The Coming Financial Time Bomb

Recs

23

"Never, ever, think about something else when you should be thinking about the power of incentives."
-- Charlie Munger

Maybe you've heard this popular myth:

A major cause of the financial crisis was boneheaded Wall Street compensation packages unaligned with shareholder interests.

Before I can tell you why that story is so misleading, please ask yourself this:

Am I an investor, or am I a speculator?
During his recent visit to Fool HQ, business legend John Bogle argued that this is the very first question you must ask yourself.

The distinction is simple but powerful: Investors buy shares of businesses and prosper over time as the company grows profits. Speculators, on the other hand, trade wiggles on a stock chart, hoping to sell shares at a higher price to other speculators within a few quarters.

Back to the myth
Sadly, shortsighted compensation plans and business strategies are aligned with the time horizons of the vast majority of shareholders. After all, at year-end 2007 (the most recent statistical set), some 80% of all shares were held by financial institutions. And the evidence shows that financial institutions are, by and large, speculators.

Given the explosion of mutual funds, 401(k)s, endowments, and the like, it makes sense that institutional ownership has steadily risen over the years. As institutional ownership has grown, however, the average holding period of stocks has shrunk:

Year

NYSE Turnover

Holding Period

2009 (year-to-date)

157%

8 months

2000

88%

14 months

1990

46%

26 months

1980

36%

33 months

1970

19%

63 months

1960

12%

100 months

Source: NYSE Group Factbook. Turnover = number of shares traded as a percentage of total shares outstanding.

It gets even worse when we look at the overall stock market, according to Bogle. Inclusive of exchange-traded funds, the overall market turned over at 284% in 2007. That means the average holding period for stocks and ETFs was four months!

OK, OK, but how does this speculative frenzy affect you?

Wall Street's very dirty secret
Simply put, when an institutional shareholder has a time horizon of four months, they should want management to pull out the stops right now to hit quarterly earnings targets. If they're not going to own the stock in five years, why would they concern themselves with the long-term effects of today's business decisions?

Consider the average holding period of these stocks in 2007 -- the year before the volatility-inducing financial meltdown:

Company

Holding Period

Bank of America

9.4 months

AIG

9.3 months

Citigroup

5.8 months

Morgan Stanley

5.0 months

Lehman Brothers

2.5 months

Sources: Yahoo! Finance; Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's; and author's calculations. Turnover calculated as total yearly volume divided by average shares outstanding.

One appalling example
From 2000 until the collapse of the firm, former Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld received approximately $350 million in total compensation. In part, he was rewarded for growing the company's earnings at an annual rate of 18% over that time frame ... except that those returns were produced using 30-to-1 leverage on top of a shoddy asset base.

Since it would only take a roughly 3% decline in the value of Lehman's assets to render the firm insolvent, it seems as if Lehman operated with temporary gains in mind, but no thoughtful strategy for how to avoid blowing up. And on Sept. 14, 2008, it did, in the largest bankruptcy ever.

The shock of Lehman's failure froze credit markets, caused huge derivatives losses, and set off bank runs around the world. In just one month, the TED spread shot up to an all-time high. AIG needed to be rescued by taxpayers because of the billions it lost because of Lehman's collapse.

The run on Washington Mutual, which began the day of Lehman's collapse, led to the largest bank failure in U.S. history in mere weeks. One Wells Fargo senior economist estimated the employment fallout from Lehman's bankruptcy at 2 million job losses. Now, even strong companies unrelated to the financial industry are suffering from the economic fallout of this crisis -- Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO), AT&T (NYSE: T), Freeport-McMoran (NYSE: FCX), and Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), for example, have been forced to announce layoffs.

No one disputes that the outrageous risks taken at Lehman Brothers and similar institutions have had terrible effects on our economy. But consider this: Despite Lehman's epic collapse, it's probable that most shareholders benefited from Lehman's more than 200% rise over eight years. Refer back to the chart above -- the average holding period of Lehman stocks was less than three months!

Frankly, this upsets me. And I can't blame you if it makes you mad, too. The fact that a majority of business owners' interests are unaligned with the health of their own businesses runs completely counter to the well-being of our economy and the basic tenets of capitalism.

If capitalism is going to work, this ridiculousness needs to change.

Here's my plan
One market-oriented mechanism would be a tax increase on speculation, combined with a tax decrease on investing. If it became less profitable for institutional shareholders to speculate on short-term price movements, and more profitable to invest for the long term, their holding periods might increase, and they'd likely care more about the financial health and compensation structures of the businesses they own.

This could take the form of a graduated 60% speculation tax on stocks and equity-based derivatives held for less than one year, which tapered down to, say, 5% after a few years.

I'm not the only investor who has thought of such a plan. Warren Buffett (perhaps facetiously) once suggested a 100% short-term capital gains tax, while John Bogle has advocated a 50% rate. Ex-American Express (NYSE: AXP) executive and former IBM (NYSE: IBM) CEO Louis Gerstner has suggested a similar plan.

