Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Friday, August 24, 2012
Commodity over view
Overall, technically on the selling side at higher levels might be recommended on the global investors sentiment and clearly watching lack of action from the Euro Zone Leaders (Greece, Germany & France Meeting).
Base metals complex may continue limited gains and hence selling might be recommended from higher side levels.
Base metals complex may continue limited gains and hence selling might be recommended from higher side levels.
Friday, August 3, 2012
A Week of full surprises: be careful
Monday
For a change, Monday has a rather bleak economic data docket and investors can actually focus on fundamentals and earnings. More than 600 companies are expected to report earnings through Thursday of next week and volatility could come from those names reporting as guidance on Europe could give further clarity into the state of the economy.
Tuesday
Investors will awake Tuesday morning to the Royal Bank of Australia's interest-rate decision, when Governor Glenn Stevens is expected to keep rates on hold at 3.5%. He may give guidance into the state of the world economy and may also comment on Europe, as Australia is exposed to that region through exports of raw materials. Later Tuesday, Italy will be in the spotlight with both industrial-production data for July and Q2 GDP on tap. Also, German factory orders will be a key number to watch for insight into the state of the German economy.
Wednesday
German and Spanish industrial production mark the early data calendar Wednesday, as Spain will once again be thrust into the spotlight. Its bonds will surely react to every data point released. Also, Chinese inflation data is due out late Wednesday night alongside Australian unemployment. Strength in Chinese inflation could indicate that the global economy -- at least global trade -- could be bottoming or even re-accelerating.
Thursday And Friday
Thursday brings more data on China as industrial production data is due and comments on the state of the European economy as it pertains to China and Chinese exports. Friday also brings more European data, with German inflation data and French industrial production due out.
Surely next week should bring further clarity on the state of Europe's economy, and these data points may help investors better understand the state of the European economy as a whole.
For a change, Monday has a rather bleak economic data docket and investors can actually focus on fundamentals and earnings. More than 600 companies are expected to report earnings through Thursday of next week and volatility could come from those names reporting as guidance on Europe could give further clarity into the state of the economy.
Tuesday
Investors will awake Tuesday morning to the Royal Bank of Australia's interest-rate decision, when Governor Glenn Stevens is expected to keep rates on hold at 3.5%. He may give guidance into the state of the world economy and may also comment on Europe, as Australia is exposed to that region through exports of raw materials. Later Tuesday, Italy will be in the spotlight with both industrial-production data for July and Q2 GDP on tap. Also, German factory orders will be a key number to watch for insight into the state of the German economy.
Wednesday
German and Spanish industrial production mark the early data calendar Wednesday, as Spain will once again be thrust into the spotlight. Its bonds will surely react to every data point released. Also, Chinese inflation data is due out late Wednesday night alongside Australian unemployment. Strength in Chinese inflation could indicate that the global economy -- at least global trade -- could be bottoming or even re-accelerating.
Thursday And Friday
Thursday brings more data on China as industrial production data is due and comments on the state of the European economy as it pertains to China and Chinese exports. Friday also brings more European data, with German inflation data and French industrial production due out.
Surely next week should bring further clarity on the state of Europe's economy, and these data points may help investors better understand the state of the European economy as a whole.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Nickel view
Nickel view
921.90 R3
908.40 R2
896.30 R1
892
previous close
890.30 S1
876.60 S2
870.70 S3
If nickel breaks R1 and trades above 908 it will pull to 921 and 947 levels again.
Less downside risk and up target seems easy.
Buy& Hold
Copper View
Copper previous close 422.55
R1 422.70 R2 424.70 R3 430.3
S1 420.50 S2 419.35 S3 418.75
If copper moves above 424 today it may see a high of 427/430
Short term buy with a target of 430
R1 422.70 R2 424.70 R3 430.3
S1 420.50 S2 419.35 S3 418.75
If copper moves above 424 today it may see a high of 427/430
Short term buy with a target of 430
Crude view
Crude looks for an upward movement.
Morning view will be buying at these levels 4921 around with a stoploss of 4896 for a target of 4965 /4995/5025
Below 4896 it looks weak and may lead to 4871/4803 which is 2 week low.
Any raise above 5025/5029 will lead to 5033/5078 which is week high.
Buy and Hold
Morning view will be buying at these levels 4921 around with a stoploss of 4896 for a target of 4965 /4995/5025
Below 4896 it looks weak and may lead to 4871/4803 which is 2 week low.
Any raise above 5025/5029 will lead to 5033/5078 which is week high.
Buy and Hold
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Short term positional
TO BUY GOLD TARGETS 29800
SILVER TARGETS 53750
COPPER TARGETS 429
LEAD TARGETS 105.50
CRUDE TARGETS 4800
SILVER TARGETS 53750
COPPER TARGETS 429
LEAD TARGETS 105.50
CRUDE TARGETS 4800
Gold Intraday call for 11 jul
Buy Gold Aug series Above 29510 sl 29490 t29610 / 29747
Sell Gold Aug series below 29460 sl 29470 t2929360 / 2929211
Sell Gold Aug series below 29460 sl 29470 t2929360 / 2929211
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Natural gas futures - Weekly outlook: July 9 - 13
Natural gas prices came under heavy selling pressure on Friday, as forecasts showing moderating temperatures following a recent heat wave prompted market players to lock in gains from a rally that took prices to the highest level since January.
Concerns over reduced power demand from utilities and power generators also helped fuel the sell-off.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, natural gas futures for delivery in August settled at USD2.787 per million British thermal units by close of trade on Friday. Earlier in the day, prices hit USD3.023, the highest since January 10.
On the week, the front-month natural gas contract declined 1.25%, the first weekly drop in four weeks.
A recent bout of hot weather across much of the country over the last several weeks helped boost natural gas prices. Spot prices have rallied nearly 25% in the past three weeks, as extreme heat conditions in the U.S. mid-Atlantic boosted demand for the fuel.
But futures plunged almost 5.5% Friday after updated weather forecasts showed moderating temperatures across most part of the country in the coming week.
Industry weather group MDA Federal said that it expected mostly seasonal temperatures across much of the central U.S. and Northeast for the period of July 11 through 15.
Weather service provider AccuWeather said that the high in Chicago on July 11 may be 81 degrees Fahrenheit (27 Celsius), four degrees below normal.
Below normal summer temperatures reduce the need for gas-fired electricity to power air conditioning, weighing on demand for natural gas.
Gas prices surged earlier in the session, shooting above the USD3.00-level for the first time since January after a report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed U.S. gas supplies rose less-than-expected last week.
The supply data came out a day later than usual due to the Fourth of July holiday.
The U.S. EIA said that natural gas storage in the U.S. rose by 39 billion cubic feet last week, below market expectations for an increase of 44 billion cubic feet.
Inventories rose by 90 billion cubic feet in the same week a year earlier, while the five-year average change for the week is an increase of 79 billion cubic feet, according to U.S. Energy Department data.
Total U.S. gas supplies stood at 3.102 trillion cubic feet last week, 24.1% above last year's level and 22.7% above the five-year average level for that week.
U.S. gas inventories did not hit the milestone 3 trillion cubic feet level until August 31 of last year.
Market analysts have warned that without strong demand through the rest of the summer, gas inventories will reach the limits of available capacity later this year.
The storage surplus to last year will have to be cut by at least another 400 billion cubic feet in the 19 weeks left before winter withdrawals begin to avoid breaching the government's 4.1 trillion cubic feet estimate of total capacity.
Prices also faced strong resistance once they broke above the USD3.00-mark, a level widely considered to be where gas loses its appeal over coal for power generation.
Speculation that utility providers in the U.S. were switching from pricier coal to cheaper natural gas helped boost prices off a 10-year low of USD1.902 hit in mid-April.
Natural gas prices are up nearly 35% since touching a decade-low on April 20.
Elsewhere in the energy complex, light sweet crude oil futures for August delivery traded at USD84.06 a barrel by close of trade on Friday, slumping 0.57% on the week.
Heating oil for August delivery eased up a modest 0.2% over the week to settle at USD2.706 per gallon by close of trade Friday.
Concerns over reduced power demand from utilities and power generators also helped fuel the sell-off.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, natural gas futures for delivery in August settled at USD2.787 per million British thermal units by close of trade on Friday. Earlier in the day, prices hit USD3.023, the highest since January 10.
On the week, the front-month natural gas contract declined 1.25%, the first weekly drop in four weeks.
A recent bout of hot weather across much of the country over the last several weeks helped boost natural gas prices. Spot prices have rallied nearly 25% in the past three weeks, as extreme heat conditions in the U.S. mid-Atlantic boosted demand for the fuel.
But futures plunged almost 5.5% Friday after updated weather forecasts showed moderating temperatures across most part of the country in the coming week.
Industry weather group MDA Federal said that it expected mostly seasonal temperatures across much of the central U.S. and Northeast for the period of July 11 through 15.
Weather service provider AccuWeather said that the high in Chicago on July 11 may be 81 degrees Fahrenheit (27 Celsius), four degrees below normal.
Below normal summer temperatures reduce the need for gas-fired electricity to power air conditioning, weighing on demand for natural gas.
Gas prices surged earlier in the session, shooting above the USD3.00-level for the first time since January after a report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showed U.S. gas supplies rose less-than-expected last week.
The supply data came out a day later than usual due to the Fourth of July holiday.
The U.S. EIA said that natural gas storage in the U.S. rose by 39 billion cubic feet last week, below market expectations for an increase of 44 billion cubic feet.
Inventories rose by 90 billion cubic feet in the same week a year earlier, while the five-year average change for the week is an increase of 79 billion cubic feet, according to U.S. Energy Department data.
Total U.S. gas supplies stood at 3.102 trillion cubic feet last week, 24.1% above last year's level and 22.7% above the five-year average level for that week.
U.S. gas inventories did not hit the milestone 3 trillion cubic feet level until August 31 of last year.
Market analysts have warned that without strong demand through the rest of the summer, gas inventories will reach the limits of available capacity later this year.
The storage surplus to last year will have to be cut by at least another 400 billion cubic feet in the 19 weeks left before winter withdrawals begin to avoid breaching the government's 4.1 trillion cubic feet estimate of total capacity.
Prices also faced strong resistance once they broke above the USD3.00-mark, a level widely considered to be where gas loses its appeal over coal for power generation.
Speculation that utility providers in the U.S. were switching from pricier coal to cheaper natural gas helped boost prices off a 10-year low of USD1.902 hit in mid-April.
Natural gas prices are up nearly 35% since touching a decade-low on April 20.
Elsewhere in the energy complex, light sweet crude oil futures for August delivery traded at USD84.06 a barrel by close of trade on Friday, slumping 0.57% on the week.
Heating oil for August delivery eased up a modest 0.2% over the week to settle at USD2.706 per gallon by close of trade Friday.
Crude oil futures - Weekly outlook: July 9 - 13
Crude oil prices fell sharply on Friday, as a disappointing U.S. jobs report added to concerns over the health of the global economy while a broadly stronger U.S. dollar further weighed.
Investors also continued to monitor developments surrounding an oil strike in Norway, the world’s eighth-largest exporter.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light sweet crude futures for delivery in August settled at USD84.06 a barrel by close of trade on Friday. Earlier in the day, prices hit USD84.03 a barrel, the lowest since July 3.
For the week, oil declined 0.57%, the eighth weekly loss in the past ten.
Oil futures tumbled more than 3% on Friday after the Bureau of Labor Statistics said that the U.S. economy added 80,000 jobs in June, below market expectations for a gain of around 90,000.
April figures were revised to 68,000 from 77,000 jobs, while May's numbers were revised to 77,000 from 69,000.
The report also showed that the U.S. unemployment rate held steady at 8.2% in June, in line with expectations.
Oil traders have long been taking cues from the monthly jobs report, the most-closely followed indicator of U.S. employment, because it offers insight into the economic health of the world's biggest crude oil consumer.
The disappointing data prompted investors to shun riskier assets, such as stocks and commodities, and flock to traditional safe haven assets like the U.S. dollar.
The euro sank to the lowest level since July 2010 against the dollar, while the dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of six other major currencies, rose to 83.47, gaining 2% on the week.
Oil prices typically weaken when the U.S. currency strengthens as the dollar-priced commodity becomes more expensive for holders of other currencies.
Meanwhile, investors continued to monitor developments in the euro zone, amid sustained fears over the region’s debt crisis.
Spanish 10-year yields settled the week at 6.95% on Friday, reversing the decline made in wake of last week’s European Union summit and re-approaching the critical 7%-level deemed as unsustainable in the long-term.
On Thursday, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said that the region’s economic outlook faces downside risks, adding that indicators for the second quarter point to weakening growth in the euro zone.
Draghi refused to speculate, however, on the chances of a third round of Long Term Refinancing Operations, which provides cheap loans to European banks to encourage them to lend.
The comments came after the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low 0.75% in July, in a bid to bolster faltering growth in the region.
There are worries that the region’s worsening sovereign debt crisis could trigger a broader economic slowdown that would curb demand for oil.
A series of stimulus measures by world central banks further underlined fears over weaker global growth prospects.
In addition to the ECB rate cut, Bank of England policymakers voted Thursday to increase the size of its quantitative easing program by GBP50 billion to GBP375 billion, in order to shield the recession hit U.K. economy from the ongoing debt crisis in the euro zone.
The bank also left the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.5%, where it’s stood since March 2009, in a widely expected move.
Elsewhere, China surprised traders by cutting interest rates for the second time in less than a month, signaling that growth is slowing more than Beijing expected.
Energy prices were well-supported earlier in the week, with crude prices hitting a five-week high of 88.97 a barrel on Thursday as concerns over a disruption to supplies from Norway boosted prices higher.
Norway is the world's eighth largest oil exporter.
Oil prices also drew support from escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the West.
Media outlets in Tehran reported earlier in the week that Iran had successfully tested medium-range missiles capable of hitting Israel in response to threats of military action against the country.
In addition, Iran's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee drafted a bill proposing to block the Strait of Hormuz for oil tankers in response to a European Union oil embargo on imports from Iran, which started on July 1.
The Strait of Hormuz, located between Iran and Oman, is one of the most important oil-shipping channels in the world, handling about 33% of all ocean-borne traded oil, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
U.S. oil prices hit a high of USD110.53 on March 1, at a time when tensions over Iran's nuclear program were running high.
Elsewhere, on the ICE Futures Exchange, Brent oil futures for August delivery settled at USD97.83 a barrel by close of trade on Friday. Prices hit USD102.33 a barrel on Thursday, the lowest since June 7.
The Brent contract rose by a modest 0.44% over the week, while the spread between the Brent and the crude contracts stood at USD13.77 a barrel by close of trade Friday.
Brent prices have been well-supported in recent sessions amid concerns over a disruption to supplies from Norway, but prices retreated Friday amid expectations an oil strike in the country will soon end.
Norway's Minister of Labor Hanne Bjurstrom urged the oil companies and union representatives to continue talks over the weekend.
In the week ahead, investors will be closely watching ECB President Draghi’s testimony before the European Parliament, on Monday, as well as a two-day meeting of euro zone finance ministers, amid expectations for a final agreement on aid for Spanish banks.
Markets will also be eyeing the minutes of the Fed’s latest policy meeting as well as U.S. data on trade balance and unemployment claims.
source: http://www.forexpros.com/news/commodities-news/crude-oil-futures---weekly-outlook:-july-9---13-235683
Investors also continued to monitor developments surrounding an oil strike in Norway, the world’s eighth-largest exporter.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light sweet crude futures for delivery in August settled at USD84.06 a barrel by close of trade on Friday. Earlier in the day, prices hit USD84.03 a barrel, the lowest since July 3.
For the week, oil declined 0.57%, the eighth weekly loss in the past ten.
Oil futures tumbled more than 3% on Friday after the Bureau of Labor Statistics said that the U.S. economy added 80,000 jobs in June, below market expectations for a gain of around 90,000.
April figures were revised to 68,000 from 77,000 jobs, while May's numbers were revised to 77,000 from 69,000.
The report also showed that the U.S. unemployment rate held steady at 8.2% in June, in line with expectations.
Oil traders have long been taking cues from the monthly jobs report, the most-closely followed indicator of U.S. employment, because it offers insight into the economic health of the world's biggest crude oil consumer.
The disappointing data prompted investors to shun riskier assets, such as stocks and commodities, and flock to traditional safe haven assets like the U.S. dollar.
The euro sank to the lowest level since July 2010 against the dollar, while the dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of six other major currencies, rose to 83.47, gaining 2% on the week.
