Showing posts sorted by relevance for query leverage. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query leverage. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Daily Economic Update: May 20, 2025

Do You Even DuPont?

We see a million articles about the “fiscal disaster” of the U.S. government, the one entity that literally cannot default in the traditional sense of failing to repay as promised, but let’s be honest, do most investors have any idea how much debt is lurking in their portfolios?

Corporate debt and the amount of leverage in the corporate sector has taken a backseat to discussions around fiscal responsibility at the federal level. The most recent Federal Reserve Financial Stability report noted, “gross leverage of publicly traded corporations edged down but remained near the upper part of their respective historical ranges.”  And let’s face it that assumes the Fed can even measure all of the debt in the system appropriately.


You just don’t see a ton of articles talking about corporate debt and leverage, until you do (does anyone remember concerns over leveraged loans in 2019?), and that’s usually not until something is broken.  In the meantime corporate reports give you the data you need to help better understand how much leverage companies might be running.

We talked about leverage here. And if you want a deeper read, this Howard Marks memo is one of my favorites, summarizing leverage as: 

“Leverage is neither good nor bad in and of itself. In the right amount, applied to the right assets, it’s good. When used to excess given the underlying assets, it’s bad. It doesn’t add value; it merely magnifies both good and bad outcomes. So leverage shouldn’t be treated as a silver bullet or magic solution. It’s a tool that can be used wisely or unwisely.”


If you’ve ever nodded along while someone said “ROE looks strong,” but didn’t ask, “Yeah, but why?”, then allow me to reintroduce you to your friend DuPont.


DuPont, Not Just For Chemicals, But Decoding Returns

The starting point of DuPont analysis, or the decomposition of ROE, is that ROE is a function of how much a company earns from its assets and its use of financial leverage.  Companies can juice their ROE by earning more from their assets or taking on more debt. 


ROE = Net Profit Margin × Asset Turnover × Financial Leverage


Translation: how much you earn on each sale (margin), how many sales you wring from your assets (efficiency), and how much of it you turbocharge with debt (leverage).


But the key here is this: leverage is a multiplier. A beautiful one when things go up. A wrecking ball when they don’t.


While companies seem to be covering that interest cost currently, the potential refinancing of longer term debt can still be a source of risks to companies earnings and investors returns. And if you listened to Jamie Dimon yesterday, he sees risks to corporate earnings.


A company with 15% ROE might look like a gem until you realize it’s built on 7x leverage and burning through cash to keep the dividend alive.


Is Leverage A Risk You Don’t See?

Morgan Housel once said, “Risk is what you don’t see.” Leverage is often exactly that—hidden in leases, obscured in footnotes (remember “Repo 105” and Lehman), normalized through buybacks.  Generally unseen until it’s not. 


This isn’t just a stock-picking problem. If index returns are juiced by levered ROE across sectors, what happens when that leverage turns from friend to foe? Valuations start to compress—not just because growth expectations fall, but because debt starts to demand its due.


So yes, DuPont is dusty. But in a world where debt isn’t cheap anymore and ROE math isn’t magic, maybe it’s time to revisit the fundamentals.  


Because if you’re holding companies whose returns are just borrowed performance, you might want to check what’s backing them.


And A Day After Moody’s Downgrade…

Corporate credit spreads were little changed in the face of the Moody’s downgrade as investors don’t believe country risk extends to corporate risk.  Yields on U.S. treasuries rose some only to retreat and ended the day little changed. The S&P was able to extend its winning streak to 6 days.


Fed officials continued to stress “wait and see” and you’re likely to hear the same message today.


In the meantime, ponder how much financial leverage you own via the S&P 500…and that’s before we even get around to talking about operating leverage.


XTOD’s:

XTOD: CEO Jamie Dimon: "Forward P/E ratios are around 20 or 21 today.  And you know, tariffs do affect the E...Earnings forecasts will come down. We started the year expecting earnings to be up 12%. Now it’s more like 6–7%. My guess? In six months, that could be zero. So earnings estimates have dropped—and that probably means P/E ratios will drop too. If P/E multiples fall by just one turn, that’s another 5% down. So between earnings and valuation compression, you could be looking at a 10% market impact. I think that’s a likely outcome, in my personal opinion",


XTOD: Wild. "PE distributions have fallen from 29% of NAV from 2014 to 2017 to only 11% last year. Endowments are rushing to complete sales ahead of potential changes to taxes, which could rise from 1.4% to 21%... 'We recently looked at a portfolio at 80-85 cents on the dollar'."


