Slope of Hope Blog Posts

Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.

Freedom From Fear

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I am currently re-reading Freedom From Fear, the superb history by David Kennedy of 1929-1945 in the United States. I emphasize re-reading, since this sucker weighs in at 900 pages, but I'm a history buff, and the Depression and World War 2 is at the top of my list of interests.

I'm halfway through this tome at this point, just before the attack of Pearl Harbor. I can share a few thoughts off the top of my head:

+ Roosevelt was much more hamstrung by an uncooperative Congress than most people remember. It's incredible he got as much done as he did, particularly in the late 1930s.

+ People think of the French as the pathetic do-nothings in World War 2. They don't hold a candle to the people of the United States, which watched apathetically as Ethiopians, Chinese, and Jews were slaughtered. The isolationist/pacifist attitude of the United States was, in retrospect, revolting.

+ Thank God for Winston Churchill.

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One Lesson I Forgot to Mention

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Last night, I did a post about nine things I had learned from The Big Short. I meant to write about ten things (as the URL of the post implies), but until now I forgot was it was.

It is this – The Powers That Be Can Mask Weakness Longer Than the Shorts Would Like. In other words, they can use their power to hide the truth for a while. The truth will come out, as it always eventually does, but waiting for the truth to emerge can be uncomfortable – – and sometimes even ruinous – – for those depending on the truth for their salvation.

In the case of the short-sellers cited in the book, the "masking" going on was that CDOs, having pretty much no liquid market, were priced by such upstanding organizations as Goldman Sachs. These firms naturally cited prices favorable to their own positions. So an honest broker might declare a given bundle of swaps to be worth 60 cents on the dollar, but Goldman and Morgan were claiming they were worth, say, 95 cents on the dollar, thus making quite-valuable CDO swaps to be purportedly worth not much value at all.

It would be sort of like getting into a huge short position on Apple Computer (AAPL) at $240/share and then suddenly finding Goldman to be the only arbiter of AAPL value. And after you put your short on, iPod sales collapsed, Steve Jobs got run over by a rickshaw, and Macintosh computers were found to randomly erase hard drives without warning……..yet Goldman said the value of AAPL was $239.50/share, simply because they had a huge long position, even though you knew the value was really more like $80. You can imagine the frustration of the shorts.

The dam did finally break, however, and the investment banks finally had to accept reality, albeit kicking and screaming. Except for Lehman and Bear Stearns, the investment banks didn't really get their comeuppance fully, but it's at least heartening near Big Shorts' end to see these bets pay off handsomely for those with the foresight to make them in the first place.

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Nine Lessons from The Big Short

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I've mentioned Michael Lewis' best-selling The Big Short a few times recently, mainly because it's one of the most enjoyable business books I've ever read. I thumbed through it again and wanted to share my "takeaways" from the book:

The Ratings Agencies are a Joke – I've never paid much attention to ratings agencies, simply because they weren't part of my world. Having read the book, though, it's astonishing to me that these organizations are still in business, let alone remain as large, publicly-traded corporations. They gave AAA ratings to virtually every financial instrument that the investment banks paid them to "rate." It would be like finding out Underwriters Laboratories have been bribed by shoddy toaster manufacturers whose products were causing house fires all across the nation. Why Moody's, Fitch, and S&P haven't gone the way of Arthur Anderson is beyond me.

The Shorts, As Usual, Are the Good Guys – All the heroes in the book are shorts. They're smart, cynical, and discerning. There's one clever short for every 999 frat-boy, rah-rah bulls.

The Shorts, As Usual, are Shunned by Everyone – In turn, the shorts – as usual – are held in contempt by everyone else. Before they were proved right, they were universally laughed at. The bright young chaps at Cornwall Capital were referred to as "Cornhole Capital" by the investment banks whom they were trying to land as their brokerage.

The Most Interesting Investors are Kooks – Michael Burry and Steven Eisman, who receive most of the attention in the book, are total characters. I find them fascinating. The world seems fixated on Warren Buffett, who yuck-yucks it up in Omaha playing his banjo for BRK investors and has this Sweet Old Uncle schtick going. I'd rather spend 30 minutes with Steven Eisman than an entire day with Warren Buffett, no question about it.

Steven Eisman would be a Sloper – Added to which, if Eisman hung out on blogs, I imagine he'd be here or – more likely – Zero Hedge. The guy is cool.

The Spirit is Willing, the Flesh is Weak – Michael Burry's investors were perfectly fine with him as long as he was cranking out multi-hundred percent returns in the stock market. But when he took on a truly far-sighted, daring bet by putting everything into CDO swaps, they turned on him. They sent him nasty emails; they threatened him; they never stopped making their doubts clear. In the end, his bet more than doubled the size of everyone's portfolio. My impression is that the investors took their gains without so much as a "sorry" for doubting him. I feel bad for the guy, since he was so alone all that time.

Investment Bankers Put Themselves First. Period. – My contempt for the likes of Goldman is well known here, but all the investment bankers in the book are shown to be interested in one thing and one thing only – – getting as much money for themselves as they can. The notion that investment banks put their customers first is a riot.

Rich White Guys Rarely Suffer Consequences – Read about Joe Cassano of AIG (a firmly effectively destroyed) or Howie Hubler of Morgan Stanley (who helped deliver a $9,000,000,000 loss to his employer) and see what the consequences for them were. Since some poor black man who steals $100 gets thrown in prison for years, one would assume these guys would have already been put to death by lethal injection. Nope – – they got paid hundreds of millions and went on their merry way.

Being Right is Overrated – In the end, when the likes of Steven Eisman and Michael Burry were shown to have been right all along, there was no celebration in their honor. Nobody held a ticker-tape parade. Even they, the victors, in spite of now being tremendously rich, felt the victory was somewhat hollow. We might collectively want to keep this in mind, since the victorious conclusion of a multi-year trade thesis might be more of a let-down than any of us imagine.

In spite of the cynical conclusions drawn from this book, I strongly recommend it as a thoroughly enjoyable read.

The Big Short

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I imagine most of you have heard of The Big Short by famed author Michael Lewis. It's been a best-seller for weeks.

One might assume that I would be standing in front of his publisher's office when the book came out to get the first copy, given the subject matter. Well, I was awfully interested, so a day or two after it came out, I went to Amazon to order it. I was surprised to see that there were many reviews, and almost all of them were one star (which is the worst). 

I thought – wow, Lewis finally has a stinker on his hands, after a series of best-sellers! What I didn't realize, since I didn't read the reviews, was that all those one-stars were simply people griping that the book wasn't on the Kindle! The nasty reviews had nothing to do with the content; the "reviewers" hadn't even read the book. They were simply frustrated that they couldn't download it, so they were venting. Not cool.

In any case, I bought a good old-fashioned made-from-trees book, and I'm absolutely loving it. I highly recommend it to Slopers, since it's as good as its best-selling status suggests. (I will also note that now the average rating is about three and a half stars, now that actual readers have had a chance to put in their two cents).

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