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Fear Of A ‘Black Swan’ Event Is Worse Than The Actual Event Itself, Study Shows

Originally posted on May 3, 2016 Are investors more frightened of freak market crashes than the reality of such crises? Sometimes fear of a freak, outlier event can be a lot worse than the event itself, at least when it comes to the markets. Most of us are aware of the now famous credit crisis book by Nassim Nicholas Taleb , “The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable.” The central thesis of the book is of course that black swans , or freak market events, are more common than we expect in life, and in particular, in complex systems such as economics. The credit crisis was, therefore, no great surprise, and such crises can be expected to occur in one form or another on a fairly regular basis. Well, that was Taleb’s thesis. But it was also a thesis written at the height of negative market sentiment. Subsequent serious academic work reported by Bloomberg by William Goetzmann, Dasol Kim and Robert Shiller looked at 26 years of survey data to test Taleb’s thesis. They found that people consistently expect things such as stock market crashes and earthquakes to happen more frequently than they really do. In other words, there may be black swans out there, but more important perhaps than their occurrence is our exaggerated fear of their occurrence. There are indeed periods of irrational exuberance when we forget about the possibility of black swans. But certainly since the credit crisis , it seems that there has indeed been an exaggerated angst that has gripped the global investing community. It is as if the crisis was sufficiently intense that it set off a type of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder among investors, leading to everyone seeing specters around every corner. This overarching sense of angst has had very significant effects since the credit crisis. Although there has been modest growth in gross domestic product in the United States ever since 2009, the recovery hasn’t felt like a recovery. We continue to suffer what economist Joseph Stiglitz calls the “great malaise,” a lack of those animal commercial spirits. Shiller himself sees this anxiety as driving this very low rate environment as most investors and banks keep the bulk of their assets in low-return fixed-income assets, which itself further lowers the yield on said assets. This has also driven excess regulation. No one can say that the credit crisis didn’t merit a significant re-think of various parts of the U.S. financial regulatory architecture. But it is now becoming equally clear that the Dodd-Frank Act was a behemoth of a piece of legislation, 848 pages long, most of it with half-baked concepts that were left to be developed over time by sub-legislation. Many now expect the very framework of large chunks of Dodd-Frank to require major re-engineering, given its excessively controlling and complex features. The idea, for example, of bank living wills was probably a non-starter from day one. The concept was that banks must put in place plans for their orderly wind down in the event of financial failure, ones that didn’t rely on government support. But this was immediately a bizarre exercise for all financial institutions because it involved making up totally theoretical failure scenarios, some concatenation of events that is unlikely to have any bearing on the actual features of any next crisis. After all how on Earth could we predict what that crisis will really entail? The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Federal Reserve made all the banks write their living wills twice, on the basis that they were too loosely drafted the first time, but more granularity here doesn’t solve the conceptual problem. The situations conceived are so hypothetical that these living will models are often the case of garbage in garbage out. In addition, for those institutions that matter – the systemically important financial institutions – living wills are a particularly absurd exercise because, by definition, these large financial institutions are simply not sustainable during periods of acute illiquidity without government support. It seems, in other words, that Dodd-Frank itself was premised on their being black swans everywhere. And the capital requirements it imposes on banks, the compliance burden, the business line restrictions and high levels of liquidity buffers all mean that banks simply haven’t been meeting much of even the legitimate credit demand in the United States. The result, of course, has been huge growth since the crisis of the shadow lending market, which is legitimate lending done by non-depositary institutions. The shadow lending market has gone through a total re-birth since the crisis, as multiple research papers demonstrate. There can be dangers of an excessively large non-bank lending sector, but again Dodd-Frank has embedded within it another mechanism for seeing black swans in this sector also. That is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau . The role of the CFPB in supposedly protecting borrowers from predatory lending is only just being defined now by the regulator. But there is already considerable confusion about the CFPB’s ambit, and, indeed, even a recent court hearing indicated that the bureau may be acting outside the scope of the Constitution. Meanwhile, the U.S. economy struggles to get above 2% GDP per annum, consumer inflation is negligible and growth is so anemic that the Fed’s attempt to raise short rates and normalize monetary policy is materially struggling. So it is back to Shiller and Stiglitz, just too much fear in the system to allow growth really to ignite. And so what does such economic neurosis really amount to? It isn’t necessarily the product of there being too many black swans but the product of an irrational belief that there may be too many black swans. And the big question then is when will it all end? When does the anxiety end, when is the neurosis cured and how? Disclosure: Jeremy Josse is the author of Dinosaur Derivatives and Other Trades , an alternative take on financial philosophy and theory (published by Wiley & Co). He is also a managing director and head of the financial institutions group at Sterne Agee CRT in New York. Josse is a visiting researcher in finance at Sy Syms business school in New York. The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author and don’t necessarily reflect the views of CRT Capital Group, its affiliates or its employees. Josse has no position in the stocks mentioned in this article.