XTOD: Shocking to literally no one, Buy Now Pay Later loans are a ticking time bomb


XTOD: Jeff Bezos on creating a culture for missionaries: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GrVrWhnXEAETEg-?format=jpg&name=900x900



https://x.com/TheTranscript_/status/1924496760786874800

https://x.com/TidefallCapital/status/1924497898412118404

https://x.com/VladTheInflator/status/1924526771934032363

https://x.com/FoundersPodcast/status/1924562453624479921


Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Daily Economic Update: January 10, 2024

Howard Mark's writing a memo that uses Edward Chancellor's excellent book, The Price of Time, as the source of Mark's inspiration, sign me up!  I've written about Chancellor's book in this LinkedIn article and I've mentioned Marks a few times on this blog (you can search) and have always enjoyed his thinking on risk and leverage, including this quote: 
"Leverage doesn’t add value or make an investment better. Like everything else in
the investment world other than pure skill, leverage is a two-edged sword – in fact,
probably the ultimate two-edged sword. It helps when you’re right and hurts when
you’re wrong. "
As for Mark's latest memo "Easy Money" , I would summarize and comment on Mark's thoughts as follows:
  • Mark's notes (again) that the extended period of low interest rates had a major impact on business and the associated appreciation of assets.
  • Mark's list the stimulative effects of lower interest rates, including pushing investors out into riskier investments in a classic 'search for yield'.
  • He goes onto discuss some of the problems that occur with abnormally low interest rates, something Chancellor provides examples of in his book and something I equally mentioned in my LinkedIn article (above).  In my article I wrote - "As Chancellor states: “Without interest, future income streams are impossible to value. Capital can’t be properly allocated and too little is saved. If this situation continues for long, then the state investment would have to replace private investment and central banks would have to replace commercial banks as the major providers of credit.” "
  • Mark's cites a number of "malinvestment" examples from the recent cycle of low yields including Argentinian 100 year bonds, financing of LBO's, Theranos & FTX scams, and the proliferation of 'zombie companies'.
  • As always Mark's never misses an opportunity to discuss leverage, writing: "In much the same way, leverage can make otherwise unattractive investments investible....it must be noted that cheap leverage doesn’t make investments better; it merely amplifies the results. In times of low interest rates, absolute prospective returns are low and leverage is cheap.  Why not use a lot of leverage to increase expected returns?  In the late 2010s, money flowed to both private equity, given its emphasis on leveraged returns from company ownership, and private credit, which primarily provides debt capital to private equity deals.  These trends complemented each other and led to a significant upswing in levered investing."  Further providing, "Heavy leverage can render companies fragile and make it hard for them to get through the proverbial low spots in the stream"
  • Mark's also talks about the perils of borrowing short to invest long, reminiscent of the March 2023 bank failures, and mentions some of the challenges of a psychological belief in lower for longer rates.
  • After discussing the impact of the low interest rate cycle, Mark's moves onto to discussing the power of understanding financial history and specifically that of credit cycles.  Interestingly Mark's uses the same John Mills quote in his article that I used in mine....should I go all Bill Ackman on him?
  • Mark's notes how similar the post-GFC years characterized by 'easy money' have been to other periods of financial history that did not end well for investors, yet, the lessons of the past fall on deaf ears.
  • While avoiding making any predictions, Mark's does not believe we're going back to unusually low interest rates and characterizes current interest rates as "normal", believing that only a true economic emergency should lead to rates lower than 2-4% range over the coming years.
  • Mark's believe the market is currently pricing in "goldilocks thinking" as it relates to either what will be the likely strength of weaknesses in the economy which will reveal themselves in the future and that such thinking will lead to disappointment.
Yesterday, stocks were little changed and yields remain largely rangebound with the 10Y Treasury seemingly caught in a trading range from around 4-4.05%. Spot BTC ETF's were "approved" until it turned out the SEC's Twitter account was "compromised".  Got to love how much crypto can and does get manipulated.

Treasury Supply (10Y auction today), earnings season and CPI on the horizon. 

XTOD: What's the lesson I want you to understand?  Greed and status can make you successful to the point of self-destruction. Leverage + taking instant IRS credits (filing taxes w/ accelerated depreciation) to live large, acquire properties, be that person on X, IG or TikTok talking about financial freedom through owning real estate is fun, until it's not.

XTOD: So, what is the purpose behind those who tell tales of cheap Canadian drugs? They seek to imply that our system is broken, and delivers only expensive drugs, when the socialist Canadian system delivers the goods for its people. Thus, they implicitly argue that we need to have socialism here. It's not complicated.  So, repeat after me. We could go with the Canadian system and have super cheap drugs, if only we can find a much bigger, more medically advanced, freer country right next to us to make miracle drugs for themselves, and then we insist that we pay them only a bit above their variable cost for our share, and then they in turn agree to let us be their parasite. Mexico, would you mind helping us out?”

XTOD: Hoarding talent backfires. Managers who fail to promote people wind up with weaker teams. 
Study of 96k job applications: Bosses who advanced their employees attracted more & better internal candidates for open positions.  People gravitate to leaders who invest in their growth

XTOD: Makes me happy to see one of my old blog posts still being read, liked, and shared.
https://worthwhile.typepad.com/worthwhile_canadian_initi/2010/12/milton-friedmans-thermostat.html

XTOD: An analysis finds that nominal wage growth peaked in 2022. In 2023, wages were still increasing but at a slower rate, and growth has yet to fall to pre-pandemic levels https://ow.ly/EF4E50Qpc0s

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Daily Economic Update: May 9, 2024

Yesterday the Swedish central bank cut their benchmark rate by 25bps to 3.75% in what some believe will be the first of many developed country central banks to cut rates this year.  On the day ahead we'll get the Bank of England rated decision, they are not expected to cut rates.  

