March 2008 Archives

Scott: It's interesting how much daily mark-to-market's effect Iceland's GDP.

 

Do not be alarmed by Icelandic whispers

By Wolfgang Münchau

Published: March 31 2008 03:00 | Last updated: March 31 2008 03:00

Some report elsewhere whatever is told them; the measure of fiction always increases, and each fresh narrator adds something to what he has heard. (Ovid, Metamorphoses) Vicious rumours recently almost drove a British bank off a cliff. Could that happen to a country? Probably not to the US, the UK or Germany. But it could happen to a small country of which most of us know little. In fact, last week it almost did happen to one when Iceland's krona once again came under speculative attack, prompting the country's central bank to raise interest rates by 1.25 percentage points to 15 per cent.

Iceland has been subject to periodic crises, one in February 2006 and another one recently, after Moody's downgraded its sovereign rating from stable to negative. Yet this is the same agency that lifted the ratings of Icelandic banks by several grades to AAA, on the spurious grounds that they enjoy an explicit bail-out guarantee by the central bank.

An important element of the latest speculative attack was a massive rise in credit default swaps of Iceland's largest banks - to more than 1,000 basis points in one case. This means that you pay $1m per year to insure a corporate bond of $10m. If these ratings were even remotely justified, then surely Iceland's banks should be considered as effectively insolvent.

Are they justified? Let us look at some facts. Iceland is a very small country with 300,000 inhabitants and an economy 0.1 per cent the size of the US. But relative to its size, it has a large banking sector, whose assets are about eight times its gross domestic product last year. Iceland's current account deficit peaked at 25.5 per cent of GDP in 2006, but fell back to about 16 per cent last year, according to the latest figures from its central bank. As of the end of 2007, Iceland's net international investment position - a snapshot showing the difference between external financial assets and liabilities - was a negative 125 per cent of GDP, which is very large by international standards. Iceland has had a bigger housing boom than that of the US or Spain. In 2005 alone, according to the latest country report by the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development, Icelandic house prices rose by 30 per cent. Annual inflation stood at 8.7 per cent in March, compared with an inflation target of 2.5 per cent.

So clearly, if your attention span extends to headline figures only, you could easily panic. But there is other evidence that might put those statistics in context. As Professor Richard Portes from the London Business School and Professor Friorik Már Baldursson at Reykjavik University* found out, Iceland's three largest banks - Glitnir, Kaupthing and Landesbanki - are healthy compared with many European counterparts. Two of them do not own any of the toxic mortgage products that have forced write downs at other banks; in the other case the holding is relatively modest. The capital structure of the banks is sound and so is the maturity profile of their debt.

Iceland's real problem is not the financial sector but macroeconomic imbalances. Here theissue is whether these are being corrected. The current account deficit fell significantly in 2007, though it picked up again in the fourth quarter due to falling returns from equity investments.

Profs Portes and Baldursson also argue official accounts probably overstate the size of the current account deficit and the international investment position. Their point is that the Icelandic economy is extremely highly leveraged - and thus very sensitive to valuation conventions. A mindboggling statistic is that the country's net foreign debt was 210 per cent of GDP (mostly private) at the end of 2004, while equity investment abroad was 88 per cent, both among the highest rates in the world. So the country has huge foreign liabilities and foreign assets: how you value them is absolutely crucial for the balance of payments.

On many structural indicators, Iceland is a sound economy. It has a modern and flexible labour force, high employment and no pension problem. But there are structural weaknesses that render monetary policy ineffective. It relies heavily on a state-owned mortgage company to provide mortgages, effectively crowding out the private sector. There is extensive price indexation for savings and other financial contracts, which has contributed significantly to the persistence of inflation. Once inflation rises, it stays high.

But judged on this evidence, the speculative run is hardly justifiable. Of course, this tiny country is susceptible to such attacks. But global investors should ask themselves whether the prospect of a dramatic rise in US inflation or a collapse in UK growth are not more serious and real threats to worry about than a collapse of Iceland's financial sector.

