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From: US GIO czi To: Undisclosed recipients:; Subject: Eye on the Market: Fifty Trades of Grey Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2013 16:10:22 +0000 Attachments: 02-19-2013_-_EOTM_-_Fifty_Trades_of Grey.pdf Inline-Images: image002.png; image003.jpg; image005.png; image007.png; image019.png; image021.png; image022.jpg; image023.jpg Eye on the Market, February 19, 2013 (the attached PDF has better illustrations and is easy to read) Fifty Trades of Grey: a story of investment, temptation, addiction and the cost of money Q1 US retail sales were better than expected in January, despite higher tax rates, as the US consumer is still more active than European counterparts (1st chart). It's too soon to see the full impact of higher US income and payroll tax rates, but a Q4 jump in real wages, improved household balance sheets and a turnaround in housing may offset part of the headwind. We'll see in a couple of quarters. Meanwhile, in the SOTU address, the President talked about raising revenues. It will be interesting to see where they come from: after the recent tax act, top quintile tax rates are now 5 times higher than the second quintile, up from 2x in 1979 as progressivity increases further (2nd chart). Everywhere I go, however, there's a different topic on everyone's minds: what will happen when the Federal Reserve stops purchasing tens of billions in Treasury and Agency debt every month? It's possible that with a sufficiently dovish Chairperson replacing Bemanke in 2014 that they will never end, and that the US will end up like Ireland, with its Treasury perpetually beholden to its Central Bank; but I don't think so. The autobiographical story below is my view on Fed purchases and their impact on the world of investing. Auto Percentof 6.5% sales: U-turns and Down-turns total population.3 month moving average Average (FICA) 30 federal individual income and tax rate by income group, Percent social insurance 2013E US 6.0% 25 Top 1% 5.5% 20 5.0% Top Quintile 4.5% 15 Middle Quintile 4.0% 10 3.5% 3.0% Europe 5 Second Quintile 2.5% 0 Lowest Quintile .5 2.0% 1998 2002 2006 2010 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Source: BEA, Census Bureau. ECB. EuroSlat. Source: CBO. TFC. JFMAIN. Lowest gu intile negative due to creditsitiansfers. My Trades of y. "I was always the cautious type. I would wait until other people jumped into a lake to make sure it was deep enough. I have never been on a motorcycle, and have never held or fired a weapon. I once rented a Maserati for a day to see what it was like, and drove under the speed limit the entire time. So, it's not surprising that by the fall of 2007, with mounting problems in housing, over-crowding in hedge fund strategies like statistical arbitrage and very low credit spreads, I got nervous and reduced portfolio risk heading into 2008. The following fall, after the collapse, I imagined a slow and steady approach to reinvesting. It would take time to rebuild confidence after the second 40% equity market decline in a single decade, right? After recessions in 1989 and 1999, you could take your time reinvesting in credit: high yield spreads remained elevated for 3 to 4 years, allowing for a long, relaxed period of risk-taking by investors with the wherewithal to have avoided some of it in the first place. Then one day in early 2009, everything changed. The Fed Chairman's picture in the paper reminded me of a cross between Sean Connery and King Hussein of Jordan. His message was clear: he was going to shroud the markets in a warm embrace EFTA01188129 of unbounded, limitless liquidity. It was slow at first, but then appeared everywhere I looked, like an endless, pounding summer rain. The convertible bonds we bought in November 2008, and the commercial real estate-backed securities and leveraged loans we bought the following spring, rose in a passionate revival of credit markets. During the first few months of 2009, you could earn 10% or more on debtor-in-possession financing, and purchase private equity interests from overextended college endowments at steep discounts. But by the late summer, as the leaves turned, these opportunities began to fade as capital came back to credit markets. I held on tight, pulled in a convulsion of rising optimism and the search for yield. Fifty Trades of Grey: Fed purchases of Treasury and Agency securities, percentof total net supply issued (measured in 10-year equivalents, 