Stateside, the large 10Y Treasury Auction tailed by a full basis point, the 13th of the last 15th auction to tail, perhaps showing that the market appetite for longer dated treasury paper has some fragility, but we'll see what the 30Y auction does today.  In Fedspeak, it's been more of the same kind of data dependent talk that everyone has become accustomed to of late.  Yields rose a couple of bps and stock grinded out another day of gains on the Dow and was nearly flat on S&P.

In other news Howard Marks dropped his latest memo titled The Impact of DebtIt is his second "short" memo, following up on his last memo which I reviewed here. Readers will know I enjoy Marks' work and have covered some of his other recent memos here and here.  Perhaps my favorite Marks' quote is "Leverage doesn’t add value or make an investment better. Like everything else in the investment world other than pure skill, leverage is a two-edged sword – in fact, probably the ultimate two-edged sword. It helps when you’re right and hurts when you’re wrong."  

In this most recent memo Marks' reference the work of someone else I very much enjoy reading, Morgan Housel.  Here are some takeaways:
  • "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."
  • "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"
What's "Margin of Safety", there are many good definitions you can find that I've written on this blog, but I think this sums it up: think creatively and be open to things unfolding in ways different from what they expect....flexibility comes with a cost....retain the option to change course when our plans go awry and have the humility to follow through. 

On the day ahead it's BoE, jobless claims and 30Y Auction.

XTOD: There are many people here with serious gifts and talents—intelligent, witty, thoughtful—and those talents constitute a great power. Unfortunately, most choose to use that power in stupid and/or dangerous ways: the sharp-tongued pundit on here wreaking insecure havoc on everyone that disagrees with him in the slightest way; or the amount of time and energy thinking of funny memes for cheap engagement.
I often imagine what good is being lost to the world—what great good could be added to the world—if these same people used those gifts and talents, that power, to build others up and do something productive. 
What books will never be written?
What genuine words will never be said?
What time and attention is not given to a spouse that is given to a social media critic?

XTOD: If you do things you don’t enjoy for long enough without understanding why you’re doing them, you develop the bad habit of doing things you don’t enjoy without understanding why you’re doing them. And you end up with a lot of people who are miserable at work.

XTOD: Want to understand what's going on in the commercial real estate market right now, especially office properties?  Watch what's happening with 1440 Broadway.  The $400 million loan backing 1440 Broadway helped push up the serious delinquency rate for office loans to 7% in April, its highest level since early 2017,  https://bloomberg.com/news/articles/

XTOD: What I want 2 understand is where all the ratings agencies downgrades are. Crickets. Even CRE CLOS-- where the losses to the AAAs stand a real chance of repeating the 2008  meltdown that saw Our Heroes taking the "First." They LITERALLY claimed a 1st Amendment pass to avoid suits

XTOD: DavidBeckworth
𝘔𝘺 𝘱𝘳𝘰𝘮𝘱𝘵 𝘵𝘰 𝘊𝘭𝘢𝘶𝘥𝘦 𝘈𝘐: can you imagine a world where the combination of (1) big data and (2) AI enables the Federal Reserve to become more automated and less reliant on human beings? 
@pmarca
 𝘊𝘭𝘢𝘶𝘥𝘦 𝘈𝘐 𝘙𝘦𝘴𝘱𝘰𝘯𝘦:
Yes, I can envision a world where the combination of big data and advanced AI technologies enable the Federal Reserve's decision-making processes to become more automated and less reliant on human input. Here's how this scenario could potentially unfold:  
𝗕𝗶𝗴 𝗗𝗮𝘁𝗮 𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗴𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻: The Federal Reserve could leverage big data analytics to integrate vast amounts of economic data from various sources, including financial markets, banking systems, employment statistics, consumer spending patterns, and global economic indicators. This comprehensive data integration would provide a real-time, holistic view of the economic landscape.
𝐀𝐈-𝐃𝐫𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐧 𝐌𝐨𝐝𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐅𝐨𝐫𝐞𝐜𝐚𝐬𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠: Powerful AI algorithms and machine learning models could be trained on this extensive data to analyze economic trends, identify patterns, and make accurate forecasts about inflation, employment, economic growth, and other key indicators. These AI models could continuously learn and adapt, improving their predictive capabilities over time.
𝐀𝐮𝐭𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐝 𝐏𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐜𝐲 𝐃𝐞𝐜𝐢𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬: Based on the insights derived from AI-driven modeling and forecasting, the Federal Reserve's decision-making processes related to monetary policy, interest rate adjustments, and other interventions could become increasingly automated. AI systems could recommend optimal policy decisions based on predefined objectives and constraints, minimizing the need for human deliberation and decision-making.
𝐂𝐨𝐧𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐮𝐨𝐮𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐧𝐢𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐀𝐝𝐣𝐮𝐬𝐭𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭: With real-time data feeds and AI-driven monitoring, the Federal Reserve's policies and interventions could be continuously evaluated and adjusted based on changing economic conditions. AI systems could dynamically adapt policies to maintain economic stability, without the delays associated with human decision-making processes.
𝐑𝐞𝐝𝐮𝐜𝐞𝐝 𝐇𝐮𝐦𝐚𝐧 𝐈𝐧𝐯𝐨𝐥𝐯𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭: While human oversight and governance would likely still be necessary to some extent, the day-to-day operations and decision-making processes of the Federal Reserve could become significantly less reliant on human input. AI systems could handle the bulk of data analysis, modeling, forecasting, and policy recommendations, with human expertise focused on setting overarching objectives and ensuring the system's integrity.
However, it's important to note that such a scenario would also raise concerns about transparency, accountability, and the potential for unintended consequences or biases inherent in AI systems. Careful governance frameworks, ethical considerations, and robust monitoring mechanisms would need to be in place to ensure the responsible and trustworthy deployment of such AI-driven systems in critical economic domains like central banking.