* The Internationalisation of Iceland's Financial Sector, Nov. 2007, www.chamber.is

munchau@eurointelligence.com

Economic Insights  (http://www.dallasfed.org/research/ei/)

Economic Insights presents commentary on people and issues that lie at the heart of a free-market economy.

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With corporate governance all but completely ignored, Japan is certainly not the easiest place to be an activist investment fund.

Skeptical of foreign investment and foreign management, management of Japanese companies have again revamped their corporate defenses against takeovers with renewed cross share-holding and adoptions of poison pills, etc.

In this light, can you think of a worse name to call your activist investment fund than, "Perry Capital", invoking perilous imagery of foreigner raiders and black ships, to pry Japan open once again!?
(Attached is the US Naval historical center's page on Commodore Perry.)

Commodore Perry and the Opening of Japan.pdf

No wonder NEC rejected Perry's bid for 25% of NEC Elec at more than a 150% premium.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perry buys stake and influence in NEC

By Michiyo Nakamoto in Tokyo

Published: March 28 2008 02:00 | Last updated: March 28 2008 02:00

Perry Capital has taken a small stake in NEC, underlining the US investment fund's determination to increase pressure on the struggling Japanese electronics group to improve returns at its semiconductor arm, NEC Electronics.

The stake - less than 5 per cent - will allow the US fund to take its grievances directly to the parent company, which controls more than 70 per cent of NEC Electronics, its listed subsidiary. Perry has a 6 per cent stake in NEC Electronics.

NEC rejected an offer from Perry in July to buy 25 per cent of NEC Electronics for Y154.4bn ($1.5bn), or Y5,000 a share. NEC Electronics'
shares closed yesterday at Y1,950.

The electronics group has refused to meet Perry while NEC Electronics, expecting to report its third year of losses in the year to the end of March, has refused to disclose information regarding its transactions with NEC.

NEC said yesterday: "We do not have any information and therefore cannot comment on Perry's investment".

Perry's move comes as other investors, in an attempt to improve investor returns, have stepped up efforts to engage with the Japanese companies in which they invest.

The Children's Investment Fund, the UK hedge fund, yesterday presented J-Power, the Japanese electricity wholesaler in which it has a 9.9 per cent stake, with a formal business plan aimed at encouraging the company to improve shareholder returns.

The 127-page plan calls on J-Power to fulfill its duty as a listed company "to create corporate value through efficient use of capital, building on reserves, improving employee income and ensuring appropriate returns to their shareholders."

It says J-Power should aim to improve efficiency in assets, capital and management, and provides specific suggestions.

One idea is for J-Power to provide electricity not just to electric power companies but also to other utilities and private companies. "These are sensible, practical business points," said John Ho, TCI director in Asia.

Meanwhile, Steel Partners, the US hedge fund, has continued to voice concerns about the activities of companies it invests in.

The fund recently won a concession from Sapporo, the beer company in which it owns an 18.6 per cent stake, to begin talks about raising its stake to
33.3 per cent.

Efforts by foreign investors to lift investments returns come as the Tokyo stock market has performed dismally, falling 17 per cent since the start of the year.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

 

I find it interesting to see a trading company owning a company that does business in the industry that the former is trading on --- in terms of a potential informational advantage & more fundamental exposure to a bull industry.

However, buying into a bull, and (potentially) divesting in a bear---depending on far the ride goes up---sounds like a great rollercoaster ride to me, and if there are a number of industrial companies willing to provide information on the industry, the informational trading advantage may be limited.

Who knows, as John Duryea commented, the trading company may in fact be the "much more logical, natural owner of the business."

20080328 FT - Ospraie agrees USD 2.1bn deal for ConAgra arm.pdf
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Ospraie agrees $2.1bn deal for ConAgra arm

By Julie MacIntosh in New York

Published: March 28 2008 02:00 | Last updated: March 28 2008 02:00

ConAgra Foods yesterday said it had agreed to sell its commodity trading and distribution business to hedge fund Ospraie for $2.1bn in an effort to focus more on its core packaged food operations.

Ospraie's private equity unit will pay ConAgra $1.6bn in cash and $525m of debt securities for the business, which merchandises and distributes grains and fertiliser, and trades agricultural and energy commodities.

