"Disciplined Systematic Global Macro Views" focuses on current economic and finance issues, changes in market structure and the hedge fund industry as well as how to be a better decision-maker in the global macro investment space.
Thursday, September 30, 2021
US Macro shocks and style factors - Important in explaining EM currency moves
Wednesday, September 29, 2021
Currency trading making a comeback? The differences across countries say yes
Debt ceiling is a side show versus the riskiness of Treasury debt as measured by a discounted pricing model
The US has unusual fiscal dynamics with the regular battle over debt ceilings. A fight may occur, but eventually the addiction to debt continues. The drama unfolds; however, the ending is still much the same. Approval for an increase allows for another sequel to the current drama. For investors around the world, this does not make sense. We end with a potential crisis which adds uncertainty that is not necessary. There is still little fiscal prudence. Of course, deficits are necessary but so are surpluses over the long run.
It is, however, more important to think through the strategic dynamics of debt and not the legislative tactics. In a recent working paper, The US Public Debt Valuation Puzzle, the debt problem is looked at from a different perspective. The authors attempt to price Treasury debt like any other asset using some classic asset pricing models. This provides some fresh perspective but also introduces a puzzle - why are rates so low when Treasuries should be considered a risky asset.
From an asset price perspective, the market value of government debt should be equal to the present discounted value of fiscal surpluses. If the value of the debt exceeds the priced surplus claim, there is a debt gap. The authors find that the yields on Treasuries are lower than the relevant interest rates that investors should be earning on the risky claims. Hence, there is a puzzle for why there is this different.
The cyclical and long-term dynamics of spending and tax receipts makes for a risky claim. The primary surplus is pro-cyclical like stock dividends. Hence, Treasury debt has substantial business cycle risk and the relevant interest rate for discounting should have a risk premium. Debt occurs at inconvenient times from a consumption perspective. This risk premium is greater than what could be the convenience yield of holding Treasuries.
The model and arguments presented may not make you money in the short-run, and the dynamics of buyers and sellers and the impact of the central bank are not considered, but the core arguments are useful. As long-term deficits increase and the cyclicality of deficits continue, there is less chance of future surpluses. The discount or appropriate interest rate for pricing these future claims should be higher. There should be a bias to higher real rates based on tax and spend behavior.
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
Market structure and high commodity prices - The continual pull to scale
There is the adage that the solution to low (high) commodity prices is low (high) prices. Prices change demand and supply, so low (high) prices will cut (raise) supply and raise (cut) demand. Prices will adjust. Market prices cycle between extremes with demand and supply lead to equilibrium adjustments.
This commodity story is playing out today. Higher prices in oil and natural gas will lead to increased supply and a demand response. The adjustment may not be immediate, but there is clear mean reversion as producers and consumers change their behavior.
Unfortunately, the story is more than a onetime adjustment in price. There are industry organization effects and restructuring of competitors. Price changes lead to a continual movement to economies of scale. Economies of scale are always lurking in the background when there are consistent price swings. Few industries become more fragmented as a response to market volatility. No firm becomes smaller by design. It is either increasing scale or elimination.
With high price comes credit constraints that support large firms and hurts small firms. The same cargo that has to be financed for trade because more expensive. Lines of credit have to be increased even with higher value of collateral. Smaller trading firms are often unable to get this added financing at attractive terms. When prices are low, credit again may become scarce as the threat of bankruptcy increases for producers. Of course, financing issues impact large firms, but the ability to weather these issues is easier when scale is already present.
Logistical problems are also problems of scale. Failure for delivery, loading delays, and higher transportation cost all hurt the small firm that may not be as diversified as larger firms. Concentration of business makes the cost of logistical failure greater.
Dispersion in price and logistical issues also lead to greater vertical integration by firms in order to control prices along the supply chain. Again, there is a movement to scale.
The movement to scale means more concentrated trading and less price transparency. This is never good for the investors involved in commodity trading.
China policy uncertainty - Starting to rise, but not like last year
Clearly, there are unknowns concerning the disposition of Evergrande where the rule of bankruptcy law is unclear. This event uncertainty is present everyday as news reports and analysis describe the lack of clarity on what will happen with a potential failure that will run into the hundreds of billions.
Evergrande is not an isolated incident of an unknown solution in a world of China policy certainty. The Economic Policy Uncertainty Indices for China show an explosion over the last two years as measured by mainland newspapers and the South China Morning Post SCMP. Uncertainty has fallen from highs over the last two years but is still at elevated levels and may be poised to grow higher. For the more general investor, the uncertainty index is a better measure of the overall business climate than a single company event.
Monday, September 27, 2021
Parrots as economists, "Supply and demand...demand and supply!"
So, what is wrong with being a parrot? Any story for determining investment returns is simple. Where is demand going? Where is supply? There can be deep narratives with a lot of facts, but it still boils down to simple issues. Can the facts describe a shift in demand and supply?
If you cannot parrot some conclusions about these shifts, you will not be able to forecast returns. Yet, something so simple can be very difficult to assess in practice. The slopes of the curves have to be addressed. The link between macro and fundamental variables, expectations, as well as capital still must be measured. Of course, for any investment discussion there may be multiple demand and supply curves that should be considered. There is no one perfectly simple chart.
Any market discussion should loop back to supply and demand. Inflation is moving higher. What does that mean for the demand of some financial assets? How will it impact the supply of assets? The Fed will taper at the end of the year. What will happen to the demand for Treasuries? How will supply be affected?
Give me the good investment parrot and I can be happy. For more on the origins of the parrot phrase see the Quote Investigator.
Evergrande, contagion, and the uncertainty risk of not knowing
During extreme market bull moves, investors think they know too much or don't need to know the details. Everyone has a story for why something should go up. In fact, there is a "don't confuse me with the facts" mentality. I have the story follow the momentum.
In a bear market, fear of the unknown takes over. We know too little and act accordingly through avoidance. There is a desire for more facts because no detail is too small.
The Evergrande debt situation is constantly changing not with solutions but with revealing more information on how bad is the situation and where risks are growing.
Some have discussed Evergrande as a Chinese Lehman moment only to dismiss this extreme story. Lehman comparisons are irrelevant. What is critical for most investors is the issue of contagion. An investor may not hold Evergrande but the spillover to other companies will impact my portfolio. There is more than one type of contagion and investors should be aware of the differences.
One form can be called tangible contagion. A failure of a firm can have an impact in their suppliers, buyers of their services, and banks that lend to the firm. These are direct spillovers.
A second form of contagion can be associative. There are firms within the same industry which will be affected with negative perception. In this case, other property firms. However, this contagion can have a short life as investors compare and contrast risks.
The third form of contagion comes from the unknown or intangible risk. There are direct Evergrande risks, but I don't know how this will spill-over to other firms, what will be the rule of law in China, the regulatory environment in China, how dollar debtholders will be treated, the risks for other highly levered firms, or the risks to construction in China.
All of these are current unknowns that cannot be easily handicapped. This is uncertainty that cannot be measured. Hence, there will be a general exit from any risks that can be tied to the Evergrande environment or ecosystem. This general pullback may not make sense, but it is tangible and will affect global markets. we are seeing this contagion and the process is not over. Some will just call this a risk-off environment. The name does not matter. What matters is that high uncertainty will lead to large rebalancing flows away from risky assets.
Saturday, September 25, 2021
The fire triangle metaphor explains the Chinese (New Zealand, Canada, ....) housing bubble
The fire metaphor was used in the book Boom and Bust: A Global History of Financial Bubbles by William Quinn and John Turner perhaps the best historical analysis on extreme market moves over the last 300 years.
Friday, September 24, 2021
Performance versus a benchmark - A better SPIVA year?
Thursday, September 16, 2021
Environmental themes and infrastructure bills - Concentrated risk
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
Five financial research curses - They cannot be avoided
Tuesday, September 14, 2021
The history of evidence-based investing - data and techniques using computing and storage to beat competition
Monday, September 13, 2021
The Fed behind the QE curve versus other central banks
Sunday, September 12, 2021
The politics of decision-making and the "Johnson Treatment" - Avoid with investment decisions
Lyndon Johnson was a politician who got what he wanted. He was persuasive not always through the weight of his arguments but through the weight of his personality. He was known to lean into people to make them uncomfortable enough to be swayed to his point of view. It was the Johnson treatment. The photo above shows Johnson giving the treatment to Senator Ted Green from Rhode Island. Newspaper columnist Mary McGrory described it as “an incredible, potent mixture of persuasion, badgering, flattery, threats, reminders of past favors and future advantages”
Johnson was a master legislator in the US Senate, and he used all his skills to get his way. This heavy-handed behavior was an effective process of him, but that is not an effective way to reach investment decisions.
You see the treatment in investment committee meetings all the time. The weight from authority, the senior portfolio manager, or the committee members that has the strongest personality will win the day. The Johnson treatment is present, and the best arguments are often lost in the debate.
Are their ways to solve the politics of decision-making? It is not easy, but there are few ways to improve the situation. First, don't have members present opinions. Focus primarily on the facts, what is known. Second, focus on the link between facts and what is the question to be answered. There is a projection from facts to prediction, and a link between facts and market reaction. This link can isolate what is quantitatively measurable and not focus on the weight of personality. Third, there is a focus on the prediction of each committee members within the context of facts and linkage. Everyone has to have an opinion. Fourth, there is accountability for each individual prediction, so the quality of judgments can be measured. The members of the crowd can be handicapped.
The Johnson treatment may work well in building to a conclusion for a politician but investment decisions must be based on the weight of the evidence and the quality of thinking. The treatment for good investment decisions must flow from facts.
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
In medias res and investment analysis - Solving problems when thrown in the middle of events
For most investment problems there is no easy well-defined beginning and analysts certainly don’t know the conclusion. Investment situations usually start in the middle of an ongoing story and have to figure out the beginning and how to anticipate the end.
This is different than the position of the historian who has the beginning, middle, and end of the story and have to focus on interpretations. Adam Tooze, the Columbia University, has had his writing of current event described as an in medias res problem. He is writing about history that is unfolding in real time.
Dropped in the middle of the story, the analyst has to figure the story out with no help of time. There is no repeat, rewind, or reread of current events. The investment has to be lived in real time.
Is there a way to solve this problem? The burden is on the analysts to resort problems and look for first causes. The investment analysis process has to create a beginning to fit the middle facts and then form an end. The investment narrative creates the full story.
Monday, September 6, 2021
Narrative and investing - Follow the facts
“Ransom Stoddard: You’re not going to use the story, Mr. Scott?
Maxwell Scott: No, sir. This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”
- Ending of the movie "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
If we had to apply this dialogue to investment markets, "when the market narrative becomes fact, print the narrative." Stories dominate the market, facts less so. Narratives concerning employment, inflation, Fed policy all dominate discussion because they provide respectability and plausibility for both the sender and receiver of the message. In a confused world, a good narrative will provide comfort as an explanation that makes sense. For the messenger, telling a story will make you a more attractive talking head than just focusing on the details in facts. Facts that do not fit the narrative make investors uncomfortable and throw investors into a state of uncertainty.
The goal of quant or data driven analysis is to provide an alternative to narrative-based investing. The difference between fact-based data and narrative is the wedge that quants want to exploit. Data driven funds will reach different portfolio choices. Of course, data and narrative can be aligned. In that case, there is limited opportunity for alpha.
Follow the facts not the narrative. Nevertheless, even the fact-based story has to be converted into the narrative. The difference is whether the investor starts with facts to develop a narrative or starts with a narrative and then looks for facts.
Thoughts on narrative
Narrative and price - Know the line of causality
Sunday, September 5, 2021
The sobering world of future returns
Saturday, September 4, 2021
Hedge fund start-up - if you are in a cold style, you will have to work harder and have more skill
Friday, September 3, 2021
Extreme skew in the market - the cost of tail hedges
Markets may move higher but that does not mean that invetsors are more optimistic about any equity trend. In fact, current information on risk perceptions shows that there is significantly greater fear of a left tail event as meaasured by the CBOE skew index. Like the VIX index, the CBOE uses prices from equity index options to calculate the skew embedded in market prices across the traded strike for an implicit one month option. The skew number usually falls between 100 and 150 but current values are at extreme levels.
The high skew suggests that buying put ptrotection is more expensive versus any period since the inception of the index. The value is higher than any period associated with business cycle downturns or market crashes. The risk-adjusted probabilities below provide the orders of magnitude for skew. A 155 reading is off the charts for both a two and three standard deviation event. It is time to be careful given the market's view on risk.