Thursday, June 13, 2013

Cautionary Words from Leon Black

Leon Black, of Apollo Asset Management, quoted in Barron's last month (registration or subscription may be required):
"It's almost biblical. There is a time to reap and there's a time to sow," Leon Black, chairman and chief executive of Apollo Global Management declared to the Milken Institute's global conference in Los Angeles, alluding to that same Scriptural passage. "We are harvesting," he added pointedly.
That is, the private-equity giant is a net seller because things simply can't get much better. "We think it's a fabulous environment to be selling," he says, noting Apollo has sold about $13 billion in assets in the past 15 months. "We're selling everything that's not nailed down. And if we're not selling, we're refinancing."
That's because there has never been such a good time to borrow -- which is raising warning flags for Black. "The financing market is as good as we have ever seen it. It's back to 2007 levels. There is no institutional memory," he observed, referring to the peak of the last credit bubble.
Black worked for Drexel Burnham Lambert, back in the bad ol' days. Black is bright and has a privileged view of the market for bank loans, especially for buyouts.

I don't think that everything literally should be sold, and he doesn't seem to be saying exactly that, but it's more of a seller's market than a buyer's market, and that it is a good time to tidy up a portfolio. Of course, for as long as the Fed chooses, cash will not be keeping up with inflation.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Nice to be Getting Back to Normal (Not)

From the WSJ today:
Investors are once again clamoring for a risky investment blamed for helping unleash the financial crisis: the synthetic CDO.

In a sign of how hard Wall Street is trying to satisfy voracious demand for higher returns amid rock-bottom interest rates, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley bankers in London are moving to assemble so-called synthetic collateralized debt obligations.
Again! Full story here (registration required). Article is titled "One of Wall Street's Riskiest Bets Returns."

This reminds me of a passage in Charles Kindleberger's excellent book, Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises, which first came out in 1978. (Just another light summer read.) He writes,
The paradox is equivalent to the prisoner's dilemma. Central banks should act one way (lending freely) to halt the panic, but another (leaving the market to its own devices) to improve the chances of preventing future panics. Actuality inevitably dominates contingency. Today wins over tomorrow. (Fourth edition, p. 164)
Unfortunately, all medicine, even necessary medicine, has side effects. I do not envy the decisions that the Federal Reserve is faced with making, but with junk bond yields near record lows and CDOs returning, the sooner we can end q.e. and ultra-low interest rates, the better.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Worth Reading

Both of these are good:

1. William Dudley, CEO of the New York branch of the Fed, reflecting on what the Fed got right, and wrong, since the crisis of 2008. Calculated Risk did a good job highlighting key passages here. Dudley is thoughtful, and the whole thing is worthwhile. Dudley delivered this talk at the Japan Society (appropriately enough) yesterday.

2. Speaking of bubbles and their consequences, Washington Irving wrote an amazingly accurate description of bubbles almost two centuries ago, in 1820. Forget the Financial Times; this passage from Irving's The Crayon Papers may be the timeliest thing I have read this year. Just read pages 41-43. A friend just sent it. New to me, but I see that it gets quoted on the web from time to time.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Cautionary Words from Paul Volcker

This new piece in Forbes quotes former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker saying that the U.S. mortgage markets are now a subsidiary of the state.

Some see Volcker's views as simplistic. I think he favors being clear, but that is not the same thing as being simplistic.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Quantification of Love

Can love be reduced to a number? Some songs have tried, at least, to quantify it:

Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe (Barry White, soul)
Heartaches by the Number (Ray Price; country)
How Deep is Your Love? (Bee Gees; disco)
Three Times a Lady (Lionel Richie and the Commodores; pop)
You're the First, the Last, My Everything (Barry White; soul)

A poem by Browning begins, "How do I love thee? Let me count the ways."

When we try to count something that goes beyond reason, we are going to have some trouble. Maybe that is why this conceit appeals: built-in tragedy.

Granted, measuring the ways in which I love you is not the same, exactly, as quantifying love itself. I don't want to be too literal here.

My wife, Ann, noticed this theme in Barry White's music. Landy Pupo-Thompson and Matt Thompson came up with the pop and disco examples.

Can you think of any more quantifying-the-unquantifiable songs? If so, please tell me.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Berkshire Hathaway Meeting Notes

So far, the best set of notes from Saturday's annual meeting, in Omaha, of Berkshire Hathway shareholders I have seen is this one from Motley Fool.

[UPDATE 5/7/13: This set, by Peter Boodell, is even better. It is nearly a transcript.]

I also found the NYT's set, here, helpful.

There is a good set from Morningstar, too. I don't think a subscription is required (but if so, it is a good excuse to sign up for Morningstar, which is useful).

That's probably enough, but for those wanting every tidbit, this set from the FT is worthy, and Charlie Munger did a long CNBC interview with Becky Quick.

I often go to the meeting, but skipped it this year.

Friday, April 26, 2013

El-Erian Interview

Nice video interview of Mohammed El-Erian, posted earlier this month at the WSJ. El-Arian emphasizes how artificial asset prices are these days. The main reason is aggressive experimentation by central bankers who, of course, are in a very tight spot. Nine minutes.

The interview is by Francesco Guerrera, who is smart, independent of mind, and one of the few financial journalists worth reading.