Ospraie, a $9bn hedge fund that focuses on commodities and basic industries, will use the ConAgra Trade Group acquisition to broaden its exposure away from pure commodities trading and into the business of commodity sales and distribution.

The deal, which will also give Ospraie better insight into the market for physical commodities, follows similar moves by hedge funds and investment banks that trade commodities and oil to gain a better ground-level view on those markets.

Goldman Sachs now owns a stake in an oil refinery and a natural gas pipeline in the US, and hedge fund Highbridge Capital bought into the energy business of natural gas marketer Louis Dreyfus last year.

"Having the business within a firm that focuses on commodities is optimal,"
said John Duryea, the portfolio manager of Ospraie's Special Opportunities fund.

"We're the much more logical, natural owner of the business."

The deal will allow Con-Agra to hive off one of the remnants of its once-large commodities operation and reduce its exposure to trading risk.

But it will also eliminate the boost the high-performing business has recently given to ConAgra's profits.

Gary Rodkin, ConAgra chief executive, said the company would use the capital generated by the sale largely to fund share repurchases.

Standard & Poor's raised its view on shares of ConAgra after the announcement, citing less risk to profits as a result of the divestiture.

With food and oil prices near record highs and demand for commodities strong, investors who have poured money into the industry in recent years have minted money.

In the event that commodities pricing does not hold up indefinitely, however, hedge funds with exposure to physical goods and better insight on trends in the market can help offset that hit.

"The volume story is a multi-year story that's not slowing down," Mr Duryea said. "That's what's behind the success of the business - it's less about pricing and more about volume."

Ospraie has secured a $1.5bn credit facility from a group of banks led by JPMorgan as part of the deal, which will help sustain the business once it is cut from ConAgra's financial support.

Once the sale is completed, which the companies expected to occur within 60 days, the ConAgra Trade Group will be renamed Gavilon LLC.

It will remain based in Omaha, Nebraska.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

Here's an interesting one talking about US Dollars and Gold...
Copied/pasted the part that was the most interesting to me.

20080324 FT - FTfm - A time of golden opportunites.pdf

...cut from article...
One of the reasons why the gold price fell and then stagnated for years was that central banks, traditionally the largest holders of gold, were selling off their reserves.
Although some European central banks are still getting rid of gold bars, this is now limited by an agreement which restricts the amount all signatories can sell to 500 tonnes a year.
In contrast to their European peers, central banks in Asia with their huge foreign currency reserves, possess relatively small amounts of gold. Since the bulk of their reserves have been in dollars, they may now start to look at switching a proportion to gold.
"In a global environment where there is an increasing question mark over the status of the dollar, gold is likely to become more attractive [to central banks]," says Giles Conway-Gordon of Cogo Wolf, a California based fund of hedge funds. He cites China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan as countries that all have very low levels of gold in their reserves. "Russia has bought a tonne of gold a month for the last several months, and Qatar is doing the same. The era of the dollar hegemony is over."

FT Special Reports

| 0 Comments

New special reports: http://www.ft.com/reports
Previous reports: http://www.ft.com/reports/index

Here's a couple interesting new special reports...
Management Accountancy
Splitting the annual report raises legal and regulatory issues (PDF)
Gas Industry
The routes to market are becoming contentious (PDF)

 

A couple interesting articles from this special report --- I love the special reports. 

20080319 - FT - Special Report - Investing In Japan.pdf 
A couple of the more interesting articles in the Special Report...

Struggle to sweep away barriers to change
Foreign investment is low compared with other countries, writes Michiyo Nakamoto

Economy: Evidence of an ability to adapt
The line is that things can only get worse. But this is overdone, writes David Pilling

Mergers & acquisitions: A simple reluctance to sell to outsiders
Japan's trailblazing triangular merger may be a one-off, says Louise Lucas

Infrastructure: Public assets are a tough nut to crack
Deregulation is slowly attracting investment, says Jonathan Soble

Recruitment: Headhunters look to beat a talent crunch
Women and new retirees are targets for foreign companies, says Jonathan Soble

Corporate governance has a long way to go
There are encouraging signs that more Japanese public companies are taking notice, writes guest columnist Warren Lichtenstein

FT - Illustration.pdf

We will never have a perfect model of risk By Alan Greenspan
Published: March 17 2008 02:00 | Last updated: March 17 2008 02:00

The current financial crisis in the US is likely to be judged in retrospect as the most wrenching since the end of the second world war. It will end eventually when home prices stabilise and with them the value of equity in homes supporting troubled mortgage securities.

