|
What are the odds of a recession? According to a recent Fed study, they may
be 51.9%. Close enough to 50-50 for government work. We analyze this study,
look at a few graphs which show a major disconnect between the housing market
and the US manufacturing and services sectors, and then close with some comments
on yet another proposed rule change. But let's start with a few housekeeping
items.
The latter half of this letter will be written primarily to my colleagues
in the financial services area, and to managers, entrepreneurs, and businesses
who anticipate the need to raise capital in the future. There are some proposed
rule changes at the NASD that will significantly limit the ability of a registered
representative to communicate with clients about private offerings, ETFs, venture
capital, DPPs, and other offerings. In some cases, it will effectively prohibit
communication on the items. This is not just about hedge funds. I think these
rule interpretations will have the unintended consequence of the potential
to severely impact capital formation in this country. This is under the radar
screen of 99% of my colleagues.
Many of my US clients and prospects wonder why I do not write to them about
my opinions on the hedge funds and private offerings that are offered to them.
The simple fact is that the NASD asserts (if you ask, which I did) that even
a simple letter, properly disclosing my income relationship with the offerings,
would be considered a research report and therefore fall under the research
analyst rules. In fact, any marketing material would is in effect considered
research, and thus cannot be sent by a registered representative to clients.
The NASD has not publicized this interpretation, but they are getting ready
to assert it in proposed rule changes. If you are in the industry, I urge you
to read the latter half of this letter and make your feelings known.
Second, I wrote a few weeks ago about the move on the part of the SEC to increase
the accredited investor financial requirements from $1 million total net worth
to $2.5 million in liquid investments, and provided a link to the SEC comments
web site. At the time there were 14 comments. As of today, less than a month
later, there are about 376 comments. There have been a lot of articles written
about the level of response. Good on my readers! I think it is safe to say
the overwhelming number do not want to see the limits raised. If you did not
read that letter, or have not yet made your views known, you can go to http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo012607,
read my thoughts on the proposed rule, and find the links further down in the
letter to make your comments.
As my Dad would often say, "Speak now, son, or forever hold your peace."
The 51.9% Probability of a Recession
I am often asked how I find so much good research about which to write. Yes,
I do get an (sometimes) overwhelming amount of newsletters, articles, and so
forth sent to me regularly. But my true secret sauce is that my readers send
me a lot of really great material that starts me down a path of inquiry. And
that is the case this week. Allan Fisher sent me a note about a study on the
yield curve by Jonathon H. Wright, an economist at the Federal Reserve Board.
If you are in the economic forecasting business, you are going to make mistakes.
As my good friend Dennis Gartman often says, there is no shame in being wrong.
The problem is when you keep getting it wrong and do not change. I have been
suggesting we will see a recession this year, based in part upon research about
the relationship between the yield curve and recessions.
I have often written about a study by New York Federal Reserve economists
Mishkin and Estrella, written in 1996, which discusses the probability of a
recession following an inverted yield curve. Wright has updated that study
and added some original analysis. It bears looking at in detail. (The graphs
and charts below I took from a blog by James Hamilton at Econbrowser.com, as
they were better than those in the paper. Thanks, James.)
(You can read the original study at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2006/200607/200607abs.html)
The 1996 study (and previous research by Dr. Campbell Harvey) showed that
there is a strong connection between an inverted yield curve and a recession
four quarters later. Wright updates that work, as we will discuss below.
But he also says that we should consider the absolute level of the Fed funds
rate as well. So, he does another model which uses the term spread on the yield
curve, which his research shows to give a better predictive performance.
But this is the kicker. It suggests a lower probability of a recession in
2007 than the prior studies. Should I change my forecast? Let's see.
First,
let's look at the probabilities of a recession using just the term spread on
the yield curve in Wright's study. It shows about a 74% chance of a recession,
as the negative spread is about 50 basis points today (on a 90-day average,
as he uses).
But what happens to those odds if we also factor in the absolute level of
the Fed's funds rate? It drops to about 51.9% (more on how to get that number
later).
Let's talk about how to read this chart. The spread is the difference between
the 3-month T-bill rate and the 10-year bond. Today that is a around a negative
50 basis points or -0.50. Each column to the left is for a different level
of Fed funds rate. Thus FF=4.0 is a Fed funds rate of 4%. There is no column
for 5.25%, where we are today, but there are columns for 5% and 5.5%.

But if you go to a clever web site at www.politicalcalculations.blogspot.com,
you can actually calculate the odds of a recession yourself, using current
numbers. http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2006/04/reckoning-odds-of-recession.html
Now they don't tell you, but you will need to use the 90-day average for the
3-month, 10-year, and feds fund rates if you are going to duplicate Wright's
research. And what you find is that you get a 51.9% chance of a recession (not
to put too fine a point on the odds), substantially less than the 74% suggested
by using the term spread alone.
In the paper, you can see graphs from last April which show the chances of
a recession at that point were considerably less than they are today, around
25%. But Fed funds was at 4.75%, and the term spread was still positive, just
slightly less than 25 basis points.
So what does this mean for policy? If you raise the Fed funds rate another
25 basis points to 5.5%, I think it would clearly also increase the negative
slope of the yield curve by at least another 25 basis points. That would put
the odds of a recession closer to 63%. I would speculate that this research
is in the back of Bernanke's mind, as well as the voting members of the FOMC.
The "Surprise" in Inflation
We had an upside "surprise" in the inflation numbers this week. (Didn't I
predict that would happen?) Given the rhetoric of the minutes that were also
released, it is clear that the Fed governors are still worried about a return
of inflation. Just yesterday the Dallas Fed Reserve president reiterated his
previous position, stated earlier this month, that "the risk of unacceptably
high inflation still outweighs the risk of substandard economic growth." That
theme has been repeated by a majority of Fed governors over the past few months.
And it is entirely possible that we will see core inflation rise from here.
It is at a very uncomfortable 2.7% over the last 12 months, and rose from the
previous month. Unit labor costs are rising at more than 3%. We have a low
unemployment rate, which is adding pressure. Note that unemployment is a lagging
indicator. It typically does not start rising until a recession is either close
or already started.
And even with the high probability of their revising the recent GDP growth
downward, much of the US economy is strong. Let's look at two charts sent to
me by South African partner Prieur du Plessis. The first is the relationship
between manufacturing and the housing market. It suggests that manufacturing
still has some downward pressure in the next few quarters.

But the relationship between housing and the service sector has completely
broken down. Notice that the service sector is even rising somewhat!

With manufacturing at 23% of the economy and services at 77%, it will take
a much bigger drop in manufacturing to bring us into recession.
With the probability of a recession at just 50% or so, and the risk of higher
inflation increasing, this is not a Fed that is going to cut rates any time
soon. In my opinion, this week's CPI data moved any potential cut out until
at least the June meeting, barring some major weakness in the economy which
is not evident today.
I still lean toward my view that we will see a recession, as the weakness
in the sub-prime mortgage market will impact housing prices more than most
observers now think. But the Wright study also reinforces my view that it will
be a mild recession, if indeed we do have one.
A Threat to Capital Formation
And now let's turn to a new rule that if enacted would have serious consequences
for capital formation in the US. This is really meant primarily for my colleagues
in the financial services industry and those who are interested in policies
which affect capital formation. The NASD (the self-regulatory body which oversees
broker-dealers) has been (on a very limited basis) and intends (in the opinion
of my attorneys and other professionals who are paying attention) to apply
the research analyst rules to private offerings, ETFs, hedge funds, and other
assorted securities. Why am I so alarmed, and why should you care? As we will
see, an attempt to apply a rule to hedge funds is going to have major unintended
consequences for all private offerings, as well as client communications. We
need a little background here.
In the wake of the scandals involving supposedly independent research analysts
and the stock offerings made by investment banks, Congress correctly mandated
new research analyst rules. Essentially, rules were written to insure that
independent research was independent. Research analysts were correctly barred
from receiving investment banking fees. The new rules were simple, but as with
all rules, the devil was in the details.
A joint NYSE/NASD committee studied the rules and issued, if memory serves
me correctly, a one hundred-plus-page opus with suggestions on how to interpret
the short congressional mandates in practice. So far, so good.
I am a fairly conservative guy when it comes to the rules. My legal bill is
way too high for a firm of my size, because we are always asking for interpretations
and clarifications.
About two years ago, we were reviewing the research analyst rules. In the
opinion of certain colleagues, there was a small chance the research analyst
rules could apply to the written research I did on specific hedge funds and
private offerings. Since the research analyst rules did not specifically exempt
hedge funds, we wanted to be sure. We felt the conservative approach was to
ask. I directed counsel to inquire of the NASD as to whether the rules applied
to hedge fund sales literature, which is essentially what the material and
any communications I did were considered to be. We were told the rules were
clear as written and they declined to answer us.
Since the rules were not clear to us, we submitted what we considered to be
sales literature on a hedge fund to the NASD advertising department. We accompanied
that submission with a lengthy (and expensive, from my point of view) letter
as to why private-placement sales literature should not be subject to the research
analyst rules.
The argument was essentially that no matter how many people read a report
on a hedge fund and then decide to buy, you cannot affect the price of the
fund. It is like a mutual fund in that regard. If I write a report on a mutual
fund and 10,000 people buy the next day, they all buy at the same price. If
I write about a stock, and 10,000 people buy, I could move the price of the
stock. (Which is one of the reasons I do not write about stocks.)
Further, you can't really do fundamental or technical analysis on a fund,
in the classic definition of analysis. I can provide information and education,
and even recommendations, but that is explicitly covered by the regulations
on marketing materials (as it should be).
Nevertheless, the NASD rejected that argument, noting that in their opinion
the submitted material was precisely what was meant as a research report and
therefore subject to the rules.
As to the nature of the material submitted, it looked and had the feel of
normal fund sales literature for a mutual fund. It talked about the nature
of the fund, the managers, and compared the historical returns with various
indices for comparison. The material was compliant (with minor changes) with
sales literature rules, and accompanied by the usual volume of disclosures,
including prominently the fact that my firm would be paid a portion of the
management fees. This is part of the crux of the practical issue, as through
legal alchemy the management fees of a hedge fund technically become investment
banking fees when paid to a broker-dealer. It is a rationale only a lawyer
can appreciate.
And since research analysts cannot receive a portion of the investment banking
fees, if I wrote a "research report" and had to be a licensed research analyst
in order to do so, I could not be paid a portion of those fees. I freely admit,
with four kids in college, being paid is near and dear to my heart.
But the NASD determined that the report if written personally by me should
be considered as subject to the research analyst rules. So, I hired a part-time
hedge fund research analyst (an academic of some note) to do independent research
reports for my firm on the funds we covered. As a business matter, it was not
that much of an issue, as it freed up more of my time, even if it was not cheap.
We submitted these reports to the NASD and worked through minor compliance
issues, and used them as research analysis.
Now, this is important. The research analyst rules were properly written to
address conflicts of interest between investment banking and research analysts.
But the intent was on research that could affect the price of the security.
Again, I can write about a hedge fund or private offering and cannot affect
the price of the fund if even 200 people buy the fund. You buy a fund at the
NAV.
At the same time as we submitted a new research report by my independent analyst,
we also submitted a short cover letter that was to accompany the report. In
the second paragraph of the letter I clearly stated that I would receive a
portion of the fees if they invested in the fund. (It goes without saying that
full and explicit disclosure of all fees and costs should be part of any material.)
There was no doubt as to my role in this transaction. I was acting as a broker
and would participate in the income stream, as I would get a portion of the
hedge fund management fees for serving as a broker. I also included three macro
reasons why I liked the fund, and suggested they call my associates, or myself,
if they were interested in getting more information.
Now here is the critical part. The NASD said this cover letter was in and
of itself a research report. On one other occasion we submitted a much briefer
cover letter, and it was also deemed a research report.
The NASD said in the Rule Proposal that the definition of "research report" is
a "written (including electronic) communication that includes an analysis of
equity securities of individual companies or industries, and that provides
information reasonably sufficient upon which to base an investment decision."
I was told by NASD staff that a simple (cover) letter from me which recommended
a fund would be deemed as a research report, because of the fact that my personal
recommendation could be a reasonably sufficient basis upon which a person could
invest. This is the broadest possible interpretation of research. When simple
opinion and (admittedly fully disclosed and self-interested) recommendation
can be elevated to the level of research, we have degraded the concept of research
in an effort to regulate a non-problem.
So, I can hire someone to write an independent research report (their opinion,
of course, is their own opinion) and send it to clients. I can call the client
and talk freely with him. But I cannot have an opinion that is communicated
in writing to more than 14 clients. Again, if this was just about my inconvenience
and marketing problems, no one should really care. But the implications go
way beyond my small concerns.
This is an age of electronic communications. My clients, and I suspect those
of the rest of the industry, increasingly want me to write them about my opinions
and thoughts, in addition to talking on the phone. If anything we write (PowerPoints,
term sheets?) in terms of education or recommendations can be determined to
be a research report, then no written communication to more than 14 people
can take place from a broker. This places a severe logistical burden on small
firms and keeps brokers from giving clients their best and most efficient advice.
It forces discrimination among clients (who are you going to call first?) and
hampers rational discourse.
In essence, I become a potted plant for all my usefulness to the majority
of my clients, as I cannot have an opinion that can be communicated in any
useful fashion. Understand, I am not against regulation. Sales literature is
already subject to any number of rules and requirements. Anything I write must
adhere closely to the rules. There is nothing I could do in sales literature
that I could not do in a research report. The extra regulation from the application
of the research analyst rule has no benefit to the investor, nor does it provide
any more protection. The only additional effect of such an interpretation is
to make communication between a broker and his client far more difficult and
limited, when clients in fact want more efficient communication.
To my knowledge, I am one of the very few who has been compliant with the
rule as the NASD currently interprets it. (Everyone else evidently assumes
that the research analyst rule is not applicable.) I have seen a lot of material
from my fellow firms which does not meet this standard. In short, this is going
to have a major effect on not just the marketing of hedge funds (admittedly
a small concern except to those of us who plow in this field) but on all private
placements (and ETFs!), which should be of concern not only to the financial
services industry but to those who think about America's competitive edge.
The compliance officers and legal staff will absolutely shut down communications,
to an extent that is far more onerous than today's stiff requirements.
Let me be clear. I do not have a problem with my writing and research being
subject to regulations. As a matter of business practice, we submit practically
everything we use in connection with my brokerage business to the NASD in advance.
Why wouldn't you? They are relatively quite efficient (faster than some attorneys
I know), and you make sure that whatever you do is compliant. And if the rules
require me to keep doing business as I am now doing, we will still see our
business grow. My policy concern is really not about hedge funds, but more
about private offerings and venture capital.
Remember the joint NYSE/NASD committee I mentioned earlier , which is composed
of both regulators and industry participants who understand the costs and problems
of using this rule to apply to private offerings? Their recommendation was
to explicitly exempt hedge funds and private offerings. The NASD has rejected
that suggestion in recent proposed rule filings. It was not inadvertent. We
checked. It was their intention.
As I will note later, this is not a small deal. In a back-door effort to regulate
hedge funds with a rule clearly not intended by Congress to do so, the unintended
consequences could be to seriously alter how capital is raised for small business.
This is not just about hedge funds. It is about all private placements, including
private venture-capital funds. Broadly defining a recommendation or information
as a research report (since currently any communication which could help an
investor make a decision is considered a research report, even if that is not
widely known in the industry) has the potential to seriously impede US investment
and capital formation. Such a definition includes any communication that a
broker-dealer uses to educate a potential investor about an offering, including
but not limited to pitch books, PowerPoints, offering summaries, and term sheets.
It is one thing to require independent research, and I am all for that, as
are all right-minded people. Independent research should not be part of the
commission stream.
The business giants of tomorrow are often the small businesses capitalized
today by small broker-dealers and their clients. This capital formation of
small business is the backbone of the American enterprise. It is the foundation
of job creation in this country. It is the genius of our market-driven economic
system.
The concern expressed by many government and financial industry leaders that
America is losing its competitive edge is well known. Expanding the research
analyst rule to the extent that rational communication between brokers and
their clients is effectively stymied, would only serve to dull that edge even
more. Such an interpretation would have a chilling affect on the ability to
facilitate capital formation by the small broker-dealer community. Fewer deals
will get done. That will be an inescapable result. And while it will not be
an issue this year or next year, at some point next decade the cumulative effect
will be pronounced. And we will wonder why things seemed to slow down.
Wall Street has lost its place as the leader of the world in IPOs. In a world
which is becoming flatter, do we want to see Main Street going to London? I
am registered in England, and do work there. I can tell you there is an appetite
for American deals there and in the rest of the world.
Where are the regional broker-dealers which used to finance small-cap business?
They are gone and their space has been filled by hedge funds. Do we want to
see the same thing happen with the small broker-dealer community? If you make
it impossible to do business, that is precisely what will happen. Foreign investors
and hedge funds will take the lead and the clients of the small broker-dealers
will be left out.
The problem is that the entrepreneurial ventures that are funded by the small
independent broker-dealer community will lose out. There is a real difference
between the deals that private equity hedge funds do and what small broker-dealers
do.
Make no mistake, if a broker cannot communicate with clients, cannot create
a proposal, term sheet, or PowerPoint that cannot be shown to more than 14
people without subjecting themselves to fines and censure, then we have in
effect shut off this vital capital-formation process.
The SEC is proposing to raise the requirements to be considered an accredited
investor. But they have wisely decided to exempt private venture funds from
this rule, in recognition of the important role they play in capital formation.
It would be a shame to have an inadvertent rule interpretation have the same
unintended consequence.
In summary, there is no additional benefit to the investor or to the economy
as a whole to this rule proposal. There are already legions of rules to cover
the communication between a broker and his clients, with a clear path to proposing
additional rules that may be necessary without adopting a back-door rule that
was not intended to cover private funds. Adding the research analyst rules
on top of the sales literature rules defies logic as to what constitutes research,
sends the wrong message to the financial services industry, increases costs
to the investor (in an effort to keep a long letter short, I did not address
this, but it will), seriously limits rational discourse between a broker and
his clients, and creates the potentially serious problem of negatively affecting
the competitiveness of not only the financial service industry but also the
US economy.
What can you do about this? The SEC is taking comments on the proposed rules
up until March 5 (I am told). My attorneys at Dechert submitted a comment on
my behalf today. It is not yet posted on the SEC website, but I assume it will
be on Monday. I have posted it on the internet at http://www.2000wave.com/pdf/Comment_Letter_SEC_Release_No_34-55072.pdf.
If you are interested in making a comment and learning in a more legal and
technical manner about this issue, you should read it. And definitely copy
it and send it to your lawyers and compliance officers and see if they agree
with our rationale. If they do, then have them also make a comment, and consider
making one yourself as well. If we can create enough interest in this, there
is a reasonable chance we can get the relevant people at the SEC to pay some
attention.
You can go to the site and make your comments at http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/nasd.shtml.
Scroll down to the notice dated January 9, 2007 (SR-NASD-2006-113). (It is
18 down on the list as of today.) If there are any comments, or ours is posted,
there will also be a link to the comments.
A Little Salsa, A Lot of Fun
It is late (already 9!) and time to hit the send button. I do hope that I
don't have to write about regulations again for some time. Fed policy is more
my cup of tea, but sometimes I just feel compelled to put in my two cents.
I am going to keep my personal comments brief this week, as I promised my
twin daughters I would take them salsa dancing, since they came into town from
college today. It is hard to believe they will be 22. I think some of the other
kids will be joining us as well.
Have yourself a good week. If you get the chance, you should go see The Last
King of Scotland. The acting job of Forrest Whitaker playing Idi Amin is one
of the best ever. He should be a slam dunk for the Oscar. It is very graphic
and one I would not take kids to. But it is a powerful movie.
Your ready for the weekend analyst,
|