As someone who feels the economic impact of this crisis, you should love a higher tax on speculators, because it would align institutional shareholders with the long-term health of the companies they own. That is a necessary step to preventing another financial time bomb. Without such a shift in incentives, they would have limited reason to demand responsible management, and a crisis like this one would be more likely happen again.

The silver lining ...
To be fair, not every corporation fits the Lehman mold. Berkshire Hathaway's shareholders are owners for more than 30 years on average; they must be happy with Warren Buffett's relatively meager compensation, large stock ownership, and long-term focus.

Nucor’s Daniel DiMicco, and Valero’s (NYSE: VLO) William Kleese have compensation structures that look much more like Buffett's than many of their CEO counterparts .

Just as we saw a number of disasters in the past year, I expect -- and history confirms -- that we will begin to see other companies benefit from their missteps. With stocks so cheap, making money now becomes a matter of examining every facet of a company -- including the competency of its management team, rewards and incentives, business strategy, and market environment.

These are just some of the factors we examine at Motley Fool Inside Value to identify the best bargains in this market. Click here if you're interested in reading more about our favorite stock ideas, free for the next 30 days.

Already a subscriber to Inside Value? Log in at the top of this page.

This article was originally published under the headline “Why You Should Love Higher Taxes” on April 17, 2009. It has been updated.

Ilan Moscovitz owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway, which, along with American Express and Intel, is an Inside Value pick. Berkshire is a Stock Advisor selection. The Fool owns shares of American Express and Berkshire. The Motley Fool is investors writing for investors.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On July 12, 2009, at 3:46 PM, tlspence wrote:

    Hello,

    I'm a nobody really, just a former factory worker now struggling to make ends meet. After spending almost 31 years on the floor of a major aluminum industry, I can see how this article applies and makes sense. It's all about making the short term buck. The housing market as well has suffered because of this 'turn over' mentality. This is why President Obama was elected to office, because the "Keepers of Capitalism" have failed to do their prospective job out of unfettered narcissism and self-interest. It boggles the mind to think of the burden which they should of shouldered and the triviality in which they have shown. Money is power and it's an outrage that those responsible couldn't see beyond their own nose. The greedy will come to rule the world, but just for a time. As Lincoln stated: "You can't fool all the people all the time.", and that time has come. Now if you'll excuse me, I have some tar boiling up on the barbecue to attend to. I don't have any meat but gratefully do have a lot of feathers.

  • Report this Comment On July 12, 2009, at 7:36 PM, daytraderwoman wrote:

    Here's the problem with Mr Mckcovitz's solution to the speculators. Todays stock market is not like the stock market of the old days. Numerous times I have bought stocks on upgrades and planning on holding them long term when some writer from Motley runs their stock down and the stock price falls like Boeing & Ford lately. Then I have to bail quick or loose. There is no security anymore in owning stocks long term. I found out the hard way holding GM

  • Report this Comment On July 12, 2009, at 8:20 PM, competentone wrote:

    Yea, that's right MORE taxes is the solution! LOL!

    Like giving more money to the exceedingly wasteful government is going to solve this economy's problems.

    If a person can speculate successfully and has capital gains from his speculation, the government taking those gains will NOT make the economy any more efficient.

    The REAL solution is to let those who fail at speculation actually FAIL.

    The multi-trillion dollar (counting the money the Federal Reserve has provided) bailout of the investment banks was nothing more than a bailout of the very speculators who created the mess.

    Let the speculators FAIL; let all the world see that virtually all the major investment banks were -- and STILL ARE -- NO DIFFERENT than Lehman Brothers. Expose them for what they are!

    When the corrupt have been exposed, the honest, proficient business people can then succeed.

    The current "bailout policy" rewards failure and penalizes the successful by making the successful pay for the losses the failures created.

    More taxes on the successful traders (short or long term) is nothing more than more destruction leveled against the free enterprise system.

  • Report this Comment On July 13, 2009, at 5:00 AM, Fool wrote:

    Well, tackling becomes a problem, best is have certin very strict holding period rules, min of 1 year.

  • Report this Comment On July 13, 2009, at 8:52 AM, dudemonkey wrote:

    >There is no security anymore in owning stocks long

    >term. I found out the hard way holding GM

    Are you 100% sure the problem is with the stock market?

  • Report this Comment On July 13, 2009, at 11:34 AM, ReadEmAnWeep wrote:

    "The REAL solution is to let those who fail at speculation actually FAIL.

    The multi-trillion dollar (counting the money the Federal Reserve has provided) bailout of the investment banks was nothing more than a bailout of the very speculators who created the mess.

    Let the speculators FAIL;"

    "The current "bailout policy" rewards failure and penalizes the successful by making the successful pay for the losses the failures created."

    Hear, hear!

