Tuesday, November 10, 2009

10 Job Hunting Strategies Guaranteed to Get You Arrested

From Cracked:

The unemployment rate in the U.S. crested 10 percent last week, a milestone which underlines the hurt last year’s economic distress has placed upon the country. Including people who are involuntarily working part time, and those who’ve stopped looking for work entirely, experts say that a whole lot of people are now becoming uneasily familiar with the Drew Carey era on The Price is Right. Grim news indeed.

Signs of desperation amongst job-seekers have been hitting the front pages with increasing regularity. Last week a man made headlines when he attempted to apply for a job while robbing a Taco Bell at gunpoint. One wonders if he thought this was the ideal way to demonstrate he possessed the rock-stupidness all Taco Bell employees are expected to have? He wasn’t even given an application though, just turned aside by a restaurant manager who was apparently in possession of some pretty serious stones. “Beat me with your bare fists, or get the fuck out,” is one hardass hiring policy.

This incident did get me to thinking though. With so many job-seekers applying for so few jobs, there’s bound to be other ways to “think outside the box” like this when applying for jobs. And if not, then surely I could do something about it, using the prestige and influence that comes with being an Internet comedy writer. Frankly, I’d be delinquent if I didn’t use my position to encourage people to rock into Taco Bells without any clothes, “weapon” in hand.

After examining the existing literature, I observed that almost everyone offering advice for interviewees was saying the exact same thing. From this, I posited that as everyone out there is receiving the same advice for job seeking, ignoring that advice entirely would be a sure way for a job-seeker to demonstrate how they were an iconoclastic young firebrand; an asset to any organization. Or get people waving their dicks around Taco Bell. For me there is no difference.

So, I compiled a list of the most common pieces of advice out there, and then using the secret powers of four cups of coffee, I flipped them on their heads to come up with a list of advice sure to land anyone a job, even losers.

______

Conventional Advice: Research the company beforehand

research-the-company

Most experts recommend reviewing the company’s website before the interview, reading up on the company’s history, and their products, etc… Which is great if you’re writing a book report, or are applying for a job as the office wiener. Every other chump is going to be reading the stupid boilerplate company website, which no one in the company actually cares about.

Unconventional Advice: Research the fuck out of the company beforehand

research-the-fuck-out-of-the-company

Instead, try asking around hacker circles on the Internet for advice on how to break into the company’s servers. Look for information on the company’s financial situation, secret recipes and, in the case of Target, their history of ritual slayings tied to the Winter solstices. See if you can find out personal information about your interviewer themselves - knowing what hobbies he has and claiming you have the same is a great way to establish a bond. How strong is his marriage? Consider sleeping with his wife to establish another common bond.

“Well, I’d have to guess reading, jogging and sticking it to your wife. Ha ha ha! High five brother! Seriously though, she’s got some daddy issues, hey?”

_________

Conventional Advice: Look professional

look-professional

This advice basically boils down to the single sentence: “Dress like you’ve got the job you want, or better.” Which is fine, if you want to look like every other Johnny Bowtie or Sally Pantsuit. You can do better than that.

sad-businessman
Turning out your pants pockets for an interview is also a no-no.

Unconventional Advice: Look interesting

look-interesting

You want your outfit to cause your interviewer to think, “Holy shit, I bet this guy has some good stories.” The daily grind of office life can get a bit boring, so having someone in the office who’s really knowledgeable about highway rest-stop culture or your town’s Malay machete fighting scene will add a real air of excitement to the work day. Here’s some ideas for outfits that should give you an idea of the potential here:

  • Naked
  • Sandwich Board warning of doom/incredible savings...MORE

Weird Clouds Overhead (Photos)

From URLesque:

Sometimes, you just want to kick back, nestle yourself in the grass, and peer up at the great blue sky. Look at those cloud formations! What do you see? A dinosaur? A football? Danny DeVito (sorry, he's been on our mind a lot recently)?

Luckily, the internet has provided heaps of footage documenting the creepier, weirder clouds that may have simply (and literally) passed you by.















"A123 Systems 3Q Loss Widens, But Rev Tops Estimates " and "Traders short A123 Systems' Dec call options" (AONE)

After ending the day up thirteen cents, the stock is now down a nickle in early after-hours trade.
From Dow Jones Newswires:

A123 Systems Inc.'s (AONE) third-quarter loss widened, hurt by higher costs and expenses, even as the electric-car battery maker saw revenue rise slightly.

Shares of A123, which held a well-received $380 million initial public offering in September, jumped 3%, to $18.52 in after-hours trading, as revenue topped Wall Street estimates.

A123 is benefiting from auto-industry interest in clean-energy technologies, resulting in deals with BMW AG (BMW.XE) and Chrysler Group LLC to develop lithium-ion batteries for hybrid and fully electric vehicles. But the company has been burning through cash, raising expectations it will hold debt or stock sales to raise money.

A123's loss widened to $22.8 million, from $19 million a year earlier. The per-share loss narrowed, to $1.78 from $2.06, as there were more shares outstanding in the most recent period...MORE
From Reuters via Forbes (Nov. 6):

Shares of A123 Systems fell 5.2 percent to $16.73 after Jim Cramer from CNBC's Mad Money TV Program said easy money has been made on the lithium-ion battery maker and the stock is now played out. A123 Systems shares jumped 50 percent on their first day of trading after its initial public offering in September.

In the options market, sellers turned up to short call options expiring in December with a $22.5 strike price, wrote Andrew Wilkinson, senior market analyst at Interactive Brokers Group, in a note to clients....

How Much Do Lithium-Ion Batteries Cost to Make?

From Green Light:

Battery cost – that single factor will likely determine when and how fast cars move from gasoline to electricity. Driving range and charging infrastructure are two problems that will likely take care of themselves: Consumers will lose range anxiety when they realize they have another car that they can take to Disneyland and lose interest in public charging stations when they realize they don't need many of them.

But battery costs directly impact car costs and hence the attractiveness of electric vehicles to consumers.

The short answer? It costs about $250 a kilowatt hour to produce ordinary lithium-ion cells for laptops, said Mark Duvall, an analyst at EPRI at a greentech breakfast sponsored by the SD Forum this morning. Making lithium-ion packs for cars cost more: Automakers have strict safety and performance standards. The general consensus is that lithium-ion packs for cars cost around $900 per kilowatt hour. General Motors, though, has strongly hinted that it is closer to $500 a kilowatt hour than the $1,000 mark, Duvall said. The Volt has a 16 kilowatt hour battery, so the battery costs about $8,000. The Volt battery, he added, also is overbuilt: It is bigger than GM needs for the car to do 40 miles on a charge. A supersized battery, however, gives the battery more charge cycles.

Ultimately, the price of batteries will approach the cost of manufacturing, he said, and many expect manufacturing prices for batteries to decline as volumes pick up....MORE

Call Volume Spikes on Reliant Energy, Inc. (RRI)

From Schaeffer's Research:

The company hasn't made any major headlines since its Nov. 5 earnings report, but nevertheless, Reliant Energy, Inc. (RRI) racked up three times its usual daily call volume on Monday. During the course of the session, traders on the International Securities Exchange (ISE) bought to open 5,715 calls on RRI, compared to just one lonely put.

RRI price chartThe day's most active call was the December 5 strike, where 7,679 contracts changed hands. Implied volatility rose 5.7% as a result, and open interest jumped overnight from 6,800 contracts to 11,764 contracts -- confirming that new long calls were added here yesterday. With RRI trading at $5.19 at last check, these back-month calls are right at the money.

Monday's bias toward bullish bets over their bearish counterparts was part of a growing trend for RRI, which now sports a 10-day ISE call/put volume ratio of 19.73....MORE

WHO IS THE MYSTERY BUYER?

The DJIA is currently up 12 while the S&P and Nas are down a fraction of a percent.
From The Pragmatic Capitalist:

I don’t know if any characteristic of this massive 6 month rally has been more apparent than the huge futures run-ups we’ve seen at random points during the trading day. Without news, the S&P 500 futures get gunned on huge volume and surge higher. I’ve seen it at least every other day for 6 months. It tends to occur on low volume days such as the one we’re currently experiencing.

As you can see in the chart below, the futures are getting gunned on massive volume without any coinciding volume in SPY. This means an institution is jamming the futures higher knowing that they can drive the market higher on no volume. Effectively, they can take out every asking price with a large enough order and immediately create a 0.25% bump in the market in no time. If you’ve been wondering why we’ve seen huge surges on low volume days and conviction high volume selling on down days this explains much of it....MORE

Pickens, Pelosi Spanked: "Clean Energy posts wider-than-expected Q3 losa" (CLNE)

The Speaker is an investor in CLNE. The stock is down over 7% today. From Reuters:

(Corrects paragraph 6 to show the company posted an adjusted profit, not an adjusted loss)

* Q3 loss $0.31/shr vs est. loss $0.30/shr * Rev falls 8 pct

* Shares down 4 pct after-market

Nov 9 (Reuters) - Natural gas provider Clean Energy Fuels Corp (CLNE.O) reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss, as a fall in natural gas prices weighed on revenue.

However, gasoline gallon equivalents delivered during the quarter rose 58 percent over last year. For the third quarter, the company reported a loss of $18.5 million, or 31 cents a share, compared with a loss of $12.1 million, or 27 cents a share, last year.

Revenue at the Seal Beach, California-based company fell 8 percent to $31.2 million....MORE

Nasdaq had an interesting post this morning:

Show of support in Clean Energy Fuels-11/10/2009

Clean Energy Fuels reported earnings after the bell yesterday, and at least one investor sold puts before the news.

optionMONSTER's tracking system detected the sale of 3,000 December 12.50 puts for $0.85 against open interest of 901 contracts. The trade will earn a profit as long as the natural-gas infrastructure stock closes above $11.65 by expiration.

CLNE ChartCLNE rose 3.3 percent to $12.84 in normal trading. It was quoted at $12.32 after hours, when its third-quarter earnings release was issued. Non-GAAP earnings were $0.01 and the net loss was $0.31. It's not clear which number should be compared with analysts' forecasts of a $0.30 loss, though revenue missed consensus by about 11 percent.

By selling the puts, the trader agreed to purchase the shares at the strike in return for accepting the premium. The strategy also took advantage of CLNE's 64 percent implied volatility reading, up from 57 percent in late October. If volatility reverses lower for the stock, it will reduce the value of the puts sold short.

Volatility usually declines after earnings are announced.

Other investors also sold the November 12.50 puts for $0.55. Volume totaled 1,165 contracts compared with open interest of 974....

Previously:

T. Boone Pickens: Greenwashing and Rentseeking (CLNE)

Nancy Pelosi, Al Gore and T. Boone Pickens Walk Into a Bar (CLNE)

Jim Cramer, Nancy Pelosi and T. Boone Pickens Walk Into a Bar (CLNE)

Neatorama's "The 10 Neatest New York Inventions Ever"

Via the HuffPo:

Here's Neatorama's list of the 10 Neatest New York Inventions Ever:

1. Jell-O Peter Cooper

2009-10-23-petercooper.jpg
Not satisfied with having built the first American locomotive and running for president (for the Greenback Party ticket), industrialist Peter Cooper decided to try his hand in desserts. In 1845, he patented the formula for powdered gelatin.

You may not know the name "Peter Cooper," but I bet you've heard of what his invention later became known as. That's right. Jell-O.

2. Club Sandwich

The next time you eat a club sandwich for lunch, think about this: it was invented in a gambling house called the Saratoga Club-House in upstate Saratoga Springs, New York.

3. Potato Chip

Fed up with a customer complaint that his french fries were "too thick," George Crum, the head chef of Moon's Lake House (also in Saratoga Springs, apparently a hotbed of culinary inventions) sliced potatoes really thin, then over-fried them to a crisp and overload them with salt. Though Crum meant that as a culinary insult, the customer really loved it and thus the Saratoga Chips (later potato chip) was born in 1853.

With the profits from the chips, Crum was able to open his own restaurant. Oh, and how did the potato chip became world famous? It was when Crum met a guy named Herman Lay. That's right, of Frito-Lay fame.

4. Toilet Paper

If there's only one good thing that came out of New York, I'm sure you'll agree that this one surely is enough. I'm talking about toilet paper.

In 1857, Joseph C. Gayetty produced the first packaged toilet paper. It consists of pre-moistened flat sheets medicated with aloe. Before that, people used leaves, sticks, corn cobs, and even magazines (a favorite was the "Rears and Sorebutt" catalog. I think you know which one I'm talking about)

5. Air Conditioining

2009-10-23-williscarrier.jpg
Here are two letters that will stop people from yearning for the good ol' days: AC. The next time you turn on the air conditioning to cool off during a hot day, thank this New York man: Willis Haviland Carrier.

Interestingly, Carrier didn't invent the modern air conditioning unit for people. He created the "Apparatus for Treating Air" to solve a humidity problem at a printing plant.

What did people do to cool a house before Carrier came along? One idea was to wrap a building in cloth saturated with melted ice water with a fan blowing hot air overhead. The idea actually worked - you could cool a building down with this method - but it has one big drawback: it consumed about a quarter of a million pounds of ice every month....MORE

Buffett and Vanderbilt: "Men of Steel" (BRK.A; BNI)

From the Wall Street Journal:

Billionaires, like little boys, have long liked to play with trains. With his latest purchase, Warren Buffett is on track to be today's Cornelius Vanderbilt.

The American railroad produced the nation's original corporate capitalists—the ones we call tycoons, moguls, or robber barons. The first and greatest was "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, who amassed the New York Central system between New York and Chicago in the 1860s and '70s. This week's purchase of Burlington Northern by Warren Buffett seems to make Mr. Buffett a worthy successor.

"It's an all-in wager on the economic future of the United States," Mr. Buffett said of his purchase. "I love these bets." So did Vanderbilt. And Mr. Buffett's wager is on a Vanderbiltian scale. His company, Berkshire Hathaway, is paying $26.3 billion in cash and stock for 77.4% of the enormous railroad. (It already owned the rest.) In the Information Age, this is a startling endorsement of the oldest of the old economy.

Nineteenth century railroads largely created the modern corporate economy. Led by Vanderbilt, they landscaped the playing field that Mr. Buffett now strides across. The tale of the two titans, then, is a tangled story rather than a mere contrast of then and now.

On Nov. 8, 1833, the 39-year-old Vanderbilt boarded a train. Railroads were new enough that this was notable in itself. The locomotive resembled an oversize barrel thrown on its side, with wheels and a smokestack. The three cars that trailed behind were modeled on stagecoaches, and looked nothing like the rectangular boxes of decades to come. The train pulled out of South Amboy, N.J., and chugged down the Camden & Amboy Railroad. It soon reached the terrifying speed of 25 miles per hour.

Then an axle broke, pitching the entire train down the embankment. Vanderbilt suffered a punctured lung, multiple fractures, and had the skin torn off his knees. He barely survived. But he did not let it color his feelings. Instead, he only grew more interested in this new business.

But what kind of business was it—public or private? The question shadows railroads to this day. The industry Mr. Buffett now enters endured a wave of government takeovers in the 20th century. Amtrak, a federal entity, monopolizes intercity passenger travel. This fraught meeting of public and private has been there from the beginning.

Take the line that nearly killed Vanderbilt, the Camden & Amboy. It was a privately owned corporation, but New Jersey had granted it special privileges—in particular, a state monopoly on railroads. At the time, the corporation was generally seen as a form of government intervention in the economy. In order to attract private investment in banks and transportation infrastructure, states chartered corporations with such benefits as limited liability and, as in this case, monopoly rights. That view of corporations had led Adam Smith to condemn them in "The Wealth of Nations" as a shackle on the invisible hand. Radical Jacksonians attacked them as an unjust grant of special privileges to already-wealthy investors....MORE

Société Générale's Albert Edwards: "...Sees Market Lows Next Year"

Mr. Edwards has pushed the time frame out from this June '09 prognostication, "More on "Société Générale's Albert Edwards "New Stockmarket Lows 2nd half of 2009"'"
From ABC News:

Albert Edwards, a top analyst with French bank Societe Generale, expects global markets to hit a new low in 2010, adding that he would not be surprised if the global economy enters another recession next year.

Edwards, one of the leading equities bears and a long-term critic of the policies of Western central banks, is skeptical of popular opinion that extreme policy response will safeguard the West against a repeat of Japan's lost decade of the 1990's.

Edwards said he expected that at some point China would go into recession, calling people's excessive faith in growth stories a "sick joke.">>>MORE

From Reuters India:

Albert Edwards, an analyst at French bank Societe Generale (SOGN.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) who correctly predicted the Asian financial crisis, sees global equity markets at a new low and chances of another global recession in 2010.

Edwards, a prominent equities bear and a long-term critic of the policies of Western central banks, is sceptical of popular opinion that extreme policy responses will safeguard the West against a repeat of Japan's 'lost decade' of the 1990's.

"People should question the happy clappy nonsense from sellside analysts," London-based Edwards, a global strategist with SocGen's Corporate & Investment Banking group, told a media briefing.

"We are not saying that people should not participate in the rallies -- that will get you fired as a fund manager -- but they should not become too convinced of the recovery," he said.

Edwards is more worried about Japan in the near term as he expects the world's second-largest economy to run into difficulty funding itself next year as demand for Japanese government bonds wane and bond yields rise further. Continued...

Recent posts that mention M. Edwards:

"Société Générale's Albert Edwards "New Stockmarket Lows 2nd half of 2009".

The Shape of Things to Come: "V Defies Economic Pessimists Seeing L, U, W"

"Eat your heart out Albert Edwards": Royal Bank of Scotland Calls for 550 S&P (and: "South Sea Bubble Redux")

[Société Générale's] Albert Edwards On The Upcoming Economic "Abyss"

Climateer Line of the Day (Société Générale's Albert Edwards edition)

Société Générale's Albert Edwards: "Stocks Drop May Turn Into ‘Rout’ as Economy Peaks"

A123 Systems third-quarter earnings preview (AONE)

UPDATE: "A123 Systems 3Q Loss Widens, But Rev Tops Estimates " and "Traders short A123 Systems' Dec call options" (AONE)"
Original post:
As a follow-up to "Earnings Heads up: A123 Systems Reports Today (AONE)" a reader emails this, from Dealscape:

...A research report from Pacific Crest Securities, highlighted in Barron's Stockpickr, sums up the opportunities and challenges investors face with A123Systems.

It is solidly positioned for hypergrowth in electrified drivetrains. Based on our discounted-cash-flow and comparable-company valuation analysis, we believe shares of AONE are fairly valued at approximately 19. That said, given the lack of pure-play comparables, and uncertainty regarding future cash flows, the shares are likely to trade based on sentiment drivers like design-win activity and customer-road-map data points.

While AONE has appreciated significantly above the initial offering price, we think further upside potential exists, although the current risk/reward trade-off is balanced, [with share moves that are] event-driven and volatile in the near term. Disruptions to key customer road maps, such as Chrysler's, could drastically change our ... valuations. [Yet] we believe that about $5 a share in cash (with additional $2.50 in Department of Energy funds), and potential for [a few] customers to break out will limit downside in the shares. ... We're modeling an aggressive company-funded capital-expenditure ramp following DoE-aided capex funding through 2012. Market cap: $1.5 billion.
...MORE
See also the Green Light blog "Fiat and Chrysler Pull Back on Electric Cars; Bad News for A123 Systems?"

Earnings Heads up: A123 Systems Reports Today (AONE)

UPDATE II: "A123 Systems 3Q Loss Widens, But Rev Tops Estimates " and "Traders short A123 Systems' Dec call options" (AONE)"
UPDATE below

Original post:
After the close. Here are the analysts estimates via Yahoo Finance:



Earnings Est Current Qtr
Sep-09
Next Qtr
Dec-09
Current Year
Dec-09
Next Year
Dec-10
Avg. Estimate -0.33-0.24-1.18-0.74
No. of Analysts 3233
Low Estimate -0.41-0.25-1.28-0.84
High Estimate -0.26-0.22-1.02-0.64
Year Ago EPS N/AN/A0.00-1.18


Revenue Est Current Qtr
Sep-09
Next Qtr
Dec-09
Current Year
Dec-09
Next Year
Dec-10
Avg. Estimate 19.20M21.52M83.63M144.04M
No. of Analysts 3334
Low Estimate 16.90M20.00M81.80M141.00M
High Estimate 21.20M22.66M85.08M149.56M
Year Ago Sales N/AN/AN/A83.63M
Sales Growth (year/est) N/AN/AN/A72.2%

Here's the company's conference call site.
UPDATE: "A123Systems third-quarter earnings preview (AONE)"

Monday, November 9, 2009

China Sovreign Fund to Buy 15% of AES, 35% of AES Wind Operations (AES)

From Bloomberg:

AES to Sell Stock, Wind-Power Stake to China’s CIC

AES Corp., the U.S. power producer with operations in 29 countries, agreed to sell stock and a 35 percent stake in its wind-power business to China Investment Corp. for $2.2 billion to raise cash for expansion.

A CIC unit will buy 125.5 million in new shares for $12.60 each, or $1.58 billion, Arlington, Virginia-based AES said today in a statement. CIC will own about 15 percent of the power company. AES also signed a letter of intent to sell a 35 percent interest in its wind-power operations to CIC for $571 million.

The transactions will give AES greater financial flexibility and allow the company to move more quickly on project developments, Chief Executive Officer Paul Hanrahan said. AES, which will need approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States to close the stock sale, also will gain cash for acquisitions.

“This just gives us a war chest of dry powder to execute on mergers and acquisitions,” Hanrahan said in a telephone interview. Access to capital markets has been “choppy,” he added, and any investment AES makes would need to be funded with equity or cash flow.

AES rose 17 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $14.03 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock has jumped 70 percent this year....MORE

24/7 Wall Street headlined their post "AES Debate: China’s Infrastructure Grab (AES)" and said:

...What is interesting here is that this is a quasi-dollar-exit. AES is a US company, but over two-thirds of its revenues are international and in areas where China has some presence. Because of the approximate $300 billion size of China Investment Corp. and adding in the near-$2 trillion China has in foreign currency reserves, it is hard to say this is a sudden departure. But we have noted on many occasions how China is gathering up oil and energy assets globally, and that is a dual-purpose effort: securing its own natural resources and reserves AND getting off the US Dollar dependence. Neither will happen immediately, but this seems fairly easy to see where it is heading over the long haul.

AES’s stance is that this move will allow the company to unlock the value of its development pipeline and will bolster its balance sheet to allow for more acquisitions and expansion projects as it seeks renewable energy projects and more developments in emerging markets.

While AES reported that its revenue fell to $3.8 billion from a level of $4.3 billion a year ago (mostly due to currency rates), its income grew to $185 million from $145 million. The company raised 2009 guidance to $1.09 EPS versus a prior target of $1.08 but against a Thomson Reuters figure of $1.10 EPS. But this is not an issue over earnings. This is an issue of the great global land and asset grab....

"With The Buck On Its Back, Stocks Poised To Rally" and "Dollar Approaching Support"

From MarketBeat:

Tight inverse correlation between movements in the U.S. dollar and various other asset classes seems to be back on again after loosening up a bit last week. G-20 meeting signals no let-up in central banks’ efforts to stimulate the global economy. U.S. dollar index is getting hammered, and in turn oil, gold and US stock futures are all seeing strong bids. Dollar index down almost 1%....MORE
From Charts and Coffee:

My script from last night predicts a move up tied to the dollar putting in a short term bottom and a pullback tied to the dollar consolidating and bouncing off support.

This morning, we’re seeing another big selloff of the Dollar. This is not a surprise. As I mentioned last week, the Fed gave traders the green light to slam the Dollar last week.

The correlation of a weak dollar is in play again this morning. UUP is down 1.23% in the pre-market. EURUSD is threatening a breakout over $1.50. Expect commodities to do well today if the Dollar selloff holds. GLD is up another 1.33% in the pre-market....

qqqq_005

I’m watching to see if the indexes can manage to breakout before the dollar finds support. I’m thinking traders see the support on the Dollar chart which should limit bullish euphoria and contain the markets. We’ll see.

