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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
August 20, 2008
A lot has been written about all the crazy mortgage and derivative
products that were peddled during the Bubble. The incredible mania that
engulfed the hedge fund community has not yet received it due. It’s
simply hard to believe the days of new fund managers raising billions
with extended lockups isn’t coming to an abrupt end. And this is an
industry that has for the past few years luxuriated in enormous
investment inflows.
While I still read articles noting increased hedge fund investments (see
"Muni Watch" above), I can’t believe the more sophisticated money is not
running or at least considering heading for the exits. At the minimum,
the industry appears to have passed a major inflection point, and one
should contemplate that acute Ponzi dynamics could easily materialize.
As long as the industry was posting strong returns, inflows remained
predictably huge. And robust flows ensured that favored positions could
be increased and additional leverage employed – self-reinforcing bull
market dynamics. These inflows worked to mark up the value of previous
investments, as global securities and commodities markets soared.
Investors were completely enamored, while "genius" fund managers raked
in billions.
This Bubble will not function well in reverse. And I know the argument
that most hedge funds are still outperforming the major equities
indices. This just doesn’t matter much. I expect the entire dynamic of
this industry to change now that the majority of funds face "high water
marks" (losses that have to be recovered before incentive fees can again
be collected). After suffering losses, many managers will be tempted to
role the dice with investors’ money: "Heads I win and get my head above
the high water mark; tails investors lose and I close the fund and enjoy
time at the beach." More responsible managers will operate under intense
pressure for performance, forced to place bets but with little room for
error. This is a particularly grueling endeavor, and you can rest
assured that markets won’t cooperate.
Such significantly altered trading dynamics – not to mention all the
burst global speculative Bubbles – create a backdrop where it becomes
extremely difficult for speculators to perform. And resulting wild
market volatility significantly compounds the pressure and angst. At the
same time, many managers had expected to implement various strategies to
play the markets’ downside – including shorting, buying put options,
writing calls, and certainly playing CDS (Credit default swaps) and
various other derivatives. Yet because the Global Leveraged Speculating
Community ballooned to unimaginable dimensions, these various systemic
"hedges" and bearish speculations all became One Big Crowded Trade.
Things are just not going work as expected, a huge problem for investors
with grossly inflated expectations.
Wall Street and global speculator community travails are today at the
heart of Acute Monetary Disorder. Global pricing mechanisms have turned
dysfunctional. Crude oil, the most important commodity in the world, now
sees its price fluctuate 30% over a few short weeks – to the upside and
then to the downside. Currency values have become similarly unhinged. At
the same time, liquidity conditions throughout the global debt markets
have turned quite spotty at best. All these factors are working
corrosively on the global economy.
The consensus view holds that the Fed should maintain today’s (grossly
inequitable) negative real interest rates indefinitely. This, as the
thinking goes, is how the financial sector will repair itself.
Everything will then return to normal - eventually. Besides, inflation’s
won’t be much of an issue. I contend that global financial and economic
systems will not begin to "normalize" until this massive global pool of
speculative finance deflates. Speculators have for some time been the
marginal price setters for global securities, energy, commodities and
many other asset markets. This is a precarious dynamic, especially
considering that large numbers of speculators are impaired and will now
be fighting to save their businesses. Things both financial and economic
have become hopelessly unstable. And this Dysfunctional Pricing Backdrop
has become the major impediment to unavoidable U.S. and global economic
adjustment.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |