Sell Signal of the Day, Greenspan Edition

Alan Greenspan’s calling a bottom:

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said financial markets and the economy will recover "sooner rather than later" from the worst turmoil in seven decades.

"Trust will eventually reemerge as investors dip hesitantly back into the marketplace," Greenspan said today in a speech at Georgetown University’s law school in Washington. "From that point, history tells us, financial and economic revival sets in. I suspect it will be sooner rather than later."

Greenspan has always suffered from a surfeit of optimism — that’s what allowed him to cut interest rates well below Nairu. But he’s never even pretended to be a market timer — until now. Maybe he thinks he’s being helpful, or constructive. He isn’t.

Posted in fiscal and monetary policy | Comments Off on Sell Signal of the Day, Greenspan Edition

Bailout Datapoint of the Day, AIG Edition

Remember the $85 billion loan that the US government extended to AIG? It turns out the insurer really needed that much money after all:

The firm tapped about $61 billion of the federal credit line after saying Sept. 16 it would give the U.S. a 79.9 percent stake in exchange for the loan.

$61 billion is an enormous amount of money to borrow in the space of a couple of weeks, especially when it’s being extended at highly punitive rates: Libor +850bp works out at 12.83%, given today’s Libor fix at 4.33%. (Your daily TED update: an awe-inspiring 381bp.)

I have to admit I’m a bit unclear on what exactly they need the $61 billion for: I thought the CDS written by AIG Financial Products were the sort of instruments where you only needed to pay out in the event of a default. Did AIG write a lot of protection on WaMu? But maybe there were separate margin/collateral agreements too.

In any event, AIG has decided to reinvent itself as a property-and-casualty shop, selling off almost all its other businesses. The world will probably never see its like again.

Posted in bailouts, bonds and loans, insurance | Comments Off on Bailout Datapoint of the Day, AIG Edition

Wells-Wachovia: Good for Everyone but Citi

Maybe Warren Buffett changed his mind?

Wells Fargo has now snatched Wachovia out of the jaws of Citigroup. This deal is good for the US taxpayer, which no longer has to backstop the acquirer’s losses on the deal, and bad for Citigroup, which is no longer acquiring the retail-banking expertise it so desired.

If it’s bad for Citi, does that mean it’s good for Wells? I would say that in the short term the answer is yes, in the medium term it’s no, and in the long term it’s yes.

When funding is tight, nothing beats a large deposit base — and Wells Fargo will now have a monstrous $787 billion in deposits, which are pretty much the lowest-cost and most reliable source of funds that any financial institution can have.

In the medium term, there are huge questions over the combined bank’s California real-estate exposure. Wells Fargo generally managed to avoid writing the most toxic mortgages in that state, but at a certain point any mortgage becomes toxic if house-price declines are big enough. I’ve always been a little surprised at the way that California-based Wells Fargo managed to weather this crisis — its market capitalization has been higher than Citigroup’s for some time now — and now that its own mortgage portfolio is going to be mixed up with Wachovia’s, investors might be hesitant to continue to give it the benefit of the doubt.

In the long term, however, this catapults Wells Fargo into the megabank leagues: there are now four, rather than three. In an age of uncertainty and consolidation, being big is an enormous advantage.

So on net most people should like this deal, unless they’re Citigroup shareholders. (Citi’s stock is down 13% this morning.) I can see why Vikram Pandit didn’t feel he could afford to get into a bidding war with Wells Fargo, but this is a big loss for him.

Posted in banking | Comments Off on Wells-Wachovia: Good for Everyone but Citi

Extra Credit, Thursday Edition

Fed Watch: Rate Cuts Increasingly Likely

Bailout narratives: "The real financial rescue still lies in the future, probably under the Obama administration." Can we wait that long?

Introduction to SwapRent: If debt-to-equity swaps work for banks, why not for houses too?

Blogging for Dollars: A good blogonomics overview from Michael Agger.

