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Friday’s Links

Fairness, Krugman, Gold,

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– This is at least good news

– Calling out the fraud

– More on it


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Santelli’s Rant: A "Watershead" Moment?

So, yesterday I got an email from a friend while I was out with the kids. “Did you see Santelli on CNBC?” he asked. When I inquired what he meant he told me to watch it ASAP.

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After I watched it, it got posted to YouTube and wow, what a reaction. As I write this is has been less than 12 hours since the video went up and already over 105,000 people have viewed it and the less than 5 minute video has received over 1,300 comments. For those who missed it, here it is:

A less than scientific look through the comments says that they are trending 10 to 1 for the sentiment expressed by Mr. Santelli. If we put aside the discussion of whether he is right or wrong, one cannot deny that he clearly touched a nerve with a ton of angry people.

If we watch the nightly news on any network we see story after story of people about to lose their homes essentially through no fault of their own. The clear implication is that were is not for extraneous factors, everything would be ok. I am sure that there is a certain segment of the population for whom that is true, of that there is no doubt. BUT,  it is impossible to have a collapse in any market like we have had in housing unless there was extreme excess from all parties, banks and buyers. The larger the fall, the more froth and irresponsibility  involved in the bubble phase. There are very few “innocent victims” here. While I am sure we can all dig to find one, I am just as sure with very little effort we can find 50 who aren’t.

Back in October of 2007 I wrote about the following story:

Wilbur Ross, a self made billionaire and his son were playing golf a few weeks ago. As they finished up, their caddy approached them and wondered if he could ask them a personal finance question.

“Sure” Ross replied

“I bought 5 condo’s in Scottsdale, Arizona,” said the caddy “I was able to flip the first 3 but I am stuck with the last two. Should I keep making the payments on them or just walk away”?

Ross thought about it for a minute and asked “Well, were are they? Is the area nice? What else is around the complex that may be of eventual value”?

“I do not know” the caddy replied, “I’ve never been to Arizona”

That, is a nice neat summation of what a “bubble” in a market looks like. When your caddy thinks he is Donald Trump, it is time to take a close look at what is going on.

Where are the heart-breaking interviews on the nightly news with folks like Wilbur’s caddy? Where are the “lesson learned” pieces about gamblers who rolled the dice on housing? See, we know they are out there. We also know they are the majority, not the minority in this scenario. This is why the frustration on people’s part when it comes to the hundreds of billions of dollars being thrown at the “problem”.

The common argument for doing it is “we have to stem the tide and save people”. Well, the FDIC did that already with its first mortgage modification plan and after six months over 50% of those loans were again delinquent.

Of course the criticism of Santelli is coming. The Columbia Journalism Review was the first that I saw. It is the typical stuff. It focuses on the tone and anger of Santelli rant, and yes, that it what it was, rips a few sentences and extrapolates much more from it that what was there.

The author of the piece denigrates his knowledge of Santelli and the network with this one sentence. “Of course, he didn’t get himself into nearly this much of a lather over the trillions of dollars we’ve given to Wall Street welfare cases and the busted banks.” Now, anyone who has seen Santelli or watch even just a few days of CNBC over the past two years has seen an almost daily diatribe from Rick opposing EVERY bailout that has come down the road.

To make it simple, go to Youtube and watch any video of Rick at ramdom, the thought proces is the same, government needs to stop the bailouts, all of them.

He then says that “this bailout isn’t even designed to bailout homeowners but the banks”. Umm… somebody might want to tell President Obama that because he has told us “this is designed to save 9 million people from losing their homes”. Ooops..

Since the author of the Columbia piece clearly does not even begin to know his subject (Santelli or the bailout plan), further discussion of the “every homeowner was screwed by the banks” piece bear little more mention.

I am sure there will be others, but that is all I have now near midnight.

What is far more important that an erroneous crtisizm is the emotion Santelli has unleashed. Read the 1,300 plus comments on Youtube, read the page after page of Twitter commentary on it (here is the RSS feed for the topic and see how the blogshere lit up with the “Chicago Tea Party” Santelli suggested.

Now, personally I do not watch much CNBC (too much yelling at each other all day, gives me a headache). But what we do enables events like this to spread like wild fire. What gets me about this one is the total one-sideness of the response from people. Those who would object to Santelli are outnumbered by a gargantuan number by those who are practically throwing their arms in the air yelling “finally” as if Rick expressed everything they have been feeling but not seeing in the MSM.

