Saturday, May 10, 2014
Saturday, December 10, 2011
ECB holds the key to solve the current European sovereign debt crisis
We have to understand the true nature of the current crisis. Clearly there is widespread budget deficit problem among the EU nations. I believe Greece has to restructure its debt to be solvent. But we need to separate solvency problem from liquidity problem. Outside of Greece, we have a liquidity problem, not solvency, at least not yet. But investors have lost confidence. They are pulling out of the sovereigns of Italy and Spain, threatening the solvency of these nations. And I do not believe the fire will end there. It will spread further to France, and even Germany, eventually destroying all Euro denominated sovereign debt markets. The very survival of Euro is now at the mercy of the whimsical financial market.
In a crisis of this nature and proportion, what's the rightful role of a central bank? The answer is unequivocal: the central bank should act as the lender of last resort and move decisively to arrest the quick erosion of confidence in the financial market. But facing with a crisis of unprecedented scale, ECB chose to hand off, doing little. The half-hearted bond buying efforts are like using water cups to try to extinguish a house fire. The correct action for ECB to take should be 100% backstop of any sovereign that is committed to future fiscal discipline. That should bring down the interest rate on those sovereigns and give them time to work out their long term budget problems.
I understand the concern of "moral hazard". But I think now is the right time to act. The 26 EU countries, including all 17 Euro nations, have agreed to stringent austerity measures and future fiscal discipline. That should remove ECB's rightful concern about moral hazard.
The other argument against ECB buying the sovereigns is the fear of inflation. That should be the least of the worries right now. Given the austerity measures that many EU nations are undertaking, it is very hard to imagine any real chance of high inflation. Furthermore, ECB may not have to print much new money at all to stop the crisis spreading. Oftentimes the show of determination by the central bank is sufficient to stop the capital outflow from the sovereigns of the troubled nations.
One more benefit of ECB buying sovereigns, a very important one, is that it will restore the financial stability of the banks that are affected by the sovereigns. This is two birds with one stone.
My suggestion is nothing new or innovative. My opinion is shared by many. I simply can't understand why ECB goes against this. Probably because Germany is the primary beneficiary of the crisis. German ten-year bonds are yielding below 2%. But watch out Germany. Don't be complacent. Fire in your neighbor's house could spread to your own.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
It is all in the price of the stock
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Steve Jobs resigns as CEO of Apple
Monday, April 05, 2010
iPad launch
Monday, March 08, 2010
Debunking the myths about healthcare reform
Debunking myths about Healthcare Reform
- “ObamaCare” is a huge government take-over of healthcare
First of all, up until recently, Obama did not put out any reform proposal. From the get-go, Obama asked the congress to come up with reform that achieves three broad goals: expanding coverage, reduce cost, and improve quality. Only recently when Obama saw the stalemate in the Congress, did he put out his own proposal.
By labeling HC reform as “ObamaCare”, some politicians are basically appealing to the raw fear of some fringe group of people about a Black President. These are the people who will oppose to anything from Obama. They don’t even accept Obama as the President of the US.
Is the HC reform proposed by Obama a government take-over?
Far from it! For the futile pursuit of bi-partisanship, Obama even abandoned the idea of a Public Option and National Healthcare Exchange, which are supported by majority of American public. Yet even with that significant compromise, the Republicans are still united against it. What's Bi-partisanship? Bipartisanship means compromise: everyone gives up something to achieve a consensus. But if you say either my way or noway, then that is not bipartisanship.
Obama's HC reform proposal is not a government take-over. It is just a health insurance reform. Almost every HC sector supports it, from the AHA representing hospitals, to the American Medical Association representing doctors, to AARP representing senior citizens, and Phrama representing the biopharmaceutical industry. Guess who is the only party that adamantly against it? The Health Insurance Industry!
- Expanding coverage to the uninsured is too costly and we can’t afford it
Is it true?
First of all, even without insurance, the uninsured are already costing the HC system. When they get sick, they go to the ER, which costs even more. That cost is actually passed on to all of us in the forms of higher insurance premium. This is called “cost shifting”.
Sure there will be some extra costs to bring these uninsured into the coverage. But in a long term, everyone’s insurance premium could come down, because hospitals don’t have to spend charity care for the costly medical treatments for the uninsured.
Moreover, it is morally wrong not to have universal healthcare. Poor countries like China are doing that. Shame on us if we don’t! We are a country that spends almost half of the world HC spending, yet achieving sub-par HC outcome, and yet not able to cover everyone.
There are broad socioeconomic benefits to have universal HC. Say you have a great business idea, and want to start a new business. Right now, you may be afraid to do that because you will lose your employer-based Health Insurance and leave your wife and children vulnerable. With universal coverage, that would not be a problem.
- People trust private insurance companies more than they trust the government
Give me a break!
Without government oversight and regulation, do you honestly believe that the insurance won’t deny your necessary care in pursuit of higher profits?