The Incestuous Goldman Sachs-U.S. Government Nexus

Everyone knows about the revolving door between Goldman and Government. What you may not know is just how many slots have been filled by Goldman alums.
From Economic Policy Journal:

The Latest List of Goldman Player's Now in (or recently in) Government

Treasury Secretary under Bill Clinton (Robert Rubin)

Treasury Secretary under George Bush (Hank Paulson)

Current president and former chairman of the New York Federal Reserve (William Dudley and Stephen Friedman)

Chief of Staff to current Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (Mark Patterson)

Chief of Staff under President Bush (Joshua Bolten)

Economic adviser to the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton (Robert Hormats)

Chairman of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Gary Gensler)

Under-Secretary of State for Economic, Business, and Agricultural affairs under President Bush (Reuben Jeffery)

The past and current heads of the New York Stock Exchange (John Thain and Duncan Niederauer)

The chief operating officer of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement division (Adam Storch)

Goldman’s new top lobbyist in Washington, Michael Paese, used to work for Barney Frank, the congressman who chairs the House Financial Services Committee.

In London, Goldman's former chief economist and partner, Gavyn Davies, is married to Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s special adviser Sue Nye. Under Tony Blair, Davies became chairman of the BBC....MANY MORE

Railroads & Windmills: Berkshire's 'Green' Bets (BRK.A)

It's not all green. See last week's "Warren Buffett bets on coal and the economy (BNI; BRK.B)"
From the Wall Street Journal:

Warren Buffett's blockbuster deal this past week for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. was based partly on the view that railroads are more efficient than trucks when energy prices are high.

But another company in Mr. Buffett's portfolio, MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., also is making a "green" bet, building windmills and investing in high-tech batteries in one of the most significant pushes by a regulated utility in clean energy.

Dozens of state-of-the-art windmills that tower over rolling corn and soybean fields in this Iowa town are part of a MidAmerican wind project that generates enough electricity to power more than 50,000 homes.

It is one of several wind projects launched since 2004 by MidAmerican, of Des Moines, for billions of dollars. Iowa has become second in the nation in wind-energy capacity, behind Texas, due in part to MidAmerican.

On Thursday, just days after Mr. Buffett's deal for Burlington Northern, an Iowa utility board approved a new, roughly $2 billion wind project that will nearly double MidAmerican's wind capacity in the state, adding between 400 and 600 turbines. MidAmerican also owns wind farms in the Northwest.

"In Iowa there was wind but nothing to harness it 10 years ago," Mr. Buffett said in an interview. MidAmerican changed that, he said, "and we've got more on the way."

The profit motive is clearly at work at the company. Mr. Buffett believes that the investments will ultimately reward MidAmerican and its parent, Mr. Buffett's conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

"Clearly he thinks oil prices are going higher and Burlington is a way to have a low-cost provider, and you see that in MidAmerican, too," said Justin Fuller, partner at Midway Capital Research & Management, which closely tracks Berkshire.

The windmills are a risky move. Alternative energy has been one of the hottest, and least successful, investments in recent years.

High costs and technological hurdles have put a leash on once-hot areas such as ethanol and solar power. From Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens to U.K. energy giant BP PLC, the so-called smart money has lately scaled back on some once-highly touted clean-energy plans.

"The one thing we won't do is get involved in fads," said David Sokol, chairman of MidAmerican, in an interview. "We're looking at game changers."

Mr. Sokol is considered a top candidate to one day succeed Mr. Buffett, and his rising status at Berkshire puts a spotlight on his company's wind-power plans. MidAmerican has spent about $4 billion on wind projects and has billions more in the pipeline to finance wind and other alternative-energy projects around the country....MORE

A Chart of Roubini’s Horrible Track record in 2009

From Wall Street Cheat Sheet:

As many of you know, Wall St. Cheat Sheet is on a mission to expose some of the biggest frauds on Wall Street. Most recently we did an extensive open-source research project on Nouriel Roubini and Jim Cramer. As a follow up, a new friend Nadeem Walayat posted a nice chart (including full citations) of Roubini’s major money-losing calls in 2009:

Nouriel-Roubini-stock-market-track-record-2009I’ve come to the conclusion that the only people ignorant enough to defend Roubini are those who accidentally listened to him during the one brief moment he was right (for all the wrong reasons). If you followed his bearish advice in 2005, you would have either missed the entire rally through 2007, or you would have lost money shorting the market. If you would have followed his advice starting on March 9, 2009, you would have lost a ton of money. We should also note that Roubini said Oil would stay below $40 a barrel for all of 2009. Ouch.

Anyway, once again, science and facts prove that there are many “gurus” on TV telling the investing public how to invest, yet they cannot beat an ETF.

Chavez to troops: Prepare for war with Colombia

From the AP:

President Hugo Chavez ordered Venezuela's military on Sunday to prepare for a possible armed conflict with Colombia, saying the country's soldiers should be ready if the United States attempts to provoke a war between the South American neighbors.

"The best way to avoid war is preparing for it," Chavez told military officers standing at attention during his weekly television and radio program.

Repeating an often-used military adage, he added, "If you want peace, prepare for war."

Chavez told his supporters that President Barack Obama holds sway over Colombia's government, and he cautioned the U.S. leader against using his allies in Bogota to mount a military offensive against Venezuela.

"Don't make a mistake, Mr. Obama, by ordering an attack against Venezuela by way of Colombia," he said....MORE

HurricaneWatch: Ida takes aim at the U.S. Gulf Coast; Oil and gas workers evacuated

I was a bit surprised by oil's price action on Thursday and Friday. Thursday's post "Hurricane Watch: "Hurricane Ida strikes Nicaragua" noted:

Nat gas futures were recently trading up two cents at $4.75, oil down $0.62 at $79.78.
While Friday's was titled "Hurricane Watch: "Storm may threaten oil output. Really?"
Today I am confused again, the hurricane is falling apart and heading for the western end of the Florida Panhandle while oil futures are trading up $1.67 while natural gas is trading down eight cents.
Oh well, information asymmetries = money.
Here's the latest from Jeff Masters' Wunderblog:
Hurricane Ida burst into the Gulf of Mexico as a Category 2 hurricane with 100 mph winds this afternoon, and is poised to deliver a solid blow to the U.S. Gulf Coast between Southeast Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle on Tuesday morning. Radar imagery out of Cancun reveals that Ida has retained its tight inner core this afternoon, with only limited rain bands affecting Mexico and western Cuba. Top winds at Cancun, Mexico today were only 15 mph, despite the fact that Ida passed just 60 miles east of the city. Infrared and visible satellite loops show little change in the intensity of Ida's heavy thunderstorms this afternoon, but the cloud pattern is beginning to become distorted due to strong upper-level winds from the southwest that are creating 20 - 25 knots of wind shear over the hurricane.

Water vapor satellite imagery reveals a large area of dry air to the southwest of Ida, but this dry air has not yet intruded into Ida's core. The latest 5:30 pm EST vortex report from the Hurricane Hunters showed that the central pressure had risen 1 mb, to 977 mb, but that the surface winds were still near 100 mph. They noted that the eyewall was open to the east, a sign that Ida's inner core may be in trouble.


The intensity forecast for Ida
The high wind shear of 20 - 25 knots currently affecting Ida is forecast to persist at that level until Monday night. With the storm now beginning to show a distortion of the cloud pattern due to this shear, it would not be a surprise of the shear managed to inject some dry air into Ida's core Monday morning, significantly weakening the storm. Aiding this process will be cooler waters. Early Monday morning, Ida will be crossing over waters of 26°C, which is barely enough to support a hurricane....MORE

Click the map below to change the zoom level.


From the Houston Chronicle:

Oil and gas workers are being evacuated from parts of the Gulf of Mexico and some production is being shut-in as Hurricane Ida takes aim for the Central Gulf coast. The storm should be hitting the Eastern edge of the main oil and gas production areas, so the amount of production offline should be relatively small.

In a statement Sunday night BP said it has curtailed some production and "evacuated most of our non-essential personnel while maintaining essential operations personnel to continue to produce as conditions allow. In the event that the storm worsens, operations personnel will work to ensure a safe and efficient shut in of production and to also position the facilities for a safe and efficient re-start."

Chevron said in a very brief statement on its web site that it has "begun to evacuate personnel due to Hurricane Ida. Some production has been shut in.">>>MORE

Treasury Blocks the Sale of Tax Credits by Fannie (BRK.A; FNM; GS)

Climateer Investing IS NOT intended to be the all-Berkshire news channel.
It's just that the company is so reflective of the overall economy and with the huge utility subsidiary and the insurance and re-insurance operations is such a microcosm of the policy debates on climate change that regular readers end up seeing Berkshire's stock symbol in the headline more than any other company.

At one time BRK was one of the the largest shareholders in Fannie's little bro Freddie Mac and 80% owned Wesco Financial had almost half its portfolio invested in FRE.
From the Wall Street Journal:

The U.S. Treasury blocked Fannie Mae's proposed sale of nearly $3 billion in low-income housing tax credits to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. on Friday after concluding that the deal was too costly for taxpayers.

The extraordinary move was the latest sign of tensions within the Obama administration over how to balance political and financial pressures resulting from the housing crisis.

Fannie Mae had agreed to sell roughly half of its $5.2 billion tax-credit portfolio and had received approval to proceed with the sale from its federal regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

Those credits are virtually worthless to Fannie because the company doesn't have any taxable income to offset, and it is forced to write down the value of those credits every quarter as their value declines.

But Treasury Department officials blocked the deal after concluding that it would have resulted in a loss of tax revenues greater than the savings to the federal government had it allowed the sale. "In short, withholding approval of the proposed sale affords more protection of the taxpayers than does providing approval," an administration official said in a statement....MORE

Friday, November 6, 2009

Berkshire quarterly net income more than doubles

Here we go. From MarketWatch:

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A 102,690, +790.00, +0.78%) (BRK.B 3,419, -6.00, -0.18%) said late Friday that third-quarter net income more than doubled as the insurance-focused conglomerate run by Warren Buffett benefited from a rebound in the value of its large equity investments and derivatives exposures. Third-quarter net income came in at $3.24 billion, or $2,087 per Class A equivalent share, versus $1.06 billion, or $682 per Class A equivalent share, a year earlier....MORE
From Reuters:
Berkshire Hathaway's net income triples

Berkshire Hathaway Files Q3 Earnings, Beats Consensus By A Country Mile

Here's the 10Q.
I haven't seen any news reports yet.
EPS came to $2087 per share compared to the Thompson-Reuters four analyst expectation of $1,308.25.

"VCs: Thousands Of Companies Will Exit Next Year… peHUB"

From PE Hub:

But they may not be going public.

Four VCs -- Sharon Wienbar at ScaleVP, Sandy Miller at Institutional Venture, Brian Jacobs at Emergence and Courtney McCrea at Weathergage (a fund of funds) -- appeared earlier this week on a panel at Dow Jones LP Summit and were asked to predict the future.

They all see a big pickup in VC-backed exits -- thousands of companies that are five to 10 years old that will be ready to go out by next summer.

But they also aired what have become usual complaints about the harms of going public for small-cap companies: the short-term trading ("Young companies need to be bought and held to grow and flourish," Jacobs said), the lack of research to educate prospective buyers on these companies once the IPO is over, the $3 million a year in costs of complying with Sarbanes-Oxley....MORE

An Options Play? "Berkshire Hathaway in the S&P 500? " (BRK.A)

From Barron's 'The Striking Price':

An options play on Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway's possibly gaining inclusion to the index. Video: Baby Berkshire Is Growing Up

OF ALL THE HONORS AND adulations bestowed upon Warrren Buffett, one has eluded him these many years.

His company's stocks, Berkshire Hathaway (ticker: BRKA) and the so-called Class B Baby Berkshires (BRKB), have never been included in the Standard & Poor's 500 index. The index is the definitive benchmark of the U.S. equity market; its 500 stocks rank among the world's largest and most highly regarded companies.

But Berkshire's recent acquisition of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNI) railroad, which is a component of the S&P 500, could lead to index inclusion for the Baby Berkshire shares. Acquiring companies are often added to the index.

At about $101,000 a share, Berkshire's A-shares are too expensive and trade too infrequently to be included in the S&P 500. But if Baby Berkshire stock, recently priced around $3,380, splits 50-for-1, as proposed by management and subject to shareholder approval, the shares could be added to the index, Jefferies & Co. is telling clients.

If this happens, Jefferies' quantitative strategists have calculated that index funds and other asset managers that track the index would buy $4 billion, or 60 million shares, which equals about 38 days of trading volume.

The forced buying typically creates lots of action in the stock and options market. To take advantage, aggressive investors can consider buying Baby Berkshire's March $3400 calls that recently cost about $182, and selling March $3300 puts for about $155.

If the stock is added to the index, the upside calls should increase in value, while the puts, which were sold to lower the cost of the overall position to under $30, would decrease in value....MORE

Berkshire Hathaway's Charlie Munger on Cap-and-Trade and When He Started Liking Trains (BRK.A; BNI)

I had planned to post this on Tuesday when word came out that Charlie and Warren were getting some new trains to play with.
Herewith a compilation of Charlieisms:

"Mr. Munger, welcome. You had some strong words on the proposed global warming policy solutions. Could you boil down your thinking for us?"
CM: "Monstrously Stupid Right Now...Almost Demented"
"That seems a bit harsh."
CM: "Think about it a little more and you will agree with me because you're smart and I'm right."
"At the annual meeting..."
CM: "I didn't set out in life to become the assistant leader of a cult."*
"At the annual meeting you shared some thoughts on alternative energy, what did you say?"
CM: Who knows, Warren was stepping all over my straight lines. Here's the Omaha World-Herald live-blog-
"Munger says harnessing the sun's power and changing sea water to fresh, other changes are for the better. Munger says he sees very good things for the future, including enough energy generation to solve a lot of other problems along with it."
*Whitney Tilson’s 2007 Wesco Annual Meeting Notes, Opening Remarks

And for the rail-curious, Mr. Tilson took down this note:
...Berkshire’s investment in railroads
Railroads – now that’s an example of changing our minds. Warren and I have hated railroads our entire life. They’re capital-intensive, heavily unionized, with some make-work rules, heavily regulated, and long competed with a comparative disadvantage vs. the trucking industry, which has a very efficient method of propulsion (diesel engines) and uses free public roads. Railroads have long been a terrible business and have been lousy for investors.

We did finally change our minds and invested. We threw out our paradigms, but did it too late. We should have done it two years ago, but we were too stupid to do it at the most ideal time. There’s a German saying: Man is too soon old and too late smart. We were too late smart. We finally realized that railroads now have a huge competitive advantage, with double stacked railcars, guided by computers, moving more and more production from China, etc. They have a big advantage over truckers in huge classes of business.

Bill Gates figured this out years before us – he invested in a Canadian railroad and made eight hundred percent. Maybe Gates should manage Berkshire’s money. [Laughter] This is a good example of how hard it is to change one’s mind and change entrenched thinking, but at last we did change.

The world changed and, way too slowly, we recognized this.
Here's Charlie at the '08 Wesco Annual Meeting:

...Q19: Forest from Ft. Worth Texas. Do you look at railroads from a replacement value standpoint?

Do you know what it would cost to replace Burlington Northern today? We are not going to build another transcontinental. And those assets are valuable, have utility. Now they want to raise diesel prices on trucks. Wish I was smart enough to identify this few years earlier. Avoiding the most extreme follies of man makes you better....

Evergreen Solar Slides; Citi Cuts Rating To Sell (ESLR)

From Tech Trader Daily:

Evergreen Solar (ESLR) shares are down sharply this morning, pressured by downgrades from both Citigroup analyst Timothy Arcuri and Pacific Crest analyst Mark Bachman.

  • Arcuri cut his rating to Sell from Hold, with a new target of $1, down from $3. “Customers like the product, but ESLR remains in a liquidity struggle that is forcing it toward what should have been done from the get-go, focusing on its competitive advantage, making wafers,” he writes. “Near-term, gross margins turns negative again” until it finishes transitioning manufacturing to China, he adds, while cash will stand at at just $50 million by the first half of 2010. Longer-term, he adds, the company’s module cost position won’t be any better than peers. And he says that it could take a few years for the company to make larger wafers that comply with current industry standards; for now, the company is the only taker for the wafers....MORE

Reforming risky banks the old-fashioned way

From FT Alphaville:

In the early days of banking, liability was not just unlimited; it was often as much personal as financial. In 1360, a Barcelona banker was executed in front of his failed bank, presumably as a way of discouraging generations of future bankers from excessive risk-taking

Andrew Haldane, executive director of the Bank of England’s Financial Stability unit, seems to have latched onto an effective, if not exactly modern, potential solution to the problem of excessive risk-taking at banks. And while he doesn’t think executing bankers was “conspicuously” successful in the past, he does have some less antiquated suggestions for reforming the banking sector in a joint presentation with the BoE’s Piergiorgio Alessandri. They include...MORE

Previously:
Zeitgeist: London Protesters Threaten Bankers, Evoke Executions
Go Long Pitchforks: How To Profit From The Coming Populist Backlash.
"...Here's the rondo from Mozart's Horn Concerto No. 2.
Music to hunt bankers by. "


"Evergreen Solar says has enough cash" and "Pacific Crest’s Bachman Downgrades Evergreen Solar to SECTOR PERFORM" (ESLR)

UPDATE: "Evergreen Solar Slides; Citi Cuts Rating To Sell (ESLR)"
Original post:
From Reuters:

* U.S. solar co expects to have $115 mln cash before end Q4

* Accelerates strategy to outsource work in China

* Shares up 1.4 pct at $1.44 (Adds analyst comment, background, updates share movement)

LOS ANGELES, Nov 5 (Reuters) - U.S. solar company Evergreen Solar Inc (ESLR) has "significant" cash to meet its operating needs, the company's chief financial officer said on Thursday on a conference call with investors, as the company's shares rose slightly in trading.

The Marlboro, Massachusetts-based company posted better than expected revenue on Wednesday and said it ended the third quarter with $91 million in cash. [ID:nN0444775]

"As you can see, we have significant cash to meet our operating needs," said Michael El-Hillow, the company's CFO....MORE

And from SmallCapPulse:

...Key Takeaways

· Modeled declines in ASPs (22% in 2010), underutilization at Devens, ramp expenses from China and continued losses from Sovello

· Downside risk is probably minimal at 0.5x price-to-book

· Evergreen may need to return to the capital markets late next year to increase debt or add further dilution

· Lowering 2010 revenue and EPS estimates to $355.3 million and ($0.03) from $466 and $0.29, respectively and removing price target

Previously:

Evergreen Solar to DEC: The crickets must die (ESLR)

Evergreen Solar: Cloudy outlook for Massachusetts's bet on solar energy firm (ESLR)

Solar: "Evergreen Solar to close U.S. module plant: US$70 million write down on Sovello JV" (ESLR)

Hurricane Watch: "Storm may threaten oil output. Really?"

From the Houston Chronicle:

Storm graphic Nov 2009.jpg
Looks stormy, says AccuWeather.

It's a bit ironic that we go through one of the quietest Gulf hurricane seasons in years with very little storm-related curtailment of oil and gas production, yet today we get this news from AccuWeather:

State College, Pa. -- 6 November 2009 -- AccuWeather.com's reports two storms are stirring up weather in the Gulf of Mexico that will affect the production of the energy industry beginning Saturday and continuing into Monday....MORE

Here are the model storm track projections from Dr. Jeff Masters' Wunderblog:



And his commentary:
...The forecast for Ida
Ida will dump another 1 - 2 inches of rain over northeastern Honduras today. The Cayman Islands, Belize, and the rest of the Honduras coast can expect occasional heavy rains of 1 - 4 inches over the next two days as spiral bands from Ida bring squally weather. Much heavier rains of 4 - 8 inches are likely to affect Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and Western Cuba beginning Saturday, as Ida heads north towards the Yucatan Channel. Higher rain amounts may occur if Ida intensifies more than forecast.


Figure 2. Total heat content of the ocean (the Tropical Cyclone Heat Potential, TCHP) for November 4, 2005 compared to November 4, 2009. TCHP values in excess of 80 - 90 kJ/cm^2 (yellow, orange, and red colors) are often associated with rapid intensification of hurricanes. This year has higher heat content in the Western Caribbean than the record-breaking Hurricane Season of 2005. The higher heat content this year is partially because we haven't had any tropical cyclone activity in the Western Caribbean, while 2005 had some record strong storms--particularly Hurricane Wilma--that churned up cold water from the depths. Image credit: NOAA/AOML.

Moderate wind shear of 15 - 20 knots and warm waters await await Ida when it emerges over the Western Caribbean tonight, and some modest strengthening is likely. It is a concern that Ida could reach Category 1 hurricane strength before it reaches the Yucatan, as the total heat content of the ocean in the Western Caribbean is very high this year (Figure 2). However, given Ida's current disorganized state and the presence of 15 - 20 knots of shear, the odds of the storm reaching hurricane strength before passing the Yucatan on Sunday night are probably low, less than 30%....MORE

Wind sector cash inflow may blow small firms away (Takeunders)

From Reuters:

Small wind energy companies could be taken over cheap because fresh funding for the sector is set to flow selectively to bigger names, placing them in a stronger negotiating position.

Analysts say the big firms are unwilling to pay premiums for the "pipeline" projects at the smaller players -- wind farms approved or awaiting construction -- which are normally added to current operating assets to arrive at a valuation....

...POSSIBLE TARGETS

Treasa Ni Chonghaile, fund manager of KBC's Eco Alternative Energy fund -- which holds shares in Novera -- said that German wind company PNE Wind could become a likely takeover candidate. The company's current price-to-book ratio stands at 1.3, compared with 2.3 of bigger German rival Nordex.

Britain's Clipper Windpower is another example. Last month it said it was in talks with potential investors that could lead to a "significant investment," not ruling out that the company could be taken over completely.

Like Novera it may struggle with valuation though...MORE.

Buffett Offers Possible 22% Profit to Arbitrage[u]rs on Burlington (BRK.A; BNI)

The headline didn't have the "u" in arb.
I added it because that word is one of the few opportunities I get to sound semi-sophisticated.
[he also likes "tranche" and "pari passu". "force majeure", not so much -ed]
From Bloomberg:

Warren Buffett is giving arbitrage traders the chance to capture annualized earnings of 22 percent on his bid for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. offered $100 a share for the largest U.S. railroad on Nov. 3 in a deal the Omaha, Nebraska- based insurance and investment company said would probably close during the first quarter. Based on that schedule and Burlington’s closing price of $96.98 yesterday, the acquisition offers an annualized return of 8 percent to 22 percent.

Shares of takeover targets rise to the offer price as the closing of the deal nears, with the gap widening when there’s doubt it will be completed. Berkshire is already Burlington’s biggest shareholder. Potential profits on the bid exceed the 0.08 percent annualized return during the past week from the 100 largest taxable U.S. money-market funds, according to data compiled by Westborough, Massachusetts-based Crane Data LLC.

“It’s a good opportunity to put some cash to work and at the end to get some Berkshire shares as part of the transaction,” Anne Gudefin, whose $15.1 billion Mutual Global Discovery Fund holds Berkshire stock and beat 99 percent of peers the past five years, said in an interview at a Franklin Templeton Investments conference in Vienna yesterday....MORE

Bet on the deal going through despite this additional headline at Bloomberg:

Worries as Rush Into Commodities Slows

From the Wall Street Journal:

The flood of investor cash that has helped drive up the prices of everything from oil to platinum this year is slowing amid worries prices could fall and evidence some of the popular commodity investment products have failed to live up to their promises.

Investors plowed a record $50 billion into commodities this year, helping drive prices for crude oil up 79% and gold 23%, but just $2.2 billion of new money flowed into commodities in October.

That would mark the lowest monthly inflow since July -- when threats of market regulation briefly unnerved investors -- and the second-lowest since November 2008.

[commodities etf]

On a quarterly basis, inflows into commodity investments have fallen from about $22 billion in the first quarter to $17 billion in the second and $11 billion in the third. The inflows already are more than triple those of 2008. On Thursday, gold closed at a record $1088.70 an ounce.

Many commodity investors missed out on the big gains because they invested in index funds designed to track different commodities, and in many cases those funds didn't do as promised. Other funds have had to stop taking new investments because they became too big for their markets.

But many investors are now worried the liquidity-fueled rally in commodities may soon be over. They say the weakness in the dollar, which has helped drive commodities higher, may soon come to an end. When it does, commodity prices may swing back drastically. Increased worries about tougher regulations down the pike and disappointing returns from some exchange-traded funds are combining to drive investors to look elsewhere....MORE

See also: Yesterday's post "Commodities: "LME copper stocks highest since May - price falls as demand weakens"

Goldman/Buffett/Fannie Tax Deal Inked a Month Ago (BRK.A; FNM; GS)

From Bruce Krasting:

If you were curious about the recent news regarding Goldman Sachs and Warren Buffett’s interest in acquiring the tax losses of Fannie Mae the details are in Fannies 10-Q.

This deal was agreed to and inked a month ago. It is still pending approval. So the information that was first reported by Bloomberg was a deliberate plant. A possible objective would have been to get a decision on the transaction before today's release. Note that the Q provides an update of the deal’s status as of November 5. Someone was waiting to edit this section right up to the last minute. A tad unusual.

From the Fannie Mae 10-Q , November 2009

Prior to September 30, 2009, we entered into a nonbinding letter of intent to transfer equity interests in our LIHTC investments. Under the terms of the transaction as currently contemplated, we would transfer to unrelated third-party investors approximately one-half of our LIHTC investments for a price that exceeds their current carrying value. Upon completion of the contemplated transfer, the unrelated third-party investors would be entitled to receive substantially all of the tax benefits from our LIHTC investments for a specified period of time. At a specified future date, the percentage of tax benefits the investors would receive would automatically be reduced and the percentage of tax benefits we would receive would be increased by the same amount. In addition, we could have the obligation to reacquire all or a portion of the transferred interests.

We have requested the approval of FHFA, as our conservator, to complete this transaction. FHFA has advised us that it has no objection to this transaction as it is consistent with the conservation of the assets of the corporation and that FHFA has requested Treasury’s approval under the senior preferred stock purchase agreement. As of November 5, 2009, FHFA has not yet received this approval....MORE

Fannie Mae’s results – oh, and what if Bank of America reported the same way… (BAC; FNM)

From John Hempton:

There have been some mathematical corrections to this post discussed in the comments. My pencil notes had the numbers right. By the time I got to writing it out errors had entered. Sorry.

Fannie Mae just put out awful looking results based primarily on massive (and increasing) credit loss provisions. Indeed their provisions this quarter were the largest thus far in the cycle.

Its worth looking a little closer because – like it or not – all Americans are owners of Fannie – both the downside (their current book) and the upside (if any) through taxpayer ownership of the common stock.

The nature of credit loss provisions

Each quarter almost every financial institution takes some charges when loans they have made settle at less than 100c in the dollar. At the moment charge-offs are at historic highs.

Every quarter a company makes an estimate of future losses – a “provision” if you will.

Provisions by definition are estimates – whereas charge-offs are real and mostly final.

The difference between provisions and charge-offs goes to a “reserve for future losses” or more commonly just “reserves”.

Most financial institutions are taking more provisions than charge-offs – in other words they are building reserves. This is necessary because there are a lot of delinquencies and a lot of loans in the foreclosure process and – just frankly – a lot of loans that common sense tells you will end in charge-off.

Most institutions build reserves relatively slowly. Bank of America for instance – in broad numbers – has had 13 billion of provisions per quarter for the last three quarters and charge-offs of 6,8 and 9 billion respectively. If the charge-offs skyrocket (say to 20 billion) at bank of America then it will find itself under-reserved – and will wind up having to report very big losses. However if charge-offs slowly level off around 13 billion per quarter then BofA will – ex-post – look OK.

The honest answer in the case of BofA is that we really do not know where charge-offs will wind up but we can make educated guesses. In the last conference call BofA thought charge-offs would peak about the first quarter of 2010. If they are right then their current reserving is right and BofA is probably a steal as a stock right now. If however charge-offs continue to rise for another 18 months peaking out at say $35 billion per quarter then BofA will need to be recapitalised further and may wind up as government property....MORE at Bronte Capital


Thursday, November 5, 2009

Forecasting Financial Crashes: The Ultimate Experiment Begins

From the Physics arXive blog:

If a new technique for predicting crashes really works, a bold new experiment will measure how well.

Is it really possible to predict the end of financial bubbles? Didier Sornette at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich thinks so and has set up the Financial Crisis Observatory at ETH to study the idea.

We've looked at his extraordinary predictions before. Earlier this year, he identified a bubble in the Shanghai Composite Index and much to this blog's surprise, forecast its end with remarkable accuracy.

But as many people pointed out, the problem with this kind of forecast is that it is difficult interpret the results. Does it really back Sornette's hypothesis that crashes are predictable? How do we know that he doesn't make these predictions on a regular basis and only publicise the ones that come true? Or perhaps he modifies them as the due date gets closer so that they always seem to be right (as weather forecasters do). It's even possible that his predictions influence the markets: perhaps they trigger crashes.

Sornette himself is only too well aware of these problems and so has designed an experiment to properly test two hypotheses. The first hypothesis is that financial (and other) bubbles can be diagnosed in real-time before they end. And the second is that the termination of financial (and other) bubbles can be bracketed using probabilistic forecasts, with a reliability better than chance.

The experiment--he calls it the Financial Bubble Experiment--consists of Sornette and his team monitoring world markets and coming up with predictions about the forthcoming end of bubbles in the way they have been doing in recent years. But instead of publishing these predictions, Sornette intends to seal them in an electronic envelope held by a trusted third party, in this case, the physics arXiv.

The arXiv time stamps each prediction so that there is no dispute over when it was made and ensures that it cannot be changed.

Every six months, Sornette says he will open the envelopes and publish his predictions so that anyone can see how successful he has been.

That's a brave step forward but one that he has little choice over, if his ideas are to be broadly accepted.

To start off with, he has made three forecasts which he's posted to the arXiv. On 1 May 2010, he will unseal them and we'll be waiting.

Exciting stuff.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/0911.0454: The Financial Bubble Experiment: Advanced Diagnostics and Forecasts of Bubble Terminations

Baguette breaks Large Hadron Collider (End of the Universe Puts Trade Down)

From Foreign Policy's Passport blog:

It's almost as if God doesn't want the scientists at CERN to fire up the Large Hadron Collider. The world's largest particle-collider, which cost around £4 billion to construct and, by the way, might destroy the world, has run into another technical mishap -- this time caused by "an errant chunk of baguette."

Somehow, a piece of bread got lodged into an electrical unit that is responsible for cooling the collider to 1.9 degrees above absolute zero. How the bread got there is a mystery: a CERN spokeswoman hypothesized that it was dropped by a bird or an airplane. But if the investigation does suggest sabotage, the local bakers' union will likely be a prime suspect.

Back when the LHC was supposed to fire up the first time, we mentioned Long or Short Capital's End of the Universe puts:

...That is why Long or Short is now offering LHC End of the Universe Puts. It’s a simple put option wherein the buyer retains the write to sell the Universe at a strike price of “Existing”. Based on our Black-Holes model used to value all “end of the world” options, the July 2008 vintage options are currently priced at $20....
Followed by "Large Hadron Collider Starts Up, Earth Suvives, End of the World Puts Plummet":

UPDATE: The marketers at LoS Capital* are still pushing product:

...We continue to reiterate the importance of LHC End of the Universe Puts.

“The LHC is a discovery machine,” said CERN Director General Robert Aymar

If this is true and you extrapolate it out, it is only a matter of time until they discover the end of the Earth and existence as we know it. Who is to say they won’t do that tomorrow? Again, not us.

Recommendation: These securities do NOT benefit from the implicit guarantee of the US government, God or your locally relevant deity. Wink wink nudge nudge, but between you and me, they DO.

*At Long or Short LLC, we leverage our superior intellect and extensive investing experience to recommend explicit Long or Short positions and related abstract trades, which may or may not be possible with real world financial derivatives. We use science to improve the lives of the rich.
More About LoS

German giants to build U.K. reactors ($25 Billion worth)

From UPI:

German energy giants Eon and RWE have decided to team up to build nuclear power plants in Britain, promising to invest around $25 billion in the endeavor.

The new company Horizon Nuclear Power headquartered near Gloucester will start operations on Nov. 16, the companies said in a joint statement. The joint venture is held to 50 percent by Eon UK, with RWE npower owning the other half.

The companies plan to invest some $25 billion into new nuclear power plants in Britain, the first of which is scheduled to go online by 2020, the statement said.

Some 6,000 MW worth of generation capacities will be installed at Wylfa on the Welsh island of Anglesey and at Oldbury, in Gloucestershire, where the companies acquired land earlier this year....MORE

Eugene Fama Drinks His Own Brand of Kool-Aid

Remember, just because economists use the tools of science (mathematics), that don't make it a science.
From bNet:

Famed economist Eugene Fama has a novel take on the financial crisis. Rejecting as “fantasy” the idea that Wall Street is in any way to blame for the mess, he says that “financial markets and financial institutions were casualties rather than the cause of the recession.”

Fama also makes a curious claim regarding the “efficient market hypothesis,” which he pioneered in the 1960s and ’70s while at the University of Chicago. The theory essentially says that markets are an efficient way to set prices, such as for stocks, because they reflect all information available to participants at any given time.

The EMH has been in dispute since the day it was born. And it has taken it on the chin in recent years from folks (like me) who think it’s dead wrong, and dangerous to boot.

But there’s no disputing the theory’s influence on mainstream financial thinking. The EMH has informed a couple generations of public policy regarding financial industry regulation. It is a pillar of the idea, now groggier than a punch-drunk fighter, that markets are self-correcting and that the best thing government can do is get out of the way.

Fama defends his theory against charges that it laid the ideological groundwork for the financial crisis by saying that, well, no one believes in it, anyway. Or rather, no one who matters.

Most investing is done by active managers who don’t believe markets are efficient. For example, despite my taunts of the last 45 years about the poor performance of active managers, about 80 percent of mutual fund wealth is actively managed. Hedge funds, private equity, and other alternative asset classes, which have attracted big fund inflows in recent years, are built on the proposition that markets are inefficient. The recent problems of commercial and investment banks trace mostly to their trading desks and their proprietary portfolios, and these are always built on the assumption that markets are inefficient. Indeed, if banks and investment banks took market efficiency more seriously, they might have avoided lots of their recent problems.

These are clumsy, if convenient, dodges. Financial institutions are of course both casualties and cause of the meltdown (’twas ever thus, by the way). AIG sold too many credit default swaps, and now it — and we — are paying the price. Countrywide wrote mortgages for anyone with a pulse, and now it’s a corpse. One day leverage is your friend, the next it’s picking its teeth with your balance sheet....MORE

FHA Postpones Release of Audit As Bailout Worries Mount

From the Wall Street Journal's Developments blog:

Two House Republicans warned that growing losses at the Federal Housing Administration could lead to a taxpayer-funded bailout and have asked the Department of Housing and Urban Development for data backing up the FHA’s assertion that it won’t need to ask Congress for any taxpayer money.

“Congress and HUD must take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that this program operates in a manner that does not expose the taxpayer to yet another bailout,” wrote Republicans Darrell Issa of California and Spencer Bachus of Alabama in a letter, dated Monday, to HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan.

The letter was released on Wednesday, hours after FHA Commissioner David Stevens and Mr. Donovan abruptly postponed the public release of the FHA’s annual actuarial review. The release of the report, which will show that the projected value of the agency’s reserves have fallen below a federally mandated level, was delayed after the FHA raised questions about one of the report’s findings.

Those flaws emerged after the FHA’s independent actuary, at the request of the FHA, included stress tests beyond the minimal requirements of the annual review. Those tests raised questions about a possible flaw in the recently completed report. The FHA wouldn’t specify what particular data had raised questions....MORE

From the Washington Post:

FHA delays the release of disputed audit of its finances

Fannie Mae loses $19bn in one quarter of one year (FNM)

That's FT Alphaville's headline, making a rather pointed point.
Here's their version of the story:

Nineteen BILLION dollars - that’s how much government sponsored entity Fannie Mae lost in the third quarter of 2009, according to the mortgage lender’s 10-Q filing with the SEC on Thursday.

That marks a ninth consecutive quarterly loss for the lender - which it accompanied with a request for a fresh $15bn bailout from the US Treasury.

Fannie Mae’s net worth has (yet again) fallen below zero, forcing it to go hand-outstretched for the fourth time to the Treasury, with which it maintains a $200bn line of credit. If the lender’s net worth were to stay below zero for more than 60 days, it would be forced into receivership.

And as Reuters pointed out:

Fannie Mae, which posted $101.6 billion in losses over the previous eight quarters, has already taken $44.9 billion in federal aid since April.

Gobsmacking.

Here are details from the filing, emphasis FT Alphaville’s...MORE

Here's the nuts and bolts, from Bloomberg:

It is time to get rid of a few Senators. Let's start with the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

[more formally, The United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs -ed]

The Deal Professor on Berkshire Hathaway/Burlington Northern (BRK.B; BNI)

From DealBook:

2 Big Deals and the Search for an M.&A. Market

Updated with clarification | Nov. 4, 10:00 a.m. What a difference a day makes. Just on Monday in “Searching for Themes in the M.&A. Market,” I reviewed the dreary figures and transactions in the mergers and acquisitions market last month and noted the absence of discernable trends.

That was Monday, before the stock market closed. In the last 24 hours, we have had announcements of two big strategic transactions. The first, announced late Monday afternoon, was Stanley Worksacquisition of Black & Decker for $3.5 billion in stock. The second, announced Tuesday morning, is truly a blockbuster deal: Berkshire Hathaway’s acquisition of the remaining 77.4 percent of Burlington Northern Santa Fe for $26 billion in cash and stock....

...In 2008, according to Factset MergerMetrics, 34 percent of transactions offered stock consideration either alone or with cash, but only 9.2 percent of those had a collar. But collars appear to be becoming more common in the distressed market environment because of the protections from volatility they provide. In the case of Stanley and Black & Decker, however, this really is a combination of two similar enterprises, so the parties most likely expected their stocks to trade in tandem, so a collar would be unnecessary.

Meanwhile, Berkshire’s acquisition of the 77.4 percent of Burlington that it does not already own is a pure acquisition. This is a stock-and-cash election transaction with a 31 percent premium. Stockholders can choose to convert their shares into $100 of cash or a number of Berkshire class A shares equivalent to $100 a share. A maximum of 60 percent of the consideration will be cash and 40 percent will be stock, and shareholders will be prorated in these amounts.

In addition, there is a floating collar on the class A stock. The collar is between approximately $80,000.00 and approximately $125,000.00 per Berkshire class A share. If the value of Berkshire stock is outside of this collar range at closing, then the number of shares received of Berkshire Hathaway class A stock will be fixed at either 0.001253489 per Burlington Northern share for values below the collar range, or 0.000802233 per Burlington Northern share for values above the collar range. In this case, the collar is more appropriate since this really is an acquisition and Burlington Northern shareholders are looking for a set amount, while both parties want to minimize the risk from stock market volatility.

In addition, Berkshire, because of its large ownership stake in Burlington, is deemed to be an affiliated shareholder of the railroad under federal securities laws. The transaction will therefore be subject to the going-private rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission....MORE

SunPower Jumps; Deutsche Bank Upgrades To Buy (SPWRA)

From Tech Trader Daily:

SunPower (SPWRA) shares are getting a lift today from Deutsche Bank analyst Steve O’Rourke, who upped his rating on the stock to Buy from Hold, while increasing his price target to $31, from $28. The stock closed yesterday at $25.31.

O’Rourke writes in a research note that the upgrade reflects the stock’s attractive valuation, anticipated industry growth and the company’s market position....MORE

"The Approaching Muni Bond Implosion" and "Allstate Sells Municipals as Governments Run Deficits "

First up, The Economic Populist:

New York Lieutenant Governor Richard Ravitch made a statement last week that should have gotten headlines, but didn't.

“I believe that the states across the United States will face deficits a year after stimulus ends of $300 billion to $500 billion a year,” Ravitch told about 200 people gathered at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. “You’re going to begin to see cracks in the municipal bond market well before then, because that’s an inexorable casualty of unfundable state deficits.”

To put this into perspective, the total state budgets for 2010 was about $1.4 Trillion. If his predictions are anywhere close to being true then the budget problems of the states are essentially unfixable.

“These are numbers that are unprecedented,” Ravitch said, adding that the current recession is unlike any in the nation’s history, with unemployment continuing to rise, “banks are falling like autumn leaves, and nobody is projecting any significant growth in 2010.”

The condition of state and local budgets are in their worst shape since the Great Depression, and if the economy doesn't turn around quicker than the mainstream believes, we are going to see defaults that will shake the economy to its foundation.
Only four months into the 2010 fiscal year, 26 states already have deficit problems totaling $16 Billion. This is after the states had to close $178 Billion of budget gaps this past summer. Only 22 states had budgets deficits of less than 20% of their total budgets. At least 9 states are projected deficits for 2011 of at least 20%, and those are often optimistic projections.
All the easy cuts have been made. Any new cuts will mean sawing into bone.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

The states have mostly closed the budget gaps through borrowing, and for now the market has responded well with strong demand. However, lately the sheer volume of supply in the three trillion dollar market is starting to drive up yields....MORE

And from Bloomberg:
Allstate Corp., the largest publicly traded U.S. home and auto insurer, is paring its municipal-bond holdings because state and local governments are “not in great shape,” Chief Executive Officer Thomas Wilson said.

“We’ve just recently begun to reduce our exposure to municipals because we are uncomfortable with some of the fiscal practices of some of the government entities,” Wilson said yesterday in an interview after the Northbrook, Illinois-based company reported a third-quarter profit. “If you look at their balance sheets or income statements and put it in financial terms, they are not in great shape.”

Allstate cut its municipal holdings 8.3 percent to $22.1 billion in the third quarter as tax-exempt yields plunged to a 42-year low and governments struggled to maintain budgets amid the recession. State tax collections declined by 16.6 percent in the three months through June from the year-earlier period, the largest quarterly decline since at least 1963, the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government said in a report last month.

Officials “haven’t adjusted their spending, so they are running deficits,” Wilson said. “When we look at the risk- return profile we don’t think we are being paid enough to take that risk today.”

Within its municipal portfolio, Allstate is reducing holdings of health-care debt and zero-coupon bonds, Chief Investment Officer Judith Greffin said today in a conference call with analysts and investors. Zero-coupon bonds mature in more than one year and don’t pay interest.

Interest Rate Risk

“Given our view on reducing our exposure to interest rate risk, that’s part of the reason why we wanted to reduce our exposure to zero-coupon bonds,” Greffin said....MORE

Montana Farmers Fear a Buffett ‘Dictatorship’ (BRK.A)

They laughed when I said "Traffic will skyrocket if only we had more Montana posts".
Who's laughing now? BwaaaHaHa.
From the WSJ's Deal Journal:

Few states have more at stake in Warren Buffett’s acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe than Montana. The company owns 90% of the state’s tracks, which are the primarily means for Montana farmers and coal miners to ship their goods across the country.

To get a sense of how the deal is being received in the Big Sky state, Deal Journal reached out to Alan Merrill, president Montana Farmers Union, who can watch Burlington Northern’s grain cars rumble along outside his Great Falls, Mont., office six or seven times a day.

For years, Merrill says, the state’s 11,000 farmers have complained about the monopoly that Burlington Northern holds over rail shipping in Montana. He hopes Buffett, who lives in the middle of corn-growing country in Omaha, Neb., will be sympathetic to farmers’ concerns about what they consider to be high rates on their barley and wheat shipments.

Deal Journal: How have farmers reacted to the deal?

Merrill: The farmers want to know if there will be an easying up on shipping rates. They want to know that Burlington Northern is not going to be a dictatorship. We have been a captive shipper for as long as I can remember. They are waiting to see what Mr. Buffett will do.

DJ: Realistically, what can Buffett do? The farmers will still be captive shippers.

Merrill: We’d like it if Mr. Buffett would come here and visit our farms and see what we are doing and then he would understand our issues with shipping rates. Instead of just saying this is what we are going to charge; take it or leave it.

DJ: Has there been any legislation proposed in Congress to break up the rail road monopoly?...MORE

Also at Deal Journal:

Protecting the Public from a Pretzel Monopoly

Hurricane Watch: "Hurricane Ida strikes Nicaragua"

Nat gss futures were recently trading up two cents at $4.75, oil down $0.62 at $79.78.
From Ken Kaye's Storm Center:


hida10.gif

Hurricane Ida struck the central Nicaragua coast this morning and continued aiming north toward Honduras, Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and possibly the Gulf of Mexico.

At 10 a.m. today, the system was 75 miles north of Bluefields, Nicaragua, crawling northwest at 6 mph with sustained winds of 75 mph.

Because it is over land, forecasters expect Ida to weaken to a depression over the next three days.

Under the long range forecast, Ida would regain tropical storm strength, move into the Gulf by Tuesday morning and generally aim toward Louisiana. That prediction, however, remains far from certain.

While Florida residents should monitor the system, for now only the Lower Keys are in the cone of uncertainty.

Of immediate concern, Ida is roughing up Central America with howling winds, torrential rains and battering waves. Of some consolation, it’s a compact storm, as its hurricane force winds extend only 15 miles from its center.

Ida strengthened into the third hurricane of the Atlantic season early this morning.

Fannie Mae to Rent Foreclosed Homes Back to Borrowers (FNM)

UPDATE: "Fannie Mae loses $19bn in one quarter of one year (FNM)"
Original post:
From the Wall Street Journal:

Fannie Mae plans to allow homeowners facing foreclosure to stay in their homes and rent them for up to one year as part of the latest effort to help troubled borrowers while keeping a glut of foreclosed properties from hitting the housing market.

The Deed for Lease Program, which Fannie plans to roll out on Thursday, will offer borrowers who fail to complete or don't qualify for a loan modification or other workout to deed their property to the lender in exchange for a lease. Borrowers-turned-tenants will be able to sign leases of up to 12 months and will pay market rents, which in most cases are lower than the cost of mortgage payments.

Fannie Mae wouldn't say how many homeowners it expects will take advantage of the program. The company acquired 57,000 properties through foreclosure during the first half of the year, bringing its total real-estate owned inventory to 63,000 properties valued at $6 billion. The rental program will allow Fannie to hold inventory off of already saturated housing markets and makes a bet that the housing market will be stronger one year from now.

"If you keep more people in their homes, it's better for the community. It's better for the financial institutions that own those homes," says Jay Ryan, vice president of equity investments at Fannie Mae. "Hopefully less foreclosure product on the market will help stabilize those communities."

Borrowers who haven't missed any mortgage payments aren't eligible for the program, and the borrower's mortgage servicer would have to show that a borrower isn't eligible for a loan modification before the homeowner could apply for the Deed for Lease program....MORE

Betting on a Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough

This kind of thing is why we use the term "Disruptive" technology rather than "Transformative" technology.
From MIT's technology Review:

A government-funded start-up claims it can make ionic liquid energy storage feasible.
A spinoff from Arizona State University says it can develop a metal-air battery that dramatically outperforms the best lithium-ion batteries on the market, and now it has the funding it needs to prove it.

The U.S. Department of Energy last week awarded a $5.13-million research grant to Scottsdale, AZ-based Fluidic Energy toward development of a metal-air battery that relies on ionic liquids, instead of an aqueous solution, as its electrolyte.

The company aims to build a Metal-Air Ionic Liquid battery that has up to 11 times the energy density of the top lithium-ion technologies for less than one-third the cost. Cody Friesen, a professor of materials science at Arizona State and founder of Fluidic Energy, says the use of ionic liquids overcomes many of the problems that have held back metal-air batteries in the past. "I'm not claiming we have it yet, but if we do succeed, it really does change the way we think about storage," says Friesen, who was named one of Technology Review's top innovators under 35 in 2009.

Metal-air batteries, such as those that use a zincanode, typically rely on water-based electrolytes. Oxygen from ambient air is drawn in through a porous "air" electrode (-cathode) and produces hydroxyl ions on contact with the electrolyte. These ions reach the anode and begin to oxidize the zinc--a reaction that produces current through the release of electrons.

But like any aqueous solution, the water in the electrolyte can evaporate, causing the batteries to prematurely fail. Water also has a relatively low electrochemical window, meaning it will begin to decompose when the cell exceeds 1.23 volts. These were two problems researchers at the U.S. Air Force Academy began tackling about 25 years ago. In the early 1980s they experimented with ionic liquids--salts that are a liquid at room temperature, and which often can remain a liquid in sub-zero temperatures or above the boiling point of water.

