Wednesday, December 30, 2009

AUSSIE SMACK

The people in this “lucky” country (Australia) as they call it have developed an economic/success arrogance just like their cricket team of the late 90’s early 2000’s. Aussies have enjoyed tremendous wealth through the commodities and housing boom, this has lead to consumption economy used to high levels of debt. It has also built that self fulfilling feedback loop that things can only go on and get better. Just like being number one in cricket the only place left is to go down. I believe this is what awaits the future of the Australian economy.

 

It is clearly impossible for the current levels of debt to be sustained. Take a look at this startling factoid that appeared in the local press a few days ago. What has in fact happened is that the belief in the success has resulted in a bubble economy, i.e. housing/mortgage and commodities. Any deflation in these assets and the result will be devastating.

 

MB

 

IN a new record, Australians now owe more in household debt than the country's entire economy earns in a year.

Reserve Bank figures show mortgage, credit card and personal loan debts now stand at $1.2 trillion, up 71 per cent from just five years ago and equating to $56,000 for every man, woman and child in the country, News Ltd says.

Our spending binge, fuelled most recently by the federal government's First Home Owner Grant, means personal debt now totals 100.4 per cent of Australia's annual GDP - one of the highest ratios in the developed world.

"It's the first time household debt has cracked 100 per cent of annual GDP and it's a terrible, terrible sign,'' University of NSW economics professor Steve Keen told News Ltd.

"It shows we are living beyond our means and many highly geared borrowers are now extremely vulnerable to further rate rises - they are already saturated with debt and will not be able to tolerate much of an increase to their repayments.''

Our financial headache is likely to get worse before it gets better. We are in the midst of the peak spending season when billions goes on the plastic, yet the Reserve Bank data dates back to October's debt levels only, so that means there are another two months of First Home Owner Grant-fuelled mortgage activity still to be taken into account.

The extra cost is expected to add billions to the burgeoning debt tally.

 

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

STAR FADING

I cannot help but feel this Star is about to start fading. He has become way to much a part of the popular press and is enjoying his current oracle status.

I think he is Long and Wrong.

 

Paulson Has Never Been More Long https://village.albourne.com/img/news/corner2.gif  posted by holdenr on Wednesday 9 Dec 2009 08:45 GMT
From Post Chronicle - see full story

From The Post Chronicle: Billionaire hedge fund manager John Paulson said on Tuesday he still sees compelling long-term returns in equities even after their sharp run-up this year, while holding no short positions in the credit markets.

"Today our net long exposure is perhaps the highest it has ever been in our portfolio," Paulson said during a luncheon presentation at the Japan Society.

 

Monday, December 07, 2009

BAD DEBT

quote from Carmen Reinhart, “In America, the Fed has injected a lot of money into the economy as a response to the crisis. Right now the Fed has about a trillion dollars of Fannie and Freddie on their balance sheet, and that's not going to turn out very well, and it hasn't been recognized.”

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Friday, December 04, 2009

WESTFIELD

I have maintained for some time; keep an eye on Westfield this Australian stock may be the leader in the field.

Thursday, December 03, 2009

THE DAX

I never quite realized what a major tripple top this was

COLLECTIVE UNCONSCIOUS

The Global Financial Crisis has given people interested in crowd behaviour incredibly rich material to apply and explore some of the more famous psychological and philosophical theories advanced by the giant “thinkers” of bygone eras. My passion lies in the epistemology that drives the crowd to herd in a seemingly irrational manner when factual information seems to require such contrasting behaviour.

My journey for this article began with the reading of a very different type of autobiography whereby Carl Jung writing in his 80’s recounts vivid memories and observations from age 3 all the way through his adult life, “Memories, Dreams, Reflections by C.G. Jung”; a fascinating article by Pulitzer Prize winner Anne Crittenden, entitled “The Stock Market Scene Today: A Jungian Perspective” providing the central theme to my article, and finally an excellently crafted critique on the comparisons of two famous thinkers “Nietzsche and Jung: The Whole Self in the Union of Opposites, by Lucy Huskinson”.  This literary journey coupled with my personal experience sparked a metaphysical phenomenon in me that both Nietzsche and Jung would describe as the process of uniting opposing forces resulting in personal growth leading to The Ubermensch (to quote Nietzsche) or Individuation (to use a Jungian expression).

Before I reveal my observations let me briefly introduce you to Jung, so to speak. Jung was born in Switzerland in 1875 and started his career as a medical doctor. He was closely associated with Freud in his early years but eventually split from Freud and developed his own branch of psychology called, “Analytical Psychology”. Whilst he believed in the personal unconscious like Freud he fundamentally differed with him as to the source of the unconscious. Freud believed it was entirely derived from within, via sexual repression whereas Jung believed it was derived from an external source or factor.

Jung essentially saw the structure of the human mind as comprising 3 parts. The first part being the rational mind or self. The second part the personal unconscious, while playing an important part in the individuals personal progress it plays only a minor role in developing herd behaviour at the collective level. The third and most famous part and the source of most of my interest is his concept of the “Collective Unconscious” which is rooted in the primordial collection of psychic energy across multiple generations housing, instinctive energies and effectively influencing the way we tend to feel about and interpret things. According to Jung these Collective Unconscious thoughts can be seen in the form of mythical characters or religious motif’s which he calls – “Archetypes”. This metaphysical psychic energy – Archetype, is so powerful in energy charging that in many instances when an individual is able to identify with a particular archetype it has the ability to overpower ones rational thinking selves. In cases where a society as represented by collective social mood identifies with an archetype(‘s) then the result is often – Mania.

At the centre of Jung’s beliefs is a process he calls “Individuation” in which individuals are pushed to achieve personal growth by balancing the opposing forces that become evident at a conscious rational level with those unconscious (archetype) forces pulling us in opposing directions. Failure to control the rational conscious man with the unconscious mind leads to what Jung calls an “inflated ego”. Jung believed the psyche would “constellate” the conscious mind in an effort to balance the opposing forces within, and where an opposing force develops sufficient dominance over the other, the result is usually a neurosis or an explosion of emotional behaviour.

What we are going to analyse is how an imbalance is created when a collective society so embraces an archetype that the rational conscious mind is dominated to a level that results in a Mania. Jung explained in detail how unhealthy it is for a society to be too attached to its collective unconscious. At these times society is prone to stray from its rational barometer and develop extreme behaviour with a catastrophic reversal being the end result, he called this reversal “enantiodromia” after Heraclitus an ancient Greek philosopher, who believed the world existed in flux and therefore needed a constant rebalancing. I call it simply reversion to the mean.

Allow me to set the scene during the 1st quarter of 2009 for a representative look at how world stock markets “constellated” social mood as represented by our “collective unconscious”. The financial system throughout the world was crumbling at its very core, the world seemed doomed to a depression the likes we had not seen in 75 years, and panic was the order of the day. In short the world was in need of a super hero - a saviour. The saviour archetype was well documented by Jung in 1936 as he witnessed the rise of Nazi power in Germany. Officially on 20th January 2009 Barack Hussein Obama II became the 44th President of the United States of America and to a large extent became the financial worlds hero tasked with saving the world; this worship extended so far that he became the first recipient of a Nobel Peace prize in advance of the supposed work he would do in war-torn countries (how ironic that he now endorses President Bush’s war in Afghanistan by sending more troops to the battle line) . There are other notable saviour archetypes on the world stage at present some of which are already seeing the dimming of their proverbial stars, e.g. Ben Bernanke, Tim Geithner, Gordon Brown, Jean Claude-Trichet, Warren Buffet (star still intact), etc. Most notably the leader of the “saviour” pack is not actually a living body as such but more like a representative deity in the form of the world’s Central Banks with the US Federal Reserve dominium occupying centre stage. There is almost universal belief in the power of these central banks ability to avert the current crisis by applying a serum (debt) which was in fact the very cause of the underlying financial crisis. This seeming “alchemy” (a subject which fascinated Jung) which I will call “financial engineering” at the Central Bank level, has introduced yet another archetype on our collective unconscious which together with the saviour has driven our current stock market to manic proportions, with our conscious rational minds completely in awe of the seeming magic and unearthly power these bodies currently wield. There is more.  Crittenden refers to Mircea Eliade a leading scholar of comparative religions and his book Myths, Dreams and Mysteries where he describes the archetype of ascension and she parallels the ascension archetype to the ever upward incline of the stock market during the late nineties. I wish to extend her stock market ascension archetype to the current ascension the stock market has enjoyed from March 2009 until now, where there has been so little pause in the amazing climb that it no doubt conjures up majestic imagery.


We now have a collective unconscious that has been so enraptured with awe at the cosmic majesty of one amazing archetype after another that the embracing collective psyche of our society has effectively abandoned clear rational thought in favour of fantasy. As an intuitive contrarian and a believer in the reversionary powers of the market and the broader Universe, we are likely to feel the dramatic “enantiodromia” effects of a reversal in the markets fortune in the months and possibly years to come. To end with a quote from Crittenden, “Jung never tired of pointing out that only highly developed consciousness of the power of the unconscious can enable an individual to withstand the power of the psychic flood sweeping everybody along. There is nothing more isolating than maintaining one’s individuality in a mass mania”.



Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Friday, November 27, 2009

SUCH CONVICTION

You have to marvel out how the so called experts can make a call with such conviction with so little evidence.

 

* Bloomberg reported that according to the California Association of Realtors, single-family home prices in California — the epicenter of the housing market's collapse — edged up 0.3% in October from the previous month to mark the eighth monthly rise in a row. Also, sales of existing homes moved up 1% last month from a year earlier. "California has hit and passed the bottom of this real estate cycle," Leslie Appleton-Young, vice president and chief economist of the Realtors group, said.

LET THE FUN AND GAMES BEGIN

 

CONVICTION

Any fund manager who has had massive conviction in a trade will be able to relate to this article on Clarium Management.

Mick.

PS. Some of those monthly returns are “smoking”.

 

Off the Simon Kerr Blog site. http://simonkerrhfblog.blogspot.com

 

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

The Limits to Fundamental Conviction – Clarium Capital

In August 2007, perfectly catching the first public intimations of a financial downwave global macro manager Clarium Capital, then of San Francisco, dispatched a manager letter that took a negative view on economic growth, real estate and the stock market. In the letter they wrote ""We have begun a post-Long Boom phase that can be called the Long Goodbye. Returns during the Long Goodbye will be lower -- perhaps half as much -- than those of the Long Boom."

The firm argued that the developed world has entered a period of lower returns in which interest rates and economic volatility would increase while growth in corporate profits and global expansion decline. To adjust to this new reality, the firm explained that people must work more, consume less and compensate for lower returns by using more leverage -- borrowing more, that is. The prudent response would be to work longer and cut consumption, but up to that point the reaction had been just to borrow more, Clarium said.

Chillingly, Clarium predicted "that higher leverage has made markets much more vulnerable to outside shocks that will force "painful" de-leveraging and a reduction in liquidity."

Clarium built these economic scenarios and market forecasts into portfolios through several investment themes. One was being short the US Dollar, and another was shorting shares of leveraged companies. In the second half of 2007 and early 2008 Clarium made stand-out returns on these themes (see table).

2007 Returns

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjiY81vCnSAmLmjzGWY4SxAnehuRfk44Yj08dXvVh07Evv2bdfyEZdKI9cUgHAwFy7-avuxYTYeA6N65yXFU1Ic5704IZUkz35chiw-BnLepp3btOL097AUvBLYKZrGQMF-QaxfUg/s400/Clarium+2H+2007.jpg

2008 Returns

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEe2LzSGX1V_pJPd3_3jpS3R8mdYd7p8GhtFTiusSJlULryRattd0hVwYPCnVo_XNmaCZ0OPOuS5zVki03gYH4HQsduScnwp2b5xJsbDXB1Y3lt2GZCES0XpIQ2rAeECaIPI8n1A/s400/Clarium+1H+2008.jpg

Clarium's excellent research had also put them into the camp that believed in the peak oil concept, making oil prices more sensitive to small changes in the demand/supply balance, and giving prices an upward bias over the long term. As it turned out, Clarium's investors didn't have to wait for the long term to arrive and for a payout on the long energy positions Clarium ran – in the first half of 2008 the oil price accelerated to the upside and Clarium's returns reflected big long exposure to energy, gaining 11.2% in May 2008 and 16.0% in June.

So in the middle of last year Clarium Capital's principal, Peter Thiel, was a "Master of the Universe". In the first six months of 2008 his Fund was up 57.9 percent. Significant inflows followed the turn of the year returns, and by the end of July 2008 Clarium Capital Management had assets under management of $7.3bn.

