sheet.

    It has a cash balance of 1.084 Billion but its total debt stands at 5.397 Billion!

    And worse still as stated in Air Asia last reported quarterly earnings..

    The entire borrowings are denominated in US Dollar and Euro. The Company has substantially hedged its foreign exchange exposure through formal foreign exchange contracts

    And what's wrong with loans denominated mainly in USD? Well the USD is appreciating against the RM. Which will mean more forex losses for Air Asia. ( For its last reported earnings, Air Asia reported that it lost 76.885 million in forex losses!)

    And what's even more mind boggling is that Air Asia has capital commitment of 25.848 Billion to purchase new air crafts!!!!

    And how much did Tune Air said GO price was?

    Yeah.. thinking about it.

    Well.. I can think of so many things.. and I am so very sure that you also can!

    And what do you think of..

    It’s also a time for Bursa Malaysia to send out the message that such moves should not be marred by careless statements that may hurt investors.

Warren Buffett Buys Stocks, The Snowball Chapter 2 and J. Kyle Bass

So some of the legends are stating publicly that they are buying US stocks: John Neff Is Buying Again And Shares What He Buys! and Warren Buffett Puts His Money Where His Mouth Is

I indeed had a wide smile on my face when I posted Warren's Buy American, I Am (
Warren Buffett Puts His Money Where His Mouth Is ) for I had just finished the 2nd Chapter of The Snowball: Warren Buffett And The Business of Life.

I for one did not know the events stated in Chapter 2. I was rather surprised to read that Warren E. Buffett had actually made a stock prediction back in 1999 in Sun Valley and again, I am utterly impressed with Alice style of writing. For once, this did not seem as if I was reading yet another investment book but it was as if I was reading a poetic history of a legendary man but yet in it, it contained the best ever lesson on the stock market and mind you, I have only just finished Chapter 2.

Now I cannot reproduce everything from the book here.. but the following are some of the passages I loved in that Chapter.


  • The audience, full of technology gurus who were changing the world while getting rich off the great bull market, sat silent. They were perched atop portfolios that were jam-packed with stocks trading at extravagant valuations. They felt terrific about that. It was a new paradigm, this dawning of the Internet age. Their attitude was that Buffett had no right to call them greedy. Warren — who’d hoarded his money for years and given very little away, who was so cheap his license plate said “Thrifty,” who spent most of his time thinking about how to make money, who had blown the technology boom and missed the boat — was spitting in their champagne.

    Buffett continued. There were only three ways the stock market could keep rising at ten percent or more a year. One was if interest rates fell and remained below historic levels. The second was if the share of the economy that went to investors, as opposed to employees and government and other things, rose above its already historically high level. Or, he said, the economy could start growing faster than normal. He called it “wishful thinking” to use optimistic assumptions like these.

    Some people, he said, were not thinking that the whole market would flourish. They just believed they could pick the winners from the rest. Swinging his arms like an orchestra conductor, he succeeded in putting up another slide while explaining that, although innovation might lift the world out of poverty, people who invest in innovation historically have not been glad afterward.

And..

  • Another light chuckle. Some were getting tired of these musty old examples. But out of respect, they let Buffett get on with it.

    Now he was talking about their businesses. “It’s wonderful to promote new industries, because they are very promotable. It’s very hard to promote investment in a mundane product. It’s much easier to promote an esoteric product, even particularly one with losses, because there’s no quantitative guideline.” This was goring the audience directly, where it hurt. “But people will keep coming back to invest, you know.
    It reminds me a little of that story of the oil prospector who died and went to heaven. And St. Peter said, ‘Well, I checked you out, and you meet all of the qualifications. But there’s one problem.’ He said, ‘We have some tough zoning laws up here, and we keep all of the oil prospectors over in that pen. And as you can see, it is absolutely chock-full. There is no room for you.’

    “And the prospector said, ‘Do you mind if I just say four words?’

    “St. Peter said, ‘No harm in that.’

    “So the prospector cupped his hands and yells out, ‘Oil discovered in hell!’

    “And of course, the lock comes off the cage and all of the oil prospectors start heading right straight down.

    “St. Peter said, ‘That’s a pretty slick trick. So,’ he says, ‘go on in, make yourself at home. All the room in the world.’

    “The prospector paused for a minute, then said, ‘No, I think I’ll go along with the rest of the boys. There might be some truth to that rumor after all.’

    “Well, that’s the way people feel with stocks. It’s very easy to believe that there’s some truth to that rumor after all.”

    This got a mild laugh for a half second, which choked off as soon as the audience caught on to Buffett’s point, which was that, like the prospectors, they might be mindless enough to follow rumors and drill for oil in hell.

    He closed by returning to the proverbial bird in the bush. There was no new paradigm, he said. Ultimately, the value of the stock market could only reflect the output of the economy.

lastly...

  • He had worked his way back around to the same subject: that one couldn’t extrapolate from the past few years of accelerating stock prices. “Now, is there anyone I haven’t insulted?” He paused. The question was rhetorical; nobody raised a hand.

    “Thank you,” he said, and ended.

    “Praise by name, criticize by category” was Buffett’s rule. The speech was meant to be provocative, not off-putting — for he cared a great deal what they thought of him. He had named no culprits, and he assumed they would get over his jokes. His argument was so powerful, almost unassailable, that he thought even those who didn’t like its message must acknowledge its force. And whatever unease the audience felt was not expressed aloud. He answered questions until the session ended. People began to stand, awarding him an ovation. No matter how they saw it — a masterful exposition on how to think about investing or the last roar of an old lion — the speech was by any standard a tour de force.

    Buffett had stayed on top for forty-four years in a business where five years of good performance was a meaningful accomplishment. Still, as the record lengthened, the question always loomed: When would he falter? Would he declare an end to his reign, or would some seismic shift dethrone him? Now, it seemed to some, the time had come. It may have taken an invention as significant as the personal computer, coupled with a technology as pervasive as the Internet, to topple him, but he’d apparently overlooked information that was freely available and rejected the reality of the approaching millennium. As they muttered a polite “wonderful speech, Warren,” the young lions prowled, restive. And so, even in the ladies’ room at the break, sarcastic remarks were heard from the Silicon Valley wives.

    It was not just that Buffett was wrong, as some felt, but that even if he were eventually proved right — as others suspected he would be — his dour prediction of the investing future contrasted so sharply with Buffett’s own legendary past. For in his early glory days, stocks were cheap, and Buffett had scooped them up in handfuls, almost alone in noticing the golden apples lying untouched on the path. As the years passed, barriers grew up that made it harder to invest, to get an edge, to figure out what others didn’t know. So who was Buffett to preach at them, now that it was their turn?
    Who was he to say that they shouldn’t make money while they could off this wonderful market?

    Throughout the rest of the lazy afternoon, Herbert Allen’s guests played one last game of tennis or golf or headed to the Duck Pond Lawn for a leisurely chat. Buffett spent his afternoon with old friends, who congratulated him on his triumph of a speech. He believed he had done a convincing job of swaying the audience. He had not given a speech full of such commanding evidence simply to go on the record.

    Buffett, who wanted to be liked, had registered the standing ovation, not the mutterings. But the less flattering version was how many were not convinced. They believed that Buffett was rationalizing having missed the technology boom, and they were startled to see him make such specific predictions, prophecies that surely would turn out to be wrong. Beyond his earshot, the rumbling went on: “Good ol’ Warren. He missed the boat. How could he miss the tech boat? He’s a friend of Bill Gates."

    A few miles away at the River Run Lodge later that evening, with the guests at the closing dinner again arranged according to some invisible plan, Herbert Allen finally spoke, thanking various people and reflecting on the week. Then Susie Buffett took the stage beside the windows that overlooked the pebbly Big Wood River and once again sang the old standards. Later the guests returned to the Sun Valley Lodge terrace, where Olympic skaters axeled and arabesqued in the Saturday night ice show.

    By the time fireworks exploded across the sky at evening’s end, Sun Valley ’99 had been declared another glorious five-day extravaganza. Yet what most people would remember was not the rafting or the skaters; it was Buffett’s talk about the stock market — the first forecast he had made in exactly thirty years.

And that was Warren's first forecast which he warned about the insane valuations in the tech stocks and now almost 10 years later he's sending a powerful message that he's putting His Money Where His Mouth Is and buy American Stocks, He Is!

Now here's a differing viewpoint from someone who deserves to he heard and he is J. Kyle Bass.

Say who? Just who is J. Kyle Bass?

Well back in Dec 19th 2007. Published on Bloomberg: Bass Shorted `God I Hope You're Wrong' Wall Street

  • Dec. 19 (Bloomberg) -- J. Kyle Bass, a hedge fund manager from Dallas, strode into a New York conference room in August 2006 to pitch his theory about a looming housing market meltdown to senior executives of a Wall Street investment bank.

    Home prices had been on a five-year tear, rising more than 10 percent annually. Bass conceived a hedge fund that bet on a crash for residential real estate by trading securities based on subprime mortgages to the least credit-worthy borrowers. The investment bank, which Bass declines to identify, owned billions of dollars in mortgage-backed securities.

    ``Interesting presentation,'' Bass says the firm's chief risk officer said into his ear, his arm draped across Bass's shoulders. ``God, I hope you're wrong.''

    Within six months, Bass was right. Delinquencies of home loans made to people with poor credit reached record levels, and prices for the securities backed by these subprime mortgages plunged. The world's biggest financial institutions would write off more than $80 billion in subprime losses, while Bass, his allies and a handful of Wall Street proprietary trading desks racked up billions in profits.

    Bass and investors like him saw opportunity in a range of new investment tools that banks created to sell subprime securities worldwide. These included mortgage bond derivatives, contracts whose values are derived from packages of home loans and are used to hedge risk or for speculation. The vehicles allowed hedge funds like Bass's to bet against particular pools of mortgages. (do read the rest
    here )

Anyway J. Kyle Bass has written a report and you can download it here: here

Here are the first two passages.

  • What’s Next?

    It is the "what’s next" that scares us the most. There is no doubt that many books will be written chronicling the times we are living through today. When we wrote to you in July 2007, we really meant "feet first"! The common denominator of everything that has gone wrong so far has been reckless amounts of leverage. The system both nationally and globally is still trying to de-lever as fast as possible, the problem is that everyone is being forced to do it at the same time. 3-month LIBOR is off the charts - not as many believe, because banks don't trust each other - but because THERE IS NO MONEY LEFT FOR THEM TO LEND TO EACH OTHER. We have argued for years now that there is not enough money at the bottom of the levered pyramid scheme the world has put together. In the U.S. alone, with Lehman, AIG, Bear Stearns, Fannie, Freddie, WaMu, IndyMac, Countrywide, and the rest of the companies that have failed to date (any many more "on deck"), there are $8 TRILLLION of assets already in receivership, conservatorship, liquidation, or "parked" with a big brother. Do you think the Government will be successful in purchasing illiquid assets off of the balance sheets of troubled companies? The odds (and the assets) are against them. Even if the Government invests equity to fill the "hole" that is created upon the sale of these assets, it leaves the same nefarious management teams in place to continue the problem by taking the money and levering it up again. The only way to solve this problem is to go THROUGH IT. We know it isn't politically popular or even popular on Wall St, but the fact is that the U.S. and the world need a Darwinian flush to rebuild our foundations and become even stronger on the backside of this mess.

    $700 Billion is Not Enough

    Let's do some quick math. We realize that there are many moving targets, but we must attempt to put things into perspective for those of you at home. To date, some $550 Billion has been written down by the world's financial institutions. In the United States alone, there is $10 TRILLION of "Prime" mortgage debt, $1.5 TRILLION of Alt-A mortgage debt, and $1.2 TRILLION of Subprime mortgage debt. Based on our assumptions, we believe we will see cumulative losses of AT LEAST 25% in Subprime, 20% in Alt-A, and 5% in Prime. Our expected default rates and severities imply that over $2.2 TRILLION of defaulted mortgage loans would result in AT LEAST $1.1 TRILLION of REAL LOSSES in mortgages IN THE U.S. ALONE. For those of you that want to talk implied roll rates, defaults, and loss severities, just give us a call. We review almost all securitization data each month. Many other countries around the world have actually lent even more aggressively than the U.S. Australia, for example, has lent on home values at 9 times median income! Historically, 3.5X is the number that actually allows borrowers to afford to pay (fathom that). The math for the rest of the world is pretty scary.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Lateline Interview: Dr. Marc Faber Talks About Australia And US.

Transcript of Dr. Marc Faber Interview on Lateline - 13th Oct 2008

  • TONY JONES: Joining us now in Singapore is Dr Marc Faber, the editor and publisher of the Gloom, Boom and Doom report.

    Thanks for being there.

    MARC FABER, EDITOR & PUBLISHER THE GLOOM BOOM & DOOM REPORT: Yes, my pleasure.

    TONY JONES: Market rallies in Australia, in Hong Kong and across Europe today on news of this government backing for bank deposits and direct investment in banks in the European case. There's been great relief all round, but could this be a false dawn?

    MARC FABER: Well, we don't know how deep the economic crisis will be that will follow obviously this financial crisis. It is also assumed that the worst of the financial crisis is over, but that is just an assumption. It could get much worse, sometime in future. As of last week, world stock markets became oversold. Statistically probably the most oversold condition in the last 50 years or so. So rebound is only natural and the markets have a tendency to bottom out in the October November period and then rallying to the spring of the following year. I'd just like to remind you when the market crashed in 1929 ahead of the Depression between November '29 and the summer of 1930 the market rallied 50 per cent before collapsing again by 85 per cent and before having the greatest depression ever. So we don't know for sure, but I would say I'm very sceptical that the governments, especially Mr Gordon Brown who talks about stability and early warning systems, that he has the ability to actually bail out the system. Since he caused most of the problems to start with, and there was an early warning system always in place, namely the early warning system is that when you have bubbles in housing and in equities and in commodities, that something is very clearly wrong.

    TONY JONES: Some of those bubbles are collapsing, but let's look at the bailout package. In Britain, the Government is buying large holdings in some teetering banks, even a majority holding in the Bank of Scotland which is nationalisation, because it will have a controlling interest. These are measures of last resort, the question is, will they work?

    MARC FABER: Normally, governments are not very good at running banks or at running any businesses, especially not the British Government, as we know. We just have to look at public transportation. So I'm very sceptical that it will work very well and we also have to analyse the terms at which these banks are being taken over. Basically, the proper way to go about bailing out the banks is to let the shareholders lose everything at the same time, let the bondholders take a very significant cut and then the Government should come in, recapitalise the banks, nurture them to health and resell them. But to essentially bail out the banks and still let the shareholders get away with it is probably the wrong medicine.

    TONY JONES: You've said recently of some of the largest European banks, the crucial problem is they become too big to fail, but also too big to be saved. Tell us what you mean?

    MARC FABER: Well, I think first of all, in a perfect market you have hundreds and hundreds of competitors and if one competitor fails or goes bankrupt it's not the end of the world, because it's just one of a few hundred. In banking, it has become a business that has become heavily concentrated among a few large players and if one of these large players fails, it goes through the whole food chain of the financial system and like a domino stone that falls down, it hits the next domino stone and so forth and so on. And that is the first problem. The second problem is that in comparison to the GDP of some countries, bank's assets are far larger. And so I think that if these countries bail out the banking system they expose themselves to eventually going bust.

    TONY JONES: Yes, you point to the leverage ratio of some of the giant banks like Deutsche Bank and Barclays. Can you explain to us what you mean by pointing to those leverage ratios, and what are the implications of these incredibly high ratios in those two giant banks?

    MARC FABER: Let's say we are businessmen and we run our businesses and we have equity of 100 and maybe we borrow 50 and then we have a relatively high cushion in carrying our business, even if we have one year's loss or if business turns down. What the banks and investment banks and companies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have done over the years is they have increasesed leverage, and that has been evident through excessive debt growth in the system everywhere in the world, but in particular in the US and in other Anglo Saxon countries. And the end result was that, say, banks they have equity of one and then sates of anywhere between 20 to 50.
    In other words, the cushion of safety, which was the equity was very small when compared to assets. So when assets start to go down, the equity is gone almost overnight.

