Benson's Economic
& Market Trends
It's Deal or No Deal as
The Hedges Clip Investors
Richard Benson
Sep 29, 2006
We're living in interesting
times. A popular TV program called "Deal or No Deal"
- a high-stakes game show of odds and chance - says it all. On
the show, contestants compete for cash inside 26 sealed briefcases.
The show is exciting because so many contestants take very big
risks and at each stage they are offered a "Deal" of
a certain free winning or "No Deal", which means they
risk it all for a chance to win even more. The critical thing
to realize here is that the contestants can only win because
their own money is never at risk. This show is a sign of the
times and parallels the mentality of many money managers and
financial institutions.
Deal or No Deal is, indeed, a study in human nature and has great
bearing on more than a few hedge funds, financing institutions
and companies. The message here is that there are too many people
willing to make extraordinarily risky bets with other people's
money if they personally have a chance to win big.
Many hedge funds collect two
percent for assets under management, and 20 percent of any winnings,
but they do not offer a "claw-back" clause in their
agreements. If a claw-back clause existed, investors in a hedge
fund would be able to take back the previous winnings of their
asset managers if too much of the hedge fund's money they managed
was gambled away foolishly. When financial interests aren't clearly
aligned, a trader can literally bet the bank.
The recent Amaranth Fund story
is just one example where a 32-year old "kid" bet tens
of billions of investor dollars and lost $6 billion. Think about
it. What lunatic pension, endowment or advisor, would trust billions
to someone who has barely lived through one economic cycle, or
was just a child when Nelson Bunker Hunt and his brother lost
everything on March 27, 1980 on "Silver Thursday".
When the Hunt brothers began accumulating silver in 1973 the
price was $1.95 per ounce. Early in 1979 the price was about
$5, and in 1980 the price peaked at $49.45 per ounce, but the
highly leveraged brothers were eventually unable to meet margin
calls and the price of silver plummeted from $21.62 to $10.80.
They were forced to file for bankruptcy. Surprise! Natural
Gas and Silver are both commodities, and speculating with high
leverage in them is dangerous!
The memories of today's young
asset managers are so short that they can't even remember when
28-year old Nick Lesson blew up the Baring Investment Bank, a
233 year-old institution, or when Long Term Capital collapsed
and folded in 1998 when it lost $4.6 billion in less than four
months. Even after going through the 2000 stock market crash,
the financial markets today are still running without adult supervision.
I'm placing my bets that Amaranth is not the last giant hedge
fund disaster to play out.
The real risks to the market
are not in the tens of billions of dollars that can be lost in
highly-leveraged commodity futures, but in the hundreds of billions
that can change hands now that total derivatives are around $270
trillion, and credit default swaps are over $23 Trillion.
In the credit default swap
market, a hedge fund or a firm like JP Morgan or Goldman Sachs
can collect cash payments today, with a promise to pay tomorrow
if a bond or note defaults. Wall Street traders and hedge fund
managers take the credit default swap premiums into income and
assume that low volatility and low loss will run forever. The
mentality on Wall Street is still all about making a year-end
bonus big enough to retire. Do the traders and money managers
really care that they are gambling pension, endowment or shareholder
money? Are they overly concerned if the losses pile up in housing,
bonds, or corporate credits? As an investor, do you care?
Everywhere we look there are
massive experiments in moral hazard where decision makers get
to reward themselves over and over again. Accounting frauds,
such as Enron, are in the headlines every day and back-dating
options for corporate management has now been discovered at hundreds
of firms. Corporate executives, money managers and traders, who
get to measure their own performance, are putting their hands
into your cookie jar and grabbing as many cookies as they
can.
Low market volatility and credit
spreads indicate that the markets perceive credit risk to be
minimal. However, risk appears low only because the growth of
derivatives, such as credit default swaps, has been exponential.
All the hedge funds and major Wall Street players have been selling
volatility and credit default swaps - especially credit default
swaps on mortgages to buyers collecting far too few premiums
to insure the risks. The retired Chairman of the Fed also assured
us that the growth in derivatives lessens risk. Sadly, the same
retired Chairman was on record just a few short years ago urging
individuals to take out adjustable-rate mortgages when there
was an incumbent President to re-elect and an economy to jump
start.
Given human nature, the real
risk in the markets is not just whether a stock goes up or down,
but rather in the behavior of your asset manager. Investors beware!
It's time to go back to only risking the money you can afford
to lose, otherwise someone may already be playing Deal or No
Deal with your money.
Richard Benson
Archives
President
Specialty
Finance Group, LLC
Member FINRA/SIPC
2505 S. Ocean Boulevard
- Suite 212
Palm Beach, Florida 33480
1 800-860-2907
email: rbenson@sfgroup.org
Richard Benson, SFGroup, is a widely-published
author on securitization and specialty finance, and a sought after
speaker at financing conferences on raising equity for mid-market
companies.
Prior to founding
the Specialty Finance Group in 1989, Mr. Benson acted as a trading
desk economist for Chase Manhattan Bank in the early 1980's and
started in the securitization business in 1983 at Bear Stearns,
and helped build the early securitization businesses at Citibank
and E.F. Hutton.
Mr. Benson graduated
from the University of Wisconsin in 1970 in the Honors Program
in Math, and did his doctoral work in Economics at Harvard University.
Mr. Benson is a member of the Harvard Club of New York and Palm
Beach.
The Specialty
Finance Group, LLC is a Florida Limited Liability Company and
is registered with FINRA/SIPC as a Broker/Dealer.
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