Clarium stayed short of the US Dollar and long energy as the start of the second half of last year, so in July and August gave back some of the gains of the first half of 2008. Bets against the world's reserve currency, the US Dollar, in a time of crisis would not have helped returns at the time of the collapse of Lehmans and the follow on problems at AIG and the UK banks (October/November last year). So after a bang-out first half, Clarium ended 2008 having made a small loss of 4.5%. Better than most hedge funds across all strategies, but the Clarium returns in the second half of 2008 were worse than the peer group global macro managers, and across the whole year the small loss was delivered to investors with very high volatility. Many macro managers run steepener trades as portfolio insurance for a liquidity crisis, so many macro managers were positive in each month of the final quarter of 2008. Clarium didn't carry that insurance and had losses in two out of three months. Like the whole industry Clarium Capital suffered major redemptions in 2008, but the scale of some of Clarium's monthly losses hastened investors to the exit. AUM were $2.5bn at the end of 2008

2008 Returns

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgnneKD8PimLSmnB7hDwsIDFsZfGcRSjSJ_Y5In2oFlAjGKXV5bWt4iuAetmaPbq6csKFZ073EpqAK1lfYhmtYih_SXZbYe2mhUbKYCi978MPBAhKpBF60yfEEvVpl4MrYq0eGpPw/s400/Clarium+2008+1a.jpg

Peter Thiel has been quoted as saying recently that "There was a degree to which the financial economy has been extremely decoupled from the real economy." He has noted that he didn't expect the S&P 500 to rally 62 percent, its steepest advance since the Great Depression, at the same time that the proportion of Americas without a job rose to a 26-year high. The Clarium fundamental call has been that the economic recovery would be at best constrained.

"A real, sustainable recovery is not possible without productivity growth," said Clarium's Chief Economist Kevin Harrington. "The recovery is not real," he says. "Deep structural problems haven't been solved and it's unclear how we will create jobs and get the economy growing again -- that's long been my thesis and it still is." He continued, "The government has helped stabilize the banking system, but I'm not sure we have a path toward sustainable growth, partly because consumers are dealing with debt and other issues, even as an energy crisis looms. It always feels unpatriotic to be negative. But too few people are focused on the real problems."

Thiel himself is of the same mindset: "I don't think that a recovery is impossible. I do think its quite hard to get to a situation where you have a lot of growth in the economy without running into basic constraint problems.

"The key thing in the US is going to be doing more with less. If you try to do the recovery by just doing more of the same and if the recovery is going to consist of going back -- to the housing bubble, going back to leveraged finance, lending money again like crazy, going back to 2005 -- it just seems to me like you're setting yourself up for a real problem. I think you would run right back into four dollar a gallon gas prices and it would sort of correct itself [back into recession].

"Longer term I'm hopeful. I'm not wildly optimistic…But I don't think it gets driven by the financial system or even has that much to do with macroeconomic policy. I think it basically has to do with getting innovation working again. I think that's a very long term trajectory. I'm pessimistic in the sense that I don't think people are focusing on that enough."

Implementing these views Clarium was long the Yen and Dollar in the first quarter of 2009. . The Dollar positioning in the first half reflected an implicitly deflationary view, and Clarium has been long of high-quality bonds based on the view that fear will prevail in markets in 2009. That fear in terms of stock markets peaked in March, and since then stock markets have rallied hard. It appeared to the investment professionals at Clarium that valuations on equity markets quickly became rich, and they have shorted stocks into the middle of the year. And paid for it:

2009 Returns

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjbUF9xyZgG8sPuZpT7YmXohS5Re8RjmPJIJ1mPVJIDa2Ui8IEWcpzU9IIQZis2QtIeVUfZ0jWwNkfeuA-14Iw0VBlmBiuaCXjSUoVpLWn4DAjjblqLDN814lptqsuQfOs6qvZung/s400/Clarium+2009+2.jpg

Global macro managers are paid to take a view on how the economic environment is going to impact market prices. If markets reflect the fair values of stocks, bonds and the parities of fx rates global macro managers have no trades to put on. They trade on where prices are going, given their view on the dynamics of economic growth, final demand, inflation and job growth, in the context of markets subject to the emotions as well as the rational thinking of investors.

Modern form macro funds aim to have five or six themes running in their portfolios. The themes are only distinct to the extent that they are uncorrelated. So if two trades are long yen call options as a probabilistic bet that the carry trade unwinds in emergencies, plus a yield curve steepening trade then there are two trades that will work for the same scenario, and they will be tightly correlated when you expect them to work. Long gold and long index-linked bond trades can be thought of the same way.

Late last year was a period when correlations between positions were either +1 or -1. So it was very difficult to construct trades with a macro take on markets that were not very correlated (positively or negatively).

Many managers in macro use VaR type measurements of portfolio risk. This methodology is flawed but still useful for macro managers because it allows risk assumption across different asset classes to be measured on a common basis. Although macro managers are not as micro-controlled as equity hedge managers in risk-assumption boundaries they can and do vary risk assumption according to shifts in markets, including regime change, which is what we saw in the Autumn. So macro managers have a free choice about maintaining, increasing or cutting their risk assumption as market values move, just like hedge fund managers in other styles.

One of the tenets of running money, particularly for other people, is that you earn the right to take risk. On an individual level Peter Thiel did that by co-founding PayPal, and so started Clarium with capital which was merited. The annual return series for Clarium given below shows the classic global macro pay-off profile: the portfolio is run as a series of bets some of which become highly profitable. In concept a global macro fund runs a series of themes are run to give a chance to smooth out returns, and losses are limited by three things: trades which have natural downside protection (like the bond floor of convertibles, or a hard asset value), strategies are put on with delineated stop-losses from the outset, and options are used to implement the views. So the return series should look like a strip of option positions – occasional big pay offs interspersed with dull returns (small losses and small profits).

Annual Returns of Clarium LP

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvGth3qPznYr2gu6QK0nXVVfhsmB9ds1tkwwHcptozcWYfDc3rxsW7OOyWPKo2DkGc_K8aP9fTiG3dACkn8yMGFgwKX568ojEEF4KENGyoGPkls6NRJ8wFAT62z_kFNOmjY4gSKw/s400/Clarium+3.jpg

In the case of Clarium several of the tenets of running money, and running money in the modern global macro format specifically have been broken. These are matching stop-losses with the risk/return profile, diversification of theme, and arguing with the market without a suitable limit.

There have been 14 double-digit monthly returns in the Clarium performance history, both gains and losses. That scale of monthly return is only feasible with the use of leverage. The use of leverage carries the inference of high conviction and/or investing capital in low volatility assets. Soros used leverage (re-hypothecation) on his bond positions in his heyday, and traded forward currencies in large size using the implicit leverage of forwards with no margin in low volatility instruments. So leverage per se is not a bad thing, and in normal markets is necessary to potentially generate 20% absolute returns from low volatility instruments.

Soros used to load up on a position when it started to turn his way - the foot-to-the-floor version of risk assumption. That is the investment hypothesis had been tested in the market and shown to be positive, so reinforce the winners. Contrarily, the markets are very good at teaching lessons in humility – so if a position started to ship losses Soros was all over it , and mentally able to cut it and re-visit at a more opportune time. So capital was dynamically applied at Soros Fund Management with the feedback loop of the P&L delivered by the positions in the market.

