##{"id":59413,"date":"2012-01-27T11:58:32","date_gmt":"2012-01-27T00:58:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.fnarena.com\/index.php\/2012\/01\/27\/living-off-immoral-earnings\/"},"modified":"2012-01-27T11:58:32","modified_gmt":"2012-01-27T00:58:32","slug":"living-off-immoral-earnings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/2012\/01\/27\/living-off-immoral-earnings\/","title":{"rendered":"Living Off Immoral Earnings"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n\tBy Tim Price<\/p>\n<p>\n\t&quot;The reality.. is that banks.. support a thick layer of second tier executives, as well as legions of pen-pushing, meeting-loving, middle- and back-office workers who are paid multiples of their worth and contribution, especially compared with other industries.&quot;<br \/>\n\t&#8211; Financial Times? <span>Lex<\/span> column, January 19th, 2012.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t&quot;Stephen [Hester, CEO of <span>RBS<\/span>] is being urged by a number of people to accept the bonus and I think he will&quot;.. This person [an unnamed senior banker] added that if [Hester] turned down his bonus, it would &quot;<span>demoralise<\/span>&quot; staff members and would send a signal that they now effectively &quot;worked for an arm of the civil service or a utility, rather than for a bank.&quot;<br \/>\n\t&#8211; Unnamed banker, playing the world&#039;s smallest violin on behalf of Stephen Hester.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tErik <span>Schatzker<\/span> (Bloomberg News): &quot;$1.6 billion in compensation [at Goldman Sachs] is still a lot of money.&quot;<br \/>\n\t<span>Nassim<\/span> <span>Taleb<\/span>: &quot;Anything above zero is too much money.&quot;<br \/>\n\tErik <span>Schatzker<\/span>: &quot;Why zero ?&quot;<br \/>\n\t<span>Nassim<\/span> <span>Taleb<\/span>: &quot;Because it is a utility. Anything you bail out, you should not be earning more than a civil servant of corresponding rank. Period.&quot;<br \/>\n\t&#8211; <span>Nassim<\/span> <span>Taleb<\/span> on Bloomberg News, Oct 18th, 2011.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t<img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fnarena.com\/ckfinder\/userfiles\/images\/Cartoon_Living off immoral earnings.jpg\" style=\"width: 305px;height: 427px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>\n\tWith thanks to The Daily Telegraph.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tContender for leading meme of our time is the idea, fast becoming conventional wisdom, that capitalism is somehow experiencing a crisis. UK Prime Minister David Cameron (or his <span>speechwriter<\/span>) suggested last week that it is now the time to use the &quot;crisis of capitalism to improve markets, not undermine them.&quot; If we draw a straight line back in time from the current financial crisis to the dawn of the same crisis, few would dispute that it was, and is, banks carrying the smoking gun. It was banks that made questionable loans to flaky borrowers &ndash; sovereign as well as individual &ndash; and it is banks that required extraordinary levels of involuntary taxpayer support to keep them &quot;in business&quot;, that is to say, keep their senior executives in the manner to which they have become accustomed.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tUnfortunately, in saving the banks from themselves, sovereign governments have now largely destroyed their own balance sheets. There is not, and never was, a free or fair market for banks. A free market would have allowed insolvent banks to fail. A free market, for that matter, would have no need of a central bank dictating monetary policy: the genius of the market is that it is perfectly capable of pricing money and interest rates in the same way it makes a price, every day, without fail, for the value of Tesco <span>plc<\/span>, crude oil or wheat. If the Prime Minister were capable of framing the problem correctly, he would have said that it was now the time to use the &quot;crisis of <span>statism<\/span> to introduce markets&quot;. Instead, career politicians in the coalition, with no practical experience of any world other than the political, have been busily urging the rest of Britain to become &quot;a John Lewis economy&quot; of motivated employee shareholders. As Martin Vander <span>Weyer<\/span> asked archly in &#039;The Spectator&#039;, &quot;Have you wondered why there&#039;s only one John Lewis Partnership, Mr Clegg ?&quot; But then <span>criticising<\/span> the Lib <span>Dems<\/span> (official financial policy: join the euro zone) for economic confusion is like <span>criticising<\/span> David <span>Blunkett<\/span> for being blind.