Friday, July 17, 2009

The Equity Risk Premium: ""

From the WSJ's Real Time Economics:

To solve the so-called equity premium puzzle, one researcher has gone digging through the garbage.

In a forthcoming paper in the Journal of Finance titled “Asset Pricing with Garbage,” University of Chicago graduate student Alexi Savov makes the case that the amount of rubbish we produce is a better (i.e. more volatile) measure of consumption than traditional tools, and that helps explain why investors demand such a high premium for stocks over bonds. (That’s government bonds, not “junk” bonds, of course.)

The equity premium puzzle has been festering unsolved in economic circles since the 1980s. The puzzle is this: economists can’t adequately explain why investors demand such high-risk premiums to own volatile stocks over relatively steady bonds. The risk premium for stocks over bonds in the long term is about 6%. But 6% seems like too big a premium to economists.

In theory, one way to explain the premium would be to look at consumption, a broad measure of wealth. People should demand a premium from an investment that goes down when consumption goes down. That’s because the alternative — bonds — hold on to their value when consumption declines. Another way to put it: When you are making lots of garbage, you are rich. When you stop making garbage, you are poor. Unlike bonds, which continue to pay out whether you produce lots of garbage (and are rich) or not, stocks are likely to lose their value during bad times. Therefore, investors should want a large reward for putting their money in something whose value decreases at the same time as their overall wealth decreases....MORE

Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy and Big Dollar Transmission Plans (BRK.A)

From the Des Moines Register via The Climate+Energy Project blog:

An official of MidAmerican Energy of Des Moines said the utility is in the early stages of putting together a proposal for a 765-kilovolt electricity transmission line that would carry wind energy from Iowa and the Upper Midwest east to Chicago and beyond.

"We don't have anything to announce formally, but we are working to interest partners in a venture for a new line," said Dean Crist, vice president for regulatory affairs for MidAmerican Energy.

Meanwhile, state regulatory officials from Iowa, the Dakotas, Minnesota and Wisconsin have declared that the Upper Midwest will be glad to host the big multistate line. But they think utility customers in the eastern United States, where the electricity would go, should pay the bulk of the costs.

MidAmerican's would be the second major wind transmission line proposal on the table.

Michigan-based ITC Holdings, which owns and operates the electric transmission system serving Alliant Energy customers in Iowa, has already won preliminary but nonexclusive approval from federal regulators for a 3,000-mile line that would run from the Dakotas through Iowa and Minnesota to Illinois and points east.

The cost of the project is estimated at between $10 billion and $12 billion.

The ITC and the expected MidAmerican transmission line proposals are bidding to be something unprecedented in U.S. utility history: A multistate transmission line designed to carry electricity from one region of the country to another.

"This can be likened to the building of the interstate highway system," said Crist....
...MidAmerican's interest in the transmission line is hardly a surprise. The utility already has more than 1,300 megawatts of wind turbine generating capacity. It also has owner Warren Buffett's ample checkbook at its disposal.

MidAmerican has formed a joint venture with AEP Energy of Columbus, Ohio, to develop wind transmission ventures in Oklahoma and Kansas.In September, MidAmerican will end its longstanding aloofness from regional transmission grid organizations when it joins MISO, which would ease any future questions about transmission line interconnections....MORE

Compare/contrast with Eric Pooley's Bloomberg Op-Ed ""Why Warren Buffett Is Wrong About Cap and Trade: Eric Pooley" (BRK.A)" and "Transmission: "A Costly and Unnecessary New Electricity Grid" And: "Debate on Clean Energy Leads to Regional Divide "

See also:

Warren Buffett on Cap-and-Trade (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's Munger on Cap-and-Trade ("Monstrously Stupid Right Now...Almost Demented"); Warren and Charlie on Wind and Solar (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy on Waxman-Markey: "We Don't Much Care For It" (BRK.A)

Did Congressman Markey Attempt Witness Intimidation With the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy? (BRK.A)

UPDATE-- "Sokol: Markey seeks to intimidate" (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Sees Carbon Trading Adding $120 to Bills (BRK.A)

Climateer Investing on Carbon Trading and Traders

General Electric's quarterly profit tumbles 47%; Energy Business Again the Star Performer

From two corners of the Dow Jones empire. First up, MarketWatch:

General Electric Co. said Friday profit fell 47% in the second quarter, as the industrial giant navigated through a tougher economic environment with fewer sales and more credit defaults in its financial business.

For the June quarter, the Fairfield, Conn., conglomerate and Dow Jones Industrial Average components said profit was $2.67 billion, or 24 cents a share, compared to $5.07 billion, or 51 cents, earned in the year-earlier period.

On a continuing-operations basis, earnings in the latest period were 26 cents a share, while analysts polled by FactSet Research were expecting earnings of 24 cents a share, on average.

Analyst earnings typically exclude discontinued operations.

GE builds jet engines, locomotives and water treatment plants, as well as provides financial backing, health-care products and entertainment, including NBC.

Revenue for the company fell to $39.08 billion from $46.84 billion in the 2008 second quarter. Wall Street was looking for sales of $41.7 billion.

"We are executing through the recession by aggressively controlling costs and driving working capital improvements while continuing to invest for future growth," said Jeff Immelt, chairman and chief executive, in a statement....MORE

And from Environmental Capital:

Once again, the energy business saved General Electric’s bacon. Second-quarter profit at the conglomerate plunged 53% on a per-share basis—but things would have been a lot worse without the energy division, which outperformed other businesses in sales and earnings.

GE’s energy business reported second-quarter revenue of $9.57 billion, a slight drop from the second quarter of 2008. Despite the lower sales, segment profit rose 13% from the prior year to $1.79 billion. Energy was the only GE division where profits rose during the quarter. GE’s energy unit makes power-generation equipment, from wind turbines to nuclear power plant components.

To get an idea how important the energy business is becoming for GE: Energy accounted for about 20% of group sales and profit in the second quarter of 2008. This year, the energy business accounted for 24% of sales and 36.7% of segment profit....MORE

Thursday, July 16, 2009

If CIT is toast, could GE Capital be next?

From Dealscape:

General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE) is slated to announce its second-quarter earnings on Friday, ironically the same day that besieged lender CIT Group Inc. (NYSE:CIT) is expected to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after bailout talks with the government fell apart on Wednesday. (The Deal Pipeline subscribers can see the full story here.)

If CIT files for bankruptcy, it's sure to undermine market confidence in GE Capital, which is in many of the same businesses as CIT.

Formerly a unit of Tyco before being spun out, CIT no longer has the enormous balance sheet of a corporate parent to draw upon when it finds itself unable to get short-term financing.

GE Capital doesn't have that problem.

GE has propped it up, as has access to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program. GE Capital has already issued a whopping $74 billion in bonds guaranteed by Uncle Sam -- making it the single biggest user of the scheme administered by the FDIC, according to Breakingviews.

While the situation at GE Capital isn't as dire as it is at CIT, things are far from rosy.

Back in April, Business Insider highlighted a Jim Grant presentation that revealed over $40 billion in exposure on GE Capital's balance sheet, more than enough to sink the finance unit and its parent. Henry Blodget wrote at the time...MORE

Gloomy Christmas 2009 for Peabody Energy Stockholders? (BTU)

From 10Q Detective:

Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU-$28.92), the world's largest private-sector coal company, appears reasonably positioned to ride out the economic downturn, having locked in thermal coal contracts last year for 2009 delivery and beyond at close to 50 –to- 60 percent premiums to current Powder River Basin (PRB) spot prices of $9.00 per short ton. Reduced electric demand and rising inventory stockpiles, however, have utilities clamoring for deferral and relief from their coal-supply off-take agreements—shipments integral to this coal miner’s financial results.

Year to date, coal-based electricity generation demand has declined nearly six percent from the prior year, or 15 million tons, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA)—and could fall an aggregate 60 million to 70 million tons compared to 2008. Reduced steam generation combined with cheaper costs of competing power sources, such as natural gas, have contributed to an increase in utility inventory levels of coal, too. At March 31, current stockpiles represented a 21.5 million short ton oversupply, or approximately two-percent on annual consumption of 1.12 billion tons, according to the EIA.

During 2008, more than 80 percent of Peabody’s total sales (by volume), or almost 210 million tons of coal, went to U.S. electric utilities. Looking to address the current oversupply situation, chief executive officer Greg Boyce told analysts on the first-quarter 2009 earnings call to expect total production cuts of about 15 million tons this year, with most of the announced production cuts anticipated to come from its biggest mining operation in the U.S., the low-sulfur producing PRB coal region in Wyoming. Boyce guided listeners on the call to expect full-year 2009 U.S. production of 185 million and 190 million tons.

Entering the second quarter, Peabody was fully contracted for 2009 shipments and roughly 90 percent committed for 2010. Should generation burn continue to fall through the second-half of the year, there is a growing concern that that more customers would pressure the coal miner to renegotiate volume and price breakpoints or defer shipment schedules. Peabody president Rick Navarre stressed on the quarterly conference call, however, that the company was “not in active renegotiations of contracts,” although he admitted the company would welcome talks to customers having “issues”—depressed end-user demand accompanied by growing coal stockpiles....MORE
HT: Pension Pulse

How long will China finance America?

From the BBC's Peston's Picks blog:

China's foreign exchange reserves have soared.

In the second quarter of the current year, they rose by $178bn to $2.132 trillion to exceed $2 trillion for the first time.

According to Bloomberg this is a record increase.

On this occasion, the primary cause is not the great surplus of China's exports over its imports.

It's the result of overseas investors identifying China as the strongest of the world's major economies and pouring money into property and into shares: the Shanghai Composite Index has jumped 74% this year.


To put it another way, if international investors want to take an equity risk in these recessionary conditions, they go to China - because its economic stimulus package seems to be working (the annual growth rate in China in the three months to the end of June is said by forecasters to have been not far off 8%; we'll have the official stats, for what they're worth, tomorrow).

Now, the really interesting question is how much of that increment has been reinvested by the Chinese authorities into US government debt, or holdings of Treasury bonds and bills.

China is the largest foreign lender to the US government. At the end of April, China's holding of Treasury securities was $763.5bn (Japan was the second biggest holder, with $686bn).

However, between March and April there was actually a slight fall in the dollar value of Chinese lending to the American government - though that fall was trivial compared with the $261.5bn increase over just a year in the amount of US government bonds held by China....MORE

HT: naked capitalism

Winners and Losers: Power Industry Infighting Heats Up Over Climate Legislation

From ClimateWire via the New York Times:

The feuding clans of the electric power industry are quarreling over newer ground: which of them most deserves the free carbon emission allotments that would be distributed if the House-passed climate bill became law.

