Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2009

Some Nice Local Press

Over the past couple of weeks, the Cary News, the Raleigh News&Observer, and WRAL each published/aired a story about my involvement in helping the town of Cary with its investment portfolio last year. I wasn’t looking for or expecting any acknowledgment, so the press coverage has been a pleasant surprise.


There are two factual points to clarify. First, although the article refers to my “gut feel”, my concerns came from a detailed analysis of Fannie and Freddie's balance sheet as well as my expectations for a deteriorating housing market. I leave hunches and inklings to more trivial matters like whether to have a baby or which wild berries to eat.


Second, the article and TV clip mention that I sold positions in Fannie and Freddie for myself and my clients. The fact is that I never owned these stocks. I actually shorted (bet that the share price would fall) Freddie Mac (FRE) shares back in March for myself and clients. The concept of shorting can be a little difficult to grasp, and I suspect the reporters were busy enough trying to figure out if there was any possible lighting scheme that would make me look remotely presentable.


The TV news segment was filmed with virtually no notice, so I'm grateful to the WRAL team for their generous and thoughtful editing. I have a new respect and understanding for just how quickly and efficiently a news crew is able to pull a story together and get it on the air. Of course, I'm also grateful to the town's finance department for taking my concerns seriously.


TV segment: http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/4235053/


Newspaper article: http://www.newsobserver.com/news/wake/cary/story/1345473.html





The Market Rubbernecker is affiliated with Aspera Financial, LLC, a registered investment advisor. Please read the disclaimer on the home page of the Market Rubbernecker site.

Monday, September 8, 2008

GSE = Government "Saving" Everyone

With Fannie and Freddie common and preferred all down 80-90%, it might seem a little persnickety that I'm irritated that they have any value whatsoever. That the U.S. taxpayer can be on the hook for future losses yet shareholders not be completely wiped out is absurd and disgraceful.

A lot has been written on this bailout, so I'll just focus on a few areas. Let's start with who's to blame. If you listen to management or government officials, no one is really to blame as they attribute the downfall to the housing bust. Funny how that works. If house prices had only kept going up at an unprecedented rate, everything would have been fine. We'd all be millionaires sipping umbrella drinks and stroking our cockapoos in our newly installed home theaters with our mortgage brokers as we prepared to take another slug of cash out of our residential ATMs to fund the botox injections we'll need to stop all that smiling over our good fortune.

The truth is that there is plenty of blame to pass around. The very structure of the Fannie and Freddie has been flawed from the beginning, and we can thank Congress (and FDR) for that. Coupling profit-making with a government mandate to make home ownership more widespread was never very neat and tidy. This was made very clear recently when Congress pressured Fannie and Freddie to expand their activity to the less credit-worthy at a time when housing was weakening. That was exactly the wrong thing to do. It's like hitting the gas rather than braking when the car in front of you slows.

We can also place some blame at the feet of their regulator (OFHEO). Back in March, OFHEO lowered the amount of capital that Fannie and Freddie were required to hold. As I wrote in my very first post on this blog, "...lowering capital requirements during a time of distress seems quite the opposite of what common sense would dictate. Credit losses are rising and asset values are falling, so let's reduce our safety cushion! Sounds like dot-com math to me." The regulators should have required Fannie and Freddie to raise capital, curtail new lending, and increase prices.

Of course, management and the board are to blame as well. They had a front row seat to what was unfolding in the housing and mortgage market, and they should have known better than anyone that it was time to pull back, take less risk, and bolster capital. They also should have known better than anyone just how weak their capital position was. Perhaps the CEOs were too busy counting the millions they received in compensation to bother with such trivia.

So, let's not blame the housing bust. Busts follow bubbles, and isn't it the job of management and regulators to account for and adjust to the dislocations that occur at such times?

What does this bailout mean? First of all, U.S. taxpayers will now be stepping in and shouldering the risk of this housing collapse. This obligation could run north of $1 trillion. Although the U.S. taxpayer is now on the hook for future losses, foreign governments around the world have just been bailed out and will be made whole on the debt that they own. Perhaps this is why the dollar continues its rally on this news. We're telling our foreign benefactors that we're willing to sacrifice ourselves to make them whole. Good deal for them. Bad deal for us.

The implications of this bailout for correcting the scourge of moral hazard (the propensity to take increased risk when you believe the government will bail you out if you fail) are grim. The Treasury and Fed continue to pay lip service to moral hazard as they commit to serial bailouts. What a message it would have sent if Fannie and Freddie had been allowed to fail, and shareholders and debtholders had to go through Chapter 11! It would have been earth-shattering. It would have clearly sent the message that the government does not exist to bail out industry and that there is a cost to taking higher risks. Stop laughing. A guy can dream.

What does this mean for the market? Judging by the initial response, market participants seem to think that this is unquestionably positive. As is typical, I disagree. The market hates uncertainty, and the bailout definitely helps to resolve some uncertainty near term. Thus the rally. So far during this bear market, the bulls have tried to rally the market on every government intervention. I would be shocked if any form of government intervention actually marks the low of this bear.

Does this bailout change the overhang of housing inventory? No. Does it encourage banks to lend more? No. Will it prevent future foreclosures? No. Does it bolster the consumer's balance sheet? No. Does it address the commercial real estate imbalance? No. Does it create new jobs? No. Does it bolster the capital of other financials? No.

Importantly, this bailout does nothing to change the fundamentals impacting the country. The bulls can have their 300 point day, but eventually they'll have to face the fact that this wasn't done from a position of strength. Rather, it illustrates the weaknesses and challenges our economy faces. Until this is adequately reflected in valuation, it would be foolish to chase these knee-jerk rallies.

Disclosure: The Rubbernecker is short moral hazard and the socialization of losses.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Dear Freddie

Dear Freddie,

By the time you read this, I’ll be gone. I’m sorry for doing this, but it’s for the best. I know this might come as a bit of a surprise to you, especially since I’ve been so happy lately. I’ve certainly benefited from our relationship, but I’ve gotten as much out of it as I should reasonably expect. Although we could have dragged this out a little longer, I think it’s in my best interest to move on.

I’ve come to realize that our association isn't healthy as it was built only on lies, misleading communication, and our differences. Even when it came to finances, we never really clicked. I’m financially independent and you’re not. I’m fairly frugal, but you just can’t stop spending. I care about quality and value while you like chasing the latest fad. I prefer to save, and you prefer to borrow. Furthermore, you’re not nearly as popular as you used to be, you don’t make as much money, your credit score is falling, and you’re always arguing with your supervisor.

Anyway, I’m going online to peruse the Edgar filings for some new friends. I’d still like to keep in touch. Who knows. In another time under different circumstances, maybe I’ll look you up again.

Yours,

MR

P.S. Rumors that I've been seen hanging out with your cousins, Fannie and Sallie, are completely false. They're both girls of low moral character.


Ok. Let's get serious. Per my recent quarterly portfolio commentary, I began reducing short positions in the financial sector at the end of last quarter, and I mentioned that I would be looking for opportunities to further reduce exposure if the sector continued selling off. Today's 20%+ decline in Freddie Mac shares provided just this opportunity.

FRE - One year

FRE Today
credit: BigCharts.com

From the New York Times today:

Shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the largest providers of funding for United States home mortgages, plunged Monday on concern the companies need to raise more capital amid larger-than-expected losses.

The corporate “federal agency” debt obligations and mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the companies also plummeted relative to government debt as investors thinned positions, analysts said.

Today's collapse holds a special place in my heart. My first post on the Market Rubbernecker actually dealt with FNM and FRE and the issue of their capital adequacy. In that post, I took issue with the sharp rebound that the shares experienced in mid-March (see chart above) following the announcement that their capital requirements were actually being reduced which would allow them to expand their portfolios in the midst of a housing bust.

Those concerns about capital adequacy have clearly been weighing on investors after that mid-March climb as shares have lost about 50% since then, with another 20% getting lopped off today.
As I stated back in March, there is a very good chance that the equity holders of FNM and FRE will be wiped out, and I still believe that may happen. Despite that, Aspera's clients have had a very nice gain from the FRE short, and I usually prefer to exit a position a little early and leave a little something for the next guy (FRE was sold today in the $11.30-11.40 range).

I still have a short position in Wachovia, but I've now covered most of the financial shorts. I also reduced exposure to TWM intraday for clients that were overweight the position (double inverse Russell 2000 ETF) as it was up another 5% over the past few days.

We need to remember that bear markets are always punctuated by strong short-term rallies like we experienced this past spring. It would not be at all surprising, from a contrarian stance, to see another rally in the near future given the increasingly pervasive bearishness in the market. Regardless of which way the market moves in the near-term, I suspect that the increased level of volatility will result in further outstanding investment opportunities, both long and short.