6 month moving average) 60 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10 Jul-10 Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Source: Nomura Securities, J.P. Morgan Securities, LLC. That's ancient history now. For the last fifty months, the Fed has been buying Treasuries and Agencies, $2.5 trillion in all (measured in 10-year equivalents). As the Fed ravishes the riskless debt markets, its demand now accounts for —55% of the entire net supply issued by the Treasury, Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. My relationship with the Fed started to change: with its relentless debt purchases and 0% policy rates, the Fed apparently sees me as a rentier capitalist whose savings should be expropriated by keeping short term interest rates below inflation. What's a rentier capitalist? According to Lenin, someone who `clips coupons, who takes no part in any enterprise whatever, whose profession is idleness' .[a] I began to question my feelings about Quantitative Easing, even though it led to a very powerful rally in the credit markets... Global USD high yield markets Emerging markets US$ debt and high grade bonds Basis points Spread, basis points 2,250 1600 600 2,000 1400 Sovereign US High 1,750 Yield 1200 —0. Grade 500 (EMBI Global 1,500 Diversified Index) 400 41— 1,250 1000 1,000 800 300 750 200 500 400 250 100 200 1987 1992 1997 2002 2007 2012 0 0 SourcIM. Morgan Securnies LLC. Data shown as lower of yield/spread 1998 2001 2007 2010 2013 to maturity and yeldispread to call date. Source: Bloomberg. On the plus side for credit, companies have a lot of cash and cash flow and I do not see a recession brewing, so a messy break-up between investors and credit markets seems unlikely this year based on fundamentals. Net of Fed purchases, there will be almost no net debt new issuance in 2013 [b], a very bullish supply picture. Furthermore, high yield companies have termed out their debt substantially relative to where they stood in 2008, and there has been a revival in CLO and CMBS issuance as structured credit markets improve. Remember as well that the Fed may not raise rates above 1% until 2015 (extrapolated based on the pace of employment gains, labor force participation and the Fed's reported 6.5% unemployment EFTA01188130 threshold). For some investors, every bit of coupon income counts: they will be loath to sell, and feel bound to hold their credit positions forever. However, I'm also watching underwriting standards as investors weaken their emotional resolve. HY issues rated B- or below are rising as a % of issuance. So are debt-to-cash flow multiples on leveraged buyouts, and in Q4 2012, payment-in- kind and covenant-lite issuance hit 2007 levels. This month, Federal Reserve Governor Jeremy Stein voiced concerns about over-heating credit markets, noting 'reach for yield' behavior and deterioration in terms and conditions. While high yield spreads don't look tight in an historical context, yields tell a different story. Given manipulation of riskless rates [see note c for an estimate thereof], I am inclined towards caution. 'Long credit' is a crowded position, and dealer inventory/liquidity has declined given industry rule-changes (according to Citi, high grade and high yield dealer inventories are 20% of 2007 levels). A period of diminishing credit returns is upon us, and it's probably time for those with more than a normal credit allocation to begin saying goodbye WI. It will not be easy; love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation. Maturity extension by high yield borrowers US high yield bonds maturi ng, billions. USD 500 450 400 wAs of Dec 2008 350 wAs of Oct 2012 300 250 200 150 100 50 I 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 or Year of maturity later Source: J.P. Morgan Secwities LLC. J.P. Mo rgan Asset Management. Underwriting standards softening, but below prior peaks Debt'cash flow 70% 6x LBO sr. debt to cash flow multiple 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Source: Standard & PooreGlobal Fixed In come Reseatch. Capeal IQ. HY issues rated B- and lower as % of total issuance 4 5x 2x Once credit markets began to tighten, investors rushed headstrong into an intense love affair with dividend-paying stocks. The S&P Dividend Aristocrats Index has outperformed the market by a huge margin starting in 2009, so much so that a few months ago, cyclical stocks were trading at the largest discount on record relative to defensive ones, and still appear to be doing so. Cyclical stocks still looking cheap to defensive ones Ratio of cyclical stock Pits to defensives. using trailing earnings 1.8 - 1.6 - 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 - 0.6 - 0.4 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 Source: J.P. Morgan SecuritiesLLC. 