Home price stabilisation will restore much-needed clarity to the marketplace because losses will be realised rather than prospective. The major source of contagion will be removed. Financial institutions will then recapitalise or go out of business. Trust in the solvency of remaining counterparties will be gradually restored and issuance of loans and securities will slowly return to normal. Although inventories of vacant single-family homes - those belonging to builders and investors - have recently peaked, until liquidation of these inventories proceeds in earnest, the level at which home prices will stabilise remains problematic.

The American housing bubble peaked in early 2006, followed by an abrupt and rapid retreat over the past two years. Since summer 2006, hundreds of thousands of homeowners, many forced by foreclosure, have moved out of single-family homes into rental housing, creating an excess of approximately 600,000 vacant, largely investor-owned single-family units for sale.
Homebuilders caught by the market's rapid contraction have involuntarily added an additional 200,000 newly built homes to the "empty-house-for-sale"
market.

Home prices have been receding rapidly under the weight of this inventory overhang. Single-family housing starts have declined by 60 per cent since early 2006, but have only recently fallen below single-family home demand.
Indeed, this sharply lower level of pending housing additions, together with the expected 1m increase in the number of US households this year as well as underlying demand for second homes and replacement homes, together imply a decline in the stock of vacant single-family homes for sale of approximately 400,000 over the course of 2008.

The pace of liquidation is likely to pick up even more as new-home construction falls further. The level of home prices will probably stabilise as soon as the rate of inventory liquidation reaches its maximum, well before the ultimate elimination of inventory excess. That point, however, is still an indeterminate number of months in the future.

The crisis will leave many casualties. Particularly hard hit will be much of today's financial risk-valuation system, significant parts of which failed under stress. Those of us who look to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder equity have to be in a state of shocked disbelief. But I hope that one of the casualties will not be reliance on counterparty surveillance, and more generally financial self-regulation, as the fundamental balance mechanism for global finance.

The problems, at least in the early stages of this crisis, were most pronounced among banks whose regulatory oversight has been elaborate for years. To be sure, the systems of setting bank capital requirements, both economic and regulatory, which have developed over the past two decades will be overhauled substantially in light of recent experience. Indeed, private investors are already demanding larger capital buffers and collateral, and the mavens convened under the auspices of the Bank for International Settlements will surely amend the newly minted Basel II international regulatory accord. Also being questioned, tangentially, are the mathematically elegant economic forecasting models that once again have been unable to anticipate a financial crisis or the onset of recession.

Credit market systems and their degree of leverage and liquidity are rooted in trust in the solvency of counterparties. That trust was badly shaken on August 9 2007 when BNP Paribas revealed large unanticipated losses on US subprime securities. Risk management systems - and the models at their core
- were supposed to guard against outsized losses. How did we go so wrong?

The essential problem is that our models - both risk models and econometric models - as complex as they have become, are still too simple to capture the full array of governing variables that drive global economic reality. A model, of necessity, is an abstraction from the full detail of the real world. In line with the time-honoured observation that diversification lowers risk, computers crunched reams of historical data in quest of negative correlations between prices of tradeable assets; correlations that could help insulate investment portfolios from the broad swings in an economy. When such asset prices, rather than offsetting each other's movements, fell in unison on and following August 9 last year, huge losses across virtually all riskasset classes ensued.

The most credible explanation of why risk management based on state-of-the-art statistical models can perform so poorly is that the underlying data used to estimate a model's structure are drawn generally from both periods of euphoria and periods of fear, that is, from regimes with importantly different dynamics.