"They're wonder fluids. They're remarkable," says John Wilkes, an ionic liquids expert who heads the academy's chemistry department. "If you look at these liquids in a bottle, they look like water, except they're viscous. They're not volatile, they don't evaporate, they're physically stable and they conduct electricity fairly well.">>>MORE

Solar: "Evergreen Solar to close U.S. module plant: US$70 million write down on Sovello JV" (ESLR)

UPDATE: "Evergreen Solar says has enough cash" and "Pacific Crest’s Bachman Downgrades Evergreen Solar to SECTOR PERFORM" (ESLR)"
Original post:
From PV-Tech:

As part of its plans to conserve cash and reduce module assembly costs to remain competitive as module prices have declined over 30% since last year, Evergreen Solar is planning to shift its Devens module assembly production to China, starting in mid-2010. When the company announced its manufacturing partnership in China with Jiawei Solar back in May, 2009 executives had said that the Deven’s module plant would continue to make modules for the expected expansion of the U.S. market. Now the company will shut-down production next year and only reopen the facility should demand dictate....MORE
From SmallCapPulse:

Cowen’s Stone Weighs in on Evergreen Solar (Nasdaq:ESLR) Q3 Results

...Stone’s Key Takeaways

· The J.V.’s bank waiver expires at the end of November, and is at risk of further write-off. Evergreen is carrying Sovello at $50MM.

· While cost/watt improved 17% sequentially to $2.40 and product GM rose to 7.1, it is above the ASP Stone estimates for Chinese competitors – cost/watt still not competitive

· Maintains NEUTRAL rating on the stock

Commodities: "LME copper stocks highest since May - price falls as demand weakens"

If the Fed sucks up $1 Trillion by March (see post below) the metals could drop 40%.
From Reuters via Mineweb:

High stocks and reduced Chinese buying lead to price knock for copper.

Copper fell on Thursday, with another jump in inventories underscoring weak demand as OECD consumption languishes and analysts see high prices deterring Chinese buying.

Copper for three-months delivery MCU3 on the London Metal Exchange traded at $6,552 a tonne in official rings from $6,570 on Wednesday. Other base metals and oil CLc1 also fell.

Copper inventories, which have been rising since mid-July, climbed 5,775 tonnes to 379,825 tonnes and are at their highest level since early May.

"The Chinese have topped up and are quite heavy on stocks now," said David Thurtell, an analyst at Citi. "They've got plenty of reserves so there's no need for them to do lots of buying at these levels."

He said that this year copper would not retest 2009 highs above $6,700, but it could rise towards $7,000 in 2010.

The copper price has more than doubled this year, supported by hefty buying by China, the world's top consumer of the metal used in power and construction, and dollar weakness....MORE

Treasury Minutes Suggest Fed to Remove $1 Trillion in Excess Reserves by March 2010

Talk about taking away the punchbowl.
From Precision Capital Management:

This morning, Treasury released the quarterly Minutes of the Meeting of the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee Of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which is

[A]n advisory committee governed by federal statute that meets quarterly with the Treasury Department. The Borrowing Committee’s membership is comprised of senior representatives from investment funds and banks. The Borrowing Committee presents their observations to the Treasury Department on the overall strength of the U.S. economy as well as providing recommendations on a variety of technical debt management issues. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association does not participate in the deliberations of the Borrowing Committee.

Though the Committee had some interesting things to say about 30 Year TIPS and inflation expectations, we will focus on the statements of one member’s presentation regarding the Federal Reserve’s exit strategy (with respect to the >$1 trillion in excess reserves held by banks on its balance sheet). We are not told just who the presenter is, but the Committee members comprise the most highly influential firms on Wall Street, including representatives from JP Morgan (Chairman), Goldman Sachs (Vice Chairman), Soros Fund Management, and Pimco. From the minutes:

The Committee then turned to a presentation by one of its members on the likely form of the Federal Reserve’s exit strategy and the implications for the Treasury’s borrowing program resulting from that strategy.

The presenting member began by noting the importance of the exit strategy for financial markets and fiscal authorities. It was noted that the near-zero interest rates driven by current Federal Reserve policy was pushing many financial entities such as pension funds, insurance companies, and endowments further out on the yield curve into longer-dated, riskier asset classes to earn incremental yield. Treasury securities have benefitted from the resultant increase in demand, but riskier assets have benefitted even more. According to the member, the greater decline in the indices for investment grade and high-yield corporate debt relative to 10-year Treasuries and current coupon mortgages displays this reach for yield. A critical issue will be the impact on the riskier asset classes as market interest rates move away from zero. [This is a shot off the bow to HY and, especially, CRE—more on this in another post.]

Here’s where it gets interesting:

The presenting member then looked at the likely sequence of the Federal Reserve’s exit strategy. The member acknowledged that the central bank must address the uncertainty and fragility of the economic recovery and the dependence of the housing market on low rates. It was suggested that the most likely sequence would be the [1] draining of excess reserves from the banking system, [2] the cessation of the mortgage-backed securities purchase program, and [3] only then raising the Fed funds target rate.

Several members at this point asked why draining reserves before ending the MBS program made sense. The presenting member noted that the program was already set to expire, and other measures, such as a revival of the Supplementary Financing Program, could be utilized by the Federal Reserve at the same time.

The Fed’s $1.25 trillion Agency MBS buyback program is set to expire at the end of March, 2010, according to the last FOMC Announcement from September 23, 2009. The point of the “several members” is valid, because why would the Fed drain reserves, only to continue adding them as a result of MBS purchases? The presenting member points out that the Fed can avoid adding reserves after they are first drained through a revival of Treasury’s Supplementary Financing Program (SFP)....MORE

HT: Wall Street Cheat Sheet

"Riksbank ‘in Denial’ May Fuel Swedish Asset Bubble " and "Obama: Swedish Model Would Be Impossible Here"

From Bloomberg:
The Swedish Riksbank’s plan to keep interest rates at a record low for a further year risks fueling a house price bubble in the largest Nordic economy, some policy makers and economists warned.

The world’s oldest central bank proposes keeping its key interest rate at a record-low 0.25 percent until autumn 2010 to spur consumer prices after half a year of deflation. Governor Stefan Ingvestold lawmakers today “the responsibility for sustainable growth with regard to lending and house prices is largely beyond the Riksbank’s control.”

That is encouraging Swedes to exploit the European Union’s lowest borrowing costs to take on bigger mortgages. Homes in greater Stockholm are back at last year’s peak, mortgage lender SBAB estimates, adding to the “risk that a bubble will build up and eventually burst,” Riksbank First Deputy Governor Svante Oeberg warned at the meeting. Even so, the bank wants to keep rates “low for a long period of time,” it said last month.

“They’re in some kind of denial,” said Tina Mortensen, an economist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “I’m quite surprised that they continue to keep this very dovish tone.">>>MORE

From a Feb. '09 post:

Eventually the government might be forced to nationalize a large swath of the banking sector, but they'll be dragged kicking and screaming. Yesterday's non-bailout announcement aimed to preserve the status quo, and Obama himself dismissed the idea that the US could adopt the Swedish model in an interview with ABC...
Pity.

The Swedish Model



As the [college] site that I lifted the picture from said:

(okay, sorry we know its tacky)

[hey, come on we're an all boy's team, what'd you expect!]

Senators Call for Financial Reform Before Cap and Trade (BRK.A)

Ain't gonna work. A quote we've posted a few times:

The whole reason for the existence of traders is to make as much money as possible,
consistent with what's legal...I lived through this:
if you didn't manipulate the market and manipulation was accessible to you,
that's when you were yelled at.

-Former Goldman Sachs trader
New York Times, May 8, 2002*

From the junk bond caused S&L bailouts to Long Term Capital Management to the Dot.bombs to the California electricity frauds to sub-prime and credit default swaps the lesson is:
Wall Street can not be trusted. Period.
If we let the camel's nose under the tent flap it is too late. The Wall Street banks will game any system the regulators can think up.
Remember, this is an entirely artificial "market" that Wall Street is "helping" to design.
What the hell do you expect?
From ClimateWire:
If supporters of creating a cap-and-trade program to address global warming want to grab the attention of skeptics on Capitol Hill, they might start by convincing the nation's most famous financier, Warren Buffett.

"We have to work it out so that Warren Buffett understands why he's better off under a trading system than he is under a command-and-control system," said Bill Tyndall, Duke Energy Corp.'s senior vice president for policy.

Buffett's longstanding concerns about unrestricted financial derivatives markets have been absorbed by key senators, who continue to harbor doubts about a market-based system for reducing greenhouse gases as they consider federal climate legislation.

David Sokol, chairman of the Midwestern utility MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co., which is owned by Buffett's investment group Berkshire Hathaway Inc., has been an outspoken critic of using a cap-and-trade program to reduce heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions. Sokol echoes Buffett's concerns about risks associated with financial derivatives, which helped trigger last year's economic collapse. This week, Buffett paid $26 billion for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., lending support not only to the railroad industry but also to the high-carbon coal industry that relies on railroads.

But now, Buffett's critique of financial trading -- and, through Sokol, a future market for carbon derivatives -- is causing cap-and-trade proponents heartache as regulatory reforms that could address some of those concerns have been stalled for months on Capitol Hill.

Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.), chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, has said Congress will probably have to pass financial reforms that regulate the $300 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market before passing carbon cap-and-trade legislation.

Over-the-counter derivatives are unregulated, privately traded financial contracts used for hedging commodity prices and speculating on price changes. The House-passed climate bill and the pending Senate cap-and-trade bill from Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) envision the trading of carbon allowance and offset contracts as exchange-traded deals and over-the-counter derivatives contracts.

'Deep suspicion' about cap-and-trade regime

"We are now well past a year since the calamities that we saw in our economy, and we still have yet to put in the needed reforms that need to be there," Lincoln said yesterday. "So the financial regulatory reform bill is definitely one where we are working in tandem with Chairman Dodd to really put together our portion of that, so that when he's ready to go, we can merge those two."

Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.), chairman of the Banking Committee, next week plans to unveil the Democrats' plan for overhauling financial regulations. Increased regulation of over-the-counter derivatives proposed by the Obama administration is expected to be either included in that package or rolled into the proposal after going through Lincoln's Agriculture Committee. Her committee, which she took over in September, has yet to schedule a markup or additional hearings on derivatives regulation.

The House Financial Services Committee has already passed sweeping financial reforms, but the Senate is expected to be more difficult. Republicans have not yet offered their support for Dodd's proposal.

Lincoln is among the chief Democratic swing votes. She also has said she is concerned about viewing cap and trade as the only means to reducing U.S. carbon emissions.

Republican leaders, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), ranking member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, also said financial reform will probably need to come first to get Republican support.

"You're essentially setting up a brand-new currency here," she said yesterday. "The American public is more than just a little suspicious about what goes on in the trading world. It's not clear and not transparent, and nothing I've seen allows it to be so. There's a deep suspicion about setting up such a regime."

See also:

Scrap Cap-and-Trade: Emissions-Trading Inventors Now Leery

The Possibility of Carbon-Trading Fraud Elbows Into Senate Climate Debate

Goldman Faces Carbon Market Curbs in Senate Proposals (GS; JPM)

Carbon Trading: Senate Confirms Goldman Alum to Head CFTC
Climateer Investing on Carbon Trading and Traders

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

Richard Sandor, Barack Obama and the Founding of the Chicago Climate Exchange (CLE.L)

California's cap-and-trade won't work

Trading: "Was Enron Right?"

CARBON KING: Economist Strikes Gold In Climate-Change Fight

Carbon Trading: How to (Maybe) Make Money Out of Thin Air: And One of my Favorite Carbon Cowboy Quotes

Here Comes Another Bubble: Gigantic Loophole in Europe Carbon Market

Japan aims to limit speculation in emissions trade (or we could just tar-and-feather carbon traders)

Brown Brothers Harriman: Too Soon to Call the End of Rally

I have a soft spot in my heart [head? -ed] for Brown Brothers Harriman. Not only is the Brown Brothers side of the business one of the oldest members of the exchange (founded 1818) but the Harriman side of the biz was founded by the sons of one of my childhood heroes, E.H. Harriman.

We first mentioned E.H. in an April 2007 post "Global Warming and Venture Capital":

We're coming up on the 100th anniversary of the Panic of 1907 (Join our cult, get the calendar free!). The Boston Fed. did a great paper on the panic that should have gotten a wider audience.

It's not that often you see a sub-head like "In Which the Downfall of a Prominent Speculator Rocks the Financial System, and a Prominent Millionaire Saves the Day" in a Fed. Bank Publication.

Rereading this got me thinking about the differance between J.P. Morgan (Our Hero), and the current crop of VC's flogging their new-found green credentials. Where were they six years ago? Oh, that's right: Webvan and Pets.com and Boo.com and Askme.com. Even Queer Company blew through $5 mil.

Compare that to Morgan six years prior to the Panic, during the Northern Pacific squeeze of ought-one. J.J. Hill flying across the country in a commandeered train, counting on one of the few guys on the planet who knew as much about railroads and financial markets as Hill himself (or for that matter as much as Hill's nemesis Ed Harriman- E.H., famous for saying:

"I can distribute more stock on upticks than I can on down"
-E.H. Harriman, railroad man and Wall Street pro.
That's a longer than intended intro, here's the story from MarketBeat:
Despite the recent softness in the markets — the S&P is off 4.7% from its recent closing high of 1097.91 on Oct. 19 — it’s still too soon to say that the great rally off the March lows is over, say technical strategists from Brown Brothers Harriman. “Despite the fact that the market’s trend has come under pressure and momentum is showing signs of rolling lower, we believe it is too soon to anticipate the end of the advance,” they write....MORE
Here are some other CI posts that mention that Harriman quote:
Oct. '08
So how many hedgies did Porsche really kill?

Jan. '09
The Grassy Knoll Theory of Investing

May '09
Is it Just Me or Does the Market Feel Manipulated?

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

"...Berkshire B-Shares No Bargain After 50-for-1 Split" (BRK.B; BNI)

From the Wall Street Journal:

Behind the Decision, a Lesson From a Mentor
Graham Taught the Future Billionaire Not to Hoard Funds; Berkshire B-Shares No Bargain After 50-for-1 Split

Warren Buffett's purchase of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. is the newest chapter in the oldest story of his professional life.

Mr. Buffett's mentor, the pioneering "value" investor Benjamin Graham, trafficked for decades in railroad stocks and bonds. In the early 1950s, at the outset of his career, Mr. Buffett read every page in Moody's voluminous transportation manuals -- twice, to make sure he didn't miss anything. Working at Mr. Graham's fund, Graham-Newman Corp., Mr. Buffett analyzed a portfolio with 21% to 36% of its assets in railroads.


But there is a more subtle side to the story. Mr. Graham taught Mr. Buffett that at the heart of the relationship between management and shareholders is a profound conflict of interest. Managers, Mr. Graham believed, will always want to pile up cash to protect themselves in case they make mistakes. But that cash belongs to the shareholders, who may be able to put it to better use than the company's managers.

Graham also highlighted a painful paradox: The better the business and the more skilled its managers, the greater its profits, causing cash to pile up to unreasonable levels. And, to Mr. Buffett's own chronic discomfort, he and Berkshire Hathaway are living proof of Mr. Graham's paradox. Because of Mr. Buffett's extraordinary skill at picking stocks and buying lucrative businesses, Berkshire consistently generates far more cash than even Mr. Buffett thinks he can put to productive use.

As long ago as 1998 -- when Berkshire had $122 billion in assets and less than $14 billion in cash -- Mr. Buffett worried his company was getting too big for its britches. "We have always known," he wrote to a fellow investor, "that huge increases in managed funds would dramatically diminish our universe of investment choices." That's because investments of a few million dollars apiece could no longer make a material difference to Berkshire's fortunes.

By 2006, when Berkshire's cash mountain had risen to $37 billion, Mr. Buffett said, "We don't like excess cash...We would be much happier if we had $10 billion."

"Size is always a problem," Mr. Buffett told me last month. "With tiny sums [to invest], it's extraordinary what you can find. Most of the time, big sums are one hell of an anchor."

Mr. Buffett would rather not resort to the simplest way of solving this problem -- paying excess cash out to shareholders in the form of a dividend. Since he owns roughly 26% of Berkshire's shares, a cash dividend would saddle Mr. Buffett with one of the largest personal-income tax bills in American history. That's not the kind of thing at which he likes to excel. Mr. Buffett's reluctance to pay a dividend leaves him with little choice but to buy big companies outright....MORE

A Visual History of the Federal Reserve

Chart porn from Financial Graph & Art.
HERE

Goldman’s Q3 trading, a breakdown by product (GS)

From FT Alphaville:

The bank that never knowingly made a loss on more than one day during the third quarter has — via its 10-q filing — provided further detail on the nature and success of its trading activities in the three months to September 2009.

First, a reminder of how Goldman Sachs’ trading and principal investments division performed during the period, as per the results statement the bank issued in October:

  • Net revenues in the division were $10.03bn compared to $2.704bn in the third quarter of 2008 and $10.78bn in the second quarter.
  • Net revenues in equities (which include Goldman’s market making and specialist businesses) rose by 79 per cent to $2.78bn compared to the third quarter of 2008 — but were down on revenues of $3.18bn in the previous three months to June 2009.
  • Net revenues in FICC (fixed income, currency and commodities) rose by 375 per cent to $5.991bn compared to the third quarter of 2008 — but were also down on revenues in the previous quarter of $6.8bn....MORE

"Near-Term Traders Bet on a Pullback for Trina Solar Limited" and "Bank of America reiterated Buy rating..." (TSL)

They have more guts than I.
Trina has the backing (implicit if not explicit) of the Chinese government, This is one of the Chinese solars that will have access to financing and anything else they need. The stock closed down $1.45 (3.82%) today but the risk on the short side is positive surprises coming seemingly out of the blue.
First off, a heads-up from China Analyst:

"Trina Solar Limited (NYSE:TSL): Bank of America reiterated Buy rating and $40 price target."
From Schaeffer's Research:

Trina Solar Limited (TSL: sentiment, chart, options) attracted a slew of put players on Tuesday, despite the stock tagging a new 52-week high. During the course of the session, the solar concern saw 3,130 puts cross the tape – more than doubling the number of TSL calls traded, and tripling the security's average daily put volume of fewer than 1,000 contracts.

Most popular was the equity's out-of-the-money November 33 put, which saw almost 800 contracts change hands. Most of the volume appears to have been the initiation of new pessimistic positions, as put open interest at the 33 strike jumped from fewer than 500 to about 1,200 contracts overnight. Plus, 97% of the puts crossed at the ask price, suggesting they were bought. However, the deeper-out-of-the-money 30 strike remains home to peak put open interest in the front-month series, with close to 1,900 contracts in residence....MORE

And for those readers who complain that we just don't have enough Italian content:

ErgyCapital, completato impianto fotovoltaico per 1 MWP

Roma, 4 nov - Il Gruppo ErgyCapital, investment company specializzata nel settore delle energie rinnovabili e del risparmio energetico, annuncia il completamento e la piena operatività di un impianto da circa 1 MWp situato ad Altamura (BA). L'impianto è di tipologia fissa non integrata, con pannelli in silicio policristallino di fornitura Trina Solar e con inverter SMA. La messa in funzione dell'impianto avviene a due settimane di distanza da quella dei due impianti localizzati nel comune di Galatina (LE), che si aggiungono a quello completamente integrato di Serravalle Scrivia, operativo da inizio anno. Il Gruppo raggiunge così quota 7,5 MWp di impianti attivi....MORE at la Repubblica
[italics. cute. -ed]

Climateer Line of the Day: New York 23rd Edition

We very, very rarely venture into the swamp of political commentary, preferring instead to let policy makers make fools of themselves, well, themselves. This is an exception because it explains so much. From Professor Ann Althouse of the University of Wisconsin Law School:

After all that, why didn't Doug Hoffman win?

...A few points about the Congressional race from someone who lives in upstate NY (not in district 23, but nearby.)

1) We have been inundated with TV commercials here. On TV, Hoffman comes across as exceedingly weird, skinny and overeager with googly eyes, bright yellow teeth, and an odd, halting way of speaking....
Alrighty then.
Perhaps the headline should have been "...Googly Eyed Edition"

AAAS-Hitachi Lecture: Energy Specialist Ernest Moniz Describes Multiple Technologies—and Political Innovations—Needed for Low-Carbon Future

From the American Association for the Advancement of Science:

...Ernest Moniz, a professor of physics and engineering systems at MIT, sketched a roadmap to a low-carbon future but acknowledged that it is not going to be easy to achieve. “I’m optimistic on the technology side,” Moniz said. “On the policy side, I’m less confident.”...

...So given the need for multiple technology pathways, Moniz offered what he called his Michelin Guide of worthwhile approaches. In his three-star category, he calls for increased improvements in energy efficiency and pursuit of carbon-free electricity in all its forms, including nuclear power, coal and natural gas with carbon dioxide capture and sequestration, and renewable energy sources such as wind, geothermal, and solar.

He gives two stars to alternative transportation fuels, such as biofuels and electricity. He also gives two stars to improvements in electric power grids and other infrastructure upgrades for energy delivery systems, and emphasizes the importance of natural gas in the transition to a low-carbon future.

As a one-star option, Moniz said it is time to get more serious about adaptation technologies and to begin to understand geoengineering measures quantitatively. Moniz acknowledged that geoengineering was “not discussed in polite company only a few years ago” and said he remains “relatively terrified” about its prospects. But “we need to understand the options just in case we don’t get the policy, business, and technology innovations rapidly enough and are forced to contemplate a hopefully short-term geoengineering intervention,” he said.

Discussing the technologies on his three-star wish list, Moniz noted the huge upfront capital costs for building nuclear power plants. But he said nuclear almost certainly will need to play a role in any serious effort to reach a low carbon future by 2050 or beyond.

His near-term priorities for nuclear include: building 10 gigawatts of so-called “first mover” plants, subsidizing facilities with design and production innovations aimed at bringing costs down; moving spent fuel at existing nuclear plants to a centralized storage location; and doing robust R&D on nuclear fuel cycle options. To enhance the nonproliferation regime, he said, nations should pursue international fuel leasing arrangements that provide assured adequate supplies of nuclear fuel to countries with small nuclear power programs and return spent fuel to the countries of manufacture.

Moniz stressed that there is no need to rush into “closed” nuclear fuel cycles, in which spent fuels are reprocessed to separate out plutonium. “The fact is we have lots of uranium,” Moniz said. Even with a tripling of the number of U.S. power reactors, he said, there is enough uranium available to fuel the new reactors for their 50-year lifetimes.

Regarding low-carbon use of coal, Moniz said there still is much to learn about the feasibility of carbon sequestration at a very large scale, which involves the capture of carbon dioxide emissions at the power plant for injection into geological formations such as hydrocarbon reservoirs or deep saline aquifers. Since trading of carbon credits typically is a part of any carbon sequestration proposal, Moniz said it is essential to develop adequate verification and monitoring techniques in order to monetize the stored carbon dioxide.

By one estimate, 92 percent of the coal plants projected to be on line in the U.S. in 2030 already exist. Retrofitting of carbon dioxide scrubbers onto existing plants is expected to be quite expensive, and not all sites will have sufficient land and water available to house the new equipment.

“We don’t know whether we can eventually retrofit 60 percent or 10 percent of existing coal plants economically,” Moniz said. If the figure is more like 10 percent, he said, switching to natural gas as a fuel at the plants may become a critical option. The U.S. has a lot of natural gas available from unconventional sources such as shale, Moniz said, but there must be more research on the sustainable growth rate for natural gas as a power source.

When it comes to solar power, Moniz said he is “extremely bullish for the long term.” But here, too, there are unanswered questions such as how quickly solar can be scaled up for widespread use. With government support, the costs of solar have been coming down, Moniz said, and there is a very active research effort underway at MIT and elsewhere to develop new, more efficient materials for converting solar energy into electricity. At MIT, he said, at least 40 faculty members are doing research related to various types of solar energy studies....MORE

87 Worst Predictions of All Time

A re-post from November '07. A surprising number of them came via the pages of Scientific American.
[and Lord Kelvin seems a bit of a twit -ed]

Here are twenty. Prediction is hard.
From 2Spare.com:

"Stocks have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau."
Irving Fisher, economics professor at Yale University, 1929.