How do insurance companies make money? They make money from the difference between what they collect, or premiums, and what they pay out, or medical claims.
So there are two ways for the insurance companies to make more money: raising the premium, which they often do, and deny medical claims, which they often do too.
Over the last decade, insurance premiums have doubled. Insurance companies actually cherry-pick who they want to cover. They want to cover the healthy ones because they don’t have a lot of medical claims. If you have pre-existing conditions, God help you! If you try to purchase insurance on your own, God help you!
Are you still saying you prefer private insurance over the government? If you do, you are a stupid teabagger with an IQ that matches Sarah Palin’s.
- 90% of people are happy with their health insurance
Yes, 90% of people are happy with their health insurance, only until they get sick and old, or lose their jobs.
Enough said!
- Tort reform will solve all the problems
Malpractice insurance is a tiny tinny portion of our national total healthcare spend, which topped 2.5 trillion dollars in 2009. Eliminating malpractice insurance won’t do a din to the total health care cost. Some politicians sound like tort reform is their best reform idea. They are either stupid, or deceitful. You make the judgment.
Final words: HC Reform cannot wait any longer. Our nation has a broken health system. We cannot just pass it over to the next generation. The power of vested interests is too strong. You have to fight for it. It's your future. It's your children's future.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Oh, it's an iPad.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
iSlate or iPad, whatever it is called, will revolutionize the printed media for ever. Steve Jobs's last act.
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Top ten reasons why some don't want health reform
9) They want their health premium to double again in next eight years as it did in the last
8) They want to pay high prices for low quality of care
7) They want to pay high prices so that the health industry can keep its fat profit margins
6) They want to pay high prices so that managed care company executives can have exorbitant bonuses
5) They want to lose their coverage if they lose job
4) They want to be denied of coverage for "pre-existing conditions"
3) They love insurance industry bureaucracy
2) They support whatever right-wing conservatives tell them
1) They hate whatever idea coming from President Obama or the progressives
Thursday, July 16, 2009
NASA erased the original Apollo 11 moon landing tape
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Character assassination of Michael Jackson by the media
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Lobbyists united to sabotage health care reform
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
An Iranian Revolution? Hardly.
1) Protests are isolated and small in scale. It has not spread beyond the elite city Tehran. Iran has over 70M in population, and 85% of them participated in the election on June 12. If there is widespread vote fraud, you would have seen a much more widespread demonstration in different places. But so far, we have only seen it in the capital city Tehran, mainly among the elites and college students. The vast rural population has not joined the protest.
2) Was there really vote fraud? According to pre-election polls, Washington Post reported that Ahmadinejad was way ahead, by a margin of 20% or 2 to 1, in most of the precincts. The election result should not be a surprise at all.
I am still puzzled by why western media were so quick to take side in this dispute over election result. I hardly see Mousavi much different from Ahmadinejad in terms of nuclear policy or policy towards Israel. The media did not take side last year in the Mexican election dispute. Why this time?
Honestly, I think Iran has the best democracy among the countries in middle east. That does not mean it would necessarily result in a friendlier foreign policy to the west.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Gearing up a fight for Health Care Reform
But the country cannot afford not to have a true reform. The current system is broken. Maintaining status quo is NOT an option. Private insurance plans have failed to deliver any menaingful reform, or produce better patient outcomes. In fact, under the current system, patients get more treatments without having better clinical outcomes. US spends as much as three times per person on healthcare than other developed nations, yet delivering below-average clinical outcomes.
We have to change the system. Private insurance plans have failed. So there have to be something alternative. A public plan can help guide a better medical payment system that aligns physician and hospital reimbrusement with patient outcome, the so called pay-for-performance concept.
Without a public plan, health care reform is DEAD. Status quo wins, and the nation is going to the road of bankruptcy. Under the current system, Medicare Part A program alone has an obligation with net present value exceeding 100 trillion dollars! The system is completely broken. It must be fixed!
The fiscal problem is NOT the 1.75 trillion dollar budget deficit projected for 2009. The fiscal problem is how can we sustain the current spending trajectory of healthcare expense, not only for Medicare, but the nation as a whole.
Saturday, June 06, 2009
Obama speech in Cairo
I found myself nodding all through his speech. He articulated what I believe in, only much better than what I can ever express in words. I think most of the progressive Christians hold similar views on those issues Obama talked about. Finally, we have a leader who is rational, reasonable, smart, and wise. The problem is that the evil forces in the world are very strong. Can Obama's vision be realized?
I certainly hope that many will be inspired by his vision and work hard to make it a reality around the world.
I really wish him the best of luck, and may God bless him and make him succeed and prosper in whatever he does.
Every Christians should pray really hard for President Obama that he have the strength wisdom and help from God to carry out his vision.
