Here we are at the end of June 2008, and its time for a mid-year update
against my prognostications at the end of '07 to see how I'm
doing.
But before we do the scorecard, let's look
at what's up - and what I see lying dead ahead.
We have had no fewer than three major financial
institutions (outside the US) call for an utter collapse of the equity markets
in the last two weeks. The latest to join the foray was Fortis, which
(in this translated article) basically calls for a collapse of
the United States financial markets and a large number of
banks.
RBS, Barclays, and now Fortis - the credit crunch is
not over, it is not contained, and that
it can't be contained.
In short, they are saying that Bernanke was an idiot - he made a bad
bet that housing and credit would turn in within a year from last August, and it
is now evident that he has lost the bet. The consequences will now rain down
upon the capital markets and the economy, and due to the pumping of liquidity it
will in fact be worse than it would have been were Ben to have stood back and
let it happen last August.
Second, credit cards have been keeping the consumer
afloat. But for how much longer? Not long. Credit lines are
being cut back; the consumer is currently drawing down credit card lines at
a rate of more than 400 basis points ahead of his income growth, and the wall is
dead ahead as contracting credit availability and rising default rates collide
with consumer "requirements." This is certain to produce spending declines
at a mid to high single-digit rate, if not worse. Count on it.
Bank lending is shrinking at a record rate. Total bank credit
outstanding is 9,339 billion; it peaked in March at 9,500 billion and
has been on a downward trajectory ever since. Why? Credit demand
by worthy borrowers is collapsing - oh sure there is demand,
but its from people who couldn't qualify to borrow a piece of flypaper. This is
the hallmark of a deflationary credit collapse and the evidence is now on
the table that what I and a few others have been talking about is starting to
occur.
The document that was disclosed by The Nation recently (the
internal BAC document that served as the "template" for the $300 billion housing
bill) showed that BAC was "valuing" second mortgages as worth just a few
cents on the dollar. Yet none of the banks are taking
that as a mark - yet. If that is their true value then any second written in
the last three or four years is worth almost nothing; in effect, you
can count them all as zeros. There has been no recognition of this yet by
the banks - but there will be, and when it happens it is likely to zero any bank
that is holding this paper. The secondary question is, of course, why
these firms haven't taken those marks if that is how they're looking at
valuation internally.
We are now seeing firm evidence of "dog eat dog" during the credit
bubble years. The latest to surface is a "smoking gun" email series from
UBS related to Auction-Rate securities, but that is by no means the only one.
The lawyers are starting to have a field day with this - they key here is
"starting." This will gain traction and as it does, the better
question will be "who survives", not "who is immune." The answer is unlikely to
be pretty for anyone who has been in the executive suite of these firms over the
last few years.
Only in the world of government lies can you call an increase in debt "income."
Yet that's exactly what happened - the "stimulus" checks are being counted as an
increase in consumer income, but they are no such thing. If I go take out a
line of credit from my credit card, my "income" doesn't grow, but golly gee, the
government's statistics say it did in this instance. Absolutely astounding
stupidity on display here - or blatant, outright fraud. Pick.
The Fed "jawbones" about price inflation but does nothing of
substance. Big shock - NOT. They're stuck. They're out of
conventional liquidity and know what's coming - Bernanke has failed to prevent
the deflationary credit contraction, and history is likely to compare him to The
Fed in the days of The Depression when all is said and done. I believe he has
made the eventual outcome worse. We are now arguing over how
much worse it will be elsewhere in the world, and my argument
there stands - the Asian Tigers, in particular, are whistling past the graveyard
and will soon be forced to face reality. Have you had a look at the Shanghai
stock market lately? The prospect of capital flight is still here, and we
still need $2 billion a day in foreign money to cover our government
obligations. As rates rise elsewhere in the world there
is a point where that spigot will get turned off - and if it does, the
bond market will collapse with disastrous consequences. This is the
900lb gorilla in the china shop and yet nobody can determine if or
exactly when it will happen. My recommendation: Run like hell from anything
with duration or credit risk and do it now!
Oil is not coming down in price any time soon, and when it
does, you won't like the "why." What's becoming increasingly clear is that
there is a major supply/demand imbalance that nobody has done a thing about, nor
can they at this point. Our opportunity to address this was thirty
years ago and The Greens, along with the Democrats, have successfully
blockaded any sort of in-our-nation energy exploitation.
