Showing posts with label Draghi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Draghi. Show all posts

Monday, 12 December 2011

Weekly Commentary on Financial Markets: 12 December 2011 Slow Progress and Enfant Terrible


Weekly Commentary on Financial Markets:  
12 December 2011

by Jacob H Schmidt

Slow Progress and Enfant Terrible             

News of the week: ECB cuts rates by 25 bp to 1%; UK vetoes EU deal and gets isolated; European banks need Euro 115 b in capital; FSA publishes RBS report     

Europe – Euro
Another eventful week, some progress on the European front, but not enough to calm the markets. European politicians seem to have gotten the message as they tried to hammer out a comprehensive solution, not perfect, but certainly in the right direction. Fiscal compacts (i.e. greater fiscal cooperation and coordination), additional 200 b in funds but no bazooka. Because the UK prime minster David Cameron vetoed the deal leading to an isolation of the UK as no other country followed him, the deal is not fully agreed. We believe that Cameron’s move was a serious error of judgement and based on bad advice: the UK cannot afford playing l’enfant terrible as it has important trade relationships with the continent, has London as a global centre of finance and wants to be a leader rather than a niche player like Switzerland. Cameron is in the hands of Tory backbenchers who are working on an EU referendum. This has already put a lot of strain on the coalition government and will upset many global companies who have their headquarters in the UK. Germany and France seem 100% committed to make this work, with or without the UK, but the pace is European style. Many analysts do not understand the continental European way of decision making and negotiations. We believe that the last summit has shown that there is a clear political will to save Europe, the Euro and to move on. However there will be more summits, slow progress and confusing messages out of Europe. But let’s not forget Europe is heterogeneous and still work in progress. Any comparison with the USA is mistaken.   

The Euro was very volatile due to the political developments, the ECB rate cut and the press conference by ECB president Draghi on Thursday. Draghi was very clear in his message on policy, the outlook for the economy and the role of the ECB. However we believe that one needs to read his message clearly: when he says that the ECB can’t and won’t take up a bigger role, it means that he will do so when markets get ugly. And it is clear that markets are unsatisfied with the outcome of the summit and the slow pace. Hence they stay volatile, with significant temporary downside risk. The ECB will have to do more to support the periphery markets. As written last week, the solution will be in a two-class Euro, allowing the weaker countries to stay within the Euro, but becoming more competitive. UK papers wrote about preparations at the UK Treasury (finance ministry) as to a potential break-up of the Euro. These news are little helpful, as they are incorrect: of course the Treasury has to foresee any potential outcome, but the likelihood of a Euro breakup is far-fetched. Nevertheless tough times ahead.
My Grade: C+

Greece
No real news on Greece, secondary market prices for GGB are now 20 bid for most maturities. Very tough for holders of debt who have it marked at 50 or higher.  At 20 Greek GGB start looking interesting: the carry is massive. The risk is that Greek debt will get a 70% discount and long restructuring. In this case the bonds could trade down to the low teens.   
My Grade: C- 

Italy
Austerity program in progress which is good news. While Italian BTP are very volatile (trading between 6% and north of 7%) Italy seems to have secured the refinancing of the Euro 300 b due next year. At 7%+ BTP look attractive, and locals are buying. With the new ECB 2 y loans these bonds are very attractive for banks.    
My Grade: B      
US
Again better economic data in the US, but overshadowed by Europe.
My Grade: B+

Companies
Company news dominated by news on banking capital: European banks will need to raise Euro 115 b in the next year. For some banks, such as Commerzbank, this might mean a nationalisation and quasi-wipe out for existing shareholders. French banks have massive exposure to Italy and Spain. They will have to address this soon. Their derivatives and other capital intense activities will also have to be cut in view of the higher regulatory capital requirements.

In the UK the long-awaited FSA report on the RBS bail-out was published Monday morning (12 Dec 2011). The FSA explains the failure as a combination of six factors (capital position, ST funding, asset quality, credit trading, ABN Amro acquisition, systematic risk plus number seven RBS management). The FSA claim that under Basle III the ABN Amro acquisition could not happen. Furthermore they say that the FSA was “too focused on conduct regulation at the time” and they ”failed adequately to challenge the judgement and risk assessments of the management of RBS”. They also write that they were understaffed. We do not agree that the ‘light touch’ regulatory regime was the reason for the black out. It is rather the cosy relationship between the agents at the expense of the principal, a classic agency problem. The one answer that remains is why out of several thousand FSA employees nobody realised that RBS ran a massive balance sheet of several trillion on a small equity base, the leverage was massive (between 50 and 70 times at the peak). The information was out there, and many market participants had voiced their negative view. The FSA could have listened to independent market analysts, spoken to hedge funds. It is astonishing that there was no “whistle blower” at the FSA. The language of the report is critical, but unfortunately too general, in the end nobody takes responsibility. Nobody is punished.  

