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Showing newest posts with label finance. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label finance. Show older posts

Monday, March 3, 2008

What about the Spanish mortgage situation?

These days, every other page in the financial media spells gloom and doom for the American housing market. Many banks and credit institutions are knee-deep in the mud of high delinquency and default rates within their mortgage portfolios. The mess is strongly compounded by the fact that American banks have heavily relied on the use of securitization. Thus, the risk of all those mortgages was distributed widely to many institutions (including, significantly, many important European banks). This situation was in large measure made possible by the credit ratings that the main credit rating agencies assigned to these RMBS (Residential Mortgage-Based Securities) and CDOs (Collateralized Debt Obligations). While the prices of homes in America kept going up everything was fine; but when the market turned down, default rates and delinquency soared and those fancy and complicated credit securities that were supposed to be super-safe, started defaulting. This is a very basic and rudimentary summary of the American mortgage crisis. The situation is akin to a sausage factory where you make sausage with every part of the animal but some great and solemn-sounding auditor (paid by you) states that what comes out of your factory is actually filet-mignon.

But the question I want to address is, what about Spain? Why isn't something (remotely) similar happening here? Well, there are a few important differences. Most of those American (and European) banks that I've refered to in the previous paragraph used something called SIVs (Special Investment Vehicles) to offload massive amounts of mortgage paper out of their balances. This strategy allowed them to elude stringent reserve requirements as defined under the Basel I capital adequacy agreement. As this Financial Times article reveals, Spanish banks tried to start doing that a while ago but the Spanish Central Bank demanded that they put an 8% reserve against those SIVs. This made the business completely unattractive for the banks. In addition to that, Spanish banks have been much more conservative, nah, scratch that... much more diligent than their American counterparts in their lending practices. Consequently, the default rates in the Spanish mortgage market are nowhere near the levels of the American market. Now, as Felix Salmon states here, the situation might be quite different if the housing market goes down significantly and many Spanish homeowners start feeling the pain of negative equity.

I don't want it to seem as if securitization is something alien to the Spanish banking sector: It's been used, and used significantly. But it's been done in a much more sensible way than in other parts of the world. Read this great and detailed explanation by Francisco Torralba at EconWeekly.

As everyone that knows me can attest, I don't spare criticism for Spain, its economic situation and immature financial markets. But in this case, one can only compliment the robustness of the Spanish banking sector and, above that, the very high quality of banking regulation that the Bank of Spain has developed in the last years. Somewhere in a bland Washington D.C. office, Mr. Caruana is smiling discreetly. And the Basel II agreement (in whose development he had a pivotal role) can't arrive too soon to help avoid the over-use and abuse of SIV's and the perverse incentives that they entail.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Investing for the long term

This is a topic that will be frequently addressed here. I'm very interested in investing, not in playing games with the market. My admired Megan McArdle calls stock-picking and fund-picking "a very expensive hobby". Financial markets are generally very efficient and most of the existing information about any stock is already priced-in. That does not mean that it is impossible to beat the market. It's just terribly difficult. Warren Buffett famously said about the EMH:
I'd be a bum on the street with a tin cup if the markets were always efficient.

The professors who taught Efficient Market Theory said that someone throwing darts at the stock tables could select stock portfolio having prospects just as good as one selected by the brightest, most hard-working securities analyst. Observing correctly that the market was frequently efficient, they went on to conclude incorrectly that it was always efficient.

So, what's one to do? Should you try to cherry-pick a few very promising (for you, anyway) stocks and high-fee mutual funds? The answer, in my humble opinion is no. The important thing here is what Mr. Buffett actually compares: he mentions someone who is the brightest most hard-working securities analyst. Do you think he's talking about you and me? Security analysis and equity valuation require very hard work and long hours of study. Being really smart doesn't hurt either.

Mr. Buffett himself has repeatedly recommended low cost index funds as the best investment alternative for most of the people who don't have the time, the skills or the talent to perform market-beating analysis. Every now and then a study comes out pointing the ridiculously low percentage of professional money managers that consistently beat the markets (before fees!).

Here we reach a point were a few country-specific differences start to matter. Most of the investment advice you can find on the internet is specific for American investors, those lucky yanks, who have access to an incredibly broad and competitive market of financial products. When you talk about low cost index funds, for an American investor you're talking of TERs around 0.3% or lower (Vanguard Funds come to mind). Try to find that in Spain! The cheapest index funds that I've found available in Spain (from INGDirect) charge a whopping 0.99%. Taking into account the power of compounding, over a long time that difference makes for a big chunk of money (that you won't have). Besides, a portfolio of 50 (admitedly very important) companies like an EuroStoxx50 index fund has, is not what I would call buying the market. So for us poor Spaniards, the available index funds are few and expensive. Yikes.

Usually, in advanced and mature markets, there's an even cheaper (Vanguard's VTI has an expense ratio of 0.07%) alternative to index funds: ETFs. ETFs provide an easy way of diversifying a portfolio and gaining exposure to different markets, sectors and regions. But. You have to keep in mind an ETF trades like any other stock and that means that you'll need a broker. In Spain brokers are very expensive compared with the available alternatives in other countries. You have to pay, for example, something called "custody fees" (comisión de custodia), i.e. a percentage of the value of the stocks you purchased with your broker that you pay anually (or quarterly or even monthly). That's in addition to the buy/sale fees.

All this means that even taking the ETF route it is almost impossible to stay below the 1% level of expenses.

The good news: after a long time searching, I've found a broker that doesn't charge that custody fee and has a very rich offer of ETFs (INGDirect doesn't charge that fee either, but you can't purchase ETFs with them). SaxoBank is a Danish bank with an office in Marbella. The buy/sell fees are normal (for Spain) and you can check the available ETF's here (you may need to select the all regions option).

(Full disclosure: I don't receive any kind of commission from any of the companies mentioned in this post. I'm not even a customer of SaxoBank. Yet)

MBA TV

If you are interested in learning about finance and business management, you could do worse than checking the resources offered by the Financial Times website. I'd like to point out these video series from New York University Stern School of Business.

If you want to get a grasp of trading dynamics without risking hard money, playing in prediction markets can be a cool alternative . You'll learn and have fun at the same time. InTrade is, of course, the big player in this field. They have a licensing agreement with the Financial Times, which offers a prediction market platform: FT Predict.