The other feedback loop that managers use is the fundamentals – have they mapped out as forecast? Is the road-map of the progress of the macro factor turning out as expected at this point? Some, indeed many, managers will argue with markets (running a negative P&L) on the basis that their fundamental view is being borne out in the real world away from traded markets. So if trade deficits are the key factor in monitoring fx rates at the time, and the trade balance is progressing as expected then managers give themselves the right to argue with the markets for the time until their conception is generally recognised in FX cross-rates. Of course there may be other factors influencing the fx rate, and the rate of progress may not be as laid out in the road-map. There is room for judgement, but not for behavioural biases counter to the facts.

In the case of Clarium the losses of August and October last year are prima face evidence that the tenets of macro management were not being followed. If there were effective stop losses at the portfolio level or by theme and the portfolio themes were indeed non-correlated then a single month's loss should not reach 13 or 18%.

As stated, last Autumn was exceptional in the shift on volatility and correlation. However part of what investors pay for in the modern hedge fund world is superior risk management. Exposures should be cut at a hedge fund at the portfolio level to ensure that the target maximum monthly loss should not be breached. Clariums' track record from 2002 to 2007 showed 3 monthly losses of 11% or just over 11%. Given the size and number of positive months that maximum monthly loss was (just) tolerable. But a loss of 18% was not and is not. Exposures should have been cut intra-month so that the target maximum loss was not exceeded. As much as anything else that was a logical reason for investors to withdraw their capital, as they did towards the end of last year at Clarium.

This year is different again. It is clear that the Clarium view on the economy is the same now as it was at the beginning of the year. That is fine – it has been a disappointing economic recovery in some senses, and so in macro-economic terms Clarium have been broadly correct this year, and may be borne out on their forecasts beyond this year. How those views have worked out in traded markets has been less successful – Clarium were down 15.8% by the end of September.

It looks like September 2009 has been a signal month for Clarium Capital Management. The Clarium Fund lost 8% in the first 14 trading days of the month. Between between Sept. 11 and Sept. 19 Clarium cut leverage from 4.2 times down to 1.4 times equity, and closed the month with a loss of 8.1%.

I would contend that the commercial position of Clarium Capital Management LLC was different this year than during the rest of Clarium's history. The large losses of August and October last year, the withdrawal of investor's capital last year, the increase in frequency of losing months, and the fact that the Fund is well below its high water mark (so vulnerable to staff losses) all shout to me that the remaining capital ($1.6bn at the end of September 2009) should be run more conservatively than hithertofor.

I do not think that managers in the position that Clarium was in this year should argue with the market to the extent in terms of scale and time that Clarium did. Being right on the economy only mitigates the position to the extent that positions in markets make money. There are natural limits to risk assumption in global macro, and to an extent Clarium lost some of its degrees of freedom in that regard from the outcomes last year. This year the natural limits to fundamental conviction for the firm should have kicked in a lot sooner than September.

The above was put together using material from various sources. I acknowledge the use of quotations and data from Bloomberg and The New York Post. The use of appropriate feedback loops and money management are core concepts used by Enhance Consulting, Simon Kerr's consultancy.

useful link: manager letter (April 2009)

 

WESTFIELD

It seems that Aussie REITs are continuing to lead Global REITs to the downside. You will remember that Aussie REITs lost about 70% of their value in round 1 of the GFC whereas the US only lost 50%. The current leadership to the downside may be telling us round 2 of the GFC has actually begun.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

NYTimes: Third-Quarter U.S. Growth Revised Lower

Amazing how the downward revisions get so little press. The mass
manipulation of the publics perception is quite remarkable.

From The New York Times:

Third-Quarter U.S. Growth Revised Lower

The government said the economy grew at a 2.8 percent pace, instead of
the 3.5 percent growth rate it estimated a month ago.

http://s.nyt.com/u/CF8

Get The New York Times on your iPhone for free by visiting http://itunes.com/apps/nytimes


Sent from my iPhone

Friday, November 20, 2009

I FEEL CLOSELY RELATED TO THE CLARIUM STORY

Clarium Capital is a well-known "global macro" (i.e. buy/sell anything on the planet) hedge fund, run by Peter Thiel. They have a great long-term record, and performed very well in 2008 (only a small loss) but 2009 has not been very kind. CBSMarketwatch reported the fund lost 8% just in the first 2 weeks of September alone, and appears to be down 15%+ for the year through mid September.

  • Clarium LP's tough 2009 got tougher in September. The hedge fund, run by PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel, lost 8% in the first 14 trading days of this month, according to an update Clarium sent to investors.
  • The hedge fund also cut leverage from 4.2 to 1 down to 1.4 to 1 between Sept. 11 and Sept. 19.
  • Clarium had already had a difficult 2009. Through Sept. 18 the fund is down 15.6% this year. Other big hedge funds that follow a similar global macro strategy, including Brevan Howard, Moore Global and Tudor BVI Global, are up more than 10% so far in 2009, through early September, according to data compiled by HSBC's private bank.
  • In February, Clarium was avoiding stocks, while betting on gains in the U.S. dollar, which the firm's Chief Economist Kevin Harrington called "implicitly a deflationary trade."

And investors seem to be fleeing (although part of this asset loss is a rough patch in the 2nd half of 2008):

  • Clarium's assets under management slumped to below $2 billion at the end of August from more than $7 billion in the middle of 2008, before the financial crisis deepened.

,,,despite great long-term returns:

  • The fund is known to take big bets and generates volatile returns. It's up more than 270% since inception earlier this decade. (this is about 22% annualized since 2002, in a "lost decade" of stock returns)

Clarium's mistake? Seems to surround the old axiom -

markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent

. The large drop in leverage the past few weeks shows Clarium is learning this the hard way; it's also another case of another prominent investor crying uncle ( a contrarian might take heart in this).

This data also shows how much pressure there is in the industry - even a few bad quarters, and many investors seem to flee. Which is why everything has now become so short-term oriented in the capital markets.

  • In an August strategy letter to investors, Clarium Vice President Tyler McCellan sounded gloomy about the global economy and the outlook for investment. "Now that the party is over, everyone wants to invest wisely," he wrote. The problem is that "the world is suffering from both the failure of old ideas and a dearth of new ones."

As I like to say the market is not about reality in the near-term, it is about the perception of reality. In time Thiel and group might certainly be proven correct (we share many of their thoughts!), as those who warned about the real estate debacle were in the middle of the decade, or those who warned of bubbles in NASDAQ stocks were in 99. Those warnings were also correct... in time, but first came epic bubbles that went much farther than anyone could imagine.