An unlikely alliance of public power providers, electric cooperatives, utility consumer advocates and utility commissioners joined together yesterday to attack the allotments provision of the House bill that they say would give windfall profits to merchant power providers with no assurance that the funds would be invested in reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

"The current provisions basically amount to a $4 billion annual giveaway" to the merchant generators, said Mark Crisson, president of the American Public Power Association, citing a study by Synapse Energy Economics Inc., of Cambridge, Mass., that APPA helped commission. It was released yesterday.

Representatives of the merchant generators immediately fired back. "This comes down to the idea that they can force us to buy [carbon] allowances from them," said John Shelk, CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association. "They can't say that out loud, so they essentially smear us with the politically charged term of 'windfall profits.'"

The House cap-and-trade bill would create a new kind of currency -- potentially worth $50 billion to $100 billion a year at the start -- in the form of free carbon allocations that permit power generators and factories to discharge carbon emissions without penalty. As the cap tightens over time, companies that could not reduce their emissions would have to purchase allowances from other companies or make offsetting investments that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The coalition of "strange bedfellows," in the words of former Rep. Glenn English (D-Okla.), yesterday urged the Senate to eliminate the portion of the allocations earmarked for merchant coal generators, amounting to 5 percent of the total. Local electricity distribution companies would get 30 percent of the emission allocations. The merchant share was added near the end of the House deliberations to secure more votes from coal state representatives.

Nuclear a likely big winner

Frederick Butler, president of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), said the allocations given to the local power distribution utilities, power co-ops and public power companies would be closely overseen by local regulators and boards....MORE
Here's the paper from Synapse Energy Economics:

Productive and Unproductive
Costs of CO2 Cap-and-Trade:

Impacts on Electricity Consumers
and Producers

(79 page PDF)

Canadian Solar: Oppenheimer calling for a big Q3; target raised to $19, Nomura Upgrades to Buy (CSIQ)

The stock was recently trading at $13.72, up 8.32%. From Notable Calls:

Oppenheimer is out very positive on Canadian Solar (NASDAQ:CSIQ) raising their tgt to $19 from $14 following checks at Intersolar. Firm notes they are growing more positive on CSIQ as they believe high cost inventory has been burned through, units and margins should rebound, and 3Q Street estimates could prove conservative. They remain cautious on the sector overall, but believe CSIQ shares still have room to run.

Intersolar checks. Opco met with companies across the solar supply chain and left feeling more comfortable with 3Q demand trends, but less comfortable with industry ASPs and 2H linearity (4Q should be down sequentially vs. Street expectations, which model-in linear growth). Still, they believe CSIQ's story is intact and feel comfortable with their 5/21 upgrade.

Costs approaching $1.50/watt. CSIQ has burned through its high cost inventory and can now produce modules near $1.50/watt (~$0.90/watt for wafers and ~$0.60/watt for cell/module processing). With this cost structure, CSIQ can price aggressively to gain share while easily maintaining a mid-teens or better gross margin....MORE

Smart-grid: EnerNOC Upgraded by Baird (ENOC)

The stock was recently trading at $21.00, up 9%. From CNBC:

EnerNOC Inc. shares have room to rise said an analyst who upgraded the stock, citing the energy management company's strong execution despite current economic volatility.

Shares of EnerNOC closed at $19.22 on Wednesday. Since the start of June the company's stock has shed almost 18 percent of its value.

Baird analyst J. Michael Horwitz said he believes the company offers investors the best way to gain exposure to the smart grid industry. He expects a strong second and third quarter for the company....MORE

Interesting timing, the company is releasing earnings on July 27:

What:      EnerNOC Second Quarter 2009 Conference Call
When: Monday, July 27, 2009
Time: 5 p.m. ET
Live Call: (800) 390-5696, domestic
(719) 325-2359, international
Replay: (888) 203-1112, passcode 4342891, domestic
(719) 457-0820, passcode 4342891, international
Webcast: http://investor.enernoc.com/webcasts.cfm (live and replay)

The Investors' Working Group Statement on the Federal Reserve (Arthur Levitt, William Donaldson, et al)

It doesn't get much harsher than having some huge investors and a couple former SEC Chairmen say:

U.S. Financial Regulatory Reform:
The Investors’ Perspective


A Report by the Investors’ Working Group
An Independent Taskforce Sponsored by

CFA Institute Centre for Financial Market Integrity
and
Council of Institutional Investors
July 2009

...This approach represents a middle ground between the systemic risk regulator advocated by the Administration and the “college of cardinals” model of oversight by the heads of existing federal regulators that some leading lawmakers propose. The IWG views both approaches with skepticism.

A council of regulators would have blurred lines of authority—ultimately no one would be in charge or accountable—and could be hamstrung by the usual jurisdictional disputes. The Administration’s approach, which envisions the U.S. Federal Reserve Board as systemic risk regulator, has more serious drawbacks. The Fed has other, potentially competing responsibilities—from guiding monetary policy to managing the vast U.S. payments system.

Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight that let institutions ratchet higher their balance sheet leverage and amass huge concentrations of risky, complex securitized products. Other serious concerns stem from the Fed’s regulatory failures—its refusal to police mortgage underwriting or to impose suitability standards on mortgage lenders—and the heavy influence that banks have on the Fed’s governance....
Here's the IWG homepage.
Here's the report (33 page PDF)

Mosaic Climbs After Report Vale Is Preparing a $25 Billion Bid (MOS)

From Bloomberg:

Mosaic Co., North America’s second- largest fertilizer producer, rose in premarket trading after a Brazilian newspaper reported that Vale SA is preparing a $25 billion bid for the company.

Mosaic climbed $4.20, or 9.4 percent, to $48.75 at 7:38 a.m. in trading before the regular opening of the New York Stock Exchange. The shares gained 29 percent this year through yesterday. Vale’s U.S.-traded shares fell 36 cents, or 2 percent, to $17.71.

O Estado de S. Paulo reported the possible bid today, without saying where it got the information...MORE

Here's the Estadao piece:

Vale estuda oferta de US$ 25 bi pela fabricante de fertilizantes Mosaic
Empresa, controlada pela americana Cargill, também desperta o interesse da anglo-australiana BHP Billiton.
Depois de gastar US$ 850 milhões este ano com a compra de ativos de potássio - matéria-prima para a fabricação de fertilizantes - na Argentina e Canadá, a Vale continua mirando o setor. Segundo fontes de mercado, a mineradora brasileira se prepara para entrar na briga pela Mosaic, empresa controlada pela Cargill e pela IMC Global, duas líderes no segmento de agronegócio.

O negócio é avaliado em cerca de US$ 25 bilhões, cifra que embute um prêmio de controle sobre o atual valor de mercado da companhia, de quase US$ 20 bilhões, pelas ações listadas na Bolsa de Valores de Nova York. Também estaria no páreo a principal concorrente da Vale, a mineradora anglo-australiana BHP Billiton, a primeira no ranking mundial....MAS/MAIS

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

"Funds drawn to China like 'moths to a flame'", And: Will Shanghai be 'eclipsed'?

First up, the Telegraph's own Ambrose Evans-Pritchard:

Fund managers from across the world are shunning the West in favour of China and emerging markets, yet still seem deeply concerned that rally over the last four months may prove to be a false dawn.

The July survey of investors by Merrill Lynch found that a net 63pc believe the world will recover over the next year, but they lack conviction and are not committing hard money to the rebound. “Asset allocators remain very cautious on global equities,” said the bank.

It noted a “very sharp increase” in cash as funds opt for caution, as well as a retreat from growth stocks into the safe havens of pharmaceuticals, health care, and utilities. Hedge funds have cut their net “long positions”, with many switching to the “short” side as the rally falters.

Despite the skittish mood, investors still seem drawn like “moths to a flame” towards Asia and emerging markets, convinced that the catch-up economies will vastly outperform the Old World over the next twelve months. A net 54pc are overweight emerging markets, the second highest ever, led by Indonesia, China, Russia, and Brazil. They seem to be disregarding warnings that China may soon have to clamp down on rampant credit growth.

“Sentiment on emerging markets is so loaded that we could see some disappointment,” said Gary Baker, Merrill’s head of European equity strategy....MORE

And on the recent BNP call for a Shanghai crash between July 17 and 27, here's The Pragmatic Capitalist:

Interesting reading here from BNP on the potential of another Chinese stock market crash. Their approach is interesting as they come to their conclusions using components of the same theories that make up my own work. I, however, do not believe the Chinese market is in for a crash, but rather believe the “long decay” scenario is far more likely. It would be highly unusual for two bubbles to form in the same market in such a short period of time - especially when the fundamentals and psychology of the market’s participants don’t justify it. In fact, it could be called an anomaly since it has never happened before....MORE

Here's Felix Salmon:

Josh and Tyler have found a piece of ever-so-scientific research which calculates that the Shanghai stock market will crash somewhere between July 17 and July 27. Which is convenient for me, since I’ll be there personally from July 19 through 25; I should have a front-row seat!

If I had to pick a single day for the crash, of course, it would have to be July 22. When the predictions of a Log Periodic Power Law are ratified by a solar eclipse with the longest totality of the century, how could stocks possibly behave otherwise?

Here's NASA's eclipse website:

On Wednesday, 2009 July 22, a total eclipse of the Sun is visible from within a narrow corridor that traverses half of Earth. The path of the Moon's umbral shadow begins in India and crosses through Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar and China. After leaving mainland Asia, the path crosses Japan's Ryukyu Islands and curves southeast through the Pacific Ocean where the maximum duration of totality reaches 6 min 39 s. A partial eclipse is seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes most of eastern Asia, Indonesia, and the Pacific Ocean.

2009 Total Solar Eclipse Global Map
Click to enlarge.

Finally, here's the three month chart for the Shanghai Composite Index:


Chart for SSE Composite Index (000001.SS)
Index Value:3,188.551
Trade Time:3:00AM ET
Change:Up 43.394 (1.38%)

Calpers Sues Over Ratings of Securities

Whaaa, whaaa, whaaa!
From the New York Times:

The nation’s largest public pension fund has filed suit in California state court in connection with $1 billion in losses that it says were caused by “wildly inaccurate” credit ratings from the three leading ratings agencies....

The lawsuit, filed late last week in California Superior Court in San Francisco, is focused on a form of debt called structured investment vehicles, highly complex packages of securities made up of a variety of assets, including subprime mortgages. Calpers bought $1.3 billion of them in 2006; they collapsed in 2007 and 2008....