1998 2003 2008 2013 Valuations of REITs and Timber companies Price to forward Adjusted Funds From Operations PIE ratio 45x 40x 35x 30x 25x 20x 10x 15x 10x 5x 5x 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 Source: ISI Group. Sloomterg. What of equity market valuations overall? Has a dreaded Fed-driven overvaluation cycle already begun? It depends on the lens you apply to remembrance of things past. Using 3 years of trailing earnings, the S&P 500 P/E multiple is around median compared to the last hundred years, and reasonable at a time of low inflation. Using 5 years of earnings makes today's multiple seem more expensive, since it inherently assumes that the earnings collapse in 2008 will occur every decade (I don't think this is a good assumption). Some positives: market expectations of future long-term earnings growth are low, and there's a lot of corporate and household cash lying around, the most in many decades on a combined basis. What about the equity market-to-replacement cost ratio? It can be a useful buy/sell signal when it's at extremes, but that's not the case now [e]. As for other equity valuation methods, such as those which flatter stocks by looking at the fact that I am forced to earn zero percent on my cash, I am trying to cast them aside: the deceptions we tell others are nothing compared to those we tell ourselves. EFTA01188131 S&P 500 price to 3 and 5-year trailing average earnings TobIn's Q: not at extremes, and therefore less Interesting Multiple Ratioof marketvalue to replacement cost of US non-financial comp. 34x 2 5-yea r 1.8 - 28x 1.6 - 1.4- 224 h r 1.2 - lex 1 - 0.8 - 10x 3-year 0.6 0.4 - 4x 0.2 - 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 0 Sou ce: Standard and Pool's Robert Shil er Data Set. JPMAM. As reported 1900 1909 1919 1929 1939 1949 1959 1969 1979 1389 1999 2009 earnings used prior to 12/31/1988. operating earnings user atter thatd ate. Source:Nations Bureau of Economic Research; Federal Reserve Board Reasonable valuations and a modest recovery in the US, Ch na and parts of the developing world should keep the party going. When inflation comes back and the Fed tightens, he party will likely end for a while, but at least right now the output gap (a measure of spare US capacity) still looks large. I have even seen remarks by Bernanke's courtiers, Evans and Yellen, indicating that the Fed will allow inflation to drift above its long term target for a while to ensure a recovery. In other words, they will postpone the inevitable for as long as they can. Lots of cash, everywhere Household and corporate cash balances. % of tangible assets 28 24 20 16 1952 1962 1972 Source. Federa Reserve 1982 1992 2002 2012 A proxy for spare capacity. the US output gap Actual output relative b a measure of full potential output(from CBO) 6% 4% 2% 0% .2% -4% Positive output gap led to inflation 46% Plenty of room to expand without inflation -8% 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 Source: Congressional Budget Office. 2005 2010 Nevertheless, the end of the affair will come one day, and probably when I am not expecting it. Since the Greenspan- Bemanke era of ultra-low policy rates began, the volatility of equities is even higher than before the creation of the Fed in 1913, when the US was beset by frequent recessions and depressions. So here I remain, trapped in a cycle of market passions that careen from sadness to ecstasy, and then back again. The ecstasy phase has more room to run for now, and we are seeing signs that M&A activity (Berkshire Hathaway and 3G purchase of Heinz, Comcast purchase of GE assets, Liberty Media purchase of Virgin Global) and share repurchases are picking up, which is generally good for stocks. The Fed is looking for `substantial' labor market improvement, which means there will probably be another 12 trades of grey before its purchases end. What kind of imbalances will grow during this time? When the Fed stops buying riskless securities, we will find out how ready risky securities are to stand on their own, and how addicted investors are to Fed support. I remember the last time I was in this kind of tangled, complicated relationship. It