Posted in remainders | Comments Off on Extra Credit, Thursday Edition

The Downside

The S&P 500 closed today at its lowest end-of-day level since October 2004 — lower, even, than it closed on Monday. I spent much of the afternoon talking to perennial pessimist Bill Rhodes, at Citibank, who was keeping one eye on the markets; he’s on the record as saying that this is the worst crisis he’s seen in an international career at the bank which has spanned more than 50 years and which has been dedicated largely to crisis management.

Here’s a datapoint to underscore just how bad things are: the markets plunged on a day when the WSJ had a front-page story about how the Fed is considering even more rate cuts — the kind of story which is normally good for at least a couple of hundred points on the Dow.

But this crisis has clearly moved far past the point at which monetary policy alone can turn things around. The only real question is whether monetary policy and fiscal policy and TARP and regulatory reform and closer cooperation between global authorities can turn things around. Right now, I’d put that at about p=0.4.

Rhodes is an old Latin America hand, and talking to him I was reminded of the Argentina crisis of 2001-2. Argentina, back then, had a very smart economy minister, Domingo Cavallo, who had a lot of respect in the corridors of power globally but who was so concentrated on putting out fires along the way that he didn’t see the magnitude of the crisis until it was too late. His huge government bill — the "megaswap", it was called — carried many hopes before it was passed, but turned out in very short measure to be too little too late. The result was a catastrophic economic crisis, with GDP falling by almost 11% in 2002 on top of a 4.4% decline in 2001.

Are things going to get that bad? No; I hope not, anyway. But the global financial system is so interlinked, and so susceptible to vicious cycles of mistrust and deleveraging, that the worst-case scenarios really are gruesome beyond imagining. Remember that, House Republicans (and Democrats, too), when the bailout bill comes before you for the second time.

Posted in economics | Comments Off on The Downside

Is Transparency Always a Good Idea?

I’m not a fan of this proposal from Josh Rosner, via Gillian Tett:

Joshua Rosner, a New York analyst, for example, has made the sensible suggestion that AIG should reveal the banks that have received credit protection as a condition of receiving that $85bn loan. That, at least, might help silence some of the wildest rumours about Goldman Sachs or anyone else.

Silence them? Hardly. Amplify them, more like.

The problem is that AIG knows how much credit protection it’s written to Goldman Sachs: about $20 billion, according to Gretchen Morgenson. And it also knows how much collateral it put up against those contracts. I do hope that Rosner’s proposing that AIG reveal the collateral number as well, otherwise the counterparty risk will look vastly greater than it actually is.

And even after taking into account the collateral, Goldman is quite typical in having a desk of credit-market professionals dedicated to nothing but managing and hedging the bank’s counterparty risk. It can be done: commenter Kamekon mentioned one method, which is buying contingent credit default swaps, or CCDSs, and I hope to have more detail in an upcoming blog entry.

So I fear that Rosner’s proposal should be filed under the category of "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing". Tett’s broader point is quite right: we had a system where only a tiny elite was capable of understanding what on earth was going on, and that system broke when millions of people outside the elite suddenly realized they had no idea what was happening. So it’s a very good idea to address what Tett calls the "yawning information gap". But what we really need is not more information, so much as more understanding. And that’s not something you can get through proposals like Rosner’s.

Posted in banking, derivatives | Comments Off on Is Transparency Always a Good Idea?

Soundbite of the Day, Customer Service Department

Tyler Cowen:

Bush, Bernanke, Paulson — we call them leaders. The Chinese think of them as the customer service department. I suspect the Chinese get straighter answers from them than we ever do.

Related: Alea has an intriguing answer to a question which has been bugging me: why is the dollar so strong, all of a sudden? In a nutshell, dollar strength = European bank weakness. Not good news.

(HT: Abnormal Returns)

Posted in china, foreign exchange | Comments Off on Soundbite of the Day, Customer Service Department

Why Mark to Market?

How was I not aware, until now, that what looks like a full RSS feed for Justin Fox’s excellent Curious Capitalist blog actually isn’t? He didn’t write 314 words on the pros and cons of marking to market: in fact he wrote 1,262. And they’re well worth reading, as you might expect from the author of a 320-page book on the efficient markets hypothesis.

