Risk on the rise as political leaders give in to mob rule

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By Guest Author - October 26th, 2011, 8:30AM

Risk on the rise as political leaders give in to mob rule
Ray Dalio
FT, October 25, 2011

~~~

We are in the midst of a deleveraging, we are nearly out of ammunition and we are at each other’s throats. Being in a deleveraging and nearly out of ammunition is a very difficult position to be in. But, being at each other’s throats is our biggest problem.

Our character and our political and social systems are now being tested in ways that have typically been tested in past deleveragings. In deleveragings bad economic conditions typically lead to emotional reactions, social and political fragmentation, poor decision-making and increased conflict. When this occurs in democracies, the checks and balance system, which is intended to yield the best decisions for the whole, can stand in the way of thoughtful leadership and lead to ineffective “mob” rule. This dynamic can lead to a self-reinforcing downward spiral.

Frustrations increase, the established ways of doing things come under attack and frustrations over the ineffectiveness of government creates the perceived need for someone to gain control of the mess. Plato spoke of this dynamic. It was the reason Hitler was elected in 1933.

In our opinion these types of risks are now emerging and should be taken into consideration when trying to figure out what may lie ahead. Rather than trying to resolve disagreements through thoughtful discourse, people are now trying to grab power to beat and suppress their opponents. Tensions between the rich and the poor, capitalists and socialists, those in and out of power and different factions in each group are now intensifying in a manner that is classic in deleveragings. Politicians who are fighting for power in a political year are fanning the flames and are increasingly willing to do risky things (like shutting down the government) in pursuit of their missions and popular support.

This growing populism will have important implications for monetary, fiscal and trade policies and will significantly increase risks of a markets downturn and a global depression.

Regarding monetary policy, the mob is at the gates of the Federal Reserve and wants to grab control while those on the inside are in disagreement about what should be done. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke and those who helped him save the country from depression are now under siege. These challenges are being faced in different forms by most central banks at the same time as they are nearly out of ammunition – i.e., their capacities to ease are very limited because they cannot stimulate private credit creation and because they cannot get money in the hands of people who will spend it. For these reasons there is greater risk that central banks cannot save us as they have always saved us in the past.

The battle between the left that wants to tax the rich more and the right that wants to cut entitlement spending is at a fierce stalemate that is likely to intensify in more scary ways. As a result, fiscal policy is unlikely to be supportive to economic growth.

With high unemployment and growing anger, the “mob” is blaming the foreigners who “took their jobs,” especially the Chinese who they say are “manipulating” their currency to “compete unfairly”. And since politicians want popular support, they are navigating this issue to gain political benefit (e.g., to put the US President in the position of having to choose between the political suicide of vetoing Senator Charles Schumer’s currency bill and clashing with China) rather than to approach this difficult issue calmly and analytically. Trade flows and capital flows are increasingly being looked at by all sides as possible weapons in an economic war. As a result, the risks of bad surprises in trade and capital flows are heightened.

Mobs are at the doors of bankers and others in the financial system, screaming to politicians to put these people in jail while the vote-seeking politicians are fanning the flames rather than reminding people that the legal system is the way these people should be judged. Since banks are levered about 15 to 1, it doesn’t take much of a debt problem to cause them solvency problems, and since in deleveragings debt problems are big, there is significant risk banks will run out of equity again and the fury against them will intensify. For these reasons risks to the global banking system are much greater than normal.