The FSA suggests a renewed public discussion on remuneration and more regulation. We believe that in 2008/9 the governments missed a great opportunity to reign in banking activities and corporate behaviour at banks when they saved them from collective collapse.  Let’s see what can be done now. We are not against regulation, but doubt very much that more regulation is the solution. What is required is “smart supervision”, where common sense rules, not more regulation. Our conclusion is that the report contributes very little to the burning question of “who”, not “why”.
My Grade: C-

Markets
Key dates: Tuesday FOMC meeting announcement. Friday is the important quadruple witching (expiry of stock index futures, stock index options, stock options and single stock futures). PPI Thursday, CPI Friday. Only 15 business days left in US (13 in UK, 14 in Europe) to adjust portfolios.
Markets will continue to be volatile, short term and in a constant risk-on / risk-off mode until next year.  My Grade: B+

Interest Rates
Rates pretty much unchanged from last week (UST 10 Y at 2.06%, 30Y at 3.11%). German bunds higher, 10 Y yields up 2 bp to 2.15%. We are unimpressed by these levels. My Grade: C-

Credit
Spreads continue to be very volatile over the week, Italian and Spanish bonds up and down within hours. Driven by politics and news. Greek bonds are trading now at 20 bid  price. My Grade: C+
Gold, Silver and other commodities also very volatile. My Grade: B+
Volatility: VIX at 26%.

Hedge Funds
Dispersion of performance in all hedge fund styles and also on fund of funds level. The average HF performance of -4% is disappointing and will lead to many reallocations. Only funds and firms with a long track record (positive) and a convincing story will be survivors after 2011. We still see interest for hedge funds exposure from pension funds, but little appetite from leveraged accounts and private clients.
 My Grade: A-

Outlook
Continuous focus on Europe macro development and US data. As per last week for the next 2-3 weeks we remain slightly positive on the stock markets as any good news leads to immediate short covering and investors are under-invested in stocks.

Conclusion
The further developments in Europe will be slow and serious risks remain, but we believe that the political will to save Europe and the Euro is too big to be negative.   My grade: B+
    
Grading: A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C- D (adapted from American University Grading / Marking System), higher marks for visibility, clear outlook, little risk, lower marks for little visibility, unclear outlook, high risk.
.
Jacob H Schmidt, international financial markets expert, HF expert, Webster Finance Professor. Expert Witness. Anglo- Austrian, multi-lingual,-cultural, critical thinker. CEO of Schmidt Research Partners Ltd, an investment advisory firm and MD of SFP-International Ltd, a consulting and training company. Available for high quality investment advisory, due diligence and consulting projects.  
Schmidt Research Partners are expert providers of advisory services, due diligence, research, consulting and training in financial markets.

This commentary is for information only. Nothing contained herein constitutes investment, legal, tax or other advice nor is it to be solely relied on in making an investment or other decision. It is not an invitation to buy, sell or subscribe and is by way of information only.

Monday, 7 November 2011

Weekly Commentary on Financial Markets: 7 November 2011 Towards more instability – waiting for Roosevelt and a European New Deal


Weekly Commentary on Financial Markets:  
7 November 2011

by Jacob H Schmidt

Towards more instability – waiting for Roosevelt and a European New Deal  

News of the week: Papandreou out – coalition government until elections in Feb 2012; Berlusconi out soon as well; European Q3 earnings season in full swing

Europe – Euro

Another round of meetings, this time the G20 in Cannes as of last week ended with little substance, apart from animosities towards Greece. Focus of the G20 meeting was Greece and Italy – whose PM Berlusconi is increasingly isolated in Europe – no mention of the other basket cases Spain, Portugal and Ireland.  The October 26 bail-out has already lost momentum as the Greeks have not accepted the deal, the EFSF is short of money and concerns over the banks dominate the markets. While the media focuses on the Greek drama – Papandreou to resign, a new PM in the person of respected frontrunners Papandreou or Dimas – the reality is that Greece is in a serious political crisis on top of the economic crisis, but Italy is the real problem: 10 year BTP are trading at 6.6% and 30% north of 7%. With Italy facing political turmoil investors are unlikely to pick up BTP at these supposedly attractive rates as these bonds will get even cheaper very soon. The only buyer in town is the ECB, and they have limited resources. The EFSF will be too small to do the heavy lifting. PM Berlusconi might be out of office soon. Out of the three scenarios or Europe
a. no change – continuous instability;
b. reversal of the European project;
c. further integration with a common bond market and fiscal policy
the likelihood of no change with short term fixes is high (70%), and 15% chance of cases a. and c.

