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Financial Meltdown: Bad Luck - or Good?

Here’s a Chinese parable that I try to keep in mind.

  Chinese Word for Luck!Good Luck Bad Luck!

A farmer used an old horse to till his fields. One day, the horse escaped into the hills and when the farmer’s neighbors sympathized with the old man over his bad luck, the farmer replied, “Bad luck? Good luck? Who knows?”

A week later, the horse returned with a herd of horses from the hills and this time the neighbors congratulated the farmer on his good luck. His reply was, “Good luck? Bad luck? Who knows?”

Then, when the farmer’s son was attempting to tame one of the wild horses, he fell off its back and broke his leg. Everyone thought this very bad luck. Not the farmer, whose only reaction was, “Bad luck? Good luck? Who knows?”

Some weeks later, the army marched into the village and conscripted every able-bodied youth they found there. When they saw the farmer’s son with his broken leg, they let him off. Now was that good luck or bad luck?Who knows?

The fact that a bad event can turn out to be good and vice versa, is a useful perspective with which to view important moments in our lives, I think.  Most of us have experienced this truth.  For me, for example, there was a depressing time when I lost my job; soon afterwards an opportunity came my way resulted in my starting a company that lead to far greater rewards than I would have had in the job that I lost. 

There are good reasons why people simply accept what seems to be bad luck or good luck at face value.  For one, very often what seems like bad luck or good luck really is what it seems.  For another, it is hard to be philosophic in the face of a loss, especially a great loss.  And for a third, who wants to try to find a gloomy side to what appears to be good luck?  But I like to take the broader view of events when I can remember to do so because it can help get past the sadness of misfortune or avoid some foolishness that can result from experiencing some “good” luck.

What About Now?

It’s not immediately clear that the farmer’s story gives us a relevant perspective on this current financial meltdown as many of us contemplate substantial declines in our asset values.   Most people have very strong feelings that the gaining of wealth is a good thing and the loss of it is bad.  No Chinese parable is likely to convince us that it could be bad luck to gain a lot of wealth or good luck to lose it.

But consider this: I had a very good friend who came from modest circumstances, as we say, and who made a great deal of money in his 30’s.  Well, my friend let his wealth get the better of him somehow.  Unknown to anyone, perhaps even to himself, he apparently had an addictive personality.  His new wealth led him to several addictions and ultimately to his untimely death.  You’ve probably heard similar stories; it’s not all that uncommon. I guess if my friend  could have known what his future would hold before he embarked on his quest for wealth he might have decided that making so much money so quickly truly would be bad luck for him.

Or consider Thierry Magon de La Villehuchet, the co-founder of an investment management firm that funneled money to Bernard Madoff.  Unable to face his losses and/or those of his clients in Madoff’s scheme, he apparently killed himself.  I’d be surprised if he were the only person to do that before all this is all over.  Might Mr. Villehuchet have chosen a different, perhaps less lucrative career if he had known the full implications of what his financial success would bring to him?  I suspect he might well have said that the farmer’s story had relevance to his life.  

Losing wealth is not a reason to rejoice but I do think there are some good reasons to welcome this bear market if we consider the larger picture of our society.

The End of Cheap Money: Good Luck or Bad?

In 1982, The New York Times Sunday Magazine ran a cover story on Paul Volker, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank.  The point of the story was that Volker was declaring victory over the inflation epidemic of the 1970’s.  Having raised short term interest rates to about 20%, Volker was saying he was through with high rates, that rates should come down now because there would be no more out-of-control inflation. 

What followed almost from the moment of that article was 26 years of nearly steady reduction of interest rates all the way down to 1% under Mr. Greenspan and now to zero in the face of our current problem, a potential deflation.  Lower interest rates are almost always good for equity investments.  Thus, the period 1982 - 2008 will mark one of the longest periods of abnormally high investment returns in the history of investing because for nearly the entire time the wind of lower interest rates was at the back of equity investors. 