While we hope that most people and their leaders will approach these difficult challenges calmly and collectively, we would not be meeting our fiduciary responsibilities if we bet on this happening without clear evidence of it. We are not alone in having and expressing our concerns in what has come to be known as “risk-on” and “risk-off” market movements.

If we calm down and work together to properly manage this difficult situation – for example, if we can properly distribute both the austerity and the increased efforts that are required to manage our debt burdens – we can get through this deleveraging without great pain. If we can’t, we may experience an economic, social and political collapse.

Ray Dalio is founder of Bridgewater Associates

Will curtain finally rise on Europe’s new plan?

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By Peter Boockvar - October 26th, 2011, 7:53AM

Merkel has finished up her speech to the German Parliament where she seems to have broad support in going forward with a leveraging of the EFSF in return for capping the German exposure at 221b euros that was agreed to back on July 21st. With respect to the Greek debt restructuring, a Greek newspaper is saying the 50% haircut will take the form of a debt exchange for 30 yr bonds totaling 35% of every 100 euros of debt owned and a 15% payment in cash. Bottom line though for this entire crisis still comes down to Italy and Spain and their ability to grow their economy and cut their debt over the next few years. The EU is still awaiting a letter today specifically from Italian officials on how they plan to do so. Italian business confidence was in line with expectations but fell to the lowest level since Jan ’10. The first ECB 12 month lending facility since it was reintroduced was open today and European banks borrowed 56.9b euros, less than the 70b that was expected. In Asia, comments from Chinese Premier Wen on policy are being taken by some that they will move to ease conditions if need be over the next 6 months. Copper is rising to a one month high in response and the Shanghai index rallied. In the US, after sharp declines last week, refi’s rose 4.4% and purchases were up by 6.4%. II: Bulls 40.0 v 35.8 Bears 37.9 v 41.0

Is the Worst of the Bear Market Behind Us?

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By Barry Ritholtz - October 26th, 2011, 7:20AM

Is the worst of the market sell off over?

If we look at long term charts of prior collapses, it appears there is lots of upside to go.

I am less convinced that there is nothing but smooth sailing ahead. For markets to continue to rally, we likely need to avoid a major collapse in Europe, sidestep a recession in the US, and see some job creation and wage improvement here that can translate into improvement in retail, auto and home sales.

As of today, I remain dubious of that as an immediate outcome.

Still, the breakout last week above the 3 month trading range at ~1220-25 last week suggests some more upside from here, assuming the new trading range sticks. The playbook calls for a pullback and test of the breakout — traditionally, making for a great entry point — and if that test successful, the next leg up should then begin.

Hence, your posture is dramatically impacted by your time frame. If you are looking out 1-3 months, you are probably bullish. If your outlook is measured in 6-12 months, you might be less sanguine.  And the time between is anyone’s guess . . .

Here is what Doug Short called the “4 Bad Bears”:

>

Click to enlarge chart:

Source: Advisor Perspectives

Android Dreams

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By Barry Ritholtz - October 26th, 2011, 7:00AM

A tribute to Ridley Scott and Vangelis, whose work on Blade Runner has been a huge source of inspiration in my shooting time lapses. As always please watch in HD with sound on! Shot over a year in Tokyo with a Canon 5dmk2, mainly in the Shinjuku area.

android dreams from Samuel Cockedey on Vimeo.

Music: “Main Titles” and “Blush Response” from the Blade Runner soundtrack.

android dreams from Samuel Cockedey on Vimeo.

More information on the process here

Selected sequences available for licensing here: gettyimages.com/​Search/​Search.aspx?contractUrl=2&language=en-US&assetType=film&p=cockedey&src=standard

The Crowd

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By Guest Author - October 26th, 2011, 6:30AM

The Crowd
Jawad Mian
October 26, 2011

The following was written by Jawad Mian, Portfolio Manager based in Doha, Qatar

