As a follow-on to my last post, here’s a graphic courtesy of ThomsonReuters showing the credit rating of 126 of the world’s nations.
The full article is available here.
hat tip: Ritholtz.com
Jul 31th
As a follow-on to my last post, here’s a graphic courtesy of ThomsonReuters showing the credit rating of 126 of the world’s nations.
The full article is available here.
hat tip: Ritholtz.com
While the rest of the world goes about its business and shakes its collective head in disgust with the political circus in DC, Wall Street (about which there’s surely plenty to shake one’s head) is captivated with the possibility that, if the government borrowing limit isn’t raised and there’s a postponement of payments from the Treasury, US Treasury debt will be downgraded by Moodys, Standard and Poors or other NRSROs (nationally-recognized statistical rating organizations.)
These ratings are provided by the NRSROs (borrowers pay for them, in fact, which is one of the many conflicts of interest that fueled the credit crisis from which we’re slowly recovering) to assist bond purchasers like yours truly with the heavy lifting of detailed credit analysis on each issue under consideration. Since borrowers with lower credit ratings are ostensibly riskier to which to lend, the interest rate on their bonds is higher than those of higher quality bonds (all other things equal.)
Wall Street’s morbid fascination, then, is around the question of “what happens if the world’s ’safest’ security is no longer so?”
PIMCO’s Neel Kashkari penned a short piece in today’s Washington Post that deserves a read by anyone trying to understand why the deletion of one letter – AAA to AA – might be such a big deal. His highlights:
These factors suggest that a U.S. downgrade has the potential to be as bad, or perhaps worse, than the Lehman shock.
The full article is here.
In my opinion, the government (I include both the Legislative and Administrative branches here) has demonstrated itself to be almost completely incompetent at one of its main tasks – the management of the public purse. The Tea Party and others deeply concerned about the US debt levels and growing deficit have thrust those questions squarely into the spotlight. While I disagree with much of their platform, I must give them credit for elevating the attention paid to the topic, which scarcely received a mention in the last Presidential election. Unfortunately, the level of discourse has gone the opposite direction, leaving the President and Congressional leaders at an apparent impasse and the rest of us baffled, frustrated and disgusted.
Kashkari’s article attempts to plumb the size of the potential market disruption, the first well-reasoned research I’ve seen on the subject. He doesn’t discuss, however, other potential impacts, such as the valuation ripple effect from:
There’s a very good argument to be made that NRSRO’s should not be allowed to hold the US economy hostage. They were, as I noted, one of the key villains in the credit debacle, and it’s no leap of logic that after facing the wrath of Congress and the Administration they’re enjoying having those politicians over the proverbial barrel. However, this is how the structure currently stands; we must deal with reality as it is, not as we wish it were. Truth be told, if I were in charge of making the call (and didn’t have to worry about the above-mentioned fallout) I’d have already downgraded US debt: timely repayment of principal and interest should never be in question for AAA-rated bonds. The US no longer meets that standard.
It’s surely possible, too, that since the US bond market remains the largest and most liquid by far, China, banks, individuals and other investors may go right on buying them as before, essentially ignoring the lower credit rating. We can hope…
Jun 23th
While I hadn’t done any real studying of the issue, it seemed to me as though we’ve recently witnessed a lot of natural disasters. Recovering from them has laid an even heavier burden on those who’re trying to recover from the man-made disaster called our economy.
Turns out that the Society of Actuaries has done the studying of that topic for me. The SOA’s June 2011 bulletin, entitled “The Coming Storm – Natural Disasters and a Struggling Economy”, offers several ominous observations:
Actuary Shaun Wang, a leader in enterprise risk management, and founder and Chairman of Risk Lighthouse LLC, warns of a “perfect storm,” a combination of natural disasters on a scale even larger than the Japan earthquake coupled with a second-dip market meltdown greater than the 2008 financial crisis.
This “perfect storm” would almost certainly trigger a market meltdown, shocking an already fragile U.S. and world economy.
The entire bulletin is here.
Jun 17th
I haven’t written much, recently at least, about the continuing drama in the Eurozone. In early 2010 when the story first broke, Kevin and I commented in several pieces (here, here, here, here, and here), and I was interviewed on local television as the riots in Greece first erupted (see video here). In short, it was pretty obvious a year ago that the problems in Greece and many other European nations weren’t going away easily or soon. My guess is that they’ll get past this crisis by a combination of austerity (both elective, at least on the part of grim and shell-shocked politicians, and forced, via the bond market) and “kicking the can down the road”, continuing the time-honored tradition of avoiding a crisis only to set the stage for greater calamity in the future.
That said, I learned today, from the blog of comedian Andy Borowitz, the Greek government may have hit upon a unique way of repaying their debts: A giant horse.

BRUSSELS (The Borowitz Report) – In what many are hailing as a breakthrough solution to Greece’s crippling debt crisis, Greece today offered to repay loans from the European Union nations by giving them a gigantic horse.
Finance ministers from sixteen EU nations awoke in Brussels this morning to find that a huge wooden horse had been wheeled into the city center overnight.
The horse, measuring several stories in height, drew mixed responses from the finance ministers, many of whom said they would have preferred a cash repayment of the EU’s bailout.
But German Chancellor Andrea Merkel said she “welcomed the beautiful wooden horse,” adding, “What harm could it possibly do?”
May 26th
Gunter Loffler, of the Department of Mathematics and Economics in the University of Ulm (Not “ummm”, Ulm, in Germany. I didn’t know where it was either.) published a recent paper postulating a connection between the construction of world’s tallest skyscrapers and financial market returns. His thesis is, essentially, that periods of time when humans have the hubris (and commercial real estate funding) to build massive skyscrapers are the same periods when stock prices become overvalued.