Fox has a much more nuanced view of marking to market than most of the econoblogosphere, which has tended to knee-jerk dismay at the prospect that the SEC might suspend mark-to-market accounting. Yes, says Justin, mark-to-market is probably better than the alternatives, but that doesn’t make it very good: what we really need here is a healthy dose of realism when it comes to the usefulness of any single number.

The health of a bank or any corporation can never be adequately measured by a single bottom-line number. Understanding the assumptions and uncertainties inherent in accounting numbers is crucial to understanding how to use them.

What’s more, the old problems with the absence of mark-to-market accounting are not necessarily going to reappear if it’s suspended. The S&L crisis, for instance, happened when interest rates rose sharply, and banks which had extended 30-year mortgages at 6% found themselves paying double-digit interest rates on deposits. In Justin’s words, they "became what’s known as zombie banks, lurching across the landscape running up ever bigger losses," and they were able to do so because they marked their mortgages at par, rather than discounting them at prevailing interest rates.

But what we’re looking at now is not a reversion to the state of affairs where banks can stop marking their assets to market and start simply declaring them to be worth 100 cents on the dollar. Instead, they’ll mark to a model which not only involves discounting at prevailing interest rates (which alone would have prevented the S&L problem) but also tries to account for expected default rates as well.

Will such models prove more accurate, over time, than market prices? No one really knows. But already we’ve reached the point at which the markets are displaying a healthy sketpicism about accounting numbers, even when they’re generated on a mark-to-market basis. That skepticism was ultimately responsible for not only the downfall of Lehman Brothers (which, remember, was solvent on a mark-to-market basis, or so its balance sheet said), but also the conversion of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to bank holding companies.

The market has already spoken: it would rather see investment banks regulated by the Fed than trust those banks’ internally-generated mark-to-market numbers. If the banks start reporting numbers based on some other standard, trust won’t increase at all. But it might not go down much, either.

All the same, the best thing I can say about suspending mark-to-market accounting is that the downside is slightly more limited than some people might think. I still can’t see any upside, and I don’t think Justin can, either. Given the choice, I suspect that healthy institutions will continue to mark to market — and that investors will reward them for doing so, and punish those who mark to anything else.

Posted in accounting | Comments Off on Why Mark to Market?

Why the Bailout Bill Alone Won’t Solve the Credit Crisis

tedspread.jpg

I’m not surprised that three-month Libor ticked up again today, to 4.21%. TED’s now at 357bp (chart above), which is really bad, and it’s going up, not down. While the stock market has settled down after the chaos of Monday, the interbank market most emphatically has not. Even AT&T can’t borrow at terms longer than overnight: I’m getting almost nostalgic for the days when three-month money was considered short-term.

Will the bailout bill help bring liquidity back to the money markets in general? If it passes, will banks start lending 90-day funds to each other again? I fear the answer is no.

The problem is that no one knows the answers to two simple questions, even assuming the bailout passes the House:

  1. How long will it take for the $700 billion ($350 billion to start) to flow from the government into the financial system?
  2. How big of a spread will there be between the prices the government pays and today’s market prices? The difference is essentially the degree to which banks will be recapitalized, and therefore safer.

When I say that no one knows the answers, I mean that no one knows the answers — not even Hank Pauslon. Until the answers emerge, I doubt there will be much in the way of increased confidence in the banking system. And once the answers emerge, they might not be the answers that the markets would most like to see.

To put it another way: passage in the House is necessary for the banking system to return to some semblance of normality. But it’s not remotely sufficient.

Posted in bailouts, bonds and loans | Comments Off on Why the Bailout Bill Alone Won’t Solve the Credit Crisis

There’s No Such Thing as Risk-Free

Andrew Hill is, I fear, a bit confused. He starts off with the very important point that in these days of monster bailouts government guarantees ain’t what they used to be:

Pause a second before you transfer your sterling deposits into the welcoming arms of one of the six Irish banks now guaranteed by Dublin. The confidence instilled by government promises to stand behind all deposits and bank debt could be as evanescent as mist on the Liffey. Given the relative size of the banking system and the Irish economy, simultaneous claims from failing banks would be hard for even the optimistic Irish to bear.

