Peter Drucker chose one new area of study every three years in his life. For the next two years (till Dec 10), this is my focus. (a) Markets (b) Learn French (c) Geography of Russia and Middle East
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Another corporate governance event in India, and this time no body notices
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Looking Back at 2008
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Bubble in Treasuries ..
Satyam's board of directors should resign
Satyam has 9 directors. Of these, my guess is these 5 would be independent directors:
a)
b) Vinod Dham
c) Dr Rammohan Rao - ISB prof
d) T R Prasad - IAS Officer
e) V S Raju - former dean IIT Madras
P.S: In today's ET, the board of directors is defending the decision. They should definitely be taken to court to find out the truth. See Sandeep Parekh's post on their compensation.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Mr. Raju backtracks - Maytas should implode
Fed cuts to 0
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Raju steals $1.6 bn from Satyam - Why corporate fraud is an under estimated risk for Indian equities
What is India's trendline GDP growth rate?
Is there a way to short Ruble?
Monday, December 15, 2008
Notes from Jim Grant's Video
- Ben Graham lost 70% between 1929 and 1932. Still an outperformance as Dow lost 89%, so one can imagine the carnage.
- Graham's partnership went into 1929 crash in a levered position, so got hit.
- Recovered everything by 1936.
- Lost another 50% in 1938.
- So perseverance is key. Debilitating loss is no reason to quit investing. This is why Graham performed better than others - because he didnt leave the markets.
- Rule No 1: Dont lose money. Rule No 2: Dont forget rule no 1.
- Intrinsic value is a very dangerous concept.
- Market is equally disinterested in valuation at top or bottom.
- Graham was not interested in integrating macroeconomics in his security analysis, though he acknowledges that he should have paid attention to the backdrop of 1920's.
- By 1940, Graham advised institutions to invest in bonds yielding 2% and not in stocks - at the end of the second edition of his 750 page book that dealt with security analysis. Even he succumbed to fear.
- Mark-to-market accounting: Very self-serving the protestations of people who are now complaining on mark-to-market. They didnt complain during the upswing. Sachs (of GS fame) in his 1932 senate testimony had this view on mark-to-market accounting: Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation had blown up in 1932. One of its investments was in a company that was later to become General Mills. Mr Sachs and his accountants determined that they can carry the investment at cost price or any price right down to $1. So they took $1. Mr. Sachs, in his testimony, said that intellectually that is the correct price, whatever one believes in the future prospects of the company. (In the book 1929 - the Crash by Galbraith, there is a fascinating description of all the GS Trading Corporation)
- Real estate is almost always illiquid, but Wall Street has almost always made money off it.
- Wall Street is in a very dangerous position right now, political reprisal can be heavy.
- Bailout: Very troubling the way it is being implemented. Administration and treasury believe that there wont be second degree impact of the bailout, without having thought through what they are doing. They are scaring people by comparing it to 1929. Between 1929 and 1932, nominal GDP fell by 50%. Today, nominal GDP is still growing, so situation is vastly different. (This is a very important point. Real GDP growth is a concept based on some statistical calculation of inflation - and there can be hundreds of inflation numbers depending on the statistician. What we can see is nominal GDP, and stocks are priced in nominal terms, not real terms. When HDFC's CEO says that loan growth is 3x real GDP growth, he is wrong, because loan growth depends on nominal GDP growth, not real GDP growth. He is implicity assuming some constant inflation number that he doesn't specify).
- A big source of fear is Wahington saying "Not since 1930's." Cant they say "Not since 1974"?
- In 1974, hundreds of companies were selling below net cash. But there was no crash in credit, unlike today. Dow peaked in 1966, was going down till 1974, and didnt get back to old peak till 1982.
- Federal Reserve founded in 1914, and it took a century to reach $1 trillion balance sheet. In last 3 weeks it's balance sheet has balloneed from $1 trillion to $3 trillion. Inflation not possible today when credit is being destroyed. But who knows what happens tomorrow. Dollar is uncollateralized. Paper without any real value.
- Before WWI, gold standard. Then gold exchange standard. After WWII, Bretton Wodds. After 1971, dollar was free of gold. For past 37 years, dollar has been the reserve currency. Never before there has been so long a run of paper money without an inflation crash. So the system has actually worked for quite a long time.
