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Monday, December 28
Fingers of Instability & Glimmers of Hope -- An Explanation
So what’s the idea and what does this have to do with investing?
Bak, Teng & Wisenfeld model stems from their investigations into the instability of complex systems, and their discovery was that these systems tended to naturally arrive at a “critical state”, after which any sand grain landing in the wrong spot can start an avalanche. Furthermore, the size of the avalanche is the result of a domino effect – how unstable was where the grain landed, and did the resulting slide cause grains to move over other unstable spots thereby creating more slippages, etc. Clearly the number and size of the “fingers of instability” that are impacted (primarily, and as an after-effect) by that falling grain of sand will play a key role in determining how large the eventual avalanche will be.
Fascinatingly, Bak-Teng-Wisenfeld discovered a mathematical property connecting the number of grains involved in an avalanche and the frequency of an avalanche of that size. Simply put, if you doubled the number of grains involved in an avalanche it becomes about 2.14x as rare. Moreover, the presence of a power law, critical state, and fingers of instability appears to be more widespread; for example, in Ubiquity, Buchanan talks about how similar properties are found in the size of earthquakes, forest fires, scientific paper citations (as a proxy for “new” scientific ideas), deaths in wars & last (but not leastly) stock price fluctuations (though Benoit Mandelbrot deserves a big nod for his works on that specific topic, but Our Man shall leave that for another time).
As such, in an attempt to impose some discipline over his thought process, Our Man hopes to jot down some of the Fingers of Instability (that could drag stock markets downwards) and Glimmers of Hope (that could drag it upwards) to: help him remind himself what he was worried about at the start of each year, to provide a guide of things to keep an eye on during the year, and to look back on in futures and see what he missed & why. It should be noted that these lists are absolutely 100% NOT predictions (it’s a mug’s game) but are things that Our Man is watching out for, worried about, or hoping for – if other people call something a “Black Swan” (something, along with 20-standard deviation events, that Our Man doesn’t believe in) and it’s not on Our Man’s list, he just missed it…
Tuesday, December 22
Portfolio Update
A range also makes more sense to Our Man as it can help balance the two conflicting emotions; a desire to be patient with positions and to give them an opportunity to work, and the ex-post need* to be disciplined in managing risk. Thus by having a range Our Man is able to encapsulate a number of things into his decision such as key support levels (be they moving average related or just psychological round numbers like $1,100) and normal intra-day volatility.
Anyways, in this instance…Gold fell through $1,100 (a psychological round number) and the moving averages (support levels, in the $1,080-$1,090 range), touching and intraday an intra-day low of $1,074. Thus discipline trumps patience and Our Man exited just over half the Gold position at the equivalent of $1,085. The Gold position now represents 8.8% NAV, with the Cash position increasing to 29.5% NAV.
*Note that by "ex-post..." Our Man means the need to be disciplined in managing risk, after the decision to invest has been made. The ex-ante discipline in managing risk should (obviously) be done before making the investment and Our Man's consideration of risk is an important factor in both making the investment AND how the investment is sized.
Friday, December 18
2010 - Year of the Relapse?
They say a picture’s worth a thousand words, so here’s a picture illustrating what I’m talking about:
Now there are a number of reasons why this debt problem has come around (hello ‘free-market’ neo-classical economic theory that doesn’t really consider the level of debt, bank lending policies & financial engineering, and irresponsible US consumers, to name a few) but that’s not our concern today. Our concern is what does it all mean! Well, Our Man’s firmly in the camp that it means we’re in a credit crisis…that the US consumer instead of over-consuming is going to have try and deleverage and do some of that 'saving', which was popular back in the old days! He also suspects that it also means that this recession (dare he mention the ‘d’ word) is going to end up in 1 of 2 ways; a Great Depression style collapse (quick deleveraging, increased savings but reduced consumption) or a Japanese (sorry Mrs OM!)-style stagnation and lots of w’s (where uneven growth, often driven by government, gives way to another recession as the government steps away…leading to the government throwing $$ at the problem, ad nauseum while delivering takes a longer slower trajectory).
The government’s response has been simple; keep asset prices up (TARP, liquidity to banks, get rid of mark-to-market, etc), try to get the consumer to spend (and taken on more debt, cash-for-clunkers, first-time high buyers credit, etc) and throw money at the problem (Stimulus). Though you’ll notice very little on debt forgiveness and credit write-downs (though, Our Man supposes HAMP was an attempt at this!), it’s also fair to say that they’ve been very successful so far in producing GDP growth. The questions will come when the support is removed and the baton is passed to the private sector.
For the baton to be passed over smoothly it will almost certainly require the consumer to be willing to take on debt (or at least not reduce debt, and take advantage of lower interest rates to refinance/roll-over debt) and resume over-consuming. However, Our Man’s wager is that the hand-off will not go smoothly, and the Japanese W’s will raise their ugly heads. We may see the first signs of this in asset prices, after February when the FED’s move to single-handedly support the toxic assets is scheduled to be withdrawn.
So either way, Our Man looks at 2010 as the year of the relapse…it’s just a question of whether it’s the economy or the consumer who’s relapsing!
What does this mean for the portfolio; well this core view helps create a starting point and from there Our Man tries to consider the “Glimmers of Hope” and the “Slivers of Instability” that could impact the markets and his book. More on that, next time…
Tuesday, December 15
Mid-Month Update: Waiting for Godot…
So far, December has proved to be a microcosm of the scenario that Our Man fears most; a drifting market. It means, that in the absence of good news, the portfolio quietly bleeds a small amount as Our Man’ negative bets (through puts) quietly burn their theta (time decay), which his equity holdings barely offset this as they drift sideways. As such, the book’s performance is buffeted by the sparring forces of his (overly?) popular position in GLD (Gold) and his (overly?) unpopular position at the long-end of the Treasury curve (TLT). The two positions have combined fairly evenly for almost the entirety of the month-to-date losses and as the numbers below show, death by a thousand cuts never looks pretty…
Our Man’s Current Thoughts:
- TLT: Despite being the largest position in the book, the Treasuries position remains a comfortable one that Our Man would consider adding to in the future. The position reflects the underlying belief that we’re in a deleveraging cycle, as evidenced by the FED’s Commercial/Industrial and Consumer lending data, which will likely prove deflationary despite the FED’s attempts. Additionally, the position would also benefit from any flight to safety away from risky assets (in particular equities).
- GLD: As mentioned when the Gold position was cut-back, it is now a far more popular position than when it was originally put on. As such, Gold has also generated an array of articles from market commentators which run the gamut from “bubble” to “fair value of $6,000+”. Our Man’s thought process remains unchanged; Gold continues to be held firstly as a hedge against bad governance (by the Fed/Treasury), and secondly as a shorter-term momentum/trend play. In November, Our Man noted that he intended to place the equivalent of a rolling stop under 50-67% of the position once gold reached $1,250. While Gold never quite got there, it has retreated to the level where Our Man exited his first slug of his position and currently sits just above its 50-day & 65-day moving averages. Should it break these levels (c$1,080) then Our Man will be exiting at least 50% of the existing position.
On a more general basis, December has shown many of the potential risks that this portfolio could suffer from in 2010:
- How sideways markets will likely lead to small and steady theta burn that goes uncompensated by the equity positions
- How uncertainty over US government debt levels, increased supply of long-term bonds, and a lack of short-medium term clarity on inflation/deflationary trend, and no catalyst for a flight to safety will likely cause bond prices to drift.
- That whether or not Gold is in a bubble, its ride from here is likely to be more volatile…especially as the US-Dollar shows signs of strengthening.
Tuesday, December 1
November Review
November proved to be the strongest month in the portfolio’s short history, with the portfolio rising 6.43%. The portfolio was profitable throughout the month making money in every 5-day rolling period, and during both the strong 1st half of the month for the markets, and the more uncertain 2nd half.
The performance was again driven by the position in GLD (Gold ETF) which contributed over 500bips to the month’s profit following the barbarous metal’s almost 20% rise during the month. The position in L-end Treasuries (through L TLT, and an individual bond) contributed over 150bips as yields continued to tighten. As noted during the mid-month updates, the portfolio’s positioning changed significantly during the month and the new positions proved a small drag on performance.
Portfolio
The portfolio’s positioning is unchanged from the update a couple of days ago.
During December, Our Man hopes to discuss the following issues:
- 2010 Outlook and Positioning
- 2010 Alternative Scenarios
- China, and Our Man’s skepticism of its economic miracle
- Potential Investments that Our Man hopes to build during 2010