Why You Should Invest In India ETFs Now

After rough trading so far this year, the Indian market is now showing rays of hope for investors. Worries over monsoon deficiency, the key cause of last year’s upheaval is unlikely to bother this year. Added to this, better-than-expected fiscal fourth-quarter earnings set the stage for India investing on fire lately (read: Fragile Five ETFs Not At All Fragile This Year? ). La Nina: Better Monsoon Expected This Year Last year, lower rains weighed on the all-important agricultural sector. But, the president of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) recently forecast India GDP growth of 8% for fiscal 2016-17 driven by the usual monsoon. The agency now expects the agricultural sector to expand at the rate of 6% this year. “That adds about 0.5-1% to GDP,” as per CII president. Even Deutsche Bank is supportive of this fact. India is going to face a La Nina event this year, which is the positive phase of the El Niño Southern Oscillation and results in cooler than average sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. It is often seen as the opposite of El Nino (read: 5 ETF Losers of 2015 Hoping for a Rebound in 2016 ). As per the research house , the Indian agricultural sector exhibits a solid correlation with La Nina with average annual rains being higher than the long-term average. The bank noted that agri GDP in La Nina years expanded at an average 7.8% year over year versus an average 2.3% jump seen in years without La Nina. Not only the agricultural sector, Deutsche Bank indicated that GDP, private consumption and investments growth average 8.9%, 7.4%, 10.4% respectively in La Nina years against average growth of 5.8%, 5.2%, 7.2% respectively in years with no La Nina. Earnings Recovery on the Horizon? Nearly 76 BSE 500 companies that came up with earnings releases recently give cues of an earnings recovery. As much as 64.5% of them beat consensus estimates for net profit while 63.2% surpassed the top line. Higher government spending and a rebound in commodity prices have boosted companies’ earnings, per analysts. Though it is too early to take a call over the whole Indian earnings, as of now the trend is positive. Monetary Policy Easing The Reserve Bank of India ( RBI ) lowered its key rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 6.50% on April 5, 2016, to bolster business in the economy. This was the first cut in 2016 followed by four rate cuts in 2015. The rate is now the lowest in over five years. Investors who put more emphasis on slowing GDP data for the U.S. economy for the October-December quarter (7.3% followed by 7.7% growth rate in the prior quarter), will now find some reason to invest in Asia’s third-largest economy. IMF Moderately Bullish The International Monetary Fund, which reduced global growth forecasts recently, maintained the same for India for this year at 7.5% . Steady private consumption is the reason for the organization’s optimism though softer exports and listless credit growth are deterrents to the economy. All these make the case for India investing stronger. While all India ETFs should stand to gain, below we highlight a few ETFs that have chances of outperforming ahead. i Shares S&P India Nifty Fifty Index ETF (NASDAQ: INDY ) The fund looks to track the performance of the top 50 companies by market capitalization in the Indian market. Banks is the top sector in the fund with about 23.2%. The fund has a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). EGShares India Infrastructure ETF (NYSEARCA: INXX ) Infrastructure stocks and the ETF should also get a boost from monetary easing. As this sector is debt-heavy in nature, a decline in interest rates will favor it. The fund has a Zacks Rank #2. WisdomTree India Earnings ETF (NYSEARCA: EPI ) The fund looks to follow the investment results of profitable companies in the Indian equity market. The fund has a Zacks Rank #2. EGShares India Consumer ETF (NYSEARCA: INCO ) As per the India Brand Equity Foundation , revenues of the consumer durables sector are expected to touch US$12.5 billion in fiscal 2016, up from US$ 9.7 billion in fiscal 2015. Since private consumption is pivotal in India, a look at this consumer ETF is warranted. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold). Link to the original post on Zacks.com

What Lies Ahead For M&A ETF?