Via WSJ

  • Hedge-fund manager Peter Thiel is suffering, not because he lost money in the downturn, but because he missed the rebound. Mr. Thiel, a billionaire co-founder of online payment company PayPal and an early investor in Facebook, thinks the economy is far from recovered and has bet with the bears amid the relentless rally. His fund has seen double-digit declines as other hedge funds have racked up gains.
  • Last year, the fund was sitting on gains of more than 40% before the collapse of energy prices caught Mr. Thiel by surprise (this hit many of us who were hiding out in commodities in the first half of 2008, before that trade reversed big time)
  • For much of this year, Mr. Thiel's firm placed a series of bets against the market, in part because valuations on a range of global equity markets have looked rich, he says. As markets have climbed higher, he has been forced to scramble to trim the positions, to avoid deeper losses.
  • He has bet on the Japanese yen, purchased safe bonds, wagered on the dollar, all in the belief fear will return to the markets. He has taken other conservative steps because "a real, sustainable recovery is not possible without productivity growth."
  • "The U.S. and much of the developed world are not very competitive globally -- that would require difficult improvements in technology that I'm not seeing enough of," he says.

Notice you will hear many of the same words we use on a weekly basis, but again... in the near-term the markets are nothing more than (in my eyes) a mass psychology experiment - fundamentals mean little; it's game theory and mob behavior. It took me a long while to figure that out as I like to approach things from an analytical, common sense point of view. But I switched to this new framework the last 5-6 years; hence watching "nonsense" play out is a lot more understandable. Even bemusing at times.

These 3 blurbs in the first bullet point below could literally be taken from any number of virtual pages of the website.

  • "The recovery is not real," he says. "Deep structural problems haven't been solved and it's unclear how we will create jobs and get the economy growing again -- that's long been my thesis and it still is."
  • "The government has helped stabilize the banking system, but I'm not sure we have a path toward sustainable growth," partly because consumers are dealing with debt and other issues, even as an energy crisis looms, he says. "It always feels unpatriotic to be negative. But too few people are focused on the real problems."

It's not just Clarium:

  • The contrarian view puts Mr. Thiel among a group of investors with impressive track records who are holding out, unwilling to buy into the notion of the economy's rebound.
  • In London, the largest fund of John Horseman's $4 billion hedge-fund firm is down 20% this year; "it is hard to build longer-term confidence when employment prospects and job markets are shrinking," he said in a client letter.
  • "The problem is that governments do not create income or wealth, and current stimulus equates to a future tax liability. That will become a major concern in mid-2010 when the stimulus is done."

 

Thursday, November 19, 2009

DIVIDEND CUTS

Year-to-date, 2009 has seen the most dividend cuts and suspensions compared to each of the last 10 years. 46 U.S. REITs have cut their dividends so far in 2009 and 11 have suspended their dividends. Starting in May 2008, 24 U.S. REITs chose to cut their dividends and 11 suspended their dividends. All but four of these cuts and suspensions in 2008 occurred in the fourth quarter. In 2007, only seven U.S. REITs cut their dividends and only three suspended their dividends. Of the last 10 years, 2005 saw the least amount of dividend cuts and suspensions with eight in total. Source SNL

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

LUNAR CYCLE

There has been a strong correlation between lunar activity and the market cycles the last few moons.

ARE THE HIGH BETA'S GOING TO LEAD THE WAY

This is a 1 minute chart of the IYR index, can it be a prelude to the next leg down. I hope so but I don't think so. As I expressed already, these short term calls are random hunches nothing more.

EW BLOGGERS IRRITATING ME

Maybe it is because I am been squeezed by this bear and therefore I am not in a particulalry good mood.
I am just browsing through all the EW blogs I read and find each one scratching their head trying to fine tune the squiggles so as to be able to say I called the top. Corrective patterns are always frustrating to trade against and looking for wave perfection is near impossible to call real time.

US REIT LONG TERM WAVE COUNT

It feels like a new recovery high is on the cards.

 

 

WESTFIELD LOOKING HEAVY

 

Friday, November 13, 2009

NAREIT 2009

Last year I attended NAREIT 2008 in San Diego and the mood was particularly bleak.
I recall one day checking my iPhone to see the market (US REIT Index) was down 14% in one day so clearly the mood was somewhat down.

I am currently reading that NAREIT 2009 in Phoenix is UPBEAT.
RBC Capital Markets analysts Rich Moore, Dave Rodgers and Mike Salinsky in a Nov. 12 report offered their thoughts on Day 1 of NAREIT's REIT World conference.
First, they noted the mood among attendees is "upbeat, substantially more so than in either of the past two NAREIT conventions," and that discussions of fundamentals, acquisitions and future opportunities have replaced the previous "obsession" with balance sheet issues. 

Thursday, November 12, 2009

McCulley from PIMCO - brilliant summation of the financial world as it is today

 

 

The Uncomfortable Dance Between V'ers and U'ers

by Paul McCulley

Around the world, in investment committee meetings and on trading floors (and at the Fed!), one question dominates discussion and debate:

How can it be that risk assets, notably common stocks, have been roaring ahead, presumably discounting a robust V-shaped economic recovery, while Treasury bonds are holding their own with a bull flattening bias, presumably rejecting the V-shaped hypothesis, instead discounting a U-shaped recovery as the base case, with a W-shaped outcome the dominant risk case?

One of these markets is wrong, it is commonly argued; the only question is which one. In the longer run, we here at PIMCO certainly agree, siding with the U-shaped camp. But that does not necessarily mean that one of the markets must necessarily capitulate to the other in the months immediately ahead. And the unifying explanation is simple: The Fed is committed to maintaining "exceptionally low levels of the Federal funds rate for an extended period." The Fed is also openly committed to being extraordinarily careful in reducing its elevated balance sheet, implying that a very elevated level of excess reserves/liquidity will be sloshing through the financial system for a long time.

To be sure, the Fed has been communicating repeatedly, with academic flourish, the technical details of its ability to eventually hike its policy rate, even with a bloated balance sheet and massive excess reserves:

  • Hiking, via its newly-granted powers of last fall, the interest rate it pays on excess reserves (IOER), which should act as a floor for the more visible Fed funds rate; and
  • Reducing excess reserves directly through massive reverse repurchases, including using tri-party repo arrangements, effectively augmenting the universe of counterparties beyond the capital-constrained primary dealers, to include liquidity flush end users.

But the Fed has also gone out of its way to communicate that discussions are about the "how" of its exit strategies, not a signal as to the "when," in the phraseology of the Financial Times' Krishna Guha. Thus, not only is the price of Fed liquidity set to hover near zero for an extended period, but the sheer volume of Fed-supplied liquidity is also likely to be flush for an extended period. In turn, as long as the Fed retains ownership of its longer-dated assets, sterilizing their liquidity effect via reverse repos, the Fed will remain not just the arbitrator of the Fed funds rate, but will also be a holder of market risk previously borne by the private market.