Oil prices typically weaken when the U.S. currency strengthens as the dollar-priced commodity becomes more expensive for holders of other currencies.
Meanwhile, investors continued to monitor developments in the euro zone, amid sustained fears over the region’s debt crisis.
Spanish 10-year yields settled the week at 6.95% on Friday, reversing the decline made in wake of last week’s European Union summit and re-approaching the critical 7%-level deemed as unsustainable in the long-term.
On Thursday, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said that the region’s economic outlook faces downside risks, adding that indicators for the second quarter point to weakening growth in the euro zone.
Draghi refused to speculate, however, on the chances of a third round of Long Term Refinancing Operations, which provides cheap loans to European banks to encourage them to lend.
The comments came after the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low 0.75% in July, in a bid to bolster faltering growth in the region.
There are worries that the region’s worsening sovereign debt crisis could trigger a broader economic slowdown that would curb demand for oil.
A series of stimulus measures by world central banks further underlined fears over weaker global growth prospects.
In addition to the ECB rate cut, Bank of England policymakers voted Thursday to increase the size of its quantitative easing program by GBP50 billion to GBP375 billion, in order to shield the recession hit U.K. economy from the ongoing debt crisis in the euro zone.
The bank also left the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.5%, where it’s stood since March 2009, in a widely expected move.
Elsewhere, China surprised traders by cutting interest rates for the second time in less than a month, signaling that growth is slowing more than Beijing expected.
Energy prices were well-supported earlier in the week, with crude prices hitting a five-week high of 88.97 a barrel on Thursday as concerns over a disruption to supplies from Norway boosted prices higher.
Norway is the world's eighth largest oil exporter.
Oil prices also drew support from escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and the West.
Media outlets in Tehran reported earlier in the week that Iran had successfully tested medium-range missiles capable of hitting Israel in response to threats of military action against the country.
In addition, Iran's National Security and Foreign Policy Committee drafted a bill proposing to block the Strait of Hormuz for oil tankers in response to a European Union oil embargo on imports from Iran, which started on July 1.
The Strait of Hormuz, located between Iran and Oman, is one of the most important oil-shipping channels in the world, handling about 33% of all ocean-borne traded oil, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
U.S. oil prices hit a high of USD110.53 on March 1, at a time when tensions over Iran's nuclear program were running high.
Elsewhere, on the ICE Futures Exchange, Brent oil futures for August delivery settled at USD97.83 a barrel by close of trade on Friday. Prices hit USD102.33 a barrel on Thursday, the lowest since June 7.
The Brent contract rose by a modest 0.44% over the week, while the spread between the Brent and the crude contracts stood at USD13.77 a barrel by close of trade Friday.
Brent prices have been well-supported in recent sessions amid concerns over a disruption to supplies from Norway, but prices retreated Friday amid expectations an oil strike in the country will soon end.
Norway's Minister of Labor Hanne Bjurstrom urged the oil companies and union representatives to continue talks over the weekend.
In the week ahead, investors will be closely watching ECB President Draghi’s testimony before the European Parliament, on Monday, as well as a two-day meeting of euro zone finance ministers, amid expectations for a final agreement on aid for Spanish banks.
Markets will also be eyeing the minutes of the Fed’s latest policy meeting as well as U.S. data on trade balance and unemployment claims.
source: http://www.forexpros.com/news/commodities-news/crude-oil-futures---weekly-outlook:-july-9---13-235683
Monday, July 2, 2012
Strategic Trading Methods and Expectations
Strategy
|
Description
|
Risk / Return Ratio
|
Expected Monthly Returns
|
Intraday Algo Strategy
|
Trades are initiated at predetermined formula based levels. It aims at consistency and disciplined approach towards trading.
|
1:2 (risk ratio)
|
2 to 4 %
|
Pair Trade Strategy
|
Stock/Index
futures are bought/sold simultaneously to create a pair where in the
objective is to cash upon the differential gains on a weekly basis.
|
1:3 (risk ratio)
|
3 to 5 %
|
Basket Trade Strategy
|
This
strategy can be used positional/intraday where in a group of stocks
containing long/short positions are traded simultaneously.
|
1:3 (risk ratio)
|
2 to 4 %
|
Option Trade Strategy
|
Multiple Strike option positions are created to maximize gains as well as maintain safety.
|
1:3 (risk ratio)
|
4 to 6 %
|
Momentum Trades
|
Intraday/Positional stock/index based trades aimed at "High-Risk & High Gain" based on technical study and momentum.
|
1:2 (risk ratio)
|
2 to 4 %
|
How does one select a duration fund ?
How does one select a duration fund ?
How does one select a duration fund ? well that
also depends on what duration are the investments intended for . How
short is “short” What are the key features of a short duration fund and
how does it compare over a long duration fund
To
begin with, lets understand what types of duration strategies one could
deploy. While there could be several, 3 main strategies are accrual
strategy, dynamically/actively managed strategy,
and traditionally managed with some combination of both (accrual and
active)
Accrual Strategy
:
Here the focus is clearly focusing on increasing / maintaining the
accrual on the portfolio. The idea is to enjoy
the carry return of the portfolio over the intended investment horizon.
Capital gains, thru adding duration while is not the primary objective
of such strategy, some gains maybe inevitable due to the roll down
effect of the yield curve and / or MTM impact.
Here, the fund manager may look to add some liquidity risk, by taking
some higher yielding less liquid assets. This would help in overall
enhancing the carry of the portfolio
From
the Kotak product bouquet, Kotak Income Opportunities (erstwhile Kotak
Credit Opportunities) follows this kind of strategy. The current
duration of the fund is at 1.9yrs, with a gross portfolio
yield of 10.25%. The fund tries to identify assets with high yield, at
the same time not diluting the credit of the portfolio. This fund does
NOT intend to take high credit risk to build up the portfolio yield.
Income Opportunities implies investment in assets
which could offering some attractive spreads relative to other asset
classes. For instance even investments in CD at spread of just 10 bps
under a similar maturity NBFC paper is an investment opportunity for
this fund. Likewise investing in a manufacturing
sector at 100 bps over a CD is also a potent opportunity. This fund has
and exit load of 15m as we focus on accrual assets in the 12-24 m
bucket. Ideal for investors looking to earn some carry on their fixed
income portfolio as also get some interest rate
exposure. Gsec exposure is usually Nil or around 5-7% of the portfolio.
Traditionally managed strategy :
Here the focus is on creating a portfolio of quality corporate bonds of
varying maturities, typically
in the 1-3yr band. Gsecs also form a part of the portfolio at times,
but more as a tactical call and not usually part of the core strategy.
Gsecs tend to add or reduce duration for such type of funds. Our Kotak
Bond short term would fall under this category.
Here the average maturity, given the current market scenario is likely
to be under 3yrs, and gsec usually doesn’t exceed 15% of the portfolio.
The core portfolio largely comprises corporate bonds. This kind of a
strategy plays a dual role of duration cum accrual
by virtue of its portfolio construct – while at the same time currently
does not intend to have excessive interest rate exposure
Actively/ Dynamically managed strategy :
Here again
several strategies could be pursued. One could churn the entire
portfolio in line with the view moving from 0% invested to 100% invested
– a truly dynamic fund management strategy. The
other variant could be that one could actively manage a certain
component of the portfolio while keep the core portfolio intact. Kotak
Bond / Kotak gilt fund would come under this category. In case of Kotak
Bond, the gilt proportion currently varies in the
band of 25-30% on the lower side to 50-60% on the higher side. In the
current market conditions, we feel this kind of portfolio management
style is likely play out well as against complete churn on the
portfolio. The rest of the portfolio continues to be invested
in corporate bonds. Thus the duration is added or reduced predominantly
through increase/ decrease in the gilt component – in line with the
view of the fund manager. Gilt is also managed in a similar manner,
where the invested portion varies from 60% to 90%
depending on the market view and existing market conditions
Do strategies really matter ?
Interest
rates move across various cycles, in response to growth in the system
as also various other macro variables. It is an arduous task to execute
every view through a single strategy. Hence
there is a clear need to differentiate strategies based on view, risk
appetite and intended investment horizons. Gsec market is the most
liquid market available in India today, hence most fund mangers tend to
use that as a potent tool to add/ reduce duration
in fixed income. Corporate bonds trade at some spread over the
sovereign curve, and hence are the derivatives of the gsec market.