...Calpers maintains that in giving these packages of securities the agencies’ highest credit rating, the three top ratings agencies — Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch — “made negligent misrepresentation” to the pension fund, which provides retirement benefits to 1.6 million public employees in California.

The AAA ratings given by the agencies “proved to be wildly inaccurate and unreasonably high,” according to the suit, which also said that the methods used by the rating agencies to assess these packages of securities “were seriously flawed in conception and incompetently applied.”...

...While the lawsuit is not the first against the credit rating agencies, some of which face litigation not only from investors in the securities they rated but from their own shareholders, too, it does lay out how an investor as sophisticated as Calpers, which has $173 billion in assets, could be led astray.

The security packages were so opaque that only the hedge funds that put them together — Sigma S.I.V. and Cheyne Capital Management in London, and Stanfield Capital Partners in New York — and the ratings agencies knew what the packages contained. Information about the securities in these packages was considered proprietary and not provided to the investors who bought them....MORE
Got that? We have a FIDUCIARY saying they bought stuff they didn't understand.
And weren't allowed to see.
"Hey Mister, I've got a magic box that will turn your dollar bills into C-notes!"
I'm pretty sure a smart young paralegal could draft the brief against CalPERS in about fifteen minutes.
We had some related thoughts in the March post "David Viniar, CFO of Goldman Sachs Blows Smoke at Journalists on AIG":
...David Viniar, CFO of Goldman Sachs, basically suggested that since nobody knew that AIG was a house of cards, nobody had any reason to suspect anything. “AIG was a triple-A rated company, one of the largest and considered one of the most sophisticated in the world,” he said. And in a response to a question on how Goldman allowed its exposure to AIG to get as large as it did, Mr. Viniar describes positions made in 2006 and early 2007 as if it was a different age, a more innocent time, when magical dwarves ruled the land, before the ring of power had been forged.

“It was a very long time ago,” Mr. Viniar says. “AIG at the time was one of the largest, strongest companies in the entire world, and they were very sophisticated, or appeared to be, a very sophisticated counterparty.” The firm later scaled back trades — by the end of 2007, according to Mr. Viniar....

My question is, "If Goldman Sachs were still a partnership, would they have entered into these transactions in the same size?"

The answer, of course, is no.

If partners equity were at risk, there is no way that they would have depended on ratings agencies to ascertain the strength of their counterparty.

Junior partners would be expected to run honey traps on AIG employees.

Lower level employees would hone their dumpster-diving skills.

Whatever it takes to gain competitive intelligence and safeguard the partnership's capital.

See also: "The optimal design of Ponzi schemes in finite economies"

Reading Mr. Viniar's words, I am reminded of his statement on market moves in August, 2007:

“We were seeing things that were 25-standard deviation moves, several days in a row”
Several folks, when they finally quit laughing, pointed out how blatently Mr. V was spinning.
Most however underestimated how infrequent 25SD events are, the most common guess being once in 100,000 years. Tee hee.
In a snappy little eight page paper "How Unlucky is 25 Sigma" we see that at 7 Sigma the odds are:
...The reader will note that as k gets bigger the probabilities of a k-sigma event fall
extremely rapidly:
• a 3-sigma event is to be expected about every 741 days or about 1 trading day
in every three years;

• a 4-sigma event is to be expected about every 31,560 days or about 1 trading
day in 126 years (!);

• a 5-sigma event is to be expected every 3,483,046 days or about 1 day every
13,932 years(!!)

• a 6-sigma event is to be expected every 1,009,976,678 days or about 1 day
every 4,039,906 years;

• a 7-sigma event is to be expected every 7.76e+11 days – the number of zero
digits is so large that Excel now reports the number of days using scientific
notation, and this number is to be interpreted as 7.76 days with decimal point
pushed back 11 places. This frequency corresponds to 1 day in 3,105,395,365
years....
The authors go on to describe the problems involved in computing numbers on the cosmological scales required for 25 standard deviations. A good read, both for the statistically challenged and for pros like Viniar, a very highly paid PR guy, in addition to his CFO duties.

Mobius Says Derivatives, Stimulus to Spark New Crisis [in 5 to 7 years]

From Bloomberg:

A new financial crisis will develop from the failure to effectively regulate derivatives and the extra global liquidity from stimulus spending, Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius said.

“Political pressure from investment banks and all the people that make money in derivatives” will prevent adequate regulation, said Mobius, who oversees $25 billion as executive chairman of Templeton in Singapore. “Definitely we’re going to have another crisis coming down,” he said in a phone interview from Istanbul on July 13.

Derivatives contributed to almost $1.5 trillion in writedowns and losses at the world’s biggest banks, brokers and insurers since the start of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Global share markets lost almost half their value last year, shedding $28.7 trillion as investors became risk averse amid a global recession.

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating the market for credit-default swaps, Markit Group Ltd., the data provider majority-owned by Wall Street’s largest banks, said July 13.

Mobius didn’t explain what he thought was needed for effective regulation of derivatives, which are contracts used to hedge against changes in stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, interest rates and weather. The Bank for International Settlements estimates outstanding derivatives total $592 trillion, about 10 times global gross domestic product.

Looming Crisis

“Banks make so much money with these things that they don’t want transparency because the spreads are so generous when there’s no transparency,” he said.

A “very bad” crisis may emerge within five to seven years as stimulus money adds to financial volatility, Mobius said. Governments have pledged about $2 trillion in stimulus spending....MORE

Can Sustainable Ag Attract Venture Capital?

From The Big Money's Daily Bread blog:

Venture capital's "largesse is finally trickling down to sustainable agriculture," says James McWilliams, a history professor at Texas State University.

"The key word is 'trickling,' " says McWilliams, writing for the Atlantic's food blog. While venture capitalists are hot to finance "clean tech" companies in areas like alternative energy and carbon reduction, small firms working in sustainable ag are, so far, also-rans.

That might be changing, as more people become aware of agriculture's outsize impact on the environment. When people think of, for example, global warming, they most often think of car-clogged freeways and giant coal-powered power plants. But agriculture is responsible for about a third of the greenhouse gases we spew into the atmosphere, among a host of other environmental problems.

But when it comes to financing, firms in the sustainable-agriculture sector "will likely never have the same investment pull as a multinational wind energy conglomerate," McWilliams says. And most often, "the profiles of these operations are too low to find room in the privileged portfolios of venture capitalists." (Though there are notable exceptions.) "It's not easy, say, for a vermiculturist with a backyard operation to convince the monied elite that his worms are worthy. It requires some translation."

Enter the translators, like Janine Yorio, a consultant who McWilliams says provides a necessary bridge between the ag nerds and the money people. VCs "generally do not want to waste time parsing the intricacies of an obscure agricultural operation. Their concern is how it'll pay off," McWilliams writes. Firms like NewSeed Advisors help them understand.>>>MORE

The Summer Of Algae

From the Wall Street Journal's Venture Capital Dispatch (now with bloggy goodness):

All of a sudden, the sun is shining on early-stage companies developing algae-based fuel. Call it the summer of algae.

Oil giant ExxonMobil’s commitment to invest $600 million in research and development alongside venture-backed Synthetic Genomics Inc. is just another in a string of recent announcements of either new fund-raises or strategic partnership with established companies.

n late June, start-up Algenol Biofuels Inc. formed a partnership with The Dow Chemical Co. to develop a $50 million, algae-to-fuel pilot-scale plant employing Algenol’s technology, which involves linking the production of sugar from photosynthesis with the enzymes required to produce ethanol within an individual blue-green algae cell.

There were also at least two funding rounds in June. Solix Biofuels Inc. closed on $16.8 million to complete construction of a demonstration-scale facility, with investors including Shanghai Alliance Investment Ltd., London-based I2BF Venture Capital, Bohemian Investments, Southern Ute Alternative Energy LLC, petroleum refiner Valero Energy Corp. and Infield Capital. Solazyme Inc. added $12 million in an interim round standing at $57 million, which was led by Braemar Energy Ventures and Lightspeed Venture Partners and brought in new investor VantagePoint Venture Partners.

And then there’s the government funding opportunity - an overall pot of almost $800 million - for pilot-stage biorefineries that is open to algae technology as well, making available significant amounts of federal money for this biomass for the first time since the Department of Energy’s Aquatic Species Program launched in 1978 (funding for the ASP was cut in 1995)....MORE

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Eliot Spitzer Not Sure He's Okay Supporting Goldman's Second Quarter Earnings

Reposted in full, from DealBreaker:

The noted hooker aficionado stopped by Bloomberg TV this morning to discuss the matter of Goldman Sachs making 'a bloody fortune,' thanks to US aid. What Big Spitz would like to know is what the bank is going to do with the capital. If they're going to create jobs, which LB and Co have yet to do, or fund companionship programs that match politicians with hot young prosities, he's got no problem. If it's going to go back into proprietary trading, etc, well, that's no good, and those 85 Broads can expect a strongly worded Slate column in the very near future, in addition to the possibility of a joint press conference on YouTube with Maxine Waters.
Ya gotta love DB, here's their liveblog of the Goldman conference call:

11:00 Music hold. Classical, with a hint of Lil Jon, which is LB's fave, and has been getting tons of play in his Top 25.

11:01 Dane Holmes, head of investor relations welcomes you, invites everyone to help themselves to a hundo.

11:02 Reading of the press release

Let this be a lesson to you all: Goldman's second quarter earnings "reflect the importance of diversifying."

11:07 Real estate hurt, kinda bad.

11:12 Compensation expenses came out to $6.6 billion-ish; headcount was down 1 percent to 29,100. Each and every one of you are missed, but LB and his bitches gotta get paid....MORE

PIMCO does not Sound like Green Shootists!

From Reuters:

PIMCO's McCulley: Fed must have bold plan in mind

The U.S. Federal Reserve may need to consider highly unorthodox measures to boost the economy if a "liquidity trap" drags on, said Paul McCulley, managing director of the giant bond firm PIMCO.

In a newsletter posted on Tuesday, McCulley said the Fed should have a plan in mind "if and when" the U.S. economy seemed set to languish in a way similar to Japan's so-called "lost decade." of the 1990s.

Liquidity trap is a term used to describe a situation where a country's nominal interest rate has been lowered to, or close to, zero but still fails to stimulate the economy.

The Fed has set its benchmark lending rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008.

For now, pressure on personal income continues from "massive unemployment and underemployment," which is pushing wage growth toward zero, McCulley said.

"This is not the stuff of a self-sustaining revival in aggregate demand," he added.