The contraction phase of credit and business cycles, driven by fear, have historically been far shorter and far more abrupt than the expansion phase, which is driven by a slow but cumulative build-up of euphoria. Over the past half-century, the American economy was in contraction only one-seventh of the time. But it is the onset of that one-seventh for which risk management must be most prepared. Negative correlations among asset classes, so evident during an expansion, can collapse as all asset prices fall together, undermining the strategy of improving risk/reward trade-offs through diversification.

If we could adequately model each phase of the cycle separately and divine the signals that tell us when the shift in regimes is about to occur, risk management systems would be improved significantly. One difficult problem is that much of the dubious financial-market behaviour that chronically emerges during the expansion phase is the result not of ignorance of badly underpriced risk, but of the concern that unless firms participate in a current euphoria, they will irretrievably lose market share.

Risk management seeks to maximise risk-adjusted rates of return on equity; often, in the process, underused capital is considered "waste". Gone are the days when banks prided themselves on triple-A ratings and sometimes hinted at hidden balance-sheet reserves (often true) that conveyed an aura of invulnerability. Today, or at least prior to August 9 2007, the assets and capital that define triple-A status, or seemed to, entailed too high a competitive cost.

I do not say that the current systems of risk management or econometric forecasting are not in large measure soundly rooted in the real world. The exploration of the benefits of diversification in risk-management models is unquestionably sound and the use of an elaborate macroeconometric model does enforce forecasting discipline. It requires, for example, that saving equal investment, that the marginal propensity to consume be positive, and that inventories be non-negative. These restraints, among others, eliminated most of the distressing inconsistencies of the unsophisticated forecasting world of a half century ago.

But these models do not fully capture what I believe has been, to date, only a peripheral addendum to business-cycle and financial modelling - the innate human responses that result in swings between euphoria and fear that repeat themselves generation after generation with little evidence of a learning curve. Asset-price bubbles build and burst today as they have since the early 18th century, when modern competitive markets evolved. To be sure, we tend to label such behavioural responses as non-rational. But forecasters'
concerns should be not whether human response is rational or irrational, only that it is observable and systematic.

This, to me, is the large missing "explanatory variable" in both risk-management and macroeconometric models. Current practice is to introduce notions of "animal spirits", as John Maynard Keynes put it, through "add factors". That is, we arbitrarily change the outcome of our model's equations. Add-factoring, however, is an implicit recognition that models, as we currently employ them, are structurally deficient; it does not sufficiently address the problem of the missing variable.

We will never be able to anticipate all discontinuities in financial markets. Discontinuities are, of necessity, a surprise. Anticipated events are arbitraged away. But if, as I strongly suspect, periods of euphoria are very difficult to suppress as they build, they will not collapse until the speculative fever breaks on its own. Paradoxically, to the extent risk management succeeds in identifying such episodes, it can prolong and enlarge the period of euphoria. But risk management can never reach perfection. It will eventually fail and a disturbing reality will be laid bare, prompting an unexpected and sharp discontinuous response.

In the current crisis, as in past crises, we can learn much, and policy in the future will be informed by these lessons. But we cannot hope to anticipate the specifics of future crises with any degree of confidence.
Thus it is important, indeed crucial, that any reforms in, and adjustments to, the structure of markets and regulation not inhibit our most reliable and effective safeguards against cumulative economic failure: market flexibility and open competition.

The writer is former chairman of the US Federal Reserve and author of The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

 

20080307 FT - Bond investors are going back to basics with new issuance.pdf

... "In an increasing number of cases CDS is trading significantly wider than cash and people no longer see it as the appropriate benchmark to price bonds. CDS is now seen as the cost of hedging credit, not the cost of credit. It is no longer a benchmark, but a data point."...

Maybe it was always just a data point?

20080303 FT - Making sense of CDS yield curve shapes.pdf

Interesting one about Barcap starting a fund that trades the CDS curve steepness (10y vs 5y) --- interesting in a world that is still many times just talking about plain CDS "levels".

FT REPORT - FUND MANAGEMENT: Making sense of CDS yield curve shapes

By Steve Johnson

Published: Mar 03, 2008

Financial innovation in the credit world has come in for its share of criticism in the past six months, with mouthfuls such as collateralised debt obligations and asset-backed securities playing their role in potentially leading the US into recession.