The lesson here is that there’s no such thing as a rock-solid guarantee: where there’s money, there’s risk. And of course even cash under the mattress isn’t risk-free, if the whole system of fiat money starts to erode. What the Irish have done is to reduce the risk of the Irish banking system as much as they can: but they can’t bring it all the way down to zero, not when even French credit default swaps are trading at over 20bp.

But then, at the end of his article, Hill seems to have convinced himself that there is such a thing as a no-risk guarantee after all.

The real question now is not whether it makes sense for the government to join a race to make the hollowest promise, but what realistic alternative guarantees can be used to secure the system, without triggering unintended consequences.

There are no "alternative guarantees" which are stronger than a government guarantee, no matter how hollow that government guarantee might be. If you want absolute safety, a government guarantee is as good as it’s going to get. You might not be happy with that — many people aren’t — but any quest for something safer is going to be doomed to failure.

Of course, some governments are safer than others. The US is safer than Ireland; Germany is safer than Italy. World Bank debt is probably safer than most, if not all. But at some point, the rush to safety has to stop, and a modicum of risk appetite has to return, since anybody with assets is taking risk whether they like it or not.

Posted in bonds and loans | Comments Off on There’s No Such Thing as Risk-Free

Goldman Sachs and the Regulatory Arbitrage Trade

Sam Jones has a great piece this morning on regulatory arbitrage under Basel II — which turns out to have been one of the big business lines of the doomed AIG Financial Products.

Banks have to have a certain amount of capital to backstop their risky assets. The riskier the asset, the more capital they need. So banks would go to AIG Financial Products to de-risk their assets, thereby reducing the amount of capital they needed and increasing the total amount of leverage they could take.

AIG was quite open about this: it described the credit default swaps it sold to these banks as being "for the purpose of providing them with regulatory capital relief rather than risk mitigation".

The rescue of AIG, then, saved billions of dollars for any bank which had a lot of exposure to AIG counterparty risk.

And Goldman Sachs was AIG’s biggest counterparty, with exposure of $20 billion.

The question, of course, is whether Goldman hedged its AIG counterparty risk. Goldman says it did:

When the insurer’s flameout became public, David A. Viniar, Goldman’s chief financial officer, assured analysts on Sept. 16 that his firm’s exposure was “immaterial,” a view that the company reiterated in an interview…

Lucas van Praag, a Goldman spokesman, declined to detail how badly hurt his firm might have been had A.I.G. collapsed two weeks ago. He disputed the calculation that Goldman had $20 billion worth of risk tied to A.I.G., saying the figure failed to account for collateral and hedges that Goldman deployed to reduce its risk.

My gut feeling is that we can trust Viniar on this one. He says that Goldman had hedged its AIG exposure, and I don’t think he’s the type of person to come out with a bald-faced lie.

On the other hand, how does one hedge $20 billion of AIG counterparty risk? Do you just buy credit default swaps on AIG from someone else? Is there some other way?

Posted in banking, derivatives, insurance, regulation | Comments Off on Goldman Sachs and the Regulatory Arbitrage Trade

Zero-Baseline Datapoint of the Day

The $9.3 billion Short Term Fund, offered as a place for schools and colleges to park their cash and get "returns slightly above U.S. Treasury bills", has now been frozen by its trustee, the stub of Wachovia which wasn’t taken over by Citigroup. And it turns out not to have been particularly short-term after all: some of its investments won’t mature until 2011, and investors can redeem only 33% of their holdings immediately.

The hit to investors won’t be large:

The Short Term Fund is offered by Commonfund, a Wilton, Conn., nonprofit that advises colleges and schools on money management. Verne O. Sedlacek, Commonfund’s chief executive, says 85% of the fund was in "high-quality" commercial paper from blue-chip issuers. The rest is largely in securities backed by assets like mortgages — the kind of investments that are being especially shunned in the credit crisis. He estimates those are selling for about 89 cents on the dollar.