"America is in a liquidity trap, driven by private sector deleveraging borne of asset price deflation, meaning that private sector demand for credit is axiomatically flat to negative, despite a fed funds rate pinned against zero.">>>MORE

Transmission: "A Costly and Unnecessary New Electricity Grid" And: "Debate on Clean Energy Leads to Regional Divide "

A twofer. First up, MIT's Technology Review:

A national interstate system for distributing power may prove an expensive boondoggle.

Energy experts generally agree that the electrical grid in the United States needs to be upgraded if the country is to increase its use of renewable-energy sources like wind power and significantly reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. But plans to string new high-voltage lines to bring wind power from the midsection of the country to the coasts, where most of the demand is, could be expensive and unnecessary, and a distraction from more urgent needs, some experts say.

A new national grid, which has been likened to the Interstate Highway System constructed in the 1950s, has been proposed by groups such as the Center for American Progress, a Washington-based think tank, and AEP, a large utility; elements of the plans have been included in recent federal legislation. According to this vision, new high-voltage transmission lines costing billions of dollars would be built across the country, augmenting the existing patchwork of transmission lines much as the Interstate Highway System laid down high-speed roadways over an existing network of highways. But such a plan is "only a dream," says Paul Joskow, president of the Sloan Foundation and a professor of economics at MIT. "It's expensive. It's politically contentious. In the end, I think you're better off spending the money on other things."

What's needed instead are improved local and regional electricity transmission, the development of an efficient and adaptable smart grid, and the demonstration of technology such as carbon capture and sequestration, which could prove a cheaper way to reduce carbon dioxide emissions than transmitting power from North Dakota to New York City....MORE

And from the New York Times:

While most lawmakers accept that more renewable energy is needed on the nation’s grid, the debate over the giant climate-change and energy bill now before Congress is exposing a fundamental rift. For many players, the energy not only has to be clean and free of carbon-dioxide emissions, it also has to be generated nearby.

The division has set off a fight between Eastern and Midwestern politicians and grid officials over parts of the bill dealing with transmission lines and solar and wind energy. Many officials, including President Obama, say that the grid is antiquated and that thousands of miles of new power lines are needed to allow construction of wind farms and solar fields in the most promising spots. Many of the best wind sites are in the Midwest, far from the electric load in populous East Coast cities.

An influential coalition of East Coast governors and power companies fears that building wind and solar sites in the Midwest would cause their region to miss out on jobs and other economic benefits. The coalition is therefore trying to block a mandate for transcontinental lines.

They want the wind farms built in rural New England and offshore from Massachusetts to Delaware, and for now it appears that they may get a chance to do that. They are campaigning to keep a provision out of the legislation that would mandate a huge super-high-voltage grid, with the cost spread among millions of electric customers.

“While we support the development of wind resources for the United States wherever they exist,” the governors warned in a May 4 letter to House and Senate leaders, “this ratepayer-funded revenue guarantee for land-based wind and other generation resources in the Great Plains would have significant, negative consequences for our region.”

Dan W. Reicher, an assistant energy secretary in the Clinton administration who now leads energy initiatives at Google, said the debate exposed a conundrum. “The areas with the most attractive renewable energy resources often don’t overlap with the places where the push for job creation is strongest,” Mr. Reicher said.

For example, a wind machine in North Dakota would produce more energy than the same machine in some Eastern states — but energy projects tend to get built in places where they are most wanted.

The East Coast advocates may have won a crucial first round. When the House passed its sweeping energy and climate-change bill on June 26, it included a provision that lets the federal government overrule state objections to new power lines — but only west of the Rockies. Western states would be unlikely to oppose the new power lines in any case: the region has long been accustomed to huge generation projects built at a great distance from load centers.

But the bill would not give the federal government a mandate to overrule the Eastern states on transmission lines. The issue will be on the table again as the Senate takes up the bill in the next few weeks....MORE

China Builds High Wall to Guard Energy Industry

From the New York Times:

Ariana Lindquist for The New York Times

The Daliang Wind Station located outside of Anxi in Gansu Province. China is now building six wind farms with a capacity of 10,000 to 20,000 megawatts apiece.

When the United States’ top energy and commerce officials arrive in China on Tuesday, they will land in the middle of a building storm over China’s protectionist tactics to become the world’s leader in renewable energy.

Calling renewable energy a strategic industry, China is trying hard to make sure that its companies dominate globally. Just as Japan and South Korea made it hard for Detroit automakers to compete in those countries — giving their own automakers time to amass economies of scale in sheltered domestic markets — China is shielding its clean energy sector while it grows to a point where it can take on the world.

Steven Chu, the American energy secretary, and Gary Locke, the commerce secretary, are coming here to discuss clean energy and global warming with Chinese leaders, and to see if progress can be made toward getting China to agree to specific targets for reductions in greenhouse gases. Agreement proved elusive during the Group of 8 summit meeting last week in Italy.

But Mr. Chu and Mr. Locke arrive as Western companies, especially Europeans, are complaining increasingly about Beijing’s green protectionism.

China has built the world’s largest solar panel manufacturing industry by exporting over 95 percent of its output to the United States and Europe. But when China authorized its first solar power plant this spring, it required that at least 80 percent of the equipment be made in China.

When the Chinese government took bids this spring for 25 large contracts to supply wind turbines, every contract was won by one of seven domestic companies. All six multinationals that submitted bids were disqualified on various technical grounds, like not providing sufficiently detailed data....MORE

E.ON and EDF have drawn the battle lines between renewables and nuclear

We last saw E.ON and EDF share a headline in "EU fines E.On and Gaz de France combined €1.1 Billion ($1.54 Bil.)". Here's the Guardian's take on some energy philosophy:

Energy bosses don't like the idea that renewable energy delivers power to the people – both literally and metaphorically

In 2003, the nuclear industry was very nearly killed off in Britain. In 2009, it is so resurgent that captains of the energy industry are arguing it is renewables that should be killed off, or at least kept on a starvation diet.

Today, the Confederation of British Industry has thrown its weight behind the nuclear industry's calls for the government to scale back "overambitious" wind power targets in favour of atomic energy. Two foreign-owned energy giants, E.ON and EDF, have recently told the government it must essentially choose between new nuclear and major renewables developments. With global warming, energy security and fuel poverty all rendering energy policy a matter of life and death today, in their own ways, this new polarisation in the nuclear debate is a desperately dangerous development.

In 2003, just before the government completed its first energy white paper, nuclear power was kept alive only because a few mandarins insisted language be inserted about a review in five years. Five years of half-hearted government efforts to mobilise renewables and efficiency ensued. Looking back now, many of us in the renewables industries see the dead hand of a civil service Sir Humphrey in the slow-motion episodes of real-life Yes Minister that we lived through. The proportion of renewables in the UK energy mix was about 3% back in 2003. It is about 3% now. With the best renewable resources in Europe, the UK is third from bottom of a European league table topped by Sweden with 40% renewables in the energy mix.

Meanwhile, renewables industries globally have been, and are, growing faster than almost all other industries. 2008 was the first year in which more renewables capacity came onstream than fossil fuels and nuclear combined, in both Europe and America. Over the past five years, the solar photovoltaics industry (PV) has grown 600%. Wind has grown 250%. Hundreds of thousands of jobs have been created.

Renewables companies that didn't exist at the turn of the century ride high in stock exchanges. The German government has shown, in a national scaled experiment, that national economies can be run entirely on renewables, overcoming intermittency and covering "baseload" by mixing and matching different members of the renewables family. The renewables industries claim they can run the global economy entirely within 20-40 years.

Swimming against this optimistic tide, EDF and E.ON are now warning the UK government that efforts to get to 20% renewables in the energy mix – the official EU target – are not only unrealistic but damaging to nuclear plans. Additional carbon-generating plants will be needed because of intermittency, they say, ignoring the German experience. The EDF CEO, Vincent de Rivaz, says he is concerned that high levels of wind construction will require new British nuclear plants to be shut down when the wind output is high.

The truth is that there is only so much money available, and the nuclear advocates – scared by the growth rates of renewables – are scrabbling to ensure most of it goes to them. De Rivaz has yet to persuade his owners, the French government, that his plan to build four British reactors at well over £4bn each makes commercial sense. He has made it clear to Whitehall that he will need major subsidies....MORE

Here are some other Brits on philosophy (from our post "How to Win Any Global Warming Argument"):



Chile sees copper averaging $2/lb in 2009

From Reuters:

World copper prices could average about $2 per pound in 2009, Chile's Mining Minister Santiago Gonzalez said on Monday, signaling greater market stability after the red metal plunged from record highs.

"The price this year depending on international conditions in China and India should stay at around $2," Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez' $2 prediction is still a far cry from records of $4 a lb nearly a year ago.

The world's top copper producer could see its output rise by as much as 4 percent this year from 2008, he added....MORE

"Why Warren Buffett Is Wrong About Cap and Trade: Eric Pooley" (BRK.A)

In February the NYT's Freakonomics blog had a post, "Can Newspapers Stop Global Warming?" that began:

Newspapers are disappearing faster than alpine glaciers, and a new paper by journalist-turned-public-policy scholar Eric Pooley suggests the two may be related.

Pooley’s paper argues that newspapers have failed as referees of the public debate on preventing climate change, reporting junk economics and good economics with equal weight. In these muddied waters, Pooley suggests, it’s harder for the government to push sound policy to stop global warming....
I, of course, had a comment:

Hogwash!
Re:
“…As an example, he points to the failure, last year, of the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act. The bill was the most serious climate-change-prevention legislation ever to make it to the Senate….”
.
The reason the bill didn’t move is the floor managers couldn’t get enough Senators to put their names to the thing.
Most folks understand that the price of coal-fired electricity would have to rise two to four times for wind/solar to be competitive. That was the purpose of L-W.
.
Upon being sworn in, most politicians come to believe that the most statesmanlike, the most patriotic, thing they can pursue is their own re-election.
Today I linked to a CJR post suggesting that newspaper websites go dark for a week. My first thought was how many truly awful essays would be written that week.
Looks like it’s already happening.
Now I’m torn between using the phrases arrogant twaddle or errant drivel.

— Climateer
This was immediately followed by Mr. Pooley's only statement in the comments section (probably a coinkydink):

Fire away, but since many of the points made here are addressed in my paper, I’d invite anyone who’s interested to read it rather than simply responding to this necessarily brief and incomplete summary. Cheers.

— Eric Pooley
Today he writes (in Bloomberg):
Warren Buffett carries plenty of weight in any debate -- even when he gets it wrong.