But this has not deterred Barclays Capital, which has launched an innovative credit strategy it claims as a world first.

The UK bank's Long-Short Credit Steepener Index is a play on the shape of the credit default swap yield curve, as expressed by the iTraxx Crossover index of default insurance on mostly junk-rated debt.

Although a number of credit hedge funds trade the CDS yield curve, Barcap's offering is believed to be the first mechanical, rules-based, low-cost vehicle in this field.

Graham Rennison, director in the quantitative credit strategy team, says although investors are used to trading the shape of interest rate yield curves, for instance selling two-year Treasuries and buying 10 years, such sophistication is not yet widespread in CDS indices.

"We feel that the credit investor base is unused to thinking about the curve shape, it's more a case of thinking about the level of the index, unlike in the rates world," he says. "Our approach has been to look at the curves as alpha opportunities. There is often mispricing because it is observed incorrectly and we will try and exploit that."

The shape of the CDS yield curve is a reflection of the perceived level of default risk at given points in time. The curve is typically upward sloping in benign market conditions, reflecting the fact that default risk may be seen as low in the short term, but greater uncertainty over longer time horizons means bond investors are willing to pay more for protection further out.

However curves can flatten, as with the iTraxx now, or even invert, if market conditions are such that investors believe defaults are as likely, or even more likely, in the short term than in the medium to long-term.

The Long-Short Index is based on a proprietary algorithm that analyses factors such as interest rates and equity market volatility to attempt to determine whether the CDS yield curve is likely to steepen or flatten over the next month. The index will then either buy 10-year exposure and sell five-year, a steepening trade, or buy five-years and sell 10, a flattening trade.

In backtesting from July 2004, Barcap claims it has delivered an annualised return of 4.37 per cent with a Sharpe ratio, a measure of risk-adjusted return, of 1.23. It has been profitable in 88 per cent of months, aided by the fact that it has been in steepener mode, when the strategy earns a positive carry, for most of this period, although it has recommended a flattening trade since last summer.

The iTraxx Crossover is already trading at its flattest ever level since its inception in 2004. However Barcap's own research suggests that had it been in place in 2001, the previous economic cycle's peak year for high-yield debt defaults, it would have inverted by at least 100 basis points, with five-year swaps trading at around 1,000bps and the 10-year around 900bp.

Barcap would not disclose the fees for the index, but says they are "not high".

The product is part of a new family of credit strategy indices unveiled by Barcap. While the Long-Short Index is seen as a means of producing alpha, or excess returns, most of its sister products are plain vanilla beta offerings, merely aiming to crystallise the market returns of, for example, long or short positions in five or 10-year iTraxx spreads and similar positions in the US CDX investment grade CDS index or in spreads on debt issued by financial companies.

Steepener and flattener indices are also available. Jose Mazoy, a member of Barcap's index strategy team, says: "These are very usual trades, but to put them in the form of an index is new."

Barcap believes these beta products will appeal to retail investors, pension funds, asset managers and insurance companies that either cannot make unfunded trades in the CDS market, or prefer not to do so, as well as investors barred from holding naked short positions. It is looking at packaging each of these products, including the Long-Short Index, as Ucits III-compliant exchange traded funds.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008

UBS Chief is a pretty interesting character.

..."The meeting ends with pleasantries all round. Like the perfect Swiss private banker, Mr Ospel accompanies his visitor to the lift. Only on the way down does the realisation dawn that, stripped of small talk, no information of substance has changed hands. For the rock climber striving for grip, Mr Ospel's facade offers no handholds.

 

20080229 FT - Man in the News_ Marcel Ospel (UBS Chief).pdf

"Six leading global investment banks are working with Markit to support the launch of the platform. The banks are: Citi, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Merrill Lynch and UBS."

"The banks will provide Markit with end-of-day and end-of-month client valuations for OTC derivative instruments and cash securities. Markit will aggregate this information and offer clients access to a composite of dealer marks for cash securities and counterparty present values for OTC derivative positions."

An interesting development in the operations side of things. :)

20080201 GIM - Markit Launches Derivatives and Cash Valuations Platform.pdf

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