This is not limited to oil drilling; these people have also
blocked wind farms off Nantucket, they have blocked nuclear power plants for 30
years and now the latest is a block on large-scale solar deployment in
the desert southwest on Federal land, where nobody lives - but we
might have an impact on some sort of desert mouse or something. This is the key
item and yet it is totally unappreciated by the commentators and others who
continue to insist that "its all ok" or "its all e-vile speculators." Uh, no
its not. We have a major problem with oil prices and the simplest way to
explain it is "there's a limited amount of supply, demand is available to
meet or exceed that supply, and there are no ready alternatives because we
have intentionally failed to develop them." In addition a significant
part of supply is controlled by a cartel and they can (and I bet they
do) jack with supply to keep prices high. Until that changes, you won't see
prices contract in a meaningful manner. A good part of the dollar-priced oil
problem is also due to Bernanke's intentional devaluation of our currency, and
we may be about to get a hyperdrive-sort of kick in the nuts on that part, as
should the ECB raise rates and drain the swamp this coming week.... The
only short-run way out of this mess is for massive demand
destruction to take place, which means a global recession - or worse.
Welcome to reality.
Remember a few days ago when I was talking about MBIA's downgrade and that they simply
didn't have the money to post as required? Guess what - I was right:
"MBIA's asset management unit was recently in the market selling at
least $500 million worth of muni bonds, the newspaper said, citing an
unidentified person familiar with the matter. Most of the bonds were sold at a
profit, the Journal reported, citing the unnamed source."
Put a fork in them. This is very likely to trigger yet more
downgrades, which will force more asset sales, which will........
We sit here at the end of June severely oversold on the major
indices, which means we're due for a bounce in the stock market. However, there
is one caveat on that - crashes happen from severely oversold conditions
too. Which way do we go in the short term? That depends - does the system
hold together for the time being, or not? All it would take is one major
financial institution to get in trouble - a big regional or money center bank,
or similar - and the lid both can and will come off.
Ok, 'nuff said on today.
Here we go with the scorecard!
- The US will enter a recession, if it has not already done so. It will be
consumer spending driven, with its genesis found in the Housing market. The
slowdown will become evident once the “real” holiday sales data is posted, and
accelerate into the first quarter.
Late, which is the same thing as "wrong". Score 1 miss,
although I believe if you use real data we're there. But, since I didn't
specify that you couldn't use the government's BS, I give myself a "miss" on
this one.
- Unemployment will increase significantly, rising to north of 5% by the
middle of next year. This will of course cascade back into consumer default
rates (mortgages, credit cards, auto loans, etc) and cause yet more layoffs. The
“virtuous cycle” will turn vicious.
Check. 5.5% on the last report; that's north of 5% and my
time period was the middle of the year. Cumulatively, 1 and
1.
- Housing will not turn in 2008. The total damage to prices
will exceed a cumulative 15% from 2005-2008, and it will not be over. At least
one, and probably several, national home builders will be cut to the single
digits on their stock price or go bankrupt and be reorganized. Residential Real
Estate will NOT be a buy in 2008; you’re still at least one and
probably two years too early.
So far, cumulative damage has been achieved. Home builder
price prognostication has been realized on several (SPF, BZH, etc) and more are
coming. I will count this as a "CHECK" for now, although it could turn out to
be wrong if housing turns later in the year, so I may have to take it back. 2
and 1.
- The story in the housing space in ’08 will be the defaults on “prime”
mortgages – which in reality were nothing of the kind (e.g. “Option ARMs”), and
on the piggyback seconds and HELOCs behind them. “Jingle Mail” will become
common as homeowners that are deeply – 20% or more – underwater simply mail in
the keys and say “screw the credit rating.” This will result in a near-total
overhaul of the “FICO” system in the next couple of years, as these people will
have defaulted on mortgages but nothing else, essentially forcing risk premiums
higher for consumer credit and decoupling FICO from actual consumer credit
(other than mortgage) behavior. I expect there will emerge a “shadow” FICO
system which ignores mortgages but rates everything else.
The jury is out on the back half, but the front (jingle mail
becoming common) is occurring. Score that one as indeterminate (2-1-1
cumulatively.)
- The stupidity in the rest of the consumer lending space (rollovers in auto
loans and 0% balance transfer hell for plastic, primarily) will come crashing
down on these companies and bring a crushing wave of defaults there as well,
along with yet more downgrades in the asset-backed paper market.
Check. This market is a mess and everyone in the space is
forecasting much higher default rates as we finish 2008. Card issuer share
prices are being pummeled and with good reason. Card lines are being cut by
virtually everyone. 3-1-1.
- Recreational sectors (e.g. boats, RVs, etc) will get smashed. If you’re in
the market for high-dollar recreational assets and have cash, late ’08 and into
’09 will present some incredible buying opportunities.
Spot-on. Brunswick (boats) and Winnebago (RVs) are in the
toilet, with factories being closed and production cut back. The opportunities
are starting to show up in the used market, but you're still early.
4-1-1.