So as the Senate digs into the climate-change bill that passed the House of Representatives last month, it’s worth taking a hard look at how Buffett’s views on the bill went off course.

Buffett knows global warming is real and carbon emissions must be cut. But he’s worried that the bill might hurt his electric utility, Des Moines, Iowa-based MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co.

He may be right. But that doesn’t mean this is a bad bill; it may mean MidAmerican made some bad decisions.

On another count, Buffett is simply wrong when he calls the bill a “huge, regressive tax” that would ensure “very poor people are going to pay a lot more for their electricity.” Likewise David Sokol, the chairman of MidAmerican, was wrong when he testified that the cost of buying carbon allowances under the bill would drive up Iowa electricity prices by $110 per month per customer in the first year.

Opponents of the bill have latched onto Buffett and Sokol’s words, trumpeting them on the House floor and in a July 7 Senate hearing. So let’s examine their three basic claims:

Claim 1: It’s regressive. No, the bill doesn’t punish the poor. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that it would cost the average household $175 a year by 2020, while the 20 percent of Americans with the lowest incomes would come out ahead by $40 a year.

‘Cap and Tax’

Claim 2: It’s a tax. In spite of the Republican Party’s relentless “cap-and-tax” talk, cap and trade isn’t a tax. It is a dumping fee for greenhouse gases. The dumping permits, or allowances, are distributed to utilities and other large emitters, who can then buy and sell them....MORE

As you can see, Mr. Pooley is a formidable wordsmith.

In this case though the words don't tell the whole story. He fails to mention that MidAmerican has the largest stable of utility-owned wind generated electricity in the country. He doesn't talk about MidAmerican's significant hydro capacity. Instead he ends the opinion piece with:

...Bottom line: MidAmerican made some bad calls. It turned on a huge new coal-fired plant in 2007. It chose not to spin off its wholesale power business. And when other utilities were hammering out their allocation deals with Congress, Sokol and Buffett sat out the negotiation.

The Oracle of Omaha apparently didn’t see this one coming. But it’s not too late: the next round of negotiation is just getting under way.

See also:

Warren Buffett on Cap-and-Trade (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's Munger on Cap-and-Trade ("Monstrously Stupid Right Now...Almost Demented"); Warren and Charlie on Wind and Solar (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy on Waxman-Markey: "We Don't Much Care For It" (BRK.A)

Did Congressman Markey Attempt Witness Intimidation With the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy? (BRK.A)

UPDATE-- "Sokol: Markey seeks to intimidate" (BRK.A)

Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Sees Carbon Trading Adding $120 to Bills (BRK.A)

Climateer Investing on Carbon Trading and Traders

California climate change law cost underrated: study

From the Department of Duh:

California's fight against global warming will cost small businesses $183 billion per year in lost output, about 10 percent of state production, according to a study released on Monday.

The study, funded by small business groups and written by a university dean, added fuel to a heated debate over the effects of California's efforts to curtail climate change and provoked criticism from environmentalists and a state agency.

California, which has the largest population and economy of the 50 U.S. states, passed its climate change law in 2006.

Since then, the state's economy has weakened dramatically, reinvigorating the arguments about whether the program makes financial sense, even as global warming has become a national concern and a top priority of U.S. President Barack Obama....

...In contrast, an analysis by California's Air Resources Board, which is responsible for implementing the climate change law, had found a slight net economic benefit to the plan.

But that analysis was roundly criticized, including by the state's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst Office, which called it "inconsistent and incomplete."

CRITICS DIFFER ON STUDY

Supporters see California's moves, ahead of other states, as creating a vibrant green economy. But Varshney argued that businesses already struggling with an economic meltdown would flee and small enterprises would have to shut down as costs eclipsed their profits.

Estimating 10 percent cost hikes for transportation, housing, fuel, food and utilities, the study forecast $63.9 billion in direct costs to small business would cause $182.6 billion in total loss of output, especially in professional services, manufacturing, arts, entertainment and recreation.

The study did not quantify the benefits of the law, saying costs would come early while benefits might never materialize.

"It is very much a stack-the-deck kind of analysis," said James Fine, an economist at the Environmental Defense Fund....MORE from Reuters

HT: Environmental Capital

Zeitgeist:: French workers threaten to blow up plant

From FT Alphaville:

Workers at a failed French car parts supplier are threatening to blow up their factory unless the company’s two biggest clients - Renault and PSA Peugeot Citroen - stump up extra compensation, the FT reported. Employees of the engine parts maker New Fabris have rigged up a series of gas canisters inside a factory workshop which they say will be detonated on July 31 if the two carmakers fail to pay €30,000 to each of the 366 workers facing unemployment.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Cash rich China eyes Canada's rich resources

Front-running the Chinese for fun and profit. From Reuters:

* Purchase of Teck stake may only be first of many

* Looking at opportunities amid credit crunch

* Key commodities include coal, copper and uranium (In U.S. dollars unless noted)

By Pav Jordan

TORONTO, July 12 (Reuters) - China's purchase of a C$1.74 billion ($1.5 billion) stake in Teck Resources (TCKb.TO) may be just the opening move from the world's top resource consumer in a strategy to use its unique wealth advantage to become a key source of mining capital for Canadian firms.

Teck said last week it sold a 17.2 percent equity stake to state-owned China Investment Corp in a deal that allows the Canadian miner to pay down its massive debt while expanding China's portfolio of commodity investments.

The deal underscores how deep China's pockets are at a time when many sources of credit and financing have dried up in the global recession, even for the biggest miners.

"Most people thought China would take advantage of this dip in commodity prices and, because they're the only ones with money, take advantage of this financial situation we are in. They have come through big time, be it oil and gas, or any commodity you can think of," David Davidson, an analyst with Paradigm Capital in Toronto, said in an interview after the Teck deal was announced....MORE

Ponzi Hedging Strategy Yields 5% Return

Reprinted in full from DealBreaker:

Some investors who were "victims" of a Ponzi scheme in Texas may have found a way to turn their losses into fraud-squared gains. Derrich Pollock, whose financial background included stints working in an auto supply store and selling vitamin supplements, took in about $6.2 million from investors and ran his Bernie-like scheme. However, he also took out $9 million in insurance policies on himself which went to investors upon his death. When Pollock died in a plane crash in 2007, investors stepped up to the plate to collect.

But when local securities regulators had a closer look at Pollock's empire, they discovered he wasn't quite the stock genius you'd expect from somebody with an auto parts background. Between the remaining assets and the life insurance payments, investors (some of whom allegedly knew Pollock was running a Ponzi scheme) have already received 105% of what they invested. Now Pollock's wife, who filed for bankruptcy, is going after some of the investors for their winnings. Ruth Madoff may have a way to avoid taking the subway after all.

Widow of man who ran Ponzi scheme wants investors to return their profits [Austin American-Statesman]

Toyota Considering Closure of Last Auto Plant in California

As a followup to our July 1 post "Last American Automaker Pulls Out of California (GM)":

The Fremont NUMMI plant is not just the last place that American automakers had a presence in the Golden State but it is also the largest manufacturing operation in the Bay Area. The downward spiral in manufacturing looks to continue until the last holdout is waved goodbye by a left behind service sector saying "Vaya con Dios"....
We have this, via Tech Trader Daily:

The carnage in the auto industry may be about to hit Silicon Valley.

Toyota (TM) is considering close NUMMI, a Fremont, California vehicle-assembly plant that it has been operating jointly with General Motors. The revamped GM has decided to pull out of the venture, New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. (ergo, NUMMI) and now Toyota may close the doors on the operation, which employs 4,600 people.

“We need to determine whether it can be economically feasible to contract with NUMMI without GM,” Toyota said in a statement, according to the Wall Street Journal.”Under the current business circumstances, Toyota regrettably must also consider taking necessary steps to dissolve the joint venture.”>>>MORE

Speculators leave oil market as regulator mulls crackdown

From MarketWatch:

Big speculators such as hedge funds and investment banks sharply reduced their buying positions in the recent week, as the futures market regulator said it's considering setting limits in energy speculation.


The drop in speculator positions likely contributed to last week's 10% slump in oil prices -- the biggest weekly loss in six months, analysts said.
Long, or buying, positions held by non-commercial traders, a category the regulator uses to classify big speculators, dropped by 16,382 contracts in the week ended July 7, according to the weekly Commitments of Traders report released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission late Friday.
That's the biggest drop in four months in oil futures traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange, according to COT historical data. Long positions held by speculators now stand at the lowest level since the week ended May 26.
Meanwhile, speculators increased their selling, or short, positions, resulting in a 60% slump in net long positions.
Net long positions held by speculators now stand at 15,357 contracts, the lowest level since May 12. One contract represents 1,000 barrels of oil. See the latest COT
report.


The change in speculation positions came as the CFTC said, also on July 7, that it's considering setting limits in the number of positions speculators can take in the energy futures market....MORE

Does Stock-Market Data Really Go Back 200 Years?

Over the weekend I was putting together some info on expected future equity returns and pulled some back copies of The Financial Analysts Journal, of which Mr. Arnott was for a time, editor. A very sharp guy. From the Wall Street Journal:

As of June 30, U.S. stocks have underperformed long-term Treasury bonds for the past five, 10, 15, 20 and 25 years.

Still, brokers and financial planners keep reminding us, there's almost never been a 30-year period since 1802 when stocks have underperformed bonds.

These true believers rely on the gospel of "Stocks for the Long Run," the book by finance professor Jeremy Siegel of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania that was first published in 1994.

Using data assembled by other scholars, Prof. Siegel extended the history of U.S. stock returns all the way back to 1802. He came to two conclusions that became articles of faith to millions of investors: Ever since Thomas Jefferson was in the White House, stocks have generated a "remarkably constant" average return of nearly 7% a year after inflation. (Adding inflation at 3% yields the commonly cited 10% annual stock return.) And, declared Prof. Siegel, "the risks of holding stocks decrease over time."

There is just one problem with tracing stock performance all the way back to 1802: It isn't really valid.

Prof. Siegel based his early numbers on data first gathered decades ago by two economists, Walter Buckingham Smith and Arthur Harrison Cole.

For the years 1802 through 1820, Profs. Smith and Cole collected prices on three dozen banking, insurance, transportation and other stocks -- but ended up including only seven, all banks, in their stock-market index. Through 1845, they tracked 19 insurance stocks, but rejected 95% of them, adding only one to their index. For 1834 onward, they added a maximum of 27 railroad stocks.