"In all likelihood world inflation is over."
International Monetary Fund Ceo, 1959.

"Read my lips: NO NEW TAXES."
George Bush, 1988.

"Capitalist production begets, with the inexorability of a law of nature, its own negation."
Karl Marx.

"The multitude of books is a great evil. There is no limit to this fever for writing; every one must be an author; some out of vanity, to acquire celebrity and raise up a name, others for the sake of mere gain."
Martin Luther, German Reformation leader, Table Talk, 1530s(?).

"... too far-fetched to be considered."
Editor of Scientific American, in a letter to Robert Goddard about Goddard's idea of a rocket-accelerated airplane bomb, 1940 (German V2 missiles came down on London 3 years later).

"That the automobile has practically reached the limit of its development is suggested by the fact that during the past year no improvements of a radical nature have been introduced."
Scientific American, Jan. 2 edition, 1909.

"It will be gone by June."
Variety, passing judgement on rock 'n roll in 1955.

"Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000 vacuum tubes and weigh only 1.5 tons."
Popular Mechanics, March 1949.

"You will be home before the leaves have fallen from the trees." -– Kaiser Wilhelm, to the German troops, August 1914.

"Radio has no future."
Lord Kelvin, Scottish mathematician and physicist, former president of the Royal Society, 1897.

"Heavier-than-air flying machines are impossible."
Lord Kelvin, British mathematician and physicist, president of the British Royal Society, 1895.

"X-rays will prove to be a hoax
Lord Kelvin, President of the Royal Society, 1883.

«There is no likelihood man can ever tap the power of the atom."
Robert Millikan, American physicist and Nobel Prize winner, 1923.


"With over fifteen types of foreign cars already on sale here, the Japanese auto industry isn't likely to carve out a big share of the market for itself."
Business Week, August 2, 1968.

"Space travel is bunk."
Sir Harold Spencer Jones, Astronomer Royal of the UK, 1957 (two weeks later Sputnik orbited the Earth).

"Space travel is utter bilge."
Richard Van Der Riet Woolley, upon assuming the post of Astronomer Royal in 1956.

«Very interesting Whittle, my boy, but it will never work
Cambridge Aeronautics Professor, when shown Frank Whittle's plan for the jet engine.

"The Americans have need of the telephone, but we do not. We have plenty of messenger boys."
Sir William Preece, Chief Engineer, British Post Office, 1878.


Everything that can be invented has been invented.
Charles H. Duell, an official at the US patent office, 1899.

And 67 more.
HT: Mental Floss

The PETA Files

In case you didn't know, here's peta.org.
Here's their "About Us":

About Us

The PETA Files is your source for up-to-the-minute information about PETA's campaigns; breaking news about victories, new initiatives to help animals, and animal rights information from across the globe; and, occasionally, a bit of inspired silliness. 'Cuz sometimes, having a sense of humor about a tough situation can make all the difference in the world....

Yup, big yucks there. Inspired silliness.

file under: What were they thinking.

Former Bears' Take on the Market’s Future

From MoneyShow:

Are we headed for a major correction, or even worse: a resumption of the bear market?

What “the best” (former bears) are telling us now…

Many investors ask us who were among the “prominent bears” (or at least who went against the crowd as “boom-time skeptics”) before investors suffered the worst market sell off since 1974.

The answer is encouraging, because almost all of the market strategists and economists who correctly and repeatedly warned us to sell, or to get to a “maximum defensive position”—have turned bullish—in some cases within weeks of the March bottom. And we have the proof, because they all appeared on MoneyShow.com and at MoneyShow events.

Here are the "Paul Reveres" who rode for months and years warning of the bubble in formation—some were early of the top by more than a year. The exact timing of their buy signals may have pre-dated their MoneyShow.com videos or MoneyShow event presentations. An important advantage of the live events and MoneyShow.com videos: experts are given enough time with us—to make unusually detailed and candid recommendations.

Bernie Schaffer: Bearish as a technical trend follower long before the top, he warned us of the folly of too much derivatives use by hedge funds pilling into “crowded trades”, that would “under perform” at the worst time. Bernie told us we had “hit a bottom” (even if it’s a massive bear market rally, it should be played on the long side) at The Las Vegas MoneyShow in May of 2009. The 40-week moving average was Bernie’s key level, 943 on the S&P 500. Since we have broken up through that level, Bernie remains bullish, citing positive sentiment: “There are four distinct backdrops or themes that accompany the ascendancy of the market from a bear-market bottom to a bull-market top.” By Bernie’s analysis, the recent cluster of media skepticism can only be characterized as “disbelief.” Bernie concludes: ”Isn’t this the wall of worry that suggests further upside?”


Joe Battipaglia: Joe was among Wall Street’s highest profile bears, long before the crash. More impressively, Joe, like Gary Shilling, precisely called the US housing downturn as the catalyst for a massive bear market. Through 2008, Joe was 75% in cash. In January, Joe raised his cash allocation to 95%, into the first Quarter of 2009. At the same time, Joe recommended buying corporate, municipal, and high-yield bonds, which outperformed stock indexes through the summer. Watch Joe’s August interview: Stocks for Economic Darwinsim. Since April, Joe has held 55% equities. Joe still warns that this credit crisis will linger for “another two to three years minimum” (to work through the excesses). Any major government policy mistake will worsen Joe’s outlook (like socialized medicine, a more prolonged war in the middle east, and passage of any of the tariffs and regulations now being threatened in Washington). “Like the Japan experience, the winners could be bond holders who sit on 7% bond yields during a deflation that could take CPI down by 1-2% per year,” Joe says.

chart

Is the market a long way from being overvalued, or good for another few years?
This is longer-term perspective of the S&P 500 by MoneyShow.com technical market expert Tom Aspray. The important lower "technical support" line is shown in blue.


Gary Shilling: Similar to Joe, Gary was prodded by TV interviewers for his insistence that a horrifically steep decline was imminent, as he pinpointed the overheated bubble in housing and the “sub-prime slime.” Gary advised buying long US Treasuries and zeros, which were the top-performing assets in 2008. Gary now sees a saw tooth pattern along a declining trend, with the US economy in the hands of the credit strapped “savings spree”-bound consumer. Look for “up and down GDP quarters.” (Eight of ten post WWII recessions saw at least one quarter of relapse.) Gary suggests there will not be a bottom until the middle of 2010, with election year political pressure colliding with a peak in unemployment—and yet another stimulus package. Click here to see Gary’s most recent videos and articles on MoneyShow.com. Gary notes that Japan ran budget deficits that are multiples of the current US deficits, without resulting in higher inflation and interest rates (7-8% Deficits compared to their GDP)....MORE
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HT: The Big Picture

Dollar-Equity Correlation: Roubini’s Wrong Again

From the Asia Times' Inner Workings blog:

Readers of this blog have been following the dollar equity correlation since Aug. 21 when I first write about it (and to my knowledge, I was the first analyst to publish about it — if you know of others please let me know).

Now the dollar-equity correlation issue is top of the financial blogs, for example this summary of views at FT’s Alphaville blog:

On Monday, none other than Nouriel Roubini, aka Dr. Doom, was making much the same argument in an FT opinion piece. Roubini, though, had dubbed it ‘the mother of all carry trades’ saying:

Let us sum up: traders are borrowing at negative 20 per cent rates to invest on a highly leveraged basis on a mass of risky global assets that are rising in price due to excess liquidity and a massive carry trade. Every investor who plays this risky game looks like a genius — even if they are just riding a huge bubble financed by a large negative cost of borrowing — as the total returns have been in the 50-70 per cent range since March.

People’s sense of the value at risk (VAR) of their aggregate portfolios ought, instead, to have been increasing due to a rising correlation of the risks between different asset classes, all of which are driven by this common monetary policy and the carry trade. In effect, it has become one big common trade — you short the dollar to buy any global risky assets.

So the combined effect of the Fed policy of a zero Fed funds rate, quantitative easing and massive purchase of long-term debt instruments is seemingly making the world safe — for now — for the mother of all carry trades and mother of all highly leveraged global asset bubbles.

So will it all end in tears?>>>MORE

Buffett Joins Goldman in Bid for Fannie Mae Tax Credits (BRK.A; FNM)

From the Wall Street Journal:

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has joined Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in the investment bank's bid to buy $3 billion in tax credits from government-owned mortgage giant Fannie Mae, according to people familiar with the matter.

The involvement of Mr. Buffett adds a twist to what was already a politically sensitive deal. The Treasury Department is considering blocking any potential sale on the grounds that it wouldn't benefit taxpayers; the money Fannie Mae would earn would be offset by the fall in the government's tax income.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were seized by the government last year and the Treasury Department has invested close to $100 billion in the housing-finance giants. Almost all their business decisions are vetted by government officials. What would have been simple deal a couple of years ago is now fraught with political calculations, such as the perception of aiding a Wall Street giant at a time of populist anger against bankers.

The credits are virtually worthless to Fannie Mae and require the company to take losses each quarter as their value declines. Companies such as Berkshire Hathaway and Goldman Sachs could use them to offset federal tax expenses.

A Berkshire Hathaway spokeswoman didn't have an immediate comment. Goldman Sachs and Fannie Mae declined to comment. Treasury officials say they are still reviewing the proposal.

Berkshire Hathaway could be an appealing partner for Goldman. While the bank's reputation has been tarnished by the financial crisis, Mr. Buffett is widely respected in Washington and on Wall Street. Both Mr. Buffett and Goldman could reap large returns from investing in these credits. One investor who has considered a similar transaction said they promise annualized returns of at least 30%.

Berkshire Hathaway has been an investor in low-income-housing tax credits in the past. Four years after the low-income housing tax-credit program was established in 1986, Mr. Buffett launched a plan to invest $25 million to create housing in areas ranging from Houston, Los Angeles, Detroit and Chicago....MORE

Bloomberg Special Report: "Buffett Buys Burlington" BRK.A; BRK.B; BNI

I didn't link to Bloomberg yesterday during our Buffet-a-palooza. (Groovin' and Behoovin' at WBRK, All Berkshire, All the Time (Berkshire- Burlington Roundup) BRK.a; BNI)
That was deliberate.
Bloomberg was reporting news while I was looking to post some of the backround, instanalysis etc.
I was pretty sure the folks at Bloomberg would have something today, I mean their lead BRK/BNI story was updated five times!
This is such a big story, the only question was what hooks would they use to get at the myriad angles.
Lo and behold, they come slammin' home with this compilation:

Berkshire's Reduced Burlington Breakup Fee Shows Buffett Confident in Deal Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the holding company that agreed to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., accepted a lower-than-usual breakup fee in a sign Warren Buffett expects to complete his biggest takeover.

Buffett Takes 10 Days to Seal Biggest Deal in 44-Year Career at Berkshire Warren Buffett put together the biggest deal in his 44-year career at Berkshire Hathaway Inc. in 10 days.

Splitting Berkshire's B Stock 50-1 Will Boost Stake of `Inferior' Owners Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s planned 50- for-1 stock split will put its Class B shares within reach of investors Warren Buffett once called an “inferior” class.

Railroad Takeover Reduces Buffett Successor's Need for `Amazing Insight' Warren Buffett’s takeover of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. may reduce his successor’s need for “amazing insight” to lead Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

Buffett's $26 Billion Burlington Wager on Economy May Boost Obama Policies Warren Buffett’s takeover of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. today is a $26 billion bet on President Barack Obama’s economic policies at a time when the administration may need the help.

Buffett Railroad Deal Is a Survivalist Bet: Commentary by Alice Schroeder Warren Buffett called Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s deal to buy the part of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. that it doesn’t already own an “all-in wager on the economic future of the United States.”

The market looks to be opening up today, I'm going to leave Warren, Charlie and Matthew to figure out their next move.
For new visitors, we have dozens, maybe hundreds of posts on Warren and his empire, we are fans.
Use the 'Search Blog' box; keywords Buffet or Berkshire or BRK.A, there is some very good stuff here. For example, "Warren Buffett, Mr. Market and the Buffett Partnership Letters, 1959-1969 (BRK.A)".
Have at it.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Groovin' and Behoovin' at WBRK, All Berkshire, All the Time (Berkshire- Burlington Roundup) BRK.a; BNI

Here's my personal bookmark of today's BRK/BNI posts (in chronological order):

Berkshire Splits, Pigs Fly (BNI; BRK.B)

MarketBeat on Berkshire Hathaway/Burlington Northern Santa Fe

Pssst, Besides Warren Buffet, Which Berkshire Hathaway Director is a Railroad Fan? (BRK.a; BNI, CNI CSX; NSX; UNP)

Warren Buffett bets on coal and the economy (BNI; BRK.B)
(must read)

The Berkshire Hathaway Arbitrage (BRK.A: BRK.B; LAB)

Baby Berkshire split may put shares in S&P 500 Index (BRK.B)

As Buffett Dumps Moody’s (BRK-A, MCO)

Buffett on His Railroad Bet (Video) BRK.A; BNI

Buffett, Burlington and the North American Union (BRK.A; BNI)

Despite Buffett Bid, More Rail Deals Seem Unlikely (BRK.A; BNI; CNI; CSX; NSX: UNP)

Buffett’s Record of Buying Railroad Stocks (BRK.A; BNI; UNP)


Hence the headline. Whew.

Buffett’s Record of Buying Railroad Stocks (BRK.A; BNI; UNP)

DealBook seems to be having fun with theis story. The post immediately below, "Despite Buffett Bid, More Rail Deals Seem Unlikely (BRK.A; BNI; CNI; CSX; NSX: UNP)" also links to them.

Warren E. Buffett’s investments in railroads are relatively recent. In fact it was not till 2006 that Mr. Buffett’s holding company, Berkshire Hathaway, began building a stake in the industry. Despite the economic downturn, Mr. Buffett continued to build his position in many of the major railroads in the United States – concentrating most of his investment in Burlington Northern Santa Fe, which he agreed to acquired fully on Tuesday for $26 billion in cash and stock.

But when he began snapping up railroad stocks in 2006, Burlington Northern was not his No. 1 investment in the industry. At the end of the third quarter of 2006, Mr. Buffett held $73 million worth of Burlington stock. His investment in Norfolk Southern was about twice that at $141 million and his investment in Union Pacific was $277 million.

In the fourth quarter of 2006, the choice was made to bet big on Burlington Northern. By the end of the quarter, Mr. Buffett had nearly $1.2 billion in Burlington stock, compared with nearly $200 million in Norfolk Southern and $755 million in Union Pacific.

That trend would continue in the coming months and by April 5, 2007, the first time Mr. Buffett disclosed that he was betting on the railroads, he had acquired an 11 percent stake in Burlington worth $3.23 billion.

But Mr. Buffett did not stop there and quietly built up his position in Burlington. By October 2007, he controlled 61 million shares equivalent to 17.2 percent of the company. Meanwhile, his investments on the other railroads increased only slightly. ...MORE

Despite Buffett Bid, More Rail Deals Seem Unlikely (BRK.A; BNI; CNI; CSX; NSX: UNP)

Hey! What about Bill Gates' CNI?
From DealBook:

Warren E. Buffett’s $26 billion deal for Burlington Northern Santa Fe helped bolster railroad stocks on Tuesday, partly as investors consider the possibility of similar deals to come. But analysts seem to agree that the chances of another mega-railroad buyout remain pretty low.

Mr. Buffett’s investment company, Berkshire Hathaway, is offering a 31 percent premium for the 77.4 percent of Burlington it does not already own. Such a large premium equated to Mr. Buffett paying about 18 times Burlington’s average 2010 earnings. In comparison, rival railroads like Union Pacific and CSX trade at around 13 times their 2010 earnings.

The Buffett premium sent railroad stocks climbing on Tuesday. Union Pacific, in which Mr. Buffett holds a stake, was up about 7 percent in late trading. Kansas City Southern gained about 8 percent, while CSX was up nearly 7 percent, respectively. Norfolk Southern, another railroad stock owned by Mr. Buffett, was up about 5 percent.

Analysts expect that railroad stocks will continue to gain based on the valuation that Mr. Buffett put on Burlington, even though the chances of further rail deals are low.

“With Berkshire making this ‘huge bet’ on Burlington — the largest acquisition in its history — the read-through is that the outlook for sector fundamentals is positive and the rails are still a great investment,” analysts at UBS said in a note to investors on Tuesday. “We do not foresee any more M.&A. deals like this in the near future.”

Analysts at Citigroup concurred. “While today’s announcement may provide support to the group near term, much like Buffett’s initial investments in Burlington did in 2007, we don’t see it as indicative of a broader wave or rail buyouts or consolidation,” the Citigroup analysts said in their note to investors. “Why? Investors know that regulatory restrictions should preclude mergers between railroads for some time, while we are hard pressed to come up with a reasonable hypothetical list of potential outright buyers for any of the remaining” railroad companies....MORE
Also at DealBook, The Deal Professor on the merger.

Will Work for Smørrebrød: Freelance Writers at the U.N.'s Copenhagen Climate Fest

I had to rejigger the Columbia Journalism Review's headline.
[words I never thought I'd read -ed.]
From the CJR's The Observatory blog:

“Will Work in Copenhagen”

SEJ launches freelancers’ board for climate meeting

The United Nations climate change summit in Copenhagen this December will undoubtedly be an international media circus of the highest order. Many of the journalists there will be wandering bards, however, reciting tales on the spot for anyone willing to listen or, God willing, pay them.

In an effort to assist those lone travelers, as well as news outlets that need help covering the summit, the Society of Environmental Journalists has created a page on its Web site listing available freelancers, many of who will attend regardless. The service, called The Copenhagen Connection, is open to society members and non-members alike.

“It was inspired by a newspaper editor I know asking me last week for a reference on an SEJ member who had contacted him directly,” society board member and Baltimore Sun reporter Tim Wheeler wrote in an e-mail. “After that, I posted on [the society’s e-mail list] asking if there was much interest in a ‘job-wanted’ board focused on boosting coverage of the Copenhagen summit. After a flurry of positive responses, we set up the simple Web listing you see.”

At press time, fifteen journalists had posted their contact information, qualifications, and availability, and the list appeared to be growing. The page notes that the Society of Environmental Journalists “provides this listing as a public service to promote more coverage of this important issue, but it does not constitute a recommendation of those listed.” But the list already comprises many experienced freelancers, as well staffers and columnists for publications like Scientific American and The Washington Post....MORE

"John Paulson Once Had Self-Doubts"

Another inimitable headline from DealBreaker. Here's the story:

You probably didn’t know it but the Jabroni Pony isn’t the only one with a new book on the financial crisis coming out today. Wall Street Journal reporter Greg Zuckerman’s got one, too (though his does not include promotion that involves being shot out of a cannon, naked, at the closing bell). While CG’s tome, which chronicles the fuck-ups of many a CEO, serves as a helpful guide on what not to do if you’re looking to avoid blowing up Wall Street, Zuckerman’s book, The Greatest Trade Ever, chronicles the stories of a bunch of guys who actually made money off that can’t lose asset class, subprime. But it wasn’t all rolling around in sticky fifties from the get-go. Daily Intel runs through the book’s subjects, and the adversity they had to overcome, before doing stuff like making $15 billion in one year, and writing a fuck-off letter to the industry, lobbying for the legalizing of weed. Take heart: even if you lack the motor skills to properly shave yourself, you could be the next John Paulson...

...Also featured: the guy with the glass eye (Michael Burry), the guy who was known for his “unusually thick sideburns” (Greg Lippman), and everyone’s favorite burnout (Andrew Ladhe)....MORE
Okay, the story is inimitable too.

Buffett, Burlington and the North American Union (BRK.A; BNI)

Well it looks like my conspiracy buff buddies are right.
The new currency will be called the Amero, the North American Carbon Market will happen and the Illuminati win again.
Damn you Queen Elizabeth (II).
From John Mugarian's Dynamic Growth:

Why Warren Buffett is buying Burlington Northern (BNI)

Let us examine a few reasons why the world's greatest investor is buying Burlington Northern (BNI).

Does Mr. Buffett know something we don't? You can bet he does!

Since Burlington Northern doesn't qualify under the normal investment parameters that Mr. Buffet uses, why is he so interested in accumulating 25% the stock?

Here are some of Buffett's parameters before buying a company;

1) Buffett identified the average rate of return on equity of American companies at 11%, and basically said he would not consider buying a company with an ROE of under 14%.

Burlington Northern ROE

2010- 11% as projected by Value line***
2006- 13%
2005-13.5%
2004- 11.6%
2003- 9.1%
2002- 9.6%

On the other hand, Coca-Cola's (KO) ROE looks like this;

2010- 32% as projected by Value line***
2006- 31%
2005- 31%
2004- 31.5%
2003- 34%
2002- 34.7%

This being said, what does Buffett know that you don't?

Globalism & The North American Union

1) Burlington Northern is a Ft. Worth, Texas based railroad that strategically lies in the middle of the NAFTA super highway. It even goes thru his home-town of Omaha!

naipn_home_new_02.jpg

Burlington Northern will be a big beneficiary of shipping goods from Mexico to the United States and Canada.

Last week, I reported that President Bush, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and President Felipe Calderon of Mexico to put the finishing touches on the “Security and Prosperity Partnership” (SPP) agreement, which essentially merges the United States, Canada and Mexico into one entity....MORE

Buffett on His Railroad Bet (Video) BRK.A; BNI

From Fox Business:

Here's the transcript:


LIZ CLAMAN, FOX BUSINESS NETWORK ANCHOR: Let's get to the story of the day. Berkshire Hathaway making this huge bet on the railroads. One in particular, acquiring Burlington Northern Santa Fe in a deal worth about $44 billion.

Let's talk to the man behind the deal. It was all his idea. On the phone, Warren Buffett, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. Hello, Warren, how are you?

WARREN BUFFETT, CHAIRMAN/ CEO, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY: Hi, Liz.

CLAMAN: What did you do? Did you wake up one day and say, " I think I'll spend another $26 billion in cash and stock for a railroad."? How did this come about?

BUFFETT: It came about because our board had a meeting (ph) scheduled for a year down in Fort Worth. The reason we have three different businesses we own in Fort Worth. And my Debbie Ballsonnick (ph), my assistant said, "Let's do the next one in Fort Worth and check out those companies."

So, we went down there a week ago last Thursday. And I went down a couple of hours earlier -- early because there were two people I wanted to see. One, my friend John Roach and then the other one was Matt Rose over at BNSF.

And while I was over there, we had about ten minutes alone after some vice presidents made a presentation. And I said, "Matt, if you're ever looking for a home for the railroad, Berkshire would make a good one."

And he didn't throw me out of the office, so the next day I made him an offer, and he said he would take it to the directors and the rest is history.

CLAMAN: So, it's a ten-minute meeting and then a week. That's awfully fast, but this is how you operate. You had already owned, of course, about 24 percent of Burlington Northern. What was it that crystalized your belief in that 10 minutes or the vice president's presentation that you ought to buy the whole thing?

BUFFETT: It wasn't -- it wasn't -- you know, I felt good about it from the time we bought our first stock in 2006. But if we hadn't scheduled the meeting down there, probably wouldn't have happened. At least it wouldn't have happened now.

But I -- you know, I like the business very much. I think the management is the best there is, and, like I say, when I didn't get thrown out of the office, I made it specific, and it was a good offer from their standpoint. And they decided to accept it. And now we're going to own a railroad. And we never fool around on things, Liz. I mean, I tell the lawyers, get this thing done, you know.

CLAMAN: I think Debbie Ballsonnick, your assistant who thought it best to put the meeting down there should get the big high five. No doubt at all.

BUFFETT: Well, yes, you'll see we didn't have an investment banker on the deal, but maybe we should have put her down.

CLAMAN: She's smart enough to do it. What is it, Warren, you see in the railroad transport area versus trucking or air cargo?

BUFFETT: Well, the rails move a freight at a much more environmentally friendly way than the truckers do. And they also only use about a third of the fuel. So, it's helping -- it helps our trade balance in the long run. It helps in terms of the atmosphere. It is a very, very efficient, effective, environmentally friendly way of moving freight. And, you know, our rail system is a huge asset to the country.

CLAMAN: BNI, of course, hauls about 10 percent of the nation's electricity-generating coal. Is this, Warren, a bet somehow on coal?

BUFFETT: Well, they haul a lot of coal and coal from the Powder River Basin in the West -- is more competitive, it's lower-sulfur coal than in the East. So, it will be around a long time. But coal, over the long run, coal will diminish in relative importance.