~~~

By any simple measure, my life has been one ruled by conformity. I wasn’t a rebel growing up. I didn’t smoke, drink, or pursue one-night stands. Nor was I a part of the Satwa G’s or Abu Shagara Boys. They were the bandana-wearing bikers (bicycles, at the time) that roamed the streets looking for trouble. I simply espoused my parent’s values and strived to be the ‘good’ son. In school, I wasn’t the prankster or the bully. I was quiet and just plain shy. Not surprisingly, that didn’t get me anywhere with the ladies. Maybe, I should’ve worn a leather jacket and have gel-infused hair. Grease style. In any case, if it weren’t for my fancy dance routine in the annual talent show to the tune of Cher’s Dov’e L’amore, I was probably going to be ‘the guy most likely to be forgotten’ because I quite simply blended in with the crowd.

I hate being part of the crowd. No, I’m not socially awkward. I don’t have Asperger’s in case you’re wondering. Even if I did, however, that may not be such a bad thing if you ask Dr. Michael Burry who lives with the ‘disorder’. In light of which (or, in spite of) he saw the world differently and spotted the bubble in the subprime-mortgage bond market long before anyone else. He put on ‘the greatest trade ever’ and raked in a modest hundred million dollars for himself. Not to mention that he became the star in Michael Lewis’ The Big Short to boot. That’s not half bad. Dr. Burry bet against the crowd and won. For according to investment mythology, the crowd must always be wrong. Toujours.

People consider investing to be a science which is studied and ruled by their models, and not an art to be felt. The whole investment process is rife with statistics, tables, mathematics, and dazzling reason. The famous stock market speculator Bernard Baruch said, ‘But what actually registers in the stock market’s fluctuations are not the events themselves, but the human reactions to these events. In short, how millions of individual men and women feel these happenings may affect their future. Above all else, in other words, the stock market is people. It is people trying to read the future. And it is this intensely human quality that makes the stock market so dramatic an arena, in which men and women pit their conflicting judgments, their hopes and fears, strengths and weaknesses, greeds and ideals.’

Crowds are everywhere distinguished by feminine characteristics. The crowd does not reason. It only thinks it reasons. As presented by the savvy Mister Johnson in Adam Smith’s ‘The Money Game’, a crowd of men acts like a single woman. The mind of a crowd is like a woman’s mind. Then, if you have observed her a long time, you begin to see little tricks, little nervous movements of the hands when she is being false. Good research and good ideas are the one absolute necessity in the marketplace. But, we must also concede that markets move in cycles like all other rhythms of life. There is nothing so disastrous as a rational investment policy in an irrational world.

The market behaves like a crowd, and if you’ve read Gustave Le Bon’s ‘The Crowd’ you know a crowd is a composite personality. According to Dr. Le Bon the most striking peculiarity of a crowd was that whoever be the individuals that compose it, however like or unlike be their mode of life, their occupations, their character, or their intelligence, the fact that they have been transformed into a crowd puts them in possession of a sort of collective mind which makes them feel, think, and act in a manner quite different from that in which each individual of them would feel, think, and act were he in a state of isolation. I don’t believe myself to be completely outside of it but I sure as hell try.

The good Dr. Le Bon said that just from being in a crowd, a sentiment of invincible power overcomes us and the sentiment of responsibility which always controls individuals disappears entirely. And once we have dissolved responsibility, we are ripe for contagion and suggestibility and acts of irresistible impetuosity. The phenomenon of precisely such a hypnotic order has provided the premise of umpteen manias and bubbles throughout our history. From Dutch tulips through to Souk al Manakh where the unofficial Kuwait stock market had the third largest market cap in the world behind only the US and Japan and ahead of the UK and France. The list goes on. Men, it has been well said by Charles Mackay, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one.

It is really quite comfy to be part of the crowd. It has to do with people wanting the same things I imagine. Making the same mistakes. The kind of feeling you get when your friends do just as poorly on an exam as you. Or when you find ‘comfort’ in being down ‘slightly less’ than the benchmark even if the market goes down by 40 percent on the whole. Lord Keynes long ago opined that “investment based on long-term expectations is so difficult today as to be scarcely practicable. He who attempts it must surely lead much more laborious days and run greater risks than he who tries to guess better than the crowd how the crowd will behave; and given equal intelligence, he may make more disastrous mistakes.” It is certainly better to be comfy, everybody will agree, than not to be. Right?

Just remember, to quote Ralph Waldo Emerson – it is easy in the world to live after the world’s opinions; it is easy in solitude to live after your own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude.