    TONY JONES: It is incredible. You've said that Barclays has a lending ratio of 60. The Deutsche Bank has a lending ratio of 50, that's $1 of equity to $50 of assets. Now that seems to be way out of kilter with economic rationalality?

    MARC FABER: Well, I think that the problem is how do you manage that kind of a risk? And senior management and the board of directors had no idea. So essentially the banks, what they did is they packaged garbage products and they sold to their clients and thought they were smart because they earnt very big fees. Essentially, they buried themselves and that serves them right.

    TONY JONES: Do you think the Europeans are facing a financial crisis in their banking system, potentially worse than the United States?

    MARC FABER: Could be in some cases. In some cases the banks are more leveraged and national banks or the GDP of these countries, unlike the US, do not support a bailout. I'd like to point out in the US we have now an additional problem coming out. Commercial real estate, and then rising unemployment, rising default rate and globally, we have the credit default swap that is still a time bomb and the whole derivatives market, that is another time bomb. Then in the US, just in the last few days, the following has happened. Last week the S&P the stock market was down something like 18 per cent. But in the past when the stockmarket was down, Government bonds in the US rallied. But in the last couple of days this hasn't happened. The bond market was also weak. Obviously, if the Government bails out the entire system, the credit of the Government diminishes and in my opinion Treasury bonds in the US should already be rated as junk bonds. I'm sure the US Government will eventually go bankrupt. Maybe not tomorrow, but as far as the eye can see, we will have deficits in the US Government, deficits of more than $1 trillion annually.

    TONY JONES: Let me ask you this, Gordon Brown is obviously so concerned that he's now calling for a new Bretton Woods conference. It was, of course, in 1944 and restructured the way in which the economies related to each other financially. Do we need something like that again now? Have we reached the emergency that we had in '44?

    MARC FABER: Well, personally I think that Mr Gordon Brown is totally unacceptable as a politician and also as a business leader and as a, or as essentially a Treasury Secretary. And he contributed meaningfully to the current crisis, as did Mr Bernanke and as did Mr Greenspan by turning their eyes away from the development of the CDS market from the CDO market and not supervising financial institutions sufficiently and printing money and leading to this huge debt growth, in particular in Britain in the household sector. So that these clowns are now supposed to bail us out is a total joke. I think what they should have done is having a conference already 10 years ago and discuss why is it that credit growth is so strong and that we have these asset bubbles that develop in various markets at different times? And at that time, they should have tightened monetary policies and not only targeted core inflation, but also targeted debt growth and money supply growth.

    TONY JONES: You've actually said there is a housing asset bubble in Australia, and also you pointed to the household debt of ordinary Australians as being a huge future problem.

    MARC FABER: For sure.

    TONY JONES: Do you think Australia is going to get swept up to the same degree, or are we insulated?

    MARC FABER: No, I think probably even worse, because don't overlook the fact the US is in very bad shape, but very simply put ... here, I oversimplify, the US doesn't produce anything, it consumes. So if consumption goes down in the US, Okay, Americans become a bit slimmer, that's very good if the obesity rate drops in America and they consume less electronics, they drive around a little bit less, it's not the end of the world. But the translation mechanism goes then into the producers for America. Notably, China and other Asian countries that then have falling industrial production and diminishing exports to the United States. And, therefore, their demand for raw material goes down and so the Asian economies are like a warrant on the US economy. When the US does well they do particularly well, and when the US does badly they're hit very hard and that then goes through to the resource producers, to OPEC, to Russia, to Australia and these countries in my opinion are actually quite vulnerable, especially given the large foreign debt of Australia.

    TONY JONES: We're also already, in fact,
    hearing that some steel mills in China are cutting demand for iron ore. They're actually calling on smaller miners in Australia to actually postpone delivery of orders. Do you think that will spiral, get worse?

    MARC FABER: Yeah, I think so, because if you look at the global synchronised boom 2001 2007 it began in the US and then it led to strong growth in China and as China was growing strongly, the industrial production went up, exports went up and then capital spending went up very substantially. And when capital spending picks up, then obviously the demand for commodities does not only go up because of local consumption and industrial production, but because of the capacity expansion. And when the recession comes the expansion is cut down and that leads to a slump in the demand for commodities. We've seen the Baltic Dry Index collapse, oil prices drop from close to $150 a barrel to around 80. Of course it will hit Australia, and very badly so.

    TONY JONES: You've also pointed, and I'd mentioned this before to the asset bubble in housing prices in Australia. Are we, in this country, do you think, due for a major correction?

    MARC FABER: Yes, I think so, major correction. Because if you look back at Australia we always had booms and busted and they tended actually to be more pronounced than in the United States. So I think we had a colossal boom in home prices and to some extent, also in commercial real estate in shopping malls and so forth and that will go in reverse. It is very difficult to call the bottom, but I think these things take time and if you look at Japan, we peaked out in 1989 on the Nikkei at 39,000. We're now at 9,000 or so. So it can take a very long time and I think this crisis will be a crisis, a milestone in economic history. The way people used to ask, "Are you born before 1929 or after 1929, or before the World War II, or after World War II?" People will ask in future, "Were you born before 2007, or after 2007?"

    TONY JONES: Well Marc Faber, living up to your gloomy reputation there, I'm afraid. We thank you for your reality check, however, and we'll hopefully speak to you again in the short term. Thanks for joining us.

Source: http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2008/s2389900.htm

Warren Buffett Puts His Money Where His Mouth Is

Posted on CNBC: Warren Buffett's NY Times Op-Ed: Buy American. I Am.

  • This is the text of an opinion piece written by Warren Buffett and published in the New York Times on Friday, October 17, 2008

    Buy American. I am.

    By Warren E. Buffett

    The financial world is a mess, both in the United States and abroad. Its problems, moreover, have been leaking into the general economy, and the leaks are now turning into a gusher. In the near term, unemployment will rise, business activity will falter and headlines will continue to be scary.

    So ... I’ve been buying American stocks. This is my personal account I’m talking about, in which I previously owned nothing but United States government bonds. (This description leaves aside my Berkshire Hathaway holdings, which are all committed to philanthropy.) If prices keep looking attractive, my non-Berkshire net worth will soon be 100 percent in United States equities.

    Why?

    A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation’s many sound companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be setting new profit records 5, 10 and 20 years from now.

    Let me be clear on one point: I can’t predict the short-term movements of the stock market. I haven’t the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up. So if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.

    A little history here: During the Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932. Economic conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already advanced 30 percent. Or think back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States in Europe and the Pacific. The market hit bottom in April 1942, well before Allied fortunes turned. Again, in the early 1980s, the time to buy stocks was when inflation raged and the economy was in the tank. In short, bad news is an investor’s best friend. It lets you buy a slice of America’s future at a marked-down price.

    Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.
    You might think it would have been impossible for an investor to lose money during a century marked by such an extraordinary gain. But some investors did. The hapless ones bought stocks only when they felt comfort in doing so and then proceeded to sell when the headlines made them queasy.

    Today people who hold cash equivalents feel comfortable. They shouldn’t. They have opted for a terrible long-term asset, one that pays virtually nothing and is certain to depreciate in value. Indeed, the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts.

    Equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably by a substantial degree. Those investors who cling now to cash are betting they can efficiently time their move away from it later. In waiting for the comfort of good news, they are ignoring Wayne Gretzky’s advice: “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.”

    I don’t like to opine on the stock market, and again I emphasize that I have no idea what the market will do in the short term. Nevertheless, I’ll follow the lead of a restaurant that opened in an empty bank building and then advertised: “Put your mouth where your money was.” Today my money and my mouth both say equities.

Dorab Mistry Reckons That CPO May Have To Fall To MYR1,600 To Boost Demand

Here are some interesting commentary from famed analyst Dorab Mistry

  • Crude palm oil prices may have to fall to around MYR1,600 a metric ton and stay there for a sustained period of time to increase demand and clear surplus stocks, London-based vegetable oil analyst Dorab Mistry said Friday.

    If crude oil is around $80 a barrel, CPO prices will have to fall to MYR1,600/ton to clear excess inventory, Mistry said at an international vegetable oil conference in Nanjing, China.

    Soyoil prices may fall further to maintain market share and avoid a huge stock buildup in South America, he said.

    In line with Mistry's forecast last month, CPO prices fell below MYR2,200/ton, moving in tandem with crude oil, which moved below $80 a barrel.

    Friday, the benchmark January CPO futures contract on Malaysia's derivatives exchange ended MYR16 lower at MYR1,635/ton.

    Mistry said fresh strong demand is unlikely to be created if CPO prices fall to MYR1,600/ton for only a single session and then rebound toward MYR2,000/ton once again.

    He said if crude oil is trading below $80 a barrel, palm oil needs to demonstrate price competitiveness by trading at lower levels.

    Biofuel producers will insist on long-term low and workable prices, Mistry said.

    "For palm oil to capture demand from biofuel producers, prices need to be low for at least eight to 10 weeks," he said.

    Lower CPO prices for one day wouldn't reduce high inventories for a longer period of time.

    Mistry said that by the first half of November, total palm oil stocks in Indonesia and Malaysia may exceed a record 5 million tons.

    He said due to the slowdown in the global economy, growth in demand for vegetable oils may turn out to be slower than current expectations.

    "Consumers will tend to buy hand-to-mouth until the economy turns for the better," said Mistry.

    He said provisional indications are that demand for palm oil for making food may rise by 4.0 million tons in the marketing year to September 2009.

    "But in the course of time, I may revise downward my estimate of expansion of food demand to 3 million tons."

    He said this will depend on whether large, populous countries slip into recession or show only small growth.

    A biodiesel producer will not start operations unless he has locked in supplies for at least one year at low prices, but traders are unwilling to sell large volumes, at current prices, well in advance.

    This is a stumbling block for generation of fresh demand.

    Favorable Weather, High Supply

    Mistry said in the last month, prospects for soybean production in the U.S. and rapeseed in Canada have improved.

    There have also been beneficial rains for soybeans in Argentina and Matto Grosso province in Brazil. Australia is expecting a large rapeseed crop.

    Malaysia's palm oil production is likely to be higher in October.

    In times of economic difficulties, farmers also tend to grow more rather than less of an agricultural crop, he noted.

    He said in the 2007-08 marketing year, incremental supply exceeded incremental demand by almost 1.5 million tons, and the bulk of the surplus was in the second half of the year.

    Mistry said the rate of growth in palm oil output will slow down in 2008-09 and will be mostly in Indonesia, with production likely to be unchanged on year in Malaysia.

    Global palm oil production may rise by 2.5 million tons in 2008-09, compared with incremental output of 4.5 million tons last marketing year.

    But a major rise by 1.6 million tons and 1.2 million tons is likely in global production of sunflower oil and rapeseed oil in 2008-09.

The Snowball: Chapter 1 - The Less Flattering Version

Got my copy of The Snowball: Warren Buffett And The Business of Life

I have read the first few pages of the book and I have to say it out loud that I am totally impressed and I can understand why Warren Buffett has chosen Alice Schroeder to do the massive task of telling his incredible story.

Let me reproduce here just the last few passages of the very short Chapter 1 of the book and you can see how Alice writing style really reflects Warren.

  • He leaps out of his chair to bring home the thought, crossing the room in a couple of strides. Landing on a mustardy-gold brocade armchair, he leans forward, more like a teenager bragging about his first romance than a seventy-two-year-old financier. How to interpret the story, who else to interview, what to write: The book is up to me. He talks at length about human nature and memory’s frailty, then says, ‘Whenever your version is different from somebody else’s, Alice, use the less flattering version.’

    Among the many lessons, some of the best come simply from observing him. Here is the first: Humility disarms.

    In the end, there won’t be too many reasons to choose the less flattering version – but when I do, human nature, not memory’s frailty, is usually why.

John Neff Is Buying Again And Shares What He Buys!

The following news clip was posted on The Philadelphia Inquirer. ( Do note that this is as it is article. I'm not insinuating anything or whatsoever. And do note the comment in big red fonts )

  • Former Vanguard guru is buying stocks
    By Miriam Hill

    Inquirer Staff Writer

    In a small office in West Conshohocken, a legendary stock market bottom feeder has been having a feast.

    John B. Neff, who racked up record gains as manager of Vanguard's Windsor Fund over three decades, is buying stocks again.

    And while the actions of one person may mean little in a multitrillion-dollar market, Neff's renewed romance with stocks signals that, to him, the worst is over.

    As of Friday, he has put cash that he had held on the sidelines for the last year back into the stock market. He retired from Windsor in 1995, after 31 years, so the world no longer watches him. He manages a portfolio for himself and for some small charities.

    But at age 77, he has not tired of what he calls "the ultimate ball game," the stock market.

    About 18 months ago, Neff started to keep more of the stock portion of his portfolio in cash. (He noted that since he left Windsor, he has kept about 30 percent of his portfolio in tax-free municipal funds to preserve wealth.)

    Neff likes bargains, stocks that sell for prices of five or six times their earnings. It is like shopping only when prices are marked down 60 percent or more.

    Few stocks were that cheap last year, so he sold some of his investments to take gains and did not reinvest. For much of the last year, he has had about 15 percent to 20 percent of his stock portfolio in cash.

    It is not that he saw the downturn coming.

    "I wasn't greatly concerned about the level of the market, or I would have had more than 15 percent in cash," he said. "I was just having a tough time finding the kind of stuff I like, with a low P/E [price-to-earnings] ratio and a high dividend yield."

    Like a P/E, a dividend yield, calculated by dividing dividends paid yearly by the stock price, may indicate whether a stock is a bargain.

    So does it mean anything that he has put his cash back in the game?

    "It does," he said. "It says in fact that an awful lot of things are available at a friendly price. It's the kind of market I'd take advantage of."


    He is not completely bullish.

    "There's some real tough sledding out there," he said. He said he believed that the economy might experience a recession but that he thought it would be mild because retailers were marking down prices and consumers would buy.

    And before anyone even considers following his investing lead, he cautions that he "really got killed the last couple of weeks."

    Last year, his portfolio lost about 11 percent, although the overall market was up slightly. But since he left Windsor, he said, he has earned about 19 percent yearly, far better than the overall market. In the 31 years he oversaw Windsor, he beat the Standard & Poor's 500 index 22 times - by about 3.5 percentage points a year.

    As Windsor manager, he was a maverick. (Neff, a lifelong Republican, is supporting John McCain for president.) Conventional investing wisdom says people should diversify, buying many stocks to reduce the risk of losing a lot on one. Neff liked to make big bets - and still does.

    His current portfolio contains about seven stocks. His on-again, off-again love affair with banking giant Citigroup Inc. is on again. He famously bought a big stake in that company for Windsor in the early 1990s when bad loans in real estate and in developing countries pummeled its shares.

    He has been buying Citigroup again, believing that its stellar network of offices around the world will help it thrive when the global economy recovers. Citigroup now accounts for about 13 percent of his portfolio.

    He also likes Seagate Technology Inc., which makes hard-disk drives. Neff said he thought that business would continue to grow as corporations sought computer storage.

    He also likes energy companies ConocoPhillips and Swift Energy Co. and computer-maker Hewlett-Packard Co.

    Several of his positions remain underwater, but he has regained some of that ground in the last two days.

    "Citigroup is up 18 percent today," he said after yesterday's market close. He still has a long way to go. Citigroup shares closed at $18.62 yesterday. He paid about $45 a share for previous Citigroup purchases.

    So he continues to toil, almost as hard as he did when he was managing billions of other people's money. He works about 60 hours a week in the West Conshohocken office offered to him by his friend Paul Miller, a founder of the money management firm Miller, Anderson & Sherrerd that later became part of Morgan Stanley.

    Neff said he remained a product of his youth in the Midwest and in Texas.

    "I'm a combination of Michigan substance and Texas bull," he said. By bull, he said, he means that he has strong opinions and few fears about expressing them.

    His opinions remain strong, but his body has faltered a bit. He has retired from various boards of directors. He tires more easily than he used to and dislikes the harried nature of today's business travel. He says he is occasionally forgetful and confesses to requiring a short midafternoon nap.

    "It's just a little hard to keep up. I still keep up with the marketplace, I think."

Source: here

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Rear View Mirror Time Again

Here's an interesting posting by Kathy again!

  • After the horrid US data released this morning, there are plenty of reasons to believe that the equity markets including the Dow Jones Industrial Average are headed lower. We have argued that the next string of GDP reports will finally reflect the recessionary conditions that Americans are already feeling. However in every battle there are signs of hope. Here is a very interesting chart published by Barclays Capital this morning. They compare the current equity market movements to that of the “Panic of 1907.”

    The similarities are striking. In 1907, the last leg lower in the Dow was the 37% decline that lasted from the second quarter to the fourth quarter. So far this year we have only seen a 34% decline from the August high of 11867 to the October low of 7882. Another 3 percent decline would bring the Dow down to 7475.
Have a look at the charts posted by Kathy..

http://www.kathylien.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/dow1907.jpg

and

http://www.minyanville.com/assets/catalog/products/00KAT-Dow100YrsMV.jpg

Read the rest of her posting here: http://www.kathylien.com/site/uncategorized/djia-does-the-past-offer-hope

Should One Stay Invested?

Published on Business Times: CIMB-Principal: Stay invested


  • Malaysian investors should take a long-term view of between three and five years and take advantage of the current cheap valuations, says CIMB-Principal CEO

    THE global financial crisis may have wiped out trillion dollars worth of assets, but this should not deter local investors from investing in the stock market, said CIMB-Principal Asset Management Bhd chief executive officer Datuk Noripah Kamso.

    She said investors should take a long-term view of between three and five years and take advantage of the current cheap valuations.

    "And when they invest, they must do so through a regular savings plan and do not invest in one lump sum," she said at a media briefing on how to invest in difficult markets in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

    "Stay invested and do not try to time the market," she said, adding that the global recession will pass and market will rebound.

I do not agree too much with what's being said.

At this moment of time, given the business economics of the world, shouldn't the investor have evaluated what he or she has invested in?

Yes?

And what about the stocks purchased?

Are they really good? Or are they what we thought was good?

Well.. if one bought a rotten stock, holding it for another 5 years or even 10 years, the chances are very much that the rotten stock will remain rotten. Yes?

I would also like to repeat the following comments I made the other day. (see To Be Correct! )

  • Yes, isn't this what we are seeing in most investors?

    The clear and precise changes in the business economics could been seen for so long already.

    Yet many chose to be stubborn and delusional and they simply refused to accept the changes. Instead they held on strongly to the believe of long term investing.

    Now do not get me wrong, I am a staunch believer of long term investing too. There is absolutely nothing wrong with the investing theories. However, has one questioned about the application of the theory itself? For example, I am realistic about the LIMITATIONS in our market and I am also aware of the lack of the long term COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE for most of our local business itself and I am also aware of the rather STRONGER CYCLICAL nature of our local business earnings.

    How?

    Just buy and hold, in regardless?

    I would if the company we are talking about is if the same exact quality as a Coke!

    And for sure, there is always a strong chance that tomorrow will always be a better day. Crisis like boom times, they come and they go. One day, the present crisis WILL pass us by and it's simply paramount that we are there to profit from it!

    Oh yeah the truth does hurt so bad, doesn't it?

Admist The Plunging Baltic Dry Index, Dr. Marc Faber Warns That Some Shipping Lines Could Go Bankrupt!

WOW!

Let me say again... WOW!

The Baltic Dry Index has continued to plunge in a rather most dramatic fashion!





As can be seen, the Baltic Dry Index has plunged anoter 10% or 194 points! The Baltic Dry Index is now at 1615 points!

Holy mama cow!

From the UK Guardian: Baltic sea freight index falls to 5-1/2 year low.

Comments made by Nick Collins is most worrying!

  • The index has seen some of the biggest falls in its 23-year history in the last week as the deepening financial crisis and slowing demand in China saps confidence.

    "It's meltdown isn't it...we're close to the bottom, but it probably will go lower," said Nick Collins, director of dry trade at Clarkson PLC ship consultancy in London.

    "It's very serious because it's triggering a lot of defaults in the market and that could have a knock-on effect," he said, without specifying what that would be.

    Collins was referring to charterers who had hired merchant ships for contracted periods of time but were returning them early because there was no longer a commercial incentive to keep them trading.

    "The fear is that this will trigger a number of financial embarrassments, though I don't think that kind of thing is going to bring anybody down at the moment," Collins said.

    Analysts have said that falling ocean freight prices to move goods and resources in the other two main ship sectors, containers to move finished goods, and tankers to deliver oil, point to slowing international trade.

    "These indexes are the evidence that that is true," Collins said.

    Container trade ferrying manufactured goods on some of the world's top export routes, between Asia and the U.S. west coast, and between Asia and Europe, have also been hammered.

    "And that's all because of looming recession in the Western world," Collins said.

    "People have been concentrating on the banks but this is evidence that it (the crisis) is filtering out in the real economy and that trade is collapsing," he said.

    Sea freight prices for dry commodities usually peak in the fourth quarter on utility demand for coal in Asia and the start of the export season for American grains.

    Analysts pin much of the slump on slowing demand for iron ore and coal in China. Stocks are high there, at a time when some of China's largest steelmakers have cut supply because of a slowdown in manufacturing.

    Iron ore and coal demand are major drivers of sea freight prices for dry bulk resources, accounting for about half of the world's trade between them on the dedicated fleet.

And if you think that is bad enough, have a look at the following commentary posted on BusinessMirror.com. Economic slump may push shipping lines into bankruptcy, says investor

And which investor?

Dr. Marc Faber!

  • SINGAPORE—The global economic slowdown will push some shipping lines into bankruptcy as demand for commodities cools and trade slows, investor Marc Faber said.

    “This is an industry that could be hit harder than what has been expected,” Faber, who predicted the 1987 stock-market crash, said in an interview Monday in Singapore. “We are really at the very beginning of an economic slump, and it could last for quite sometime.”

    The Baltic Dry index, a measure of commodities-shipping costs, has plunged 82 percent in the past year as Chinese steelmakers have cut iron-ore imports on slower demand. Container rates have also fallen because US and European consumers are buying less Asian-made furniture, toys and clothes.

    “There has been an acute and significant decrease in near-term demand for shipping capacity,” Jon Windham, Winnie Guo and Yumi Park, analysts at Macquarie Group Ltd., wrote in an October 9 report. “The primary cause is a significant fall off in general demand driven largely by companies’ fears to extend cash.”

    Svithoid Tankers AB, a Swedish shipping line, said Monday that it intends to file for insolvency liquidation after failing to secure new financing.

    Companies worldwide are struggling to secure credit as the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and the wider economic slowdown have caused banks to cut lending because of increased concerns about getting their money back.

    Shipowners will also likely find it more expensive to get funding, according to Faber, managing director of Marc Faber Ltd. and publisher of the “Gloom, Boom & Doom” report. The maritime sector needs about $300 billion over the next three to four years to fund the construction of vessels already on order, according to Nordea Bank Finland Plc., the largest lender to the sector last year.

    The credit crunch may also impact shipping by making it harder for traders to secure letters of credit, the financing notes that are to key to many transactions.

    “The banks don’t trust each other,” Faber said. “Some shipments may be delayed because of fears the letter of credit won’t be accepted by another bank.” -- Bloomberg

Other recent postings made on the Baltic Dry Index:

1. Views On Current Weakness On Baltic Dry Index
2. The Collapse of the Baltic Dry Index
3. Goldman Downgrades Bulk Shippers!
4. Baltic Dry Index Keeps Falling!
5. Baltic Dry Index Stages Strong Rebound!
6. Baltic Dry Index Set For Strong Recovery???
7. Baltic Dry Index Plunges To Seven Month Lows!
8. The Baltic Dry Index Keeps On Plunging!
9. Baltic Dry Index Continues To Plunge
10.The Plunging Baltic Dry Index And The Dangers Of Using Forward PE!
11. Baltic Dry Plunges Below 2000!!!

Hedge Fund Woes

Here's an interesting update on the hedge funds by Charlie Gasparino (one of my favourite presenters on CNBC)

  • Ongoing hedge fund losses and liquidations spooked markets Wednesday, and some of the biggest names in the mix now are Citadel Investments and Highland.

    Hedge funds had their worst month ever in September, with average losses of 6.2 percent, according to an estimate by TrimTabs Investment Research.

    All major categories of funds chalked up losses over the month, but emerging markets, long equity funds and distressed strategies had the worst results. The declines came as investors withdrew $43 billion from hedge funds—almost seven times the previous monthly record for redemptions, TrimTabs said.

    Citadel confirmed to CNBC that its flagship Kensington and Wellington funds, which hold around $15 billion in assets, are down between 26 percent and 30 percent so far this year.

    But Chicago-based Citadel denied rumors that it's having difficulty meeting margin calls and is facing mass redemptions. The firm also denied that it's unwinding any positions.

    Highland, on the other hand, is unwinding positions, according to traders with knowledge of the activity of the big hedge fund company, which has $14 billion under management.

    According to one trader with firsthand knowledge of Highland's activities, Highland is selling big blocks of assets; today, Highland settled on 30 cents on the dollar for $20 million to $30 million in bank loans that the firm only last week was trying to unload for 60 cents on the dollar.

    More tellingly, the trader said, Highland has put out a bid list for $600 million of loans. It's important to note that it isn't clear whether the bid list represents the beginning of a massive unwinding of positions, or just some major selling in order to meet redemptions.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27204824

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Testing for Bottoms..

Here is a test chart for tk..



Do you think this is a bottom?



Well.. this was what happened next!!!



and incrediblely... the stock shot up!



And finally...

Charlie Munger Comments On Current Crisis

Charlie Munger had no kind words for the current mess.

  • Even more radical is Berkshire Hathaway's vice chairman. Munger wants Wall Street balance sheets reduced by 70% and insists that the firms "be a market maker, a broker, an underwriter and a custodian of securities but not the hedge funds they have become." He wants to restrict leverage to 50% on every securities transaction except for the Treasury trading desk where "you're dealing with the safest securities around."

    That 50% margin level, incidentally, is the maximum that ordinary investors can obtain from their broker when they purchase common stock.
    Before their respective demises, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were leveraged to the tune of $30 of debt for every $1 of capital.

    To rid Wall Street of its Las Vegas tone, Munger suggests leveling the options exchanges in Chicago and New York, and banning completely all derivatives contracts, a rather impossible vision but one that's true to his spirit. He's also furious with the accountants, in particular for letting Wachovia report actual profits on accrued interest from risky mortgages when, in fact, the interest wasn't paid but added to the principal amount due on the mortgages.

Source: http://www.forbes.com/2008/10/13/rohatyn-munger-dimon-pf-ii-in_rl_1013croesus_inl.html

Iceland Stock Exchange Plunges Big Time

Totally incredible. Iceland stock exchange has plunged 77 percent when it resumed trading!

YES IT'S 77 PERCENT!

Holy Cow!


The iceman plummets!

Posted on the UK Guardian.

  • Iceland's blue-chip stock exchange plummeted 76% when it resumed trading today.

    Icelandic stockmarkets had been suspended since Thursday. The OMX 15 fell 76% to 716.27 points, while the all-share index dropped 66% to 953.14 points. Six financial stocks — Kaupthing, Landsbanki, Glitnir, Straumur-Burdaras, Reykjavik Savings Bank and Exista — remained suspended.

    Last week Iceland took control of Kaupthing, Landsbanki and Glitnir, a move that brought much of the country's banking sector under state control.

    Britain and Iceland are working together to help the creditors of failed Icelandic banks, which include many British savers, local authorities and charities.

    British retail tycoon Sir Philip Green jetted to Iceland at the weekend to negotiate a deal with the troubled investment group Baugur to buy up to £1bn of its debts. A deal could give him huge influence over Baugur's retail investments, which include Oasis, Karen Millen, Debenhams and Moss Bros.

    Toy shop Hamleys and department store House of Fraser, which are partially owned by Baugur, rushed out statements yesterday stressing their independence.

    In a statement today, Baugur said that, despite media speculation, it had not appointed any advisers. "We continue to monitor the situation in Iceland, where possible maintain a dialogue with the banks and manage and plan our business accordingly," said chief executive Gunnar Sigurdsson. "We have no plans to place our UK business into administration."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/oct/14/iceland-marketturmoil

See also: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article4940623.ece

And Iceland problem is also a problem to Britian!!!!!!!!!

Take the following BBC report!

  • The government has defended its investment advice to councils who deposited £858.3m in Icelandic banks which later failed.

    Communities secretary Hazel Blears said the guidance had been "prudent and sensible" and that none of those affected would "struggle" to pay staff.

    The Local Government Association has demanded an inquiry into the investments made by 116 councils.

    Ministers have revealed universities also have £77m in Icelandic banks.

    'Strong ratings'

    LGA chairman Margaret Eaton said: "This isn't the time for a blame game. This is an unprecedented situation, the extent of which could not have been foreseen.

    "However, at the appropriate moment, there needs to be a full and independent inquiry to find out just how these banks continued to get relatively strong credit ratings until a few days before they went under."

    The government and the LGA have set up a joint "rapid response unit" to provide financial advice to councils affected by the banking crisis.

    Ms Blears said: "The government's first priority has been to do everything we can to help local authorities, along with other creditors, get back the money which they had deposited in the banks."

    But for the Conservatives, shadow communities secretary Eric Pickles said: "There is a difference between light touch regulation and neglect."

    In a ministerial statement, the government revealed that 12 UK universities have total deposits worth £77m in failed Icelandic banks.

    But the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills said the figure should be viewed in the context of annual turnover of £18bn.

    In a separate statement, Cabinet Office Minister Liam Byrne, said charities accounted for "an extremely small fraction" of the total of £56bn invested in Icelandic banks.

    'Complacency'

    Government ministers were warned about the possible collapse of Iceland's banks and the threat to depositors' cash in July, when credit rating agencies downgraded them.

    Lib Dem Treasury spokesman Lord Oakeshott and Tory MP Michael Fallon, deputy chairman of the influential Commons Treasury committee, both raised the issue with ministers.

    But they were told depositors would be protected by law.

    Speaking to BBC News on Friday, Lord Oakeshott accused ministers of "complacency" for apparently ignoring warnings from the City.

    "Alarm bells were ringing all over about the Icelandic banks and the Treasury must have been blind and deaf not to hear them," he said.

    In a statement, the Treasury said it was not the government's role to advise savers and ministers had stressed Iceland had a legal obligation to pay compensation.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7669918.stm


Tuesday, October 14, 2008

These Bailout Are Simply Outrageous Blasts Jim Rogers

Jim Rogers certainly doesn't have any nice words to say on what has happened.

  • We Are Facing an 'Inflation Holocaust': Jim Rogers

    Markets do not trust the governments' plans to keep struggling banks alive and investors will only calm down when the companies with bad assets are allowed to go bankrupt, legendary investor Jim Rogers, CEO of Rogers Holdings, told CNBC on Friday.

    "The way to solve this problem is to let people go bankrupt," Rogers said.
    "Then you will hit bottom and then you start over. The people who are sound will take over the assets from the people who aren't sound and we will start over. This is the way the world has worked for a few thousand years."

    The current rescue plans, which will force governments to issue more debt, print money and flood the markets with liquidity, will flare up inflation after the crisis is over and will create worse problems, Rogers warned.