Thursday, August 21, 2025

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: The Peril of Debt – Navigating the Stream with Caution

Greetings, astute investors! In today's Wisdom Bites, we turn our attention to a powerful, yet often perilous, force in finance: leverage. While it promises amplified returns, it also holds the potential for ruin, a truth Howard Marks masterfully unpacked in his May 9, 2024 memo, "The Impact of Debt." This memo strongly aligns with our blog’s consistent emphasis on robust risk management and the timeless principle of "margin of safety."

Marks highlights that "Leverage doesn’t add value or make an investment better." Instead, it is "a two-edged sword – in fact, probably the ultimate two-edged sword. It helps when you’re right and hurts when you’re wrong". Drawing on the insights of Morgan Housel, Marks emphasizes that "as debt increases, you narrow the range of outcomes you can endure in life".


The core danger, Marks warns, is the "risk of ruin". He employs a powerful analogy: "never forget the six-foot-tall person who drowned crossing the stream that was five feet deep on average". This illustrates that 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". Leverage has the power to "push routine risks into something capable of producing ruin". Marks further notes that investors "rarely consider outcomes that have happened only once a century . . . or never" when making leveraged bets.


For Marks, the solution is clear: investors should "usually use less than the maximum available" leverage. Instead, focus on generating "good-enough return". This advice ties directly into Warren Buffett’s investing maxim: "Never risk permanent loss of capital". This principle underpins our blog’s belief in patience and compounding – because "The ability to stick around for a long time, without wiping out or being forced to give up, is what makes the biggest difference". As Munger famously stated, "Never interrupt compounding unnecessarily".


Ultimately, Marks advocates for adherence to "Margin of Safety", a concept deeply rooted in Ben Graham’s philosophy. This means cultivating flexibility, having a buffer, and maintaining the humility to "change course when our plans go awry". By carefully managing debt and prioritizing survival, you position yourself for long-term success rather than succumbing to the temptation of short-term, high-risk "bonanzas".

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: The Discipline of Uncertainty

Welcome back to Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites, your daily reminder to cut through the noise and focus on what truly matters. Today, we're diving into a collection of a timeless mix of previous advice and XTODs (X/Twitter Thoughts of the Day) that illuminate the multifaceted world of risk management.

The Best of Edward Quince on Risk Management

In a world saturated with data and predictions, genuine insight often lies in understanding the unpredictable and managing our responses to it. Here are some profound observations on navigating risk, gleaned from the wisdom shared in our daily updates:

1. Embrace Uncertainty and Ditch Prediction

The future is inherently uncertain, and trying to predict it is often a fool's errand. As Myron Scholes wisely noted, "Everything in life is volatility times time. As volatility increases, time compresses. But what we care about is the validity of the fixed point. If we lose it, everything in the past becomes meaningless". Many "experts" confidently assert future outcomes, but remember that "Nobody knows anything, and that's okay". In fact, "It is very, very hard to keep in mind that we're not good at predicting & even harder to incorporate it into a general policy". The incentives in finance often encourage adding "noise, complexity and a constant pressure to do something", but "Time is the best filter. It is the only filter I trust". Your "behavior matters more than your forecast".

2. Start with Your Goals, Not the Market

Effective risk management begins with a clear understanding of what you want to achieve. As one XTOD puts it, "Risk offers the possibility of more, and risk management tools aim to empower us to go for more while taking less risk. Using them correctly involves staying focused on our goals and taking just enough risk to achieve them". Without a goal, "Taking a risk without a goal is just like getting in a car and driving around aimlessly expecting to wind up in a great place". Remember, "You don't need to worry about progressing slowly. You need to worry about climbing the wrong mountain".

3. Master Yourself: The Toughest Opponent

Risk management isn't just about financial models; it's deeply human. "The greatest battle of all is with yourself—your weaknesses, your emotions, your lack of resolution in seeing things through to the end. You must declare unceasing war on yourself". Overconfidence is a primary pitfall, as "Being 100% sure of yourself at all times betrays arrogance and breeds complacency. Questioning yourself reflects humility and propels growth". We often err by overestimating certainty or misjudging probabilities. Our aversion to loss can even lead us to take "bigger risks than we should or even realize". Cultivate humility, because "The need for certainty is the greatest disease the mind faces".