Usually therefore, one does not tend to do significant churns in this
segment, unless there is a significant change in view
We
believe most fund management styles are centered around either of the 3
above within the duration space, and hence one needs to understand the
risk reward trade off before investing in any
of such funds
Interesting
times in the fixed income market, where markets are caught in midst of
slowing economic growth on one hand, and sticky inflation on the other
side. We feel this could be an opportune
time for investors to increase exposure to fixed income as an asset
class with benign / stable interest rate expectations going forward.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Is testosterone the new drug of choice on Wall Street?
Is testosterone the new drug of choice on Wall Street? How traders are using male hormone booster shots to maintain a competitive edge
The male hormone testosterone has become an unlikely drug of choice for Wall Street traders seeking to give themselves an edge over their professional rivals.
New York clinics have reported a rise in treatment for 'testosterone deficiency', sometimes known as 'andropause'.
They say many workers in the male-dominated industry are hoping that boosters of the hormone will help them perform better at work and put in longer hours.
Upper West Side osteopath Lionel Bissoon, who now specialises in 'integrative medicine', says he first noticed demand for testosterone replacement therapy when the financial crisis hit
He told the Financial Times: 'Since the recession started, more guys want to be on top of their game.'
High demand: New York doctor Lionel Bissoon says 90 per cent of his patients work in finance
'All of these men are under tons of stress, and stress will reduce their levels of testosterone,' he said.
'As one patient told me: "There’s a whole bunch of whizz-kids beneath me who are ready to take my place."'
One patient, a 40-year-old venture capitalist who goes only by the name John, told the paper that his lack of drive and lethargy was initially diagnosed as depression. A consultation with Dr Bissoon, however, revealed that his problem was actually a testosterone deficiency.
John says: 'Wall Street is a play hard, work hard environment. I now have a bit more of an alpha male personality, and I’m able to get by on less sleep.
'It's the positive side of aggression. You change your mentality and start looking positively at the future.'
ABOUT TESTOSTERONE AND HYPOGONADISM
The male hormone testosterone is produced by the testicles.
Hypogonadism is the medical term for a deficiency, and symptoms may include low libido, fatigue, muscle-loss and hair-loss.
Many other indications, such as poor sleep, depression and difficulty concentrating are more vague, and making it relatively difficult to diagnose, according to the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) can be administered through the skin, as a patch or gel, or as an injection.
It is no longer prescribed orally in the U.S. because the hormone was rendered inactive by the liver. It was also found to cause liver damage.
TRT is considered controversial because some physicians believe too much of the hormone poses an increased risk of prostate cancer in some patients.
Hypogonadism is the medical term for a deficiency, and symptoms may include low libido, fatigue, muscle-loss and hair-loss.
Many other indications, such as poor sleep, depression and difficulty concentrating are more vague, and making it relatively difficult to diagnose, according to the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) can be administered through the skin, as a patch or gel, or as an injection.
It is no longer prescribed orally in the U.S. because the hormone was rendered inactive by the liver. It was also found to cause liver damage.
TRT is considered controversial because some physicians believe too much of the hormone poses an increased risk of prostate cancer in some patients.
He is not the first to cash in on this new demand. A company called Cenegenics, which has long offered male hormone treatment at its 20 clinics around the U.S., is to open an outpost near Wall Street next month.
But those who choose to have the treatment will need a Wall Street salary to afford it.
Initial fees can be around $4,000 as patients are given thorough tests - prior to treatment - that will alert doctors to risk factors like heart disease and a variety of different cancers.
Such tests would also reveal if a man had too-high levels of the female hormone oestrogen, one of the reasons they might be suffering from andropause symptoms like low energy, drive, concentration levels and libido.
Dr Bissoon says he is even treating some women for testosterone deficiency, though, he admits, they are given far lower doses in order to prevent the onset of typically masculine traits like excess facial hair.
Testosterone and high finance do not mix: so bring on the women
Testosterone and high finance do not mix: so bring on the women
Gender inequality has been an issue in the City for years, but now the new science of 'neuroeconomics' is proving the point beyond doubt: hormonally-driven young men should not be left alone in charge of our finances.
For the past few weeks I've had two books by my bed, both of
which offer a first draft of what history may well judge the most
significant event of our times: the 2008 financial crash. Read together,
they are about as close as we might come to a closing chapter of The
Rise and Fall of the American Empire. As literature, one of them – the
final report of the Financial Crisis
Inquiry Commission of the US Treasury – doesn't always make for easy
reading: there are far too many nameless villains for a start. And,
quite pointedly, there is not a heroine in sight. Reading the report I
became preoccupied by, among other things – the fairy steps from
millions to billions to trillions, say – the overwhelming maleness of
the world described. The words "she", "woman" or "her" do not appear
once in its 662 pages. It is a book, like most historical tragedies,
written about the follies and hubris of men.
The other book, an entirely compulsive companion volume, is Michael Lewis's best-selling The Big Short, which Google Earths you into the crisis. Rather than looking at a global picture, it lets you into the bedrooms and boardrooms of the individual corporate men who catastrophically lost billions of dollars and, on the other side of those bets, the extraordinary ragtag of obsessive individuals who saw what was coming and made eye-watering fortunes. It gives the crash a human face, and once again that face is universally male.
The books are linked by more than subject matter, though. Lewis, a one-time bond trader himself – he left, 20-odd years ago, in incredulity and disgust to write his insider's account, Liar's Poker – gave evidence to the Crisis Inquiry Commission over the course of its 18-month sitting. In the end, however, he refused to sign off the report; and not only did he refuse to sign it, he also refused to put his name to the dissenters' addenda to the report, which three of the committee insisted upon. And not only that, he did not add his name to that of the single individual who insisted on a further addendum stating that he dissented from the dissenters' view. Lewis was not a fan of the report.
The reason for this was simple, he suggested. He felt that the committee, for all its considered judgment, had not understood, from the outset, a single, pivotal word. That word was "unprecedented". Though the inquiry had set out in the belief that the crash was an event different in kind to anything that had gone before, it nevertheless proceeded to judge it in the terms of previous crashes. What it failed to do, in Lewis's eyes, was this: it neglected to look for the things that might have changed in Wall Street or the City, the things that might have made individuals on the trading floors act in ways that were seen to be entirely, unprecedentedly, reckless. When he came to consider these things himself, Lewis felt that perhaps chief among the unprecedented novelties was this one: women.
"Of course," he observed, with tongue firmly in cheek, "the women who flooded into Wall Street firms before the crisis weren't typically permitted to take big financial risks. As a rule they remained in the background, as 'helpmates'. But their presence clearly distorted the judgment of male bond traders – though the mechanics of their influence remains unexplored by the commission. They may have compelled the male risk-takers to 'show off for the ladies', for instance, or perhaps they merely asked annoying questions and undermined the risk-takers' confidence. At any rate, one sure sign of the importance of women in the crisis is the market's subsequent response: to purge women from senior Wall Street roles…"
When I first read those remarks it was not clear how much in earnest Lewis had been when he made them. Subsequently, though, I heard him speak at the London School of Economics, and he took this idea in a slightly different direction. When asked what single thing he would do to reform the markets and prevent such a catastrophe happening again, he said: "I would take steps to have 50% of women in risk positions in banks." Pressed on this, he went on to suggest how science reveals that women in general make smarter decisions regarding investment than men, that when it comes to money, women in couples are demonstrably better at evaluating risk than their partners, and single women much better still.
Though those of us males who have an uncanny sense of money always slipping through our fingers might anecdotally believe this to be true, I was surprised to hear it stated as a fact. It seemed to beg a number of questions. First, if women really are better at making these judgments, why is it always men, still, without exception, who troop out before select committees to explain where it all went wrong, and how they weren't really to blame. And second, would it really be different if women were in charge?
You don't have to look too far into the science to realise that Lewis's claim, in broad terms, stands up. The first definitive study in this area appeared in 2001 in a celebrated paper that broke down the investment decisions made with a brokerage firm by 35,000 households in America. The study, called, inevitably, "Boys will be Boys" found that while men were confident in making multiple changes to investments, their annual returns were, on average, a full percentage point below those of women who invested the family finances, and nearly half as much again inferior to single women.