Thus, while rich risk asset prices can certainly be viewed as a consensus expectation for a strong recovery, such lofty valuations can also be viewed as a consensus expectation about the Fed's commitment to erring on the side of being too late, rather than too early, in starting a Fed funds tightening cycle. Indeed, one could actually be agnostic, even antagonistic, about a big-V recovery and still be favorably disposed to risk assets, in the short run. Historically, what pounds risk asset prices is either a recession or unexpected Fed tightening; or worse, both. Right now, it is hard to get wrapped around the axle about recession, since we've just had one, which might not even be over.

To be sure, the economy could have back-to-back recessions, as was the case in 1980 and 1981–1982. But that episode was associated with massive Fed tightening in 1979–1980, followed by massive easing in the middle months of 1980, followed by massive Fed tightening yet again, as Paul Volcker waged a two-step war against inflation. Presently, the Fed is openly declaring that it will maintain near-zero short rates for an "extended period," in the context of inflation below its implicit target.

Thus, as long as economic recovery appears underway, even if stoked primarily by (1) policy stimulus and (2) a turn in the inventory cycle, there is no urgent reason for investors to run from risk assets. Put differently, investors can be agnostic about (3) the strength of private demand growth until the one-off forces supporting growth exhaust themselves, as long as they don't have fear of Fed tightening.

In turn, a bull flattening bias of the Treasury curve, with longer-dated rates falling toward the near-zero Fed policy rate, can be viewed as a consensus view that the level of the output/unemployment gap plumbed during the recession is so great that disinflationary forces in goods and services prices, and perhaps even more important, wages, will be in train, even if growth surprises on the upside. Accordingly, Treasury players, like their equity brethren, need not fear the Fed, as there is no economic rationale for an early turn to a tightening process.

Thus, both rich risk markets and the lofty Treasury market can be viewed as rational in their own spheres, even if they are seemingly irrational when compared to each other. The tie that binds them, that allows them to co-exist, need not be a common view regarding the prospective strength of the recovery, but rather a common view as to the Fed's friendly intent and reaction function.

But, you retort, this can't go on forever – at some point, risk assets will have to capitulate to reality if the big-V does not unfold, no? Yes, but it is not quite as simple as that. Without the big-V, Treasuries will tend to bull flatten, soothed by rational expectations of an extended period of the Fed funds rate pinched against zero. In turn, such a path for Treasuries would provide valuation support for risk assets. How so?

All risk asset prices are analytically the Net Present Value of expected growth in cash flows, discounted by the appropriate-duration risk-free rate plus a risk premium. Thus, expectations of a friendly-for-longer Fed policy would be supportive of risk assets, as they (1) tend to pull down long-duration risk-free rates, while also (2) pulling down the market-required risk premium (which moves inversely with investors' animal-spirited risk appetite, which moves inversely with fears of Fed tightening).

To be sure, this fundamental valuation framework – known as the Gordon Model – also implies that in real terms, the positive P/E effect of low long-term risk-free rates is moderated to the extent that the non-big-V scenario also implies lower growth in real profits. There are no free lunches. But since real long-term Treasury rates trade in real time, while "new-normalized" real growth rates are uncertain, subject to animal-spirited conjecture, friendly real long-term interest rates will tend to dominate the formulation of P/Es.

Thus, ironically, the biggest intermediate-term risk for risk assets is not that the big-V doesn't unfold, but that it does, inciting the Fed to bring the extended period of a near-zero policy rate to a close. But again, you retort, doesn't that imply that in the absence of the big-V, risk asset prices could levitate into bubble valuation space? Yes, it does mean that. And that is a very, very uncomfortable proposition for those grounded in fundamental analysis, as I am.

Another Winning Trade

The Efficient Market Hypothesis in Retreat
But such discomfort is likely to be an enduring fact of life on the journey to the New Normal. Recall, a core tenet of "fundamental analysis" is the efficient market hypothesis, which presupposes that rational investors will, given time, always pull nominal – and real – values back toward their "fundamentally justified" levels. Yes, there will be noise in real time, the hypothesis allows, but it also holds that neither irrational gloom nor irrational exuberance will go to extremes: momentum players will, in the end, always be trumped by value players, before momentum players have done any great harm. Market failures, capitalism's equivalent of estrangement in families, are simply assumed away. They are not supposed to happen; therefore, they won't.

But they do. Such was the case with the Forward Minsky Journey1 that unfolded alongside the Great Moderation for twenty-five years after the recession that ended in 1982. Ever-increasing private sector leverage was applied on the presumption that the Great Moderation was a perpetual motion machine, rather than an epoch that would eventually implode on its own debt-deflationary pathologies, as Minsky envisaged. Nominal asset prices, notably property, became bubbly-unmoored from "fundamental" value, yet both borrowers and lenders were willing to "validate" those unmoored levels with legally binding nominal debt obligations – hedge debt units followed by speculative debt units followed by Ponzi debt units.

It all blew up, of course, with not just trillions of net worth destroyed, but also the wisdom of religious belief in the efficient market hypothesis. Thus, as we look forward, a huge amount of humility is warranted in projecting asset returns on the basis of tight bands around what "fundamentals" suggest constitute fair value. Yes, there is no substitute for fundamental analysis; it remains at the core of investment management. But asset values can stray far, very far, away from their putative "fair" levels, much, much further than was the case during the middle-aged years of the Great Moderation. The efficient market hypothesis may not be dead, but it is most assuredly in retreat.

Behavioral Economics and Finance in Ascendency
In contrast, the insights of behavioral economics and finance are very much in ascendency. This personally brings me great satisfaction, as both of my macroeconomic heroes, John Maynard Keynes and Hyman Minsky, were quintessentially behavioral economists, starting with the proposition that developing a theory as to how the world does work is much more productive than developing a theory as to how the world should work. That's not to suggest that there is not room for both types of theorizing. Indeed, one without the other is silliness, and both Keynes and Minsky did both.

And the envelope between those two modes of theorizing is the fact that the future is inherently uncertain. That might not sound like a profound assertion, and it isn't. We all intuitively know that. But the efficient market hypothesis conveniently assumes away that reality, in what is technically called the "ergodic axiom" – that past and current relationships between variables are reliable predictors of future relationships between variables. This assumption holds in astronomy, which is why astronomers can forecast with incredible accuracy when the next lunar eclipse will unfold.

This assumption also holds in calculating the risk of any given hand in a defined card game – there are 52 cards in the deck and it is quite possible to calculate with great precision the odds of winning the game, such as Blackjack or Poker. That doesn't mean that you can know with precision whether you will win, simply that you can forecast the odds of any given player winning, given the cards in their hands and other players' hands, in the context of what cards are left in the deck. Indeed, I find it amusing when television shows broadcasting such games flash up the odds of any player winning after each card is dealt. There is risk, but not uncertainty – we know there are 52 cards in the game and we know what constitutes a winning hand. The ergodic axiom holds.

In investment markets, however, the ergodic axiom doesn't hold, even though it is implicitly assumed in the efficient market hypothesis (but ironically, not in the legal disclaimers of all investment presentations, which state that past results are not necessarily indicative of future results!). In investment markets, genuine uncertainty exists: We can't assume that we know how many cards will be in the future deck or what will constitute a winning hand. That's not risk, but rather uncertainty.

And how do we deal with it? As Keynes explained in Chapter 12 of the General Theory, we deal with it by falling back on convention, or rules of thumb. In his words:

"Certain classes of investment are governed by the average expectation of those who deal on the Stock Exchange as revealed in the price of shares, rather than by the genuine expectations of the professional entrepreneur. How then are these highly significant daily, even hourly, revaluations of existing investments carried out in practice?

In practice, we have tacitly agreed, as a rule, to fall back on what is, in truth, a convention. The essence of this convention – though it does not, of course, work out so simply – lies in assuming that the existing state of affairs will continue indefinitely, except in so far as we have specific reasons to expect a change. This does not really mean that we really believe that the existing state of affairs will continue indefinitely. We know from extensive experience that this is most unlikely.

The actual results of an investment over a long term of years very seldom agree with the initial expectation. Nor can we rationalize our behavior by arguing that to a man in a state of ignorance; errors in either direction are equally probable, so that there remains a mean actuarial expectation based on equi-probabilities. For it can easily be shown that the assumption of arithmetically equal probabilities based on a state of ignorance leads us to absurdities.

We are assuming, in effect, that the existing market valuation, however arrived at, is uniquely correct in relation to our existing knowledge of the facts which will influence the yield of the investment, and that it will only change in proportion to changes in this knowledge; though, philosophically speaking, it cannot be uniquely correct, since our existing knowledge does not provide a sufficient basis for a calculated mathematically expectation. In point of fact, all sorts of considerations enter into market valuations which are in no way relevant to the prospective yield.

Nevertheless the above conventional method of calculation will be compatible with a considerable measure of continuity and stability in our affairs, so long as we can rely on the maintenance of the convention. For if there exist organized investment markets and if we can rely on maintenance of the convention, an investor can legitimately encourage himself with the idea that the only risk he runs is that of a genuine change in the news over the near future, as to the likelihood of which he can attempt to form his own judgment, and which is unlikely to be large. For, assuming that the convention holds good, it is only these changes which can affect the value of his investment, and he need not lose his sleep merely because he has not any notion what his investment will be worth ten years hence.

Thus investment becomes reasonably 'safe' for the individual investor over short periods, and hence over a succession of short periods however many, if he can fairly rely on there being no breakdown in the convention and on his therefore having an opportunity to revise his judgment and change his investment, before there has been time for much to happen. Investments which are 'fixed' for the community are thus made 'liquid' for the individual."

Those few paragraphs, my friends, are the foundation of modern behavioral economics and finance. Human beings, including investment managers, face both risk and uncertainty, and deal with uncertainty by resorting to conventions, notably that yesterday is the best predictor of today, and that today is the best predictor of tomorrow. George Soros calls it reflexivity.

But when that comforting convention is overwhelmed by a new reality, all hell breaks loose. Uncertainty can no longer be simply assumed away. And when that happens, human beings tend to disengage, eschewing investment in favor of building up cash reserves. And if this proclivity becomes both widespread and profound, we find ourselves in Keynes' Liquidity Trap – there is plenty of money around, but risk-averse investors, infected with uncertainty, refuse to "put it to work" – on either Wall Street or Main Street. Such was the case a year ago, following the fateful decision to let Lehman Brothers fall into a watery grave.

The way out of that lacuna was for (1) the fiscal authority to step into the breech and borrow money from the newly risk-averse, putting it to work to recapitalize the banking system and on Main Street in support of aggregate demand; and for (2) the monetary authority to drive the interest rate on money to zero and promise to hold it there for an extended period, making holding cash very painful while reducing uncertainty, re-exciting investors' risk appetite.

Another Winning Trade

Bottom Line
Fiscal and monetary authorities around the world have done exactly that over the last year, and since April, in the words of the G-20, it has "worked." Well, at least on Wall Street, where risk appetite is in full bloom. Whether or not that renewed risk appetite finds its way to Main Street is the key question beyond the immediate horizon.

We here at PIMCO think it will, but only in a muted way, not a big-V way. We also recognize, however, that markets can stray quite far from "fundamentally justified" values, if there is a strong belief in a friendly convention, one with staying power. And right now, that convention is a strong belief in a very friendly Fed for an extended period. Thus, the strongest case for risk assets holding their ground is, ironically, that the big-V doesn't unfold, because if it were to unfold, it would break the comforting conventional presumption of an extended friendly Fed.

Simply put, big-V'ers should be wary of what they wish for. U'ers, meanwhile, must be mindful of just how bubbly risk asset valuations can get, as long as non-big-V data unfold, keeping the Fed friendly. But that's no reason, in our view, to chase risk assets from currently lofty valuations. To the contrary, the time has come to begin paring exposure to risk assets, and if their prices continue to rise, paring at an accelerated pace.

 

HOMEBUILDERS

Well what do you know Toll Brothers the largest homebuilder of luxury homes beat expectations, what happened the share price popped a cool 16.5% on the day.

Good thing I hadn’t placed my shorts at the open, but I got a few away at the high of the day. Lets see how things unfold.

 

 

CRISIS LOOMS

Commercial Real Estate ‘Crisis’ Looming for U.S.: Chart of Day

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By David Wilson

Nov. 11 (Bloomberg) -- “A crisis of unprecedented proportions is approaching” in the U.S. commercial real-estate market, according to Randall Zisler, chief executive officer of Zisler Capital Partners LLC.

The CHART OF THE DAY displays quarterly returns on commercial property -- apartment buildings, hotels, industrial sites, offices and stores -- as compiled by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries. Returns were negative for the past five quarters, the longest streak since 1992.

Property prices have fallen by 30 percent to 50 percent from their peaks, Zisler estimated yesterday in a report. The plunge has wiped out the equity in most real-estate deals that relied on debt financing since 2005, he wrote.

Zisler, whose firm focuses on real-estate investment, estimated that building owners will default on $500 billion to $750 billion of mortgage debt. This equals as much as 54 percent of the $1.4 trillion in loans that will come due in four years, by his count.

