1. “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and
applying the wrong remedies.” Groucho Marx
How about General Stanley McChrystal? Flying from the opposite side of the planet to be fired
by the president certainly cannot be easy on the ego. McChrystal's visit to the White House
lasted around thirty five minutes or so. A life in the armed forces comes to a close in a brief
firing from the Commander in Chief. Nothing like going out with a bang is there?
What is most interesting in the story is not so much that a man was fired for insubordination. Of
most interest is a quote from Politico suggesting the writer of the Rolling Stone article, Michael
Hastings, was able to write the piece because, as a freelance journalist and not a beat reporter,
"burning bridges by publishing many of McChrystal's remarks" was not a worry to him. Frank
Rich, in the New York Times on June 27, 2010 said, "Politico had the big picture right. It's the
Hastings-esque outsiders with no fear of burning bridges who have often uncovered the epochal
stories missed by those with high-level access."
Wow! How does one feel? Again, SummitVIEW is reminded that what one often reads or hears
in the news just may not be the full picture. Why would anyone want to report the ugly truth
when spin is so easily digested by the American populace? What else is not being reported for
fear of burning bridges? Where is Clark Kent when you need him? SummitVIEW is beginning
to understand the motivations for the creation of Superman in 1939. See Rosenberg’s quote
below where he compares today to the 1930s.
Another news item of interest is the announcement of a trade agreement between Taiwan and
China. For two entities embroiled in a dispute over sovereignty for the last 60 plus years, the
signing of the agreement represents a form of detente. Bloomberg reports in the trade agreement
between the sovereignties China will also open markets in 11 service sectors such as banking,
securities, insurance, hospitals and accounting, while Taiwan agreed to offer wider access in
seven areas, including banking and movies, the two sides said. They also signed an agreement on
intellectual property rights protection." The agreement appears to reflect the thoughts of
Mohamed El-Erian, Chief Executive Officer of PIMCO. El-Erian stated in an article
titled Driving Without a Spare, that the new normal is a world of "changing risks and
opportunities." For this global economic transition period, investment with the safest carry will
be "in sovereigns that, due to their economic and financial fundamentals, are truly core countries
in the midst of the global paradigm shift."
As readers of prior SummitVIEWs know, a primary concern is the current level of risk in the
system or, rather, the financial markets. Relying on your local newspaper or news program to
provide the proper insight likely will engender confusion and a belief in false realities. If one
2. were to follow the national media attention on the imminent threat of inflation, the result would
be a belief that the US is doomed to experience inflation very soon. Reality is likely to be quite
different. Recent housing data points to the continued decline in real estate prices. Although
there does exist pricing power in some industries, with a pillar of economy, real estate, still
experiencing declining values, the likelihood of inflation rearing its ugly head is very low. Wage
increases? Not happening. Unemployment rate declining? Nope.
The data point most telling to SummitVIEW is that which is cited by David Rosenberg below, in
the quote titled The Bottom Line. Rosenberg says “[t]he world is awash with $222.5 trillion of
total liabilities across public and private sector claims, or the equivalent of 362% of global GDP.
Extinguishing this debt will be deflationary even as central banks will be forced to print money
as an antidote and we are really in the early stages of this deleveraging cycle.”
Think about the ratio cited above for a moment. On a global scale there exists over 4 times (and
rapidly approaching 5 times) the level of debt as the level of annual global production. As we all
know most of that debt is held in the developed world. Without extend and pretend accounting
standards in the banking and mortgage industries, where would equity values be today? As
leading economic indicators roll over in the United States, few choices are available that have
not already been deployed. How do equity values hold up when the economic engine is slowing
and leverage is excessive. As an investor one should seek high earnings yield companies (that is
low price to earnings) with little to no leverage, if you have to be in stocks that is. Otherwise,
holding cash, high quality debt, and sovereigns of those countries that are recipients of the new
economic paradigm likely will prove prudent.
Protecting one’s wealth in this epochal transition is of primary importance. Long term asset
performance averages are irrelevant when risk is defined as the probability of the permanent loss
of capital. In an environment where most underfunded pension funds are holding out for the
return of an equity bull market, the underfunded state of pensions is likely to get worse than
better in the near term. Ironically, Rosenberg just released his view of current financial market
activity. The closing paragraph in Dinner with Dave, June 30, 2010 dovetails with
SummitVIEW nicely:
Resolving the pension crisis in the U.S. though [sic] a longer work‐life and
higher contribution rates is surely going to mean that deflation, not inflation,
as it pertains to many discretionary segments of the consumer spending pie, is
going to be the primary trend for some period of time; likely five years or more.
In other words, the time to be worried about inflation is really beyond our
forecasting horizon.
3. 2010 is likely to go down in history as a seminal year. The confluence of events shaping
geopolitics and geo-economics are starting to make their mark. Although the events will be the
focus of headlines, the response to the events is how our time will be defined. SummitVIEW
holds to the belief that, although the transition to a new period of growth will be rife with strife
and stress, a new period of prosperity will emerge on a scale few can forecast.
Getting through a stormy sea of debt and traction-less economic growth requires proactive risk
assessment and management. As James Montier of GMO LLC says, as quoted below, “[h]aving
defined the target, managers should be given as much discretion as possible to deliver that real
return. This avoids the benchmark-hugging behavior that is typically induced by policy
portfolios.”
Francois Trahan, Vice Chairman and Chief Investment Strategist at Wolfe Trahan & Co., expects
the forthcoming period of deflation to be reflected in the equity markets with lower price to
earnings multiples. In research titled Time to Throw Out Your Textbooks, Trahan states, “the fact
is that the majority of empirical data show that lower interest rates are consistent with lower P/E
multiples for the market.” Echoing SummitVIEW’s sentiment that our time will be defined by
the responses to current economic circumstances, Trahan goes on to say, “[w]e hope policy
makers will be somewhat proactive and the market won't have to once again force the "invisible
hand".
In closing I turn to the words of Woody Brock:
To sum up, what we are experiencing is not an event‐driven turning point as
in 1990, but rather a conceptual revolution in which much received wisdom
about the role of the state and economic prospects for the future is being stood
on its head. On both sides of the Atlantic, there is a sense that the Social
Contract has been broken, and that government is the true culprit. What a
change from a year ago when bankers were deemed the sole villains! The
historian Simon Schama detects the beginnings of the Age of Rage, and he is
probably right. The stakes are very high, and the political and economic
consequences will be severe.1
Recent market volatility is a reminder to all investors to fasten seat belts. The wild ride is just
leaving the station.
1Brock, H. Wood, Profile May 2010, Is the “Age of Rage” at Hand? ‐ Sovereign Debt, the European Crisis, and the
Euro, Strategic Economic Decisions, Inc. www.SEDinc.com
4. Driving Without a Spare
Over the next few years, Australia and Canada will constitute the analytical battle-ground as
elements of the new normal come head-to-head with those of the old normal. Our sense is that
the two countries’ exposure to the dynamic components of global growth - through direct trade
links with Asia and the commodity angel - will likely outweigh the drag from the legacy of
household leverage (Australia) and the economic links to the U.S. ( Canada).
For investors, this translates into a secular period of changing risks and opportunities:
The distribution of global outcomes is going through a transformation, both in terms of
overall shape (flatter) and tails (fatter);
It is a world where several of the old simplifying adages that once brought comfort to
investors - such as industrial country governments constitute interest rate risk while
emerging economies involve credit risk - require considerable refinement;
It is a world that calls for a broader investment universe and guidelines and , for those
who use them, revamped benchmarks that better capture the world of today and
tomorrow rather than that of yesterday;
It is a world of significant country, regional and instrument differentiation when it comes
to harvesting equity and credit premiums in high-quality corporates, financials and
emerging markets;
It is a world where the currencies of the emerging (as opposed to submerging) economies
will continue to warrant a greater allocation over time; and
It is a world where the safest of carry will come from duration and curve in sovereigns
that, due to their economic and financial fundamentals, are truly core countries in the
midst of the global paradigm shift.
Mohamed El-Erian, PIMCO, Driving Without a Spare, Secular Outlook, , May 2010
I Want to Break Free, or, Strategic Asset Allocation ≠ Static Asset Allocation
Clients should liaise with their managers to set a “realistic” real return target (recognizing that
available returns are a function of the opportunity set, not a function of the needs of the fund).
After all, the aim of investing must surely be “maximum real returns after tax” as Sir John
Templeton observed long ago. None but a few very lucky fund managers get to retire on relative
performance.
Having defined the target, managers should be given as much discretion as possible to deliver
that real return. This avoids the benchmark-hugging behavior that is typically induced by policy
portfolios.
5. Of course, it creates problems for measurement. Indeed, as I mentioned at the beginning of this
paper, the most common response when I present these arguments is, “So, how should we
measure you?” This obsession with performance measurement at the expense of investment
sense is disturbing to me. There is no easy mark to judge fund managers against. This may
actually be a good thing. It may force investors to allocate capital on the basis of process: i.e.,
you will only let managers that you trust and understand run your money. [emphasis added]
James Montier, GMO LLC May 2010,
I Want to Break Free, or, Strategic Asset Allocation ≠ Static Asset Allocation
The Bottom Line
The bottom line is that all levels of society, and across most countries in the industrialized
world, have far too much debt and far too much debt‐servicing costs in relation to income. The
world is awash with $222.5 trillion of total liabilities across public and private sector claims, or
the equivalent of 362% of global GDP. Extinguishing this debt will be deflationary even as
central banks will be forced to print money as an antidote and we are really in the early stages
of this deleveraging cycle.
David A. Rosenberg, Breakfast with Dave, Gluskin Sheff & Co., June 22, 2010
DARING TO COMPARE TODAY TO THE 30’S
Coming off a crash (‘29) and rebound (‘30); aftermath of an asset deflation and credit collapse
banks fail (Bank of New York back then, Lehman this time around); natural disaster (dust bowl
then, oil spill now); global policy discord (with the U.K. then, with Germany now); geopolitical
threats; interventionist governments; ultra low interest rates (long bond yield finished the 1930s
below 2%); chronic unemployment (25% then, 17% now); deflation pressures; competitive
devaluations; gold bull market (doubled in Sterling terms in the 30s); debt defaults; sputtering
recoveries and rallies; onset of consumer frugality.
David A. Rosenberg, Breakfast with Dave, Gluskin Sheff & Co., June 24, 2010
How The Middle Class, Or The New Rentiers, Is Stuck Between
Deflation And Hyperinflation
The world is currently overwhelmed with debt, but underwhelmed with growth. Everyone is
trying to export, but no country has embraced the concept of expanding domestic consumption.
Although I personally like consumption, I am an American and therefore over‐borrowed and
unable to service the debt loads of my city, my state, and my country, not to mention my own
personal debt load. With the Americans no longer available as consumer of the last resort, and
no one else stepping up, global final sales will stagnate in the years ahead. As a result, global
debt loads will become relatively larger. If the world economic pie can not grow strongly,
thereby lessening the relative size of global debts, the magic of compound interest will certainly
bankrupt many governments and commercial entities. Currently there is a growing solvency
crisis impacting many Eurozone sovereigns and another one that is
occurring within many states and jurisdictions in the United States. It seems quite obvious that
many of these problems will lead to default and the loss of principal on a grand scale. In the
next few years, a greatly increased percentage of all outstanding investment grade global debt
will default.