    This is what capitalism is all about. The companies/people who fail, fail. If you bail them out you are indeed rewarding failure.

    Bailing out GM rewards bad management, promotes short sightedness and irresponsibility. This punishes better companies like F, who settled for fewer benefits for their employees and less growth for the company because they knew what they could afford.

    Even though I am a long term investor I actually hunger for dips in the market like we have seen.

    How else can we get amazing buys?

  • Report this Comment On July 14, 2009, at 7:58 PM, StockTrader12 wrote:

    Doesn't the Motley Fool make money from traders?

    You really want to eliminate traders with your goofy trader tax?

    60% tax?!?!

    Then you have the gaul to ask us traders to sign up for your $200 newsletter?

    You're trying to take our career away & then ask for money.

    You really are a fool.

    Does the Motley Fool management support this trader tax position?

    Write here in the comment section so we can all see the answer.

  • Report this Comment On July 15, 2009, at 11:52 AM, trade123 wrote:

    Traders provide liquidity and correct inefficiencies in price via (arbitrage) and other short term techniques. The are the other side of your sell order when the market is crashing and you need to sell.

    The NYSE has move away from the specialist system in favor of high frequency algo Market Makers. These liquidity providers (as well as other high frequency traders) make it possible for you and your mutual fund manager to buy or sell in a split second. Unlike illiquid markets (with fewer participants) like real estate. Ask anyone trying to sell a house, office building, land, how nice it would be to have a ready buyer willing to take the other side of the transaction in a spit seconds time........

    To thank them for this service that they provide you propose to tax them into oblivion.

    The negative unintended consequences are very obvious to anyone actively involved with the mechanics of the marketplace.

  • Report this Comment On July 15, 2009, at 12:22 PM, trade123 wrote:

    Try finding anyone from an exchange who would agree with this to quote instead of a handful of limousine liberal billionaires who made fortunes in the liquid, robust, equity markets that traders play such an important role.

    Show me one NYSE Member, Executive, Market Maker, Arbitrageur, or Floor Broker that agree with this tyranny tax ........... You will be hard pressed to find ANYONE involved in the day to day mechanics of keeping a fair and orderly marketplace and providing liquidity that would support your suggested tax.

  • Report this Comment On August 08, 2009, at 2:28 PM, TMFDiogenes wrote:

    Hey trade,

    To answer your first question, this proposal isn't an official position of TMF. It's just an idea some of us were discussing.

    Thanks for posting,

    Ilan

  • Report this Comment On August 08, 2009, at 3:35 PM, truthisntstupid wrote:

    If someone starts running your company down and "you have to sell quick or lose" ....WHY? Did the company have solid fundamentals? Was its payout ratio too high? Was it having to borrow or raise capital to pay its dividend? Why did you have to sell it if it was a good investment then it should be even a better investment at a lower price?? Why didn't you buy more? Do you hurry and get out every time you ever have paper losses? Paper losses are unrealized losses. Solid companies won't go to zero. Hang in there. Downturns are opportunities. You haven't lost anything unless you're forced to sell at a low point. You're paying too much attention to the bears and the pessimists and blowing a fantastic opportunity. I've sold nothing, and overall, I'm ahead. But then, I'm a dividend investor. Solid companies and utilities paying dividends are offering income for sale when they're down. I hate it when they're up. Maybe something some of you wannabe traders should consider...I have fun watching them go up....and I love it when they go down. Tod Wenning's article "Build A High Yield Portfolio" describes my attitude perfectly. I buy 'em to keep 'em. Before you judge that as stupid...look his article up. And quit worrying what the market's going to do next.

Add your comment.

Compare Brokers

TD AMERITRADE
more info
ShareBuilder
more info
Power E*Trade

more info
Scottrade
more info
Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 938689, ~/Articles/ArticleHandler.aspx, 12/1/2009 12:53:03 AM

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

The Must-Read Story on Fool.com
The Public Health-Care Plan's Problem

Related Tickers

11/30/2009 4:00 PM
INTC $19.20 Up +0.09 +0.47%
Intel Corp CAPS Rating: ****
FCX $82.80 Down -1.34 -1.59%
Freeport-McMoRan C… CAPS Rating: ****
AXP $41.83 Up +0.99 +2.42%
American Express C… CAPS Rating: ***
T $26.94 Down -0.05 -0.19%
AT&T, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
IBM $126.35 Up +0.65 +0.52%
International Busi… CAPS Rating: ****
CSCO $23.40 Up +0.02 +0.09%
Cisco Systems, Inc… CAPS Rating: ****
VLO $15.89 Down -0.11 -0.69%
Valero Energy Corp CAPS Rating: *****

Community: Investing Wiki

Term Of The Hour

Micro cap: A micro cap is a company with a very small market capitalization, generally between $50 million and $250 million.

Want to learn more or edit this definition?
Click here to read more!