If you add that up, it comes to 98.35 cents on the dollar, before adding in any interest payments. The fund might have broken the buck on a mark-to-market basis, which would explain the three-year time frame for liquidating it, which clearly envisages holding securities to maturity rather than selling them. It seems that what’s happened is that rather than giving investors back less than their original investment, the trustee has decided to simply wind down the fund altogether.

For me, this is yet another indication of how incredibly important the zero baseline is. The difference between a short-term fund gaining 1% and losing 1% is an order of magnitude greater than the difference betwen that same fund gaining 1% and gaining 3%. The latter is a question of performance, for a fund; the former is a matter of life and death.

I’d add that hedge funds have the same implicit zero baseline. People don’t invest in hedge funds to outperform the S&P 500: hedge-funds are absolute-return vehicles, and if their returns are negative, that’s guaranteed to result in substantial outflows, no matter what the stock market does. It’s one of the problems with running a hedge fund: when times are good, your investors want you to outperform stocks. But when times are bad, they want you to outperform zero. It’s a hard job, but then again you’re being paid extremely well for trying to reconcile the dual benchmark.

Posted in hedge funds, investing | Comments Off on Zero-Baseline Datapoint of the Day

A New Derivative

What was all that about derivatives being finanial weapons of mass destruction? Not any more!

Chicago-based Actuarials Holdings, parent company of the Everest OTC Trade Facility and the AE Clearinghouse, has unveiled what it says is a revolutionary ‘safe’ derivative called the Clipper that enables traders to control total risk, highly leverage their capital, and eliminate counterparty risk.

It’s actually an interesting idea. From what I can make out, Clippers act a bit like puts and calls, but with an embedded knock-out which cuts off tail risk. And because they are filled in a dark pool, they claim to have no counterparty risk.

I can’t find much more information on these Clippers at Actuarials’ website, but if y’all have any questions for them, I’ll send them on over. I guess my first question would be whether these things can be used on bonds, or whether they’re confined to stocks. And also, of course, how much they cost.

Posted in derivatives | Comments Off on A New Derivative

Extra Credit, Wednesday Edition

Making Sense of Manhattan Real Estate: Can’t be done.

House Price Calculator: From OFHEO. Seems a bit optimistic.

WaMu Changes Stance On Grey: It’s the new blue!

Global Derivatives Market now valued at $1.14 Quadrillion: Yet another entry in the meaningless-numbers stakes.

Posted in remainders | Comments Off on Extra Credit, Wednesday Edition

The Human Toll of the Credit Crisis

If you check out Joe Nocera’s blog at the NYT, it’s accompanied by this smiling photograph:

joe-nocera.jpg

But scroll down a little, and you’ll see what the credit crisis has wrought:

joenoceraolder.jpg

Legislators, pass the bailout bill! Our journalists can’t take much more of this!

Posted in bailouts | Comments Off on The Human Toll of the Credit Crisis

Don’t Get Sanguine About This Bill

After the lessons we learned on Monday, it’s a good idea to pay attention to people who say that the bailout bill is going to have difficulty getting passed in the House. And Andrew Leonard, today, says just that:

The prospects in the House are still up in the air, complicated by the reality that this new bill is anything but "clean" — it is is, in fact, three, or even four four, bills, squashed together. What was once a 3-page three-page plan from Henry Paulson that became 110 pages long when considered by the House is now a 451-page monster.

The "Emergency Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008" 2008 now also includes the "Energy Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008" 2008 and a smorgasbord of other add-ons…

A House of Representatives that has already rejected this bill will now confront a new bill stocked with unpaid-for tax breaks that conservative House Democrats — the infamous "Blue Dogs" — have been stalwart in opposing.

"Are you trying to jam the House?" one reporter asked Reid. The Senate Majority Leader majority leader denied he was attempting to do any such thing, but it seems self-evident than in attempting to rally significant support for the bailout in the Senate, he has orchestrated the creation of a piece of legislation that is guaranteed to ruffle feathers in the House.