CLAMAN: There's a growing anti-rail lobby in Washington right now. I know you know because you do your homework on this stuff with a push by the shippers to re-regulate the rails -- the Railroad Antitrust Enforcement Act, if you will. Do you have any friends in Washington who assured you that railroads would not be re-regulated? Because I would imagine if the Obama administration went along with the shippers to regulate the rails, that might hurt your investment.

BUFFETT: Well, I would say since the Staggers Act back in 1980, which diminished the regulation substantially, you've had enormous progress with the rail system. You've decreased prices on inflation-adjusted terms significantly. So, I would say that the deregulation that took place starting in starting in 1980 is actually benefited the shippers enormously. And we're moving far, far more freight with using far less fuel, very efficiently. My guess is that people will see the rail for what they are, really an outstanding way of moving freight around the country.

CLAMAN: Cheapest, best way. But then there's cap-and-trade, Warren. Some analysts are very skittish about coal and a possible backlash if cap-and-trade goes through. You mentioned now -- you said, we're going to see a diminishing of coal use. But what do you think cap-and-trade would do to the business if that went through?

BUFFETT: It won't change the composition of what utilities are doing tomorrow or next week or next year. The utilities over time are going to use less coal and probably more nuclear. Our own utility, for example, uses wind very substantially in Iowa.

So, over time, coal is going to diminish somewhat. Now, I think that will hit Eastern coal more than Western coal, but that's a fact of life over a considerable period of time. And that's true whether there's cap-and-trade or not, yes.

CLAMAN: The way you structured this deal, you're using some Berkshire stock for this and then $16 billion, I believe, in cash to pull it off.

The Berkshire board approved a what? -- 50-to-1 split for the Class B(ph) shares. Why not all cash, Warren? Are you trying to preserve your cash at this point?

BUFFETT: I like to have a very comfortable level of cash. This is also the minimum amount of stock we can give and still have people be able to elect a tax-free deal that own BNSF stock currently. If we were going to use -- I don't like using stock, I can tell you that. I don't like issuing Berkshire shares.

CLAMAN: Is this the first time you've used stock?

BUFFETT: No. No, we've used it before. In fact, if you go back to

(INAUDIBLE) deal, that was an all-stock deal. But generally speaking, I'm not enthused about using stock. But using 40 percent and considering the fact we already own some, which we also bought for cash, we're mostly using cash in this transaction.

CLAMAN: You just mentioned the tax-free aspect. Can you clarify a little bit on that?

BUFFETT: Well, 40 percent of the deal will be stock, and everybody will be able to opt whether they want stock or cash. And if less than 40 percent opt for stock, they get an all-stock allocation. And if more than 40 percent, still, people who opt for stock will get mostly a stock allocation. And to the extent they get stock, it will be a tax-free exchange.

CLAMAN: To acquire a company of this size when transportation demand is down, of course, as you said, is really a bet on the U.S. economy. In fact, in the release you called it an all-out wager on the economic future of the United States. When do you see the total recovery taking hold?

BUFFETT: I don't know. But it doesn't really make any difference in terms of this acquisition. If we're going to hold something for a hundred years, the next week or month or year doesn't really make any difference. If we hold it a hundred years, I guarantee you there will be some recessionary years in that period. And it really doesn't make any difference whether it's the first year or the fifth year or the eighteenth year. We're in for keeps.

CLAMAN: It's funny you did this with the rails because just two weeks ago we had Bob Oldstein of the Oldstein Funds on saying the rails are overstating their earnings and underdepreciating their equipment.

Do you see it that way? Did you look into that?

BUFFETT: It's true. I didn't have to listen to that, but it's true any company that has long-life assets is replacing assets that they bought many years ago with things that cost more money now. That's true of our utility business, that's true of any business. It's true -- if you build a plant that 30 years ago had a 30-year life. When you go to replace that same plant, it's going to cost you more money. That's a fact of life in an inflationary economy.

CLAMAN: One year ago in September, we were all so nervous, and that's when President Bush and Hank Paulson pushed through T.A.R.P. Since then, we've had the stimulus. You have said when you treat a patient with such a huge amount of medicine, the likes of which we've never done before, somewhere down the line, we're going to see the ramifications. What do you think those ramifications will be, and aren't you worried to make such a huge purchase knowing that that may come to pass

BUFFETT: I'd be more worried holding cash. I think that if you look at the side effects of the incredible dosage that we've had to give -- and I think that dosage has been 100 percent appropriate; I'm not knocking that. But when you apply the kind of medicine we've applied, you may have sort of unprecedented aftereffects, too. But the one thing about those unprecedented aftereffects is they're going to be very bad for cash. I would much rather own working assets than have cash in a period that well could become inflationary down the road.

CLAMAN: But that's with the headwinds, though. You told me back in May and repeat in June the commercial real estate would, quote, "hit the skids big-time," and now we see that it is. What makes you think the businesses would ship more goods by a railroad when that kind of headwind is blowing in dark clouds? Or is this such a long-term bet at this point that you're not looking the next two years out?

BUFFETT: OK. Thank you, Liz.

BUFFETT: I don't know what will ship next year, but I would bet a lot of money -- in fact, we have bet a lot of money -- ten years from now there will be more people in the United States and they will be consuming more things than they consume now. And that will be more so 20 years from now and 30 years from now.

So, there's going to be goods moving around for more and more people who are going to be consuming more and more of them, and certainly, rails should not only get a share but probably should probably get a little more than their share. It's a bet on the American economy essentially continuing to prosper over time just as it's prospered every since 1776.

CLAMAN: A lot of employers you're taking on here. Universal healthcare is at the forefront of a lot of people's minds. Do you think as you look what the government is attempting to do and Congress, now is the time to tackle such an expensive problem?

BUFFETT: Well, I think it's long past the time we tackle health care.

But one of the real problems is the incentives in the system, and they’re very tough to get to. But we do spend 16 percent or so GDP on health care in the United States. And we have to figure out some way to slow down that particular engine.

CLAMAN: Do you think the wealthy should be taxed to pay for healthcare for all?

BUFFETT: I think the wealthy overall should be taxed more relative to the poor and the middle class.

CLAMAN: Here's a worry, though. The House bill calls for that 5 percent surtax on the wealthy, but it’s not indexed for inflation. Could that end up mimicking the alternative minimum tax which originally was supposed to tax only the rich, and now, as you know, police officers and teachers have to pay it?

BUFFETT: Well, I haven't read the 1,900 some pages in their entirety. I do know they have the 5 percent tax -- I think it's on incomes of over $500,000 or something. You're right, the way I read it, it's not index.

But as a practical matter, I think that the wealthy have had their share of overall taxes, counting payroll taxes diminish significantly in the last 20 years. So I think that if you're looking for more revenue from the citizenry, I think the rich are the place to look.

CLAMAN: And that's you.

BUFFETT: That's me, right!

CLAMAN: You're okay with it?

BUFFETT: Absolutely.

CLAMAN: I always take your temperature each time we speak when it comes to President Pbama. Back in June, the last time you spoke you were very happy with all he's done. Does that sentiment continue?

BUFFETT: I am very, very glad I worked for and voted for President Obama, and I think he's the right man to have in the job.

CLAMAN: You're not concerned about all the spending that's going on at the moment?

BUFFETT: I think it's been -- I think it's necessary. I think a lot of the things we've done in of the last year or 15 months will have aftereffects. But I think they've been very important. We came very close to going into the abyss a year ago. And, you know, they've had to do some very unusual things, and some will have later costs. But they still were the right things to do.

CLAMAN: You wrote in back in August in the "Times" "the dollar's destiny lies with Congress." And with the deficit for 2009 -- listen, the numbers keep changing but $1.4 trillion, 10 percent of GDP high since 1945. Are you buying foreign currencies now or at least playing that carry trade since the dollar's so weak and there are other currencies with better yield? And I know you don't like to talk about what you're doing but, you know, as you see the dollar.

BUFFETT: You're seeing us get rid of a lot of dollars today in exchange for a lot of assets. So, I would rather own physical assets than own dollars.

CLAMAN: OK. As we finish up here, I have to ask, is this Burlington Northern purchase really just a chance to beef up your Lionel Train collection you have in the attic?

(LAUGHTER)

BUFFETT: I've got -- I’ve got a pretty good railroad on the third floor, but it’s nothing compared to the Burlington Northern...

CLAMAN: Yes. Matt Rose of Burlington Northern just said he's getting thousands and thousands of railcars to add to that collection.

BUFFETT: Yes. Right! Right!

(LAUGHTER)

CLAMAN: Thank you so much, Mr. Buffett.

As Buffett Dumps Moody’s (BRK-A, MCO)

I heard there was some thing going on with Berkshire today.
From 24/7 Wall Street:

Warren Buffett is dumping Moody’s Corp. ( MCO). We’ll never know until it is already done whether the Oracle of Omaha wants to jettison it entirely from the holdings of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK-A), but he has already lightened up twice in his stake, most recently this last week. If you listened to Buffett on a CNBC call this morning after his Burlington Northern Santa Fe (NYSE: BNI), a simple interpretation is that he might just be booting all of his Moody’s position. Our only criticism over this is that Buffett had enough foresight and knowledge that he could have come to the very same conclusion over a year ago at much higher prices.

And then our friend over at OptionHawk.com sent us this today regarding increased options trading: MCO traded a massive bearish collar as 10,000 December $26 calls are bought at $0.70, 10,000 December $20 puts are sold at $0.90, and a block of 550,000+ shares are shorted…. Shares of the credit services firm are in a channel down formation with the next target of $21….

David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital noted a short sale that had been placed a while ago (noted in September) was in Moody’s Corp. because of his belief that the models of the ‘independent ratings agencies’ are going to permanently change....MORE

Can Al Gore Be A Profiteer Without Profits?

From Private Equity Hub:

Lots of blog buzz today about a NY Times story on Al Gore’s cleantech investments, and if such activity is ethically compatible with his lobbying for environmental legislation that could benefit his portfolio. Not surprisingly, critics see irreconcilable conflict.

The Drudge Report, for example, has a breathless header about ”Gore’s big profits from global warming.” Other outlets have used the term “profiteer,” and even the NYT regurgitates the meme that Gore wants to become the world’s first “carbon billionaire” (without noting it was first coined by virulent climate change skeptic Sen. James Inhofe).

The NYT also rehashed Rep. Marsha Blackburn asking Gore about conflict of interest during a House hearing earlier this year, but without her daft question of whether or not Gore was “aware of… capital firm Kleiner Perkins.” For the record, Gore has been a partner at venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins for more than two years, and listed as such on the Kleiner Perkins website.

What all of this conversation misses, however, is that Gore has not yet profited on any of his cleantech investments via Kleiner Perkins. Let alone profiteered or gotten close to carbon billionaire status (as an aside, how would Gore leapfrog other KP partners to become the first carbon billionaire?).

The reason, of course, is that Kleiner Perkins has not yet sold any of its nearly two dozen cleantech investments. Not Silver Spring ($170m in total VC funding). Not Fisker ($94m). Not Bloom Energy ($165m). Not Miasole ($78m). Not Mascoma ($96m). Not GreatPoint Energy ($150m). Not any of the others. They remain sunk costs, with no guaranteed returns (the nature of capital… err, venture capital).

To be clear, I’m not saying that Gore is above scrutiny. I’m also not saying that his lobbying efforts haven’t paid off for Kleiner portfolio companies (just ask other cleantech VCs about Kleiner, and they turn green with talk of its political connections). Instead, I’m just saying that some present context is in order. As of this moment, Gore has put in far more than he’s taken out. And, given the general dearth of VC cleantech exits, it will probably be that way for a while…

The Climate Bill Is Doomed ("Could That Be a Good Thing?")

From MIT's Technology Review's Potential Energy blog:

Last week researchers and policy experts gathered at MIT to talk about geo-engineering--a subject that's becoming more popular in the face of concern over inaction on climate change.

The upcoming United Nations climate change convention in Copenhagen seems unlikely to produce the binding and stringent agreement needed to sharply curtail greenhouse gas emissions. Meanwhile, greenhouse concentrations continue to mount, driving scientists who were once opposed to the idea of tinkering with the planet to reconsider it.

Now they've got another reason to be worried. Earlier this year a climate bill that would've limited greenhouse emissions and helped renewable energy sources compete with fossil fuels seemed well on its way. In June a version passed the House. But then other matters--mostly health care reform--distracted Congress, and a Senate version of the bill got bogged down. The Senate recently took up the bill again, but yesterday a report in the Washington Post declared that "there is almost no hope for passage" of the bill.

Democrats are divided over the bill, and Republicans have been vocally opposing it. If the report is right, countries meeting in Copenhagen will have even more reason to criticize the U.S. for inaction, and to use that as a reason to delay a climate treaty or water it down.

That's one way to look at it, at any rate. Here's another: Copenhagen is probably doomed already--why the rush to push legislation through? That's essentially what Republican Senator George Voinovich (Ohio), who opposes the current bill, reportedly said last week, "Wouldn't it be smarter to take our time and do it right?">>>MORE

Baby Berkshire split may put shares in S&P 500 Index (BRK.B)

Following up on the post immediately below, "The Berkshire Hathaway Arbitrage (BRK.A: BRK.B; LAB)".
From MarketWatch:

Trading volume of Class B stock will rise, meeting a benchmark criteria

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s decision to split its Class B shares could put the company in the benchmark S&P 500 Index, spurring a big round of buying by index funds, analysts said Tuesday.

Berkshire said its board approved a 50-for-1 split of its Class B common stock (BRK.B 3,320, +54.84, +1.68%) to help smaller investors handle the company's $44 billion acquisition of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. (BNI 97.60, +21.53, +28.30%)

Berkshire Chairman Warren Buffett is notorious for his aversion to stock splits, saying such moves have no real impact and are more like slicing a pizza into smaller pieces. The company's Class A shares (BRK.A 100,195, +1,445.00, +1.46%) have never been split and currently trade above $100,000 each.

However, Berkshire created smaller Class B shares -- sometimes known as Baby Berkshire stock -- to keep investment firms away from smaller investors who wanted a piece of the action, but didn't have $100,000 to put to work. That stock is worth roughly one-thirtieth of the Class A shares.

When the latest split happens, the Class B shares will be even smaller. The Class B shares currently trade at $3,324. After the split, the price will drop to roughly $66. That will make the shares more accessible to smaller investors and will increase trading volume....MORE

The Berkshire Hathaway Arbitrage (BRK.A: BRK.B; LAB)

UPDATE: "Baby Berkshire split may put shares in S&P 500 Index"
Original post:
This is a repost from February, with a couple additions at the end.

As a followup to yesterday's "Buffet Urges Investors to Read Graham’s Chapters 8 and 20 in Times of Financial Crisis (but wait, there's more!)", Market Movers brings a pair trade to our attention (it's not a classic arbitrage as the "B" shares are not good delivery for the "A"):

...Now the B shares have 1/30th of the economic value of the A shares, but only 1/200th of the voting rights. They began the week worth about 1/31 of an A share, and ended it worth less than 1/32 of an A share. Given that the seeming arbitrage persisted all week, the market might well be starting to value those A-share voting rights.

"In my opinion," says Warren Buffett, "when the B is at a discount of more than say, 2%, it offers a better buy than the A." Right now the discount is a whopping 7%. So if you want to take Buffett's advice, start buying up B shares. If, that is, you want to buy his stock in the first place. Which is a different matter entirely....SOURCE

We are conversant with the issue. From Berkshire Hathaway (oops, just noticed that Mr. Salmon has the link to the memo, here it is anyway:...Memo

Whose the happiest guy on the floor today? From Barron's, April 25, 2005:

Meet Mr. Nickel

A veteran Big Board specialist says penny increments in stock trades have been "a disaster"

AT AGE 74, HAVING LOGGED 55 YEARS on Wall Street and more than 30 as a New York Stock Exchange specialist,

Jim Maguire no longer has to trek to work on the floor every day.

In fact, since selling Henderson Brothers, the firm he once led, and 19 of his 22 NYSE seats to LaBranche & Co. (ticker: LAB) for $230 million at nearly the exact top of the market in early 2000, Maguire has no need to work anywhere at all.

And yet, every day he can be found at his post on the floor of the Big Board, where he referees the trading in Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A) shares and acts as something of the exchange's institutional memory.

In those roles, Maguire certainly doesn't need to lead a lonely, long-shot crusade to persuade Wall Street and Washington leaders to enact a radical change in the way stocks are traded.

But that's just what he's been doing for more than three years, as he's attempted to focus decision makers' attention on the idea of pricing stocks in minimum increments of five cents, rather than the current pennies.

A Quixotic Quest?

Acting strictly on his own and not as a representative of LaBranche or the New York Stock Exchange, Maguire has, by his account, made his pitch to thousands of industry and regulatory folks in the past few years. He paid for an op-ed-like ad to appear in the Wall Street Journal in January to broadcast his message. He has made pilgrimages to Washington to interest trade groups and regulators in his self-appointed mission. Depending on your point of view, he's leading a promising crusade or riding a hobbyhorse that's likely to take him nowhere, especially in light of last week's announcement that the NYSE is buying Archipelago, one of the premier electronic-trading organizations. That could push the Big Board more squarely in the direction of computer-controlled trading and everything it entails, including tiny price spreads on orders.

Maguire, however, seems to be enjoying his ever-more quixotic quest.

"My wife tells me to stop talking about it, because people will start thinking I'm a kook," says Maguire, whose impish grin helps make him look at least a decade younger than his age. "I tell her she knew I was a screwball when she married me (in 1960), and I'm a screwball now. What can I say, she bought a stock and it went down."

But, for all Maguire's kidding at his own expense, others are slowly beginning to buy into his favorite cause.

[Maguire]
Maguire: "My wife tells me to stop talking about it, because people will start thinking I'm a kook."

All U.S. stock exchanges began trading shares in penny increments in early 2001 as part of regulators' mandate to substitute decimals for the old fractions, most recently sixteenths. This move effectively cut price increments by 80% (from 6.25 cents to one cent). The goal was to foster narrower spreads between bid and offer prices, and to reduce trading costs.

Over the past four years, however, nearly everyone intimately involved with trading has become frustrated by the penny regime. While the apparent bid-ask spreads have narrowed, the amount of stock available at the quoted market prices has shriveled to insignificant levels.

Because displaying a bid or offer is an invitation for another trader to step in front of the order for the price of a mere penny per share and get a trade off first, limit orders have become scarce....MORE



From Mr. Buffett's 1989 Letter to the Shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway:

With more than a year behind him of trading Berkshire's
stock on the New York Stock Exchange, our specialist, Jim Maguire
of Henderson Brothers, Inc. ("HBI"), continues his outstanding
performance. Before we listed, dealer spreads often were 3% or
more of market price. Jim has maintained the spread at 50 points
or less, which at current prices is well under 1%. Shareholders
who buy or sell benefit significantly from this reduction in
transaction costs.

Because we are delighted by our experience with Jim, HBI and
the NYSE, I said as much in ads that have been run in a series
placed by the NYSE. Normally I shun testimonials, but I was
pleased in this instance to publicly compliment the Exchange....

Henderson Brothers was purchased by LaBranche & Co. in March 2000.

In the same letter Warren had some comments on the company jet, The Indefensible:

...Last summer we sold the corporate jet that we purchased for
$850,000 three years ago and bought another used jet for $6.7
million. Those of you who recall the mathematics of the
multiplying bacteria on page 5 will understandably panic: If our
net worth continues to increase at current rates, and the cost of
replacing planes also continues to rise at the now-established
rate of 100% compounded annually, it will not be long before
Berkshire's entire net worth is consumed by its jet.

Charlie doesn't like it when I equate the jet with bacteria;
he feels it's degrading to the bacteria. His idea of traveling in
style is an air-conditioned bus, a luxury he steps up to only
when bargain fares are in effect. My own attitude toward the jet
can be summarized by the prayer attributed, apocryphally I'm
sure, to St. Augustine as he contemplated leaving a life of
secular pleasures to become a priest. Battling the conflict
between intellect and glands, he pled: "Help me, Oh Lord, to
become chaste - but not yet."

Naming the plane has not been easy. I initially suggested
"The Charles T. Munger." Charlie countered with "The Aberration."
We finally settled on "The Indefensible." ...

Warren Buffett bets on coal and the economy (BNI; BRK.B)

A first rate piece of writing from MarketWatch:

Transporting black rocks is a big part of Burlington Northern's railroad business

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s $44 billion deal to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. is basically a huge bet on coal, a fuel that powers Warren Buffett's power plants at his MidAmerican Energy utility and plays a major role in the railroad business.

While regulatory delays and uncertainty over climate-change legislation has slowed the addition of new U.S. coal plants, plenty of new facilities are expected to come on line in the United States, becoming prospects for future growth for the railroads.


Ron Reiring

Nine new coal plants have been permitted in the United States as of Oct. 9, and 25 are under construction for a combined generation capacity of nearly 15,000 megawatts, according to a report by the National Energy Technology Laboratory.

Moves by the Obama administration to curb emissions in proposed climate-change legislation are also anticipated to push the generation industry toward wider use of carbon-capture and storage technology at coal plants, which still supply nearly half of America's electricity.

With the U.S. economy poised for a rebound, both the coal-fired electricity industry and the railroads that haul the black rock are primed for growth, leading Buffett to describe his huge purchase as "an all-in wager on the economic future of the United States." See full story.

Hauling coal made up about a quarter of Burlington Northern Santa Fe's (BNI 97.67, +21.60, +28.40%) third-quarter revenue of $3.6 billion.

A total of 604,000 of the Fort Worth, Texas-based railroad's fleet of train cars shipped coal during the third quarter -- a bigger share than any other single material.

Burlington Northern lists itself as the largest hauler of cleaner-burning, low-sulfur coal, most of which originates in the Powder River Basin of northeastern Wyoming and southeastern Montana.

Though its network of 30,000 miles of track that crosses the lower 48 states, the company hauled 297 million tons of coal last year, enough to produce more than 10% of the nation's total electricity.

The railroad supplies 60 utilities in 28 states, as well as power plants in Canada and Mexico.

At the same time, Berkshire Hathaway's MidAmerican Energy ranks as the largest utility in Iowa, with more than 723,000 electric customers in an area stretching from Sioux Falls, S.D., to the Quad Cities area of Iowa and Illinois.

About half of MidAmerican's 7,200 megawatts of generating capability comes from coal, with the company holding majority ownership in five of the six coal-fueled generating stations in Iowa and 11 plants overall.

Of the largest 15 U.S. electricity generators, Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A 100,298, +1,548.00, +1.57%) holds the portfolio with the largest carbon footprint, according to data from energy and utility consultancy Ventyx, cited in a recent presentation by Exelon Corp....MORE

Here's BNSF's "GUIDE TO COAL MINES: Mines Served by BNSF Railway"

HOW GOLDMAN SACHS IS TRADING THE COMMODITY MARKETS (GS)

From The Pragmatic Capitalist:

It’s no secret that Goldman Sachs has an enormously profitable trading operation. In the most recent quarter they reported an astounding $10B in total trading and investments. This represented 81% of the firms total revenues. One of the most profitable arms of this trading operation is the commodity desk. Goldman’s commodity calls are often market moving and always noteworthy. Their latest commodity positions reflect the firm’s continued bullish outlook on the economic recovery.

Goldman is very bullish on Natural Gas. Their 3 month price target on Nat Gas is $6.50 while their 12 month target is $7.70. That is a 33% and 57% expected climb.

How to play it? Goldman likes Summer 2010 NYMEX Natural Gas futures....MORE

American Electric Power to form transmission company (AEP)

From the Columbus Dispatch:

American Electric Power is creating a new company to handle the interstate transmission of power, a task previously handled at the state level.

This change could allow the Columbus-based utility to receive lower interest rates on its largest transmission projects, a spokesman said.

AEP is calling the new company Transco and is giving it an initial budget of $118 million for 2010.

"The Transco will be our vehicle for much of AEP's future on-system, wholly-owned transmission investment," said Michael Morris, AEP's chairman, president and CEO....MORE

From the Wall Street Journal:

...The new transmission company AEP is forming will operate in the company's current service territory, and will be dedicated to enhancing and improving the grid in that 11-state area, said company spokesman Pat Hemlepp. He added that putting the new company in charge of grid work would get it off the utility units' books and increase transparency for shareholders.