But the wealth-creating machine of lower interest rates was corrupted during the most recent part of this trend, 2002 - 2008, by the addition of unregulated and misunderstood leverage - - from LBO’s to CDO’s to MBS’s and so on. I would argue that the end of this period in our history should not be seen necessarily as bad luck.    

In some ways it seems to me that our society has become like my addictive friend.  Social values have been distorted by great wealth that has accentuated a variety of societal addictions.  Though not unique to this time in history, money has increasingly influenced politicians who have granted legal opportunities to their supporters to make more money in ways that have turned out to be toxic to the system and have now led to its partial collapse.  

So, for example, Mr. Schumer stops the congress from reforming the clearly unfair favorable tax treatment given to private equity compensation (which is taxed at only 15% as a capital gain); the private equity folks heap debt on the balance sheets of companies, most of which were previously healthy; that debt eventually becomes untenable loans on the books of greedy bankers; the banks then must be bailed out by taxpayers in order to save the economy from the ruin that a failed banking system would cause.  All a function of excessive greed - a value system gone awry.  

And then we have the personal costs, beyond wealth. The promise of much fast money has led many of the most talented young people to forego life paths like medicine or science or teaching or research or public service in favor of investment banking or “quantitative” investing.  One reason some do it is that the costs of education and houses rose so high that many new college graduates could hardly hope to pay off their college loans or own a home unless they chose a highly lucrative field of work.  Thus both greed and the inflated costs of high-end living have pushed talented youths to pursue fields in which they learn nothing beyond how to make money out of money, producing very little if anything useful in the process. 

Perhaps a serious economic downturn is exactly what America needs to regain a healthy work ethic that includes the idea that the rewards of work are in large part the work itself.  It would have been better for us if the financial crash had come sooner because the damage would have been less. 

Looking Forward

And here is something else to consider.  Eventually the economy and the markets will recover.  We don’t know if that will come in 2009 or in 2015 or some other time.  Personally, I think it will come whenever it becomes clear that deflation is not dominating the economy, just as the last bull market started when it became clear that inflation was not dominating the economy.  The personal finances of those who are able to manage their funds to coincide with the next bull market - and not the dangerous false rallies that draw more money into a bear trend - will do quite well.

So: is the financial crisis we have entered into a good thing or a bad thing?   I would argue that we might not want to try to answer that question quite yet. 

 

 

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12 responses so far ↓

  • 1 eddel // Dec 28, 2008 at 9:01 pm

    If only the future was as easy to know as the past! Your viewpoints are well taken regarding the excesses that have greatly damaged our society and economy.
    Confucius say? In every calamity there are the seeds of opportunity.
    What to do now with money? Leaving it in money markets funds is a loser, but may be better than a losing stock. I believe there are many good sound companies whose bonds and preferred stocks will pay me to wait until I can see clearer where the market is headed, possibly in 6-18 months.

  • 2 Karol // Dec 29, 2008 at 3:51 am

    Clearly it is a good thing to step into the water of the financial crisis sooner then later. Hot or cold maybe even shallow or deep what will we learn? We already know that the water is not clean.

    As Energy Investors we may see this event slowing down the decline of oil in terms of several years. It may give time for other sources to develop which will further the slow down of oil. Hence, it’s looking better already. That is to say it is already looking better depending on where you place your next’s bet.

  • 3 Barry // Dec 29, 2008 at 4:26 am

    To Jim:You must be sick of hearing from me.The reality is that the fed.is creating money beyond anything in history.Obama will spend trillions to stimulate the economy.It will work and faster then you think.The next problem is going to be an inflationary boom that will drive all real assets to the moon.By the time you realize what is happening you will have missed a big part of the move.Now is the time to get invested when oil stocks are cheap.Bernake and Obama are ringing the bell.They will spend whatever it takes to prevent defation.I hear the bell ringing loud and clear.Look at the oil service stocks,they are so cheap that I don’t know which to buy first.Good luck

  • 4 robert essian // Dec 29, 2008 at 4:40 am

    “Bad Luck-Good Luck” did indeed effect me as I read your post. My sympathies to all who have family tragities because of the times we live in.