Now is no time for fiscal conservatism, so I doubt that House Democrats will oppose the bill just because it extends a bunch of tax breaks for things like motorsports racing track facilities. But I do wonder why the Senate is going first, here: the Senate was meant to be the easier chamber to pass. By forcing the House to vote on a massive bill larded up with something for everybody to object to, they’re just making life harder on the House.

What’s more, the financial markets knew exactly what they were getting with the original Paulson 3-page bill. The amended version voted on Monday was more complicated, but still within the ken of traders. This monster, on the other hand, has far too many moving parts. And I do fear that if and when it does pass the House, the markets will drop. Two days ago, the $700 billion bailout bill might have been sufficient to unfreeze credit markets. By the end of this week, with massive bank bailouts going on around the world, there’s a good chance that it won’t be enough. Not even with exemptions from excise tax for certain wooden arrows designed for use by children.

Posted in bailouts, Politics | Comments Off on Don’t Get Sanguine About This Bill

Even the Shorts are Losing Now

How on earth did David Einhorn’s Greenlight Re contrive to lose 11.5% on its investment portfolio in September, the month that Lehman Brothers went bust? Einhorn has famously been short Lehman for many months, and the short-selling ban didn’t apply to existing short positions, only to new ones.

Clearly this result wasn’t expected: Greenlight is down 25% today. Did Einhorn suffer a crisis of confidence and cover his shorts too early?

Posted in hedge funds, insurance | Comments Off on Even the Shorts are Losing Now

Did Buffett Kill the Wells Fargo-Wachovia Deal?

Why did the Wells Fargo deal to buy Wachovia fall through at the last minute? The WSJ reports that Wells Fargo CEO chairman Dick Kovacevich blamed perceived weaknesses in a surprising area of Wachovia’s loan portfolio:

Wachovia’s advisers were surprised because the portfolio in question was smaller than many of its toxic mortgage portfolios and didn’t have any obvious red flags.

For the next four hours, Wachovia’s team tried to ease his concerns, but Mr. Kovacevich kept repeating: "It’s not my call, it’s our loan people."

Jeff Matthews has a very interesting take on all this. He points out that Kovacevich, a real buck-stops-here kind of guy, is not the kind of person to blame underlings. Could it be that "our loan people" weren’t his underlings at all, but rather Warren Buffett?

Buffett, of course, had just taken on $10 billion of new exposure to Goldman Sachs. He owns 9% of Wells Fargo, which means that if Wells Fargo bought Wachovia, he’d essentially be taking on 9% of Wachovia’s liabilities, including its $312 billion mortgage portfolio. It’s easy to see that in the wake of the Goldman deal, he might not have been particularly excited about the Wachovia deal.

And it’s almost unthinkable that Kovacevich wasn’t talking to Buffett, his largest and most loyal shareholder.

But there’s a conflict there: it’s entirely conceivable that the deal would have been good for Wells Fargo even if it didn’t fit into Berkshire Hathaway’s broader risk strategy. If Kovacevich is taking marching orders from Buffett, that’s kinda scandalous, especially now that Goldman Sachs, another core Buffett holding, is a bank and therefore a competitor.

But Buffett has rare and special powers. Just look at BRK-B: it rose on Monday, during the worst stock-market crash in years, and then fell on Tuesday when the rest of the market was up sharply. When things get really bad, it seems, people look to Berkshire Hathaway as a safe haven. Don’t they know that it’s extremely leveraged (like all insurance companies), doesn’t pay any dividends, and is largely invested in the stock market?

Posted in banking, insurance, M&A | Comments Off on Did Buffett Kill the Wells Fargo-Wachovia Deal?

Libor Update: Still Frozen

Overnight Libor came down today, to Extremely High from Utterly Ridiculous. But three-month Libor went up: it’s now 4.15%, which means that TED’s at 334bp — or as it’s referred to these days, "frozen". (No interbank lending is actually going on at these, or any, levels.)

More worryingly, euro Libor is higher still, on both fronts — and that’s after Ireland’s decision to guarantee just about any conceivable liability of all the country’s major banks.