Looks like he’s actually on to something. From the abstract:
This papers shows that construction starts of record-breaking skyscrapers predict subsequent US stock returns. In the three to five years after the construction of a record-breaking new skyscraper began, per annum stock market returns are around 10 percentage points lower than in other years. The predictive ability is significant and relatively stable.
In fact, the predictive power of his “skyscraper index” (my phrase, not his) actually beats more commonly used metrics. Again, from the abstract:
It exceeds that of alternatives such as the prevailing historical mean, predictions based on dividend ratios, and recently suggested combination forecasts. The findings are robust against a wide range of specifications. Further analyses show that tower building also predicts international stock market returns.
If I’d have just known that it was as simple as selling stocks when the construction for new world’s tallest skyscrapers was begun…
The paper’s abstract is here, and the full paper is here: SSRN-id1787517
hat tip: CXO Advisory
May 20th
Although I don’t disagree…
Today from NPR’s Planet Money series (one of the better pieces of investigative / educational journalism extant):
Read and/or listen to the story here.
My earlier thoughts on gold (soon to be updated).
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UPDATE: Tuesday 24 May 2011
Column in today’s NY Times amplifies the point made by the NPR story, and in my earlier scribblings:
Dr. Brian Greber, Director of Boise State University’s Center for Business Research and Economic Development, lists among his many responsibilities the teaching of an MBA economics class, to which I was honored to guest lecture on Tuesday 26 April. The topic, “Macroeconomic Drivers of Stock Market Valuation”, owes a great deal to Crestmont Research and other firms whose work I follow closely and that has informed my own.
The slides from the presentation are here.
My impression is that not that many experienced practitioners, including yours truly, slavishly subscribe to the doctrine after it’s been shot full of holes past few years, but for those of us raised on Modern Portfolio Theory it’s dogmatic that US Treasury bonds are THE credit risk-free asset that underpins valuation calculations for everything else. I mean, EVERYTHING else – stocks, bonds, commodities, whatever, fair value calculations start with a risk-free rate to which risk premia are added.
Caused me to do a double-take, then, when I saw this graphs from the IMF (not some tin-hat blogger like yours truly, the IMF!) that shows a credit premium – the pink area on the graph – beginning to appear, according to their models in 2008.
On the other hand, anyone who’s not been on another planet, in a CIA black-ops prison or a coma knows that the gold ol’ US Treasury note just isn’t what it used to be (case in point, S&P’s spectacularly un-newsworthy downgrade of US debt - that horse is so far out of the barn he’s over the horizon and in the next county).
An excellent write-up of the graph and related info is on Barry Ritholtz “The Big Picture” blog.
Editor’s note: I no longer subscribe to the MPT / EMH doctrine as it was taught nearly 20 years ago when I waded through the CFA program. Sometimes you have to learn the theory so you can understand why it doesn’t always work in practice…
Hat tip: Global Macro Monitor for the graph
Apr 22th
Remember the shockwaves created by Lehman’s collapse in September 2008? (I certainly do – I phoned from the Sawtooth wilderness to coach my panicking then-employer how to buy 1 week T-bills at negative interest rates.) While it’s a little hyperbolic, Annie Lowry’s piece in today’s Slate.com proposes a similar global market reaction if the US defaults on its Treasury debt.
Among the cascade of problems she foresees on that fateful day:
I’d add to the list the headache of bank capital and liquidity levels coming into question since many financial institutions maintain large Treasury note positions. Municipalities, pension funds and other large institutional investors are also required to hold certain percentages of their pools in high quality assets, so would feel the effect of deteriorating credit quality (not to mention the painful price markdown.)
Read the full article here.
ADDENDUM 5.38pm MST, 25 APRIL 11: A JP Morgan research piece echoing most of Lowry’s points can be read here -> JPM Domino Effect
Aug 07th
Once In A Lifetime
Author: Kenn Lamson
Comments: 0
I’ve checked off a few once-in-a-lifetime boxes at age 45: As a goggle-eyed kid I watched Neil Armstrong step onto the moon, several years later wore my most patriotic red/white/blue shirt (with red socks!) to celebrate our nation’s 200th birthday, strode across the stage for high school and collegiate graduation (as many do – I didn’t say this was an exclusive list!), got married and divorced (the latter of which I hope will only be once), and so on. As of Friday afternoon, however, I unfortunately must add to that list of once-in-a-lifetime occurences that I’ve witnessed the downgrade by Standard & Poors of the US sovereign credit rating.
In my earlier posts I mentioned a few of the questions now standing front-and-center before the markets and investors. While anyone who says they know what will happen tomorrow and in subsequent days should be dismissed out of hand, I offer below commentary from some of those I read and respect:
Financial Times: S&P Cuts US Debt Rating to AA+
Economist: S&P’s Credit Rating Cut: Downgrading Our Politics
PIMCOs Mohamed El-Erian: US Downgrade Heralds a New Financial Era
NPR’s Planet Money: Why S&P’s Downgrade of the US Credit Rating May Not Be As Bad As It Sounds
Barry Ritholtz: 10 Questions About the S&P Downgrade
As I write this on Sunday afternoon several firms with typically insightful commentary have not opined since S&P’s action, so I’ll append the post as other comments become available.
UPDATE 9:30PM MONDAY 8 AUGUST 2011:
As the market reopened today (and took a 6.7% shellacking) additional firms shared their assessment.
Vanguard: Downgrade Should Mean Little for Long-term Investors
Absolute Return Partners: Why The US of AA Matters
QB Asset Management: Downgrade of US Treasury Obligations Legitimate and Insufficient (hat tip Ritholtz.com)
Paul Kasriel (Northern Trust): S&P’s Downgrade of US Sovereign Debt – People Actually Pay Them For These Opinions?
John Hussman: Recession Warning and the Proper Policy Response