Friday, October 24, 2008
It's Friday, all markets are DOGS and simply goin'...
...........DOWN...
.......................DOWN...
... by Tom Waits, from "Swordfishtrombones" - as not sung by Scarlett Johanssen.
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Thursday, October 23, 2008
Taking a gamble on emerging markets
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While on the subject of gambling, Las Vegas Sands (LVS) is looking a bit Lehman-like. Actually, the 5 year senior Lehman CDS at the point it went poof! topped out at a mere 707pts...
What's a good sign of being a dead man walking... trying to sell a flagship asset, maybe? Like Neuberger Berman... or the Macau Four Seasons, say?
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Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Why nothing's being shipped, and why the fallout will be way way wi-i-i-i-ider than you think
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Tuesday, October 14, 2008
How the government froze my money market
From super-sharp financials guru Bill Stacey of global theme players AviateGlobal in HK:
G7 governments are now trying mightily to fix problems that they largely caused and certainly exacerbated. Consider the following policy measures that systematically, if not intentionally, undermined key markets – eventually feeding into the money market.
- Inconsistent bail outs of banks (bond holders protected in Freddie, Fannie, Wachovia but not WAMU) dries up term debt for banks
- Presence of potential government guarantees stops equity investments without government support
- Uncertainty about TARP and related programmes stopped the emerging market for “toxic” assets and eliminated price discovery
- Offers of deposit guarantees in some countries creates “beggar thy neighbor” responses in all countries to do the same
- Government equity injections to banks and talk of warrants creates massive risk of dilution for existing shareholders in financial institutions and creates panic selling
- Ban on short selling eliminates a pool of liquidity and source of buying support in the financial sector
- Ban on short selling undermines some hedge funds, causes losses and redemptions and creates retrenchment in one of the most active groups of investors. It also undermines the convertible market
- Talk about government support for household mortgages in the US, likely creates a moral hazard that will lead to more defaults, stop the market moving to clearing levels for property and extend the work out in the underlying pressured market
- Guarantees in money market funds divert money that would otherwise have flowed to banks away to securities and creates a shortage of treasury paper as funds seek to exit financial and corporate short term exposure
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Steeper and Narrower
The Man, Julian Robertson (on CNBC w Erin) has been playing the steeper yield curve trade (see y'day), and meanwhile, the TED spread (see right) is narrowing just a leetle bit.
Fresh shorts which held off yesterday seem to be dribbling their way back in today after the inevitable opening surges... and quite a lot of retail investors across the region seem to be saying "phew!thankyouverymuch" and chucking out some very painful names this morning.
And that makes me feel a leetle bit more bullish about this bear rally, too, on top of the thank-goodness-we're-looking-at-a-nasty-recession-not-a-Depression view gaining currency out there.
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"Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job"
"Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job"... from feather duster to rooster in one easy week...
And Nobel Laureate Krugman concurs...!
(UPDATE: Cassandra not quite so positive...)
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Monday, October 13, 2008
Steepening yield curve - impending inflationary holocaust?
From 4:50, he discusses an impending "Inflationary Holocaust"...
(And I especially like the bit about getting the G7 to head down to the bar.)
See my posting from last Friday the Recipe for Banks in Trouble. For what it's worth, I think the G7 DOES, finally -kinda- know what it's doing. (Sooooo... when should we start heading into inflation plays? No hurry, but...)
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Saturday, October 11, 2008
Sell more to squeeze the shorts!!!
"Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. exchanges may seek to impose a temporary ban on short sales for individual stocks that plunge... Under the plan, a stock that ends trading with a loss of at least 20 percent would be protected from short sellers for the following three days, the people said..."
So... hmm... if I am shorting the hell out of a name, even if I only started when it was already down 8-10%, and it starts to get to maybe 15 or 16% down on the day, I would probably slow my short selling right down or even start to cover some or all of the position under this 20%/3day ruling - so yes, that might actually work. Yay! Then my bear-raiding buddies and I can whack it again the next day for another 15-16% and the following day for another 15-16%. Cool.
Oh, wait... But what if I want to squeeze the short sellers that have smacked down a stock I am holding in my portfolio by 15-16%... What would I do? Well, towards the close, I might go and sell the hell out of it to get it to breach the 20% fall for the day limit and then pile in long the next few days to force the shorts to cover under the 3 day ban.
It may not even be a name I already hold - I could short sell just enough to force it through the 20% mark and then cover quickly and pile in long as above.