To be a good measure of stock returns, an index should be comprehensive (by including many stocks) and representative (by including the stocks commonly held by investors). The Smith and Cole indexes are neither, as the professors signaled in their 1935 book, "Fluctuations in American Business." They cherry-picked their indexes by throwing out any stock that didn't survive for the whole period, whose share prices were too hard to find or whose returns seemed "inflexible," "erratic," or "non-typical."

The database of early U.S. securities at EH.net has so far identified more than 1,000 stocks that were listed on 10 different exchanges -- including Charleston, S.C., New Orleans, and Norfolk, Va. -- between 1790 and 1860. Thus the indexes relied on by Prof. Siegel exclude 97% of all the stocks that existed in the earliest years of the U.S. market, and include only the bluest of the blue-chip survivors. Never mind all of the canals, wooden turnpikes, rubber-hat companies and the other doomed stocks that investors lost millions on -- and whose returns may never be reconstructed.

There is a second problem with Prof. Siegel's data.

In an article published in 1992, he estimated the average annual dividend yield from 1802-1870 at 5.0%. Two years later in his book, it had grown to 6.4% -- raising the average annual return in the early years from 5.7% to 7.0% after inflation....MORE

In a January comment at MarketBeat a blogger said:

I thought it was interesting that you pointed out Citi’s 10yr performance.

I’ve done some research showing that the 10 calendar years for the S&P 500 ending Dec 31, 2008 were the worst since 1831! So Citi isn’t alone…

http://www.planbeconomics.com/2009/01/07/worst-10-years-on-record/

My comment was:

Mark,
What’s your data source, pre-1871?
I’ve got “COMMON-STOCK INDEXES 1871-1937″ open on the desk as I type and Mr. Cowles is quite explicit as to the reasons the Commission didn’t go further back than 1871. (pg. 4)
A big one is the paucity of publicly traded industrials.
During a mis-spent youth I read every line of the book.
My favorite tidbit is the listing, among the pre-1871 industrials, of New York Guano.
Some things never change.
Here’s Yale’s (and my) gift to the MarketBeat’s readers:
http://cowles.econ.yale.edu/P/cm/m03/index.htm
It links to a big ‘ol hog of a PDF,

Survivorship bias, small sample, reliance on financials (i.e. no wooden turnpike companies, failed canals...) etc. etc.

Trouble for Treasuries Lurks as California Melts: David Reilly

From Bloomberg:

It’s time for investors in U.S. Treasuries to toke up, or at least support offers by pot smokers to help narrow California’s budget gap by paying taxes on marijuana.

Ludicrous as that legalization ploy may sound, California and its Governator aren’t in a position to dismiss any possible help. Neither are holders of U.S. government debt who would suffer if California’s slow-mo meltdown eventually ripples across the entire country.

So far, the prospect of a California collapse hasn’t worried investors outside municipal markets. U.S. debt holders piled into $19 billion of 10-year notes offered on Wednesday, pushing yields below 3.4 percent.

And California isn’t going to fall apart in a matter of days. While the recent issuance of IOUs to cover some bills is unsettling, the state is able to meet most of its obligations.

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and his dysfunctional legislators may even find a way out of the current imbroglio. The possibility that banks such as Wells Fargo & Co. and Bank of America Corp. may stop accepting the IOUs as of today, for example, may spur legislative compromise.

Even so, that’s not going to solve California’s long-term, structural issues. Today’s problems follow a similar budget mess, and a temporary resolution of a $42 billion deficit, in February.

Debt Downgrade

Unless California overhauls the way it is managed or the U.S. economy stages an incredible comeback, the state’s budgetary woes will only deepen.

While saying the state’s default risk “remains low,” Fitch Ratings downgraded California earlier this week. It said California’s governmental gridlock “could persist, further aggravating the state’s already severe economic, revenue and liquidity challenges.”

Plus, the enduring recession makes it more likely that California’s $26.3 billion budget gap will worsen, especially since the state is at the epicenter of the housing crisis and has higher unemployment than much of the rest of the country.

So what would President Barack Obama do if given the choice between allowing a California default and taking on more debt on behalf of taxpayers?

Do the math. It only involves one figure -- 55. That’s the number of Electoral College votes held by California, the most of any state.

Tough to Abandon

It would also be tough to let California go to the wall after saving Michigan and the United Auto Workers via General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Group LLC, not to mention keeping Manhattan afloat through the bailout of Wall Street.

Then there is the threat a California default poses to the entire U.S. municipal finance system. On its own, California’s almost $80 billion in outstanding debt is a small slice of the municipal securities market, which the Securities and Exchange Commission recently estimated at about $2.6 trillion.

The problem: if California defaulted, already gun-shy investors would likely hustle out of municipal issues just to be on the safe side....MORE

Power Play: HSBC on the Coming Carnage in Power Generation

From Environmental Capital:

It’s not often that equity analysts reach back to Napoleon’s later campaigns to describe the landscape in, say, the global market for power generation technology.

Napoleon_art_200v_20090710112134.jpg
Watch your back

But like the scorched-earth Russia that greeted the French army in 1812, the world’s makers of electricity-generation equipment face a foreboding landscape. A global push to change the way electricity is generated and used is forcing big equipment makers, from General Electric to Siemens, to figure out a fresh manuever....

...What’s that mean for individual companies? HSBC has some favorites—Harbin Power and Dongfang Electric of China; Siemens of Germany; Vestas of Denmark; and ABB.

Dongfang has exposure to both wind power and nuclear power, two high-growth sectors in China, HSBC says. Harbin doesn’t have wind, but is ramping up production of more efficient thermal generators which China also needs.

ABB’s global leadership in electricity transmission puts it in an enviable position to reap sales in a sector that HSBC figures should account for 50% of global power-business sales over the next five years.

Vestas, as the world’s biggest wind-turbine maker, is best-positioned to take advantage of the recovery in the wind business. Siemens seems poised, after a decade of restructuring, to deliver healthy earnings. Finally, General Electric, while not making the bank’s top-five shortlist, boasts an enviable global position in gas- and wind-power equipment....MORE

Thursday, July 9, 2009

The Obama Market vs. The Presidential (4-year) Cycle

This doesn't have any predictive skill but I wanted to bookmark the chart. I never realized how flat the first twenty months of a term looked. From Kitco:

The typical pattern for the first five-plus months of a presidential term is mostly sideways as new administrations take shape and second-termers reshuffle people and set new priorities....MORE

Funniest Headline of the Day: "World leaders say 2-degree climate cap approved"

Sorry... can't... stop... laughing...must... post...From EarthTimes:

The leaders of the world's biggest polluting nations said Thursday they had agreed to limit global warming to within 2 degrees centigrade to prevent catastrophic climate change. Developed and developing nations "for the first time acknowledged the significance of the 2 degrees," US President Barack Obama said. The landmark deal was approved in the central Italian city of L'Aquila by the heads of state and government of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United States, Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa, Australia, Indonesia and South Korea.

Canute by the Sea-Shore
(That'd be King Canute teaching his courtiers a lesson)

Senate Ag Panel's Members Look to Stake Major Claim in Climate Bill

From ClimateWire via the New York Times:

Powerful members of the Senate Agriculture Committee are angling to include even more farm and ethanol-friendly provisions to their chamber's energy and climate legislation than the House added to its bill last month.

Chairman Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and other members of his panel say they want to ensure any effort at wide-ranging climate legislation in the Senate will include all of the provisions that House Agriculture Chairman Collin Peterson (D-Minn.) brokered for the House cap-and-trade bill, H.R. 2454 (pdf). With the hard-fought Peterson deal as their starting point, the farm state lawmakers could have leverage to capture additional benefits for farmers and ranchers.

As Senate leadership aims to advance the bill this fall, agricultural interests could form a formidable coalition. Several key fence-sitters on the bill sit on the Agriculture Committee, and farm interests have wide appeal in the Senate. Each senator has some farm interests in his or her state -- unlike the House, which has more representatives from urban and suburban areas....MORE

Shipping flashes early warning signals again

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard is concerned. From the Telegraph:

Port statistics are revealing. They were a leading indicator before the production collapse in the Japan, Europe, and the US over the winter, and they may be telling us something again.

Amrita Sen at Barclays Capital says the number of Baltic Dry ships waiting to berth — mostly in China and Australia — has begun to fall after peaking at 154 in mid-June.

The Capesize Iron Ore Port Congestion Index (a new one for me, I must confess) is replicating the pattern seen a year ago just before the commodity boom tipped over.

“The anecdotal evidence we are hearing is that vessel queues have been falling. There are reports of cancelled tonnage from China pointing to a slowdown in Chinese buying of coal and iron ore.

“We are definitely expecting a correction. People have been building stocks of iron ore too quickly in anticipation of the stimulus package in China,” she said.

The Baltic Dry Index measuring freight rates jumped 450pc in the first half of the year on the China rebound, but has begun to fall back over the last two weeks. (Sen doubts freight rates will recover much since 1000 new ships are hitting the market this year and again next year, compared to 300 in normal years. There is obviously a horrendous shipping glut).

Over at Naked Capitalism they are reporting that international port traffic for containers (ie finished goods) is as dire as ever. The rates for 40-foot container from Asia and America’s West have actually fallen this year from $1,400 to $920.

“There has never been a decline like this before,” said Neil Drecker from the Drewry Report. “The container industry is looking at a $20-billion black hole of losses. We can expect a lot of casualties.”>>>MORE

Schaeffer's Midday Market Check

The 'Today's Percent Returns' feature is a handy snapshot. It looks like the gold bugs are trying to fight back from their recent drubbing. From the Trading Floor blog:

The sector graph shows a mild upside bias with the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI), Natural Gas Index (XNG), and Oil Service HOLDRS (OIH) leading the charge. The SPDR Homebuilders (XHB), Semiconductor HOLDRS (SMH) and Regional Bank HOLDRS (RKH) are also relatively strong. The iShares Treasury Bond (TLT) and AMEX Pharmaceutical Index (DRG) are the only decliners on my list....



Have you seen M3 lately? (Crash Equities; Flight to Treasuries?)

The bit in parentheses is mine. I said almost the same thing in the June 29 headline and story "Crash Equities, Spur Flight to Quality, Offload $2 Trillion in Treasuries":

For months the question has been "Who is going to buy enough U.S. paper to fund the nearly $2 Tril. 2009 deficit?" Well, Ma and Pa Investor are cranking up the savings rate...
From Economic Policy Journal:

Does Ben Bernanke Have a Diabolical Plan to Help Treasury Finance $2 Trillion?