Jawad S. Mian
Direct: +974 4405 6557
Mobile: +974 3343 3711
Email: jmian@qinvest.com

Clarke & Dawe on Quantitative Easing

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By Barry Ritholtz - October 26th, 2011, 6:06AM

“A very Large number, Economist”


Originally aired on ABC TV’s 7.30: 20/10/2011

~~~

Injury-free going into the weekend

Tuesday PM Reads

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By Anna W - October 25th, 2011, 4:30PM

Afternoon Train Reading:

• An apocalyptic end to world’s biggest bubble (Market Watch)
• Inflated Expectations for an Economic Fix (WSJ) see also In Cautious Times, Banks Flooded With Cash (NYT)
• A pox on all your AAA houses (FT.com)
• Ritholtz Interview: An Uncompromised View of Contemporary American Politics and Economics (Capitalism Without Failure)
• Court orders Overstock’s Deep Capture slander mill shut down (Stockwatch)
• Penny Wise and Euro Foolish (Hussman Funds) see also Risk on the rise as political leaders give in to mob rule (FT.com)
• Don’t Blink! The Hazards of Confidence (NYT)
• Steve Jobs & the art of focus (Presentation Zen) see also On Steve Jobs’s passing (Armed and Dangerous)
• How Netflix Lost 800,000 Members, and Good Will (NYT)
• An interview with David Eagleman, neuroscientist (boingboing)

What are you reading?

Things That Make You Go Hmmm…

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By John Mauldin - October 25th, 2011, 4:30PM

Things That Make You Go Hmmm…
John Mauldin
October 24, 2011

~~~

Do we need a law that makes it illegal to push a moose out of a moving aircraft? In baseball, what are the odds of a perfect game? How difficult will it be to solve the problems of the Eurozone? These and other issues are meditated upon by Grant Williams in his Things That Make You Go Hmmm… letter, which is this week’s Outside the Box. Maybe it was the baseball set-up (as my Rangers battle the Cardinals in the World Series) or that I keep getting asked about Europe here in New Orleans at the 2011 Oppenheimer Wealth Management Roundtable, but Grant really pulled me through his weekly missive when I got started, and I believe you will enjoy it as well. Long and short, Grant lays out the problems that we face in a very realistic assessment. I will also point out that he makes me look like a euro-optimist.

I am working on recovering from this past weekend, as this was the first time in 12 years I missed a letter due to simply not feeling well. But I guess that means I should be grateful I am not sick all that often. I hated to not write. The spirit was willing but the flesh was weak. It seems like I was “gifted” by my granddaughter with a nasty bug, which decided to show itself while I was in South Africa. Aaah, the joys of being a grandfather. Another round of catching nasty stuff from your progeny.

Your ready for some rest and baseball on TV analyst,

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box

JohnMauldin@2000wave.com

THINGS THAT MAKE YOU GO Hmmm . . .

“Everyone needs the ECB to step up to the plate. The ECB has no excuse not to act. In trying to keep its monetary virginity intact, the bank threatens to destroy the Euro Zone. If that happens, nobody will be able to profit from its virginity.”
- PAUL DE GRAUWE

“Simple Math:
The total overall cap [of the ESM] is 500 billion Euros
160 billion Euros has been spent
340 billion Euros remains
340 billion Euros + zero Euros = 940 billion Euros“
- Mike Shedlock, on the latest European ‘Masterplan’ to merge the EFSF + ESM

“The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it’s difficult to determine whether or not they are genuine” – Abraham Lincoln

Lee Richmond, meet everybody. Everybody? Meet Lee Richmond.

It’s difficult to put an exact number on the number of games of professional baseball that have been played since 1900 – most estimates seem to be clustered around the high 300,000s though. For the purposes of this exercise, I am going to take the number provided in no-nonsense fashion by Wiki answers: 390,536.

In amongst those 390,536 games were home runs, walks, steals, strikeouts and singles, doubles and triples too numerous to keep track of; or rather, just too numerous for anyone but the most die-hard of stat geeks to even contemplate tallying.