was in 2003: the Fed set policy rates at 1%, below the rate of inflation [something John Taylor has been highlighting as explained in note f], and set in motion another cycle in which the value of cash was destroyed. Incredibly, investors in US T-bills earned returns below the rate of inflation until September 2005, which was well into the recovery and around the time the housing collapse began. Fed sponsorship of (another) housing boom [g] and the credit markets was great while it lasted, and I thought the affair would never end. But it did end, with sadness and with betrayal: when it came time for the Federal Reserve to warn me about possible consequences of surging home ownership costs, I didn't even get an email, or a salacious text. Instead, I read one day in the newspaper that the subprime issue was 'contained'. Love means never having to say you're sorry." EFTA01188132 US home price to rent ratio, and periods of negative real interest rates 140 135 , Index 111 1970 = 100 130 125 • 120 • 115 110 105 100 95 90 2008 1970 1975 1988 1992 0% • I -2% 4% \N -6% 1970 1975 1981 1986 1992 1997 2003 2008 Source: Federal Housing Finance Agency. Bureau of Labor Statistics. St. Louis Federal Reserve 1981 1997 Negalive returns on 3-month T-bills 2003 le Iv Michael Cembalest J.P. Morgan Asset Management BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis CMBS Commercial mortgage backed securities CLO Collateralized loan issuance CBO Congressional Budget Office FICA Federal Insurance Contributions Act QE Quantitative easing SOTU State of the Union TPC Tax Policy Center (Brookings) Notes [a] Vladimir Lenin, "Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism", Section VIII, Parasitism and Decay of Capitalism, 1916. [b] Debt universe: high yield and high grade bonds, EM sovereign and corporate debt, municipals, Agencies, Treasuries and structured credit. [c] If you research estimates of the Fed's impact on long-term interest rates, you might be surprised at how low they are. The latest paper on the subject puts the impact at 35-45 basis points, and other studies show even lower estimates. See "The Federal Reserve's Large-Scale Asset Purchase Programs: Rationale and Effects", D'Amico, Nelson, Lopez-Salido and English, December 2012. [d] The same view does not hold for credit hedge funds with minimal directional exposure to spreads or rates, and who seek to take advantage of the decline in dealer inventory/market-making and resulting arbitrage opportunities that arise between bonds and credit default swaps. [e] Tobin's Q looks at the ratio between the market value of equities and their replacement cost, using the Federal Reserve Report Z1, Table B102. Values for 1900-1952 in the chart are based on estimates from Blanchard, Rhee and Summers ("The Stock Market, Profit And Investment', National Bureau of Economic Research, 1990). Some analysts believe that Tobin's Q has been overstated in recent decades, as intangibles make up a larger percentage of total assets. As an example, in 2009, a paper from The Conference Board estimated intangibles at 54% of total assets for US pharmaceutical companies, and at 43% of total assets for US technology companies. [f] Inflation was at the same level in 2003 as it was in 1997, yet policy rates were 4.5% higher in 1997. This is a point that Stanford's John Taylor, a critic of current Fed policy, made last November at the Centennial Celebration of Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago. [g] The Fed had plenty of company in the housing boom/bust: homeowners, banks, mortgage originators and guarantors, broker-dealers, rating agencies, US government-sponsored enterprises, Congress, regulators and of course, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which by the year 2000, required that 50% of all Fannie/Freddie origination went to affordable housing borrowers, which in turn resulted in a surge in 3% down-payments. There have been a lot of rule EFTA01188133 changes in the financial system in response: so far, Dodd-Frank is 34% complete and has generated over 11,000 pages of new regulations. On the other hand, half the volume of all home purchase loans from 2009 to 2011 were underwritten by the Federal Housing Administration, Veterans Affairs and the Department of Agriculture with average down-payments of.....3%. IRS Circular 230 Disclosure: JPMorgan Chase & Co. and its affiliates do not provide tax advice. 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