    "We're setting the stage for when we come out of this of a massive inflation holocaust," he said.

    And the plans are unlikely to fend off a severe economic downturn, as the crisis starts affecting all walks of life.

    "We had the worst excesses we had in credit markets in world history. We're going to have to take some pain," Rogers said.

    "Many people bought 4-5 houses with no money down and no job… you think we'll just say well, that's too bad, we'll start over and nobody loses their job? Be realistic."

    People should not look to the upcoming G7 meeting with the hope that the leaders of the strongest economies will find a solution.

    "What they (G7 leaders) need to do is go down the bar and leave the rest of us alone," Rogers said.

    Economies who did not take part in the subprime bonanza are likely to suffer along with Wall Street and the developed economies as the crisis unfolds, he warned.

    "What about all the people in countries that minded their manners, saved their money, didn't get overextended and now all of a sudden they're being asked to bail out a bunch of guys on Wall Street who were incompetent at best and some of them crooks?"

    "I thought it outrageous that anybody has to step in a bail out a bunch of 29 year olds driving Maseratis,"
    he said.

    There are not many safe havens in the volatile markets, he said.

    "I have an enormous amount of cash and I've been using it to buy more Japanese yen, more Swiss Francs, more agricultural products… there's a liquidation phase going on, where everything is being liquidated. They're selling everything in sight."

    "In a period like this the way you make money coming out of it is to own the things were the fundamentals have not been impaired," Rogers added.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27097823


Baltic Dry Plunges Below 2000!!!

There is simply no respite for the dry bulk shipping index.

Yesterday the dry bulk index plunged a whopping 11% or 245 points to close at 1976!!


However, despite this incredible meltdown, there are folks who are still bullish on this sector!!!!!!!!

Yes, just published on Lyolds: Dry bulk set to rebound next month.

  • DRY freight rates are set to rise from their three-year lows by November according to some of the world’s major ship operators and brokers, but fears remain that the market still has further to fall.

    ICAP Shipping’s quarterly report today forecast a rebound in dry bulk rates by the end of November until early in 2009. Rates would then soften in the second half of 2009 and slide further into 2010.

    Record investment in bulk carrier newbuildings would see fleet growth exceed trade growth between 2009 and 2011, ICAP said.

    Maersk Broker, another leading dry bulk broker, believed rates would recover at during the fourth quarter and that charter levels would be 30% higher than levels seen at the end of September.

    The Baltic Dry Index today reached 1,976 points, an incredible 83% lower than its highest level of 11,793 points seen on May 20. Average panamax rates are now around $12,800 per day -- down from highs of around $90,000 per day five months ago. Capesize rates today hit $21,400, compared to over $230,000 per day in late May.

    “By the latter end of 2010 the kind of rates that we are seeing today, maybe even lower than this, are the rates that you can fully expect to see,” said ICAP Shipping Research managing director James Leake.

    Asked if rates had bottomed out Mr Leake said: “Maybe not yet. The (technical) signals we’re looking at show no sign of any resistance (to lower rates) being met. But the point of resistance could happen when a number of major banks and governments come to some kind of agreement to solve the trade finance issue, and that could suddenly change the landscape.”

    Mr Leake said he remained confident about China’s medium and long term demand for commodities, with shortages of thermal and coking coal in the Indian and Pacific basins increasing long haul shipments.

    Maersk Broker said any recovery “will not be as profound as we had originally expected, nevertheless the market will move towards much higher levels than we see today.”

    Classic Maritime president Jacob Fentz said he expected a market bounce “pretty soon but not back to previous levels”.

    “I think there’s too many problems in the world for that,” he said.

    He said the market meltdown was “overshooting big time on the downside just like it did on the upside.”

    Classic Maritime has about 46 capesize vessels on period charter -- about 5.5% of the global fleet of around 800.

Unlike our local financial press who simply abused journalism by continuing to quote unnamed sources, it's really great to see these industry experts willing to be quoted on their opinions!

So what they saying is that this meltdown has probably overshot big time and a recovery in the index is most likely... however do remember it is quite unlikely that one see the dizzy rates recorded.

If you ask me.. I would probably assume that the BDI index should be around 2500-3000. That's my opinion and yes I am indeed very shocked to see such a collapse in the index! And yes, I do think a rebound is quite likely in the very near future.

Would I buy any shipping stock? My answer is simply no because there are too many unknown variables in this industry right now and I don't think it's wise trying to be a hero just for the sake of trying to be one!

Over on Seeking Alpha the following posting was submitted.

  • Now a report from Naked Capitalism suggests that shipping volumes have seized up because of the financial crisis:

    I spoke to another friend of mine this afternoon, whose father has been in the shipping business forever. Pristine credit rating, rock solid balance sheet.

    He says if he takes his BNP Paribas (BNPQY.PK) letter of credit to Citi (C) today for short term funding for his vessels, they won't give it to him. That means he can't ship goods, which means that within the next 2 weeks, physical shortages of commodities begin to show up
    .

    Readjust growth expectations?

    If this condition of inability to ship because of problems within the inter-bank credit market is widespread, then we have a case of analysts getting fooled by the data. The steps taken by the authorities to ease these conditions could then spark an enormous rally in the markets, in equities and especially in commodities. ( Source:
    here )

Other postings on the Baltic Dry Index:

1. Views On Current Weakness On Baltic Dry Index

2. The Collapse of the Baltic Dry Index

3. Goldman Downgrades Bulk Shippers!

4. Baltic Dry Index Keeps Falling!

5. Baltic Dry Index Stages Strong Rebound!

6. Baltic Dry Index Set For Strong Recovery???

7. Baltic Dry Index Plunges To Seven Month Lows!

8. The Baltic Dry Index Keeps On Plunging!

9. Baltic Dry Index Continues To Plunge

10.The Plunging Baltic Dry Index And The Dangers Of Using Forward PE!

Monday, October 13, 2008

Dr. Marc Faber Says A Global Bust Is Likely To Happen

Here are some lates comments from Dr. Marc Faber.

  • There were also some speakers who thought that the Asian financial crisis in 1997-1998 made many Asian companies become conservative investors and borrowers, but that the United States failed to follow its own prescriptions for Asia, which then had also suffered from too much leveraging in the property market. It was also clear that the subprime-mortgage crisis was brought about by too much liquidity, easy credit and inadequate government regulation.

    A few were brave enough to recommend what sectors to invest in, but cautioned investors to look at valuations on a per-stock basis instead of per country and industry. One fund manger even managed to pick out a few choice stocks in the Philippine market that could offer earnings opportunities once their share prices drop to desired levels.

    Most of the fund managers tried to end the conference on a more hopeful or optimistic note, with some even predicting that the world will probably be in a better place by 2010.

    What really happened?

    Speaking on the subprime-market meltdown, Dr. Marc Faber of the Hong Kong-based Marc Faber Ltd. put the blame squarely on the US Federal Reserve for its loose monetary policy. The Fed had cut its overnight rates from 2001 to 2007, “which led to strong money supply growth and strong credit growth….Seventy percent went to housing real-estate investment. Between 2000-2007 home prices then rose steadily and went way above the trend.” From 6 percent at the beginning of 2001 the Fed funds rate was slashed gradually, finally reaching 1.5 percent this month as the Fed moved to stimulate the sluggish economy.

    Further, Stephen Weiss, senior vice president of Income Research and Management, said the US banks basically didn’t do their homework in checking the credit background of their borrowers, many of whom would probably not meet lending standards under the normal circumstances. The banks then sold the mortgage bonds—which were given high ratings by credit-ratings agencies—despite the low quality of the borrowers.

    “The credit crisis is very serious. The Fed can cut rates and pursue even more expansionary monetary policies. Also, fiscal measures can be expanded further. However, in the current conditions such policy measures will increase the rate of inflation and accelerate the depreciation of the US dollar,” added Faber.

    A $700-billion bailout package was recently approved by the US Congress enabling the Department of Treasury to take over troubled lending institutions. Over the weekend President Bush and G-20 finance ministers resolved to unite to combat the spreading credit crisis.

    “Regardless of policies followed by the US government and its agencies, the consumer is in recession and the recession will deepen.
    Trade and current-account deficits will shrink further and diminish international liquidity. The shrinkage of global liquidity is bad for asset prices, including commodities. Also, deleveraging is occurring among financial intermediaries. This is extremely negative for an economy addicted to credit growth.

    “We had an unprecedented global economic boom. A global bust is likely to happen,” was Faber’s prognosis.

Source: http://businessmirror.com.ph/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=288:opportunities-amid-the-global-crisis&catid=34:perspective

In that same article, it was absolutely great to see the following passage!

  • US didn’t learn from Asian crisis

    During the panel discussion on the “Fixed Income Markets Outlook,” William Thomson, chairman of Private Capital Ltd., a Hong Kong-based wealth management company and adviser to the London-based Axiom hedge-fund group, said the subprime-credit mess in the US “almost mirrors the [Asian financial] crisis in 1997 where greed and crony capitalism and the absent of regulation” were the norm.
    He added that the Americans “forgot their lectures to Asian economies a decade ago,” when the regional economy crashed as the property market burst and currencies collapsed.

    After the Asian financial crisis, it took only four to five years for the region’s economies to recover because its residents have a high savings rate reaching 30 percent to 40 percent of total gross domestic product. (The exception is the Philippines, with a historically low savings rate.)

    So he expressed uncertainty for the outlook for the West because the “OECD [Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development] savings rate is quite low,” with the US in particular, at only 14 percent to 15 percent of its GDP. “That’s only a third of the Asian savings rate so it [the US] has a bigger hill to climb. The recession will not be an easy one to get out of.”

Problems With Letters Of Credit???!!!!

Here is one massive, massive, massive issue pointed out by John Mauldin in his weekly newsletter. Where Do We Go From Here?

  • Letters of Credit: Going, Going Gone?

    Just as the business world is dependent upon commercial paper as its life blood, the world of global trade depends on letters of credit (LOC). Without LOCs, the world of trade quickly freezes up.

    If you are a manufacturer of a product and want to sell to someone outside your borders, you typically require a letter of credit from the buyer before you load any cargo at a port. A letter of credit from a prime bank is considered to be proof of your ability to pay. It not only can be a source of ultimate payment, it can be a source of inventory financing while goods are in transit.

    And if you are a business which is buying a product, you do not want to release money until you know the product is on the way. There are buyer's and seller's agents who make sure these things happen seamlessly, and world commerce had grown because of it.

    Now we are starting to get anecdotal evidence that this extremely vital market is also freezing up. If you think the problems stemming from a meltdown with the commercial paper markets are threatening to the world economy, they are small potatoes when compared to a seizure in the letter of credit markets.

    I had been thinking about this for a few weeks. Then an article posted on Naked Capitalist caught my eye. Quoting:

    "At the end of the day, if every counterparty is bad then you don't have a market and you don't have an economy. I spoke to another friend of mine this afternoon, whose father has been in the shipping business forever. Pristine credit rating, rock solid balance sheet. He says if he takes his BNP Paribas letter of credit to Citi today for short term funding for his vessels, they won't give it to him. That means he can't ship goods, which means that within the next 2 weeks, physical shortages of commodities begin to show up
    . THE CENTRAL BANKS CAN'T LET THAT HAPPEN OR WE HAVE NO ECONOMY, LET ALONE A CREDIT SYSTEM."

    And they quote the following story from The Financial Post of Canada:

    "The credit crisis is spilling over into the grain industry as international buyers find themselves unable to come up with payment, forcing sellers to shoulder often substantial losses.

    "Before cargoes can be loaded at port, buyers typically must produce proof they are good for the money. But more deals are falling through as sellers decide they don't trust the financial institution named in the buyer's letter of credit, analysts said.

    "'There are all kinds of stuff stacked up on docks right now that can't be shipped because people can't get letters of credit,' said Bill Gary, president of Commodity Information Systems in Oklahoma City. 'The problem is not demand, and it's not supply because we have plenty of supply. It's finding anyone who can come up with the credit to buy.'

    "So far the problem is mostly being felt in U.S. and South American ports, but observers say it is only a matter of time before it hits Canada. 'We've got a nightmare in front of us and a lot of people are concerned it's going to get a lot worse,' said Anthony Temple, a grain marketing expert based in Vancouver.

    "Access to credit is key to the survival of maritime trade and insiders now say the supply is being severely restricted. More than 90% of the world's trade by volume goes by ship. 'The credit crisis has made banks nervous and the last thing on their minds is making fresh loans,' Omar Nokta, an analyst at investment bank Dahlman Rose, said in an interview with Reuters.

    "While shipping has always been a cyclical industry whose fortunes rise and fall with the global economy, analysts said the current crisis over the drying up of credit is something they have never seen before."

    If banks are refusing to go into the LIBOR market and lend to each other, then why would they want to take a letter of credit either? At first, it will be a small trickle, which is how the commercial paper meltdown started. Then it will be a flood.

    The one good sector in the US is its export sector. Start slowing that down due to a lack of ability to ship or receive payments and see what happens to an already shrinking economy. If anyone wants to see how the credit crisis can affect Main Street, look no further.

    It is hard to overstate the problem and the potential for it to create a true economic meltdown. It must be dealt with, and soon. See more below.

Source: http://frontlinethoughts.com/article.asp?id=mwo101008

Subscription is required and highly recommended!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Did Tune Air Said It Was Thinking Of Making a GO for Air Asia?

Here's a well written editorial from Errol Oh on Star Bizweek.

  • Saturday October 11, 2008

    When less is best

    BY now, we should be accustomed to AirAsia Bhd notching up the first this and the first that. It’s a company that prides itself on being a pioneer and an innovator. Last week, the low-fare airline yet again did something unprecedented, but it was more of a baffling development than a milestone of distinction.

    In response to a newspaper article on its possible privatisation, AirAsia confirmed on Tuesday that major shareholder Tune Air Sdn Bhd was thinking of taking such a step.

    Apparently without being prompted by the usual query from Bursa Malaysia, AirAsia had verified the report with Tune Air. Not that it was a difficult thing to do. AirAsia’s top two executives, Datuk Seri Tony Fernandes and Datuk Kamarudin Meranun, also control Tune Air.

    The carrier said it had been informed that Tune Air was “continually exploring various options on how best to optimise and expand the operations of (AirAsia), especially in current times, given the volatility of fuel prices, business environment and the financial and capital markets”.

    That’s basically the first half of the announcement. Typically, that’s about all shareholders would openly say about privatisation plans that are still on the drawing board. However, Tune Air had given AirAsia more information, which in turn was made public by the latter.

    Said AirAsia in the Tuesday announcement: “One option being considered by Tune Air is a potential privatisation exercise of AirAsia at an indicative price of about RM1.35 per AirAsia share, which is subject to change depending on the market conditions at the point of decision.

    “This option is still being developed and it must be emphasised that this option is subject to the availability of financing on acceptable terms from financial institutions and other potential investors in these challenging times, as well as conducive market and industry conditions.

    “An appropriate announcement will be made when Tune Air has formed a firm intention to proceed or not.”

    Market watchers agree that AirAsia’s announcement was a first for corporate Malaysia. The singling out of privatisation as a possibility is already a rarity, but the mention of a price has really got people talking. This is not just price-sensitive information €“ it’s price-specific.

    AirAsia can argue that it was merely being transparent when it volunteered these details, but here’s a case when less is best.

    In fact, the airline has not done the investing public any favours by saying too much about Tune Air’s interest in taking it private.

    Few things excite the stock market more than the possibility of a general offer (GO), which normally paves the way for a privatisation. The idea of one very willing buyer agreeing to pay cash for all the shares at a fixed price is potent.

    We are used to hearing rumours about GOs, but it’s another matter when a company that may be privatised, particularly one run by the potential offerors, announces the indicative offer price. It’s practically a statement of intent.

    AirAsia closed on Tuesday at RM1.27. Under ordinary circumstances, the information on the possible privatisation would have almost certainly lifted the share price closer to RM1.35. However, stock exchanges around the world had a miserable time last week and Bursa Malaysia was no exception.

