- "It's the presence of debt that creates the possibility of default, foreclosure, and bankruptcy."
- "Does that mean debt is a bad thing and should be avoided? Absolutely not. Rather, it’s a matter of whether the amount of debt is appropriate relative to (a) the size of the overall enterprise and (b) the potential for fluctuations in the enterprise’s profitability and asset value."
- This reminds me and reminded Marks of one of my favorite Marks' memos https://www.oaktreecapital.com/docs/default-source/memos/2008-12-17-volatility-leverage-dynamite.pdf?sfvrsn=c7bc0f65_2
- "As Housel puts it, “ as debt increases, you narrow the range of outcomes you can endure in life.”
- The reason for taking on debt is simple, it's cheaper than equity, allows you to 'bet' more and when you're right you end up winning more.
- Of course when you're wrong you lose more...
- And this is where Marks' makes his mark in the memo: "But levered portfolios face a downside risk to which there isn’t a corresponding upside: the risk of ruin. The most important adage regarding leverage reminds us to “never forget the six-foot-tall person who drowned crossing the stream that was five feet deep on average.” To survive, you have to get through the low points, and the more leverage you carry (everything else being equal), the less likely you are to do so. "
- And in referencing Housel referencing Taleb, Marks' provides "It’s the isolated “tail events” that saddle levered investors with the greatest losses" and "One is thus capable of unwittingly playing Russian roulette – and calling it by some alternative “low risk” name. " and " as illustrated by recent events, we rarely consider outcomes that have happened only once a century . . . or never."
- So where does that leave things with regards to Marks' views on using leverage:
- "investors should usually use less than the maximum available. Successful investments, perhaps enhanced by the moderate use of leverage, should usually provide a good-enough return – something few people think about in good times."
- The risker the asset, the less leverage you should use and
- Adhere to Buffett's "Margin of Safety"
"We think they are days from failure. They think it is a temporary problem. This disconnect is dangerous."
Thursday, May 9, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 9, 2024
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 8, 2024
Tuesday, May 7, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 7, 2024
Ignorance. Finally, we should admit that neither we, nor central banks, really understand how the economy works and how monetary policy affects the economy. There is a complex verbal doctrine that bounces around central banks, policy institutions, and private analysts, asserting that interest rates have a relatively mechanical, reliable, and understood effect on “spending” through a “transmission mechanism” that though operating through “long and variable lags” gives the Fed essentially complete control over inflation in a few years. The one thing I know from 40 years of study, and all of you know as well, is that there is no respectable well-tested economic model that produces anything like that verbal doctrine. (More here.) Knowing what you don’t know, and that nobody else does either, is knowledge. Our empirical knowledge is also skimpy, and the historical episodes underlying that experience come with quite different fiscal and financial-structure preconditions. 1980 was a different world in many ways, and also combined fiscal and microeconomic reform with high interest rates
Monday, May 6, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 6, 2024
"Persuaded as the Secretary is that the proper funding of the present debt will render it a national blessing, yet he is so far from acceding to the position, in the latitude in which it is sometimes laid down, that “public debts are public benefits,” a position inviting to prodigality and liable to dangerous abuse, that he ardently wishes to see it incorporated as a fundamental maxim in the system of public credit of the United States, that the creation of debt should always be accompanied with the means of extinguishment. This he regards as the true secret for rendering public credit immortal." -ALEXANDER HAMILTON, first U.S secretary of the Treasury (1790)
And courtesy of George Hall:
"What a Government spends the public pay for. There is no such thing as an uncovered deficit. But in some countries, it seems possible to please and content the public, for a time at least..." - John Maynard Keynes, 1923, A Tract on Monetary Reform, p. 62.
Anyway, why does a government want a monopoly over currency, see here
XTOD: To recap this week ... On Wednesday the question to Powell was if they would hike. On Friday, we are asking if they cut this summer. Any bets on what next week brings?