This is bad, people. And frankly I’m not sure that even passage of a $700 billion bailout bill will be enough to unfreeze markets at this point.

Posted in bonds and loans | Comments Off on Libor Update: Still Frozen

The Lloyds-HBOS Arbitrage

Robert Peston is on form this morning, writing about the proposed takeover of HBOS by Lloyds TSB:

If you believe that the terms of the deal won’t and can’t be changed, the current HBOS share price is an opportunity to buy £10 notes for £6.60.

That looks too good to be true. And the normal investing rule is that if it looks too good to be true, then don’t touch it even if you’re in a radiation-proof suit.

But normal rules don’t apply right now.

There’s a wonderful quote in this morning’s Guardian from an unnamed "major" investor, who said to that newspaper: "the market is suggesting that the deal is not going to happen. And the market is usually right."

The market is usually right? Where has he or she been for the past few years?

In that period, the market has been comprehensively, systematically wrong about almost everything. But don’t get me started.

Of course, Lloyds is paying in stock, so in order to arbitrage the HBOS share price you would have to simultaneously short Lloyds. Is that even possible these days?

(HT: Ishmael)

Posted in banking, stocks | Comments Off on The Lloyds-HBOS Arbitrage

Food Price Datapoint of the Day

David Chang:

Farmer Michael’s feed costs have risen 400 percent in the last twelve months. To make a profit on the beautiful turkeys his family is raising in time for Thanksgiving, he’ll have to charge a hundred bucks a bird. At Momofuku, I’m paying 150 percent more for humanely raised pork belly than I was paying at this time last year.

Chang’s conclusion is inescapable:

Our cuisine and eating habits will more closely resemble those of the nineteenth century than the late twentieth. Hunting will be less about the buck points and more about the meat. Nose-to-tail eating will make a comeback–not because of fashion or Fergus Henderson (whom I love), but because of scarcity and price. And small-scale farming–little vegetable gardens in the backyards of homes in cities, suburbs, and the countryside alike–will become not just economically sensible but cool.

For brunch on Saturday, I made some very simple and rather delicious organic chicken hearts on toast; I think the onions and garlic that I fried the hearts in cost more than the meat. I can’t wait to see fewer steakhouses and more offal temples in New York: dining could get much more interesting, if things continue at this rate.

(HT: Steele)

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Annals of Legislative Incompetence, Pennsylvania Edition

It’s not just federal legislators who are good at screwing up carefully-negotiated deals. Pennsylvania’s governor, Ed Rendell, faced with a $1.7 billion transportation funding shortfall, came up with a very bright idea: selling off a concession to run the Pennsylvania Turnpike for $12.8 billion. But the state’s legislators sat and sat, doing nothing, and now the bidders, led by Abertis and Citigroup, have understandably withdrawn their offer. After all, in a cash-strapped world, that’s a very large amount of money to have put to one side in anticipation of a deal which looks as though it probably wouldn’t happen anyway.

The fiscal consequences for Pennsylvania are pretty gruesome, and not just in the short term. Highway maintenance costs continue to rise, even as future traffic might well fall, given high gas prices and increasing tolls. What’s more, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission’s budget has an anticipated cost of funds of just 4.5%, which is utterly unrealistic in today’s market. Pennsylvania legislators had the opportunity to transfer all these risks onto a private-sector consortium — and build in high minimum operating standards which currently don’t exist, and get a check for $12.8 billion which could immediately be put to use on important and stimulative infrastructure projects:

The state has about 8,500 miles of roadway rated in "poor condition," said Rich Kirkpatrick, a state Transportation Department spokesman. The state has 6,034 bridges rated as structurally deficient as of June 30, the most of any state in the U.S., Kirkpatrick said.

With the state and the country in a recession, it would have been nice to be able to spend billions of dollars on improving infrastructure, thereby creating thousands of jobs and improving the state’s productive capacity. Oh well.

Posted in infrastructure | Comments Off on Annals of Legislative Incompetence, Pennsylvania Edition

Lehman Bust Hits NYC Commercial Property

One of the main drivers of New York City’s commercial property boom was Lehman Brothers. Now that Lehman’s gone bust, the NYC commercial property market seems to have ground to a halt.