...Now, I'm wondering if the too clever by half Bernanke may have a diabolical plot to finance the record $2 trillion debt the Treasury is starting to raise. While China and pretty much everyone else are watching to see how much money the Fed is going to print to absorb the record debt, maybe Bernanke is going to fake out everyone and go in the opposite direction....

Today, a nice simple picture via The Mess that Greenspan Made:
Haven't looked at this chart from NowAndFutures in some time now - either someone's asleep at the switch over at the Federal Reserve or M3 really isn't all that important an indicator.
IMAGE Then again, maybe this is what the central bank didn't want people to see....MORE

Judge calls on US to clarify position on UBS-"Drum 'em out of the Country"

From the Financial Times:

UBS shares outperformed the Swiss market strongly on Thursday as investors digested the latest twist in the battle of wills between the US and Switzerland over bank secrecy.

The Miami judge presiding over a crucial court hearing next Monday has called on the US authorities to specify how far they would go to force the Swiss bank to comply, should the court rule in their favour....

How's this grab ya? Pull the charter of their Utah industrial bank and cancel their U.S. securities licenses. For starters. Then start playing hardball. Why? Here's the official Swiss government position, from the Times of London:

Switzerland threatened to seize the names of 52,000 Americans from UBS rather than allow the Swiss bank to hand over the data to the US tax authorities.

UBS faces a court hearing in Miami on Monday, where it is being sued by the Inland Revenue Service (IRS)

The IRS, which suspects the Swiss bank of helping wealthy Americans to hide almost $15 billion so they could avoid paying tax on the money, wants UBS to give it the names of about 52,000 clients with Swiss bank accounts.

UBS claimed that revealing its clients’ identities would force it to break strict Swiss banking secrecy laws.

The Swiss Justice Ministry warned today that it would take control of the information rather than allow UBS to give it to the IRS.

"Switzerland will use its legal authority to ensure that the bank cannot be pressured to transmit the information illegally, including if necessary by issuing an order taking effective control of the data at USB," the country said in a filing to the Miami court....MORE

Except for confusing Inland and Internal it seems like good reporting.

Here's a Climateer Investing post from March:

"You can't trust the Swiss, that's the bottom line,"

-Senator Carl Levin
March 3, 2009

What is up with the Swiss?
From this, a couple years ago: "Swiss in Liechtenstein 'invasion'", to this: "Swiss banker admits blackmailing BMW heiress" a couple days ago, it's the world turned upside down.

Now we read in Forbes:

Swiss Kick Off 'Currency War'

Switzerland's latest move to weaken the Swiss franc marks the first time in the current financial crisis that a G10 nation has intervened in forex markets to support a flagging economy. It is probably only a matter of time before others--notably Japan--follow suit....MORE
We are already seeing markets react: "Gold rises on Swiss central bank move"

The Mises Economics blog asks, "What's the Deal With the Swiss?":

Open thread to discuss what happened to the land formerly known as the Western Shangri La.

- Delinked from gold in order to join the IMF and settle Nazi-era court cases.
- Caved to the IRS and the Germans on withholding tax information on expats.
- The SNB continues to sell gold in accordance to the Central Bank Gold Agreement.
- And now they are intentionally devaluing their currency.

What are they drinking over there? Got bored of eating cheese and chocolate on the Paradeplatz?

I hope this will end the way Switzerland's 1980's invasion of Lichtenstein did.

The locals gave the Swiss troops cookies and cocoa.

It may not, however. In a cunning flanking maneuver, Lichtenstein put out this press release:

March 12, 2009

The Liechtenstein Declaration

Through this Declaration, Liechtenstein commits to, and will implement, global standards of transparency and exchange of information as developed by the OECD and will advance its participation in international efforts in order to counteract non-compliance with foreign tax laws.

With this Declaration, Liechtenstein clarifies its position regarding privacy and banking secrecy and confirms its readiness to speed up the negotiation of tax information exchange and other agreements with a view to having a network of such arrangements in place as soon as reasonably possible in order to address the global issue of tax fraud and tax evasion as well as double taxation. In this process, Liechtenstein will emphasise its responsibilities to address both the tax claims of other jurisdictions and the trust of its clients....

In purple ink! Take that, UBS.

UPDATE: Lichtenstein Wins! (Mutual Assured Destruction version of winning)

Switzerland caves in to pressure and signs up to tax-evasion fight

Switzerland has caved into the growing pressure on tax havens by pledging to co-operate with international standards on tax evasion.

In a landmark decision, the Swiss government said this morning it will adopt Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development standards, which state that countries should work together on cases of suspected tax evasion....MORE

A few days later I felt some remorse and posted:

"Pretty Good Rhythm for White Guys"*

I may have been too tough on the Swiss in Friday's post "You can't trust the Swiss, that's the bottom line,".


From the "You Don't See That Every Day" file, Basle's own Top Secret Drum Corps:

*That was a favorite line of a now deceased friend. Had he lived to see these guys he'd have said it.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

No Money Multiplier

From the Council on Foreign Relations (!) blog:

This is Mark Dow. Brad is still away.

There has been a lot of response to the assertion I made the other day that base money has not been growing since December, and that the money multiplier is not passing much of anything on to the broader economy or markets. The story that the Fed is printing money is just too strong to kill with a few facts. But, let me try again with a picture.

Here’s a chart I stumbled onto. It was Bloomberg’s chart of the day a couple of weeks ago. I do not know the research analyst from Westpac, an Austrialian bank, who put it together, and though I can verify his base money numbers, I cannot verify his M2 numbers. Nonetheless, the data fit what I know. Here’s the chart:

The M2 Money Multiplier vs Base Money, last 16 months

PowerShares Agiculture (DBA): Farm favorite (MOO)

This post is really just an excuse to tell a quick story. From BloggingStocks:

There are many reasons to like the PowerShares DB Agriculture (NYSE: DBA), an exchange-traded fund that tracks agricultural commodity prices," says fund expert Doug Fabian.

In The ETF Trader, he explains, "We like the technical picture. In addition, we believe commodities are a great hedge against inflation.

"Overall, we like the patterns taking shape in the world's key agricultural crops. The price charts of crops like corn, soybeans, sugar and wheat all have given us one compelling message, and that message is it's time to buy.

"This ETF that seeks to track the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index - Optimum Yield Agriculture Excess Return.

"The index is composed of futures contracts on corn, soybeans, sugar and wheat, some of the most liquid and widely traded agricultural commodities.

"There are many reasons to like DBA besides just its technical picture. First off, commodities are a great hedge against inflation....MORE

I cut it there because fund expert Doug Fabian seemed to be getting a bit excited. Another play is the Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (MOO). Top 10 Holdings.

And no, I don't like it just for the symbol. Here's a story:

I was at the track one day, patiently and persistently buying losing tickets when I ran into an acquaintance, a former finance guy who had left the business. With him were four of his eight kids. Did I mention he was a degenerate horseplayer?

Making small-talk with his 10 or 11-year old daughter I asked who she liked in the next race.

She answered "Little Boy Blue" (or somesuch, it was a while ago). Being the condescending know-it-all adult, I asked if she liked it because of his cute name.

Um-hmm she said, that, and he had an unpublished workout, five panels in :59 3/5.

The horse, of course, came in. Paid 6:1, made my day and taught me a lesson or two about assumptions and cute names (symbols) etc. And hey, MOO is a cute symbol!

First Solar Upgraded, Yingli Downgraded by ThinkEquity (FSLR; YGE)

From Tech Trader Daily:

ThinkEquity analyst Colin Rusch this morning upgraded First Solar (FSLR) to Buy from Accumulate, lifting his price target to $188, from $180. He also raised his 2010 EPS estimate for the company to $8.99, from $8.55, above the consensus at $8.52.

“Given the recent sell-off of solar stocks and FSLR’s 29% move lower from its May high, we believe investors can begin to get constructive on the stock in anticipation that the company meets Q2 estimates...MORE
From China Analyst:

Yingli Green Enery (NYSE:YGE): Downgraded by ThinkEquity; Recent Financing Dilutive to Earnings

ThinkEquity downgrades Yingli Green Energy (NYSE:YGE) from Buy to Accumulate, and cut their price target from $15 to $12.

Think Equity analysts consider Yingli's recent financing activities to be dilutive to earnings. These activities included issuance of 18.6 million new shares, selling $29.3 million convertible note, and the opening of a 2-year credit facility of $100 million....MORE

Or, as 24/7 Wall Street headlined the moves on Monday:

Yingli Secures New Credit Facilities, Further Complicates Structure (YGE)

Solar for Dark Climates

From MIT's Technology Review:

Solar technology that generates both heat and electricity could make solar energy practical in places that aren't sunny.

Cool Energy, a startup based in Boulder, CO, is developing a system that produces heat and electricity from the sun. It could help make solar energy competitive with conventional sources of energy in relatively dark and cold climates, such as the northern half of the United States and countries such as Canada and Germany.

The company's system combines a conventional solar water heater with a new Stirling-engine-based generator that it is developing. In cool months, the solar heater provides hot water and space heating. In warmer months, excess heat is used to drive the Stirling engine and generate electricity.

Samuel Weaver, the company's president and CEO, says that the system is more economical than solar water heaters alone because it makes use of heat that would otherwise be wasted during summer months. The system will also pay for itself about twice as quickly as conventional solar photovoltaics will, he says. That's in part because it can efficiently offset heating bills in the winter--something that photovoltaics can't do--and in part because the evacuated tubes used to collect heat from the sun make better use of diffuse light than conventional solar panels do.

The system is designed to provide almost all of a house's heating needs. But the generator, which will produce only 1.5 kilowatts of power, won't be enough to power a house on its own. The system is designed to work with power from the grid, although the power is enough to run a refrigerator and a few lights in the event of a power failure.

The company's key innovation is the Stirling engine, which is designed to work at temperatures much lower than ordinary Stirling engines. In these engines, a piston is driven by heating up one side of the engine while keeping the opposite side cool. Ordinarily, the engines require temperatures of above 500 °C, but Cool Energy's engine is designed to run at the 200 degrees that solar water heaters provide....MORE

Technical talk: S&P 500 – expect retest sequence

Some insight into where my head's at; Having just shouted "BOHICA!!" (bend over, here it comes again) in response to a wave of selling, I saw the above headline and misread it as "...-expect rectal sequence". Might be time for a vacation.
From Fusion IQ via Investment Postcards from Cape Town:

The comments below were provided by Kevin Lane of Fusion IQ....

