Prometheus,
With the Cuffs On
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
DIGG THIS
Money carries
no passport, but it slides through almost any border. It flies no
flag, but it is welcome in almost every nation. It speaks no language,
but when it talks, everyone listens. But for all its passe-partout
appeal, money has more enemies than friends. And the biggest threat
is probably the financial industry itself.
"Don’t
worry," the bright young man at a London private banking told
us, "we maintain the highest levels of professionalism and
use the most sophisticated tools of modern portfolio management."
That was just
what we were worried about. What follows is a lament...and a complaint...about
the current state of people in the financial métier: they
have been disabled by their own theories...handicapped by their
own greasy trade.
We were impressed
by the man in front of us. Handsome, well-dressed, well spoken in
three different languages, he had spent years learning the principles
of economics, finance and business management. His palaver to prospective
clients was flawless. Yes, he said, the research department is keenly
searching for alpha...but it knows that 80% of performance comes
from careful asset allocation, which the bank’s strategists have
calculated based on risk/return analyses going back a hundred years.
The expected return from Japanese equities over the next five years,
for example, will be precisely 7.56%...but with an anticipated volatility
of 20.43%.
But then we
learned that we didn’t have to live with volatility. The firm’s
analysts have done extensive research, he explained; they’ve been
able to find many different asset classes that had equal and opposite
volatilities.
When Japanese
stocks bob in one direction, for example, the firm’s Ultra-leveraged
Macro Opportunity Hedge fund weaves in another.
Just throw
the mathematicians a bone; they’ll figure out how to put these things
together so that you can optimize your return while minimizing your
risk. Then, according to the math whizzes’ calculations, you could
find yourself with a 90% probability that your $100 investment will
grow to somewhere between $292 and $132 in year 10. This, it should
be mentioned, is a "nominal" value. Even if the target
is hit, the $132 may not even buy you a cup of coffee in London.
It barely buys you one now.
So many numbers...
6s and 7s...5s and 4s...every number the Arabs ever invented is
brought into service. But what do they really mean?
"Can you
tell us what the price of oil will be next week," we began
to torment our interlocutor. "Or, how about the dollar?"
"Of course
not."
"Then,
how can you make projections ten years out...on investments, all
of which will be greatly influenced by the price of oil, the strength
of the dollar, inflation rates and completely unforeseeable events?"
"Well,
these are not predictions. They are projections, based on many years
of experience. Our researchers are the best in the business, with
degrees from Harvard, MIT and Oxbridge. Of course, no one knows
what the future will bring...but these projections are the best
output of modern portfolio management."
Pointing to
a helpful chart supplied by the investment firm, we continued our
interrogation:
"In the
last 6 months, Merrill Lynch has had to write down an amount equal
to almost half its book value? UBS has written off 40%. If these
financial engineers were really able to project earnings and risk
out to 2 decimal places, how come they couldn’t protect themselves
from this blow up?"
They ought
to give special parking places to anyone who studied business, economics
or finance in the last 30 years. Higher education has lowered their
I.Qs. Years of toil in academia have weakened their vision and taken
the common sense right out of them.
A blind man
could have seen the blow-up in sub-prime coming. But somehow, the
geniuses missed it. What went wrong? The disabling infection may
be understood by looking at how the hot shots handle risk. Of course,
they don’t really have any way of knowing what real risk is; no
one can know the future. For all we know, a plague will wipe us
all out in the next three weeks. None of us knows what the price
of oil will be next week...or next year...or 10 years from now.
Nor do any of us know what real risks the oil market faces. War...weather...technological
advance...who can say?
But rather
than admit that it just didn’t know...the financial industry embarked
on a staggering series of myths and conceits that must have taken
the gods’ breath away.
Since they
couldn’t know real risk, they substituted volatility as a proxy,
which is a little like getting an inflatable doll to take your wife’s
place at a dinner party; the conversation may be dull, but at least
she won’t contradict you.
Once they had
shut up risk, they could say whatever they wanted. They could pretend
that price movements, for example, were like natural phenomena.
It was absurd and everyone knew it. Prices depended on what people
thought; volcanic eruptions did not. But Richard Fama put forward
the Efficient Market Hypothesis in the 1960s as if he had stolen
the gods’ fire. He claimed market data could be treated as if they
were random fluctuations. If an earthquake had stuck Rome only twice
in the last 100 years, the "risk" of an earthquake was
only 2%. For all they know, the streets of the Eternal City will
rock and roll every day for the next 200 years...but this little
subterfuge gave their mathematicians something to work with. Then,
looking at price patterns as if they were seismic records, they
could make all sorts of fantastic simulations...and come up with
fancy new products, such as a Highly Leveraged, Sub-prime Debt Portfolio.
Using historical norms, they pressed the junk credits together like
potted meat and – in a miracle that would have floored Jesus – transformed
it into Prime A.
But it was
all nonsense. The prices thought to be random weren’t random at
all, but the consequence of practices, ideas, and institutions built
up over centuries. Change the circumstances...and the numbers changed
too. As Soros puts it, markets are "reflexive." In our
words, prices are neither fixed nor random...but subject to influence.
For example, it was observed that stocks outperformed bonds over
the long term. Stocks
for the Long Run was the title of a best-selling investment
book in 1994, which argued that stocks would make you rich if you
held them long enough. This long-term reward was in return for investors’
willingness to take short-term risks; they called it the risk premium...which
they defined, again, as volatility. Stocks were down in some periods,
but always up over the long term. Thus, for a person who could wait,
there was no risk at all.
By 1999, no
truth was more obvious: stocks would make you rich. By then, the
whole financial world was alight...stocks had risen three times
since 1994 – to over 11,000 on the Dow by the end of the year. Now,
it was time to pour on the gasoline. Another best-seller appeared
that year: Dow
36,000.
No
one seemed to notice that those data points that convinced investors
that stocks were such a great investment were registered when people
thought stocks weren’t so great. For much of the stock market’s
history, investors had demanded higher dividend yields from stocks
than they got from bonds – to make up for the risk. And they had
rarely paid more than 20 times earnings. Yet, in 1999, the p/e ratio
of the S&P rose over 32 – about twice the long-term average.
Circumstances had changed; the insight was no longer valid. And
the fire went out.
The Dow may
still go to 36,000, probably when a cup of coffee goes to $132.
Last we looked, it was almost 10 years later and the Dow was back
to where it ended 1999. During this time, too, the dollar has lost
about 30% of its purchasing power...so the investor who believed
in stocks for the long run is down about a third.
March
18, 2008
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Bonner
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