Friday, December 12, 2008

NPR on Japan and Cars

Someone from NPR called me this morning. She asked my opinion about why the Japanese stock market had dipped when the auto bailout did not happen. Intuition would indicate that the Japanese car companies would be better off because of less competition.

I told her there were two major reasons for the Japanese stock market's dip.

1. The Japanese yen's strength. Yesterday, the American dollar dipped about 2.5% against almost all other major currencies (FXC, FXF, FXE). Basically, America's citizens lost about 2% of their international purchasing power overnight. This is major news, but you wouldn't know it from the lack of media attention. (Quite frankly, pictures of Weimar-Republic-branded wheelbarrows carrying the American dollar should be on the front page of every major newspaper.)

The Japanese yen is strong in part because Japan has a high savings rate and is the world's second largest economy; however, in a perverse result, Japan's high savings rate works against them because they export so many products to the United States, where our currency is becoming weaker. Basically, Japanese products are going to be too expensive for Americans, so Americans will either buy fewer Japanese cars, CDs, and Nintendos, or the Japanese will have to reduce their prices. Either action will cause lower profits for Japanese companies, which is one reason the Nikkei declined by over 5%.

2. A chain reaction disrupting the global auto market. Car companies are more connected than you might think. A GM bankruptcy impacts a wide array of other companies, like steel manufacturers, chipmakers, etc. Companies that had the Big Three as primary customers would have to lay off workers and stop hiring, which puts less money in the hands of potential car buyers worldwide.

Also, in addition to joint ventures, such as NUMMI, car companies buy materials from the same suppliers. If one supplier, let's say Delphi, loses a major customer like GM, their cash flow is reduced, and they may need to lay off workers, delaying projects, new orders, and even existing orders, further disrupting the auto market.

Globalization means more and more companies, especially large ones, are interconnected. This has advantages and disadvantages. One major disadvantage is that if one large company is reckless, it creates problems for numerous smaller companies. Delphi still exists, but has been in Ch 11 bankruptcy since October 2005. Delphi's bankruptcy filing was probably the writing on the wall for the Big Three.

3. I also said any value left in GM, Chrysler, and Ford was in their finance arms. In plain sight, American car companies became subprime banks. They were practically giving away their products in exchange for a stream of steady cash payments, with interest. All those 0% financing commercials? That's the equivalent of a "no money down," ARM home mortgage, but on a smaller scale. Car loan interest is where the Big Three receive a large chunk of their income, because margins on non-SUV autos have been consistently declining. Like the banks, GM and Ford took on too many subprime borrowers and overestimated expected income streams. The result is now all too predictable.

Washington Lawyer on Free Trade

I am currently licensed as an attorney in both California and Washington, D.C. It's not as impressive as it sounds--there are procedures for mutual cooperation between the two bar associations, so you can waive into D.C. if you meet certain criteria. The D.C. bar publishes a magazine called Washington Lawyer. This month's cover feature a story on free trade, by Sarah Kellogg:

http://www.dcbar.org/for_lawyers/resources/publications/washington_lawyer/december_2008/free_trade.cfm

While the majority of Americans favor trade, that majority has been shrinking. Fifty-three percent of Americans had a positive view of free trade in 2008, according to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, a public opinion survey of the Pew Research Center. That’s down from 59 percent last year and 78 percent in 2002. What’s shocking in the numbers is that the United States ranked last among developed nations in terms of public support for free trade. The next closest nation was Egypt at 57 percent.

Trade’s financial benefits and costs are constantly being debated, but there’s no denying exports play an important role in the U.S. economy. In 2007 exported goods and services accounted for 12 percent of the Gross Domestic Product. One of three U.S. acres is planted for export, and manufacturing exports have increased by 128 percent since the last multilateral- trade round more than a decade ago, according to the Office of the United States Trade Representative.

Wall Street to Reid: Cool Down

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was featured on every news channel last night, talking about how Wall Street would collapse this morning because the Senate rejected the auto bailout.

Well, the stock market was steady early this morning, and the Nasdaq was actually up around 8:00AM.

The White House just said it might step in to assist the car-makers, causing the market to move higher:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081212/ap_on_go_co/meltdown_autos

Goshdarn it, if there's one thing Americans should know by know, it's that whenever George W. Bush gets involved, efficiency, financial stability, and prosperity follow. Right? Right?

Michael Malone in the Santa Clara Magazine

My alma mater's publication, the Santa Clara Magazine, continues to impress. This month's issue had a great essay by Michael Malone, who believes America's future depends on its continued willingness to encourage entrepreneurs:

http://www.scu.edu/scm/winter2008/entrepreneurs.cfm

Half of all new college graduates now believe that self-employment is more secure than a full-time job. Eighty percent of the colleges and universities in the United States now offer courses on entrepreneurship. Sixty percent of Gen Y business owners consider themselves to be serial entrepreneurs. And, most tellingly, 18- to 24-year-olds are now starting companies at a faster rate than 35- to 44-year-olds.

Don’t think that the rest of Generation Y is still dreaming of a gold watch: 70 percent of today’s high schoolers intend to start their own companies.

It looks like the new college grads aren't buying into the seniority paradigm. That's what I like about Santa Clara County--with all the new people here from so many different places, corporate seniority is less respected. Results, not tenure, are what count, which is the way a meritocracy ought to work.

Of course, I had to pick the one profession, law, where seniority does count. Sigh.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Where does America get its oil?

If you think America gets most of its oil from Saudi Arabia or the Middle East, you are wrong. ExxonMobil ran an ad in yesterday's WSJ (12/10/08, A10-11) showing the sources of America's oil imports:

55% = North American (includes Canada, Mexico)
16% = Africa
14% = Middle East
12% = South America (includes Venezuela)

The remaining 3% comes from Russia/Caspian, Europe, and Asia-Pacific (includes Indonesia).

Last time I checked, the top three suppliers of American oil were Canada, Mexico, and Venezuela.

Scott Burns on Social Security

Scott Burns on Social Security--skip the first question and go to the second one:

http://assetbuilder.com/blogs/scott_burns/archive/2008/12/10/what-others-are-doing-with-their-401-k-money.aspx

I didn't know how the Social Security system really worked until I read Mr. Burn's response to the second question.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

The Poor, Poor American Dollar

I have a treat for my readers--The Atlantic's (December 2008, p. 62) interview with Gao Xiqing, who oversees and invests $200 billion of China's $2 trillion U.S. dollar holdings. This interview is one of the best ones I've ever read because of the government official's openness:

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200812/fallows-chinese-banker

Below are my favorite two parts from the interview, one about the American dollar, and the other about derivatives:

Everyone is saying, “Oh, look, the dollar is getting stronger!” [As it was when we spoke.] I say, that’s really temporary. It’s simply because a lot of people need to cash in, they need U.S. dollars in order to pay back their creditors. But after a short while, the dollar may be going down again. I’d like to bet on that!

I have been converting my dollars into Canadian dollars recently. I already have euros (FXE) and some Swiss francs (FXF). We'll see in a year whether my decision was the right one. I felt compelled to diversify my U.S. dollar holdings, because they were earning around 1% in interest, while competing currencies had much higher interest rates and the possibility of greater upside.

As for derivatives, here is what Mr. Gao had to say:

If you look at every one of these [derivative] products, they make sense. But in aggregate, they are bullsh*t. They are crap. They serve to cheat people.

Mr. Gao explains derivatives by comparing them to multiple mirror reflections of one actual product. It's such a perfect analogy, I'm surprised no mainstream American publication has mentioned it until now.

Kudos to The Atlantic and Mr. Fallows for publishing this interview.