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Good news from the government Bank Stress Test
Banks could increase equity by either raising capital from private investors, or converting the TARP funds they received from government bail out into equity. Obama repeatedly said that he doesn't want the government to get involved in private businesses. So I guess TARP conversion will be the less desirable option.
Because banks have gotten 6 months of probation, by the end of the 6 months, none of the banks may need to raise any new capital at all. If the economy stabilizes, as many early indicators point to, then banks may be able to earn its way out.
Two names that I invested in have fared much better than I expected. Citi group turned out to need only $5B. There is no question that Citi could earn its way of this in next 6 months. Citi's brokerage business must be making a lot of money these days :)
The other bank that I own, Capital One does not even need any new capital, according to WSJ. I thought it would be needing somewhere around $1.5B. It has gotten 3.6B TARP fund from the government last fall. If Capital One ever needs capiatl, it could convert some of the TARP into equity. Obviously that would be dilutive to existing shareholders. Or alternatively, it can wait for 6 months and earn its way out of $1.5B short fall. In first quarter alone, its security portfolio (amounts to 30B if my memory is right) had a gain of $500M. Given how well the capital market, including the credit market, has performed so far, I think it can easily make another $500 in Q2. So even Capital One needs $1.5B, there won't be too much euqity dilution in the end.
Both stocks will go higher.
Disclaimer: I am not a registered financial advisor. My blog is not intended to provide investment advice. Readers beware. Invest at your own benefit or peril!
Monday, April 27, 2009
An Apple "MediaPad" for Newspaper subscription?
Here is the link for the Newsweek article.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Apple to the rescue of the Newspaper industry?
Let's face it: the "netbooks" out there are pieces of junk. The only thing those devices can do is browsing the internet. Apple should never damage its own brand by making similar piece of junk.
If you study Apple closely for the past several years, every time it introduced a new device, there is a clear application that goes with the device. Apple devices have never been a general purpose device at the beginning. As the product evolves, the device can pull in more applications. But at least in the beginning, there is always one new application that goes with a new device.
For example, when Apple introduced iPod, it was all about music and iTunes application. AppleTV was meant to bring video delivered over the Internet to TV screen (with limited success because of the restrictions content providers put on AppleTV). What about iPhone? Initially iPhone was all about multi-touch internet browsing experience. IPhone is the first mobile device that had a true full-blown internet browser (not the garbage WAP browser) and much more (multi-touch interface).
So if Apple is to introduce a 10-in "netbook", what new application it will bring with the device? How about NEWPAPER and BOOKS?
Everyday you hear the news about the financial stress the Newspaper industry is experiencing: shrinking ad dollars due to web competition and economy, compounded by rising costs of printing and distribution. The business model is broken, just as that of the music industry. If iPod saved the music industry, I believe the new Apple "netbook" will save the Newspaper industry.
Imagine a 10-inch netbook with an Application that bring all your favorite newspapers to your finger tips: New York Times, WSJ, Washington Post, and many other. The multi-touch and multi-media interface will be FAR superior to the inky paper we read every day. I for one will cancel my paper sub and opt for digital.
And the Newspaper can sell TARGETED ads on the screen! Again, I stress targeted, meaning the ads can be different on different subscriber's device, based on subscriber's preference.
Obviously, this device won't be a pure book/newspaper reader, as Kindle is. It will have general purpose applications like the iPhone, iPod Touch and Mac PC has. But the killer app for the device would be the Newspaper reader.
Let's wait and see!
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
SDR as alternative to US dollar?
What are the problems of current system where US dollar is the de facto currency for international trades and the world currency reserve? There are many. And I believe the main cause of the current global financial crisis can be traced to the problems with US dollar:
1) US has enjoyed an extremely low interest rate for a long time due to dollar's special status
Because dollar is the standard currency in which international trades are settled, excess capital has to flow to dollar denominated assets (US treasuries, agency MBS, and other US assets), creating an artificially low interest rate environment for the US and relatively high interest rate environment for the rest of the world. Due to the low borrowing costs, US government and consumers have over time accumulated huge amount of debt to support large government spending and lavish personal consumption. The gradual increase in US national debt (leverage) initially created bubbles in asset pricing (late 90s Nasdaq equity bubble and 2008 real estate assets bubble), and eventually led to global crisis of confidence in the value of dollar (2002-2008) and bursting of the asset bubbles (2008 financial meltdown).
2) When US dollar serves as world reserve currency, US monetary policy has impact beyond US borders, affecting global economic growth. When US loosens monetary control to try to finance domestic spending, it also creates liquidity glut around the world, and causes inflation to spike. That was what happened during 2002-2008: crude oil price rose from 20s to 150. Prices of grains, and other commodities rocketed during the same period. On the other hand, when the US ran into a liquidity crisis, as it is now, countries around the world are facing liquity freeze as well.
3) Individual countries can use currency manipulation to gain competitive advantage in international trades.