...There will be short-term trading opportunities that present themselves during the remainder of the summer and into the fall; however, we don’t see any directional bull trend re-establishing itself before some kind of retest sequence. The only thing that would change this outlook is a high volume move on strong internals back above the recent highs.

tt0807k

GE Stock Worth Just $2, Says Longtime Bear Charles Ortel

GE was recently foen another 2 1/2%. From Yahoo Finance:

If 2008 hadn’t been the year of Wall Street’s Armageddon, it might have been remembered as the year General Electric was revealed to be a financial company masquerading as an industrial conglomerate.

Like most banks and Wall Street firms, GE’s financial unit, GE Capital, was pummeled by the credit crunch, arguably threatening the venerable company’s survival.

Like other financial firms, GE weathered the storm, thanks in part to the government’s bailouts – last November GE Capital was declared eligible for TARP funds, thanks to its ownership of a small S&L in Utah. To date, GE Capital has issued about $80 billion of FDIC-insured debt through the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, or TLGP, The Washington Post reports.

But GE is far from out of the woods, according to Charles Ortel, managing director of Newport Value Partners, an independent research firm. As of March 31, GE had $470 billion of debt vs. just $2.8 billion of tangible common equity, he notes.

Because of that high debt-to-equity ratio and a slowdown in its industrial businesses, “we only see downside” for the stock, says Ortel, who believes $2 represents fair value for GE common, which closed Tuesday just above $11. ...MORE

The Big Four of Accounting Will Be Among the Big Winners if U.S. Adopts Climate Law

Good paying greencollar jobs. From Climatewire via the New York Times:

Having helped companies explore the labyrinth of greenhouse gas regulation in Europe, the Big Four auditing and accounting firms are now moving quickly to build climate and carbon shops in the United States. Their goal is to stake claim to a business that could one day rival tax compliance and financial disclosure in size and scope.

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Ernst & Young, KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers are the undisputed giants of the auditing, tax advisory and business consulting world. They boast a client list that includes thousands of the biggest names in the corporate world.

The four are already well-known in Europe for their carbon footprint accounting, abatement strategy consulting and emissions disclosure services as industries on the other side of the Atlantic are forced to comply with the European Union's Emission Trading Scheme (ETS), but so far, their presence in America's nascent carbon market has barely been recognized.

But that's about to change. All four firms are in the midst of shifting experienced staff from places such as London and Copenhagen to New York and Washington. They are leaning on climate experts from as far away as South Africa and Australia in setting up their carbon desks here. Representatives from the firms are also more frequently seen at carbon market conferences as staff familiarize themselves with the basics of emissions trading in the United States....MORE

Mind the Gap: LDK Solar and Cheap Silicon

LDK was recently down $0.35 at $8.94. From Environmental Capital:

LDK Solar’s recent travails provide a vivid illustration of why profitability is so elusive in the solar sector.

Shares in the solar wafer manufacturer have lost about 18% this week, after the company said that demand is stronger than expected but revenues are weaker than expected. It’s the flip side of a big increase in polysilicon production capacity around the world—prices for solar power’s raw material are going south.

“It indicates that pricing is deteriorating faster than expected,” said Stuart Bush, an analyst with RBC Capital Management, in an interview.

Cheaper silicon is good for the sector as a whole—it helps make solar panels more cost-competitive with traditional power sources. But for companies like LDK, cheaper silicon prices are slamming profitability....MORE

Goldman, Morgan Stanley Threatened by CFTC Review (GS; MS)

A follow-up to yesterday's "Oil, Gas Market Speculation May Face Restrictions by U.S. CFTC".
From Bloomberg:

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley may never have the same leeway in commodities as they did when oil reached a record $147 a barrel last year.

The Commodities Futures Trading Commission will consider greater regulation of oil, gas and other energy markets at hearings this month. It plans to review exemptions to trading limits that since the 1990s allowed Goldman and Morgan to build multibillion-dollar ventures in futures, swaps and over-the- counter markets.

“They’re very significant swaps participants, and they’re very significant dealers for over-the-counter swaps in the commodities market,” said Dan Waldman, former general counsel of the CFTC and a senior partner at Arnold & Porter LLP in Washington. “If their ability to do some of that business was limited, they’d have to find other ways to reduce their risk or reduce the size of their commodity swaps books.”

Energy swaps are trades in which parties exchange the difference between two price payments, one fixed and one floating, for a specific commodity for a period of time.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley accounted for about half of the $15 billion in revenue that the world’s 10 largest investment banks generated from commodities in 2007, Ethan Ravage, a financial-services industry consultant in San Francisco, estimated last year, as energy prices neared records.

Spokesmen for both banks declined to comment, as did one from Barclays Plc. Spokesmen from JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. didn’t immediately return calls for comment....MORE

On the other hand we've never been shy about commenting, see:

June 16, 2008: Goldman, Morgan Stanley Profits Conceal Reliance on Commodities

June 25, 2008: Which Former Goldman Sachs Chairman Should We Listen to on Oil Market Speculators?

August 19, 2008: Goldman’s Oil Thesis: Timing is Everything

October 7, 2008: Goldman: We Got Our Shorts On, Oil not Going to $200.00

October 27, 2008: The Goldman Commodities U-turn, again

November 20, 2008: It’s official, Goldman capitulates on oil

December 2, 2008: Oil speculation: It's back

December 12, 2008: Goldman Cuts Oil Forecast to $45 (vs original $200) Sees Bottom

June 4, 2009: Goldman Raises Year-End Crude Forecast by 31% to $85

Always, always be skeptical of anything Goldman says regarding commodities.*
J. Aron is one of the company's crown jewels and was the springboard for CEO Lloyd Blankfein.**...
...*From our November 20, 2008 post "It’s official, Goldman capitulates on oil":
...Now Goldman is left with the ignomy of summarily abandoning the investors who listen to its research calls, telling them effectively that they’re on their own. On Thursday, Goldman said it was ”closing” its recommendations for oil trades. Meaning that in a perilous time when the traders who pay attention to Goldman’s recommendations could use some guidance the most, Goldman has opted to give them the least. And some traders are furious about it, comparing the maneuver to then-strategist Abby Cohen’s decision to abandon her targets for equity indexes in the fall 2001, citing the uncertainties abounding in the market.

Goldman specifically talked about four trade recommendations it previously issued, and said clients shouldn’t put any stock in them any longer. One particular trade, a Nymex-WTI swap on the 2012 contract, issued in September, when crude already had declined to below $70, suggested that the contract would reflate to a range of $120 to $140. Obviously, that hasn’t happened....MORE

Goldman marketed the fact that CalPERS and other long-only index buying institutions could piggyback on GS's status as a 'commercial' to avoid position limits by entering into swaps with the bank. The institutions thought it was a sweet deal, until it wasn't. If it comes down to throwing customers under the bus or protecting the propritary trading, there's no decision.

**"When Blankfein asked about his title, a boss at J. Aron said,
'You can call yourself contessa if you want.'"
-Fortune, January, 2006

June 5, 2009: Are Goldman's Oil Swaps Clients Piling Back Into Oil?

Pay attention, or be bamboozled by bread and circuses

We've expressed* similar thoughts on occasion. From the Sydney Morning Herald:

After being paid to study the performance of politicians for the past 35 years it finally occurs to me that the problem with democracy is the same problem we have with competition in markets: for it to work well requires more effort and attention on the part of voters (or customers) than they're prepared to devote to it.

The similarity between democracy and markets is hardly surprising because they're both forms of competition. Businesses compete for our custom, political parties compete for our vote.

With the competition between, say, the Big Four banks, we expect to sit back while they compete with each other to attract our business, and this process produces the highest quality service at the keenest prices.

But it never works that way. Unless we pay close attention to the deal we're getting, unless we shop around and are prepared move our business to get a better deal, we don't get a very good deal at all.

It turns out that competition in markets is a two-way street: the customers have to put a fair bit of effort into making it work. If they don't, the banks will still compete with each other, but they'll do it in ways that yield the customer little benefit - advertising and phony product differentiation.

And I now see that competition in politics works much the same way. Unless enough of us pay close attention to what the pollies are doing and saying, they'll find ways to compete that are easier for them and less beneficial for us....MORE

A good catch by Big Gav at Peak Energy

*From our comments on the May '09 post "Paul Tudor Jones Interview at Institutional Investor":

...The advantage and disadvantage of global macro is It Is Not Easy. You have to pay attention and you have to understand the interrelationships of many markets and politics and weather and psychology and be facile in both words and numbers and in an ego-driven business be humble enough to learn the lessons the market will teach you.

It really helps to not take yourself too seriously, both to avoid the temptation to impose your will upon the market and to maintain enough perspective to spot opportunities ahead of the crowd.
Because global macro isn't easy the rewards can be tremendous.

And from our Dec. 31, 2008 post "2008: The End of the Beginning":

When in doubt, lift a quote snippet from Churchill.
On Sunday, September 14, 2008 I put up the post below. It was the night before Lehman Brothers filed their chapter 11, two days before AIG became a 79.9% subsidiary of the U.S. Treasury and a week-and-a-half before Washington Mutual was seized by the OTS and put into receivership:


One Way or Another We Will Get Through This

I've got to get some rack time but before I head out I'll get a little more personal than I usually do. I have been at the market my entire adult life and have seen the best and worst of human nature. To augment personal experience I have studied and read tens of thousands of pages, everything from popular histories to incomprehensible academic works.

The one lesson worth knowing is: "There will always be opportunity". It may not be easy and it may not be fast but the opportunity is there every morning. The place to start is to PAY ATTENTION. That alone will get you into the second quartile.
Take a look at the first decade of the last century in the chart below...

EU fines E.On and Gaz de France combined €1.1 Billion ($1.54 Bil.)

E.on is one of the largest purchasers of carbon credits in the world. If they are willing to risk a three-quarter billion fine in one of their core businesses, what do you think is going on in the carbon biz, now and especially in future as the price ratchets up?
E.On is the largest investor-owned utility in Europe with revenues of €86.7 Billion ($120.5 Bil).
GdFSuez is no slouch itself, clocking €83.1 Bil. in '08 revenues ($115 Bil.)
From the BBC:

Energy giants E.On and Gaz De France (GDF) Suez have been fined by European Commission competition regulators for carving up gas markets between them.

Both Germany's E.On and France's GDF Suez have been fined 553m euros ($770m; £477m) by the Commission.

The firms agreed in 1975 not to compete with each other in their national gas markets when they started to import gas through a pipeline from Russia.

"The Commission has no alternative but to impose high fines," it said.

"They maintained the market-sharing agreement after European gas markets were liberalised, and only abandoned it definitely in 2005."

EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said the secret carve-up had deprived customers of price competition and choice of supplier in two of the largest markets in the 27-nation EU....MORE