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George Soros Invests in Plains Exploration

Soros Buys 5.4% of Plains Exploration by Teresa Rivas, Barrons.com

Former highflyer Plains Exploration & Production (PXP) is one stock that has run out of gas as energy prices pulled back. However, the oil and natural-gas exploration company has a new investor in billionaire George Soros who has scooped up nearly 6.5 million of the downtrodden shares in 2009.

On May 4, 2009, Soros's fund, Soros Fund Management, disclosed it now owns 6,467,400 million shares, or a 5.4% stake in the Houston-based Plains Exploration. Soros' hedge fund did not show any stock holdings as of Dec. 31, 2008, meaning the shares were purchased at some point in the last four months.

Soros Fund Management has registered as a passive investor in the company. Plains Exploration did not return phone calls seeking comment. A spokesman for Soros Fund Management declined to comment on the stake. Soros's investment comes as the shares hover not far above their March 6, 2009, five-year low of $15.25. That's a fraction of the shares' all-time high of $79.86 last June, during the height of high gas prices.

On May 4, 2009, the stock gained $2.54 to $22.38. Over the past year, the shares have slumped 67.3%, losing more ground than its peers in the Dow Jones Exploration & Production Index, which fell 42.7% and the broader market, down 37.1%.

Low oil and natural-gas prices have sharply reversed the industry fortunes, compared to last summer, when oil broke the $100-per-barrel mark and companies were flush with cash. At the end of April 2009, Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Aubrey McClendon warned that depressed prices would likely continue through the 2009 summer season, with a possible recovery in the 2009-2010 winter heating season.

Lon Juricic, president of StreetInsider.com, sees Soros' investment as a bet on that eventual recovery, given the stock's current doldrums.

"The stock is not far off its bottom, and has fallen significantly from its highs, so it looks like they're in it for a valuation play at this point," he says. "This is definitely a stock to watch. This is a bottom-pick where they are trying to get in early, ahead of any rebound. It's a bet that energy prices will be recovering in the future."

Juricic calls the position significant, but notes that Soros himself likely had little to do with the stock pick, as he leaves the operations of his funds up to managers. Analysts seem to agree with Soros' decision. Those surveyed by Thomson Reuters rated Plains Exploration at Buy or the equivalent, with a 12-month target price of $36.20.

Source.

Filed under  //   Aubrey McClendon   Chesapeake Energy   George Soros   Lon Juricic   Plains Exploration & Production   Soros Fund Management   StreetInsider.com  

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George Soros Invests $50M in Powerspan

Soros pushes Powerspan to $50M for carbon capture
by Camille Ricketts, VentureBeat.com

A group of investors, including George Soros, has funneled $50 million into Powerspan, a company that devises ways to remove carbon dioxide from coal plant emissions. The Portsmouth, N.H.-based company says it will use the new money to set up its system at a utility-scale demo plant in Ohio.

Already, Powerspan is implementing its ammonia-based technology at a 120-megawatt demo plant that is slated to be operational by 2012. The company claims that it will catch and sequester more than 1 million metric tons of carbon dioxide at this facility every year.

The processes used to remove carbon dioxide from emissions are extremely expensive — and in this case, capital-intensive. In order to make installation possible, companies involved in carbon sequestration are almost always forced to depend on both venture and government sources of support. That’s why most world governments offer tax credits and other incentives to encourage utilities to adopt this type of technology.

In the U.S., the recent economic stimulus bill has allocated $3.4 billion for research on carbon-based fuels like coal. The Department of Energy is also offering loans to companies looking to commercialize products that clean up these fuel sources. Powerspan says it plans to apply for both the federal grants and loans.

And when the time comes to garner DOE support, the company is ahead of the game, having already worked with one of its labs to refine the carbon-capture systems it plans to market.

Powerspan also has the advantage of having friends in high places. George Soros is a name to be reckoned with, certainly. Tenaska Energy, AllianceBernstein, Persimmon Tree Capital, NGEN Partners, Beacon Group, Tremont Group, RockPort Capital Partners, Calvert, Angeleno Group, Fluor Corp. and FirstEnergy also participated in the recent round of financing.

