Israel Window to Bomb Iraq Reactor Closed ?

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 8:30PM

Debka via UBS’ s Andy Lees (in London) by way of Art Cashin in NY:

Geopolitics – Debka file reports that the announcement that Russia is set to activate Iran’s first nuclear power station by loading the fuel on August 21st has caused a major flap in Israel as it is reported that Russia has stationed S-300 anti missile batteries in Abkhazia on the Black Sea to protect the power station, which means that Israel’s air route to Iran is hereby closed and Moscow will do its utmost to thwart an Israeli air strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities. John Bolton, former US ambassador to the UN defined Moscow’s date for loading the fuel rods into the reactor as the point of no return, describing August 21st as a deadline “by which Israel would have to launch an attack on Iran’s Bushehr reactor before it effectively becomes immune to assault”. Once they are loaded, then an attack would risk spreading radiation.

Discuss . . .

Media Hits

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 4:00PM

I have to run out to visit The Dylan Ratigan Show 4pm (EST), then on to the other side of city and for CNBC’s Fast Money at 5pm (EST).

I will post videos when they go live on line (feel free to beat me to it in comments)

Mandelbox Zoom

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 3:28PM

This will blow your minds

Mandelbox Zoom from hömpörgő on Vimeo

music: Dajuin Yao -­ Satisfactio­n of Oscilla­tion

hat tip boingboing

History of World GDP

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 3:00PM

Via the Economist, we see this intriguing histogram of Global GDP (below)

The Economist notes:

“Data compiled by Angus Maddison, an economist who died earlier this year, suggest that China and India were the biggest economies in the world for almost all of the past 2000 years.”

But then asks a really silly question:

“Why they fell so far behind may be more of a mystery than why they are currently flourishing.”

They were the biggest economies because they had a the biggest populations, and up until 200 years ago, population size was a dominant factor in economic output.

Once the industrial revolution came along, followed by the information revolution, mere size mattered less. First the Europeans, then the Americans leveraged technology to blow out GDP on a per capita basis. Steam engine, internal combustion engine, silicon makes up for size.

Now, India and China are using industrial leverage, and are moving up in the world on a GDP per capita basis.

Now >

Hat tip Chart Porn

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UPDATE: I see that Paul points to a gigantic Excel table, if you want to play with numbers yourself.

Long Term Market Cycles

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 11:30AM

Ron Griess (The Chart Store) looks at the longer term market cycles of the last century. He divides them into 5 sections, 3 bears and 2 bulls.

The table breaking the periods down further is after the jump . . .

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click for larger graph

Read the rest of this entry »

The Lafite Puzzle

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By Guest Author - August 17th, 2010, 10:10AM

The Lafite Puzzle
ANDY XIE

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China’s impact on the luxury French wine market has been enormous. The French fine wine index (Liv-100 index) is up by roughly 37% from a year ago, 24% year-to-date, and its upward momentum remains strong.

Not many asset classes have hit new highs above their mid-2008 levels. In addition to fine French wine, gold and China’s residential property sector reached new highs in 2009. But I can’t recall any others. And among the three, French fine wines seem to have performed best.

There is little doubt that Chinese buyers, not Wall Street traders, are the force behind this positive trajectory for French fine wine. Bordeaux wine producers are all talking about China and Chinese buyers seem to dominate the en premieur for the 2009 vintage available from next year. In fact Chinese mainland buyers are increasingly pricing out buyers from Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong in the quest for ‘first growth’ wines.

French wine is, of course, different from a Louis Vuitton bag. When you drink a bottle of wine, it is gone. You can store it as an investment, but the process is complicated and costly.

For most Chinese, investment is actually a secondary consideration. Drinking it now is more important. Yet this seems inconsistent with the dominant Chinese preference for accumulation. So the question is, why so much demand from China?

Like Japan in the 1980s, an important factor seems to be the need to lubricate business relationships. This phenomenon plays out across the world during rapid economic development. Successful economic development may require a little intoxication – when one sinks a lot of money into an under-developed economy, it needs courage.

The business drinking culture has been changing in China. Like elsewhere, liquor consumption (like baijiu) has been declining out of health concerns. So the need for alcohol in business entertainment has produced a unique Chinese phenomenon: massive demand for Chateau Lafite wine. Lafite is one of the five first growth wines from Bordeaux. France classified Bordeaux wines into first to fifth growth in 1855 for its World Expo. At that time four chateaux – Lafite, Latour, Haut Brion, and Margaux – were classified as first growth. In 1975 Mouton also qualified. The chateaux in some of the Bordeaux areas like Pomerol and St. Emilion do not participate in this classification system and have started their own, with some of their wines even more expensive than the five first growth wines. Nevertheless, the first growth label travels well, especially to a new market like China.