A more recent study of 2.7 million personal investors found that during the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, men were much more likely than women to sell any shares they owned at stock market lows. Male investors, as a group, appeared to be overconfident, the author of this study suggested. "There's been a lot of academic research suggesting that men think they know what they're doing, even when they really don't know what they're doing." A fact that will come as a surprise to few of us. Men, it seemed, typically believed they could make sense of every piece of short-term financial news. Women, never embarrassed to ask directions, were on the whole far more likely to acknowledge when they didn't know something. As a consequence, women shifted their positions far less frequently, and made significantly more money as a result.
Naturally, if these findings were widely applicable, then it would be hard not to agree with Lewis's suggestion for reforming the sharpest end of capitalism. Rather than ring-fencing casino investment banks or demanding that high street banks hold vastly greater capital, as we heard at the Mansion House last week, wouldn't a safer model just be to hire more women?
To argue this case, you would probably need more than just behavioural evidence; you might need to understand some of the mechanisms which produced the trillion-dollar bad decision-making that led to what happened in 2008. In recent years, and particularly since the crash, a new science of such decision-making – neuroeconomics – has become fashionable in universities and beyond. It proposes the idea that you will create a better understanding of how people make economic choices if you bring to bear advances in neurobiology and brain chemistry and behavioural psychology alongside traditional economic maths models. Not surprisingly, neuroeconomics has plenty to say about the question of whether decision-making, in high-pressure situations, divides on gender lines.
The problem is that most of the scenarios used to investigate this divide are artificial. It is one thing attaching someone to an MRI scanner and telling him or her that a million pounds rests on their decision in a game; it is another when that person actually stands to lose a million pounds. Only one study, as far as I could discover, has had access to the brain chemistry, the neural biology, of young men actually working on trading floors. But the results it produced were nonetheless startling.
The study was led by a pair of Cambridge researchers. One, Joe Herbert, is a professor of neuroscience, and the other, John Coates, a research fellow in neuroscience and finance. Herbert, a specialist in the effect of hormones on depression, was fascinated to put some of his theories about the role of chemicals on decision making into practice. The curious thing about banks, he told me, "was that they know all about computers and systems and markets but they know next to nothing about the human machine sitting in the chair in front of screens making decisions. Nothing. We aimed to correct that just slightly."
It was Coates, though, who made the experiment possible. Having met Herbert at his lab in Cambridge, I met Coates in a pub in west London. He had a special advantage in gaining access to bond traders' brains, he explained: he used to possess one himself. Sharp-eyed and fit-looking, Coates retains the intensity of a man who used to run a trading desk on Wall Street during the dotcom bubble. He started off at Goldman Sachs and went on to Deutsche Bank. After some years trading, and making a lot of money out of a lot of money, he became increasingly fascinated by the way, during the dotcom years, the traders he worked alongside radically changed behaviour. They became, he says, "euphoric and delusional. They were taking far more risks, and were putting up trades with terrible risk-reward profiles". The dotcom was fun, in a way, he suggests; it was like the roaring 20s. "But I don't think anyone looks back on the housing bubble and laughs."
Coates was a relatively cautious trader himself, but there had been times when he too felt this surge, this euphoria: "When I had been making a lot of money myself, I felt unbelievably powerful," he recalls. "You carry yourself like a strutting rooster, and you can't help it. Michael Lewis talked about 'Big Swinging Dicks', Tom Wolfe talked about 'Masters of the Universe' – they were right. A trader on a winning streak acts exactly that way."
The second thing that Coates noticed was even more revelatory to him. "I noticed that women did not buy into the dotcom bubble at all," he says. "You couldn't find one who did, hardly. And that seemed like a pretty cool fact to me."
With this cool fact in mind, Coates began splitting his time between his trading desk and the Rockefeller University in Manhattan, which is perhaps the world's leading institute for the study of brain chemicals. There he started to become interested in steroids, and in particular something called "the winner effect". This occurs when two males enter a competition and their testosterone levels rise, increasing their muscle mass and the ability of the blood to carry oxygen. It also enhances their appetite for risk. Much of this testosterone stays in the system of the winner of a competition, while the loser's testosterone melts away fast; in evolutionary terms, the loser retires to the woods to lick his wounds. In the next round of competition, though, the winner already has high levels of testosterone, so he starts with an advantage, and this continues to reinforce itself.
"Steroids," Coates explains, "like most chemicals in your body, display what is called an inverted U-shaped response curve." That is to say, when you have low levels of them you lack vitality, and do very poorly at mental and physical tasks. But as the levels rise you get sharper and more focused until you reach an optimum. The key thing is this, however: "If you keep winning, your testosterone level goes past that peak and sliding down the other side. You start doing stupid things. When that happens to animals, they go out in the open too much. They pick too many fights. They neglect parenting duties. And they patrol areas that are too large." In short, they behave like traders on a roll; they get cocky.
Coates became convinced that this winner effect was what he observed in bullish trading markets, and what ended up dramatically distorting them. It also explained why women were mostly immune to the euphoria, because they had only 10% of the testosterone of men. What struck him most, though, was that, for all the literature about financial instability, economics, psychology, game theory, no one had ever clinically looked at a trader who was caught up in a bubble.
Coates wrote a research proposal. He came back to Cambridge where he had done his first degree, and because of his background eventually gained access, with Herbert, to a major City bond-dealing floor in London. They tested the traders for two hormones in particular, testosterone and cortisol (the anxiety induced, depressive "stress hormone"), and mapped their levels over a period of weeks against the success or failure of trades, individual profit and loss. Coates had imagined the experiment to be a preliminary study but the correlations he found – for evidence of irrationality produced by the winner effect and its converse – was "an absolute dream". They not only discovered that a trader's morning testosterone level could be used to predict his day's profitability. They also found that a trader's cortisol rose with both the variance of his trading results and the volatility of the market. The results pointed to a further possibility: as volatility increased, the hormones seemed to shift risk preferences and even affect a trader's ability to engage in rational choice.
Though the sample was limited, and suitable caution was needed in claiming too much, the correlations suggested that over a certain peak, testosterone impaired the risk assessment of traders. "And cortisol," he suggests, "was in some ways even more interesting than testosterone. We thought cortisol would rise when traders lost money," Coates says, making individuals more than usually cautious, "but actually it was going up incredibly when they were faced with just uncertainty. The stress hormones were switching over to emergency states all the time. There was an optimal level but these stress hormones can linger for months. Then you get all sorts of really pathological behaviours. If you are constantly prepared for high tension it affects your brain, and it causes you to recall stressful memories and become exaggeratedly risk-averse and kind of helpless."
Unfortunately this particular study ended in June 2007, before the full effect of the crisis, but its implications account, Coates believes, for some of what he subsequently heard from the trading floor. "If cortisol goes beyond a certain point, then it may become very difficult for traders to assess any risk at all. These guys are not built to handle adversity that well. There is an observable condition called 'learned helplessness', which if you are submitting to great stress over a long period of time makes you give up suddenly. Lab animals develop it: you open the cage and they won't escape. Traders have it too. They just slump in their chairs. In the crisis there were classic arbitrage opportunities as the markets were falling. Free money. But traders would sit there staring at the numbers and not touching it."
Since then, Coates has partly been working on the other strand of his original hypothesis, looking at the brain chemistry of women working in the markets. Because of the small sample sizes he has to work with – there were only three women out of 250 traders on the floor he first tested – the detail of that is far from complete, and he is properly reluctant to draw conclusions. What he will go so far as to say, though, is this. "Central bankers, often brilliant people, spend their life trying to stop a bubble or prevent a crash, and they are spectacularly unsuccessful at it. And I think it is because, at the centre of the market, you have these guys either ripped on testosterone or overwhelmed by cortisol so that they become completely price insensitive." Coates wrote a couple of articles after that research was published, suggesting that, if the winner effect was right, it was possible that bubbles were an entirely young male phenomenon. And if that were the case, then the best way of preventing boom and bust was to have more women and more older men – less in thrall to hormones – in the markets. "We know that opinion diversity is crucial to stable markets. What no one talks about is endocrine diversity, a diversity of hormones. The billion-dollar question is how to achieve it."