- Government will, as is usual, try to meddle in the market’s adjustment of
risk and price. The depth of this meddling will be the determinant on
whether this is a deep but sharp and reasonably-short recession or whether it
morphs into something far more serious. With 08 being an election year the
temptation to engage in SEVERE tampering will be significant, and if they do,
the risks rise materially. There is a serious risk of an all-out
deflationary depression, and if we get one, it will almost certainly be the
government’s fault. Whoever wins the Presidency may wish they had lost
come ’09 and ’10.
$450 billion thus far either proposed or passed and they're
not done. I'd say this is a gigantic "check".
5-1-1.
- Buffett just announced he is setting up a Municipal Bond insurance company.
This will put a stake into the Monolines’ hearts, taking all their business
away that is profitable, and leaving them with structured finance which has huge
embedded – and unrecognized – losses. The announcement, which showed up on
the 28th, didn’t send shockwaves through the market – but it should have.
Effectively, Warren threw a grenade (minus pin) into the magazine of structured
finance. This is the death knell for the few trillion in CDSs that are
out there can’t be paid; there is no longer any reason to believe that the
companies writing these things will be able to be recapitalized off “profitable”
sides of their business! This is how fortunes are made (for Warren) and
lost (for everyone who did imprudent things.) The “big story” in the
financial markets for 2008, and the likely trigger for major turmoil, will be
the implosion of the CDS marketplace and how Buffett profited from it.
This will stabilize the municipal bond marketplace
which has been positively hammered.
A swing and a big whiff. Buffett didn't do a damn thing of
value. Munis are still getting pounded. The monolines are in the process of
collapse but I haven't seen the municipal market stabilize at all and
cannot recommend hiding there at the present time.
5-2-1.
- Equity prices will be choppy in the first couple of months and will
experience a peak to trough swing of at least 20% during the year in total.
I expect the S&P 500 to at least touch 1220 in 2008 and my current
downside target is 1070. Note that should we get a “parabolic” sort of
move in the first quarter, which is possible, the potential for an even louder
“boom” (collapse) goes up dramatically; in that case I would not be surprised to
see a three-digit handle on the S&P 500 sometime during the 2008-2010 time
period.
For the DOW, the 20% "bear market" swing has been achieved.
However, the accuracy of this call remains to be seen across the entire market,
so I'll call this one "indeterminate."
5-2-2.
- Return OF capital will be far more important in 2008 than return ON
capital.
Anyone need more examples of this than the last couple of
weeks? 6-2-2.
- I do not expect the central banks to “hyperinflate” anything. Metals, in
a protracted, serious deflationary selloff will get smashed. (If you're a
"Gold Bug", read below for why I think you're nutty to hold metals - there's a
better play if you believe in hyperinflation.)
Hyperinflation? Where? Metals haven't done so well this
year, have they? Still, the score on this is indeterminate, so call it 6-2-3
for now.
- Debt will be paid down when possible and when not, defaulted. This, of
course, prevents deploying capital towards consumption and production.
Expect this to show up in the first quarter in ways that cannot be refuted,
and for the market to “get it” some time before the end of the second
quarter.
Ding! The last couple of weeks anyone?
7-2-3.
- Commercial Real Estate will collapse. The leverage in these deals has
actually exceeded that in residential, if you can believe it.
This will prove to have been totally insane and the losses taken there
will be immense. It will also put a fork into the “this is contained”
thesis, and validate the fact that generally, commercial R/E lags residential by
12-18 months. Guess what – time’s up!
How many examples do you need? SRS may be the play of the
back half of the year (yes, I own some and its doing well.) So far, however, I
can't score this one conclusively as my SRS was bought off the trough, so I'm
not declaring victory here. Yet. 7-2-4.
- Business CapEx will slow precipitously and may go negative. This will be
“spun” for the first quarter or so, but by the middle of the second quarter it
won’t be able to be spun any more, and the truth will have to be faced. That
“truth time” will likely mark the start of the second big leg down in the equity
markets.
Ding! Oracle anyone? RIMM? Here it comes!
8-2-4.
- The Dollar will bounce all over before starting to take off when it becomes
apparently that the rest of the world is going to get it worse than we
will.
Indeterminate, but it sure looks pretty good so far.
8-2-5.
- The “market callers” who are (almost to a man!) calling for big moves
northward in 2008 will be coming to the public “hat in hand” as we get into the
latter part of the year. These people will be roundly discredited and yet
another wave of so-called “analysts” will disappear from the scene, along with
all the money the chumps who listened to them lost.
Cramer is still on the air. Since I have until the end of
the year, I won't call this one yet.
8-2-6.
Not bad, overall. 4:1 on those that can be considered settled, with
40% or so outstanding going into the back half of the year.