4. The Peril of Leverage: Don't Drown

One of the most dangerous aspects of risk is leverage. Howard Marks' powerful analogy warns, "never forget the six-foot-tall person who drowned crossing the stream that was five feet deep on average." He stresses that "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". Leverage "pushes routine risks into something capable of producing ruin", making investments inherently riskier.

5. Survival and Simplicity are Paramount

For long-term success, staying in the game is more important than chasing speculative gains. As Charlie Munger famously advised, "Never interrupt compounding unnecessarily". Warren Buffett echoed this with his fundamental rule: "Never risk permanent loss of capital". This commitment to survival means prioritizing prudence. "Margin of safety—you can also call it room for error or redundancy—is the only effective way to safely navigate a world that is governed by odds, not certainties". Simplicity is also key: "Block out all the noise and keep it simple".

6. Action and Prudence

While patience is a virtue, there are times to act. "Risk no more than you can afford to lose, and also risk enough so that a win is meaningful. If there is no such amount, don't play". "Intelligence without courage leads to anxiety because you will spend your time overthinking instead of acting, taking risks, improving your life". In making decisions under uncertainty, "the consequences must dominate the probabilities". A simple hedge is often to "simply take less risk".


Ultimately, understanding risk management means acknowledging that "The four most dangerous words in investing are: ‘this time is different’". By focusing on timeless principles, cultivating self-awareness, and maintaining a long-term perspective, you can navigate the inherent uncertainties of life and markets with greater resilience and wisdom.


Sunday, August 6, 2023

An Economist Walks Into a Brothel by Allison Schrager

 


Allison's book is all about understanding risk and how to manage unwanted risk.  This book uses a series of interesting stories to help the reader understand several "rules" related to risk.  What follows is a series of quotes I found interesting while reading this book and my associated commentary.

The importance of having a goal 

Taking a risk without a goal is just like getting in a car and driving around aimlessly expecting to wind up in a great place

knowing what you want might be the hardest part of risk management 

Over the course of my career one of the more interesting things I've observed both in my personal and professional life is just how difficult it can be at times to clearly specify goals.  We have all been part of performance review processes where we are asked to specify our goals for the upcoming performance period and became somewhat paralyzed as we assessed what we wanted out of the future.  At a corporate level sometimes defining a strategic vision, clearly identifying objectives, including return objectives, becomes difficult in practice. 

This is not to say that there aren't times when we can clearly articulate what we want, but simply to say that there are certainly times where defining what we want is challenging.  

Further, how we frame what we want, our goals, can lead us astray.  Using Schrager's example, how often have we framed what we want as simply "change", without defining further what we specifically want to the changed outcome to look like, what exactly will change.  For example, we all generally know that a goal of "taking a vacation" is going to be much better defined by being specific as to what you want out of the vacation.  Do you want to sit on the beach or go skiing?  Both satisfy the goal of "taking a vacation", but they clearly are very different outcomes.

taking a risk on the unknown for its own sake is a bad risk strategy

The risk of misspecification of goals is a risk that we don't think about managing, likely because we sometimes want to skip the step in the risk management process where we set our goals and objectives.

Why we want what we want is a topic for another discussion and something I'll cover when I review Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire by Luke Burgis in a forthcoming post.

Is risk-free enough to meet your objectives?

Identify your goal and then price it in risk-free terms.
Taking more risk than necessary is inefficient

The price of that risk-free asset is the most critical piece of information in any investment problem, or any decision you might face.

As we sit here in 2023, interest rates have risen at the fastest pace in the last 40 years. Risk-free rates, the yields on U.S. Treasury securities, are as high as in the 5% range.  If you have a monetary goal or return objective of 5% over the next year, you can very likely achieve that return without much risk (at least in nominal terms).

Risk-free depends on your goal.
In your personal life it can be much harder to define the "risk-free" option, and Schrager makes clear this fact by stating: 
it can be hard to see the risk-free choice because there is no single universal risk-free asset; it depends on your goal.

Schrager provides an example that likely resonates with anyone who has shopped for house these last few years. "If your goal is getting that specific house, the risk-free option is putting in a large bid...as much as you are prepared to pay - to ensure you get it." If your goal is different and you want a house you think is a good bargain, then "you should pay less than what you think the house is worth and be comfortable with the risk of losing a bidding war."

All said, it's universal that we shouldn't want to chose a higher risk path when a lower risk path can achieve our objectives.

Probably not, you likely will need to take some risk in life

Crucially, risk can lead to good outcomes, "rewards", as well as the bad outcomes we most often associate with risk. We all learn the old saying "no risk, no reward".  To reach our goals we often have to take some level of risk.  In your personal life if you're training for a physical goal, like running a marathon or earning a black-belt in a martial art, you inevitably face some risk of injury.  When managing a business you face some economic risk from every strategic decision, from personnel management, to product development.

smart risk taking involves going for more, and taking just enough risk that we need to, or are comfortable with to achieve our goal

What makes this so difficult is assessing the probabilities associated with each of the good and bad outcomes. I have often counseled the obvious, that you should avoid risk that lead you to blow up, the one's you can't recover from easily or ever.