It was probably going to happen sooner or later anyway: commercial property prices, just like residential property prices, are governed ultimately by lenders’ risk appetite. But in the world of commercial property, Lehman brothers and a few shops like it were willing to advance 90% of overinflated prices even when rental income didn’t come close to covering the mortgage payments.

They could do so with impunity (or so they thought) because no sooner were such loans advanced than they were bundled up into CMBS and sold off. But invariably the lead bank ended up taking a significant slug of the deal — the primary reason why Lehman went bust.

Today, one can’t really say that commercial-property underwriting has improved, so much as that it’s disappeared altogether. (Whether that contitutes an improvement is a question to be left to theologians.) And as a result, done deals are falling through: HSBC, for instance, owns an undistinguished office block on Bryant Park, and decided to sell up and move to 7 World Trade Center. Now it’s changed its mind, because it simply couldn’t scare up realistic bids for 452 Fifth Avenue.

The irony is that HSBC should have known full well that it wasn’t a great idea to own property in this market. After all, the CEO of HSBC USA, Martin Glynn, and his lieutenant, Brendan McDonough, both rent their New York apartments — at a cost to HSBC of $586,600 per year. Maybe they should have decided to rent their office space at the same time, rather than waiting until now.

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Extra Credit, Tuesday Edition

Why Main Street should support this rescue: A good, clear explanation.

Where Will the Money Come From? DeLong Krugman explains why a bailout won’t need outside funds.

Congresswomen Explain "Nay" Vote: This is how the sausage fails to get made.

Killed Barclays banker had tried to help homeless Lithuanian: A very sad story from England which helps put things in perspective.

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When Stocks Soar

If a stock ever moved resolutely sideways, it was Wachovia. From September 2004 until September 2007, it basically traded at $50 a share: sometimes a little less, sometimes a little more. And then it started a year-long decline, which culminated in a final drop to zero (plus option value) on Monday. Wachovia’s shareholders have been wiped out: the stock closed at just $3.50 a share today — that’s down 65% from where they closed on Friday.

Now anybody who listens to the WSJ’s style maven will try to avoid hyperbole:

Words like plummet and plunge — and soar and skyrocket, for that matter — quickly lose their shock value when they are overused. Such words should be considered what Bryan Gruley in Chicago calls “think first” words — think about them before you apply them.

Still, if words like plummet and plunge are ever appropriate, I think they can reasonably be used here, in the case of Wachovia. It’s not like stocks ever trade below zero. So one could forgive the WSJ’s markets reporter, Peter McKay, for getting out the "think first" words today. Until you notice which "think first" word he actually used:

Other financial bellwethers posted big gains. Citigroup jumped 16%, Wachovia soared 90%, and Wells Fargo was up 13%.

According to the WSJ, Wachovia didn’t plummet, it hasn’t plunged. Instead, it soared.

In the real world, however, Wachovia rose just $1.66 per share — a modest move indeed for a bank of its size. The market is still valuing Wachovia’s equity at zero; it’s just that the option value on those shares increased a little. And there’s simply no way that Wachovia is a "financial bellwether" any more. Wachovia stock is trading entirely on the way in which the bank gets taken over; it has nothing to do with the health of financials more generally.

And while I’m on the subject of market reports, can someone explain to me how "widespread hope that a bailout plan for Wall Street will be revived in Congress" would send the S&P 500 steadily up 5.42% on the day? Did the chances of a bailout bill getting signed into law increase significantly between 1pm and 4pm? Because stocks did.

Now I’m happy to hope/admit that what we saw today might have been more than just a "dead cat bounce", as I described it before the markets opened. Dead cats aren’t normally that bouncy. But it would still help a lot if market reports put stock moves in much more context than they do. Wachovia’s $1.66 rise today does not a soaring stock make, and stock-market volatility is not prima facie evidence for "a rush of buyers attracted by bargains". A little less breathlessness and a little more detachment would go a long way, in these unusually crazy times.

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