"It's a clearer transmission play in the eyes of investors," Hemlepp said, adding the new company hasn't been named yet and is envisioned as a wholly owned subsidiary of AEP. The company said it expects to invest $118 million in the new company's activities next year.

The new company comes as part of AEP's broader transmission strategy, which includes a joint venture with Warren Buffett's MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. in Texas and ventures with several other companies elsewhere in the country.

Revamping the transmission grid has become a priority in Washington, as lawmakers try to figure out how to encourage development of renewable energy sources that don't emit the heat-trapping gases blamed for climate change. Building new transmission lines will be key for bringing wind and solar power generated in remote areas to the distant cities that need the power.

AEP currently has a 39,000-mile transmission network in the U.S., and has utility operations through most of the Midwest and parts of the South.

From Reuters:

AEP will form a transmission company, or Transco, to pursue new transmission
opportunities within the company's existing 11-state footprint, a key
component in a three-part national transmission strategy. AEP has existing and
planned transmission projects in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas
(ERCOT) through its Electric Transmission Texas joint venture with MidAmerican
Energy Holdings Company. AEP is also pursuing transmission projects outside
its footprint and outside ERCOT through joint ventures with numerous other
companies, including Electric Transmission America, AEP's broader partnership
with MidAmerican.

"The Transco will be our vehicle for much of AEP's future on-system,
wholly-owned transmission investment," Morris said. "These investments will
include a wide range of on-system transmission improvements, things like
greenfield projects, station additions and system upgrades. Pursuing these
activities in a Transco, with formula rates adjusted annually by the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), benefits customers by enhancing AEP's
access to capital. This enables the company to undertake substantial new
investment while relieving our operating company balance sheets of the burden
of meeting those capital demands, thereby allowing them to put capital to work
on distribution and generation needs."

AEP expects to invest $118 million in Transco activities in 2010.

"We are seeking state utility status for the Transco in states where that
designation is required, and we will join both PJM and Southwest Power Pool as
a transmission owner," Morris said. "We plan to file a FERC tariff for the
Transco later this year, with rates effective in mid-2010."...MORE

Carbonista*: "Gore’s Dual Role: Advocate and Investor "

From the New York Times:

Former Vice President Al Gore thought he had spotted a winner last year when a small California firm sought financing for an energy-saving technology from the venture capital firm where Mr. Gore is a partner.

The company, Silver Spring Networks, produces hardware and software to make the electricity grid more efficient. It came to Mr. Gore’s firm, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, one of Silicon Valley’s top venture capital providers, looking for $75 million to expand its partnerships with utilities seeking to install millions of so-called smart meters in homes and businesses.

Mr. Gore and his partners decided to back the company, and in gratitude Silver Spring retained him and John Doerr, another Kleiner Perkins partner, as unpaid corporate advisers.

The deal appeared to pay off in a big way last week, when the Energy Department announced $3.4 billion in smart grid grants. Of the total, more than $560 million went to utilities with which Silver Spring has contracts. Kleiner Perkins and its partners, including Mr. Gore, could recoup their investment many times over in coming years.

Silver Spring Networks is a foot soldier in the global green energy revolution Mr. Gore hopes to lead. Few people have been as vocal about the urgency of global warming and the need to reinvent the way the world produces and consumes energy. And few have put as much money behind their advocacy as Mr. Gore and are as well positioned to profit from this green transformation, if and when it comes.

Critics, mostly on the political right and among global warming skeptics, say Mr. Gore is poised to become the world’s first “carbon billionaire,” profiteering from government policies he supports that would direct billions of dollars to the business ventures he has invested in.

Representative Marsha Blackburn, Republican of Tennessee, asserted at a hearing this year that Mr. Gore stood to benefit personally from the energy and climate policies he was urging Congress to adopt....MORE
*We've also considered Carboñeró , The Great Carbono, etc.

Pssst, Besides Warren Buffet, Which Berkshire Hathaway Director is a Railroad Fan? (BRK.a; BNI, CNI CSX; NSX; UNP)

Well now. The old boy billionaire railroading fan club is having a good day, what with the Transports up 159 (4.43%).
From GuruFocus:

Guru Holdings – Major Railroads: Burlington Northern Santa Fe, Union Pacific Corporation, Canadian National Railway, Norfolk Southern Corp.
Recently, there has been a lot of interest in railroad stocks. Their barrier to entry is undeniable. In the 1800s, the government gave land to the railroads in order to link the country together. Today, this would be a near impossible action. It is nearly if not totally impossible for new competitors to enter the market place.

Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp, Union Pacific Corp, Canadian National Railway and Norfolk Southern Corp will be reviewed.

Of interest is that 3 of the 4 stocks discussed here are holdings of Warren Buffett. It appears that he is collecting a basket of railroads....

...The following Gurus hold BNI
George Soros owns 55,900 shares as of the quarter that ended on 06/30/2009, which is 0.16% of the $2.61 billion portfolio of Soros Fund Management LLC.

Ron Baron owns 59,000 shares as of the quarter that ended on 06/30/2009, which is 0.04% of the $11.99 billion portfolio of Baron Funds.

Kenneth Fisher owns 982,838 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 0.29% of the $24.67 billion portfolio of Fisher Asset Management, LLC.

Prem Watsa owns 2,088,000 shares as of 03/31/2009, which accounts for 2.9% of the $5.21 billion portfolio of Fairfax Financial Holdings, Inc.

Warren Buffett owns 76,777,029 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 11.53% of the $48.95 billion portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway.

Chris Davis owns 224,224 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 0.03% of the $51.82 billion portfolio of Davis Selected Advisers.

Tweedy Browne owns 1,334,954 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 5.82% of the $1.69 billion portfolio of Tweedy Browne CO LLC.

Prem Watsa owns 2,088,000 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 2.95% of the $5.21 billion portfolio of Fairfax Financial Holdings, Inc.

Wallace Weitz owns 204,900 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 0.98% of the $1.54 billion portfolio of Weitz Wallace R & Co.

PRIMECAP Management owns 100,000 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 0.02% of the $48.26 billion portfolio of PRIMECAP Management.

Jean-Marie Eveillard owns 15,000 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 0.01% of the $8.91 billion portfolio of Arnhold & S. Bleichroeder Advisers, LLC....MORE

The answer to our headline question is:
Bill Gates, Canadian National Railways (CNI)
Bill Gates owns 8,399,653 shares as of 06/30/2009, which accounts for 4.82% of the $7.49 billion portfolio of Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust.

Goldman’s Plan for Fannie’s Credits May Trip Up (FNM; GS)

UPDATE: "Buffett Joins Goldman in Bid for Fannie Mae Tax Credits (BRK.A; FNM)"
Original post:
From DealBook:

It could be yet another opportunity for Goldman Sachs to come out a winner from the financial crisis that it helped create, but the Treasury Department appears poised to squash it.

Treasury officials confirmed on Monday that Goldman Sachs, which reported record quarterly profits last month, has proposed buying or at least borrowing tens of millions of dollars worth of unused tax credits from Fannie Mae, the mortgage finance company that is now owned by the government, The New York Times’s Edmund L. Andrews and Graham Bowley reported.

Fannie Mae cannot benefit from the tax credits, which are tied to investments in low-income housing, because it has lost so much money that it may not owe federal taxes for years to come.

The proposal, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, has been pitched by the Wall Street firm as a win-win idea. Fannie Mae would get cash, which it might be able to pump into more low-income housing investment, while Goldman Sachs and perhaps a syndicate of investors would be able to reduce their taxes.

Investors and financial institutions already trade low-income housing tax credits, so the concept itself is not new. The deal would also be a variant of those in which profit-making companies buy businesses with big tax-loss credits they can use to offset their own tax bills.

But the political appearances could hardly be worse. Lawmakers in both parties have fumed time and again that Wall Street firms — Goldman Sachs in particular — seemed to be profiting from the mortgage bubble and bust they played a central role in financing.

On top of that, Treasury officials said the proposal would be of dubious benefit to taxpayers: the government, as Fannie Mae’s owner, would be collecting money with one hand while it was giving back at least as much with the other hand to Goldman Sachs and its investors....MORE

London Bullion Conference delegates see gold hitting $1,181.30 one year from now (GLD; XAU)

Well that seems rather specific.
From Reuters via Mineweb:

Delegates at the London Bullion Market Association annual conference expect to see gold prices XAU= at $1,181.30 an ounce in 12 months' time, a poll conducted by the conference organisers showed.

Around 370 traders, analysts, miners, central bankers and others are attending the conference in Scotland, which concludes later on Tuesday.

Spot gold's current record high is $1,070.40 an ounce, reached in October and the metal traded around $1,062 an ounce on Tuesday afternoon....MORE

MarketBeat on Berkshire Hathaway/Burlington Northern Santa Fe

Either they have a nose for news or they're bored. I'm betting the former.
From MarketBeat:

Warren Buffett’s Biggest. Deal. Ever.

...In a brief chat with CNBC this morning, Buffett described how the deal came together fairly quickly after meeting recently with Burlington Northern chief executive Matt Rose. “I made him an offer and he said it would take it to his board and it took about fifteen minutes,” Buffett told CNBC....
Berkshire Vs. the Fed
...Along with last week’s 3.5% 3Q GDP reading, Buffett’s rhetoric fuels the perception that the recovery is building steam, and the Fed doesn’t want to be left at the station clinging to its extremely accommodative policy when the economic growth train pulls away....
Warren Buffett: Buying Near the Bottom … Again

Association of American Railroads

...And from looking at the rail data, it appears that Buffett didn’t try to “catch a falling knife,” rather he waited until there were a signs of improvement before pulling the trigger....MORE
Buffett Buy of BNSF Jolts Transports out of Malaise
The Dow Jones Transportation index shot higher, as railroad stocks surged on the news that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway is buying the Burlington Northern Santa Fe. Transport railroad stocks Union Pacific, Norfolk Southern and CSX are all the biggest contributors to the breakout in the the 20-stock measure higher — besides BNSF, of course, which is up 28%, after the deal news....MORE
Warren Buffett’s Railroad Deal Isn’t a Short-Term Bet

Warren Buffett BNSF: Behind the Split in Baby Berkshires

When I came to the markets some of the old-timers still called the DJTA "the rails".
Along those lines, we use a modified index that strips out the airlines to get a handle on freight traffic by truck and rail.

Berkshire Splits, Pigs Fly (BNI; BRK.B)

UPDATES below.
Original post:
I was planning a post on Mr. Buffett's partner Charlie Munger when I heard this news. We might hook up with Charlie this afternoon.
Burlington Northern Santa Fe is the largest coal hauler out of the Powder River Basin of Montana and Wyoming. They are such a big player that this coal is responsible for 10% of the entire nation's electricity.
As Mr. Buffett said about the acquisition:

“Most important of all, however, it’s an all-in wager on the economic future of the United States,” said Mr. Buffett. “I love these bets.”


Here's Barron's Stocks to Watch Today, from whom I stole the headline:

There goes the neighborhood.

Warren Buffett is doing something he hasn’t often done: he’s splitting the class B shares of his Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) stock by 50 to 1, meaning you’ll soon be able to buy into Berkshire for $65.30 a share instead of $3,265.

The move comes in conjunction with Buffett’s announcement his company will buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) railroad company for $100 per share through a combination of cash and stock, a 30% premium to its closing price yesterday.

Burlington stock is up 29% in pre-market trading at $98.09, while Berkshire class B is up $100.90, or 3.1%, at $3,365.90.

The split is subject to Berkshire shareholder approval. No date has been set for the shareholder vote yet, nor for the record date of the split.

Berkshire already owns 23% of Burlington. Berkshire says its offer totals $44 billion, including the portion it already owns, and it’s picking up $10 billion of Burlington debt, making this the largest deal Berkshire has ever done. The split will allow those Burlington investors who want to take stock instead of cash to do so, effectively allowing Buffett to use more of his own currency — his stock....

The Washington Post (a Berkshire-Hathaway company, 18.4%) is using AP and Reuters stories.

Here are the press Berkshire releases:

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Board of Directors Approves 50-for-1 Split of Its Class B Common Stock

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY INC. TO ACQUIRE BURLINGTON NORTHERN SANTA FE CORPORATION (BNSF) FOR $100 PER SHARE IN CASH AND STOCK:
"...The definitive agreement provides that each share of BNI common stock will at the election of the shareholder be converted into the right to receive either
(i) a cash payment of $100.00 or
(ii) a variable number of shares of Berkshire Hathaway Class A or Class B common stock, subject to proration if the elections do not equal approximately 60 percent in cash and 40 percent in stock. The stock component of the consideration is subject to a “collar” whereby the value of each Berkshire Hathaway share received is fixed at $100.00 if the price of Berkshire Hathaway Class A stock at closing is between approximately $80,000.00 and approximately $125,000.00 per share. If the value of Berkshire Hathaway Class A stock is outside of this collar range at closing, then the number of shares received of Berkshire Hathaway Class A stock will be fixed at either 0.001253489 per BNI share for values below the collar range, or 0.000802233 per BNI share for values above the collar range. The shareholder may receive Class A or, in lieu of fractional Class A shares, equivalent economic value of Class B Berkshire Hathaway shares, subject to certain limitations as described in the definitive agreement...."
Here's Berkshire's description of the A and B shares:
Memo

From: Warren Buffett
Subject: Comparative Rights and Relative Prices of Berkshire Class A and Class B Stock
Date: February 2, 1999 Updated July 3, 2003

Comparison of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Class A and Class B Common Stock


One geographic oddity, major BNI competitor, Union Pacific, is headquartered just under two miles due west of BRK headquarters.
UPDATES:
MarketBeat on Berkshire Hathaway/Burlington Northern Santa Fe

Pssst, Besides Warren Buffet, Which Berkshire Hathaway Director is a Railroad Fan? (BRK.a; BNI, CNI CSX; NSX; UNP)

Warren Buffett bets on coal and the economy (BNI; BRK.B)

Groovin' and Behoovin' at WBRK, All Berkshire, All the Time (Berkshire- Burlington Roundup) BRK.a; BNI

Bloomberg Special Report: "Buffett Buys Burlington" BRK.A; BRK.B; BNI

Monday, November 2, 2009

Climateer Line of the Day: Cap-and-Trade Edition

From the New York Times' Dot Earth blog:

...It would take 20 years to fix the mess that Congress, with the help of special interests, seems intent on creating.
-James E. Hansen, PhD., Goddard Institute for Space Studies
I've disagreed with some of J.E.H.'s tactics, comments and even science but on the C&T policy prescription he's right and has been right for a while now. He's also incurred the wrath of some self-proclaimed "Progressives" for his stance.

Environmental Capital also had a post on the EPA lawyers. There's an excellent, well-reasoned, almost Shakespearean comment.
[umm, two out of three? -ed]
If Cap-and-Trade is So Terrible, What’s the Alternative?

"Okay Mr. Climateer, Where's Your 'S&P 500 1125 Sometime in October?'"

The S&P closed out the month of October at 1036.19. The closest we got to 1125 was the Oct. 21 intra-day high of 1,101.36. The highest close was the 1,097.91 on the 19th.
In March '08 we had a post commemorating the guts, brains and plain hard work of the folks who pulled off the Berlin Airlift sixty years earlier:

Ag Stocks and The Berlin Airlift (AG; MOS; MON; POT)

Last night in "Commodities Comeuppance" I said my best guess was that the ag stocks would be up today. When POT and MOS opened down I was reminded of a vignette from the Berlin Airlift.

We're coming up on the 60th anniversary of the Soviet blockade that June.
During the summer the two million people that the Brits and Americans were trying to feed could get by with two tons of coal per day (over the course of the airlift 80% of the weight hauled was coal) but as the blockade went on, it was apparent that the Sov's. intended to starve the city and it became imperative that an efficient method of delivering coal be found.

During winter the absolute minimum requirement was 3100 tons of coal per day. The little C-47's could haul around three tons per flight. The first week of the airlift, deliveries averaged 90 tons per day. The second week, 1000 tons/day.

It was decided to experiment with a low-speed, low-level drop of coal onto an empty field, the idea being that if it worked, B-29 Superfortress' with a 105 mph stall speed and 22-25 ton capacity would solve the problem.

On the appointed day the senior commanders went to the field, the plane came over, low and slow, dropped the coal, packed 100 pounds to a bag, the bags landed, exploded open, the coal was pulverized and a great black cloud of coal dust covered everyone watching.

One of the Generals, I forget if it was LeMay, Tunner or Smith, said "Doesn't work" and that was that.

When I saw the ag stocks open this morning I thought
"Doesn't work".

The logistics geniuses figured out what needed to be done, took 300 of the 400 10-ton capacity C-54's in the U.S. fleet, developed flight rules so efficient that the Germans called it "die Luftbrücke" (Air Bridge) and on Easter Sunday 1949 in a move to crush the Soviet's spirit, they decided to show off with the "Easter Parade".

In the 1440 minutes of that day, they flew 1398 flights into Berlin delivering 12,940 tons of coal.
The Soviets gave up the blockade the next month, two million people didn't starve or be forced to live under Moscow masters and thousands of kids remembered the candy bars the pilots would tie to handkerchief parachutes and drop as they came into Tempelhof.




39 British and 31 American airmen were killed in crashes during the airlift...

I don't go in for fancy explanations for failure. That kind of rationalizing can lead to muddled thinking that can cost you real money. It's smarter to learn what you can (long was wrong the last five days of the month) and move on.
I also violated the first rule of analyst CYA; if you give a price, don't give a date. The violation was deliberate and against the recommendation of some sharp friends.

On the other hand I did point out the risks (and they are real) to long portfolios:

Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Markets: Where Do We Go From Here? (INTC; JPM) The Beat Goes On
Regular readers know we are looking for S&P 1125 sometime this month. If you watch this stuff (and I understand normal people who don't) the level of nervousness about the market's direction and this earnings season is as high as I can remember. Participants know they are playing a dangerous game; we all think we will be the one to grab a chair when the music stops.

This is creating a frisson for the players that has to be at least as exciting as Chris Matthews reaction to a Barack Obama speech...

Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Short Interest Declines Again (and Why it Matters)
...As we saw* in the 2008 oil market, a relentless up-move crushes the bears, both financially and psychologically. If you don't have that potential buying power, the down moves are fast and furious. From here it is not hard to see a 200 point down day in the DJIA come out of the robo-traders at any time, for any reason....
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
15% correction coming in SP500?
I'm pretty sure the market doesn't subscribe to the Poincaré recurrence theorem.
I however, may, this being the second gloomer chart of the day.
("Seasonal Drop in U.S. Stocks May Just Be Delayed: Chart of Day")
Friday, October 23, 2009
Approaching the Height of the Earnings Reporting Season
...As can be seen in the graph below, today is the lightest reporting day of the week whereas next week has the busiest. Keep those stops tight.
Friday, October 23, 2009
Something to Think About: "The US stock market is overvalued by 40%"

Friday, October 23, 2009
A Trend is A Trend (Until it Isn't)
A reader emailed "What did you mean by 'Keep those stops tight?"' [in this morning' post "Approaching the Height of the Earnings Reporting Season" -ed]

Good question. A quick look at the DJIA hourly chart for the last ten days reveals a couple interesting points to consider (from BigCharts)...

...First off, the triple top around 10,100. Three time this week the index got to this level and stalled out. Secondly, the daily low to high range has expanded considerably. This kind of sloppy action is often the sign of half-hearted buying by participants.

Although we are still looking for S&P 1125 this month (which means next week), this is dangerous territory. To quote myself [favorite source? -ed]:
Markets: Where Do We Go From Here? (INTC; JPM) The Beat Goes On
Regular readers know we are looking for S&P 1125 sometime this month. If you watch this stuff (and I understand normal people who don't) the level of nervousness about the market's direction and this earnings season is as high as I can remember. Participants know they are playing a dangerous game; we all think we will be the one to grab a chair when the music stops.

This is creating a frisson for the players that has to be at least as exciting as Chris Matthews reaction to a Barack Obama speech...
There is downside risk. Any drop could be the start of a 15 to 30% decline.
I am comfortable with a 2% loss in futures or options, 4% in leveraged ETF's and 7-8% in individual stocks. Your comfort level will vary but at this point the goal has to be preservation of capital.
The kind of action we've been experiencing will stop you out a lot which can drive you crazy.
[not a long drive -ed]

If you aren't comfortable scale back your exposure to the "I can sleep at night" level.
As I said, good question.
So there you go.
Be smart, be honest, be brief, be gone.
Mañana.

"Fertilizer Markets Remain Mystery" (MOO; MOS; POT; TNR)

A note from farm country via Maril Hazlett at the Climate+Energy Project*.
From The Progressive Farmer:

Empty Pipeline for All Major Fertilizers Could Lead to Slight Volatility in 2010

The roller coaster that has been the U.S. fertilizer industry may have moved away from the worst of its stomach-lightening fluctuations. But the ride will in no way be boring for the next few seasons, according to speakers at the 2009 Fertilizer Outlook and Technology Conference.

Fertilizer industry leaders hoping for a sign of calmer times heard repeatedly that there was "no consistency on the horizon."

The only predictability will be that farmers will be carefully watching prices and crop needs, and be slow to commit to anything beyond basic soil maintenance levels.

Phil Cochran, Cochran Agronomics, Inc, Paris, Ill., said his growers are barely beginning to harvest corn, but expects them to continue to be judicious, even at fertilizer cost levels a third of 2008 prices. For the 2009 season, he worked with eastern Illinois growers to consider two fertilizer application rates: 50 pounds of phosphorus and 350 pounds of potassium (K) per acre and 70 P and 400 K per acre. Both are much lower than normal individual annual rates, "but these were based on the farmer's pocketbook, what he could afford to spend, not on agronomics."

In one example, Cochran showed that staying with low-to-barely maintenance levels saved a grower $20 per acre on P alone, twice that on P, K and N levels that would correspond with a higher fertility scheme....MORE

Doc Hazlett's latest post on the CEP blog is "Ag and the climate bill – farmers caught between climate legislation and climate change", which title I like, it reminds me of the Devil and the deep blue sea.

California: "John Doerr For Governor?"

From Tech Trader Daily:

Now here’s a novel idea.

In an op-ed piece in the San Francisco Chronicle yesterday, Hoover Institution fellow Bill Whalen proposes that billionaire venture capitalist John Doerr jump into the California governor’s race. Whalen is kind of an odd person to make this suggestion; he was the chief speechwriter for former governor Pete Wilson; he’s also served as a media consultant for, among other people, current governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. (Both Republicans.) But is is nonetheless an intriguing idea.

For one thing, the proposal follows San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom’s withdrawal from the race, basically ceding the Democratic nomination to none other than Governor Moonbeam himself, the apparently ageless Jerry Brown....MORE

The bigwigs of the valley were serious Obamaniacs in the run-up to the general election even while Santa Clara county went for Hillary, 53.8%, to Barack Obama's 41.1% in the primary.

"TOTAL INTRA-DAY REVERSAL"

As a practitioner of The Grassy Knoll Theory of Investing (there is a 'They' and 'They know") I am dubious of most EVERYTHING.
Of course this can lead you into the "Wilderness of Mirrors" which term the CIA's counter-intelligence czar James Jesus Angleton coined and which trap he fell into:

...Angleton came to suspect Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who commented wryly that even the most brilliant and loyal officers should not spend their entire career in such pressurized and paranoid fields. Angleton also privately accused numerous members of Congress and President Gerald Ford of treason. Angleton's notorious pursuit of the "5th Man," who he believed had penetrated a secret agency in Washington, was solved, he believed, when DCI William Colby fired him. No one was above suspicion, and even Angleton himself was accused by others of working for the Soviets. (Wikipedia)
Oh well.
From The Pragmatic Capitalist:

S&P futures have reversed this morning’s gains for a full 2% decline. High beta is leading the charge down on heavy volume. Not exactly the kind of action you see at a bullish reversal point in a rally. Of course, we’re not day traders here at TPC nor do I emphasize such trading, but this it notable action on a day when the data appeared quite positive.

ES

"Why Do Green Energy Experts Buy Solar Stocks? "

An interesting post from Tom Konrad. Although he doesn't come right out and say it, the gist is these aren't businesses as the term is generally understood but rather are currently just subsidy conduits.
From AltEnergyStocks:

Green energy experts accept that solar panels are one of the least cost effective ways to reduce your carbon footprint. Nevertheless, many buy solar stocks. They should rethink their investment strategies.