My Grade: C-

Greece

In Greece the drama continues, as Papandreou has agreed to resign and the search is for a new prime minister. Both frontrunners have good credentials, but will they be in a position to change anything in Greece? We believe that the interims government will satisfy the formal requirement for the next tranche and buy time. It is not in Europe’s interest that Greece collapses, but the outlook is very grim for Greece. The stability will be very short term. The risk that the new Greek government could go for a default and Euro exit has increased. The immediate default risk (2011) relatively low (2011 bonds trading at prices of 88-90), but any bond after New Year is at risk.  My Grade: D     

US

The WSJ reported last week that 15% of all US citizens rely on food stamps. This is the real tragedy of the recession and the 2008 crisis: official unemployment rate of 9%, unofficial rate of 16%, structurally many are long term out of job and poverty in one of the richest countries of the world. While the US debt is a problem, the increasing poverty in the US is the real failure of the administration. Most European countries do a much better job. The US debt problem will become the focus soon again, when the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction aka Super Committee set up in August 2011 will have to issue a recommendation by November 23, 2011. Nevertheless US debt looks safe versus the less stable European debt markets. US rates to stay at 0% until 2013 at least according to last week’s FOMC. My Grade: B+

Companies

European companies report Q3 earnings, most doing ok, except for the banks, who show heavy write offs due to exposure to Latin Europe and difficult equity markets. BNP Paribas reported a Euro 2.2 b write down on Greek debt (a 60% write off), more French banks to follow this week: Soc Gen, Natixis and Credit Agricole. The focus will be the write off of sovereign debt, the revenues from the business segments and redundancies. The higher capital cost due to Basel III and additional buffers will make banks less profitable. We see more use CoCos (conditional convertibles) to achieve the higher ratios.
In the US Groupon went public with a 30% increase on day 1 (from 20 to 26). While many investors are very critical of the business model and the numbers, the IPO was a first day success due to the controlled size (5%) and probably the role of the syndicate. We believe that Groupon used a small window of opportunity to go public which might close again soon. Linkedin trading at 300 times next year earnings, Groupon at ??. Groupon et al stocks are really for day traders and hedge funds flipping on the first. No serious investor would buy a company with a P/E of 300 or even negative P/E. A lot of OPM buyers.  My Grade: C+

Markets

Continuous high vol in equity markets, FX and bonds which are overshadowed by macro events. Sovereign risk appraisal is en vogue again. My Grade: C+

Stock markets

In the world of economic uncertainty and sovereign risk stocks have been doing reasonably well: Dow is up 3% YTD, SP500 flat, FTSE down 6%, but European and EM stocks down more than 10%. Good, stable companies in liquid markets looking attractive, and the constant sell offs allow investors to pick up great stocks at cheap levels. For traders this creates additional opportunities.  My Grade: B+

Interest Rates

US rates volatile from week to week: 2.04% vs 2.31% for 10 year notes (vs last week); Rates also lower now in German bunds (1.84 vs 2.19%). Too much volatility for large government bond markets.  My Grade: C-

Credit

Wide spreads in Italian BTP, now at 6.6% for 10 year bonds. Greece at default levels. Spain at 5.6%. Irrespective of Berlusconi or a new government, Italy needs to roll over Euro 300 b next year.  My Grade: C-

In the commodity space base and precious metals also volatile. Silver at 34.5, Gold at 1760. My Grade: B+
Volatility: VIX up to 30 % from 24% last week.

Hedge Funds

A tough year for hedge funds, as Dow Jones Credit Suisse Core Hedge Fund Index was up 1.85% in October but down 6.1%. YTD. HFoF doing better, showing that fund selection is key. My Grade: A-

Outlook

Continued political uncertainty, default risk and the fear of a double dip recession guarantee high volatility. For investors the choice is tough as HF and PE flattish at best, most equity markets down and rates low. The Christmas rally in equities has limited upside, investors tempted to take profits where possible.

Conclusion

While European and world leaders disappoint and the naive hope that China would save Europe got dashed, the risks of instability are increasing. According to our analysis there are many parallels to the developments after 1929 when leaders missed the opportunity to reform the process. It took four years until 1933 when President Roosevelt got elected and started the New Deal. Europe is waiting for its Roosevelt (or Roosevelts) and New Deal. My grade: B-
    
Grading: A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C- D (adapted from American University Grading / Marking System), higher marks for visibility, clear outlook, little risk, lower marks for little visibility, unclear outlook, high risk.
.
Jacob H Schmidt, international financial markets expert, HF expert, Webster Finance Professor. Expert Witness. Anglo- Austrian, multi-lingual,-cultural, critical thinker. CEO of Schmidt Research Partners Ltd, an investment advisory firm and MD of SFP-International Ltd, a consulting and training company. Available for high quality investment advisory, due diligence and consulting projects.  
Schmidt Research Partners are expert providers of advisory services, due diligence, research, consulting and training in financial markets.

This commentary is for information only. Nothing contained herein constitutes investment, legal, tax or other advice nor is it to be solely relied on in making an investment or other decision. It is not an invitation to buy, sell or subscribe and is by way of information only.