    My parents always told us (13 children) that our responsibilities were to provide food, clothing and shelter. Everything else is excess. That excess should be used to plan for a rainy day. Beyond that, share. In addition they taught us a work ethic because something always needed to be done.

    So to conclude if the accumulation of excess wealth is your motivation then surely somewhere, someone, will suffer. It is better to give than to receive…

  • 5 KV // Dec 29, 2008 at 6:38 am

    The Chinese parable is for a fatalist, not for me.

    Every dark cloud has a silver lining is more appropriate. The silver lining is that a new administration is coming…

    Just like oil, steel, copper, we are in a correction phase on retail prices. Not long ago, apples were 59~79 cents a pound, today they are crossing over two dollars a pound. It requires most have to earn at least $3 for a pound of apple. At a minimum wage of $10, it is nearly 20 minutes of bagging groceries. So, price deflation is necessary. I hope the wage deflation is less than price deflation.

    Much of the money that Feds has digitally printed, has been absorbed digitally to prop up the balance sheets of banks, and never will be in circulation. As of now, there is no inflationary pressure, even with old wars flaring up.

    Here is my thesis: Republicans wanted to break the back of the middle class since Nixon’s time, beginning with dollar decoupling from gold. (for history buffs, Cheney, Rumsfeld, et. al. go back to that time, and little Bush was the tool they needed.)

    They have nearly succeeded, but the long term results are not in yet: poverty is returning to the world at a fast pace, Chinese are going back to villages to grow mustard greens. As poverty grows, the freedom loses. In a republic, there are only two classes: haves and have nots.

    A hungry poor man or woman will do anything for an apple. To avoid this nightmare, I will take inflation, deflation, whatever works.

  • 6 Menachem // Dec 29, 2008 at 9:24 am

    Jim,

    Great article! As an orthodox Jew this really hit a chord with me. We believe that G-d’s hand is always guiding things at the world and often what appears to bad at the time, when looked at from a broader perspective, is really for an ultimate good.

  • 7 Isaac // Dec 29, 2008 at 10:06 am

    This article strikes a chord with me. I have found myself over the past 6 months pondering the fact that in many ways a sharp decline in the global industrial sector is a two edged sword. One edge is a tragedy for those who are overleveraged, or work in an overleveraged industries. The other edge is the a positive one, positive for the all the forests that aren’t getting cut down, all the wetlands that aren’t getting paved, etc.
    We are in the midst of the fourth mass global extinction in the planets long history.
    How do we have a healthy economy without steamrolling nature to death.? We must remember that despite our attempts to deny it, we are infact animals that are part of nature. How do we have an economy that is healthy, without destroying our own source of sustainance? Menacham, I am also a Jew, and I must say that there are different ideas among Jewish people than the one you explain- and one prominent such idea is that we humans have free will, and are solely responsible for our acts (good or bad). Humans do good(God) things, and horrific things, and our challenge is to be fully conscious.
    Respectfully, Isaac

  • 8 Paul // Dec 29, 2008 at 8:35 pm

    >> Good Luck Bad Luck!
    thats a great parable. I have asthma. Good luck or bad luck? Well, at least I won’t be drafted into the army.

  • 9 Karol // Dec 30, 2008 at 12:13 am

    Hi Jim,

    I see that you are adding more news/information for us readers to previous articles you have written. That’s very nice. I’m wondering how far back you are going to go when you do this. It could be a bad luck good luck thing if I miss one or two.

    Thanks in advance

  • 10 Karol // Dec 30, 2008 at 2:13 am

    Golden Oil!

    good vs bad investment

    Gold doesn’t go away in the way oil gets burned. Yet they are both limited here on earth.

  • 11 Menachem // Dec 31, 2008 at 8:17 am

    Issac,

    Actually orthodox Judaism also believes that man has free will and totally responsible for his actions.

    It’s one of the most difficult philosophical issues to understand how G-d can be involved in the world and at the same time allow us free will.

    Still haven’t figured it out, but always trying… :)

  • 12 Isaac // Dec 31, 2008 at 8:35 pm

    Thanks Menacham.

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