Alpha Dogs
Bill Bonner
The
Daily Reckoning
Apr 2, 2007
The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: When desperately seeking alpha, the
average investor will buy just about anything...even if that
means overpaying. This week, Bill Bonner examines the gall of
the private equity industry, and how it compares to that of the
hedge fund industry. Read on...
God must love typical investors;
he created so many of them. But he cursed the poor yahoos to
mediocrity. They can't get 'alpha' (above market performance),
say the theorists, because they can never know as much as the
market itself.
For the average investor, it
is true; he can do no better than average. Match his little wits
against 'the market'? Don't make us laugh.
You can hear a lot of laughing
in the City and on Wall Street lately. And this week, the cynical
cackles came from the Blackstone Group, which offered to sell
common investors 10% of the company for $4 billion.
Here we back-track for a moment
with an observation: The major decision that any stock market
investor has to make is which line of guff to fall for. Any of
them will ruin you - but some faster and more thoroughly than
others.
One of the finest pieces of
guff ever - the Efficient Market Hypothesis - is probably one
of the least harmful. EMH tells us that market prices incorporate
all the information available at any given moment - infinitely
more information than any individual investor could hope to assimilate.
Logically (if idiotically) any extra value an investor sees in
a share is thus incorrect, compared to the price actually set
by the all-seeing market.
It is impossible to beat the
market, declares EMH. Of course, it is not true. But it also
may not be true that you will go to jail if you kill someone.
Still, it's not a bad idea to believe it.
Meanwhile, for 20 years, Blackstone
Group has been doing to the market approximately what Tyson did
to Holyfield. It's profits in 2006 reached $2.27 billion, more
than double that of the previous year.
Obviously, the professors of
EMH got it wrong somewhere.
While the academics say you
can't beat the market, the financial industry makes it sound
as though you almost can't help beating it. For a fee, mutual
funds, account managers, stockbrokers, hedge funds and private
equity groups offer to help you trounce the average investor.
Of course, that's the business
we're in, too, here at the Daily Reckoning. But our pitch is
extremely modest: If you don't like our ideas and suggestions,
you can ask for a refund.
Compare that to the chutzpah
of the hedge fund industry, which charges 2% of capital and 20%
of performance. If the professors are right, investors who go
into hedge funds are morons. If the results are purely random
- as EMH insists - they're just giving away their money. If the
returns bounced up 100% one year and down 50% the next, over
a decade, almost all your money would be taken away in fees.
But then, the chutzpah seemed
to reach a peak when hedge funds began offering shares to the
public. If a hedge fund manager really could get enough 'alpha'
to justify the fees, why would he want to give it away to perfect
strangers? Hedge fund managers can do math. They wouldn't sell
shares of their own fund unless they could get a premium. As
we explained earlier this week, either the public was willing
to pay more for alpha than alpha was worth, or, there really
wasn't any alpha at all.
It turned out that hedge fund
alpha had vanished. No one seemed to know where it went, but
when they toted up hedge fund performance, over the last two
years, they found that they were no better than the average mutual
fund...and no better than the average, mediocrity-chasing lumpen
investor.
Then, alpha was spotted hanging
around with Private Equity capital, which soon became the hottest
thing on Wall Street.
And now comes the pitch:
"Pssst," says the
Blackstone Group. "You still want alpha? Buy our shares."
Is the Blackstone Group a religious
or charitable order? Not so far as we have heard. If they have
any alpha, they are not going to give it away. Already, they
give investors in their private funds about the same deal as
the hedge funds - 2 and 20, 2% of capital, 20% of profits. And
now, like the hedge funds, they are proposing to sell their moneymaking
magic to the poor fellows in the public market.
Exactly what public investors
will get, we don't know. It's a private company. And the prospectus
for its new offer is not out yet.
What we know is that private
equities, like hedge funds, have taken on a speculative mentality.
Deals are put together...then flipped from one PE firm to another.
The objects of their attention - actual, profit-making companies
- are loaded down with debt so the private equity investors can
take out the profits. And then, the deals are sold back to the
public - at a big premium. As more and more money chases quick
profit, standards slip; the deals degenerate...from super-prime
to subprime. Until investors come to their senses.
In 1989, it was junk bond dealers
with alpha in their pockets who were in need of wising up. Then,
Ohio Mattress was being taken private by a buyout firm just at
the time Drexel Burnham collapsed. Lenders got worried...then
frightened. All of a sudden, the easy credit that made the deal
possible disappeared. First Boston, one of the lenders, reached
into its pocket and...lo...no more alpha. The deal fell apart
and the bank was so destabilized, it was later sold to Credit
Suisse.
Junk bond investors learned
such a valuable lesson, it took them almost 10 years to forget
it.
Regards,
Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning
P.S. In the upcoming Survival
Report, we give a full expose of Goldman Sachs and its role in
the current subprime housing fiasco. In addition to two other
outstanding reports, this third report is included free as a
special bonus for charter members who sign up now. For details,
click here:
The Survival Report
http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/SUR/ESURH300
Regards,
Bill Bonner
email: DR@dailyreckoning.com
website: The
Daily Reckoning
Bill Bonner
is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning.
Bill's book,
Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and
Politics, is a must-read.
He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial
Reckoning Day:
Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century (John Wiley
& Sons).
In Bonner and
Wiggin's follow-up book, Empire
of Debt:
The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic
brand of humor to expose the nation for what it really is - an
empire built on delusions.
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