To most experienced, male, investment bankers, of course, this sounds like fighting talk. An old friend of mine, who traded his Cambridge English degree for an extremely lucrative life as a bond dealer, offered this, when I presented Coates's evidence to him. "It would be nice to think that having more female traders on the floor would make for less volatility," he said, "but that's wishful thinking. Financial markets are now global, so while we in the west might decide not to chase trends or react instinctively to breaking news because there are mature mothering types in boardrooms and sitting on risk committees, the rest of the world will, and our banks would lose out." And that's not all. "Many of the women I know who have managed money or have put capital at risk for banks have tended to be even more aggressive with risk than their male counterparts, as if perhaps to compensate for their supposed diffidence. Fighting their way through a male-dominated environment to a position in which they can invest/punt/ risk-manage, many women develop an ultra-masculine persona so as to be thought of as ballsy…"
Just a cursory glance through some of the recent spate of books and blogs written by young women who have worked in the City and lived to tell the tale would certainly seem to support this observation. Melanie Berliet, who worked as one of the only female traders in Wall Street, set the tone in her confessional blog: "If anything," she observed, "my token status gave me an extra thrill. I enjoyed being called a 'fucking dullard' or being instructed, patronisingly, to 'remove head from ass', because my reaction – to grin rather than cry – impressed the guys. I loved their attention and the daily opportunities to prove that I fitted in. What separated me from my colleagues was physical: my 5ft 9in, 120lb frame, my long, blondish hair – and my vagina. I had two options with my boss: trade sexual banter or resist. Typically, I chose the former. Like most traders, my base salary wasn't terribly high—$75,000 at the start of my third year. The bonus was all, and getting the right number rested on one thing, as I saw it: my willingness to promote my boss's fantasy of fucking me…"
John Coates doesn't believe the caricature, or at least he believes that in the upper reaches of banks, things have moved on. "A lot of my former colleagues are running divisions, or whole banks," he says. "I don't buy the sexist macho argument. The big investment banks desperately want women traders. But when they interview women who are qualified, the women don't want to do it…"
Neuroeconomics also starts to provide the answers to some of the reasons for that. Muriel Niederle is a professor at Stanford University, looking at gender differences in risk decisions. Over a period of years Niederle has developed clear evidence for the theory that though in non-competitive situations women demonstrate an advantage over men in making investment decisions, they either shy away completely from making those decisions in intensely competitive environments, or they respond less well than men to competition with very short-term high intensity and results-driven focus. This pattern is set, Niederle proves, from a very young age (and no doubt has a good deal to do with the differential presence of troublesome testosterone). Joe Herbert told me at his lab in Cambridge: "What is clear is that there are neurological differences between the sexes. Women, in very general terms, are less competitive, and less concerned with the status of being successful. If you want to make women more present, you have to remember two things: the world they are coming into is a man-made world. The financial world. So, either they become surrogate men… or you change the world."
Ah, changing the world. In the wake of 2008, there was a good deal of talk about that heady idea. Much of this talk concerned the creation of more gender balance in the city. The Economist coined the phrase "Womenomics" and argued that excluding nearly 50% of talent from crucial positions in business and finance was not only discriminatory but caused serious harm to stability and growth. Iceland's banks brought in women to clear up the mess that men had left. A good deal was made of the fact that the extraordinary success of microfinance in the developing world was because 97% of the loans were granted to women (men were – biologically? culturally? – not to be trusted). Science, neuroeconomics, was harnessed to develop some of those themes. And then, well, nothing. The commissions and the select committees decided that a return to something like the status quo, with all its implicit risks and inequalities, was the only option.
Womenomics still persists in a few places, however. The 30% Club was an initiative set up last November by executive women, and some senior men in FTSE 100 companies and accountancy and legal practices, to increase the number of women in decision-making and boardroom positions to that figure. It goes a little further than Lord Davies's recent report on the subject. But 30% is not an arbitrary number; it is thought – by neuroeconomists again, and through observation – to be the minimum proportion of women at the top of an organisation required to begin to change the culture; below that number, women tend to behave "like surrogate men"; above it, the subtle differences produced by gender might begin to influence the way decisions are made. In Britain there is still a good way to go: only 5.5% of executive directors in FTSE 100 companies are women (yet evidence shows that companies with women leaders have a 35% higher return on equity, and companies with more than three women on their corporate board have an 80% higher return on equity). On city trading floors, the percentage remains, for some of the reasons outlined above, at around 3% or 4%. Testosterone rules.
The country that has attempted most radically to change this balance is Norway, where a Conservative minister imposed a quota of 40% female directors in every boardroom. Most of the data suggests the initiative has been a great success, both culturally and commercially (though some, male, commentators argue that the turnaround is better explained by the spike in oil prices).
It would be hard to find many people in the city, even among women, who would favour quotas, though that argument can be made. John Coates, wearing his dealmaker's hat, suggests a practical solution. "The question is not whether men are risk takers and women are risk-averse. It is more what kind of risk do they want to take? My hunch is that women don't like high-frequency trading, so what you have to do is change the accounting period over which they are judged."
He then gives me a potted description of how things remain: "Say you have two traders. One trader makes $20m a year for five years, of which she might typically pocket a couple of million a year herself. At the end of five years she has made the bank the best part of $90m. Another trader makes $100m a year for four years. They don't want that guy to go off to a hedge fund so they let him take home $20m a year. But then in the fifth year – because of the winner effect – he loses $500m. That is essentially what happened in the financial crash. The bank has lost $100m and the trader has gained $80m. If you were judging these things over a five-year period, then you can see which person you would hire."
But, of course, that would require a very different idea of markets, and of money, to the one that is currently desperately being defended and remade. It would certainly require a greater degree of "endocrinal diversity". Still, the next time you hear someone suggest that things are getting back to "normal" in the city, and that we should at all costs start believing in exponential growth again, at least you can look him in the eye and state that you think his hormones might be playing up.
■ Our brains are designed to seek out novelty, but too much information can overwhelm them; we are generally better at assessing risk when listening to Bach than with the chatter of TV news.
■ Men's brains tend to shut down after they have proposed a deal, waiting for the response. Scans show that women brains continue to be active, analysing whether they have done the right thing.
■ Humans are the only animals that can delay gratification, a function of the prefrontal cortex. However, the prefrontal cortex only matures after the age of 30, and later in men than women. Before that, we are more likely to seek immediate gratification.
■ Our brains reward social interaction with the release of a chemical called oxytocin. It makes us feel good when we follow the herd. Stock market bubbles are one likely result of this.
■ Our brains are wired for human oxytocin-mediated empathy (or HOME). We are biologically stimulated to love (or hate) what is most familiar to us. We are built to form attachments, to value what we own more than what we do not own. This fact skews the rationality of all our investment decisions.
source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/19/neuroeconomics-women-city-financial-crash
The other book, an entirely compulsive companion volume, is Michael Lewis's best-selling The Big Short, which Google Earths you into the crisis. Rather than looking at a global picture, it lets you into the bedrooms and boardrooms of the individual corporate men who catastrophically lost billions of dollars and, on the other side of those bets, the extraordinary ragtag of obsessive individuals who saw what was coming and made eye-watering fortunes. It gives the crash a human face, and once again that face is universally male.
The books are linked by more than subject matter, though. Lewis, a one-time bond trader himself – he left, 20-odd years ago, in incredulity and disgust to write his insider's account, Liar's Poker – gave evidence to the Crisis Inquiry Commission over the course of its 18-month sitting. In the end, however, he refused to sign off the report; and not only did he refuse to sign it, he also refused to put his name to the dissenters' addenda to the report, which three of the committee insisted upon. And not only that, he did not add his name to that of the single individual who insisted on a further addendum stating that he dissented from the dissenters' view. Lewis was not a fan of the report.
The reason for this was simple, he suggested. He felt that the committee, for all its considered judgment, had not understood, from the outset, a single, pivotal word. That word was "unprecedented". Though the inquiry had set out in the belief that the crash was an event different in kind to anything that had gone before, it nevertheless proceeded to judge it in the terms of previous crashes. What it failed to do, in Lewis's eyes, was this: it neglected to look for the things that might have changed in Wall Street or the City, the things that might have made individuals on the trading floors act in ways that were seen to be entirely, unprecedentedly, reckless. When he came to consider these things himself, Lewis felt that perhaps chief among the unprecedented novelties was this one: women.
"Of course," he observed, with tongue firmly in cheek, "the women who flooded into Wall Street firms before the crisis weren't typically permitted to take big financial risks. As a rule they remained in the background, as 'helpmates'. But their presence clearly distorted the judgment of male bond traders – though the mechanics of their influence remains unexplored by the commission. They may have compelled the male risk-takers to 'show off for the ladies', for instance, or perhaps they merely asked annoying questions and undermined the risk-takers' confidence. At any rate, one sure sign of the importance of women in the crisis is the market's subsequent response: to purge women from senior Wall Street roles…"
When I first read those remarks it was not clear how much in earnest Lewis had been when he made them. Subsequently, though, I heard him speak at the London School of Economics, and he took this idea in a slightly different direction. When asked what single thing he would do to reform the markets and prevent such a catastrophe happening again, he said: "I would take steps to have 50% of women in risk positions in banks." Pressed on this, he went on to suggest how science reveals that women in general make smarter decisions regarding investment than men, that when it comes to money, women in couples are demonstrably better at evaluating risk than their partners, and single women much better still.
Though those of us males who have an uncanny sense of money always slipping through our fingers might anecdotally believe this to be true, I was surprised to hear it stated as a fact. It seemed to beg a number of questions. First, if women really are better at making these judgments, why is it always men, still, without exception, who troop out before select committees to explain where it all went wrong, and how they weren't really to blame. And second, would it really be different if women were in charge?
You don't have to look too far into the science to realise that Lewis's claim, in broad terms, stands up. The first definitive study in this area appeared in 2001 in a celebrated paper that broke down the investment decisions made with a brokerage firm by 35,000 households in America. The study, called, inevitably, "Boys will be Boys" found that while men were confident in making multiple changes to investments, their annual returns were, on average, a full percentage point below those of women who invested the family finances, and nearly half as much again inferior to single women.
A more recent study of 2.7 million personal investors found that during the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, men were much more likely than women to sell any shares they owned at stock market lows. Male investors, as a group, appeared to be overconfident, the author of this study suggested. "There's been a lot of academic research suggesting that men think they know what they're doing, even when they really don't know what they're doing." A fact that will come as a surprise to few of us. Men, it seemed, typically believed they could make sense of every piece of short-term financial news. Women, never embarrassed to ask directions, were on the whole far more likely to acknowledge when they didn't know something. As a consequence, women shifted their positions far less frequently, and made significantly more money as a result.
Naturally, if these findings were widely applicable, then it would be hard not to agree with Lewis's suggestion for reforming the sharpest end of capitalism. Rather than ring-fencing casino investment banks or demanding that high street banks hold vastly greater capital, as we heard at the Mansion House last week, wouldn't a safer model just be to hire more women?
To argue this case, you would probably need more than just behavioural evidence; you might need to understand some of the mechanisms which produced the trillion-dollar bad decision-making that led to what happened in 2008. In recent years, and particularly since the crash, a new science of such decision-making – neuroeconomics – has become fashionable in universities and beyond. It proposes the idea that you will create a better understanding of how people make economic choices if you bring to bear advances in neurobiology and brain chemistry and behavioural psychology alongside traditional economic maths models. Not surprisingly, neuroeconomics has plenty to say about the question of whether decision-making, in high-pressure situations, divides on gender lines.
The problem is that most of the scenarios used to investigate this divide are artificial. It is one thing attaching someone to an MRI scanner and telling him or her that a million pounds rests on their decision in a game; it is another when that person actually stands to lose a million pounds. Only one study, as far as I could discover, has had access to the brain chemistry, the neural biology, of young men actually working on trading floors. But the results it produced were nonetheless startling.
The study was led by a pair of Cambridge researchers. One, Joe Herbert, is a professor of neuroscience, and the other, John Coates, a research fellow in neuroscience and finance. Herbert, a specialist in the effect of hormones on depression, was fascinated to put some of his theories about the role of chemicals on decision making into practice. The curious thing about banks, he told me, "was that they know all about computers and systems and markets but they know next to nothing about the human machine sitting in the chair in front of screens making decisions. Nothing. We aimed to correct that just slightly."
It was Coates, though, who made the experiment possible. Having met Herbert at his lab in Cambridge, I met Coates in a pub in west London. He had a special advantage in gaining access to bond traders' brains, he explained: he used to possess one himself. Sharp-eyed and fit-looking, Coates retains the intensity of a man who used to run a trading desk on Wall Street during the dotcom bubble. He started off at Goldman Sachs and went on to Deutsche Bank. After some years trading, and making a lot of money out of a lot of money, he became increasingly fascinated by the way, during the dotcom years, the traders he worked alongside radically changed behaviour. They became, he says, "euphoric and delusional. They were taking far more risks, and were putting up trades with terrible risk-reward profiles". The dotcom was fun, in a way, he suggests; it was like the roaring 20s. "But I don't think anyone looks back on the housing bubble and laughs."
Coates was a relatively cautious trader himself, but there had been times when he too felt this surge, this euphoria: "When I had been making a lot of money myself, I felt unbelievably powerful," he recalls. "You carry yourself like a strutting rooster, and you can't help it. Michael Lewis talked about 'Big Swinging Dicks', Tom Wolfe talked about 'Masters of the Universe' – they were right. A trader on a winning streak acts exactly that way."
The second thing that Coates noticed was even more revelatory to him. "I noticed that women did not buy into the dotcom bubble at all," he says. "You couldn't find one who did, hardly. And that seemed like a pretty cool fact to me."
With this cool fact in mind, Coates began splitting his time between his trading desk and the Rockefeller University in Manhattan, which is perhaps the world's leading institute for the study of brain chemicals. There he started to become interested in steroids, and in particular something called "the winner effect". This occurs when two males enter a competition and their testosterone levels rise, increasing their muscle mass and the ability of the blood to carry oxygen. It also enhances their appetite for risk. Much of this testosterone stays in the system of the winner of a competition, while the loser's testosterone melts away fast; in evolutionary terms, the loser retires to the woods to lick his wounds. In the next round of competition, though, the winner already has high levels of testosterone, so he starts with an advantage, and this continues to reinforce itself.
"Steroids," Coates explains, "like most chemicals in your body, display what is called an inverted U-shaped response curve." That is to say, when you have low levels of them you lack vitality, and do very poorly at mental and physical tasks. But as the levels rise you get sharper and more focused until you reach an optimum. The key thing is this, however: "If you keep winning, your testosterone level goes past that peak and sliding down the other side. You start doing stupid things. When that happens to animals, they go out in the open too much. They pick too many fights. They neglect parenting duties. And they patrol areas that are too large." In short, they behave like traders on a roll; they get cocky.
Coates became convinced that this winner effect was what he observed in bullish trading markets, and what ended up dramatically distorting them. It also explained why women were mostly immune to the euphoria, because they had only 10% of the testosterone of men. What struck him most, though, was that, for all the literature about financial instability, economics, psychology, game theory, no one had ever clinically looked at a trader who was caught up in a bubble.
Coates wrote a research proposal. He came back to Cambridge where he had done his first degree, and because of his background eventually gained access, with Herbert, to a major City bond-dealing floor in London. They tested the traders for two hormones in particular, testosterone and cortisol (the anxiety induced, depressive "stress hormone"), and mapped their levels over a period of weeks against the success or failure of trades, individual profit and loss. Coates had imagined the experiment to be a preliminary study but the correlations he found – for evidence of irrationality produced by the winner effect and its converse – was "an absolute dream". They not only discovered that a trader's morning testosterone level could be used to predict his day's profitability. They also found that a trader's cortisol rose with both the variance of his trading results and the volatility of the market. The results pointed to a further possibility: as volatility increased, the hormones seemed to shift risk preferences and even affect a trader's ability to engage in rational choice.
Though the sample was limited, and suitable caution was needed in claiming too much, the correlations suggested that over a certain peak, testosterone impaired the risk assessment of traders. "And cortisol," he suggests, "was in some ways even more interesting than testosterone. We thought cortisol would rise when traders lost money," Coates says, making individuals more than usually cautious, "but actually it was going up incredibly when they were faced with just uncertainty. The stress hormones were switching over to emergency states all the time. There was an optimal level but these stress hormones can linger for months. Then you get all sorts of really pathological behaviours. If you are constantly prepared for high tension it affects your brain, and it causes you to recall stressful memories and become exaggeratedly risk-averse and kind of helpless."