I recently spoke on "Stock Selection in the Era of Peak Oil and Climate Change" at the ASPO 2009 International Peak Oil Conference. Whenever green energy enthusiasts find out that I analyze green energy stocks professionally, they react in one of two ways. Many want to know my top stock pick in general (New Flyer Industries NFI-UN.TO/NFYIF.PK) or in their favorite sector (see below.) Others tell me about their own green energy investments.

My guess is that the latter group hopes I will stamp some sort of stock guru seal of approval on their portfolio. If so, they usually go away disappointed. This is not only because I have not yet been issued with a special seal by the stock guru union. It's also because, even if I had such a stamp of approval, I would seldom need to use it.

I find that even industry experts who know more than I do about green energy fail to apply that knowledge when it comes to investing. Enthusiastic amateurs are often worse. The typical green stock holdings of a brilliant cleantech engineer are a couple solar stocks, like First Solar (FSLR) and Sunpower (SPWR.) People who will lecture tirelessly on the need to improve the efficiency of buildings before slapping solar on the roof don't walk the walk when it comes to their investment portfolios. Instead, they take whatever portfolio they have, slap on a couple solar companies. They forget all about the efficiency stocks and other, more cost-effective renewable options such as wind, geothermal, and biomass that they would recommend if they were asked about what we needed to decarbonize the economy.

Invest In What You Know, Use What You Know

To be fair, none of these people are professional investors....
He goes into a quick overview of efficiency stocks and ends with:

...Financial modeling shows that solar will only be a significant part of the most effective carbon mitigation strategies if prices fall quickly and dramatically. Such cost improvements are possible, but will come with the risk of extreme disruption for the current crop of solar stocks.

Investors swept up in the emotional appeal of solar stocks are providing those of us who pay close attention to the economics of green energy an opportunity to profit at their expense. Taking advantage of the opportunity is not only likely to benefit the investor, it will also help the companies we do invest in raise capital.

Pretty much the raison d'être of Climateer Investing.

Creative Writing: "How CBO budget scoring devalues efficiency ... WITH PUPPIES!"

I tried sending this link to a friend who can't pull it up. When she tries the link up she gets "Database Error: Unable to connect to your database. Your database appears to be turned off or the database connection settings in your config file are not correct...." I'll just copy it out and get back to the other Aryans in the next post.
My smartest tech guy, Siva, (a streetwise Hindu boy, Caltech postdoc) starts talking DNS; SQL or some such.
I thought Sanskrit was a litugical language.
From Grist:

The Congressional Budget Office is back in the news, after director Doug Elmendorf testified before Congress about the economic impacts of clean energy legislation. Opponents of that legislation rushed to hype a few of his comments out of context, and succeeded, as usual, in getting their voices amplified in the Washington Post.

Elmendorf didn’t say anything that wasn’t already in the CBO’s analysis of the Waxman-Markey bill, which was released in June and discussed to death at the time. Despite what you’d think from hysterical headlines, the top-line conclusion of that report was that the bill would reduce the federal deficit. The lowest-income quintile would gain in purchasing power; the middle class would pay modest costs. Those costs are, by CBO’s own admission, almost certainly lower than the analysis projects, since it doesn’t count the benefits of the aggressive energy efficiency provisions (or the economic benefits of avoided climate change). Overall, the CBO paints an incredibly optimistic picture of the economic costs of clean energy legislation, even given the flaws and conservative biases of its analysis.

Anyway, much ado about nothing, again. Just so we walk away from this latest hubbub having learned something, though, let’s take a look at some serious issues around the CBO, specifically its budget scoring and how it undercounts the cheapest, fastest source of clean energy: efficiency.

To acknowledge up front: it’s not easy to talk about CBO scoring without putting people to sleep. It’s not easy to talk about energy efficiency without putting people to sleep. CBO scoring of energy efficiency? That’s x-treme sleepy. We’re going to need puppies.

puppies!

Despite its obscurity, CBO budget scoring is actually quite important. It shapes legislation in subtle but pervasive ways. In particular, undercounting the potential for efficiency systematically distorts energy policy in ways that favor delay, compromise, and defensiveness. The good news is that properly accounting for efficiency opens the door to clean energy policy that’s fiscally responsible and environmentally accountable.

To understand why CBO accounts poorly for efficiency, some basic background on CBO scoring is necessary. Don’t worry. This guy will help you through it.

puppies!

The t-word

First, we’re talking about budget scoring here, not broader economic scoring (which CBO also does, as does the EPA, as do any number of think tanks and consultancies). Budget scoring is a narrow assessment of legislation’s projected effect on the federal budget, and only CBO does it. There are big problems with the broader analyses, too, but it’s budget scoring that has the most tangible effect on the legislative process.

Budget scoring matters because Obama and congressional Democrats promised that the climate bill will be deficit neutral. It “won’t add a dime to the deficit,” as Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) has put it. Who decides if the bill is deficit neutral? That’s the CBO.

The most important aspect of climate bill scoring is that the CBO treats pollution allowances as federal revenue, and allocating those allowances—handing them out—as spending. It effectively treats cap-and-trade as an indirect tax (like excise taxes, or customs duties). This has all sorts of implications.

The 25% haircut

puppies!

For reasons we won’t get into, the CBO assumes a fixed nominal GDP—that is, they assume that legislation will not change the overall size of the economy, by either spurring or slowing growth. Practically speaking, that means any tax revenue that comes out of the private economy must, by definition, reduce private spending and thereby reduce taxable income, to balance the scales. In this case, the requirement to buy pollution allowances will lower the taxable income of the businesses and individuals who pay for them. That in turn will lower federal revenue from direct (income) taxes. So you get a new revenue stream, but at the cost of losing a little bit of the old revenue stream.

How big is the collateral damage to direct tax revenue? Rather than try to calculate that percentage for every piece of legislation and every set of taxed entities, the CBO (along with the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Treasury Department’s Office of Tax Analysis) has settled on a standard number, which it applies across the board: 25%. So for every buck that’s raised via an indirect tax, a quarter is lost in direct taxes and only $0.75 can be slated for new spending; $0.25 has to be set aside to balance the budget (assuming a balanced budget is the goal). This revenue offset is colloquially known, by the tiny number of people who have reason to know such a thing colloquially, as the “25% CBO haircut.”

Because the CBO treats pollution allowances as tax revenue, they take the haircut. Climate policy watchers will recall that the Kerry-Boxer climate bill introduced late last month was virtually silent on allowance allocation. The only thing it did specify is that 25% of the allowances would be set aside to reduce the deficit. However the allowances are allocated, whomever they’re given to, as long as 25% are set aside the result is guaranteed to be scored deficit neutral. That provision is what justified Kerry’s “won’t add a dime” boast.

(Incidentally, for a more in-depth but still relatively clear explanation of the haircut, see the CBO’s immortal tract, “The Role of the 25 Percent Revenue Offset in Estimating the Budgetary Effects of Legislation” [PDF].)

puppies!Sidebar: What about the House? or Get a haircut, ya hippie!

You may be wondering: why didn’t the Waxman-Markey bill in the House reflect this same 25% haircut? How come it got away with setting aside under 10% (through 2025) of allowances for deficit reduction?

A partial answer is that the House operates within what used to be the standard Congressional budget window: 10 years. That is to say, for House bills, “deficit neutral” means “deficit neutral for the first 10 years.” The House can use various budgetary tricks, e.g. selling future years’ allowances to the near-term, to pad revenue during the crucial 10-year window. It’s a bit dodgy, but then so is the pretense that human beings are capable of predicting economic circumstances more than 10 years out with any precision.

The Senate, though, loooves deficit hawkery. Loves it! Just wants to kiss it. Senators compete to see who can be more Serious about the deficit; it’s like Deficit Idol on the Sunday cable talk shows. The Senate not only passed a budget point of order forbidding legislation that increases the deficit inside 10 years, it passed another that prohibited legislation “that would cause a net increase in deficits in excess of $5 billion in any of the four 10-year periods beginning in 2018 through 2057.” (What, are they joking? What about the 2058 budget?!?)

Because of this delightful and not-at-all stupid and shortsighted provision, to get through the Senate, legislation has to be scored deficit neutral effectively in perpetuity. That’s a lot harder than appearing deficit neutral for 10 years, especially in regards to a program that most economic forecasts (wrongly!) show rising steadily in price in the post-2020 years.

puppies!One more wrinkle: offsetting offsets

One important twist is that the revenue offset (haircut) can itself be offset by ... are you ready for this? ... an offsetting offset. (Yes, the CBO really calls it that.) In the haircut analogy, an offsetting offset would be Rogaine. Or maybe extensions.

Remember, the revenue offset is a reduction in direct taxes caused by an indirect tax. An offsetting offset is when tax revenue is spent in a way that raises other incomes, which thereby raises (re-raises?) direct tax revenue. It offsets the offset! Are we having fun yet?

What kind of spending counts as an offsetting offset, thus avoiding the haircut? Any revenue returned directly, via tax cuts or credits, to a taxable entity (a business or an individual) qualifies.

If, by contrast, revenue goes to, say, state energy efficiency block grants, federal RD&D, rebates to low-income households with no taxable income, transit assistance, jobs training programs, international reforestation, or any of a gazillion other worthy investments, it takes the haircut. It is assumed to be displacing spending in the private economy, and since the CBO assumes fixed GDP, that means someone’s taxable income must take a hit.

OMFG another wrinkle!

If revenue is returned directly to a taxable entity but with strings attached—mandates about how the money must be spent—then it does take the haircut. The CBO figures that’s tantamount to government spending through an intermediary, which like all government spending displaces private spending. This will turn out to be a crucial distinction.

Offsetting offsetting offsets

Just kidding. Here’s a puppy.

puppies!

Luvagod tell us why any of this matters

OK! Right now, in the Kerry-Boxer bill, 25% of allowances are set aside for deficit reduction. That leaves 75% of the allowance money from cap-and-trade to be spent on buying votes various good causes.

Here’s the thing, though: before the final legislation is done, that 25% will go down. It will be partially offset, because some of the revenue will be spent on direct transfers to taxable entities, and direct transfers get no haircut. In fact, the more that’s spent on direct transfers, the more of the total pie there is to spend.

puppies!This creates a somewhat perverse incentive structure. Since Congress would obviously like to have 100% of the revenue to spend, that’s going to bias decisionmaking in favor of direct transfers: tax cuts and tax breaks, aka the same crappy tax-based energy policy the U.S. has been limping along with for 30 years. Any other spending gets that extra 25% cost tacked on.

Direct transfers aren’t necessarily bad policy: they include the good (rebates to consumers to shield them from energy price increases), the pretty good (subsidies for renewables), and the not-so-good (subsidies for polluters). But a great deal of what we’d like government to help with is included in all that spending that does get the haircut—most importantly, energy efficiency programs.

So, in budget terms, tax credits cost what they cost; energy efficiency programs cost what they cost plus 25%.

What about all those kickbacks to utilities?

Good question.

As noted the other day, utilities get lots and lots of allowance value (about 40%) in Waxman-Markey. Do those handouts take the haircut? The utilities (LDCs) are expected to use the revenue for “consumer benefit,” but what does that mean in budget terms?

Remember, direct transfers to taxable entities don’t take the haircut, unless there are strings attached. So is allowance value given to LDCs a form of direct transfer to businesses and utilities? That wouldn’t take the haircut. Or is it a direct transfer to LDCs, with strings attached on how it’s to be used? That would take the haircut.

What a fun wonky question! Let’s savor it with a wagon full of puppies.

puppies!

A CBO letter to Waxman (PDF) clarifies the treatment of LDC allocations ... a little. But some questions remain.

The letter seems to say that LDC allocations won’t take the haircut. For one thing, the bill doesn’t yet mandate that the money be used for consumer benefit, it just strongly suggests it (see this post for more). As far as what counts as consumer benefit, the letter explicitly cites reductions in electricity rates or fixed-dollar rebates. But that distinction matters; if utilities just lower electricity rates, the electricity price signal will be muted and other forms of carbon use will become proportionately more expensive. A fixed-dollar rebate returned separately would keep consumers whole while still preserving the motivating force of the price signal. Could the bill mandate that “consumer benefit” be in the form of fixed-dollar rebates? It’s unclear.

puppies!What if the bill mandates that some percentage of utility allowance money go to energy-efficiency programs (rather than being returned directly to ratepayers)? Bam: haircut. Here’s what it says in the letter:

One might argue that this example [spending on utility efficiency programs] is similar to the previous example in which the LDCs kept consumers’ electricity prices from rising (and in which federal revenues did not fall) because both involve giving resources back to consumers. However, this example differs from the earlier one due to the increase in electricity prices that, by the assumption of fixed nominal GDP, must be offset by lower spending elsewhere in the economy.

Now, this would make sense if spending on efficiency were like any other spending. But it isn’t! Yes there would still be an “increase in electricity prices,” but there would be a corresponding decrease in energy bills. That’s the whole point of efficiency improvements: they produce ongoing savings, functionally equivalent to rebates, in perpetuity. Every dollar not spent on energy is money that can be used for other purposes. It doesn’t lead to “lower spending elsewhere in the economy.” (It’s worth noting that utility efficiency programs are incredibly cost-effective means of reducing emissions—about the most cost-effective way currently available.)

It’s a little crazy that handing money to electricity ratepayers doesn’t take the haircut, but handing energy savings to ratepayers does. If anything, the transfer of value via efficiency is economically more advantageous; every efficiency investment effectively establishes a grant fund that produces savings year in year out.

The CBO should revisit this issue. The utilities should be required to spend a good chunk of the allowance value on efficiency programs, and policymakers shouldn’t be punished with a 25% cost hit for making that decision.

puppies!State efficiency programs too?

Yes. Allowance value granted to states to fund energy efficiency programs should not suffer the haircut. As long as there’s good monitoring and verification, state efficiency programs save taxpayers money, thus increasing their take-home income. It’s an offsetting offset by god!

Beyond budgeting

The bias against efficiency—counting it as a cost but refusing to take account of its benefits—extends beyond budget scoring to broader economic analysis as well. Economic models assume that cost-effective efficiency investments would already have been made by the private sector (no one leaves money lying on the street, etc.). So government efficiency investments must displace more efficient private sector spending.

In sharp contrast, research from the McKinsey & Co., based on ground-up research, shows that the 2020 target in Waxman-Markey can be met at negative cost. If Kerry and Boxer made the improvements to the bill recommended by the American Council for an Energy-Efficiency Economy, the legislation would not only create more jobs but offer households $283 annual savings by 2020. (If, instead, Kerry and Boxer integrate the energy bill that passed through the Energy Committee—the American Clean Energy Leadership Act—it would leave enormous potential savings on the table.)

If it was more widely understood that U.S. taxpayers could save billions of dollars by lowering greenhouse gas emissions, the political landscape would look very different. The vote count would look very different. The federal budget would look different too.

Aw, now look what I did:

puppies!

"Ja, ja, So Your U.S. Market is Up a Bit, Ever Hear of Berlin, 1923?"

This morning both the DJIA and S&P are up a bit over 1.1%.
Here's a partial repost from Oct. 13, 2008 when the DJIA was up 11% on the day.
(sticking with the language of love, I was dancing around calling it 'Die Glückliche Zeit' [The Happy Time] which was the German term for the period when the u-boats were running free and sinking Allied shipping virtually at will).
If you are any good at this stuff volatility is your friend.
At least until everyone else quits and you're bartering junk silver for wheat as the world sinks into a new dark age.*

...It was while skimming the GFD list that this popped out (remember this is inflation adjusted!):

Best and Worst Investment Periods in Germany

What were the best and worst months in the history of the German stock market? The most obvious factor is the importance of the hyperinflation of 1922 through 1924. The data have been calculated in real returns, adjusting for inflation during the hyperinflation of the 1920s, and as you can see, the hyperinflation provided investors with both strong returns and dismal returns, though more of the latter. The dates outside of the 1920s which registered as among the best and the worst are conspicuous, October 1949 for the stabilization of the German financial system, November 1918 for the end of World War I, September 1931 in the middle of the collapse of the German economy, and of course, October 1987.

Best Months Percent Return Worst Month Percent Return
September 1923 99.12% August 1922 -43.90%
December 1922 67.91% December 1923 -31.68%
June 1923 60.38% July 1922 -29.94%
August 1924 47.66% August 1923 -29.32%
November 1923 38.25% November 1919 -29.26%
October 1949 32.04% April 1924 -27.98%
April 1920 31.67% September 1931 -25.85%
February 1923 29.58% October 1922 -24.65%
April 1923 29.28% November 1918 -23.16%
October 1923 26.20% October 1987 -27.31%

The Best and Worst Years

What about the best and worst years for stocks in Germany? Again, the 1920s and 1930s dominate the data, with 1923 providing probably the strongest return to any stock market in the history of stock markets as German stocks recovered from the collapse into hyperinflation of 1922 when stocks provided their worst returns in German history. The post-World War II period also provided some of Germany's best returns.

Best Year Ending Percent Return Worst Year Ending Percent Return
November 1923 1229.73% October 1922 -84.89%
January 1924 521.73% February 1920 -81.25%
July 1959 126.11% August 1919 -77.65%
February 1950 120.22% January 1923 -67.79%
January 1927 114.11% December 1918 -56.03%
February 1921 110.39% November 1924 -48.26%
December 1926 108.11% April 1932 -46.29%
February 1927 107.09% September 1931 -44.30%
December 1949 102.32% January 1926 -38.88%
January 1952 98.17% December 1987 -36.49%


Ja, I have your puny little American 11%.

I haven't checked these numbers against Gielen (Gregor, I forget the book) but I seem to remember that during the first week of 1924 the Berlin Exchange was up 30%, so these are the right order of magnitude. Here are the Global Financial Data lists of largest moves through 1999.

*It's hard for me to type those last few words whithout hearing Churchill's voice delivering the "Their Finest Hour" speech:
"...Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this Island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands. But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science."

California to withhold a bigger chunk of paychecks "Technically, it's not an income tax increase:"

Putting the fun in dysfuntional!
From the Los Angeles Times:

"You'll get the money back eventually."

Starting Sunday, cash-strapped California will dig deeper into the pocketbooks of wage earners -- holding back 10% more than it already does in state income taxes just as the biggest shopping season of the year kicks into gear.

Technically, it's not a tax increase, even though it may feel like one when your next paycheck arrives. As part of a bundle of budget patches adopted in the summer, the state is taking more money now in withholding, even though workers' annual tax bills won't change.

Think of it as a forced, interest-free loan: You'll be repaid any extra withholding in April. Those who would receive a refund anyway will receive a larger one, and those who owe taxes will owe less....MORE
Now, how do you spell tyrannicide?

Wilbur Ross Sees ‘Huge’ Commercial Real Estate Crash (AGO)

Mr. Ross is one of the very, very sharpest operators in the market. Distressed debt and related areas are so fraught with ways to lose money that anyone who can even survive is smarter than the average bear. To make the kind of money in the field that Mr. Ross has made is proof positive of a deep understanding of the biz. We titled one of our posts "A Guy Who Might be Smarter then Warren Buffett Talks About the Financial Mess (AGO; BRK.A)".
From Bloomberg:

Billionaire investor Wilbur L. Ross Jr., said today the U.S. is in the beginning of a “huge crash in commercial real estate.”

“All of the components of real estate value are going in the wrong direction simultaneously,” said Ross, one of nine money managers participating in a government program to remove toxic assets from bank balance sheets. “Occupancy rates are going down. Rent rates are going down and the capitalization rate -- the return that investors are demanding to buy a property -- are going up.”

U.S. commercial property sales are forecast to fall to the lowest in almost two decades as the industry endures its worst slump since the savings and loan crisis of the early 1990s, according to property research firm Real Capital Analytics Inc. The Moody’s/REAL Commercial Property Price Indices already have fallen almost 41 percent since October 2007, Moody’s Investors Service said Oct. 19.

Billionaire George Soros, speaking today at a lecture organized by the Central European University in Budapest, said a “bloodletting” may be coming for leveraged buyouts and commercial real estate.

“The American consumer will no longer be able to serve as the motor for the world economy,” said Soros, 79.

His comments came in the same week that Capmark Financial Group Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after originating $60 billion in commercial property loans in 2006 and 2007.

‘Extreme Caution’

Ross, the 71-year-old chairman and chief executive officer of WL Ross & Co. LLC, said in an interview on Bloomberg Radio that he would use “extreme caution” before putting money into commercial real estate, especially office space, because properties are losing tenants....MORE

In a January '08 post, "Billionaire to rescue of crisis-hit US insurer (ABK)" (gosh was it less than two years ago that the biggest problem on the radar was MBIA and Ambac?), We said:

If you are running a mismanaged monoline insurer you DO NOT want this man pulling into the parking lot. His presence means the jig's up and you're buffing that résumé. He is a VERY serious dude....

Wilbur Ross
Bond play: Ross is 'keen to take advantage of a coming wave of consolidation'

Speculator Bets on a New Trading Range for First Solar, Inc. (FSLR)

From Schaeffer's Research:

...Thursday's plunge effectively snapped FSLR out of its trading range between $140 and $160, which had confined the equity's movements since mid-September. In fact, the equity didn't stop sliding until meeting up with former support in the $120 neighborhood. Judging by today's option activity, at least one speculator is looking for FSLR to find itself a fresh sideways channel to occupy during the short term.

Specifically, there seems to be a short strangle tucked away within today's option trading. At exactly noon, FSLR's December 135 call and December 120 put each saw a block of 175 contracts cross the tape. The calls traded closer to the bid price than the ask, while the puts traded squarely at the bid -- indicating these contracts were most likely sold.

In a short strangle, the trader is looking for the underlying equity to remain pinned between the two sold strikes through expiration, allowing both options to expire worthless. The initial premium received from the sale of both options is the maximum potential profit....MORE

Goldman Looks to Buy Fannie Tax Credits (FNM)

From the Wall Street Journal:

Treasury Lurks as Spoiler as Political Climate Favors Main Street's Benefit Over Wall Street's
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is in talks to buy millions of dollars of tax credits from government-controlled mortgage giant Fannie Mae, but the potential deal is running into opposition from the U.S. Treasury, which could block the deal.

A sale would bring some needed financial respite to Fannie Mae. But the administration is leery about approving a deal that would help Goldman reduce its tax bill, given the animus held by many lawmakers toward big Wall Street firms in general and Goldman in particular.

The Obama administration is looking at the deal with a critical eye and could block it. Goldman, meanwhile, is hopeful it could win approval this week.

"Treasury is reviewing and will not let it proceed unless it is clearly in the taxpayers' interest," spokesman Andrew Williams said.

Fannie Mae and its regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, declined to comment.

"Fannie Mae is owned and controlled by the federal government," said Goldman Sachs spokesman Michael DuVally, who wouldn't confirm the company was in talks with Fannie about the credits. "The only basis on which approval for any transaction would be given would be if it was clearly in the taxpayers' best interest."

Precise details of the deal couldn't be learned. Some on Wall Street think Goldman could buy $1 billion of the tax credits, which would allow the bank to offset a portion of its profit. It is unclear how much of a discount Goldman is offering to pay. One person familiar with the potential transaction said Goldman could line up other investors for the deal as well.

Nearly every major business decision at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is vetted or directed by the government. Officials at both firms have complained about their contradictory missions -- they are at once private companies and tools of public policy.

The Goldman talks are emblematic of these conflicts: A deal that could help Fannie Mae might also be politically unpalatable.

The Treasury Department has purchased $45.9 billion in preferred stock in Fannie Mae since it took over the company last year to pump money into the firm, giving taxpayers a substantial stake in the firm.

The tax credits are an incentive in federal law to spur investments in low-income housing. The law allows investors to receive tax credits for financing qualified housing developments. These credits tend to be drawn out over periods such as 10 years, and are attractive to companies that know they will be profitable during that span.

Both Fannie Mae and its rival Freddie Mac loaded up on low-income housing tax credits during the real-estate boom. But the credits have lost considerable value in the past 18 months. Fannie Mae has lost tens of billions of dollars and, like many other financial firms, has been unable to use them. Fannie Mae had $5.8 billion in such partnership investments as of June 30....MORE