Merger and acquisition (M&A) activities across a number of sectors were on a tear last year, with a record level of such activities. But the momentum for M&A – one of the major drivers of the stock market ascent in recent times – seems to be fading this year. At least, the numbers are giving such cues. The volume of global deals is $US822.2 billion ($1.1 trillion) so far this year, which represents a decline of 17% year over year (read: Merger & Acquisition ETFs: Will 2016 Replicate 2015? ). In addition to this data, there has been a surge of failed M&A deals lately. As per data provided by Dealogic , “US targeted withdrawn M&A volume is up 64% on full year 2015 ($231.1bn) to $378.2bn in 2016 YTD (as of May 4, 2016).” This is because several mega deals have been called off lately which took the size of U.S. oriented withdrawn M&A to a record level. Drugmaker Pfizer’s (NYSE: PFE ) decision to abandon its $160 billion deal to unite with Botox maker Allergan plc (NYSE: AGN ) due to the new Treasury guidance related to tax inversion is the largest called-off deal on record. The $103 billion deal between Honeywell International (NYSE: HON ) and United Technologies (NYSE: UTX ) is also out of action. There was also a proposed $38.7 billion merger deal between Halliburton (NYSE: HAL ) and Baker Hughes (NYSE: BHI ), which finally fell apart in April. As per Dealogic, with the termination of these likely deals, investment bankers were hard hit as they lost about $1.2 billion in possible investment fees. What’s Next? It looks like that the removal of mammoth deals in the U.S. actually inflated the size of withdrawn M&A data ($357.8 billion); the data speaks less about the diminishing number of activities. As per financial review, though there was a plunge in global M&A deal size, the number of announced transactions is 8,025 so far in 2016 versus 8,085 last year, indicating that the number has just moderated, and is far from completely losing momentum. The stringency in the U.S. tax inversion rule is less likely to put an end to cross-border deals. Yes, it could slow the momentum, but cannot stop them altogether (read: New Tax Inversions Rules: Threats to Healthcare ETFs? ) Another reason for the M&A slowdown is the underperformance of hedge funds in recent times. Notably, activists’ hedge funds play a huge role in companies’ merger and acquisition decisions. If the climate improves in this area, maybe M&A sector will receive a fresh lease of life. Also, being an election year, activities may remain slightly subdued in the U.S. Plus, the banking sector is facing stringent regulation and is also caught in a trap following energy sector issues. This is because banks have considerable exposure in the energy sector, which may default on persistent low oil prices. This scenario made the banks unsure of “how much leverage they should supply to private equity transactions, which has caused them to shy away from lending to PE-backed deals .” If the banking sector recovers in the near term, mergers and acquisitions may also perk up and investors could easily take advantage of the merger arbitrage strategy. This strategy looks to tap the price differential (or spread) between the stock price of the target company after the public announcement of its proposed acquisition and the price offered by the acquirer to pay for the stock of the target company. This is especially true given that investors should go long on the target or the acquired company and short on the acquiring company. When the deal is completed, shares of the target company will increase to the full deal price (in some cases slightly below the deal price), giving investors a nice profit. How to Play? Here are three merger arbitrage ETFs, any of which could make compelling options for investors seeking to play this area. These are the IQ Merger Arbitrage ETF (NYSEARCA: MNA ), the ProShares Merger ETF (BATS: MRGR ) and the Credit Suisse Merger Arbitrage Index ETN (NYSEARCA: CSMA ). Link to the original post on Zacks.com