So how do you Quantify and Communicate Risk

A good risk estimate requires data that can do two things: (1) reveal lessons from the past that will be relevant to the future, and (2) predict that certain past outcomes are more likely than others.

The hard part is knowing what constitutes a reasonable range

they often assume a normal distribution and use volatility as a standard measure of risk....normality is a controversial assumption.....if your distribution is skewed, volatility will underestimate risk.

that's the thing about predicting the future from based on the past.  It works until it doesn't...Often we don't realize the world is changing until long after it has changed.

When we think about the risk we want to take or avoid, we often look to the past. This makes intuitive sense.  As a child we learn to avoid touching a hot stove or that bees can sting as risk to be avoided.  We also learn through parables, traditions, and formal schooling the stories both of risk to avoid as well as risk that was rewarded. We learn from the past.

The most common ways we get probability wrong are: 1. We overestimate certainty 2. We overestimate the risk of unlikely events.  3. We assume correlations that don't exist. 4. We put a big weight on very likely or unlikely events and put almost no weight on anything that happens in between.

Because we live in an age of data, it is easy for us to want to quantify all known past risk and stop there.  Often it's better to take some time to consider risk qualitatively as well, brainstorming "what ifs" to see if the past data encompasses things you might want to consider before deciding whether to take or manage a risk. We often find ourselves in scenarios that are sometimes described as "regime changes", where past data provides little usual information in uncovering future probabilities. Thinking creatively can help you challenge the data before making a decision.

Manage risk you don't want to take or aren't being rewarded for taking

hedge: giving up some of your potential earnings in exchange for reducing risk

When we hedge, we give up some of our potential gains in exchange for reducing the chance of loss.
With hedging you must take less risk; you give up the extra upside of your potential reward in exchange for lessening the risk that something goes horribly wrong.

As someone who helped clients manage unwanted interest rate and currency risk, the act of hedging is near and dear to my heart, but a complex subject.  For some business managers, the decision to hedge can be simple because your investors aren't rewarding you for taking on a certain risk.  For example, if you manage certain assets, your investors may not reward you for generating returns due to fluctuations in foreign currency in your investments, but they may certainly punish you if you take that risk and lose money because of that decision. In this case managing foreign currency risk may be an easy decision.

In other situations you may not have a choice around what risk you manage.  We all are familiar with being required to insure our homes and automobiles. In certain financial transactions you may be required to manage interest rate or foreign currency risk as a condition to the transaction.

de-risking increases the odds of your getting what you want, but you must give up the possibility of getting more....Hedging does not differentiate between systematic and idiosyncratic risk, but it can reduce both types.

The thing about "hedging" is that it's a good news is bad news story.  For example if you own a foreign-denominated asset, if the foreign currency appreciates against your currency that's good news for your asset.  However, foreign currencies can be volatile and given the chance the foreign currency might depreciate against your currency, you may choose it's a risk that you need to manage to ensure you meet your return objectives.  In that case you may decide to hedge, or lock-in a future price at which you can sell/exchange your foreign currency from your asset for your local currency.  However by doing so you now can no longer benefit from foreign currency appreciation. So when the foreign currency appreciates, the "good news" on the underlying asset is now offset by "bad news" or losses on your hedge position.

Sometimes we want the possibility of more

With insurance you get rid of downside risk, but the upside, or upper tail, is still all yours (minus the cost of insurance).

Purchasing insurance or using options as a risk management tool is a way to remove downside risk while still retaining the ability to benefit from scenarios that are favorable to you.  For example when you insure your house you pay a premium such that the risk of loss due to fire is removed, but if your house doesn't burn down and continues to appreciate in value you get to keep the upside.  When a company manages interest rate risk or foreign currency risk using option products they can set a level of protection that corresponds with their risk management objectives and retain the upside of favorable moves in interest rates or currencies. 

Even if we don't buy insurance, the price helps us gauge risk and understand which situations are riskier than others.

Of course insurance isn't free and sometimes insurance can be very expensive.  As to why it can be expensive, it's useful to understand the underpinnings of how options are priced.  Schrager helps provide a basic understanding of option pricing models:

Vega: the larger your volatility is, the more risk you have to give up to protect yourself from bad outcomes.

Delta: sometimes one scenario is more likely to need insurance than the other. And the more likely you are to need insurance, the more expensive it is.

Theta: how long the risk will last. "fallacy of time diversification"..a longer time in the market means more risk

Rho:  how much you earn without taking any risk at all..Risk-free also represents how much it costs to finance a risky bet

It can be unfortunate, but not terribly uncommon, that people or businesses find themselves in a situation where they are effectively chasing the management of risk. Often this occurs because they didn't have any established risk management process at the onset of their decision making and the unwanted risk taken only becomes obvious later, which of course is generally at a time when that risk is expensive to manage.

But can we ever get more for less risk?

In finance risk is the input and reward is the output...Markowitz argued that diversification was how investors could create efficient portfolios.