(at this point, I should apologise to any non-baseball fans amongst you for whom the terms used above have induced a frantic bout of head-scratching and a desire to skip ahead – stick with me for a while longer and the fog will clear – I promise).

Part of the innate beauty of baseball to me is the fact that (certainly in the modern era), game by game, season by season every aspect of it is measured, quantified and evaluated and the myriad ways the numbers can be dissected enables you to drill down into any part of it and gain a real understanding, through those numbers, of exactly what is going on. You can’t fudge the numbers. The Oakland Athletics’ Billy Beane showed the power of this approach, which was documented so brilliantly in Michael Lewis’ ‘Moneyball’

But let’s get back to Lee Richmond.

In 1880 Richmond became the first of only 20 men in baseball history to pitch a perfect game when he pitched the Worcester Ruby Legs to a 1-0 victory over the Cleveland Blues at the Worcester Agricultural Fairgrounds on June 12.

Think about that for a second.

Over 130 years. 390,536 games. 2 teams in each contest. That’s 781,072 opportunities for a perfect game to be pitched or, to put it another way, the odds on a perfect game being pitched are 39,053:1 – and rising. In fact, more people have orbited the moon than have pitched a MLB perfect game and NOBODY has done it more than once.

(At this point I will again attempt to keep the non-baseball aficionados with us by the use of this short explanation of a ‘perfect game’:

A perfect game is defined by Major League Baseball as a game in which a pitcher (or combination of pitchers) pitches a victory that lasts a minimum of nine innings and in which no opposing player reaches base. Thus, the pitcher (or pitchers) cannot allow any hits, walks, hit batsmen, or any opposing player to reach base safely for any other reason – in short, “27 up, 27 down”)

Interestingly enough, although it is technically possible for multiple pitchers to combine for a perfect game, to date, every major league perfect game has been thrown by a single pitcher.

That record needs to change. And fast.

Right now, the team comprising the ECB, EU and the various parliaments that make up that fractured and faltering alliance are sending pitcher after pitcher to the mound (sometimes in groups of two or three) trying to combine for the perfect game that they NEED in order to escape the debt trap they have backed themselves into.

Being in a situation where you lose unless you can pull something off against odds of multiple-thousands to one and pitch a ‘perfect game’ is a ridiculous spot in which to find yourself, but as this month has rolled by, it has become ever-more apparent that that is precisely where the Brussels Eurocrats now find themselves. It appears as though, as the pressure has ratcheted up this week, we are now in the ninth inning.

Personally, my own belief (as regular readers are by now well aware) is that the very best the Eurocrats can hope for is to extend the game by an inning or two, but their arms are tired, their bullpen is empty and, at some point, we are going to see an absolute avalanche of runs scored against them as the whole thing finally topples under its own weight.

This past week has been nothing short of farcical as the tension has built towards a crescendo that seemed at first to be willfully engendered in order to generate just enough sense of impending crisis to enable a resolution to be forced through in a similar fashion to that which preceded Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke’s now-infamous closed-doors fright-fest (hyphenation alert!) that led to the passing of the TARP in late 2008.

Read the rest of this entry »

Who Owns What You Watch On TV?

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By Barry Ritholtz - October 25th, 2011, 2:30PM

Over the past 16 years channels broadcasted to homes in the U.S. have increased by over 70. But who owns all of those channels? UsTelevision.com looked into it and found the biggest businesses that have stakes in the stuff we watch on TV.

Click for ginormous chart:

Source:
Us Television infographic
Wallstats, August 2011

Galbraith: U.S. Not Like Europe, We Should ‘Spend Our Way to Recovery’

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By Barry Ritholtz - October 25th, 2011, 1:00PM

Source:
U.S. Debt Is Not Like Europe’s: It’s Time to Spend Our Way to Recovery, Says Galbraith
By Stacy Curtin
Daily Ticker, October 25, 2011
http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/u-debt-not-europe-time-spend-way-recovery-125624442.html

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