State of the European Banking Crisis at August 21, 2011

The banking crisis that is occurring in Europe is getting much attention. Much of the recent performance of the equities markets of the world is being blamed on slowing growth. While growth is slowing, I believe the way the equities markets are moving lower is indicative of a liquidity crisis driven by potential bank failures.

We can see this in the CDS markets, particularly in the CDS of Bank of America, Commerzbank, Societe Generale, UniCredit, and Lloyds, which I refer to as the “Failing 5″. What is alarming is that these 5 banks represent very large proportions of GDP (each having over $1 Trillion in assets on the balance sheet) of 5 of the largest economies of the world, respectively the US, Germany, France, Italy, and the UK.

Here’s the graph:

CDS of the 5 Failing Banks - BofA, Commerzbank, SocGen, UniCredit, and Lloyds

All banks are above their 2008 wides except for BofA which is very near its 2008 wide.

Not surprisingly, the banks’ equities are trading near their 2009 lows. Below is a normalized graph of the equity prices of each bank:

Equity Prices of the Failing 5 Banks - BofA, Commerzbank, SocGen, UniCredit, and Lloyds

What is alarming (or serves as a warning) is that while these banks are trading near their lows, the market is not yet. Important to realize is that the banking models simply stop functioning at these levels. Banks can’t fund themselves in the long run at these levels and keep a business model. Many clients only borrow money at spreads of 100-200bps. So at 300bps spread of marginal funding costs, the banks will have to start to de-lever rather than take on new business (this is an optimistic scenario). A worse case is that the market loses faith in the bank, and a bank run ensues (the Lehman scenario).

So while Equities on valuations-terms may look cheap, current valuations do not capture the distinct possibility of at least one important bank failure (much less 5).

They also do not incorporate the forthcoming negative earnings revisions, as currently very few earnings have been revised down on the single name level, even though GDP is being rapidly revised down throughout all Wall Street banks.

ECRI leading indicators are already starting to turn down, and it is likely that the SP 500 continues to follow the ECRI LI downward. Here’s the current graph:

ECRI Weekly Leading Indicator at 2011-08-21

It’s not a perfect comparison, and I have more sophisticated ways of looking at the market, but simplistically, given that the current correlation between ECRI and S&P 500 price level continues to hold, we can see downside in the S&P to the 1000 level as ECRI continues to deteriorate.

Latin American corporate bond spreads continue to widen, though recently it has just been that the treasury bond rally has not been accompanied by a rally in corporate yields. Yields themselves have stopped widening for now. Here’s the current picture for Latin American Bond Spreads:

Latin American Corporate Bond Spreads at 2011-08-21

We are at a real crossroads, just as we are with bank CDS’s. The current level of 400bps is not stable. Either we continue on the path to 800, or the world returns back to the 300bps level. Spreads look juicy relative to the last 2 years though a longer term chart demonstrates the razors edge where we now stand:

Long-term Latam Corporate Bond Spreads Screen Shot 2011-08-21

Given the lack of clarity and resolution that is coming out of the European leadership, my bet is that spread go wider and equities go lower in the coming days and weeks.

The one positive thing I can say is that the problems of the world right now are not due to Latin America where things continue to progress and slowly get better. Credit is still difficult here (in Brazil credit costs at least 1 percent per month) and so there is much less risk of a debt driven deflation directly. We are, however, still linked to the world and are unlikely to avoid slowing substantially with a US recession. If a European bank breaks, Brazil and the rest of Latin America will suffer from the rapid decline in liquidity as EM bonds get sold.

Investing right now is 90% macro, and the dominant macro factors are outside of the region – predominantly Europe with a heavy dose of the US thrown in and both are in trouble.

Be careful out there.

Abraço, Arthur O’Keefe, São Paulo Value

State of Latin American Corporate Credit Market at August 7 2011

While the market decides if it is going to a enter a liquidity crisis, Latam spreads have started to widen in sympathy to the market. Spreads are 35bps wider month-to-date.