Carbon sequestration is one area of cleantech that is just beginning to grow and considering how hard any money is to come by in the sector these days, $50 million is a pretty impressive head start.

Source.

Filed under  //   AllianceBernstein   Angeleno Group   Beacon Group   Calvert   Carbon Capture   Cleantech   Department of Energy   FirstEnergy   Fluor Corp.   George Soros   NGEN Partners   Persimmon Tree Capital   Powerspan   RockPort Capital Partners   Tenaska Energy   Tremont Group  

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Barron's Online Q&A with Jim Rogers

Jim Rogers Isn't Buying a U.S. Stock Rocovery by John Kimelman, Barron's Online

Bank executives and investors can breathe a sigh of relief: Jim Rogers has covered the short positions on financial stocks he put in place ahead of last year's massive meltdown.

But just because this influential investor isn't betting that big banks will fall much further doesn't mean he's confident they will stage a lasting rally either. He feels similarly about U.S. stocks in general.

"I am skeptical about the rally, and the world economy for the next year or two or three," he says. "But if stocks go down, I can make money with commodities."

Rogers, now 66, gained fame as George Soros' hedge-fund partner in the 1970s and 1980s. After retiring from professional money manager in his late 30s, the Alabama native tooled around Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America visiting emerging markets, one by one. His resulting book, Investment Biker, helped to popularize emerging market investing at the outset of a bull market for the sector.

He also helped to popularize commodity investing, which for decades was the province of niche investors. In the 1990s, he developed commodity indexes based on futures contracts that in recent years have been turned into exchange-traded funds available to all investors. His 2004 book, Hot Commodities, came ahead of a surge prices for energy, metals, and agriculture.

Since its inception in July 1998, the Rogers International Commodities Index has gained 158%, while the S&P 500 has fallen 23%. And that gain for the commodities index comes despite the fact that it's lost more than half of its value since last July. At these levels, Rogers has been a buyer.

These days, Rogers, now 66, is sticking close to home in Singapore with his wife, Paige Parker, and two small daughters. He's about to release his latest book, A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing in which he encourages other people's children to travel widely and learn Mandarin so they can reap the rewards of China's economic boom.

Recently, Rogers talked to Barrons.com by phone from his Singapore home.

When you last did a lengthy interview with Barron's magazine a year ago you were lightening up on emerging markets investments. Well, you called that one right. But now that many of those markets have fallen from their highs of recent years, are you more optimistic?

No. I've sold all emerging markets stock except the ones in China. I bought more Chinese shares in October and November during the panic, but I have not bought China or any other stock markets including the U.S. since then. I'm not buying anything in China right now because the Chinese market ran up maybe 50% since last November.

It's been the strongest market in the world in the past six months and I don't like jumping into something that has been that run up. Still, I'm not thinking of selling these stocks either. I think if it goes down I'll buy more. I think you will find that it's the single strongest market in the world since last fall.

In your latest book, you talk of China as the great investment opportunity of the 21st century, just as the U.S. was in the 20th century. What percentage of a typical American investor's portfolio should be in China?

If they can't even find China on a map, I don't think they should have anything in China. They should know something about China before they invest there. If they have the same convictions that I do then they should probably have a lot. If you asked me that question in 1909 about the U.S. stock market, I would have said to put 100% of your money in the U.S.

Might it make sense to have a greater weighting in a diversified mix of Chinese stocks than in U.S. stocks?

Well yes. Just as in 1909, if you were German or Chinese, you should have had the largest percentage of your money in the United States. The idea of investing is to make money, not to have some sort of political agenda.

That being said, you currently think Chinese stocks are bid-up now, so you're not buying at these levels. So what have you been buying lately?

I have been buying commodities through the Rogers commodity indexes I developed because my lawyer won't let me buy individual commodities. I recently bought the all four Rogers indexes, the Elements Rogers International Commodities Index (ticker:RJI) as well as the three specialty indexes, the International Metals (RJZ), the International Energy (RJN), and the International Agriculture (RJA.)

That's how I invest in commodities and that's what I bought last week. I have been buying these shares since last fall and up to last week.

Though you got out of emerging markets last year before they fell hard, you seemed be caught by surprise by the fall-off in commodity prices last year. Is that right?

Yes, I was surprised. I did not expect commodities to go down that much and in retrospect it was a period of forced liquidation for many (professional) investors. You know AIG went bankrupt, which was huge in commodities. Lehman Brothers was big in commodities.

But at least I was shorting the investment banks at the time and other financials such as Citigroup and Fannie Mae. So I was hedged by being long commodities and short the other things such as financials and as you know most of them were down from 80% to 100%, so I more than made up on my shorts than I lost on my longs.

So thank God for (the stock decline in) Citigroup and thank God (for the decline) in Fannie Mae.

Now despite the recent stock-market rally that started in March, many U.S. stocks are trading well off their 2007 highs. How come you see no value to this market?

I am not buying U.S. companies mainly because I think we may have seen a bottom but I don't think we have seen the bottom. I am skeptical about the rally, the world economy for the next year or two or three. But if stocks go down, I can make money with commodities. In the 1970s, commodities went through the roof even though stocks were a disaster. In the 1930s, commodities rallied first and went up the most long before stocks pulled it together.

Can you summarize the reasons for your bullishness about commodities?

It depends on the supply and demand. And we have had a dearth of supply. Nobody has invested in productive capacity for 25 or 30 years now. The inventories of food are the lowest they have been in 50 years and you have a shortage of farmers even right now because most farmers are old men because it has been such a horrible business for 30 years.

And as for metals, nobody can get a loan to open a mine as you know. Who is going to give you money to open a zinc mine? It takes at least 10 years to open a mine so it's going to be 15 or 20 years before we see new mines come on. Nobody has been opening mines for 30 years and they are not going to.

And in the meantime reserves are declining. As for oil, the International Energy Agency came out recently with a study showing that oil reserves worldwide were declining at the rate of 6% or 7% a year.

That does not mean that if suddenly the U.S. goes bankrupt that everything won't collapse in price. But I would rather be in commodities because it's the only thing I know where the fundamentals are improving.

They are not improving for Citibank or General Motors but the supply situation in commodities is such that when demand comes back, then commodities are going to be the best place to be in my view.

What do you think of bonds?

I am anticipating shorting bonds, the U.S. long bond. It's about the only real bubble around that I can see right now -- other than the U.S. dollar. I am not shorting bonds at this moment because I've shorted plenty of bubbles in my day, and I have learned that you better wait because they go up higher than any rational person can anticipate. But my plan is to short the long bond in the U.S. sometime in the foreseeable future.

I've read that you think the penchant of the last two presidential administrations for bailing out failing U.S. companies is a big mistake and will contribute to prolonging this recession. You argue that it's best to let these companies all go bankrupt. How bad can the economy get?

Yes, politicians are making mistakes. In Japan, the problem has lasted for 19 years. I hope that it doesn't last 19 years in the U.S. The approach that works is to let them (U.S. banks and automakers) collapse and clean out the system.

The idea that phony accounting is the solution (through changes in mark-to-market rules) is ludicrous. And the idea that a debt problem and an excessive spending problem can be cured with more debt and more spending is ludicrous.

It's laughable on its face, but politicians think they've got to do something. Unfortunately, they are doing the wrong things and they are going to make it worse.

Thanks for your time.

Source.

Filed under  //   A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing   AIG   China   Citigroup   Elements Rogers International Agriculture   Elements Rogers International Commodities Index   Elements Rogers International Metals   Fannie Mae   General Motors   George Soros   Hot Commodities   International Energy Agency   Investment Biker   Japan   Jim Rogers   Mandarin   Paige Parker   Rogers International Commodities Index   Singapore  

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Soros Says G20 Must Produce Practical Measures

From George Soros, Chairman of Soros Fund Management and Founder of the Open Society Institute

The forthcoming Group of 20 meeting is a make-or-break event. Unless it comes up with practical measures to support the less developed countries, which are even more vulnerable than the developed ones, markets are going to suffer another sinking spell just as they did last month when Tim Geithner, Treasury secretary, failed to produce practical measures to recapitalise the US banking system.

This crisis is different from all the others since the end of the second world war. Previously, the authorities got their act together and prevented the financial system from collapsing. This time, after the failure of Lehman Brothers last September 2008, the system broke down and was put on artificial life support. Among other measures, both Europe and the US in effect guaranteed that no other important financial institution would be allowed to fail.

This necessary step had unintended adverse consequences: many other countries, from eastern Europe to Latin America, Africa and south-east Asia, could not offer similar guarantees. As a result, capital fled from the periphery to the centre. The flight was abetted by national financial authorities at the centre who encouraged banks to repatriate their capital.

In the periphery countries, currencies fell, interest rates rose and credit default swap rates soared. When history is written, it will be recorded that in contrast to the Great Depression protectionism first prevailed in finance rather than trade.

Institutions such as the International Monetary Fund face a novel task: to protect the periphery countries from a storm created in the developed world. Global institutions are used to dealing with governments; now they must deal with the collapse of the private sector.

If they fail to do so, the periphery economies will suffer even more than those at the centre, because they are poorer and more dependent on commodities than the developed world. They also face $1,440bn (€1,060bn, £994bn) of bank loans coming due in 2009. These loans cannot be rolled over without international aid.

Gordon Brown, the UK prime minister, recognised the problem and designated the G20 meeting to address it. Yet profound attitudinal differences have surfaced, particularly between the US and Germany. The US has recognised that the collapse of credit in the private sector can be reversed only by using the credit of the state to the full.

Germany, traumatised by the memory of hyperinflation in the 1920s, is reluctant to sow the seeds of future inflation by incurring too much debt. Both positions are firmly held. The controversy threatens to disrupt the meeting.

Yet it should be possible to find common ground. Instead of setting a universal target of 2 per cent of gross domestic product for stimulus packages, it is enough to agree that the periphery countries need aid to protect their financial systems. This is in the common interest. If the periphery economies are allowed to collapse, the developed countries will also be hurt.

As things stand, the G20 meeting will produce some concrete results: the resources of the IMF are likely to be doubled, mainly by using the mechanism of the “new arrangements to borrow”, which can be activated without resolving the vexed question of reapportioning voting rights.

This will be sufficient to enable the IMF to help specific countries at risk but it will not provide a systemic solution for the less developed countries. Such a solution is readily available in the form of special drawing rights. SDRs are complex but they boil down to the international creation of money. Countries that can create their own money do not need them but periphery countries do. The rich countries should therefore lend their allocations to the nations in need.

Recipient countries would pay the IMF interest at a very low rate, equivalent to the composite average treasury bill rate of all convertible currencies. They would have free use of their own allocations but would be supervised in how the borrowed allocations were used to ensure they were well spent.

In addition to the one-time increase in the IMF’s resources, there ought to be a big annual issue of SDRs, of say $250bn, as long as the recession lasts. It is too late to use the April 2 G20 meeting to agree this, but if it were raised by President Barack Obama and endorsed by others, this would be sufficient to give heart to the markets and turn the meeting into a resounding success.

Source.

Filed under  //   G20   George Soros   Gordon Brown   Great Depression   IMF   International Monetary Fund   Lehman Brothers   Obama   Open Society Institute   Soros Fund Management   Tim Geithner  

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George Soros In Tune With the Zeitgeist

On Friday, August 17 2007, 21 of Wall Street's most influential investors met for lunch at George Soros's Southampton estate on the eastern end of Long Island. The first tremors of what would become the global credit crunch had rippled out a week or so earlier when the French bank BNP Paribas froze withdrawals from three of its funds, and in response, central bankers made a huge injection of liquidity into the money markets in an effort to keep the world's banks lending to one another.

Soros's guests included Julian Robertson, founder of the Tiger Management hedge fund; Donald Marron, former chief executive of PaineWebber and now boss of Lightyear Capital; James Chanos, president of Kynikos Associates, a hedge fund that specialised in shorting stocks; and Byron Wien, chief investment strategist at Pequot Capital and the convenor of the annual gathering.

As the group dined on striped bass, fruit salad and cookies, the discussion focused on a single question: was a recession looming? We all know the answer today, but the consensus that overcast afternoon was different. In a memo written after the lunch, Wien wrote: "The conclusion was that we were probably in an economic slowdown and a correction in the market, but we were not about to begin a recession or a bear market." Only two men dissented. One was Soros, who finished the meal convinced that the global financial crisis he had been predicting - prematurely - for years had finally begun.

His conclusion had immediate consequences. Six years earlier, following the departure of Stan Druckenmiller from Quantum Funds, Soros's hedge fund, Soros converted the operation into a "less aggressively managed vehicle" and renamed it an "endowment fund", which farmed most of its money out to external managers. Now Soros realised he had to get back into the game. "I did not want to see my accumulated wealth be severely impaired," he said, during a two-hour conversation this winter in the conference room of his midtown Manhattan offices. "So I came back and set up a macro-account within which I counterbalanced what I thought was the exposure of the firm."

Soros complained that his years of less active involvement at Quantum meant he didn't have the kind of "detailed knowledge of particular companies I used to have, so I'm not in a position to pick stocks". Moreover, "even many of the macro instruments that have been recently invented were unfamiliar to me". Even so, Quantum achieved a 32 per cent return in 2007, making the then 77-year-old the second-highest paid hedge fund manager in the world, according to Institutional Investor's Alpha magazine. He ended 2008, a year that saw global destruction of wealth on the most colossal scale since the second world war, with two out of three hedge funds losing money, up almost 10 per cent.

Soros's main goal was to preserve his fortune. But, as has been the case throughout his career, his financial acumen enhanced his credibility as a thinker, and never more so than in 2008. In May and June, after more than two decades of writing, he finally hit bestseller lists in the US and in the UK with his ninth book The New Paradigm for Financial Market s. In October, he received an invitation to testify before Congress about the financial crisis. In November, Barack Obama, whom he had long backed for the presidency, defeated John McCain.

"In the twilight of his life, he's achieved the recognition he has always wanted," his friend Wien said. "Everything is going for him. He's healthy, his candidate won, his business is on a solid footing."

Many comparisons have been drawn between 2008 and earlier periods of turmoil, but the moment with most personal resonance for Soros is not one of the conventional choices. The parallel he sees is with 1944, when, as a 13-year-old Jewish boy in Nazi-occupied Budapest, he eluded the Holocaust.

Soros credits his beloved father, Tivadar, with teaching him how to respond to "far from equilibrium situations". Captured by the Russians in the first world war, Tivadar was imprisoned in Siberia. He engineered his own escape and return home through a Russia convulsed by the Bolshevik revolution. That sojourn stripped him of his youthful ambition and left him wanting "nothing more from life than to enjoy it".

Yet on March 19 1944, the day the Germans occupied Hungary, the 50-year-old sprang into action, rescuing his immediate family and many others by arranging false identities for them. Before the invasion, George was still enough of a child, his father thought, to need a bit of parental coddling. Yet the teenager who spent the war living apart from his parents under a false name found the danger exhilarating. "It was high adventure," Soros wrote, "like living through Raiders of the Lost Ark ." And as the current financial crisis gathered momentum, he admitted to the same thrill. "I feel the same kind of stimulation as I felt then," he told me.

Part of the excitement is intellectual. Soros's experiences in 1944 laid the groundwork for the conceptual framework he would spend the rest of his life elaborating and which, he believes, has found its validation in the events of 2008. His core idea is "reflexivity", which he defines as a "two-way feedback loop, between the participants' views and the actual state of affairs.

It is, at its root, a case for frequent re- examination of one's assumptions about the world and for a readiness to spot and exploit moments of cataclysmic change - times when our perceptions of events and events themselves are likely to interact most fiercely. It is also at odds with the rational expectations school of economics, which has been the prevailing orthodoxy in recent decades. That approach assumed that economic players - from people buying homes to bankers buying subprime mortgages for their portfolios - were rational actors making, in aggregate, the best choices for themselves and that free markets tended towards equilibrium.

The rational expectations theory has taken a beating over the past 18 months: its intellectual nadir was probably October 23 2008, when Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, admitted to Congress that there was "a flaw in the model". Soros argues that the "market fundamentalism" of Greenspan and his ilk, especially their assumption that "financial markets are self-correcting", was an important cause of the current crisis. It befuddled policymakers and was the intellectual basis for the "various synthetic instruments and valuation models" which contributed mightily to the crash.

By contrast, Soros sees the current crisis as a real-life illustration of reflexivity. Markets did not reflect an objective "truth". Rather, the beliefs of market participants - that house prices would always rise, that an arcane financial instrument based on a subprime mortgage really could merit a triple-A rating - created a new reality. Ultimately, that "super-bubble" was unsustainable, hence the credit crunch of 2007 and the recession and financial crisis of 2008 and beyond.

As an investor and as a thinker, Soros has always thrived in times of upheaval. But he has also remained something of an outsider. He recalls how he "discovered loneliness" when he arrived to study at the London School of Economics in 1947. Later on, as he worked his way up from being a journeyman arbitrage trader in London and then New York, to running one of the world's most successful hedge funds, Soros remained, in the words of one private equity acquaintance, a bit of "an oddball", both on Wall Street and in the academic world.

Strobe Talbott, now the president of the Brookings Institution and a former US deputy secretary of state, said: "He likes to think of himself as an outsider who can come in from time to time, including to the Oval Office, where I took him on a couple of occasions. But simply hobnobbing with the powerful isn't important."

That lack of clubbiness and the associated trait of iconoclasm may explain why, for all his success, Soros has had a mixed public reputation. His speculative plays, which have often targeted currencies, have earned the wrath of political leaders. The ambitious, global reach of his richly funded Open Society foundation has prompted some critics to accuse him of suffering from a Messiah complex. He was so effectively demonised by the US right earlier this decade that he kept fairly quiet about his support for Obama, lest the association hurt his candidate. Probably most painfully, his forays into economics and philosophy often have met with considerable scepticism, especially in academic circles.

The one time and place where he instantly became a highly regarded insider was in the former Soviet Union and its satellites when the Berlin Wall came down. More completely and more swiftly than any other foreigner, Soros grasped and embraced the systemic transformation that was unfolding. The question for him today is whether, as the west undergoes its own once-in-a-century systemic shock, this arch-outsider will find himself in the mainstream in the society that has been his main home for more than half a century.

Soros's most famous - or infamous - speculative play as an investor was his bet against sterling in 1992, which won him more than $1bn and earned him the epithet from the British press of "the man who broke the Bank of England". That bet is also a perfect illustration of the specific talent that his past and present fund managers agree has been central to his investing success.

Soros's best-known investment was not, in fact, his own idea. According to both Soros and Druckenmiller, who was managing Quantum at the time, it was Druckenmiller who came up with the plan to short the pound. But when Druckenmiller went through his rationale with Soros, in one of their twice- or thrice-daily conversations, Soros told his protégé to be bolder: "I said, 'Go for the jugular!'." Druckenmiller duly raised their stake - Quantum and several related funds wagered nearly $10bn, according to interviews Soros gave afterwards - and Soros earned both a fortune and an international reputation.

Druckenmiller, who spent 12 years at Quantum, says that conversation exemplifies Soros's singular financial gift: "He's extremely good at using the balance sheet - probably the best ever. He is able to use leverage when he likes it, but he is also able to walk away. He has no emotional attachment to a position." Chanos agrees: "One thing I've both wrestled with and admired, that [Soros] conquered many years ago, is the ability to go from long to short, the ability to turn on a dime when confronted with the evidence. Emotionally, that is really hard."

Soros denies any great degree of emotional self-control. "That's not true, that's not true," he told me, shaking his head and smiling. "I am very emotional. I am as moody as the market, so I'm basically a manic depressive personality." (His market-linked moodiness extends to psychosomatic ailments, especially backaches, which he treats as valuable investment tips.) Instead, Soros attributes his effectiveness as an investor to his philosophical views about the contingent nature of human knowledge: "I think my conceptual framework, which basically emphasises the importance of misconceptions, makes me extremely critical of my own decisions . . . I know that I am bound to be wrong, and therefore am more likely to correct my own mistakes."

Some Soros-watchers intimate that his vast network of international contacts might be an important source of his market prescience. But it was in the one part of the world where Soros really did have an inside track - the former Soviet bloc - that he made his most disastrous deal. In Russia, as in much of the former Soviet Union, he was intensely engaged with the country's transformation. In June 1997, as the Kremlin struggled to pay overdue wages, Soros extended a bridge loan to the Russian government, acting as a one-man International Monetary Fund.

He came to believe in Russia's commitment to reforms, and to see himself as an insider - two convictions that were his financial undoing. He invested $980m with a consortium of oligarchs who acquired a 25 per cent stake in national telecoms company Svyazinvest, deciding to participate because "I thought that this is the transition from robber capitalism to legitimate capitalism". Instead, the Svyazinvest privatisation turned out to be the moment when the oligarchs redirected their energies from fleecing the state to fleecing one another. Soros, as an outsider, was an obvious casualty. "Never have I been screwed so much since Russia. For them, they get a satisfaction out of doing it.

"It was the biggest mistake of my investment career," he told me. "I was deceived by my own hope."

On a chilly Monday night in December, Soros drove from Manhattan to the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut. He was due to speak at a benefit for the Scholar Rescue Fund, a programme he has partly financed and which, since 2002, has provided safe havens for 266 persecuted academics from 40 countries. After his talk (on the global financial crisis, of course), Soros filed out of the auditorium chatting with Stanley Bergman, a founding partner of the law firm that had sponsored the evening.

"You like the game?" Soros asked his host with a smile. "Yes," the white-haired Bergman replied.

Then, in a flash of the competitive spirit that makes Soros an avid skier and player of tennis and chess, Soros asked: "And how old are you?" "75." "I'm 78," Soros replied. "But what's the use of good health if it doesn't buy you money?" The vigorous septuagenarians flashed each other a complicit smile.

According to Wien, Soros likes the game, too: "George loves to be able to show from time to time that he can do it." But while he loves to play, he is disdainful of a life lived purely to accumulate more chips. His epiphany came in 1981, when he had to scramble to raise money to pay for an investment in gilts. "I thought I would have a heart attack," he told me. "And then I realised that to die just for the sake of getting rich, I would be a loser."

For Soros, the solution was philanthropy. "To do something really that would make a significant difference to the world, that would be worth dying for," he said. Soros's fortune has given his causes enormous firepower: according to Aryeh Neier, the human rights activist who has been running the Open Society foundation since 1993, its budget was $550m in 2008 and will increase to $600m this year. By his own calculation, Soros has donated more than $5bn to his causes, primarily through his foundation.

"No philanthropist in the second half of the 20th century has done better in deploying resources strategically to change the world," Larry Summers, the newly appointed head of Barack Obama's National Economic Council, told me early last autumn.

Talbott compares Soros's impact to that of a sovereign nation. In the 1990s, he says, "when I got word that George Soros wanted to talk, I would drop everything and treat him pretty much like a visiting head of state. He was literally putting more money into some of the former colonies of the former Soviet empire than the US government."

Soros's philanthropic lieutenants report an approach similar to the investing style observed by his fund managers: he knows how to make big, original bets and he isn't afraid to cut his losses. Anders Aslund, an economist who has studied Russia and Ukraine and has worked with Soros on various projects, believes his philanthropic style "is very much formed by the money markets, which are always changing. He assumes any idea he has now will be wrong in a few years. He is always asking himself, when he has a wonderful project going, 'When should I stop this project?'."