Politicians may want to look at this before they do something else, people are not happy out there and it isn’t just because we are in a recession. It is because we feel the most aid and help is going to those people and institutions who got us in this very mess. that is infuriating for people who have behaved responsibly.

It should be noted that isn’t because of what they aren’t doing in Washington, but what they are and that is a huge difference.

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Fairholme Funds Conference Call

This is a great call. Bruce Berkowitz, who runs the Fairholme Funds (FAIRX) is frank and very honest..

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Fairholme Nov. 2008 Conference Call

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Santelli "Part Deux"

The first video is getting about 100 comments an hour over on YouTube. I think it is pretty clear Santelli struck a real nerve with people…

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Wilbur Ross Calls Out JP Morgan and Citigroup CEO’s $$

Another great guest. Wilbur is now my favorite investor……I love honesty. Wilbur takes JP Morgan’s (JPM) Dimon and Citigroup’s (C) Pandit to task for their blatant intellectual dishonesty..

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Rick Santelli’s Rant "An Anthem for Responsible People" $$

Finally someone in the MSM says what everyone else is thinking….if there is a God, this will resonate in Washington …please pass this along..

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Air Travel Nosedives in December and January

More bad news for those who think we may have a rebound coming soon. Key point, this takes into account world travel also so the results in Asia are noted.

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Premium Monitor Dec08

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Thursday’s Links

NY Gov., Solar shingles, Pakistan, “Cowards”

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– Any wonder people distrust politicians?

– They are coming

– Nuclear powers cannot become unstable

– Will anyone in the MSM have the balls to call him out on this? Don’t think so either

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Will Rohm & Haas Win in Court vs Dow? Not so Fast

I have been trying to make this point for a while. He is another take on it re: the Rohm & Hass (ROH) / Dow Chemical (DOW) litigation is not the slam dunk some seem to think it is. This is from Peter Friedman, a law professor and former Wall Street attorney.

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Here is the post…

Courts are supposed to do justice even if doing so costs individuals a lot of money.

Joe Nocera writes in the New York Times that to even suggest “that maybe, just maybe, deals that stop making sense ought to be called off, or at least rejiggered, especially in the middle of a once-in-a-lifetime financial crisis – invites withering scorn, especially if you say it to someone on Wall Street or in the legal profession.”

I’ve worked in the legal profession on Wall Street, and I like to think that when what the law seems to compel makes no sense the law has the capacity to adjust, to do justice instead of nonsense. My thinking isn’t purely the product of naivete and idealism. There really is a legal (or, rather, for the lawyers among my readers, an equitable) argument to stop the particular deal Nocera is writing about. Moreover, that argument is precisely that the deal makes no sense to an interest — the public — much more important than the individuals who would profit mightily from the deal.

Here’s the deal: “Last summer, the Dow Chemical Company won a heated auction for a well-run, highly valued specialty chemical company called Rohm & Haas. . . . The price it agreed to pay was high: $78 a share in cash, a 74 percent premium, for a total of about $15.3 billion.” The problem is that in light of the global financial crisis and a collapse of the chemical business, if the deal goes through the resulting Dow/Rohm & Haas entity “could be badly damaged, saddled with high-priced debt in a horrible business environment, and a junk bond credit rating.”

What does that mean? It means that if the deal goes through Dow would need to strip itself to the bare bones to survive or would collapse altogether. This while “Dow Chemical employs around 45,000 people; Rohm & Haas employs more than 15,000.” This while “the American chemical industry – which was suffering even before the financial crisis because of the rise of commodity chemical companies in China and elsewhere – is going to be in a bad place for the foreseeable future.” This “[a]t a time when every job matters, and when the economy is holding on for dear life . . .”

In return, the shareholders of Rohm & Haas will get $15.3 billion. According to Answers.com, ‘the Haas family, descendants of one of the company’s two founders, continue to control a substantial ownership interest of nearly 30 percent” of those shares. So the the Haas family and the other Rohm & Haas shareholders are suing for “specific performance” of the contract with Dow; that is, they are asking a Delaware court to order Dow to go through with the deal to buy Rohm & Haas for $15.3 billion.

I’m not sure why there’s “withering scorn” for the suggestion that a court might refuse to enforce a deal that threatens 60,000 jobs and, as Nocera writes, would probably destroy “billions of dollars of value.” It’s no stretch to suggest that at a time of global economic collapse and at a time when President Obama is fighting to inject billions of dollars into the economy, the deal is not in the public interest.