Latin America Corporate Bond Spreads for bonds in USD:

Latam Corporate Spreads at 2011-08-07

At the current level of 340bps the market is nearing the May 2010 (Greece part 1) liquidity crisis levels.

Treasuries helped make July a stellar month for Latin American Corporate Bonds, but, now that they are choppy, they are not helping as much to maintain a steady yield for the Latam Bond Index. 10 year US Treasuries are 20bps tighter month-to-date at 2.56%

US Treasuries:

US Treasury Rates at 2011-08-07

As a result Latam Corporate Bond Yields are roughly 10 bps wider from month end to yield about 6.00%:

Latam Corporate Yields at 2011-08-07

Given the duration of Latam bonds, this has driven the bond index down about 90bps month-to-date:

Latam Corporate Bond Index Value at 2011-08-07

Will see where this finds a bottom, but generally sell-offs in Latam Corporate Bonds, considering the growth characteristics and fiscal condition of the region, presents an attractive investment opportunity.

Another sign that things may improve for the asset space is that 26 week (6 month) correlation of spread returns (lately negative) to the returns of the S&P 500 (very negative) is approaching a high:

Rolling 26 Week Correlations between Latam Spread Returns and S&P 500 Returns at 2011-08-07

Given that the primary concerns are growth (and secondary concerns are the futures of various developed markets) we may see equities continue to lag while credit spreads may hold or rally given their elevated levels.

A variant scenario is that current fair value of the S&P is 1180-1315 with best guess of value at 1260, so with the S&P at 1200 we may see a relief rally which would aid Latam Corporate Bond spreads in tightening driving returns.

Current S&P 500 Model:

S&P 500 Index Model Valuation at 2011-08-07

S&P earnings are still strong and estimates have yet to come down, which is a very different scenario from 2008 when earnings were falling with estimates also being revised down by the time the Lehman led liquidity crisis struck.

On the bear side, a government/sovereign credit crisis is uncharted territory in recent times. I believe this last happened in the 30s.

So much more analysis and monitoring is required. Will keep you posted.

Abraço,

Arthur O’Keefe, São Paulo Value

August 5th close to mark short term bottom? SPY, XLV look intersting

Quick post:

Technicals of the S&P look very oversold. Fair value still looks to be around the 1250-1275 levels. Given the Fed meeting next week, there could be a short bounce to play of buying today at the close. The model is recommending to long at the close today.

S&P 500 Model at 2011-0805

We are in the midst of a liquidity crisis, but it is a different flavor from 2008 which was driven by corporate (bank) failures. Today we are looking at government failures. Corporations are relatively resilient still.

S&P 500 sales are rock solid:

S&P 500 Sales at 2011-08-05

Back in 2008, sales margin (earnings to sales) had already turned for a while. Today they are still at the peak:

S&P 500 Margins at 2011-08-05

Neither sales or sales margin are predicted to soften in the next 3 months.

Which means the big question is what’s going to happen to earnings multiple. Finally we are approaching a short term reasonable multiple which points to a tactical (short term call) bottom:

S&P 500 Price to Earnings (PE) at 2011-08-05

The cheapest sector that I can see is Healthcare (ETF: XLV) which is even more predictable that the S&P in aggregate. Healthcare is a defensive play is it does not have nearly the level of fluctuations in sales and margins. Here are all 4 graphs of the index underlying XLV:

XLV Healthcare Index Model at 2011-08-05

XLV Healthcare Index Sales at 2011-08-05

XLV Healthcare Index Margins at 2011-08-05

XLV Healthcare Index Price to Earnings (PE) at 2011-08-05

As a side note, tech (XLK) is also starting to look cheap, but I need to dig in more.

Good luck today.

Abraço,

Arthur, São Paulo Value

S&P bottom signaled with weekly close below 1275

Looking at the 10 year and earnings and recent trends in price to earnings, it looks like fair value of the S&P 500 is 1250-1275. A weekly close below 1275 would signal that a short term bottom is in place.