    On Wednesday, AirAsia shed 1 sen and the following day, it lost another sen. The depressed investor sentiments may have thwarted a surge in the counter, but in the minds of some investors, the announcement has established a floor for the share price.

    Sure, the announcement also includes a caveat, but that’s a frail counterweight to the perceived promise of a GO at RM1.35 a piece. Besides, the warning wouldn’t even be necessary if the price was not revealed in the first place.

    Should we view this episode as a misreading of what listed companies should and shouldn’t tell the market?

    Bursa Malaysia’s listing requirements ought to be the first point of reference. Broadly, the corporate disclosure policy says the companies must disclose to the public all material information necessary for informed investing.

    This is broken down into six specific policies, and the one that covers the AirAsia announcement calls for an immediate response, including making due enquiry, to rumours and reports that contain material information.

    The exchange says that if the information is correct, the company must make a statement setting forth the facts. The statement should “include but not be limited to, an indication of the state of negotiations or of corporate plans in the rumoured area”.

    Based on this, it’s enough for AirAsia to report only that Tune Air is considering the option of privatising the airline.

    It’s a stretch to believe that AirAsia would have been in violation of the disclosure policy if it had not mentioned the indicative price for the privatisation.

    In the end, it’s also about taking a commonsensical approach. Do investors and minority shareholders benefit from being told the price, considering that it is a moving target and that it is possible that the exercise may not materialise?
    In fact, it may even lead to investment losses if Tune Air’s plans change.

    For that matter, what was it that compelled Tune Air to provide AirAsia with the price? Tune Air is not bound by Bursa Malaysia’s listing requirements, and it can stand by the reasoning that it ought to withhold the price until it actually makes the GO.

    In addition, by showing its hand prematurely, Tune Air risks having to pay more for the shares.
    Why go down this road?

    It was last Tuesday as well when the Melewar group said it was looking at privatising insurer MAA Holdings Bhd (MAAH). Tunku Datuk Ya’acob Tunku Abdullah was quoted as saying he would “definitely consider doing a voluntary GO for MAAH”.

    He is a substantial shareholder of Melewar Equities (BVI) Ltd and is also MAAH executive chairman. Last month, Melewar Equities launched a GO for oil and gas company M3nergy Bhd.

    Another article quoted Tunku Ya’acob as saying, “Should I do a general offer on MAAH, the answer is yes, I should do a GO on MAAH because it is very cheap (trading) at 60 sen per share with its NTA (net tangible assets) at about RM1.50.”

    Following the news reports, MAAH issued a statement through Bursa Malaysia on Thursday that it couldn’t comment on Tunku Ya’acob’s remarks because he was overseas,

    It added, “The board (of directors) is only able to comment after it has made due enquiries with the major shareholder. Steps are being taken by the board to seek clarification on the statements made by the major shareholder.”

    With our share prices battered by the economic and political uncertainties, it’s again the season for GOs and privatisation exercises.

    It’s also a time for Bursa Malaysia to send out the message that such moves should not be marred by careless statements that may hurt investors.

Source: http://biz.thestar.com.my/bizweek/story.asp?file=/2008/10/11/bizweek/2221997&sec=bizweek

Well said Errol! It's sure is baffling!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Do investors and minority shareholders benefit from being told the price, considering that it is a moving target and that it is possible that the exercise may not materialise? In fact, it may even lead to investment losses if Tune Air’s plans change.

I fully agree with what Errol is saying here.

Well isn't this basically a deal where the left hand (Tune Air) says it was thinking of a plan to take right hand (Air Asia) private!!!!!!!!!!! (Both Air Asia and Tune Air have the same bosses!)

Well... I can think of so many things in my life and I am sure that the janitor downstairs also can. However, most of the time we don't mumble out extremely loud of what we think of.

From a simple business perspective, surely from a Tune Air perspective, there has to be monetary benefit from taking Air Asia private, yes?

Think of it.. if no money can be made from this exercise, why bother then?

Which sane people would want to embark on a corporate exercise that has ZERO monetary value, right?

Yes?

So if Tune Air sees monetary benefit from this GO exercise, why bother with SHOUTING OUT LOUD the GO price? Why? Why? Why?

Does it make any sense?

And with such an exercise, surely many would accuse Air Asia of trying to create an artificial price support for the stock. By naming out the price, aren't they telling in an indirect manner not to thrown this stock, especially so in a plunging global market?

And is Air Asia even worth 1.35? Is it?

Look at their balance sheet.

It has a cash balance of 1.084 Billion but its total debt stands at 5.397 Billion!

And worse still as stated in Air Asia last reported quarterly earnings..

  • The entire borrowings are denominated in US Dollar and Euro. The Company has substantially hedged its foreign exchange exposure through formal foreign exchange contracts

And what's wrong with loans denominated mainly in USD? Well the USD is appreciating against the RM. Which will mean more forex losses for Air Asia. ( For its last reported earnings, Air Asia reported that it lost 76.885 million in forex losses!)

And what's even more mind boggling is that Air Asia has capital commitment of 25.848 Billion to purchase new air crafts!!!!

And how much did Tune Air said GO price was?

Yeah.. thinking about it.

Well.. I can think of so many things.. and I am so very sure that you also can!

And what do you think of..

  • It’s also a time for Bursa Malaysia to send out the message that such moves should not be marred by careless statements that may hurt investors.

And The Crisis Hits The Rich Soccer Owners!

I am huge soccer fan. Hence the following news clip was massive to me!

Published on Bloomberg News.

  • Abramovich, Deripaska, Oligarchs Lose $230 Billion

    By Yuriy Humber, Greg Walters and Maria Kolesnikova

    Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Russian billionaires from aluminum magnate Oleg Deripaska to
    soccer-club owner Roman Abramovich lost more than $230 billion in five months during the nation's worst financial crisis since the 1998 default on its debt.

    The combined wealth of Forbes magazine's 25 richest Russians tumbled 62 percent between May 19 and Oct. 6, based on the equity value of traded companies and analysts' estimates of closely held assets they own. The loss is four times larger than the fortune of the world's wealthiest man, Warren Buffett.

    Moscow's benchmark Micex stock index declined 61 percent since its peak in May. The global credit seizure, war with Georgia and falling commodity prices led foreign investors to pull $74 billion out of Russia since early August, according to BNP Paribas SA. While Russia's 1998 default and devaluation of the ruble eradicated savings for most of the population, this year's losses are wiping out its richest citizens' fortunes.

    ``There was a massive transfer of wealth into the hands of the oligarchs in 1998,'' said Mark Mobius, executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management Ltd., which has about $30 billion in emerging market stocks. ``Now it's going the other way.''

    United Co. Rusal's Deripaska, 40, the richest Russian on the list, lost more than $16 billion and in the past week ceded stakes in Hochtief AG and Magna International Inc.
    Chelsea FC owner and Evraz Group SA shareholder Abramovich, 41, lost $20 billion, based on assets excluding property and cash.

    Lisin's Losses

    The biggest loser has been Vladimir Lisin, 52, an avid hunter and head of Russia's Shooting Club, whose 85 percent stake in OAO Novolipetsk Steel lost $22 billion in value in the period.

    Novolipetsk rival Evraz declined 83 percent, shrinking 49- year-old founder Alexander Ambramov's fortune to $2.2 billion from $13.4 billion. Russia's biggest steelmaker, OAO Severstal, also fell, cutting the wealth of chief executive officer and majority owner Alexei Mordashov, 43, to $5.3 billion.

    ``They should take us all off the Forbes list,'' said Alexander Lebedev, ranked 39th by the magazine in May with $3.1 billion of wealth. Lebedev, 49, who owns 30 percent of state-run airline OAO Aeroflot, said in an interview on Sept. 23 that ``silly'' rhetoric by the Kremlin over the conflict in Georgia was responsible for 40 percent of the stock market's drop in August.

    Lukoil, Alfa

    OAO Lukoil Chief Executive Officer Vagit Alekperov, 58, saw his 20 percent stake in Russia's second-biggest oil producer decline to $7.2 billion from $19.5 billion. The fortune of Alekperov deputy Leonid Fedun, 52, declined to $3 billion from $8.4 billion. Both men have said they will continue to buy more Lukoil shares.

    Dmitry Rybolovlev, 41, who controls OAO Uralkali and owns 20 percent of OAO Silvinit, the country's only potash producers, lost about $12.8 billion, leaving him with $4.1 billion.

    Alfa Group partners Mikhail Fridman, 44, German Khan, 46, and Alexei Kousmichoff, 45, ranked seventh, 10th and 17th, respectively, lost at least a combined $12.1 billion.

    Alfa's shareholdings include BP Plc's Russian oil venture TNK-BP, mobile-phone operators OAO VimpelCom and Turkey's Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS, supermarket chain X5 Retail Group and television broadcaster CTC Media Inc.

    Spokespeople for companies including Deripaska's Basic Element, Evraz, Nikolai Tsvetkov's UralSib Financial Corp. and Rybolovlev's Uralkali declined to comment on the losses.

    Cashing Out

    At least one of Russia's wealthiest got out in time.

    Mikhail Prokhorov, 43, sold his 25 percent stake in OAO GMK Norilsk Nickel to Deripaska's Rusal for an undisclosed amount in April, just before nickel prices began to slump. The value of that stake plummeted from $13 billion on April 24 to $3.38 billion on Oct. 6.

    Prokhorov received $7 billion in cash as part of the Norilsk transaction, the Kommersant and Vedomosti newspapers reported then, citing unidentified people familiar with the deal.
    ``Are you criticizing me for feasting amid the Black Death,'' Prokhorov joked with reporters in Moscow on Sept. 30, after buying half of Renaissance Capital for $500 million. That was less than a quarter of the value the investment bank had a year ago when VTB Group sought to take it over, according to a Vedemosti report. ``Crisis time is a peak for opportunities,'' Prokhorov said. ``An absolute peak.''

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&refer=home&sid=a_xIo0TG12EI

Big, big OUCH for Chelsea!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Friday, October 10, 2008

Where Is The Moola?

And here is the issue. Where is the Moola? LOL! Excuse the pun but the according to Bob Pisani's street talk, the focus now is Where is the Earnings?!!

  • The markets are extremely oversold, but it can't muster a rally. Why not? The Fed is doing everything it can; it will undoubtedly soon start taking direction positions in financial companies, and may even guarantee loans between banks.

    While many are expecting a rally, and some are in fact buying modestly right now,
    there are other problems.

    1) Financials have been hurt by concerns about wider losses (credit card, commercial real estate), and capital raising issues.

    Look what happened to BofA[nd Morgan Stanley after they announced capital raises; look what is happening to Wells Fargoand Prudential and Protective Life now that many believe they will have to raise capital.

    2) But there's a bigger problem: there is no "E" in the P/E.
    In English, there is no Earnings in the Price/Earnings Ratio.

    Look at the estimates now: S&P 500 price is 975; many estimates of earnings for the S&P 500 for 2009 are around $75 for the index.

    Do the math: 975/$75 = 13 x earnings. Now, this is modestly cheap. The historic average is 15 x earnings, so 13 x is a little cheap, but not much.

    Here's the problem: that $75 estimate is baloney. No one has a CLUE what earnings will be. All we know is they keep dropping.

    So the Street is re-jiggering the numbers. Instead of $75 earnings, let's assume, say, $60 earnings. In order to get to a level where the S&P is cheap (13 x earnings), we have to go to 800 on the S&P: 800/$60 = 13.3 x earnings. 800 on the S&P??? Gads, it's at 975 or so now, that's a drop of...another 175 points....1,700 points on the Dow! Sobs and wails.

    See why the Street is in despair? With no visibility on earnings, we can't play the game.


    That's why the banks have to start lending, in order to get a clear indication of what it costs to borrow money. Getting a grip on a company's lending costs are key.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27103775

To Be Correct!

Here's one fantastic blog posting from Dr. Brett: The Need To Be Right Versus The Need To Make Money


  • Over the last few days, I've had the opportunity to talk with everyday investors as well as my usual contacts with prop traders and portfolio managers. One of the distinguishing themes in these talks has been stubbornness versus flexibility: the willingness and ability to maneuver and adapt to changing market conditions versus the need to stick with positions and be proven correct.

    Among the traders, the ones who have done well in the recent market decline are those who have been selective in their risk exposure, riding short-term market moves, limiting overnight headline risk, and shifting positions tactically to adjust to volatile conditions. They have focused on making money--and limiting loss of capital. They've been quick to recognize when they're wrong, at times getting stopped out once, twice, three times before finally riding the anticipated market move.

    The traders who have performed most poorly are those that have been stubborn. They have had strong views of markets and have stuck with those views, even in the face of markets that have moved against them. Convinced that markets are overdue for reversal, they have faced large losses as weakness has led to further weakness. They have been more concerned about being right than making money; they've been reluctant to be stopped out, instead waiting for markets to validate their opinions.

    Interestingly, I'm seeing the same dynamics among individual investors. Some have made proactive adjustments to their portfolios to reduce risk, including reducing exposure to vulnerable investments (financial stocks, preferred shares, high yield bonds); some are also revising their views of the financial future, looking for themes and sectors that will benefit in a changed economic environment (firms that generate cash and are less reliant on borrowing; firms that appeal to consumer value rather than luxury; safe yields among beaten down bonds). Other investors are frozen, immersed in hope that "things will come back". They remind me of the dot-com investors who, stunned by losses of 50% in their holdings, insisted that a bottom was at hand. Sadly, many of these shares declined by more than 75% before we saw a durable market bottom--and many of those companies never survived the decline.

    This is one of the paradoxes of trading and investing: you need distinct views to put your money at risk, and you need to persist with these views in order to ride winners. At the same time, you can't become married to these views; you need to quickly revise and even abandon your outlooks in order to limit losses. We can trade and invest for ego needs, and we can trade and invest to make money: over the long haul, we can't do both. It takes a strong ego to formulate and act upon one's ideas; an even stronger one to step back from those ideas in the face of non-confirmation.

To be correct.. !!!!

Yes, isn't this what we are seeing in most investors?

The clear and precise changes in the business economics could been seen for so long already.

Yet many chose to be stubborn and delusional and they simply refused to accept the changes. Instead they held on strongly to the believe of long term investing.

Now do not get me wrong, I am a staunch believer of long term investing too. There is absolutely nothing wrong with the investing theories. However, has one questioned about the application of the theory itself? For example, I am realistic about the LIMITATIONS in our market and I am also aware of the lack of the long term COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE for most of our local business itself and I am also aware of the rather STRONGER CYCLICAL nature of our local business earnings.

How?

Just buy and hold, in regardless?

I would if the company we are talking about is if the same exact quality as a Coke!

And for sure, there is always a strong chance that tomorrow will always be a better day. Crisis like boom times, they come and they go. One day, the present crisis WILL pass us by and it's simply paramount that we are there to profit from it!

Oh yeah the truth does hurt so bad, doesn't it?

Thursday, October 09, 2008

The Plunging Baltic Dry Index And The Dangers Of Using Forward PE!

And the Baltic Dry Index plunged yet again!



Other postings on the Baltic Dry Index:

1. Views On Current Weakness On Baltic Dry Index
2.
The Collapse of the Baltic Dry Index
3.
Goldman Downgrades Bulk Shippers!
4.
Baltic Dry Index Keeps Falling!
5.
Baltic Dry Index Stages Strong Rebound!
6.
Baltic Dry Index Set For Strong Recovery???
7.
Baltic Dry Index Plunges To Seven Month Lows!
8.
The Baltic Dry Index Keeps On Plunging!
9.
Baltic Dry Index Continues To Plunge

This morning I read a good passage loaded on Seeking Alpha on investing in the baltic dry index. It's a short investing lesson, a rather important investing lesson on using forward PE.