Among the first growth wines, Lafite has taken on a life of its own, rising much quicker than the fine wine market as a whole, and other first growth wines in particular. For example, 2000 vintage Lafite has appreciated by about 550% in pound sterling since 2005, compared to 180% for the market as a whole. The most comparable wine to Lafite is Latour, and the price of its same vintage has risen roughly in line with the overall market. The price differentials between Lafite and other vintages of first growth wines are not as dramatic as for the 2000 vintage, but they are still large. Something special has happened to Lafite these past few years. That something is China.

Essentially, Lafite has become the unofficial Chinese wine for business entertainment. There are theories as to why, the most popular being that the Chinese translation is easy to say and sounds nice. I am not sure this is the best explanation. Drinking at business events in China is not really sophisticated; it is more about getting tipsy quickly. Guests are expected to be impressed by the price of expensive wine, and not the taste.

Is the Lafite phenomenon a bubble? As Greenspan has said, one can never be sure if a bubble exists until it bursts. It is possible that Chinese drinkers appreciate something in Lafite that other drinkers never did. Hence, as Chinese become richer and spend more on wines, Lafite benefits from this source of demand more than others. So the Lafite phenomenon may actually be a price revaluation, rather than a bubble.

An alternative scenario could be that other first growth wines will get the Lafite treatment over time. Chinese demand for Lafite is due to lack of knowledge about alternatives, so when Chinese drinkers become more sophisticated, the demand for other first growth wines will probably increase. This could be a rising tide that will gradually lift other fine wines.

The second scenario is possible, and it has to do with the French system for wine production and the laws that make it impossible for the great wine chateaux in Bordeaux to increase production. Bordeaux wine producers have to go for quality and high price rather than quantity. Hence, when a new source of demand comes, the price always goes up.

Indeed, the Lafite price is now so high that it has led to a large counterfeit industry. Some analysts estimate that 70% of the Lafite consumed in China is fake. I have personally experienced this on a few occasions, although the people who served me fake Lafite were unaware of its questionable provenance because they paid the same high price fetched by the genuine article. I could tell that the fake was good wine too, probably a good second growth poured into a Lafite bottle. Forgers have targeted the legendary 1982 vintage in particular. Many wealthy Chinese have bought large stocks of 1982 Lafite and the odds are most of it is fake. There are so few bottles of the real vintage left that it is highly unlikely to find several cases of the real thing.

When the Chinese economy matures in ten or 15 years and business entertainment declines in importance, Lafite prices may come under pressure. At this point demand will be mostly for self enjoyment and hence, more price sensitive. Japan has already gone through such a cycle.

A market is efficient when informed consumers make rational choices. An efficient market motivates producers to improve quality and control costs and this cycle leads to great brands that last.

The French wine market was like that, but I am afraid that Chinese demand is decreasing the market efficiency and may bring down great brands over time. When winemakers see prices resulting from propaganda, not quality, they will focus on marketing and decrease their investment in improving quality. It would be a tragedy if Chinese demand, by bringing easy money, brings down a French legacy that has lasted for five centuries.

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Andy Xie is a former Morgan Stanley economist, now living in China. This was originally published in China International Business Daily on August 17, 2010

Judge DKs Citi-SEC Settlement

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 9:15AM

Hey, just like BofA!

Another settlement, another DK from a judge:

“A federal judge refused to approve the Securities and Exchange Commission’s $75 million settlement with Citigroup Inc. over the bank’s disclosure of subprime-mortgage problems, saying she is “baffled” by the proposed pact.

The move by U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle represents another challenge for the SEC as it tries to punish financial institutions blamed for the financial crisis.

The judge, striking a frustrated tone, fired several questions at the SEC, among them why it pursued only two individuals in the case and why Citigroup shareholders should have to pay for the alleged sins of bank executives.”

My issue with the proposed Citi settlement was that it is a) too small; and 2) too limited in executives covered. There were many more people involved in Citi’s $40 billion misstatements than the two execs cited here.

Oh, and U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle seems to have the same fundamental misunderstanding about punishing shareholders that Judge Jed S. Rakoff of Federal District Court in the Bank of America case did. Shareholders in corrupt companies are supposed to be punished . . .

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Previously:
Punishing Shareholders? Nonsense (August 3rd, 2010)

Source:
Judge Won’t Approve Citi-SEC Pact
KARA SCANNELL
WSJ, AUGUST 17, 2010
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704868604575433833841630548.html

July Housing Starts still reflect aftermath of tax credit

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By Peter Boockvar - August 17th, 2010, 9:05AM

July Housing Starts totaled 546k annualized, 14k less than expected and June was revised down by 12k to 537k. Permits at 565k were also below forecasts of 580k. The gain in starts m/o/m was solely led by multi family as single family starts fell to the lowest level since Apr ’09. Single family permits also fell to the lowest since Apr ’09. The two regions with the highest foreclosure competition to new building, the South and West, saw declines in single family construction while the Northeast and Midwest had modest gains. Housing is still dealing with the aftermath of the pull forward of demand into the Spring due to the tax credit so it will continue to be months before we know what’s real supply/demand and what has been messed with thru government stimulus. Another comment ahead of today’s housing summit, if the average taxpayer is still on the hook for someone else’s mortgage after this GSE revaluation process ends, we’ve learned nothing.

What will the Gov’t do now?/Irish bonds in demand

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By Peter Boockvar - August 17th, 2010, 8:26AM

The news of the day for policy makers, politicians and the financial standing of the US will be on full display today as more than 3 years after the subprime mortgage market started to implode, a debate about the future of our socialized housing finance system finally takes place. In terms of speculation of a pre Nov election surprise/gift from FNM and FRE to those borrowers who are under water, nothing is expected. Ireland had two solid bond auctions selling 3 1/2 yr and 10 yr debt, sending their yields and CDS lower. Spain also had a good auction too and the safety grab of German bunds and US Treasuries are reversing a touch. Shrugged off was the weaker than expected German ZEW # (expectations of future growth within 6 mo’s) because the current conditions component was almost twice as high as expected at the highest since Jan ’08. The Shanghai index closed up to just shy of the highest since May.

2008 Bailout Counter-Factual

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By Barry Ritholtz - August 17th, 2010, 7:45AM

Earlier this month, I discussed a NYT OpEd by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner (Welcome to My Job Security). Geithner pointed approvingly to the report released by Alan Blinder and Mark Zandi, advisers to President Bill Clinton and Senator John McCain, respectively:

“The combined actions since the fall of 2007 of the Federal Reserve, the White House and Congress helped save 8.5 million jobs and increased gross domestic product by 6.5 percent relative to what would have happened had we done nothing.” (emphasis added).

I did not have cause to disagree with the Blinder/Zandi numbers; they are best guesses using Moody’s econometric modeling. However, I did criticize their overall approach, saying: “That is now our standard — what was done versus doing nothing? That is truly the wrong counter-factual…

David Weidner took issue with that assessment. In his column A Nation That Won’t Be Fooled Again, he noted:

“The financial crisis and stagnant economy have made us bitter. We’ve become a nation of complainers and critics. Nothing is ever good enough for us. The bailouts are misguided. The stimulus didn’t work or wasn’t enough. Reform is too weak or makes matters worse. It’s one thing to call the glass half empty, but these days we deny the existence of tableware.”

I don’t disagree with Weidner’s perspective. Many people have gone off the deep end, obsessing with “recession porn,” seemingly addicted to negative commentary and wild conspiracy theories.

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My disagreement with the Zandi-Blinder report is not its theoretical underpinnings — it is by definition a hypothetical counter-factual. Rather, it is the counter-factual Blinder/Zandi chose to use: “What would the economy look like now if we had done nothing?

Instead, I propose a better counter-factual: “What if we had done the right thing, instead of nothing — or the wrong thing?

A quick definition first: The term “counter-factual” is a term of art often misunderstood. The definition of counter-factual is a “what-if” — counter-factuals explore historical incidents by extrapolating an alternative time line:

-What-if Chrysler was not bailed out in 1980?
-What-if JPM was not guaranteed $29B of Bear’s liabilities?
-What if Citi and BofA were put into reorg/receivership?
-What if AIG’s counter-parties were not made whole 100 cents on the dollar?

We don’t have alternative universe laboratories to run control bailout experiments, but we can imagine the alternative outcomes if different actions were taken.

So let’s do just that. Imagine a nation in the midst of an economic crisis, circa September-December 2008. Only this time, there are key differences: 1) A President who understood Capitalism requires insolvent firms to suffer failure (as opposed to a lame duck running out the clock); 2) A Treasury Secretary who was not a former Goldman Sachs CEO, with a misguided sympathy for Wall Street firms at risk of failure (as opposed to overseeing the greatest wealth transfer in human history);  3) A Federal Reserve Chairman who understood the limits of the Federal Reserve (versus a massive expansion of its power and balance sheet).

In my counter factual, the bailouts did not occur. Instead of the Japanese model, the US government went the Swedish route of banking crises: They stepped in with temporary nationalizations, prepackaged bankruptcies, and financial reorganizations; banks write down all of their bad debt, they sell off the paper. Int he end, the goal is to spin out clean, well financed, toxic-asset-free banks into the public markets.

Thus, Bear Stearns is not bailed out by the Fed. Instead, the FOMC chair tells JP Morgan’s CEO “You have 9 trillion dollars in exposure to Bear derivatives. Instead of guaranteeing you $29 billion for a risk free takeover, we will start preparing a liquidation plan for Bear. And given your exposure to them, we best plan one for JPM too. (and if you don’t like that, you can kiss our ass).”

Tough talk, but the outcome would have been much better: JPM would likely have bought Bear anyway, if for no other reason than to prevent someone else from buying them, and forcing JPM into bankruptcy, to pick up their assets for pennies on the dollar. That would have set a much better tone for future bailout expectations, versus the massive moral hazard the Fed created with the Bear bailout.

Lehman? Prepackaged bankruptcy, less disruptive.

AIG ? There never was an implicit government guarantee that all counter-parties dealing with AIG-Financial Products — a giant leveraged structured finance hedge fund hiding under the skirt of the regulated insurer — would be made whole. But the Bush/Paulson/Bernanke bailout created one. Instead, AIG-FP should have been carved out for dissolution/wind down, while the insurer could have continued to exist on its own. AIG would have had the liability for the government’s costs, but the counter parties? They would have gotten zero. If you go to Vegas and shoot craps in the alley way behind the casino, don’t expect the gaming commission to collect your winnings. But that is what we did with AIG.

Fannie & Freddie: Two more crappy banks that should have been wound down. These were publicly traded companies that were guaranteed lower interest rates — not an infinite backing from taxpayers. They should have been wound down like all any insolvent bank. Today, they serve as the mechanism for backdoor bailouts of the rest of the wounded banking sector.

The same approach should have occurred with the rest of the crowd of irresponsible banks, investment houses, monoline insurers, etc. One by one, we should have put each insolvent bank into receivership, cleaned up the balance sheer, sold off the bad debts for 15-50 cents on the dollar, fired the management, wiped out the shareholders, and spun out the proceeds, with the bondholders taking the haircut, and the taxpayers on the hook for precisely zero dollars. Citi, Bank of America, Wamu, Wachovia,  Countrywide, Lehman, Merrill, Morgan, etc. all of them should have been handled this way.

The net result of this would have been more turmoil, lower stock prices, and a sharper, but much shorter economic contraction. It would have been painful and disruptive — like emergency surgery is — but its better than an exploded appendix.

And today, we would have a much healthier economy:

Functioning Banking System: Clean banks not laden with bad paper would be actually making loans to qualified borrowers;

Healthier Housing Sector: An unsubsidized real estate sector — no tax credits to first time buyers, no ultra low interest rates — would have had much lower prices, with far less bad mortgages floating around. We would be much further along in the foreclosure process. More of the folks who bought more house than they could afford would have moved into homes they can afford;

Much Smaller Federal Deficits: The trillions of dollars of bailout costs on the books of Uncle Sam would not exist. Not he Tarp, not the government guarantees, not the GSEs, none of it.

Right-sized Finance Sector: Instead of an outsized banking sector, finance in the US would be more proportional relative to the overall economy. Resources and assets (including programmers, quants, and engineers) would go to more appropriate firms.

Bond holders Lose: Here is an insane idea: If you lend money to a firm that goes out of business, you lose most of that money (You do get a high priority in the liquidation). The US Taxpayer does not step in to guarantee the loss. Crazy, I know, but it is crazy enough that it just might work!

Counter-parties Lose: See above

Managements Lose: It seems that for the most part, most of the upper level bankers who helped bring about the crisis are still working for the same banks. A study found that “92% of the management and directors of the top 17 recipients of TARP funds” are still working for the same banks. Reorg would have caused these people to be fired; perhaps the bankruptcy judges would have clawed back some of the execs ill gotten gains.

Moral Hazard: Bankers expectations that they can behave recklessly because Uncle Sam will bail them out, is dramatically reduced.

While we certainly can compare what was done with doing nothing, the proper counter-factual is to compare what was done with what should have been done.

Throwing trillions of dollars at the crisis, and hoping for the best will provide a short term improvement over doing nothing; trillions of dollars have that sort of power.

The proper comparison, however, should be versus what should have been done. Performing that analysis leads one to a very different set of conclusions . . .

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Sources:
Perhaps, It’s Time to Play Offense
DAVID LEONHARDT
NYT: September 16, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/17/business/17leonhardt.html

A Nation That Won’t Be Fooled Again
David Weidner
WSJ, AUGUST 12, 2010
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704901104575424332141218568.html

Previously:
Banking Sector Remains (literally) Unchanged (January 4th, 2010, 10)

Welcome to My Job Security (August 3rd, 2010)

Krugman’s Crisis Responsibility: Reagan or Bush ? (June 12th, 2009)

Grading Financial Regulatory Reform (June 25th, 2010)

Bear Stearns, Lehman Execs Kept Billions . . . (November 23rd, 2009)

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