S&P 500 Model at 2011-08-04 with Fair Value 1250-1275

A red flag would be downward revisions in forecasted earnings (shown in red as BEst_EPS). Also a liquidity crisis would cause temporary stress.

I advocate being very cautious in this environment.

Cheap sectors are: Tech and Healthcare. Rich sectors are: Energy and Industrials.

Abraço,

Arthur, Sao Paulo Value

Equities Index Models are Price to Earnings Models

In these last few months of shifting focus to Latam Credit, I devoted a material amount of time to the transition from the mindset of a single name equity investor to the midset of a macro asset allocator having views on asset classes such as credit spreads, interest rates, and equity indexes (mainly S&P 500 and Bovespa) as well as equity sub-index views (like having a view on cyclicals versus non-cyclicals) to understand where investment is flowing.

Credit investing and rates investing are sensitive to investor relative return perceptions between asset classes. At the end of the day most bonds get paid back, yet there is still volatility in the asst class as funds flow into and out of credit and rates. Why is this?

The results of search for the answer to this why are surprising in that the skill-set and way of thinking at the index level of investing is in many ways different than what is requires for investing at the single-name level.

A quick example is earnings misses/beats. Single name investing many time is about knowing which company is better at its business than its competitors. So at the single name level it could be that a business’s competition is better and customers shifted to a competing product, and so the company lost sales and therefore missed earnings. In this case, though, at the index level sales likely stayed the same, and the earnings merely moved to someone else’s bottom line in the index. Who earned them only changed the the total earned in aggregate didn’t. So the index earnings don’t move in this case, and if index P/E doesn’t move, index price stays the same as well.

Inside the index one will see one company rally and one company sell-off but an index investor won’t feel anything. This concept is captured in the average correlation statistics of the S&P 500 (here shown as of July 28, 2011 from a Goldman Sachs report by David Kostin):

Pairwise and Sector correlation of the S&P 500When pairwise correlation is very low, as it was in the mid 90s and mid 2000′s, the prevailing stories are idiosyncratic – stories about winners and losers within a sector and between sectors (cyclicals versus non cyclicals, etc).

In todays environment, pairwise correlation is actually quite high by historical standards. This can be thought as prices of all companies (to exaggerate a little bit) are rising and falling together.

This is interesting, because in general, as shown below (also from GS/Kostin), index earnings are slow to change (and they are only reported in 4 two month periods per year effectively).

S&P 500 Earnings Graph at 2011-08-03 from Goldman Sachs

Given that index earnings don’t change quickly, one might expect index price volatility to be low and therefore in high pair-wise correlation times, one might expect single name volatility to be low. This is not the case. Index volatility is not explained by earnings beats/misses at the index level.

So what’s going on then? The short answer is Index investing is 10% forecasting index earnings which is more or less easy given that they don’t change much/quickly day-to-day as shown above and 90% forecasting Index Price-to-Earnings ratio, which itself can be broken down into price-to-book and ROE forecasts.

Price to Earnings = Price to Book x Book / Earnings

Return on Equity = Earnings / Book, therefore:

Price to Earnings = Price to Book / ROE

This can be counterintuitive, but the implication is that improvements in ROE should lower Price to Earnings if Price to Book doesn’t change.

So bottom line is that Earnings don’t change much, so forecasting index levels becomes of game of forecasting price to earnings and/or price to book and ROE of the index.

The punchline is that what drives Price-to-Earnings many times are factors outside of the equities markets and many analyst equity models. One extremely important factor to watch and understand is 10 year US Treasury rates. They are extremely correlated with price to earnings of the S&P 500 as noted below (here shown as of August 3, 2011 from a UBS report by Jonathan Golub):

Price to Earnings of the S&P 500 versus 10 Year Treasuries from UBS So today the stories are not about individual winners and losers but about the merits of owning equities as opposed to rates.