Anyway here is the article.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/99039-never-enough-lessons-on-forward-p-e

Never enough lessons on forward P/E, especially for cyclicals. On Tuesday, dry bulk shipper DryShips (DRYS) hit an all-time low of $21.8, down from a peak of $120, and down from the $64 back when Barron's called the Buy on the stock. Everyone is wrong at times, and being wrong for decent reasons is fine. But in a previous post in April, we outlined that we mostly took issue with Barron's completely missing some of the most important issues with dry bulk commodities transportation stocks such as DRYS, and worst of all arguing for the stock given a very low forward P/E, which was completely ridiculous given that the bulk shipping industry is prone to earnings swings of +/-80% within short, unforeseeable periods of time. The below was our previous excerpt from Barron's:

  • Global trade might slow this year, but it will come back eventually, and DryShips' profits -- and shares -- should move up over the long term, even if 2008 growth turns out to be lower than Wall Street expects. At its recent quote of 64, DryShips stock was trading at a price/earnings ratio of 3.5 times consensus analyst earnings estimates of $18.18 a share this year and about 5 times the $12.22 forecast for 2009. DryShips also trades at a more than 50% discount to its peers, although rivals generally seek long-term contracts, which are less volatile.

And then our following criticism.

  • This article fails to mention that dry bulk spot rates are extremely volatile and forecasting where they will go is subject to massive room for estimation error, even for industry veterans. Thus forward P/E can be very deceptive and is a silly way to look at the companies. Last year Clarksons research surveyed a large collection of readers to forecast where rates would go in 2007 and EVERYONE was wrong by a large margin. (they spiked massively) They can also spike massively downward in the same fashion... If forward earnings ends up being 80% lower, which historically isn't a crazy notion at all if you look at a rate chart, your P/E will be 5x what you thought it was. Thus using forward P/E is pretty silly given its forecast error range is so wide as to be near meaningless.

What Now After World Rates Cut?

World markets had its World CuT ( I actually would prefer calling it World Cup 2008!) last night and of course the main question that a lot of folks want to ask is exactly what Chris Puplava had written in his market wrap, Are We There Yet?

Before we focus on what Chris had written, let's look at some short notes from CNBC's Bob Pisani.


  • What an interesting trading day. Four observations:

    1) Markets rallied midday on
    comments from Mr. Trichet in Europe-he said they would "take appropriate decisions at any time." Traders interpret this to mean that Mr. Trichet is now clearly in the rate cut camp, and to providing "unlimited" liquidity. This is a big turnaround: Trichet turns dovish.

    2) Stock traders are fixed on the bond market, as traders want to believe that today's huge selloff in bonds means that the flight to quality trade is ending.

    This would be a big psychological boost, because stock traders want to believe this is a sign the credit markets might be in the process of unfreezing.

    3) We are so oversold, and there has been so much money lost, that a small but significant minority of professional traders are now LONG the market--they are standing in the bleachers cheering like crazy, because for them it is ALL IN time.

    There is a larger group--half of all traders--sitting on the sidelines waiting for some sign of a tradeable bottom. They do not have it yet, but that minority that is long is trying desperately to get the uncommitted group in.

    4) The most important development is the coordinated global action. First U.S. federal agencies began coordinating activities, then other countries began active intervention, now there is GLOBAL COORDINATION. Consider that we have had, in less than a week:

    --a UK bailout,
    --Fed buying commercial paper,
    --a Spanish TARP,
    --coordinated rate cuts,
    --deposit guarantees in Europe,
    --a banking sector support plan in Russia.


    Merrill Lynch's economist, Alex Patelis, summed it up best: "Unless we are assuming that global policy makers are incompetent, they will sooner or later get it right."

    Source:
    http://www.cnbc.com/id/27088304

Now let's look at what Chris had written.

  • I still maintain that the markets will not bottom until next year and that the current recession we are in will likely not end until the second half of 2009. A brief explanation of these views from last week’s article is given below:

    Market & Economic Snapshot
    So there you have it. Credit markets remain frozen, the Federal Reserve is dropping B-52 dollar bombs (devaluing our currency), household net worth is declining, incomes are falling, and jobs are being lost to the tune of over a half million year-to-date. The economic tanker is clearly in recessionary waters that will not be calming until at least next year. What the Federal Reserve and government do from here will decide the depth and duration of the current recession but make no mistake, an economic recovery will not take place until next year as the economy will not turn on a dime.

    As such, any market bounce produced from reaction to the bailout legislation passing or some other government action will fade as quarterly earnings misses (losses), job losses, rising unemployment, and falling consumption reports come in.
    SELL STRENGTH!

    I have had a very pessimistic tone over the last few months and have likely depressed many readers. The chief reason was to help protect reader’s capital by staying out of the markets and using rallies to exit if one was still invested. Today’s WrapUp will be a bit more balanced as I will show that we are still not at “THE” bottom but rather at or near “A” bottom, as well as show the light at the end of the tunnel. Central banks are now acting in a coordinated fashion by lowering interest rates globally, and the markets crashing over the past two weeks means that we are likely at or near an intermediate-term bottom in the markets. Nothing goes down or up indefinitely as the 2000-2003 bear market showed us with several double-digit counter trend rallies, and we are due for one now as the current sell off is long in the tooth.

    While we are overdue for a corrective bounce we still have not seen the end to the current bear market. Valuations are still not near lows seen in previous bear markets, and historical intermarket timelines and relationships show that a bottom in the markets in the here and now is far too early relative to the state of the economy to be signaling “THE” bottom. Market participants would be looking past a very long and dark valley indeed if this is to be the bottom.

And yes Chri reckons that the current valuations are way too high!

  • Valuations Still Too High
    In a late August WrapUp (
    The Worst is Yet to Come) I showed how analyst estimates for the S&P 500 were far too high and likely to fall significantly as corporate profit margins still remain near historical highs and with analyst accuracy near 16 year lows (Analysts’ Accuracy on U.S. Profits Worst in 16 Years). As such, I have looked at previous bear market bottoms (using 15%+ to define a bear market) and used the trailing price-to-earnings ratio (PE) using the previous twelve months of earnings rather than the leading PE ratio that uses suspect forward analyst earnings estimates......

And yes Chris also believes that US could be in for a 'deeper recession'..

  • Historical Cycles
    Not only do valuations point to a final bottom months out, so too does the historical precedent of the stock market’s bottom in relation to economic variables. I believe the economy is entering deeper into a recession that is not likely to end until next year as multiple economic variables show below. For instance, the year-over-year (YOY) rate of change in nonfarm employment typically peaks 15 months prior to the onset of a recession and bottoms two months AFTER a recession has ended. With the employment YOY rate of change still plunging it is not likely that the recession is to end any time soon.

Chris then continues..

  • If the recession is not likely to end until next year, looking at the relationship between stock market bottoms and recession conclusions will show that it is too soon for a current bottom in the stock market. It is common knowledge that the markets serve as discounting mechanisms and so stock markets typically peak prior to the onset of a recession and bottom prior to a recession’s end. Over the last forty years, the S&P 500 has peaked six months prior to the onset of a recession and bottoms five months prior to a recession’s end. The market has followed the historical average by peaking six months prior to the current unofficial recession that is likely to have started in January of this year.

Ah.. watch for the bear market rallies!!

  • If I am correct that we are near an intermediate bottom in the stock market, and that the stock market is not likely to bottom until the first half of next year, then all is not lost. Bear market counter-trend rallies typically lead to double-digit advances that can allow investors to sell into to regain some of their capital that has been lost over the prior months. Raising cash and sitting tight until next year should allow one to enter into the market at much discounted prices and experience a rally off the conclusion to a bear market, which are typically explosive.

And his advice..

  • Selling into an intermediate corrective bounce should help investors regain some of the capital that has been lost recently. I believe sitting tight until reinvesting in an eventual market bottom next year will go a long way in returning an investor’s capital back to pre 2008 levels, more so if one invests in tomorrow’s best bargains. Going forward, the above mentioned economic indicators that typically herald an end to recessions will be monitored closely. New developments over the course of the remainder of the year will help fine tune my forward estimates for the likely outcome in 2009. Stay tuned.
I've only highlighted some passages written by Chris. Do read the rest of his article in full here

And yes, I very much agree with what's said about Larry Kudlow. Out of all the folks at CNBC, I find him even more repulsive than Cramer! But hey, this is my personal opinion.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Global Rate Cut!!!

Holy Cow!!!!

Central banks cut interest rates

  • Six central banks - including the Bank of England - have cut their interest rates by half a percentage point.

    The UK rate move - which had not been expected until Thursday - puts the interest rate at 4.5% from 5%.

    The US Federal Reserve has cut rates from 2% to 1.5% and the European Central Bank (ECB) trimmed its rate from 4.25% to 3.75%.

    The unprecedented step is aimed at steadying a faltering global economy and slumping stock markets.

    The central banks of Canada and Sweden and Switzerland all took similar action in the co-ordinated move.

    China also cut its rate, but by 0.27 percentage points.

    European financial markets reacted well, pulling back some of the losses seen earlier on Wednesday.

    The last time the Bank of England cut rates in a special meeting was on 18 September 2001 - when rates came down from 5% to 4.75%.

    'Bold and decisive'

    The announcement came hours after the UK government unveiled plans for a £50bn rescue plan for UK banks.

    In the UK, some mortgage lenders immediately passed on the rate cut to borrowers - trimming their variable rates.

    Responding to the interest rate cut, UK manufacturers' group the EEF welcomed the " bold and decisive move" it hoped would "arrest the current crisis and collapse in confidence".

    "Coupled with the plan to shore up the financial system today's co-ordinated moves should help arrest the potential slide into depression," said the EEF's chief economist Steve Radley.

    And analyst Peter Warburton of Economic Perspectives said the rate cut was "fully justified by the depth of the economic crisis that the UK is now facing".

    "It has taken far too long for the government and the Bank of England to recognise the scale of threat posed by the seizing up of the credit system," he said.

    'Strong support'

    The Federal Reserve said that it had acted "in light of evidence pointing to a weakening of economic activity and a reduction in inflationary pressures".

    And the ECB said it had felt able to act because "inflationary pressures have started to moderate in a number of countries, partly reflecting a marked decline in energy and other commodity prices".

    Although it did not cut its own rate - which is just 0.5% - the Bank of Japan expressed its "strong support" of the policy.

And many thanks to this global plunge protection effort.. the markets turned for the better.. for now!

-------------------

Some comments: From CNBC's Bob Pisani

  • After closing at 1029, S&P Futures traded as low as 962 until the early morning, then rallied to as high as 1043 when the coordinated rate cut of half a point was announced, then moved all the way back down.

    Simply put, the S&P futures moved 8 percent in 4 hours. The hope is that burgeoning coffers, and a rare coordinated rate cut will finally get banks lending again.

    While most traders welcomed the cut, there were many who complained about the TIMING. This camp has been waiting--and waiting--for a huge down open on big volume. Never mind that the S&P 500 has dropped 100 points in the past three days--this apparently was not alarming enough for this crowd.

    Today, they thought, was the day it would have happened. If the Fed ONLY WOULD HAVE WAITED UNTIL NOON--after the market opened down big--we could have had a Clean Uncontested Reversal.

    The Fed, to this crowd, has thwarted this, so now we have Yet Another Muddled Short-Term Bottom. They are still waiting for the Big Washout.


Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27082904

Some comments from Kathy

  • We have been literally begging the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England to work together to stem the bleed in equities and they have finally done it (What is the Fed Waiting For? And Panic Selling in FX Begs Coordinated Easing). For the first time since Sept 2001, central banks around the world have delivered a coordinated interest rate cut. Coming 2 days before the G7 meeting and 1 day before the ECB interest rate decision, their move sends a strong message to market that the central banks are holding nothing back in their attempt to unlock the credit markets, stabilize the stock market and stimulate growth.

    Given that the Bank of Japan stood aside, the move is bearish for USD/JPY. However the impact on the Euro and British pound is limited because the interest rate differentials between those currencies and the US dollar remain unchanged. Unprecedented is the buzz word in the financial markets these days and today’s rate cuts were nothing short of that.

    Unfortunately despite an initial rally in stocks, equities have given back all of their gains as investors believe that the actions by the central banks are too little too late. This is undoubtedly the right move for the central banks, but the right time to have made the rate cuts was last Friday after the TARP approval. Stocks continue to sell off because this has not solved the funding issue. The LIBOR - OIS (Overnight Index Swap) rate hit a record high indicating that credit is still tight. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s full percentage point rate cut earlier this week has raised the bar.

    Source: http://www.kathylien.com/site/japanese-yen/coordinated-interest-rate-cuts-too-little-too-late#more-1294


Prem Watsa Explains Why This Will Be A Long And Deep Recession Globally!

Oops.. and yet another dooooooooooooom posting!

Last Friday, I posted the warning from IMF:
Massive Warning From IMF: US Could Head For Deep Recession

On theGlobalAndMail, legendary Canadian Investor, Prem Watsa of Fairfax Financial, states Why this slump will be 'long and deep'

  • A global recession may be near, but the global bear market has already arrived, and my, what teeth it has.

    After yet another Monday horror show - the fourth in a row in which the Dow Jones industrial average dropped at least 300 points - every one of the world's major equity markets has shed at least one-quarter of its value so far in 2008.

    On the bright side, when it's this bad, how much worse could it get?

    Much, much worse, says one of the few investors who has prospered in the meltdown.

    "Stock markets are not down 50 per cent in Canada or the United States from their highs. They've got a long ways to go down before that happens," says Prem Watsa, chairman of Fairfax Financial Holdings.

    Uh-oh.

    "We think there's a significant recession coming, long and deep. It's going to spread all across [the world] ... It's very difficult to not be caught by it."

    Yikes. But surely there are reasons for hope.

    The world's central banks have moved to Defcon 1. There's talk of a co-ordinated cut in interest rates. And don't forget about that $700-billion (U.S.) bailout for bankers.

    "It will be difficult for the Fed to do too much now," with the key lending rate already down to 2 per cent," Mr. Watsa says.

    "This $700-billion all sounds good. But they [the central bankers] have no ammo."

    Considering the source, this is worrisome news. A lot of people will claim they saw the credit fiasco coming, but Mr. Watsa is one of the few who can prove it.

    He can pull out a letter to shareholders that he wrote in 2004, in which he warned about the evils and risks of "bonds that are backed by home equity loans, automobile loans or credit card debt" and hinted that maybe the rating agencies were a tad too eager to give those bonds a triple-A gold star.
    Or he can just point to the Fairfax bank account, flush with the proceeds of a large and highly profitable bet on a financial nuclear winter. Fairfax has turned a $1.65-billion (U.S.) profit from buying and selling credit default swaps - a form of credit insurance, essentially - and was sitting on another $447-million in gains from those investments, as of Sept. 19.

    So, when he speaks of recession and credit catastrophes, it's time to listen.

    Do not expect that a sharp contraction in the economy will purge the toxic debt and bring on a quick recovery, Mr. Watsa says.
    The Great Unwinding is the end of "a 20-year phenomenon of excess optimism ... so I don't think we should expect it [to be over in] six months."

    The bailout, passed last week by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President George W. Bush, may help. But it could prove to be a mixed blessing. As the program begins to buy unwanted mortgage debt from banks, it will establish new (and probably low) market prices for that debt, which means the stuff that remains on financial balance sheets will have to be marked down, too. So expect a new round of writeoffs and pain in the banking system. "It's not easy to solve," he says, "other than [with] time."

    Fairfax remains positioned for worse times to come. Seventy per cent of the company's investment portfolio is cash and government bonds. The parent company has $1.1-billion in cash and securities as of the end of June, but Mr. Watsa has no plans to spend very much of it - not even picking over the remains of insurance rival American International Group, which is being disassembled by the U.S. government, though Fairfax may try to buy some AIG "crumbs."

    This much is certain: He's in no rush to buy stocks. Sure, sometimes a desperate seller comes to Mr. Watsa with an offer that just can't be refused - as an Australian agrifood company just did, selling Fairfax a majority stake in its Canadian subsidiary for less than its balance-sheet value.

    But in the bigger scheme of things, this is no buying opportunity in the equity markets. There's not enough despair yet, little sense of capitulation. When will that day come?
    "You'll know about it when no one here is optimistic, perhaps including us. You'll know when there's no expectation of a turn. We're not seeing that, by the way. Everybody's looking at the point to buy.

    "In September, there were redemptions [of mutual funds], significant redemptions ... But history shows you've got to have months of redemptions. That's an indication that people are losing their confidence and want to be out of the market.

    "You'll see the average pension fund going down to 30 per cent, 40 per cent equity allocation. ...'Stock' will be a bad word. You'll see all that for some time before you have to react."

    And in the meantime? Bolt the doors. Hunker down. Hoard your cash. If you owe, repay your bankers.

    "This is the time to be cautious in your own finances - to get out of debt, to not buy the big car you don't need," says Mr. Watsa.

    "This will pass. But you have to survive it."

Source: here

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

The Blame Game For The Financial Mess

The blame game has started.

The issues pointed out are rather valid in my opinion and if nothing is done, history will repeat itself once more!

Posted on CNN Money.

  • Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government, said the executives received large bonuses that they didn't deserve. He also company officials wined and dined at posh resorts even after the government issued the company a taxpayer-funded billion credit line on Sept. 16.

    In prepared testimony for a committee hearing, ex-CEOs
    Robert Willumstad and Martin Sullivan said the rules forced AIG (AIG, Fortune 500) to take billions in writedowns and led to a downward spiral that led to the government action.

    Waxman put the blame for AIG's troubles squarely on its past and pesent leaders, comparing them to the former Lehman chief executive Richard Fuld, who
    testified on Monday about the investment bank's bankruptcy.

    "In each case, the companies and their executives grew rich by taking on excessive risk," said Waxman. "In each case, the companies collapsed when these risks turned bad. And in each case, their executives are walking away with millions of dollars while taxpayers are stuck with billions of dollars in costs."

    Waxman added, "The AIG CEOs are like the Lehman CEO in one other key respect - in each case, they refuse to accept any blame for what happened to their companies."

    In particular, Waxman singled out AIG's financial products division, headed by Joseph Cassano.

    "This (bailout) was a direct result of the mistakes made by Mr. Cassano," Waxman said. "Yet even today, he remains on the company payroll, receiving $1 million a month."

    Waxman also attacked company leadership for throwing a one-week retreat at the St. Regis Resort in Monarch Beach, Calif. just days after the bailout, at a cost of $440,000.

    "Average Americans are suffering economically. They are losing their jobs, their homes, and their health insurance," said Waxman. "Yet less than one week after the taxpayers rescued AIG, company executives could be found wining and dining at one of the most exclusive resorts in the nation."

    Willumstad, who was CEO from June through the September action by the Federal Reserve, said "mark to market" accounting rules - which require companies to value securities at current prices in distressed situations - forced financial institutions to book billions of dollars in losses for securities that were not in default.

    He said those losses led to a spiral that included debt rating downgrades.

    Sullivan, who was CEO from March 2005 until June, said the accounting rules were key among several factors leading to AIG's problems, saying they had "unintended consequences for financial institutions when markets seize up."

    On Oct. 3, AIG said it had already gone $61 billion into debt to the government, and was selling off parts of the company to pay for it.

    Tuesday's hearing was to be the second by the House Oversight panel to examine what went wrong with the economy.

    The first, on Monday, grilled Fuld, over why his company failed. The committee blamed Fuld and Lehman for being partly responsible for the economic failure that led to the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street.

    But Fuld blamed a "crisis of confidence" that had swept through the financial markets.

    Waxman also hammered Fuld for reaping about $480 million since 2000 at Lehman, while Fuld disputed that tally.

Isn't it simply disgusting to read all these??? Sigh!!!

Source and rest of story: here

Dr. Marc Faber: Short Term Bottom Near?

'Arghhh.... I've been reading way too much dooooooooooooom articles lately! Arghhhhh... '

Well how about a slight change of menu again? The other day I posted an article stating that lengendary investing
Anthony Bolton is saying that Why Now's The Time To Buy.

And guess what Dr. Marc Faber is saying now?

  • The stock market is as oversold as it has been since the crash of 1987 and the broader market could be start to rebound until early next year, Marc Faber, editor and publisher of the Gloom Boom and Doom Report, said Tuesday.

    The market is possibly in "the most oversold condition" since perhaps Oct. 19, 1897, Faber told CNBC's "Squawk Box."

    "Usually there is some seasonal strength between October and March" so it is possible the S&P 500 index will create a low between now and the end of the month, he said.

    But even at 1,000 the S&P is not particularly attractive and investors will still have to grapple with falling earnings through 2009, Faber said.

    "The fact is that earnings next year will continue to disappoint as the global economy is in recession," he said.

    Longer-term investors will have to position themselves in emerging country stock markets to play the global recovery, Faber advised.

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/27063664

What Did Warren Buffett Warn About Back In 2006

Here's an interesting article posted on CNN Money way back in 2006.

Buffett: Real estate slowdown ahead

On the real estate bubble


Buffett: "What we see in our residential brokerage business [HomeServices of America, the nation's second-largest realtor] is a slowdown everyplace, most dramatically in the formerly hottest markets. [Buffett singled out Dade and Broward counties in Florida as an area that has experienced a rise in unsold inventory and a stagnation in price.] The day traders of the Internet moved into trading condos, and that kind a speculation can produce a market that can move in a big way. You can get real discontinuities. We've had a real bubble to some degree. I would be surprised if there aren't some significant downward adjustments, especially in the higher end of the housing market."

On mortgage financing


Munger: "There is a lot of ridiculous credit being extended in the U.S. housing sector."

Buffett: "Dumb lending always has its consequences. It's like a disease that doesn't manifest itself for a few weeks, like an epidemic that doesn't show up until it's too late to stop it. Any developer will build anything he can borrow against.
If you look at the 10Ks that are getting filed [by banks] and compare them just against last year's 10Ks, and look at their balances of 'interest accrued but not paid,' you'll see some very interesting statistics [implying that many homeowners are no longer able to service their current debt]."

Monday, October 06, 2008

Shocking Losses Reported By Kurnia Asia!

Malaysia's largest general insurer Kurnia Asia Bhd reported its earnings tonight.

It was truly shocking!

It had a sales revenue of 318.784 million. However it reported net losses of 303.093 million!

This is what it had to say in its earnings note.

==>

The Group suffered pre-tax loss of RM319.927 million for the quarter, compared to the RM33.800 million loss recorded in the preceding quarter. The drastic fluctuation on the results was mainly due to the underwriting loss of RM323.679 million recorded during the quarter, compared to RM48.024 million in preceding quarter, as a result of the following:

a) Claims expense increased by 119.6% quarter-on-quarter from RM217.721 million to RM478.112 million. Correspondingly, net claims ratio increased from 84.6% to 192.8% between quarters. The increase was mainly due to the efforts in strengthening KIMB’s claims provisioning as explained in note B1.

b) Management expenses increased by 9.4% quarter-on-quarter from RM62.448 million to
RM68.292 million for the current quarter, mainly attributable to the revision of the estimated useful life of computer equipment as explained in note B1.

Other than the major reduction in underwriting performance above, investment and other income declined by 59.9% quarter-on-quarter from RM15.927 million to RM6.383 million, due to the poor showing of Bursa Securities.

As mentioned in note B1, the Group’s results for the quarter under review were also mainly contributed by KIMB. KII’s contribution to the Group’s gross premium and net loss for the quarter amounted to RM9.919 million and RM0.955 million respectively.

==>

How on earth can its claims expenses increase by 119.6% quarter-on-quarter from RM217.721 million to RM478.112 million??????

Totally unreal!

Anthony Bolton : Why Now's The Time To Buy!

Legendary investor, Anthony Bolton reckons that it's time to buy! Why now's the time to buy

  • After all, Mr Bolton is one of the most successful investors alive today.

    He managed the £2.4bn Fidelity Special Situations fund for 28 years, during which time an investment of £1,000 would have grown to £147,000.

    With characteristic modesty, he admitted over lunch this week that he was "a bit early" in turning bearish. When he warned in November, 2006, that the bull market was long in the tooth and share prices seemed unsustainable, the FTSE 100 traded at around 6,000.
    It went on to top 6,600 before beginning the long decline to where we are today.

    More importantly, for an army of investors who follow the "British Buffett", Mr Bolton added that he has been buying shares for the first time in two years because some valuations are the cheapest he has seen in a lifetime.

    Speaking at his offices in the shadow of St Paul's Cathedral – where, incidentally, this multi-faceted man has had his choral compositions performed – he said: "Investors who sell now are making the great mistake of being shaken out when markets are low.

    "They are probably the same people who bought when markets were high. If you are panicky by nature, you should not have invested in shares in the first place.

    "An important part of what responsible fund managers and financial advisers should be doing is hand-holding when the environment looks as uncertain as it does now."

    For those who decide that stock markets are just too shocking for them and are determined to switch into cash, Mr Bolton believes the Government should be bolder in its bid to restore confidence in banks.

    He said: "In the global economy, you cannot really have regulators in different regions doing different things.

    "If the Irish guarantee deposits without limit and Britain does not do so, then the authorities will eventually look back and see that the money has gone elsewhere.

    "I think Britain may be forced to follow the Irish. There is an obvious risk there in terms of the cost to the Exchequer but we may have to do that."

    But this long-term devotee of the cult of the equity continues to assert that the greatest gains will go to those who seize the opportunity to buy share-based funds today. He said: "For the first time in a couple of years, I have started to feel more optimistic and there have been signs of a market low.

    "There has been evidence of final capitulation, with people talking about looking into the abyss and how the whole system could collapse. I have applied the same analysis for 30 years to identify periods of excessive optimism or excessive pessimism and – whether it was 9/11 or when Kuwait got invaded – invested by betting against them. I had not invested in the market for years but I put some money in two weeks ago and put some more in on Tuesday."

    He is not a share tipster and would say no more than that he favoured "Fidelity's global funds" on the basis that "sterling is unlikely to be one of the stronger currencies in the next few years".

    However, he dismisses the idea that emerging markets can decouple from the woes of developed economies – predicting more trouble in Russia, in particular – and adds that the downward correction of the commodities bubble has much further to go: "After what went before, falling for a few months is not enough."

    He is also sceptical about some of the apparently mouth-watering dividend yield forecasts being bandied about:
    "Something that has not been adjusted enough are earnings estimates.

    "I think some are far too high because analysts are often slow to downgrade."

    Of course, Mr Bolton is not infallible - for example, he suffered something of a sticky patch in the three years to 1991 when costly mistakes included Polly Peck, a 1980s go-go stock which eventually went bust.

    Today, he remains cautious about the timing and shape of the recovery ahead.

    He said:
    "Because of the credit overhang, it will be a protracted and slow upturn; I am not looking for a fast recovery. The current bear market started 15 months ago – which is longer than most bear markets have lasted – and the first sectors to suffer were financials and consumer cyclicals – such as retail and media stocks – and I expect these sectors to lead the upturn.

    "The Lloyds TSB takeover of HBOS should go through and will go through. Their share prices today will be seen as anomalies with the benefit of hindsight.

    "But I expect lots more regulation of the financial system, banks in particular, and taxes will have to go up to pay for their rescue."

    He is scathing about some directors' failure to accept responsibility for destroying household name institutions: "Where they have lost a huge amount of value for shareholders, there has got to be a question about whether the management should remain. When the rewards are there for shareholders, we expect directors to be paid well – but when they are not there, we don't expect them to continue to be remunerated in that way."

    Pressed on the specific example of Sir Fred Goodwin, the chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland, who received substantial bonuses after the £47bn takeover of ABN Amro – now regarded by some critics as a deal too far – Mr Bolton said: "Knowing one of the non-executives recently appointed at RBS, I would be surprised if he went there and expected things to remain the same.

    "I agree with Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett's partner, who said that when the ship hits the rocks, the captain loses his job. I think that's a good general principle."

Source of article: here

Do note:

1. He doesn't think highly of emerging countries!

2. He does not think a fast recovery is possible.

3. He expects commodities to go down more!


More Bank Failures??

Not a good thing to read on a Monday Morning.

Posted on MSNBC.com is an article from AP stating that
Bank on it — bank failures will rise next year

  • SAN FRANCISCO - Here's a safe bet for uncertain times: A lot of banks won't survive the next year of upheaval despite the U.S. government's $700 billion plan to restore order to the financial industry.

    The biggest question is how many will perish and how they will be put out of their misery — in outright closures by regulators scrambling to preserve the dwindling deposit insurance fund or in fire sales made under government pressure.

    Enfeebled by huge losses on risky home loans, the banking industry is now on the shakiest ground since the early 1990s, when more than 800 federally insured institutions failed in a three-year period. That was during the clean-up phase of a decade-long savings-and-loan meltdown that wound up costing U.S. taxpayers $170 billion to $205 billion, after adjusting for inflation.

    The government's commitment to spend up to $700 billion buying bad debts from ailing banks is likely to save some institutions that would have otherwise died, but analysts doubt it will be enough to avert a major shakeout.

    "It will help, but it's not going to be the saving grace" because a lot of banks are holding construction loans and other types of deteriorating assets that the government won't take off their books, predicted Stanford Financial analyst Jaret Seiberg.
    He expects more than 100 banks nationwide to fail next year.

    The darkening clouds already have some depositors pondering a question that always seems to crop up in financial panics despite deposit insurance:
    Could it possibly make more sense to stash cash in a mattress than in a bank account?

    "It sounds like a joke," said business owner Mauricoa Quintero as he recently paused outside a Wachovia Bank branch in Miami. "But it sounds safer than the turmoil out there right now."

    Not as many banks are likely to fail as in the S&L crisis, largely because there are about 8,000 fewer today than there were in 1988.

    But that doesn't necessarily mean the problems won't be as costly or as unnerving; banks are much larger than they were 20 years ago, thanks to laws passed in the 1990s.

    "I don't see why things will be that much different this time," said Joseph Mason, an economist who worked for the U.S. Treasury Department in the 1990s and is now a finance professor at Louisiana State University.
    "We just had a big party where people and businesses overborrowed. We had a bubble and now we want to get back to normal. Is it going to be painless? No."

    With more super-sized banks in business, fewer failures could still dump a big bill on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the government agency that insures bank and S&L deposits. The FDIC's potential liability is rising under a provision of the bailout that increases the deposit insurance limit to $250,000 per account, up from $100,000.

    Using statistics from the S&L crisis as a guide, Mason estimates total deposits in banks that fail during the current crisis at $1.1 trillion. After calculating gains from selling deposits and some of the assets of the failed banks, Mason estimates the clean-up this time will cost the FDIC $140 billion to $200 billion.

    The FDIC's fund currently has about $45 billion — a five-year low — but the agency can make up for any shortfalls by borrowing from the U.S. Treasury and eventually repaying the money by raising the premiums that it charges the healthy banks and S&Ls.

    Through the first nine months of the year, 13 banks and S&Ls have been taken over by the FDIC — more than the previous five years combined.

    The FDIC may be underestimating, or least not publicly acknowledging, the trouble ahead. As of June 30, the FDIC had 117 insured banks and S&Ls on its problem list. That represented about 1 percent of the nearly 8,500 institutions insured as of June 30. Entering 1991, about 10 percent of the industry — 1,496 institutions — was on the FDIC's endangered list.

    Although the FDIC doesn't name the institutions it classifies as problems, this year's June 30 list didn't include two huge headaches — Washington Mutual Bank and Wachovia. Combined, WaMu and Wachovia had more than $1 trillion in assets; the assets of the 117 institutions on the FDIC's watch list totaled $78 billion.