Of course, I may actually fail to get it down more than 20%, since as a short squeezer trying to drive the stock up, I will be shorting hard into a lot of buying by bears covering their shorts that day so they can drive it down on following days (you following this?) So if I don't get it trading more than 20% down, I can still enjoy the ride, i.e. make money on my short the next day and decide what to do later.
Neat. We need a bit more volatility and uncertainty in this market to keep things interesting.
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Friday, October 10, 2008
Recipe for Banks in Trouble
2. Recap (Temasek, HM Govt, Buffett, MUFG, US Treasury... wherever, whoever) - on the way
3. Force inflation on the economy - coming next, hence steepening, below:
That's basically it.
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From William Pesek of Bloomberg on the "United Socialist States of America" on Sept 22nd:
First, here's a memo that the U.S. Treasury team, of which the New York Federal Reserve president was a member, might have written a decade ago.To: Asian Finance Officials
From: U.S. Treasury
Subject: Worsening Regional Crisis
As economies reel amid instability and as investors flee, it's important that Asian policy makers heed this 10-point plan:
- Raise interest rates to support currencies;
- Cut government spending and debt;
- Don't blame speculators and hedge funds;
- Let property prices slide. It's a correction, not a crash;
- Don't save those who made bad decisions. Moral hazard is bad;
- Increase transparency in the corporate sector;
- Subsidies of any kind are always and everywhere bad;
- Get banks to write down bad loans immediately;
- Avoid blaming the media for your problems;
- Follow the free-market policies that drive U.S. prosperity.
Now for the message emanating from the U.S. Treasury these days:
- Disregard all of the above.
Classic.
(And then there's this one from Sept 19th - "Back in the US... Back in the US...")
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When I'm 64: The Pair Shaped Fund is... UP!
Over that period, The MSCI Far East Free index was down 32.4% and the S&P500 was off 29.8.. annualize those (compounded, roughly) we're looking at down some 80% for both of 'em.
Right now my beta adjusted net position is 3.1% short, with gross exposure of 44%. (Unadjusted that's -0.5% and 56%.) Yes, pretty low gross exposure, but I think managing exposure is, now more than most times, key.
Current live positions:
- Long SNDA, SOHU, PWRD / Short SNDA, NTES
- Long CHU/ Short CHL
- Long KTC / Short SKT, KEP, PKX
- Long SCR / Short CMED
- Long SNP, CEO / Short SHI
- Long UMC / Short TSM
- Long VISN / Short FMCN
- Long LPL / Short AUO
- Long JASO, YGE / Short LDK, STP
- Long INFY, WIT / Short SAY
- Long TLK / Short IIT
- Long LFC / Short HBC
(NB This is NOT the performance and portfolio of my day job fund, which is primarily invested in the live markets in Asia.)
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Friday, October 3, 2008
I'm so old that...
... I remember Barings and James Capel and WICO and BZW and Warburgs and Hoare Govett and Vickers da Costa
... I remember what people do when E F Hutton speaks, and who measures success one investor at a time
... I remember the sound of a stock chart being printed on a dot matrix printer
... I remember the IBM PC-XT (and its super fast 8088 processor) which we shared at work
... I remember searching for "sex" on Altavista
... I remember floppy disks (that really were floppy)
... I remember Bloomberg terminals with big ball keyboards (with Chiclet buttons)
... I once worked for Rowe and Pitman (or was it Rowak?)
... My first boss had been a partner at Phillips and Drew
... I remember Big Eight accounting houses
... I remember when Greed, for want of a better word, was good
... I used to think "who would read research from Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch in Asia?"
... I remember the first time Security Pacific started making Hoare Govett partners very very rich
... I remember that time when the KLSE traded more than the NYSE
... I remember Glass-Steagall
... I remember Pan-El
... I bought Aokam
... I broked to Scudder and Twentieth Century
... I remember horrible toilets on company visits in Shanghai... and holding on until back in your own hotel
... I remember small fish being dried in the sun along Boat Quay in Singapore
... I remember when every bank and broker had at least one junk available for booze cruises in Hong Kong
... I remember when Thailand was going to be the next Malaysia
... I remember Green Island Cement
... I remember ConsPlant
... I remember when Jardine Matheson had stock code 15
... I remember when First Pacific was definitely going to be the next hong
... I remember not being able to buy shares in Korea, Taiwan and India (and China) at all
... I remember Communist China
... I remember bloody coups and protests in Asia
... I remember watching the end of the Vietnam war on TV
... I remember asking somebody what "a hedge fund" was
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------------------------- Disclaimer -------------------------
Good luck!
Hedge Thing