There are very deep implications. From 2009, at least, to be a US Treasuries trader is to be an Equities Index Trader. Broadly people taking views on the S&P 500 index level are taking views on US Treasury 10 Year rates because the link between the two is that the same factor that drives 10 Year rates drives price-to-earnings ratios.

So to tie everything together, Index Earnings don’t change quickly. Most of the volatility in the index is explained by changes in Index Price-to-Earnings. So Index models (to forecast the Index Price) are really Index Price-to-Earnings models.

Furthermore, given the very high correlation, any equity index model has to consider the interest rate effect on price to earnings or at least have a reality check on whether the forecasted price-to-earnings level of the model checks witch what is likely in the Interest Rate market (particularly 10 Year Treasuries).

So the bottom line is that as growth expectations have been revised down, 10 year Treasuries have rallied, and this has pressured Price-to-Earnings of the S&P 500.

When will this stop? Probably when growth expectations are all repriced, which should finish in the next week or two. Keep an eye on GDP revisions and 10 Year Treasury interest rate action and you’ll get a sense of when it’s safe to be long equities again or when the 10 Year Treasury is at risk of selling off.

Abraço, Arthur

São Paulo Value

Risk on but be hedged

Have an article forthcoming for the last few weeks, but I have been struggling to find time to publish it. Will try to do so in the coming days.

In the meantime, just want to put out that since the beginning of the month, the risk return balance has shifted tremendously to a short vol, long equity with a macro hedge strategy. Sounds complicated but basically it’s that mega-cap equities should outperform in the next couple of years if debt stays at this level more or less. Only in the most dire situation will debt outperform megacap equities and I don’t think we are there yet.

An example is Walmart which has growing foreign business and is the low cost retailer for the us. The stock hasn’t moved in ten years while over the same period earnings per share have quadrupled.

Given that it was a ten year trend to cheapness, I expect the reversion to take at least a year, but there should be money to be made.

Similarly tech is very cheap – MSFT, INTC, HPQ.

Buy long dated calls where you can get the cheaply, sell medium dated puts where you can get paid dearly, and manage risk by hedging in the macro indices.

Try not to lose money,
Arthur O’Keefe
São Paulo Value

Tony Robbins – An Important Note of Caution

I know I have fallen off the planet for the last few months, but I have been very busy getting settled in São Paulo…. I remain super bullish long-term on Brazil and see enormous opportunities here. Some of those periodically consume a lot of my time.

In any case I continue to read and analyze what’s going on. Volume in the markets has been extremely light and conditions are pretty dangerous in my opinion. Very large moves on very small volume affect asset values of enormous scale. I call that a form a leverage in the system. In a way I think it would be better if the market just remained shut rather than have +/- 2+% days on less than 200mm shares changing hands on the SPY.

I advocate running very small direction either long or short (depends on what you own or are short I suppose) in this market and keeping gross leverage low as well (gross leverage is [ABS(longs) + ABS(shorts)]/[Net Equity] where ABS is absolute value).

If you’re dying to have a position, WMT is looking pretty cheap. HPQ is as well. But hedge out some of the Beta to the market in any positions (including these). Don’t stretch at all in this market and try to get some sort of seniority in the capital structure. I think the general direction continues down in the long term. Maybe some miracle happens and the market somehow rallies, but the risk is more weighted to the downside in my opinion.

So I will leave with this video warning on the state of the market that I came across from Tony Robbins. I am trying to figure out who’s he referring to in his opening (if I do I will post an update), as he never reveals his source. I don’t think, based on the numbers that he mentioned, that his client is Paul Tudor Jones, but it sounds like someone of equal stature. What’s significant is that I have to take Tony’s claim that he is well connected at face value given what I know of him. So if he felt strongly enough to go on the record with a warning saying that his best clients are worried, especially given that Tony doesn’t need to say any of this to gain credibility, it’s worth listening to and considering. It at least adds to the body of data to be analyzed.

Take a look at this video: