|
With the economy increasingly looking like it will slow down materially in
the last half of the year, there is a drum beat for the Federal Reserve to
cut rates. But how likely is a rate cut this year? We take a very different
look at inflation to see if there is any room for the Fed to give a boost to
the economy. We look over our shoulder at Japan and the yen carry trade and
ask a heretical question: does the Fed cutting rates make any difference?
Inflation is Baked into the CPI Numbers
Last Monday, I used an excellent piece by friend and money manager John Hussman
for my Outside the Box. Buried at the end in the piece was a throwaway line
that really intrigued me and spurred some research:
"If you look carefully at the CPI figures (and tinker with the monthly numbers),
you'll also discover that even if the figures average a 2% annual rate in the
months ahead, the year-over-year headline CPI inflation rate will be pushing
4% by November. This is already 'baked in the cake.' Since Bernanke is clearly
concerned with the inflation expectations of the public, as well as the Fed's
credibility, that headline CPI figure may create some complications for cutting
rates in the months ahead, unless resource utilization falls out of bed."
That intrigued me. So, I went to the Bureau of Labor Statistics database on
the CPI (Consumer Price Index). And John is right. There are some very interesting
implications in the numbers. You can see them at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpid0706.pdf.
I reproduce them below, rounding the numbers to the nearest one-tenth. This
is the all items CPI or the so-called headline CPI, which includes food and
energy. These are not seasonally adjusted, but are the actual numbers with
1982-84 as the base. (If you look at the website, there are two series. The
other starts in 1967. For our purposes, either will do.) Note that starting
in August of last year a very interesting thing happens. The index starts to
go down and drops all the way into the end of the year. Let's go to the table.

The number drops to 201.5 in November. As a quick aside, that means prices
have essentially doubled since the starting period, or things cost twice as
much as they did in 1982-84 which started with a value of 100. The index was
up to 208.4 by this June. If prices merely (!) stay flat for the next five
months that would mean inflation would be around 3% for the 12 months ending
in the 4th quarter.
What happened to cause the numbers to go essentially flat for six months?
Housing, which is 42% of the CPI, was essentially flat for the last six months
of 2006, but has risen. Gasoline dropped over 60 cents a gallon. Natural gas
only rose a small amount. Food was essentially flat. All of the inflation for
the last 12 month for the actual numbers was in the first six months of this
year.
This is a pattern that we can see in the first table, where a lot of annual
inflation is in the first half of the year and gets tamer in the latter half.
But how likely are prices not to rise in the latter half of this year? Headline
inflation is running well over 3% for the just first six months of the year.
If that pace were kept up, headline inflation for year would be over 6% for
2007!
Is that likely? Probably not, as much of the increase has been in energy and
food. But it is also not likely that inflation would simply stall from here.
Food prices are rising, and so is energy.
Let's say inflation moderates in the next six months to an annual basis of
2%, which would be the lowest rate for the last three years. That means in
November that the index would be around 210.5 and a headline inflation rate
of well over 4% year over year. As we will see in a minute, core inflation
(CPI less food and energy) is over 2%, so projecting 2% for the rest of the
year is a reasonable conjecture at this point.
But we are told that the Fed likes to look at core inflation. Core inflation
looks to be a lot tamer, but still not below 2%.

Again, these are not seasonally adjusted numbers. But since we are only really
interested in year over year results in this discussion, seasonally adjusted
numbers make no difference. Core CPI was up about 2.7% for the year ended in
June. Even if core inflation falls to 2% for the last half of the year (which
it did last year), that will mean core inflation in December is still at 2.5%.
That is well above the Fed's comfort zone of 1-2%.
Now maybe they decide to buy Paul McCulley's argument that their comfort zone
should be 1-3%, but there are no indications that any Fed governor is considering
such a stance. This back of the napkin analysis suggests there is little reason
to expect the Fed to have the room to cut rates if they want to maintain their
inflation fighting credibility. In fact, there are many who argue that they
need to tighten.
What could make inflation come down? Oil prices could plunge, but that is
only about 8% of the CPI. We could see a drop in housing costs as owners who
cannot sell their homes decide to rent at lower prices, but this is not typically
something that would show up in the data that quickly. If core inflation were
to moderate back to what is was during the last half of 2006, it would still
have annualized inflation at 2.2%.
Under normal circumstances, 2% core and 4% headline inflation is not an environment
for the Fed to cut rates. If we were to get a rate cut in the latter half of
this year, say at the December meeting, it would be in an economic environment
that would not be good.
In short, we would have to see unemployment rising rapidly, consumer spending
and confidence falling and a recession clearly in the offering. That is not
an environment that would be positive for most markets, especially the stock
markets.
So, for those analysts and investors who are hoping the Fed will cut rates
and give a boost to the stock market, you need to be careful for what you wish.
The Mortgage Pig in the Python
The housing market just continues to falter. "Existing home sales declined
for a fourth straight month, down 3.8% in June, although median prices rose
0.3% and inventories fell to an 8.8-month supply. In the largest drop since
January, new home sales declined 6.6% in June, and are off 22.3% from a year
earlier. Median prices were down 2.2%. Housing starts rose 2.3% in June although
construction permits declined 7.5%. The monthly average of 1.462 million starts
in the second quarter was barely above the 1.460 million figure in the first
quarter. The National Association of Homebuilders' confidence index dropped
to 24 in July--its lowest level since January 1991." (www.agaryshilling.com)
Gary Shilling notes that J. P. Morgan now projects that home prices will fall
20% from their 2006 peak. He points out that this makes his call of a 25% drop
last year seem slightly less radical. He writes:
"Bernanke told Congress last month that the housing swoon 'will likely continue
to weigh on economic growth over coming quarters, although the magnitude of
the drag on growth should diminish over time.'"
But it will take longer than you might think for that negative influence to
decrease. Let's take a look at the following table. This shows the amount of
adjustable rate mortgages that reset each month for the first half of this
year and will reset for the next 18 months. Note that these reset numbers are
a driving factor in the increasing rise in foreclosures. Pay attention to the
numbers I highlight in red for January through June of 2008. The largest portion
of mortgage resets is not until next year.

We have just seen $197 billion of mortgage resets so far this year. That is
less than we will see in two months (February and March) of next year. The
first six months of next year will see more than the total for 2007 or $521
billion. This suggests to me that the number of foreclosures is due to rise
dramatically from the already high current levels, putting more homes into
a weak housing environment.
These homes that are going to see reset prices are for the most part not going
to be able to be rolled over into a traditional 30 year mortgage because there
is not going to be enough equity to get a traditional mortgage. While the total
increase in payments is an estimated $42 billion, which is not all that large
in the grand scheme of things, to the individuals who are paying the increase
it is a large increase in their housing costs. My estimate is that this is
about one-half of 1% of total consumer spending. Along with inflationary rises
in food and energy, this is going to continue to put pressure on consumer spending.
Bernanke is right. The pressure from housing will diminish over time. But
it is not going to be over in a few months. It is going to take at least another
year and maybe 18 months for a bottom in the housing market to develop.
Housing Starts Look to Stop
Look at the next chart. In a typical housing market downturn, we see housing
starts drop below 1,000,000 in the US. In this next chart from Shilling, notice
that both housing starts and residential construction as a percentage of GDP
are still way above what you would expect for a market bottom.

We are still seeing housing starts averaging close to 1.45 million on an annual
basis, yet the supply of new homes are rising. New homes in many areas are
starting to sell for less than used homes. Normally, a new home sells for a
premium of about 10%, as everything is shiny and new.
This suggests that existing home prices are going to have to come down. Prices
for new homes are falling and will fall more. As an aside, when you see that
median home sales prices are not falling all that much, what is really happening
is that smaller homes, typically bought by new families and first time buyers
are not being sold as they cannot get subprime financing. That means that the
headline price declines in the statistics are back-loaded and will show up
later.
Shilling suggests that housing starts will fall to around 1,000,000 on an
annualized basis at some point next year. That is a lot more pain for homebuilders.
Bottom line? We are going to see more pressure on the consumer as mortgage
equity withdrawals continue to fall precipitously and as housing related jobs
continue to drop. This is going to result in a much slower economy in the last
half of this year. Side bet: the advance GDP number of 3.4% we got last week
for 2nd quarter GDP is going to be revised downward. Little noticed in the
release was that GDP was revised downward for past three years, with some quarters
being revised down by as much as 0.5% three years later.
Let's revisit a chart I first used in January of this year, showing the impact
of mortgage equity withdrawals on the US economy.

MEWs are down by 50% by some estimates and are dropping fast. Real personal
consumption growth was an anemic 1.3% in the last quarter. GDP is likely to
be less than 2% for the last half of the year, and less than 1% in the fourth
quarter would not surprise me. Remember, headline inflation (technically PCE)
is subtracted from the GDP number. That is one of the reasons that GDP was
low in the first quarter and bounced back in the second quarter, as PCE inflation
dropped by almost 2%.
Yes, I know that is not what the numbers we showed earlier in the letter demonstrate,
but don't ask me for an explanation, as I do not have one. It is odd, though.
If inflation is high in the last quarter, it might surprise a lot of people
by giving us a negative GDP number.
The economy is going to slow down on the back of falling home prices, falling
new home construction and ever smaller increases in consumer spending. The
good news is that most of the economy is doing well and should keep the slowdown
from becoming a serious recession. And that we will work through this in a
more or less orderly fashion.
A Few Thoughts in the Recent Credit Crisis
Those who maintained that the subprime mortgage problems would be contained
were wrong. It clearly spread throughout the entire credit markets. Anything
labeled CDO or ABX or CLO lost liquidity. There were no bids. The market was
clearly shooting first and asking questions later.
The good news is that this is for the most part simply a re-pricing of risk
and that will get done over the next few weeks and months. It will take longer
for Wall Street to come up with new, more credible securities to package debt
to get deals done. Transparency will be the watchword in the brave new world
of credit. Imagine that. People who lend money are now going to want to know
who is going to pay the loan back. And the rating agencies are going to have
to figure out how to create credible ratings for the new version of CDO and
CLOs.
I think this is healthy. Yes, the losses for those who have subprime and Alt-A
exposure are quite real. Even the equity portions and lower grades of prime
mortgage securities may be at loss, given Countrywide's latest disclosure of
their problems with prime mortgages.
Some BBB tranches of subprime paper are down by 60%. That is not surprising,
given the quality of the loans that were made. What is very disturbing to investors
is to watch what they thought was AAA credit already marked down by 10% or
more. Some AA credits are down by as much as 25%. If you bought recent A rated
mortgage paper you could be down by over 50%! That is ugly.
Given that investors are not feeling very sanguine about rating agencies right
now, it is understandable that they did not want to buy any more of anything
until the dusts settles. Further, it was clear a few weeks ago to almost anybody
that yields were going to rise. Until the market settles on what the new levels
are, and more importantly what the real risks are, it is going to be difficult
to get a highly leveraged merger deal done.
But some of the recent volatility was overdone. The newly minted (May 22)
LCDX, which is a stand-in for high yield loans, has dropped 10%. That assumes
a default rate of between 5-10%, when the actual default rate for leveraged
loans for the last 12 months was just 0.12%! Look at the chart below from www.markit.com.

The chart shows these loan swaps trading down to 92. The market opened at
90.5 on July 27. My sources tell me that some trades were made pre-open on
Monday in the 89 area. That is truly throwing the baby out with the bathwater!
There were some traders who made (and lost!) money on that one.
If the fundamental risks of the market were suggesting a problem, I would
be very nervous. But the recent volatility is more of a fear response (certainly
justified in a very real sense) than reasoned investing. Today some of the
sanity began to return as the market for these loans is rebounding.
Liquidity will eventually return to these markets. There are still vast pools
of capital that must seek a return and will find its way into the credit markets.
But it is going to be more savvy and less casual about where it lends money.
The adults are getting ready to take control. The young quants will now be
going to the penalty box. And survivors will not soon forget this lesson. The
days of the cheap LBO are over. Good.
Look at it this way. Leveraged Buy Outs were routinely done at 12 times annual
cash flow with debt equal to 10 times cash flow at a blended interest cost
of 8%. This is what the banks who guaranteed these deals were expecting to
be able to sell the loans at.
Now, these loans are going to be closer to 10-11%. That means you are going
to have to drop your valuations to 9 times cash flow (or less) and/or put up
more equity to get debt down to 8 times cash flow. Will deals get done on this
new basis? Sure, but the mid-20 returns that private equity investors have
come to know and love are going to drop. Perhaps by half in a lot of cases.
Either that, or the stock prices are going to have to drop enough to be interesting
as a LBO play.
Further, it is clear that corporate borrowers are going to pay more for their
loans. That is going to put pressure on profits over time.
Think of it this way. If the Fed decided to raise interest rates by 1% over
the next year, the market would fall out of bed. But the credit market just
raised interest rates by about 3% in a few months! Subprime home loans without
sufficient equity are a thing of the past. Credit for riskier deals is now
a lot more expensive. LBO deals are getting pulled left and right. Lenders
are properly going to put much more emphasis on risk and return of capital.
And it is not just in the US that credit markets are tightening. In the world's
second largest economy, Japan, the financial stocks are dropping even more
than they are here. UBS tells us that 25% of the foreign exchange market in
Japan is now composed of retail traders. Read that again. One of the most important
lenders in the world (Japan), and the source of the yen carry trade, is now
in the hands of very weak players who are clearly amateur speculators piling
into a market that has made a lot of money. Think day traders and dot-com stocks.
If (when) the yen strengthens, it could do so violently as the retail crowd
rushes for the exits.
Good friend and macro maven Greg Weldon is putting together a special report
for me that will be Monday's Outside the Box. Almost no one is paying attention
to Japan and the yen carry trade and its impact on world liquidity. We should
be. You will want to read this OTB carefully.
All of this means more volatility in the next few months, not less.
Half of All Hedge Funds Gone?
Long time readers know that I am a huge fan of Jeremy Grantham. He is one
of the smartest and most successful investors in the world. In his recent letter,
he stated that "within 5 years I expect that at least one major 'bank' (broadly
defined) will have failed and that up to half the hedge funds and a substantial
percentage of the private equity firms in existence today will have simply
ceased to exist."
I have to make a comment on that. He may be right that 50% of the hedge funds
that exist today will be gone, although I doubt it will be that high. But the
demise of that many hedge funds is entirely predictable and something that
we should expect. Except for the largest funds, the vast majority of hedge
funds are small businesses. Michael Gerber estimates that 80% of all new small
businesses fail with five years of starting up, and 80% of the remainder no
longer exist in the next five years.
When you think about it, the odds on being a successful hedge fund manager
are not all that high. To charge the fees that they do, they have to deliver
the goods consistently. In these markets, that is tough.
So, while a lot of hedge funds in the market today will no longer be here
in five years, the real reason is that they simply did not generate enough
cash flow for themselves and their investors to survive. You can actually have
a profitable year and see your assets under management leave. 7% a year for
three years is not all that exciting.
And let me make a few predictions. There will be thousands more hedge funds
in five years than there are today. And the industry will be twice as large.
And that is a very good thing.
Golf, Weddings and Europe
I will be going to Europe August 21 and staying there through September 5.
Other than meeting with clients in London and a speech in Copenhagen for Jyske
Bank, I will be mostly tourist. I plan to be in London, Copenhagen, Stockholm,
Warsaw, Krakow and Prague. I will have some time to meet with clients and friends
at a happy hour or dinner here and there. I always enjoy meeting interesting
people and making new friends. If you want to meet in London, you can drop
me a note or contact my European partners, Absolute Return Partners.
I am finishing this letter on a Thursday as I will fly to San Antonio tomorrow
to be with Mike Casson and Connie for their wedding and weekend of partying
with friends. Mike is the publisher for this letter and a close friend. We
have been doing all sorts of business together for over 30 years (where has
the time gone?). Mike is the best of Texas. In all the deals we have done,
we have yet to need a piece of paper. His handshake is his contract. And his
handshake is worth more than a lot of the deals I have done on paper. This
world needs more people like Mike.
And I am going to try and golf on Saturday. I went to the driving range last
Sunday and my back did just fine. It had gotten difficult and I had to stop
three years ago, but have done a lot of abdominal work and my back is a lot
stronger. I do enjoy the game, and hope to be able to start playing again.
It is time to hit the send button. Enjoy your weekend, and call a friend and
let them know you appreciate them.
Your wondering if I can even break 110 analyst,
|