When US devalues its currency, it is essentially reducing its debt obligation to countries who hold US dollar reserve (lend money to the US). Often time, countries resort to currency devaluation to get out of national debt (Obama may be doing it now for the US). And in the menawhile, a cheaper currency increases export and reduces import, helping domestic industries to gain global competitive advantage. Such practices will lead to protectionism in global trades. Protectionsim will result in slower global economic growth.
All these problems can be corrected with a truly global currency, not in place of but on top of local currencies. A global currency, independent of the influence of any single country's domestic economic and monetary policies, should attain a much more stable value. Individual countries can still pursue its owm monetary policy flexibility without too much an impact on global economy. Countries don't feel cheated if their exports are paid for in the international currency that has stable value and cannot be devalued by single country for the purpose of gaining competitive advantage. So all in all, an international currency, maybe in the form of SDR of the IMF, may be a great idea, and may cure the US addiction to low borrowing cost and high consumption.
Isn't US trying to reverse trade deficit with other countries? SDR may help a long way towards that objective.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
What is money?
In ancient times, money used to be something tangible, such as gold, silver or copper. Business transactions, be it trade of physical goods or capital transaction, were done with physical money changing hands.
But the world has evolved into a credit world. Business transactions have long gotten rid of changing-hands of physical money. Transactions have been done through credit: a promise to pay in physical money in the future.
With the adoption of computer technology, money is just a number on the ledger. It is an accounting entry, a mere measurement of wealth. It no longer takes a physical shape.
So in essence, money is just a promise, a credit, or a trust. When the trust in money is broken, such is the case right now, money becomes elusive. When the central banks around the world are freely printing money to bail out financial institutions and businesses that are deemed too-big-to-fail, what is the worth of money we are holding? At what point, the trust in paper money will be completely broken?
We have already seen people fleeing paper money to find refuge in the physical store of value, such as gold and silver. Gold price is approaching $1000.
But the question is: should we go back to gold? Will commodity-based money cure the ill of paper-based (or promise-based) money?
The answer in my view is no. We are not going back to the days when physical money was the primary medium of business transactions. Credit money is here to stay, which means, even in a commodity-based monetary system, money will still be just a promise, a promise to pay in gold, silver, or what ever commodity the money is backed with, in the future. When business transactions (trades of goods and flows of capital) continue to expand, credit money will also expand. Credit money will always be greater than the ACTUAL physical reserve the central banks hold. In times of financial crisis, when people come to redeem the credit for physical money, central banks won’t have adequate physical money to meet the redemptions. At that point, the decoupling of money from its commodity backing will have to occur (such was the case in 1971 when President Nixon formally decoupled US dollar from gold).
My view is that we should not go back to gold or silver standard. And I do not believe commodity-based monetary system is the answer. The answer is proper regulatory oversight of the financial institutions.
Money is a trust. We need stringent regulation to safeguard the trust.
Monday, March 16, 2009
AIG disclosed payments of > $100B to banks related to its derivative bets
Regardless it is payment or collateral, AIG should not be allowed to write so much CDS contracts without having sufficient capital to back them up. Gambling on CDS should never be allowed for the regulated financial institutions. If investors wanted to gamble, let them do that. But regulated financial institutions have fiduciary obligations to its constituents (depositors in the case of banks, and policy holders in the case of insurance companies).
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Here are quotes from CNNMoney.com:
AIG Reveals Over $100 Billion Of Payments To Banks, U.S. States
March 16, 2009: 07:55 AM ET
LONDON (Dow Jones) -- American International Group said over the weekend it had paid over $100 billion of its bailout funds to U.S. states and international banks including Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale.
The cash was used to cover collateral payments, cancel derivative contracts and meet obligations at its securities lending business after the firm had to be bailed out last year.
Most of the major U.S. and European banks were represented on the list, but AIG (AIG) revealed that Goldman Sachs was the biggest single beneficiary from the payments, receiving $12.9 billion.
Bank of America Corp. and Merrill Lynch together received $12 billion in payments, followed by Societe Generale , which got $11.9 billion and Deutsche Bank , which was handed $11.8 billion.
Payments to municipalities totaled $12.1 billion.
"AIG recognizes the importance of upholding a high degree of transparency with respect to the use of public funds," the group said in a statement.
The group had previously argued that disclosing the identity of counterparties could damage its business relationships or cause competitive harm, but it had come under increasing pressure from lawmakers to provide details.
The remainder of the $173 billion that AIG received from taxpayers has been used to repay debt, boost capital levels at some of its units and fund vehicles created to wind down its derivatives contracts.
Shares in the group, which is now 80% owned by the government, have fallen more than 99% from their peak in early 2007.
The announcement over bailout payments came after AIG became embroiled in a row over bonus payments to employees at the unit that was largely responsible for its near collapse last fall.
The decision to pay around $450 million in bonuses elicited howls of protest in Washington, with key House lawmaker Barney Frank, D.-Mass, calling on the government to examine whether the bonuses can be legally recovered.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Citi shares will soar if mark-tomarket accounting is modified
In concept, MTM accounting is a good thing, because it requires companies to report their assets at the true market value. However, in practice, such requirement has serious flaws, and is threatening (or has already threatened the viability of the entire US banking system). Many of the assets carried on the banks' balance sheet do not trade on a liquid market. To account for their market value is very difficult, and in many cases, seriously flawed standards have been applied to mark the value of the these assets. For example, it is seriously flawed to use thinly traded CDS contracts or CDOs to mark the implied value of these assets. CDS and CDO are not traded on a public exchange, and are subject to price manipulations.
What happened in this financial crisis was that banks were forced to mark down the value of their perfectly fine assets, due to the use of flawed market value indexes such as CDS and CDO. Hedge fund managers who have shorted bank stocks manipulated the prices of CDS and CDO, forcing banks to mark down their assets value, triggering capital shortfall and credit downgrades. In many cases, the assets that banks are forced to mark down are performing assets, generating steady incomes. After the mark down, banks have either to sell these assets at depressed valuation, or have to raise capital at prohibitively expensive rates.
What we need is a MTM accounting system that does not rely on flawed valuation methodology, but rather truly reflects the economic value of the assets.
I am hopeful that we soon will have a new set of MTM accounting guide lines that will reflect the true economic fundamentals of the financial institutions. If that happens, many bank stocks will soar. Citi shares can increase more than ten-fold easily.
With the current incredibly wide credit spreads, US banks must be making huge amount of profit. Yesterday's news about Citi is not an isolated event. I believe other banks are also generating handsome profits. In terms of really depressed valuation, I like Capital One (COF), which is trading at only 0.2 times of its book value! Obviously Citi is even cheaper. But Citi faces large dilution from government stakes in the company. So I prefer COF. WFC and JPM are also good investments at current prices.
Disclaimer: You should consult your financial advisers before making any investment decision. The above opinion is not a recommendation for anyone to buy or sell any stock or other financial assets. Invest at your own risk!
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Market shot up more than 6% on Citi news
Investors seemed to be surprised by this news. That just shows that majority of the investors do not understand the nature of the current financial crisis.
I am not surprised at all. Citi, and other banks, should be making tons of money right now. The yield curve is so deep, and the FED is giving them almost free money to borrow. If they can't make money now, when can they?
In fact, according to an internal memo sent to Citi employees by Citi CEO Vikram Pandit, the company may generate more than 8B operating profit in the first quarter of the year.
From the very beginning, the root problem of many US financial institutions was not operating problem, but asset problem. Because the value of mortgage back securities many of these company hold on their balance sheet has declined dramatically, these companies are facing a capital shortfall.
I would argue that some of the decline in value of the mortgage-backed securities was artificial, a result of mark-to-market accounting based on questionable market valuation (for example, CDS-implied value), and does not reflect true economic value of these securities.
Let me explain: the total US MBS outstanding is valued at 10 trillion. Most of these MBS should have loan-to-value ratio of 80%. Let's assume that house prices have all declined 40%, which is a much worse assumption than what actually occurred, then the maximal write-off of the MBS value should be 20% of the 10 trillion, or 2 trillion. Between the FED and Treasury, more than $5 trillion has been pumped into the US financial institutions. Are we still saying these companies are insolvent? Give me a break!
I believe that most of the US banks are now making a killing. Their borrowing cost is almost none (interest rate is close to zero), but the interest rates they charge to borrowers are very high. And the Fed is willing to lend to the banks as much as the banks demand, through the Fed funds discount window. There is absolutely no reason why banks won't make huge profits right now.
But banks will have to continue to face asset write-off problems, as long as the current flawed mark-to-market accounting is in place. There is an analogy here: the banks are like a person who have a very well paid job. The person is earning a very high income, but because of the bear market, the person's 401K and other equity investment accounts have lost a lot of money, and his house is probably worth a lot less. But the person does not intend to cash out his investments, or sell his house. His job pays him well. Is he worried? No. He shouldn't. Because the stock market will eventually recover, and the house price won't remain depressed.
I think same is true with the banks now. The value of their assets is now depressed, because risk premium is high (the discount rate is high). But the banks continue to earn good profit from loans they give out. Overtime, when risk premium starts to subside, the value of the banks' assets will recover.
All of those doomsday-sayers don't know what they are talking about.
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
We need to restore confidence in the US financial institutions
I think the President was articulate and made a strong case. In contrast, the Republican response, delivered by Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, was so poor that it sounded like a botched Saturday Night Live skit.
The old Republican argument that "the government is not the solution, but the problem" sounds so irrelevant these days. If the Republicans don't believe government can ever work, why do they seek to be elected to public offices? To prove that government indeed does not work? Yeah, we got plenty of proof in the Bush administration. Bush's cynical view about the role of government led to massive outsourcing of critical government functions to private contractors run by those who put him in office. The end results were terrible and deadly (in both Iraq war and Hurricane Katrina).
OK, I don't want to go back talking about Bush nightmare anymore. It is past. Now the critical task is how to restore investors' confidence in the US financial institutions.
There are concerted efforts to undermine the financial institutions. Some cried for "nationalization of the banks", while others screaming "No more bailouts. Let the banks fail".
Do US financial institutions have adequate capital? The answer is an emphatic yes. Then you ask what is the problem? The problem isn't banks having insufficient capital. The problem is investors' confidence. Majority of the financial institutions need access to the debt market for financing. In normal time, there are plenty investors willing to lend money to the banks. But this is not normal time. Investors have doubt in banks' balance sheet. I think these doubts were healthy. For a long time investors risk premium was too low. But now, there are those short sellers out there trying to create panic among the investors. They claim that "the entire US financial institutions have ZERO equity", without needing any facts to substantiate the claim. And they pay the debt rating agencies to downgrade credit ratings of the banks. They went on the TV, masquerading as libertarian capitalists speaking on behalf of regular people against government help bailing out "Wall Street thieves". But their ulterior motives are to instigate a run-on-bank of the US financial institutions, create a self-fulfilling prophecy of doom-and-gloom.
In my previous post, I have argued that the bad asset issue related to subprime lending is a tiny tinny problem. The big problem is that investors losing confidence and refuse to lend. That is why investors are piling cash into treasury securities, considered risk-free. In this circumstance, the Fed, and the Treasury have to step in to be the lender of last resort. That is what they are doing. And that is why I believe they should continue doing that, and communicate their determination to the public, so that confidence may gradually be restored.
Bernanke today did some of that during his testimonies in front of the Congress. I need more forceful pronouncement from the government more often and more clear.
I am hopeful that today's >4% rally in the stock market is the beginning of an end of the current financial crisis.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Is subprime mortgage problem really the cause of current financial crisis?
Consider this analogy: there was a man smoking in a theater full of people (back in those old days when smoking was still allowed inside). He inadvertently burned his pants with his cigarette. The lady next to him shouted: "fire!". Then the next a few other also shouted: "fire!". some people started to run for the door. People in the back did not know what was happening, but heard "fire". Then they all started to run for the door. That created a stampede, and people pushed each other trying to get to the door. Children were crying, and ladies screaming. The theater door collapsed, many injured, and some even killed by the stampede.
This is what is happening now in the global financial system. The "fire" here was the subprime mortgages. But it was a small fire that could have been put out easily. The people who first called out the problem was right. Indeed we had a serious problem with the bad assets in subprime mortgages that the banks and financial institutions are holding on their balance sheet. But the scope of the problem was grossly exaggerated, sometimes deliberately by some people who could profit immensely from the problem.
These days it is a heresy to say subprime mortgage problem wasn't a big deal. But look at the facts: according to the Fed, at the end of Q2 2008, the total mortgages outstanding (both residential and commercial) was $14.8 trillion, 10% of which can be considered subprime. Residential mortgage delinquency rate was 6.41%, and foreclosure rate 2.75% (commercial mortgage delinquency rate was much much lower, less than 1%). Even we assume that ALL subprime mortgages were worth NOTHING, the money needed to completely stop subprime problem would be only 10% of the $14.8 trillion, which would be $1.48 trillion. How much money the Fed, FDIC and the Treasury have spent to rescue the banks and financial institutions? MORE than $7 trillion so far!
-on-
What's the problem here? We have a classic run-on-bank situation here, triggered by subprime problem, but more importantly instigated by the hedge fund community and the short sellers. There has been a concerted effort to undermine the US financial institutions and create panic among investors.
Because of the constant bashing of the US financial institutions by characters like Peter Schiff, investors got really confused, and did not see that the real scope of the subprime mortgage problem was actually very limited. Then you had those credit analysts, who paid by their hedge fund clients, kept pushing down the credit ratings on banks and financial institutions in an attempt to instigate a run-on-bank. What you got in the end was a self-fulfilling prophesy.
Financial institutions are built on trust. When trust was gone, these institutions could no longer exist.
Fannie and Freddie were great cases in point. There weren't much problem with their mortgage assets. Fannie's mortgage delinquency rate was a little above 1% and Freddie was still below 1%, before they were rescued by the government and put into conservancy. Either institutions had much exposure to subprime mortgages at all. What happened was that Fannie and Freddie's capital market dried up, because investors simply did not want to lend money to any financial institutions at the time, not even Fannie and Freddie. The securitization market was completely frozen (thanks to Hank Paulson who let Lehman go under). In that circumstance, no matter how money good the assets were, the companies could not survive. That was a typical run-on-bank!
We have to stop all those stupid doom-and-gloom talks. We have to restore people's confidence in our financial system. If you understand what I put forth above, you would agree with me that there IS NO fundamental problem with the US financial institutions! There was a crisis of confidence problem. We need to restore that confidence.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
The theory of evolution is seriously flawed
But if you carefully study the theory of evolution, and are intellectually honest, you will come to the conclusion, as I did, that the theory is seriously flawed.
Natural selection has supplanted God as explain-it-all. Whatever we cannot explain in biology, we attribute that to the result of natural selection. For example, why do dogs have extremely sensitive olfactory function (sense of smell)? Oh, it is the result of natural selection. Because this trait gives dogs survival advantage in nature. But why human did not attain such a trait? Or why not every animal attain such a trait, if this trait confers survival advantage?
Before Darwin, God was the ultimate answer to every question. After Darwin, natural selection gradually took the place of God.
I plea, for the sake of science, we have to break the shackle of the "natural selection" dogma. Let's probe deeper. Let's not be hindered by any presumed dogma. Let's be honest with our intellect and reason. The theory of evolution in its current form is completely erroneous.
Yes, I am a Christian, and I believe in God. But that is not the reason I question evolution. I used to be a complete atheist, growing up in an atheist country. In my first year in college, I took Biology 101. Towards to the final part of the course, the topic was evolution. I had a huge debate with my classmates, which lasted to the wee hours of the morning. And the next day we would have a final test for the class. I would rather fail the test than accept a flawed (stupid, as I called it at the time) theory.
I wasn't a Christian at that time. I never heard about God. But I was honest to myself, and to reason.
Natural selection simply cannot explain the diversity of species. In order for the nature to select certain traits, you have to have the traits to begin with. But aren't we trying to explain the ORIGIN of these traits? How can natural selection PRODUCE so many different traits? Later evolution theorists postulated that random mutations somehow happen to produce many features. Then the force of natural selection would only allow those desirable traits to survive.
But that is inconsistent with the fact. Let me give you a simple example: evolution theorists believe that amphibians were evolved from fish, because nature favors animals that can both live in water and on land. If that is true, then we would see only amphibians, no fish now, because nature has selected out fish in favor of amphibians. You have to have this selection pressure in order for species to evolve, right? If there weren't "negative natural selection" pressure on fish, how can fish evolve into amphibian when fish was perfectly fine being just fish?
Let's assume for a moment that random mutations actually were lucky enough to produce certain traits. But we are talking about extremely lucky. Let's consider the trait of vision for a moment. This trait is the result of coordinated work of multiple tissue functions: the eyeball (the "lens"), the muscles that adjust the "lens", the iris that regulates the input of light, and the nerve cells that transmit light signal to brain, and the brain cells that interpret the signal, and many many more. In order for such a complex trait to evolve out of nowhere, you have to have coordinated random mutations involving multiple tissue cells, and in a series of steps, to finally and luckily result in perfect vision. What a miracle! It is like you put a heap of metal fragments together, and suddenly there is a hurricane, and after the hurricane, alas, a new Boeing 747 was right there! Yes, this could happen, mathematically possible. But it may be easier to believe in God.
Archeological evidence does not support evolution, either. Species tend to spring out from no where in very short periods of time, and then you do not see emergence of any new species for a long long period of time. It seems that the emergence of new species occurred sporadically within very short periods. Darwin theory would have predicted gradual evolution of species, which means we should see emergence of new species all the time. But the fact is different from what Darwinism predicts. Later evolution theorists noticed this glaring contradiction. Some of them proposed a modified theory called "punctuated equilibrium". How punctuated was the process of evolution? Maybe six periods, like the six days in the book of Genesis?
It takes more faith to believe evolution than to believe God!
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Who are against the stimulus plan?
The first group are the ideologues. These people are inherently against any form of government intervention. They stick to their ideology and dogma, refuse to consider facts and practical matters. They are like the pharisees in Jesus time, who were against doing anything on sabbath day, even rescuing someone from drowning.
The second group are the short seller. They have a lot to gain financially if the economy continues to flounder and stock market languish. They bet against US economy, equities, mortgage debts, and US financial assets. These people care nothing else other than money. They have no ethics, no moral, no trace of human decency.
The third group are idiots, who knows nothing about economics or anything. They are simply against anything supported by Obama or the Democrats.
Any reasonable person would realize that it is imperative that the US government pass an economic stimulus plan.
Demand is shrinking. Initially the decline in demand was justified, because people over spent in the past few years. But now the decline in demand is spiraling down out of control, not because of the financial health of US household, but because of pure fear and lack of confidence. Because of the shrinking demand, businesses are cutting back production capacity and laying off massive number of workers. The massive job losses are further crimping demand and consumption. The vicious cycle is feeding on itself. If nothing is done to increase demand, stop factory closings, and stem the job loss, we will definitely go into a sustained period of depression.