“Much of the debt is likely worth about 50 percent of par, or less,” the report said. Many banks will end up insolvent as they reduce the value of their holdings, he wrote, adding that regional and community lenders are especially vulnerable.

California, in particular, is experiencing a downward spiral in commercial property as prices decline and a growing number of tenants default, Zisler wrote. His analysis was included in Controller John Chiang’s monthly review of the state’s finances.

(To save a copy of the chart, click here.)

To contact the reporter on this story: David Wilson in New York at dwilson@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 11, 2009 11:11 EST

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Wednesday, November 11, 2009

HOUSING

I think it is time to start selling this housing bounce, I have missed the 1st leg down but I think now is quite an attractive place to short the bounce.


REMEMBER FANNIE

 I dont know why but I just had the urge to see where Fannie Mae is trading as I am told the force behind the home loan lending almost in its entirety has been Fannie, so if things in the housing market are turning up then so should the price of Fannie.

Well I was shocked it is down 50% since its high September (6 weeks ago).

Is granny fannie trying to tell us something.

AS IF IT NEVER HAPPENED

I am reading through one headline after another putting forward a bullish case. In many instances the euphoria is even worse than pre the crash because now, punters have the ability to say that the crash is behind us and has set the market up for a prolonged bull market.

Even the not so sanguine investors are saying the carry trade brought about by the ridiculously low rates in the US and other parts of the world is fuelling the fire. Of course they are right about this but it is a bubble and every bubble bursts.

I have been a professional money manager for 8 years and I have read more books on market history than many people will read in their entirety throughout their lifetime, and I know with certainty how this will end. Only I believe the tears on the next leg down will be more like floods as people realize not only how greedy they were to risk so much in the face of so much risk, but more how dumb they were not to have realized it.

The greed part people will be able to deal with, because it is part of the inner struggle that we all face throughout our lives, but I believe the feeling of depression caused by being plain old stupid will take much much longer to heal.

I just read that JP Morgan has lifted their pay freeze, instituted at the height of the crisis. You have 3 banks in the US paying more than $30bn in bonuses for this year when in March everyone thought the world as we knew it was over.

Come in lets get real here, except for the ever growing % of US unemployed how many of us really felt this recession. Hardly come on be truthful, it was more felt at arms length via lower share portfolio's or lower pricing in our homes but how many people were out and out desperado's?

If history is anything to go by this painfull experience is what is needed to cure the ill effects of blatantly mismanaged companies and governments. I don't wish this hardship on anyone and the more I think about it the sadder I become because I am realizing how many more people will have to experience this because of the lack of truly honourable leadership.

If you want a career that will pay have an endless supply of customers then study psychology or psychiatry, or if you are a dumbo like me buy psychiatirc drug manufacturers.

Lastly, remember that no party continues forever, and if you have been lucky enough to enjoy this one, why not quit while you are ahead and you still have your sanity.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

DIFFICULT TIMES

For a bear the market action last night was quite tough!! There is still no clear pattern right now so we hang a little longer.

Monday, November 09, 2009

UNCERTAINTY in CERTAINTY

I am sure you have all experienced a feeling of knowing with differing degrees of certainty, but cannot fully explain it. The most common way of explaining this experience is to attribute the level of certainty with a higher degree of knowledge or some prefer to rely on a meta psychic experience such as intuition. I am going to attempt a more philosophical explanation using the natural sciences and try and link it to the way I have experienced the markets over the last few months. The learning experience has given me a good perspective of this seemingly crazy world of financial markets. As a non scientist I extend fair warning that I may not be doing these iconic subjects true justice, so please bare with my superficial understanding and before we dive in, I owe credit to physicist/theologian Gerald Schroeder for the germination of the idea from his book, "The Science of G-d".

 

The story begins with the birth of a famous French Mathematician in 1749 by the name of Pierre-Simon Laplace who took the Newtonian mechanical approach of cause and effect and pioneered a whole new field of study called Causality or Determinism (there is a difference but lets leave Determinism for another "Back to School" section). In staying with this approach of cause and effect, Laplace introduced the idea of accurate forecasting, believing that every aspect of the universe and by extension life could be predicted by knowing the cause and applying empirically validated formulae (e.g. Newton's 2nd law) to derive the effect. These insights were further strengthened early in the last century by Einstein's, "General Theory of Relativity".

 

Now this is where things get interesting, lets meet Mr Heisenberg an Austrian Physicist who discovered in 1927 that the more precisely one is able to identify a physical property the less precisely one can predict natures causative effect; his discovery called Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle is the foundation to the ever  growing field of Quantum Mechanics. According to the Uncertainty Principle explained by the equations of Quantum Mechanics it is impossible to measure a microscopic particle with any degree of accuracy or certainty and the more microscopic you go the less certain the equation becomes. To my simple mind the more confined the space it would make sense that the more accurate your predictions are likely to be, but the reality of nature is not so intuitive. Another way this discovery is often unknowingly explained is that the more you know about a certain area of specialty the more you realize how little you know. This is counter intuitive but is the reality of the experience.

    

So lets try and apply these fascinating discoveries to the trading of financial markets and see what philosophical insights we can draw so that we become wiser in our approach to money management.

 

Laplace taught us about cause and effect; Economics left to its true free market essence is after all a reflection of life and therefore suffers the same causative effects so beautifully described by Adam Smiths "invisible hand". In other words there are certain causes and effects that observed from a distance must in fact take place. Take an economy that consumes more than it produces, by simple deductive laws of logic this economy will self destruct (US currently); another cause and effect example would be where an economy backed by fiat currency continues to print money faster than the real growth of the economy (US currently), the only logical cause and effect result will be a currency that devalues.

This I believe is where most economists, chartists and fund managers chasing short term predictions come unstuck in their analysis and pursuit of precision. They are missing an important part of the equation. Heisenberg with his Principle of Uncertainty has taught us that as we attempt to use ever more precise detail with our Newtonian based  economic/finance/technical tools we are not in fact  achieving greater certainty with our forecasts but in fact the opposite is true. These insights are all counter-intuitive and my interpretation is that just like with the natural sciences forecasting accuracy is more assured over a longer term (cause and effect above the subatomic level) than over a shorter (more precise subatomic) term; hence the title of this essay Uncertainty in Certainty. Yes we know with certainty how things will end in general terms, the problem remains that as we try and predict how things will unfold in the short term we are introducing Heisenberg's Principle of Uncertainty, and our certainty diminishes as we become more specific.

 

To conclude this does not mean that I believe we cannot make better than random short term forecasts, rather I believe that as ones predictions move to a micro level the uncertainty factor increases, it is a law of nature, and therefore one needs to ensure that our money management processes compensate for this uncertainty.