Financial economist separate risk into two broad categories: the first is idiosyncratic risk, or the risk unique to a particular asset...The second kind of risk is systematic risk, or risk that affects the larger system instead of an individual asset...Systematic risks are harder to manage than idiosyncratic risks, and the downsides are potentially more dangerous. 

Study after study shows that actively managed mutual funds, the ones that contain professionally picked stocks, don't offer higher returns than index funds after adjusting for risk and fees.

In finance diversification is often referred to the closest thing to a free lunch, it's the concept that you if you make a bunch of uncorrelated bets some winners will offset some losers and you'll be left with only the systematic risk that is common to all of the bets.  It reduces the chance you just made a bad bet and or got unlucky at the expense of reaping all of the rewards of making an extremely correct single bet. Whether all correlations go to "1" in some extreme events is a topic for another day.

Schrager offers up one of the best diversification strategies in life:

Having more friends increases the odds someone will be available when you need them.

Common Mistakes

As mentioned above, sometimes the hardest part of risk management is identifying your goals and objectives.  The failure to know what you're after often leads us astray and allows us to become more susceptible to behavioral biases.

Risk offers the possibility of more, and risk management tools aim to empower us to go for more while taking less risk. Using them correctly involves staying focused on our goals and taking just enough risk to achieve them.

Prospect Theory says when we weigh different options, the value we place on them depends on how much money we have when we start and if there is the possibility of loss....Prospect Theory argues that humans are risk seeking, or willing to take a chance on even bigger losses to forgo certainty when offered a menu of loss scenarios.

The other way we often see excessive risk taking lead to challenges is when leverage is used. In finance, leverage is the use of borrowed money to make a risky investment. Often leverage is needed to magnify returns to equity to reach objectives. Inherently there is no problem with leverage per se, but applying leverage to a volatile asset or a volatile set of cash flows can cause ruin.

 leverage...it is a negative hedge...how people magnify risk     

Over the course of my career, I sometimes encountered a situation where the probability someone was assigning to negative scenarios (risk) was quite high and they were looking to manage that downside risk.  In those scenarios, if you truly believed the probability of a recession was much higher than anyone else in the market and were convinced the probability was 100%, it would seem the best way to manage that risk would be to sell all of your risky assets.

The simplest way to hedge is to simply take less risk.

Sometimes taking less risk is the correct strategy but again our behavioral biases can lead us to flawed decision making, especially when we are evaluating risk while sitting on losses.      

We have an aversion to loss and sometimes that can lead us to take bigger risks than we should or even realize

Riskless is unobtainable

Edwin Goldwasser posited that “A riskless society is 'unattainable and infinitely expensive" and that is true.  As discussed above, to meet goals risk some level of risk must be taken.
We can reduce uncertainty but never eliminate it.

Uncertainty makes us uncomfortable, and it is costly to deal with. 

we can never anticipate everything that will go wrong or right, and if we think we can, we set ourselves up for failure.

Risk models can't account for everything that can possibly happen, and they are not meant to.

Realizing that some risk is necessary and unavoidable, it remains prudent to maintain flexibility and some margin of safety where possible.  As Schrager provides: 

think creatively and be open to things unfolding in ways different from what they expect....flexibility comes with a cost....retain the option to change course when our plans go awry and have the humility to follow through. 

Know your goals, mitigate unwanted risk, prepare and position the best you can for when the unknown or unexpected occurs, because life is uncertain, but remember without risk there is no return.

Friday, June 14, 2024

Daily Economic Update: June 14, 2024

It's a summer Friday, two days past the most important Wednesday of your career, why are you reading this?

Yesterday saw headline PPI post a decline of 0.2% MoM with core PPI flat MoM, both lower than expected.  Jobless claims rose more than expected, but remain low.  Many market participants believe the recent inflation data rules out the chance of a rate hike from here.

The 30Y Treasury auction was referred to as "stellar" as it priced 1.5bps inside when-issued. Is it falling inflation, falling growth expectations, both that helped bolster demand?  In any event today's supply didn't look like an issue.

If you guessed all-time highs on equities you were right.  

On the day head it's UofM sentiment as the highlight.

XTOD: Private equity is coming to college athletics.  As detailed in this article, the Big 12 is considering an equity investment of up to $1 billion for 20% of the conference.  Another example demonstrating that college athletes are professional athletes.  https://cbssports.com/college-football/news/big-12-considering-private-equity-investment-of-up-to-1-billion-for-as-much-as-20-of-conference/

XTOD: Private equity is going to blow up the world.

XTOD: The question for private credit is how much continued growth depends on expanding:
- retail access  - redeem-ability  - secondary market liquidity - leverage (!!) 
By all accounts, all these features are becoming more common. The asset class quickly starts looking a lot different.  Leverage is the key because it’s the only way outsize relative growth can continue. You can’t somehow recreate the 15x levered banking system on 1x leverage.


Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Daily Economic Update: April 8, 2025

Almost The Same Industry

Financial news media continued running its favorite genre: sell-off porn. We even got pieces on circuit breakers - always a vibe when CNBC & Bloomberg starts quoting the SEC & FINRA like it’s gospel. You already know the reason: the “t” word.  