Why am I willing to defy the withering scorn of the Wall Street experts? Because specific performance, the remedy Rohm & Haas is asking the court to grant, is an what is known as an “equitable” remedy. In order to show it is entitled to equitable relief, Rohm & Haas must show that the outcome makes sense even after the court balances “all the equities” involved. In other words, the court must determine whether, considering all of the interests at stake in the lawsuit, ordering the deal to go through would be more fair than unfair. The public interest plainly is one of those interests the court must consider. Because the deal poses such a great threat to the public interest, the equities do not favor the deal; the equities, in fact, weigh heavily against enforcing the contract between Dow and Rohm & Haas.

In legalese, Corporate and Commercial Practice in Delaware confirms that this is the law in Delaware:

[I]f specific performance of a contract would cause significant public harm, then the Court has discretion to deny such relief, even where a breach of contract and substantial harm to plaintiff have been established . . .

1-12 Corp & Commercial Practice in DE Court of Chancery § 12.03 (Matthew Bender 2008), citing Alro Assoc., L.P. v. Hayward, CA 19544 (Del. Ch. Oct. 31, 2003), mem. op. at 22-26 (holding that where plaintiff had established breach of contract by Delaware Department of Transportation and where Court had assumed irreparable harm to plaintiff, specific performance was not appropriate due to a balance of equities weighing strongly in favor of public interest).

Courts really are supposed to do justice notwithstanding the fact Wall Street expresses withering scorn at the thought.

Link to original post

Now, Dow is trading as if they will be forced to complete the transaction on after the trial in March. Should that not be the case, shares should surge…

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January FOMC Minutes

I am shocked on average they only see 8% unemployment in 2010. One has to be concerned they fully do not grasp the situation.

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Jan. 2009 FOMC Minutes

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Wal-Mart Earnings Call (audio)

Anyone want to guess where the $800 tax breaks coming up will be spent? Yeah…me too, Wal-Mart (WMT)

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Frontline: The Finiancial Crisis $$

This is good……and scary

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International Currencies and Tobacco $$

This is a piggyback to a post two weeks ago about Phillip Morris International (PM) and their guidance for 2009.

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In the post I was looking at the possible effect of the US Dollar on their results. Yesterday CFO Hermann Waldemer was in NYC and gave the following talk on the subject (slide presentation is at the end):

We expect our underlying business performance to add 33 to 48 cents to our EPS in 2009, representing a growth rate of 10 to 14%. This strong performance will regretfully be overshadowed by a significant currency hit. Our EPS guidance for 2009 is based on exchange rates prevailing in early February.

Making predictions about currencies is particularly difficult at present due to the huge volatility, which is illustrated by the fact that the adverse currency impact would have been 40 cents, or only half, at the exchange rates prevailing just a few weeks ago in mid December 2008.

The chart shows the evolution in the exchange rate of the Dollar against the Euro for the period 2007 through early 2009.

PMI benefited from a favorable currency situation during the first nine months of 2008. In September, the US Dollar started to strengthen significantly as it was perceived as a “safe haven” in turbulent financial times. As a result, there was an adverse currency impact from the Euro on our fourth quarter results.

After significant volatility in December, the US Dollar has once more strengthened in the wake of election optimism in the USA and weak economic data in the EU and stood at 1.28 in early February, when we established our EPS guidance.

Since the beginning of September, we have also witnessed a strong depreciation of many emerging market currencies against the US Dollar, the most notable being the 47% decline in the value of the Russian Ruble and the 74% decline in the value of the Ukrainian Hryvnia.

Many in the investment community have expressed surprise at the magnitude of the currency unfavorability that we have disclosed. Let me try to explain this impact in greater detail first by addressing our exposure by underlying currency. As we mentioned during our earnings call, the currencies in the key emerging markets of Mexico, Russia, Turkey and Ukraine account for 58 cents of the total foreseen adverse variance of 80 cents, while other emerging market currencies are 11 cents negative.
The decline in the Euro is expected to have an adverse impact of 13 cents and other developed market currencies another 16 cents. This is expected to be partially offset by a 15 cent positive impact from the Japanese Yen and a 3 cent positive impact generated by the conversion of our Swiss Franc costs into US Dollars at more favorable rates.

I would like to stress that the breakdown of the variance is based on underlying currencies and that this does not necessarily equate to the impact on individual market profitability. Let me elaborate further.