In this case, one obviously would prefer businesses/private sector to step up, increase investment, stimulate demand and create jobs. But that is not happening. The private sector is holding backing, quite understandably. They are not willing to take risk to invest, not knowing when the economy would improve.
Given this reality, government HAS to step in, to increase demand for goods and services. With increasing demand, businesses will stop closing factories and laying off people. Then gradually consumer confidence will be restored. A normalized demand level will be established. Once demand stabilizes, business confidence will be restored. Risking taking and private investment will come back. New jobs will be created. As a result, consumer confidence will rise. Then demand will further improve, and the loop of positive feedback will result in gradual recovery of the economy.
At which point, the government stimulus can be removed. Increased tax revenue can be used to pay down the debt borrowed for the stimulus spending.
Sunday, January 18, 2009
America never ceases to amaze the world
Four years later, the world again is looking at America, this time with a sense of awe, and maybe a little jealousy, as America turns a new page in her history. The world is amazed: America, only in America!
America is still the beacon of hope. America is still the light in the darkness.
The world has regained faith in America and the American people.
The night on Nov 2nd, 2008, I could not help calling my old friends in the land where I came from. I said: look, I told you so.
America, I am so proud of you. American people, I am so proud of you. American people are fair, just, and full of grace and compassion. They are not afraid of admitting their own wrong, and they always look forward.
To be honest with you, there is also evil in America. In the last of eight years, you have seen it in full display. But America always overcomes. America always moves forward.
In two days, really two days, Barack Obama will be our President! Mr. President, please remember the people who have voted for you. Please do not break your promises. We want change! Yes, you may have to make some compromises, to win over your political opponents. But never make deal with the devil!
Mr. President, I pray that: may God give you wisdom, judgment, and courage to lead this great nation out of current darkness. Bring back the hope for the whole world.
Friday, January 16, 2009
State of the economy
I am in the middle of the two extremes. In the extreme left, the Keynesian people put too much faith in a few elites in the government that the government can make sound economic investments when private sectors are gun-shy. On the other hand, the free market crowd put too much faith in the "invisible hand" of the market and its ability to self adjust, forgetting that free market in short term can be very inefficient and irrational, and takes a long time to self adjust. The current economic situation is a case in point. After several years of easy credit, the financial sector is almost grinding to a standstill. Private investment is almost completely frozen. Consumers all of sudden woke up, stopped their spending binge and have been tightening the belt to suffocation. The negative multiplier effect of declining investment and consumption has led to massive layoffs and production shutdowns. Under this situation, if the government does not step in to provide a backstop, the economy will certainly spiral down to depression, and remain there for a long time, until the markets gradually self adjust. We cannot afford to wait. Normally I do not like Keynesian economics and government intervention. But this is not a normal time. If the government has any use at all, now it is the time for it to step up.
There are three types of government interventions that can affect the economy: monetary, fiscal, and tax. We have tried the monetary. Federal Reserve has printed trillions of fresh dollars, only seeing those dollars being hoarded by the banks without being put to use to stimulate the economy. Reducing taxes, or even tax rebates, may not help either, because the private sector does not want to invest or spend the money they get from tax reduction or rebates. So that leaves only fiscal stimulus in the forms of government spending. I think prudent and targeted government spending at this critical juncture is necessary to create jobs for the laid-off workers, stimulate economic demand, and produce long lasting benefits to the society.
That is why I support a "shock and awe"-type of fiscal stimulus package, to increase investment in much needed infrastructure upgrades around the entire US. Still remember the bridge collapse in Minneapolis? Just a few weeks ago, the River Rd down here in Potomac Maryland became a real river road, because a massive water main break. For so many years, we have under-invested the nation's critical infrastructure because no-one likes to pay higher taxes. We should also increase the investment in projects that produce long lasting benefits to the country, such as increasing funding for scientific research, alternative energy, national broadband networks, and smart electric grids.
Yes, I am nervous, but I am more hopeful. I am carefully watching what Obama is saying. And I like what I have heard so far. I am hopeful.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Steve Jobs says: happy new year. see you in six months
The stock will undoubtedly trade down today. But is it a bad thing that Apple from now on will gradually move out of the shadow of Steve Jobs? There is no doubt Steve Jobs has contributed enormously to the success of Apple. But I don't believe Apple is entirely managed by a few strong personalities (or one strong personality). I think the company has the needed management process (from strategy to operation to marketing, etc.) in place to continue its success in the market.
In the past several months, I have seen some welcome changes taking place at 1 Infinite Loop. For example, for the first time, Apple allows variable pricing for the songs to be sold in iTunes Store. Yesterday, there were reports that Apple has allowed third-party mobile browsers to be installed on iPhone.
I am hopeful that a post-Jobs Apple will be more open and flexible in its way of dealing with developers suppliers media and investors. In that sense, Jobs-less Apple may not entirely be a bad thing.
Disclaimer: I own common shares of Apple.