Markets opened in freefall, reversed losses after a headline about a 90-day tariff pause, then got whipsawed again when that headline got promptly body-slammed by reality. When the dust settled: Dow down, S&P lower (5,062), Nasdaq somehow green. Volatile and confusing sum it up.


I Thought The Goal Was Tik-Tok, Not Tit-for-Tat?

China pledges to stimulate their economy while slapping 34% tariffs on the U.S.  The Trump administration fired back with threats of another 50% tariff on Chinese exports. At some point, China might just need to ship over consumer goods and include a check for the U.S. shopper. 


Not the Flight To Quality You Ordered

Speaking of China - are they dumping Treasuries? Someone’s selling. The 10-year yield spike by 20bps to 4.22% , which isn’t exactly the behavior you’d expect in a flight to quality. If it’s not China hitting the bid, maybe it’s leveraged players forced to sell what they can, not what they want, to meet margin calls.


We talked about the Treasury conundrum back on Friday - still relevant. File it under second order thinking and don’t get too comfortable.


Leverage In Focus: Echoes of Explosions Of The Past

Whenever volatility picks up and the word "deleveraging" gets tossed around, someone usually ends up face down in the punch bowl. Remember Archegos? That 2021 moment when one firm, running a giant levered book, detonated after banks—plural—forgot to ask how many IOUs they'd handed out. Just ask Credit Suisse. Or whatever’s left of them. (Hi UBS).


Let’s not forget what Howard Marks wrote back on May 9, 2024 when Marks reminded us about ‘The Impact of Debt’

 “But levered portfolios face a downside risk to which there isn’t a corresponding upside: the risk of ruin….“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.”


So what’s the impact of leverage today? No one knows. But if this ride keeps going, it seems likely we’ll find out who was swimming naked in that stream.



Tariffs: Symptom, Not Cause?

We talked yesterday about the potential for changing the global monetary order - a Bretton Woods III.  Apparently, Ray Dalio was thinking the same thing. (We assume he’s a loyal reader.)


He argues that tariffs are just a surface-level reaction to deeper structural problems: too much debt, not enough trust, and a financial system propped up on increasingly shaky scaffolding. He might be right. Or he might just be angling for another LinkedIn carousel post.


When Everyone's Guessing, Maybe Sit Still

Here’s the thing: chaos is always loud. Long-term investing is mostly quiet. And patience never trends on X.


We’ve said it before, but it’s worth repeating when the VIX spikes and headlines scream—discipline wins over drama. While the crowd fixates on the next 90-day tariff pause or Treasury yield spike, smart money is thinking in decades, not trading sessions.


XTODs:

XTOD: Chinese memes on American re-industrialization rolling in. lol the music. https://x.com/i/status/1909348105675211192


XTOD: Steve Miran’s Hudson Institute speech represents one of the most concise and clearest articulations of the Trump admin’s worldview, which is often either lost or confusing in Trump’s own rendering. As far as I can tell, they think of the Pax Americana global order as a club membership, for which the US has under-charged for the past few decades. Reasonable people can debate whether the US undercharged but important thing is that the current admin thinks so. So much so that the current admin believes the current system has been made unsustainable and made the US economy at a severe competitive disadvantage and sections of its population in dire economic straits. Again, debatable but that’s the claim.  

So to make the system work, as far as I can tell, basically they want to charge a membership fee to pay for the global order system. And the fee is per usage, the more a member country practically uses club’s facilities and the valuable amenities provided by the US, the more they ought to pay the US through tariffs if not directly in wire payments. Again debatable whether tariffs are really the best means of collecting such a membership fee, since tariffs are at least in part borne by American consumers and create frictions in global trade hence making the whole system less efficient.

That is the philosophical rationale behind the tariff table we saw, which honestly may not have been Miran/CEA’s best possible work as much as something that was just a quick hack. Based on this, I suspect a lot of the severe tariff rates on some of the poorest countries in the world were likely indeed mistakes and will likely need to be revised downwards.

This is a massive change to the global order, but if there’s some silver lining it’s that like it sounds like it’s more a radical reform than a total abandonment of Pax Americana and at least as per this speech not a total decoupling either, which I think is more consistent with Trump’s ideology or lack thereof.  https://whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/2025/04/cea-chairman-steve-miran-hudson-institute-event-remarks/

XTOD: The Foreign Minister of Iran, Abbas Araghchi has confirmed via a post on X that representatives from the United States and Iran will meet in Oman on Saturday for “indirect high-level talks” claiming that the “ball is in America’s court.”


XTOD: Educate yourself. No one is ever going to teach you enough or hand it to you on a platter. Books and articles, and ask questions—an endless amount of them.


https://x.com/gaborgurbacs/status/1909348105675211192

https://x.com/stevehou0/status/1909344035418079455

https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1909393821865029944

https://x.com/RyanHoliday/status/1909228715130884258


Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: Crafting a Joyful Life and Legacy [Buffett Birthday Celebration Edition]

Beyond the realm of finance, Warren Buffett shares profound wisdom on how to live a truly rich and fulfilling life. He encourages us to thin...