Unfortunately this particular study ended in June 2007, before the full effect of the crisis, but its implications account, Coates believes, for some of what he subsequently heard from the trading floor. "If cortisol goes beyond a certain point, then it may become very difficult for traders to assess any risk at all. These guys are not built to handle adversity that well. There is an observable condition called 'learned helplessness', which if you are submitting to great stress over a long period of time makes you give up suddenly. Lab animals develop it: you open the cage and they won't escape. Traders have it too. They just slump in their chairs. In the crisis there were classic arbitrage opportunities as the markets were falling. Free money. But traders would sit there staring at the numbers and not touching it."
Since then, Coates has partly been working on the other strand of his original hypothesis, looking at the brain chemistry of women working in the markets. Because of the small sample sizes he has to work with – there were only three women out of 250 traders on the floor he first tested – the detail of that is far from complete, and he is properly reluctant to draw conclusions. What he will go so far as to say, though, is this. "Central bankers, often brilliant people, spend their life trying to stop a bubble or prevent a crash, and they are spectacularly unsuccessful at it. And I think it is because, at the centre of the market, you have these guys either ripped on testosterone or overwhelmed by cortisol so that they become completely price insensitive." Coates wrote a couple of articles after that research was published, suggesting that, if the winner effect was right, it was possible that bubbles were an entirely young male phenomenon. And if that were the case, then the best way of preventing boom and bust was to have more women and more older men – less in thrall to hormones – in the markets. "We know that opinion diversity is crucial to stable markets. What no one talks about is endocrine diversity, a diversity of hormones. The billion-dollar question is how to achieve it."
To most experienced, male, investment bankers, of course, this sounds like fighting talk. An old friend of mine, who traded his Cambridge English degree for an extremely lucrative life as a bond dealer, offered this, when I presented Coates's evidence to him. "It would be nice to think that having more female traders on the floor would make for less volatility," he said, "but that's wishful thinking. Financial markets are now global, so while we in the west might decide not to chase trends or react instinctively to breaking news because there are mature mothering types in boardrooms and sitting on risk committees, the rest of the world will, and our banks would lose out." And that's not all. "Many of the women I know who have managed money or have put capital at risk for banks have tended to be even more aggressive with risk than their male counterparts, as if perhaps to compensate for their supposed diffidence. Fighting their way through a male-dominated environment to a position in which they can invest/punt/ risk-manage, many women develop an ultra-masculine persona so as to be thought of as ballsy…"
Just a cursory glance through some of the recent spate of books and blogs written by young women who have worked in the City and lived to tell the tale would certainly seem to support this observation. Melanie Berliet, who worked as one of the only female traders in Wall Street, set the tone in her confessional blog: "If anything," she observed, "my token status gave me an extra thrill. I enjoyed being called a 'fucking dullard' or being instructed, patronisingly, to 'remove head from ass', because my reaction – to grin rather than cry – impressed the guys. I loved their attention and the daily opportunities to prove that I fitted in. What separated me from my colleagues was physical: my 5ft 9in, 120lb frame, my long, blondish hair – and my vagina. I had two options with my boss: trade sexual banter or resist. Typically, I chose the former. Like most traders, my base salary wasn't terribly high—$75,000 at the start of my third year. The bonus was all, and getting the right number rested on one thing, as I saw it: my willingness to promote my boss's fantasy of fucking me…"
John Coates doesn't believe the caricature, or at least he believes that in the upper reaches of banks, things have moved on. "A lot of my former colleagues are running divisions, or whole banks," he says. "I don't buy the sexist macho argument. The big investment banks desperately want women traders. But when they interview women who are qualified, the women don't want to do it…"
Neuroeconomics also starts to provide the answers to some of the reasons for that. Muriel Niederle is a professor at Stanford University, looking at gender differences in risk decisions. Over a period of years Niederle has developed clear evidence for the theory that though in non-competitive situations women demonstrate an advantage over men in making investment decisions, they either shy away completely from making those decisions in intensely competitive environments, or they respond less well than men to competition with very short-term high intensity and results-driven focus. This pattern is set, Niederle proves, from a very young age (and no doubt has a good deal to do with the differential presence of troublesome testosterone). Joe Herbert told me at his lab in Cambridge: "What is clear is that there are neurological differences between the sexes. Women, in very general terms, are less competitive, and less concerned with the status of being successful. If you want to make women more present, you have to remember two things: the world they are coming into is a man-made world. The financial world. So, either they become surrogate men… or you change the world."
Ah, changing the world. In the wake of 2008, there was a good deal of talk about that heady idea. Much of this talk concerned the creation of more gender balance in the city. The Economist coined the phrase "Womenomics" and argued that excluding nearly 50% of talent from crucial positions in business and finance was not only discriminatory but caused serious harm to stability and growth. Iceland's banks brought in women to clear up the mess that men had left. A good deal was made of the fact that the extraordinary success of microfinance in the developing world was because 97% of the loans were granted to women (men were – biologically? culturally? – not to be trusted). Science, neuroeconomics, was harnessed to develop some of those themes. And then, well, nothing. The commissions and the select committees decided that a return to something like the status quo, with all its implicit risks and inequalities, was the only option.
Womenomics still persists in a few places, however. The 30% Club was an initiative set up last November by executive women, and some senior men in FTSE 100 companies and accountancy and legal practices, to increase the number of women in decision-making and boardroom positions to that figure. It goes a little further than Lord Davies's recent report on the subject. But 30% is not an arbitrary number; it is thought – by neuroeconomists again, and through observation – to be the minimum proportion of women at the top of an organisation required to begin to change the culture; below that number, women tend to behave "like surrogate men"; above it, the subtle differences produced by gender might begin to influence the way decisions are made. In Britain there is still a good way to go: only 5.5% of executive directors in FTSE 100 companies are women (yet evidence shows that companies with women leaders have a 35% higher return on equity, and companies with more than three women on their corporate board have an 80% higher return on equity). On city trading floors, the percentage remains, for some of the reasons outlined above, at around 3% or 4%. Testosterone rules.
The country that has attempted most radically to change this balance is Norway, where a Conservative minister imposed a quota of 40% female directors in every boardroom. Most of the data suggests the initiative has been a great success, both culturally and commercially (though some, male, commentators argue that the turnaround is better explained by the spike in oil prices).
It would be hard to find many people in the city, even among women, who would favour quotas, though that argument can be made. John Coates, wearing his dealmaker's hat, suggests a practical solution. "The question is not whether men are risk takers and women are risk-averse. It is more what kind of risk do they want to take? My hunch is that women don't like high-frequency trading, so what you have to do is change the accounting period over which they are judged."
He then gives me a potted description of how things remain: "Say you have two traders. One trader makes $20m a year for five years, of which she might typically pocket a couple of million a year herself. At the end of five years she has made the bank the best part of $90m. Another trader makes $100m a year for four years. They don't want that guy to go off to a hedge fund so they let him take home $20m a year. But then in the fifth year – because of the winner effect – he loses $500m. That is essentially what happened in the financial crash. The bank has lost $100m and the trader has gained $80m. If you were judging these things over a five-year period, then you can see which person you would hire."
But, of course, that would require a very different idea of markets, and of money, to the one that is currently desperately being defended and remade. It would certainly require a greater degree of "endocrinal diversity". Still, the next time you hear someone suggest that things are getting back to "normal" in the city, and that we should at all costs start believing in exponential growth again, at least you can look him in the eye and state that you think his hormones might be playing up.
Neuroeconomics: Six things that the science of decision-making reveals
■ If groups of young men are shown pornographic pictures of women and then asked to choose between safe and risky investments, compared with men shown non-pornographic pictures they choose far riskier portfolios.■ Our brains are designed to seek out novelty, but too much information can overwhelm them; we are generally better at assessing risk when listening to Bach than with the chatter of TV news.
■ Men's brains tend to shut down after they have proposed a deal, waiting for the response. Scans show that women brains continue to be active, analysing whether they have done the right thing.
■ Humans are the only animals that can delay gratification, a function of the prefrontal cortex. However, the prefrontal cortex only matures after the age of 30, and later in men than women. Before that, we are more likely to seek immediate gratification.
■ Our brains reward social interaction with the release of a chemical called oxytocin. It makes us feel good when we follow the herd. Stock market bubbles are one likely result of this.
■ Our brains are wired for human oxytocin-mediated empathy (or HOME). We are biologically stimulated to love (or hate) what is most familiar to us. We are built to form attachments, to value what we own more than what we do not own. This fact skews the rationality of all our investment decisions.
source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jun/19/neuroeconomics-women-city-financial-crash
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