Read rest of article http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27036808/

And the problems with banks in Europe isn't too conformting either. Germany Rescues Hypo, Guarantees Savings

  • Germany acted to stem turmoil in its financial sector on Sunday, thrashing out a new rescue for imperiled lender Hypo Real Estate and, in a surprise move, pledging to guarantee private savings accounts.

    After German banks and insurers shocked the government on Saturday by withdrawing support for a government-led 35 billion euro ($48.50 billion) rescue for HRE, Berlin scrambled to hammer out a new deal before markets opened on Monday.

    Under an accord, struck just after 11 p.m. local time,
    the financial sector agreed to provide an extra 15 billion euros ($20.8 billion) in liquidity for HRE on top of the 35 billion they had already committed together with the Bundesbank, the Finance Ministry said.

    "With this commonly forged solution, (Hypo Real Estate) will be stabilized and thereby the German financial marketplace strengthened in difficult times," the ministry said.

    Earlier, the government said it had agreed to guarantee private deposits to help restore confidence amid the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.

    "We say to savers that their deposits are safe," Chancellor Angela Merkel told a news conference in Berlin.

    The move was a surprise because, behind the scenes, German officials had been highly critical of Ireland when it announced a similar move last week.

    The change in approach reflected the fast-moving nature of the crisis, which spread across the Atlantic much quicker than many leaders in Europe had anticipated.

    The Finance Ministry said the guarantee would cover more than 500 billion euros in deposits.

    "This is an important signal so that things calm down and excessive reactions are avoided that would make the current crisis tackling and prevention effort even harder," Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said.
Read rest of cnbc posting http://www.cnbc.com/id/27039285

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Investing Classics: RUMOURS are Contagious!

Here is another investment classic from Wallstraits. ( Sorry I have lost the link)

RUMOURS are Contagious!

There's something really potent about rumours and how they spur people into action. Especially when delivered with minimum information and maximum excitement and conviction, and if you do not allow people to ask questions. Keep the conversation very brief. The trick is to shout something like this,
"Hey, buy this stock NOW NOW NOW! Has to be today - before lunch time. Just do it, okay? Make sure it's before lunch otherwise it'll be too late."

Guess what will happen next? The recipient of the message will be in a panic mode
(Wah! Very hot tip! Quick! Quick! Must buy now!).

Two things will happen right after the Message from the "Prophet": (1) key in your own trade online, or call your broker/remisier and get him to buy at least 10 lots of the stock before lunch; (2) call your husband/boyfried, mom and dad, best friend, and whoever you're really fond of at the moment, and say in a serious conspiratorial tone,
"Hey, GUess what? I've got a hot tip for you. Just go and buy this stock today. Make sure you do it before lunch, okay?"

By this time, your remisier and broker will be feeling extremely uncomfortable, like someone who hears about a big office party and was the only one who did not received an invitation. They'll call their friends who're traders in other brokerage firms, and ask them what's the deal with the stock. Your parents, the proud second-hand recipients of the "hot tip" will be calling their best friends and relatives to buy as well. The reason?
"My daughter/son told me to buy. Don't know the reason. Don't ask so many questions. But very good tip. Must buy before lunch."

The stock moves up 10 cents right after lunch. Everyone is happy. End of the day? The stock price has dropped a dollar! Ouch! Ouch! Ouch!

A flurry of calls will follow, and we can just imagine the conversation: "Aiyo! What kind of hot tip is this? Lousy one lah! I thought you told me it will go up? How come it went down one dollar? I just lost ten thousand in half a day!!!" You call your Prophet frantically and when you get hold of him, and try to get the reason for the stock's non-performance, the answer will probably be,
"I thought ....but they told me..."

Then you wonder, why didn't you ask him who they are, or why he thought it was a great stock and that the price would go up, before you ran out and told everyone you knew to buy the stock. Now, not only is your reputation down the drain, you've lost quite a few friends, plus ten thousand dollars too!

And the moral of the story is...?

1. As much as rumours are thrilling and spice up an otherwise boring day, minimize your indulgence. If you want to follow, don't buy 10 lots. Buy just 1 lot, so if you lose, it will not be that painful a lesson.

2. To sound like a Guru is a great ego-booster, and with everyone salivating at your 'hot tip' like some juicy story about a friend of a friend who did it with a goat. But it could very well backfire - just like malicious gossip!

3. Investing is boring and slow. Like deep sea fishing. But like deep sea fishing, if you're patient and stick with it long enough, you will get a big fish! For people who want to punt and make a quick buck, you could end up with nothing or some little shrimp.

4. Do your own homework. It's easier to listen to someone than think for yourself. But at the end of the day, it's more profitable and you'll get more satisfaction if you exercise independent thinking.

5. Just don't do it. Avoid it like the foot and mouth disease.


~~~~~~

You might be interested in this other posting.

1. Investing Classics: Deadly Sins Commited By Investors

Tim Woods Says It Ain't Gonna Work

The following passages are taken from Tim Woods editorial today on FinancialSense Market Wrap:


By every historical measure the equity markets slipped into a secular bear market in 2000. As a result, we began to see efforts by the powers that be to keep the market afloat. I have stated all along that manipulation will ultimately not work. I have also stated all along that all this will do is make matters worse in the end. Well, I would think that everyone can now see, matters are indeed much worse. Yet, the Fed, the Treasury and the politicians continue to think that they can “fix” the problem by throwing more money at it. They do not understand that they can’t “fix” this economic crisis. They also do not understand that it is their trying to “fix” things in the past that has created the current situation. All markets as well as the economy must both inhale and exhale. They are trying to prevent the exhaling and it ain’t gonna work.

What we are dealing with is the wrath of Kondratieff Winter, which is about the purging of excess credit. Along with that comes deflation and along with that global stock markets enter into extended declines. Real estate declines, economic growth slows, commodities decline, bankruptcies accelerate as the excess credit is purged from the system, the banking system is shaken, the free market is blamed and we move toward national fascist political tendencies. We are now seeing each and every one of these symptoms of K-wave winter. For the record, I did not make up these symptoms to fit the current situation. I have original writings by Nikolai D. Kondratieff and the signs of K-wave winter were quoted from a book by David Knox Barker titled, The K-wave and was published in 1995. Don’t think the powers that be aren’t aware of Kondratieff Winter. They know full well what we are facing and that is why they have tried to hold back its wrath as diligently as they have since 2001.

Now, from a Dow theory perspective, I have been saying that when the averages moved below their August 2007 secondary low points, on November 21, 2007, that under classical Dow theory, a primary bearish trend change occurred. According to William Peter Hamilton, the great Dow theorist of the 1920’s who called the 1929 top, said that when the averages move below their previous secondary low points, the stock market barometer is forecasting stormy conditions. Interestingly enough, most major averages around the world also topped and entered into primary bearish trends in conjunction with this Dow theory primary trend change.

Let’s now move to the Dow theory chart below. When the non-confirmation between the averages occurred in July, many insisted that that non-confirmation was bullish. I even read articles claiming that the primary trend was bullish in accordance to Dow theory. I have maintained that under orthodox Dow theory nothing has changed the primary bearish trend that was confirmed on November 21, 2007 and that the non-confirmation was merely a warning of a possible trend change, but that it was NOT in and of itself bullish. This has since proven correct. This topic was also addressed in the
September 19th WrapUp. There are many that view the Dow theory as some antiquated relic of the past that is no longer relevant. There are others that claim to be Dow theorists, yet they have never read the writings of our Dow theory founding fathers, which again were Charles H. Dow, William Peter Hamilton and Robert Rhea. Anyway, I guess my point here is that the Dow theory first signaled stormy conditions last November and it has proven correct once again. It has also helped me to guide my subscribers through this economic disaster and it is anything but an antiquated relic of the past. If someone says this, then they don’t truly understand Dow theory.

Read rest here: It Ain't Gonna Work

Friday, October 03, 2008

Massive Warning From IMF: US Could Head For Deep Recession.

Makes me chuckle for it was not long that OUR so-called local expert lambasted Warren Buffett for being a lousy economist! ( see past postings Tan Teng Boo Declares Warren Buffett to be a lousy Economist! and Is iCapital Views Consistent? Is Warren Buffett a Lousy Ecomist? )

IMF has now has released a report stating that US could be heading for a deeper recession!

  • OTTAWA -- The U.S. is likely headed for a deep recession, the International Monetary Fund warned Thursday in a report in which it notes that the current banking crisis is the type that's most likely to lead to such a downturn, and suggesting the government's proposed bailout of the banking system is the right course of action.

    "Episodes of financial turmoil characterized by banking sector distress are more likely to be associated with severe and protracted downturns," the world's lender of last resort said in a chapter in its world economic outlook, released in the wake of Wednesday evening's vote by the U.S. Senate supporting the revised $700-billion US bailout but in advance of Friday's second vote on the rescue package by the U.S. House of Representatives.

    "Financial stress is more likely to be followed by an economic downturn when it is preceded by a rapid expansion of credit, a run-up in house prices and heavy borrowing by households and non-financial firms," it said. "The current situation of the United States bears some resemblance to previous episodes of banking-related financial stress episodes that were followed by recessions."

    The report, which looks at past episodes of financial stress and their implications for subsequent economic activity, ranks the current crisis "as one of the most intense for the United States and one of the most widest affecting virtually all countries in the sample."

    "Based on a comparison of the current episode of financial stress to previous episodes, there remains a substantial likelihood of a sharp downturn in the United States," it warned.

    "Not all episodes of financial stress lead to economic slowdowns or recessions," it added, noting that in fact only about half of the episodes of financial market stress were followed by economic slumps.

    "However, when a slowdown or recession is preceded by financial stress, and especially when the stress is concentrated in the banking sector, typically it is substantially more severe than slowdowns or recessions not preceded by financial stress," it said. "In particular, slowdowns or recessions preceded by bank-related stress tend to involve two to three times greater cumulative output losses and tend to endure two to four times as long."

    The odds that a banking-related crisis is followed by a slowdown or recession is associated with the extent to which house prices and outstanding credit have risen prior to the eruption of the crisis, it said. Further, while greater reliance on borrowing by non-financial corporations is associated with a sharper downturn in the aftermath of financial stress, the indebtedness of households is "crucial in determining whether the downturn will turn into a recession."

    However, the relatively strong positions of corporate balance sheets at the onset of the crisis and the aggressive monetary easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve may provide some cushion in the U.S., while the relatively strong balance sheets of European households offer some protection against a sharp downturn there, it added.

    "In the current circumstances, strong actions by policy-makers to deal with the stress and support the restoration of financial system capital seem particularly important," it concluded, adding that of special importance is the restoring the capital bases of core financial intermediaries, including broker-dealers and investment banks to help alleviate economic downturns.

Source: http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=856044

Investing Classics: Deadly Sins Commited By Investors

Here's a great investment article that I would like to share. It was posted a long time ago on Wallstraits - sadly the link is broken. http://school.wallstraits.net/viewmodule.php?c=5&m=12


  • 4 Deadly Sins of Investors

    You've probably heard of the "7 deadly sins"-namely, pride, envy, gluttony, lust, anger, greed and sloth. They are not from biblical reference, contrary to popular belief, but date back to the 12th century when discussed and recorded by Saint Thomas Aquinas. St. Thomas warned that the most deadly aspect of each of the 7 sins was their tendency to lead to the others.

    The same holds true today for the 4 deadly sins of investing. If you find yourself guilty of any one of these sins you are likely to be tempted more easily to commit the other three. The 4 deadly sins are - GREED, FEAR, IMPATIENCE & STUPIDITY.

    GREED is what moves markets. Greed is the most basic element of playing the stock market with a short-term outlook. Greed is the most deadly of all sins. Greed will lead the investor to making rash decisions without careful thought and consideration. Greed will lead an investor to use margin accounts unwisely, looking to maximize their returns with minimum capital. Greed pushes us to buy the hottest stock in the hottest market, just before it crashes back to reality.

    FEAR is the second strongest market mover. Fear makes investors become lemmings, following the latest rumor and trend for fear of being left out or missing a big move. Fear makes us reluctant to chart our own path. We fear going out on a limb to buy stocks we feel are undervalued and out of favor even as we see solid fundamentals under the surface. Fear of loss can even keep us out of the market when we should be in, just as greed keeps us in the market when we should be getting out.

    IMPATIENCE causes us to sell when we should be buying. We are often very talented at carefully searching the stock jungle for fine investment candidates, and even buy them. Then, after six months and another earnings release that is right on target with our expectations, the stock price drops another 10%. We lose patience and purge the shares of a perfectly good company from our portfolio and look to invest where there's more action (greed & fear). Common sense and independent thinking would tell us to add to our holdings if the company has grown with expectations and the price has fallen further as an even larger value has been created-and patiently wait for the market to properly value your gem.

    STUPIDITY is the final sin. It is usually a result of laziness, a close runner up as deadly sin #5. Technical chartists fall into this category. With no scientific proof to validate any methodologies, they continue to invest based on arbitrarily interpreting the shape of historical pricing charts. This illogical stock analysis fails to bother with understanding the underlying fundamentals of a business, the savviness of their management, their business performance track record, their competitive advantages or their business model and future prospects. No, save time, just view the chart.

    So you see, markets have always been and will always be moved by fear and greed, while individual investors are constantly tempted by impatience and stupidity. The investor who can faithfully resist the greed to jump into the hot rumors with borrowed money, deal with the fear associated with independent thought and decision making often against the crowd, be patient with their portfolio companies as long as they meets expectations from a business perspective, and be smart and energetic in their analysis methods-these investors will be without sin, cleansed, purified, holy, sanctified, righteous-and filthy dirty rich enough to afford other sins!

Back in 2006, Michael Dowling wrote an essay called The 7 Deadly Sins of Investors - you can download it via this link here

For me, point 5 or rather sin number 5 was rather important in my view for this is exactly why we see so many investors who likes to remain delusional and not acknowledging what exactly is happening.

  • 5. Knowing best (PRIDE)

    It is a natural human desire to avoid acknowledging mistakes or losing. This translates into poor investment practice when we are not willing to sell stocks they have bought because they have since fallen in price. Investors do this because they don’t want to have to acknowledge to themselves the mistake they made by buying the stock in the first place. We are reluctant to crystallise losses, a condition known in psychology as Loss Aversion. Modern finance has made huge advances in the last 10 years in modelling and understanding this effect. While we still own the stock, we can convince ourselves that it is only temporarily low in price, and that it will rebound in the future. This can be problematic if it leads to our ignoring negative news about a stock. Similarly, we tend to sell stocks too soon after they have risen in price, even if there is more potential good news for that stock on the horizon. We want to be able to acknowledge to ourselves they have made a successful investment by cashing out and taking their profit. To make matters worse, investors tend to view losses as being determined by external and uncontrollable events, and to view gains on investment as being due to their own intelligent actions. Behavioural finance specialists call this self-attribution bias.

    All of this smacks of course of the sin of Pride, an excessive belief in ones own ability. Thus, a lot of investors now view the high prices that stocks achieved in the late 1990s as caused by corporate fraud and deception. By blaming company insiders for the high prices paid for stocks, investors can push the blame for their mistakes onto external factors, and absolve themselves of any fault. However, one main reason for high stock prices in the late 1990s was due to irrational buying on the part of investors. Bitmead shows that the bubble was concentrated in those stocks that were most visible on the internet. Investors, who don’t acknowledge this run the risk of making the same mistake again.

    This kind of emotional involvement on the part of investors can lead to them ignoring important news relevant to their investment’s future performance. The best investors keep emotions out of the investment process, although evidence from psychology indicates that persons who are unable to form any emotional attachments are unable to make decisions, so some emotion is necessary, but tempered by reality. These investors simply view each investment as a right to an income in the future. If the share price is excessively high compared to the potential future income from that investment, they will sell. If the share price is low compared to the potential future income, they may consider purchasing the share. Ineffective investors allow emotions to influence their decisions.