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tHaving said that, the &#039;sex-tips-from-virgins&#039; unsolicited economic advice from Mr Clegg did inadvertently stumble upon a broader truth about the financial crisis: in large part, it does come down to ownership. Example. The two largest Swiss banks, UBS and Credit Suisse, have not exactly covered themselves with glory during the financial crisis. They&#039;ve covered themselves with something, but it doesn&#039;t smell like glory. Credit Suisse stock between the start of 2007 and the end of 2011 has delivered a total return to shareholders of some minus 70%. UBS stock over the same period has done even worse: a total return of minus 82.6% (and that includes dividends). By their very nature it&#039;s difficult to comment about how genuinely private Swiss banks have performed during the crisis, but since they&#039;re not beholden to a widely diversified (read: essentially powerless) shareholder base, they can concentrate on customer service rather than on filling their boots and extracting value from shareholders. And as hedge fund manager Kyle Bass has pointed out, having unlimited liability as a partner in such a bank gives those employees a particular interest in ensuring that they don&#039;t entertain reckless <span>malinvestments<\/span>. For this reason alone, private banking groups have a higher likelihood of outliving their publicly listed competitors.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe phrase &#039;market failure&#039; also crops up in David <span>Swensen&#039;s<\/span> guide for individual investors, &#039;Unconventional success&#039;. The title is an allusion to Keynes&#039; famous observation that fund managers, courtesy of endemic <span>groupthink<\/span>, tend to prefer (and to deliver) conventional failure over unconventional success. <span>Swensen<\/span> himself is famous for steering the Yale endowment through many years of impressive investment returns. He uses &#039;market failure&#039; in the context of a managed fund industry that involves the<br \/>\n\t&quot;interaction between sophisticated, profit-seeking providers of financial services and naive, return-seeking consumers of investment products. The drive for profits by Wall Street and the mutual fund industry overwhelms the concept of fiduciary responsibility, leading to an all too predictable outcome: except in an inconsequential number of cases where individuals succeed through unusual skill or unreliable luck, the powerful financial services industry exploits vulnerable individual investors.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>\n\tTo <span>Swensen<\/span>,<\/p>\n<p>\n\t&quot;The ownership structure of a fund management company plays a role in determining the likelihood of investor success. Mutual fund investors face the greatest challenge with investment management companies that provide returns to public shareholders or that funnel profits to a corporate parent &ndash; situations that place the conflict between profit generation and fiduciary responsibility in high relief. When a funds management subsidiary reports to a <span>multiline<\/span> financial services company, the scope for abuse of investor capital broadens dramatically. In contrast, private for-profit investment management organizations enjoy the option of playing the role of a benevolent capitalist, mitigating the drive for profits with concern for investor returns.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe financial crisis of 2007- ..? has taken the role of giant <span>vampiric<\/span> money-squids masquerading as investment banks to new levels of surrealism quite beyond the realm of satire. Not content with ripping the faces off clients, banks &#8211; not limited in the scope of their operations to pure investment banking &#8211; have now shown themselves quite adept at ripping the faces off taxpayers too. If deficit exists, it is not in free market terms, because as we have seen, no such free market exists. The deficit is a political and regulatory one.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tIn &#039;The Puritan Gift&#039;, the Hopper brothers identify the proximate cause for the crisis as<\/p>\n<p>\n\t&quot;an excess of borrowing by government, businesses and individuals.. Increasingly, reckless lending and borrowing &ndash; two sides of the same coin &ndash; have characterized most aspects of American society for the last thirty years..<\/p>\n<p>\n\t&quot;This abuse of credit across the whole of society coincided with, and could not have occurred without, a deterioration in corporate culture occurring in the last third of the twentieth century. In the Golden Age of Management (1920 &ndash; 1970), executives had learned the craft of management &#039;on the job&#039; from more senior colleagues. As they progressed up the ladder of promotion, they would also absorb &#039;domain knowledge&#039; about the activity for which they were responsible &ndash; to borrow a term <span>favoured<\/span> by Jeff <span>Immelt<\/span>, chairman and chief executive of General Electric. Starting in the late <span>1960s<\/span>, however, a new concept appeared on the corporate scene: that management was a profession like medicine, dentistry or the law, which people were &#039;licensed&#039; to <span>practise<\/span> at the highest level if they had studied the subject in an academic setting. Business school graduates and accountants set the pattern of <span>behaviour<\/span>; others would follow in their footsteps. In 2001 a &#039;professional&#039; manager entered the Oval Office of the White House to take charge of the nation.