Friday, May 3, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 3, 2024
Thursday, May 2, 2024
Daily Economic Update: May 2, 2024
Refunding announcement showed continued high bill issuance, unchanged from current auction sizes. JOLTS data showed a large decline in job openings, ISM showed weakening activity and really the only economic beat yesterday was in ADP Employment. Of course now of this really mattered as the main event was Powell's presser, which was aptly summed up in this tweet from Bloomberg's Jonathan Ferro: "One gear: dovish. Powell says policy is restrictive and the presser ended almost as soon as it started. The 2-year rallies for the 5th straight Fed decision-day." That dovishness and the reduction in QT was enough to send yields lower and stocks higher. The 2Y is back under 5% at 4.96% and the 10Y is 4.63%.
If you'd like a little more on the Fed check out my recap here.
On the day ahead it's Jobless Claims, Productivity & Unit Labor Cost, Factory Orders and Apple earnings.
XTOD: Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady, fires back at Kendrick Lamar
XTOD: "The Treasury has continued to stick to their prior market guidance of not expecting to increase nominal coupon auction sizes for next several quarters...because if they were to deviate from that and increase, we WILL have a resumption of the term-premium scare..." @Nomura #McE
XTOD: Feed the transcript from today's FOMC press conference to ChatGPT. Here is its summary: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GMhLEfzXMAAPbV4?format=png&name=small
XTOD: Apparently, the secret to a long and happy marriage is…proposing at the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting? https://wsj.com/finance/berkshire-hathaway-annual-meeting-romance-25eb77fc?st=npgr0xi3cucb39s via @WSJ
XTOD: “I’ll just work until I have X dollars and then do what I want.” If you don’t define the “what I want” alternate activities, the X figure will increase indefinitely to avoid the fear-inducing uncertainty of the void.
XTOD: The best antidote to burnout is not teaching people coping skills to handle stress. It's redesigning work to reduce stress. The cure for exhaustion is removing overwhelming demands and the norm of self-sacrifice. Healthy workplaces value well-being as much as performance.
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
FOMC Recap: "Dark Matter" matters
- The FOMC maintained their policy fed funds rate at 5.25%-5.50%
- The statement noted that "there has been a lack of further progress toward" the 2% inflation objective.
- The FOMC will reduce the pace of QT.
- Powell characterized U.S. growth as strong, the labor market as relatively tight, and that it will take longer than thought for inflation to return to target.
- Powell continues to characterize monetary policy as 'restrictive' though noting that the data will ultimately tell them if that's true.
- Powell does not believe the Fed's next move will be a hike.
- Powell isn't really thinking about the calendar and whether they will have time to cut rate this year. "I don't know how long it will take".
- Powell said, the economy has been hard to forecast. There are paths to cuts and paths to no cuts, but he doesn't know.
"My own view is that physics envy drove economists to think of the social world as a potentially perfect machine." - Robert Skidelsky, What's Wrong With Economics?
- "Steal the lights from our eyes": Represents the loss of clarity and transparency in economic decision-making, where hidden forces obscure understanding.
- "Take my blood from my heart": Symbolizes the extraction of wealth or value from the core of the economy, leaving it weakened.
- "We're in all of this dark matter": Reflects the pervasive influence of hidden economic factors, such as market sentiment or systemic risks.
- "Take the breaths from my chest, Take the pulse and I'm outta line": Suggests the suffocation of economic vitality and stability, leading to disruptions and imbalance.
- "Denounce the demagogues, King diamond to discard": Calls for rejecting misguided leadership and outdated economic models that no longer serve the collective good.
- "Deplore the dialogue, Your word against the law": Highlights the breakdown of effective communication and trust in economic institutions, leading to uncertainty and conflict.
- "It's strange these days, When everybody else pays For someone else's mistake": Illustrates the unfair burden placed on the broader population for the failures or misdeeds of a few, echoing themes of moral hazard and systemic risk.
- "No tolerance for intolerance, intolerance for- No patience left for impatience no more": Reflects the need for a balanced and disciplined approach to economic policy, rejecting short-termism and reckless behavior.
- "No love lost for lost loves, No sorrow for the unaccountable": Conveys the necessity of holding accountable those responsible for economic harm, without sentimentality or excuse.
Overall, these allegorical references paint a picture of the complex and often opaque world of economics, where hidden forces and systemic flaws can have profound impacts on individuals and societies.
There might be more wisdom in this AI generated allegory than in obsessing over every word Powell spoke today.
Daily Economic Update: May 1, 2024
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