Currency, whether positive or adverse, has a straight line impact on net revenues. From our discussions, it appears that some models used outside PMI, which cannot replicate the underlying details of our business model, have sought to simplify the complex effect of currency movements by applying a similar rule to profitability. However, the relationship between currency and OCI is neither linear nor simple nor consistent across our wide range of markets. What happens is that the impact of favorable and unfavorable currency movements on OCI is also influenced by the extent to which there are elements in the cost structure that are not in local currency.
Let me use a theoretical example to illustrate this. Market X has net revenues of $2.0 billion, but faces a currency depreciation of 25%. The impact on net revenues will be a decline of $500 million or 25% to $1.5 billion. If all the costs were in local currency, they would also go down by 25% and OCI of $1.2 billion in this example would decline to $900 million.

However, if half the costs in this market were in US Dollars, be they leaf costs, direct materials or marketing expenses, then total costs in this market would decline not to $600 million but to $700 million. As a result, OCI would decline to $800 million, or by 33%, and the OCI margin would decrease from 60% to 53%.

The same effect would of course work in reverse in the event that the local currency appreciated.

To what extent can we directly protect ourselves against currency swings through hedging?

Let me reiterate that it is our policy never to carry out income hedges – or what we call “translation hedges”. Such hedges are purely speculative and would have a significant unpredictable impact on the company’s profitability. We at PMI run a solid and prudent business and therefore will not speculate on currencies.
However, we do seek to protect our business, where appropriate and feasible, through so-called “transaction hedges”. The two main examples are the hedging of the Japanese Yen on the sale of cigarettes to our affiliate in Japan and the hedging of the US Dollar on the purchase of tobacco leaf.

Opportunities for additional transaction hedges are however quite limited. They are generally not available at acceptable costs due to the large interest differentials and the applied volatility charges or simply non-existent in large quantities in our key emerging market currencies.

He then looked at how currencies can effect costs:

Let’s look at PMI’s cost structure.
In 2008, our total costs above the OCI line were $16.2 billon, of which $9.3 billion represented Costs of Goods Sold and $6.9 billion marketing, overheads and other expenses.

Tobacco leaf is the single largest component in our cost structure with $3.6 billion in 2008. In terms of currency denomination in our P&L, 26% of these costs are in US Dollars, 48% in Euros and 26% in other currencies.

PMI purchases tobacco leaf from a number of countries. The most important sources of leaf are Argentina, Brazil, Greece, Malawi, Turkey and the USA.

Tobacco leaf is fundamentally a US Dollar denominated agricultural crop. However, PMI converts a large part of its leaf purchases into Euros for inventory and balance sheet valuation purposes and this currency is subsequently used in transactions with local affiliates.

Direct materials account for $2.4 billion in costs. In terms of currency, 60% are in Euros, 26% in Dollars and 14% in other currencies.

Other elements of our Cost of Goods Sold total $3.3 billion with the majority of these costs being denominated in local currencies, which here would include part of the Euro total due to our large production volume in the EU.

Likewise our $6.9 billion in sales allowances, marketing expenditures, overheads and other expenses above the OCI level are predominantly accounted for in local currency, though with 12% the Swiss Franc is relatively important, reflecting the location of our operations center in Lausanne, Switzerland.

While this gives you the overall picture, it should be stressed that there are significant regional variations in the currency split of PMI’s costs, as illustrated here with the examples of Indonesia and Russia.

In Indonesia, 88% of our costs are in Rupiah, while in Russia only 39% of our costs are denominated in Rubles. This reflects the greater Dollar and Euro sourcing of leaf tobacco and direct materials in Russia. In Indonesia, we are able to include local tobacco in our cigarette production and cloves are sourced locally. In both countries, marketing and support function costs are predominantly accounted for in their respective local currency.

The Russian example also highlights the importance to PMI not only of movements of the Ruble against the Dollar but also the Ruble against the Euro.

Let me close this section on currency by highlighting the fact that the Japanese Yen is the only major currency which has appreciated in value since the beginning of 2008. All our other main currencies have moved in the same unfavorable direction, some with large declines, thus amplifying the adverse impact. History has generally shown that large currency swings tend to be at least partially reversed over time so we are optimistic that these strong currency headwinds will be temporary.

Here is the slide presentation:
Phillip Morris International 2/17/2009 Presentation

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Greenlight Capital 2008 Annual Report $$

Buying Gold (GLD) ……

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Greenlight Capital 2008 Annual Report

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Wednesday’s Links

Japan, Gold, Media, Flash

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– Everyone wants to “avoid the Japanese’s situation” but, do they really know what that is?

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– Good thing they are “neutral”……. right

– Video on phones…a great post
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