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>\n\tWhether considering the managers of listed businesses or the managers of discretionary funds, investors should be well served by identifying those conforming to a moral as opposed to a purely self-interested approach. Decent moral <span>behaviour<\/span> is to a degree subjective, but as Justice Potter Stewart famously said of pornography, we know it when we see it. Reforming banking sector pay will only be the start of an overdue cleansing of the <span>Augean<\/span> stables. When banks compete properly for business and run the risk of genuine failure in so doing, the market will be on its way to being fixed. But as things stand, banks in collusion with central banks are distorting the term structure of debt markets (and through inflationism, all other asset markets too) and giving investors a delusional sense of safety with regard to sovereign bonds. Both financial signals and financial <span>signalling<\/span> are all wrong. When monetary policy rates and supposedly market-led interest rates are as low as they currently are (5 year US Treasuries yield less than 1% and 5 year <span>Gilts<\/span> barely that), it is not a sign of confidence, <span>Messrs<\/span> Cameron and Osborne, but a reflection of absolute terror on the part of the crippled banks that have been buying them in preference to any form of more constructive lending. Again, this is not a crisis of capitalism, but of state-controlled capital.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tTim Price<br \/>\n\tDirector of Investment<br \/>\n\t<span>PFP<\/span> Wealth Management<br \/>\n\t24th January 2012.<br \/>\n\tEmail: tim.price@pfpg.co.uk Twitter: <span>timfprice<\/span><br \/>\n\t<span>Weblog<\/span>: http:\/\/thepriceofeverything.typepad.com Group homepage: http:\/\/www.pfpg.co.uk<br \/>\n\tBloomberg homepage: <span>PFPG<\/span> <\/p>\n<p>\n\tAll views expressed are the author&#039;s, not <span>FNArena&#039;s<\/span> (see our disclaimer).<\/p>\n<p>\n\t<strong>Important Note:<\/strong><br \/>\n\t<em><span>PFP<\/span> has made this document available for your general information. You are encouraged to seek advice before acting on the information, either from your usual adviser or ourselves. We have taken all reasonable steps to ensure the content is correct at the time of publication, but may have condensed the source material. Any views expressed or interpretations given are those of the author. Please note that <span>PFP<\/span> is not responsible for the contents or reliability of any websites or blogs and linking to them should not be considered as an endorsement of any kind. We have no control over the availability of linked pages. &copy; <span>PFP<\/span> Group &#8211; no part of this document may be reproduced without the express permission of <span>PFP<\/span>. <span>PFP<\/span> Wealth Management is <span>authorised<\/span> and regulated by the Financial Services Authority, registered number 473710.Ref 1004\/12\/JD 240112<\/em><\/p>\n<p>\n\t<strong>Technical limitations<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n\t<strong><span style=\"font-style: italic\">If you are reading this story through a third party distribution channel and you cannot see charts included<\/span>, <em>we <span><span>apologise<\/span><\/span>, but technical limitations are to blame.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>\n\t<em>Find out why <span>FNArena<\/span> subscribers like the service so much: &quot;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.fnarena.com\/index4.cfm?type=dsp_newsitem&amp;n=29EB960D-9DFF-C00E-7F6B464E5D52E250\">Your Feedback (Thank You)<\/a>&quot; &#8211; Warning this story contains unashamedly positive feedback on the service provided.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>PFP Wealth&#8217;s Tim Price denies there&#8217;s a crisis for capitalism, but there is one for state controlled capitalism, he believes.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[90,91],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/59413"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=59413"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/59413\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=59413"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=59413"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/staging.fnarena.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=59413"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}