- Paradox of dollar strength. Unpredictable consequence of dollar strength might be that people lose faith in all currencies - nothing is collateralized. Euro is a confederation of states. Ireland is having its difficulties. What if Spain, Portugal, France, Germany find the monetary regime too restrictive and decide to go on its own way. Since 1971, currencies haven't been collateralized, and the world doesn't mind. But the world didn't mind CDO for a long time, now it does.
- Private equity has devalued the "Your word is your bond" creed of Wall Street by walking out of so many deals. Hedge funds have been much better.
- One of the unintended consequences could be - a new wave of entreprenurial banking partneships, as the bigger banks become government departments.
Inventory Writedowns
Dollar is falling again. This sets up an interesting paradox for the US indices, especially Nasdaq, for whom a major chunk of the earnings is international.
Somehow there is a consensus that US treasuries are in bubble zone because yields have reached multi-decades low. It might be true, or it might not be true (look at Japan with 1% yields for multiple years). Besides, the mere existence of a bubble doesn't imply it is ready to pop. I think USD depreciation will precede a major treasury sell off. Now USD has started weakening since equity markets rallied. But is this the start of a full blown sell off? I don't know. Neither does anyone else. The way things evolve will determine what actually evolves.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Udaipur-Haldighati- Mt. Abu vacation
Some thoughts:
a) Besides low cost tech outsourcing, there is one other industry in which India is globally competitive. That is hotels. And the USP is not limited to the royal palaces that have now been converted into hotels in Rajasthan. Even the smaller havelis and old houses that have been converted into hotels - whether in Jaipur, Pondicherry or Mt. Abu - have an ambience that no hotel in US can provide, all at a reasonable price. Now if we can just keep the terrorists at bay...
b) Some very good roads are under construction - the road between Udaipur and Mt. Abu was freshly built, and will rival European roads once the project is over. Apparently this road will go from Bhuj in the west to Assam in the east. Now we won't be driving 120kmph on average anytime soon, primarily because of the cows and goats, but an improvement from 40 to 65 kmph is a vast improvement in percentage terms.
c) There is a museum in Haldighati - apparently it is the private initiative of an individual. Seems like they are trying to make a historical theme park there. They are actually making the walls of a fort, to make it all seem very historical. Haldighati is where Rana Pratap fought Akbar's army and where his legendary horse, Chetak is buried.
d)In the battle of Haldighati, the general of Akbar's army was Sawai Jai Singh of Jaipur. So, essentially, it was a fight between Jaipur and Chittod. Now both these erstwhile kingdoms are part of Rajasthan. Is there a historic rivalry between different regions of Rajasthan, and indeed amongst different regions of the same states across the country that gets reflected in local, state and national politics? People are prisoners of history. Is this somewhere getting reflected within the internal dynamics of Congress and BJP? An interesting idea to explore further.
e) There is no agriculture to speak of around Udaipur. Apparently mining is where lots of people are employed. Road construction is another. Probably tourism. Tourism is a big industry in India. For all the beureaucratic indifference and official apathy, Incredible India is a relatively successful marketing campaign.
India-Pakistan Crises
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20081208_next_steps_indo_pakistani_crisis
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20081201_strategic_motivations_mumbai_attack
Worth a read
Friday, December 05, 2008
Are some hedge fund strategies permanently damaged?
We have seen several fund companies (State Street etc) curtailing their stock lending programmes. One is the fear whether they ever get the securities back, due to heightened counterparty risks. Two is a stigma attached with helping the shorts. Regulators also keep changing the rules. People are more careful to locate the stock before it can be shorted.
If this is a permanent damage because of the counterparty risk issue, does it mean that several hedge fund strategies like long-short equity or convertible arbitrage become very difficult to implement even when markets stabilize? Because if one can't locate the stock as people are unwilling to lend it out, the shorts can't short it. Thats not good for the long-term market structure.
Thursday, December 04, 2008
Vendor Financing
Merrill Lynch has published their 2009 economic outlook — the over-riding theme? Nothing less than the decline of the West’s financial supremacy.
From the report:
In the emerging world, particularly China, the vulnerability to the US financial crisis is likely to lead to a fundamental rethink of the development model. Expect long-run policies reducing ties to Anglo-Saxon consumption and a rebalancing in the global political power toward the emerging world.……
At its core, the global financial crisis brings an end to the vendor financing model, whereby excess consumption in the US was financed by a savings glut in the emerging world. The market will ensure this adjustment finally happens. This is coming from both directions…