Soros's war chest, and his determination to deploy it beyond the usual blue-chip charities of hospitals, universities, museums or even poverty in Africa, had long made him a controversial figure outside the US. He was among the western culprits accused by the Kremlin of inciting Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution; his foundation's offices have been raided in Russia and he was forced to close them down in authoritarian Uzbekistan.

America, it turns out, can also be sensitive to plutocrats using their wealth to address socially contentious subjects. In recent years, his foundation became more active in the US, taking on issues including drug policy. His engagement became more intense during the George W. Bush presidency, when Soros decided that the open society he had worked to foster in repressive regimes abroad was imperilled in his adopted home.

Some admired his chutzpah. The famously independent-minded Paul Volcker, who was appointed to lead the Fed by Jimmy Carter and reappointed by Ronald Reagan, said: "The drug thing is a perfect example that he doesn't adopt a conventional view. I think drug policy needs a new look and he's been one of the people who say that."

Soros's money has been crucial in enabling him to voice maverick views: "That's what led me to oppose Bush very publicly, because I was in a position that I could afford to do it," he said. But he also believes his fortune and the automatic credibility it gives him in America has drawn the fire of conservative pundits such as Fox's Bill O'Reilly and extremist pamphleteer Lyndon LaRouche. "Given the excessive esteem in which people who make money are held in America, I had to be demonised," he said.

Their attacks worked. So much so that last year, as the Obama bandwagon gained speed and American financiers, along with much of the rest of the country, clamoured to jump on, his earliest heavyweight Wall Street backer kept a low profile. "Obama seeks to be a unifier," Soros said. "I thought my vocal support for him would not necessarily benefit him."

At around 1.00am on November 5 2008, the twice-divorced Soros sat on a peach-coloured sofa in his elegant Fifth Avenue apartment, with Queen Noor of Jordan to his left and Steve Clemons of the New America think-tank perched on the edge of a chair to his right. Around them milled a crowd of eclectic guests, many still teary-eyed from Obama's Grant Park victory speech, which had been broadcast on four flat-screen television sets in the apartment. Michele Pierre-Louis, prime minister of Haiti and former head of her country's Soros foundation; former World Bank chief James Wolfensohn; Volcker; and twentysomething Kwasi Asare, a hip-hop music promoter, were among the visitors.

Soros was in a mellow, triumphant mood that night - and with good reason: he had spotted Obama early on. His ubiquitous political consigliere , Michael Vachon, still has among his papers a rumpled itinerary from a trip he and Soros took to Chicago in February 2004. In the upper right-hand corner of the page, Vachon had scrawled, "Barack guy". After making persistent calls to set up a meeting, the Senate candidate joined Soros for a 7.30am breakfast at the Four Seasons.

Soros left that meal "very impressed", a view that was confirmed when he read Obama's autobiography and deemed him "a real person of substance". On June 7, Soros hosted a packed fundraiser for Obama's Senate campaign at his Upper East Side home. Soros and his family contributed roughly $80,000, then the legal maximum.

Obama was impressing a lot of people at that time. But once it became clear that Hillary Clinton would run for president, nearly all the established New York Democrats lined up behind their local senator and her machine. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, now the head of the IMF and then a possible French presidential candidate, said Soros told him in 2006 he was supporting "this young guy, Barack Obama. He was the first one to tell me this and he was right." On January 16 2007, the day Obama formed a presidential exploratory committee, Soros contributed to his campaign and officially offered his backing. Before doing so, Soros called Clinton to let her know. "I look forward to your support in the general election," she told him.

His decision to back Obama was consistent with his life-long affinity for moments of radical change. "I felt that America had gone so far off-base that there was a need for discontinuity," he said. As in the markets, Soros's political bet on systemic transformation - his support for Obama, but also his early opposition to the war in Iraq and the "war on terror" - has come good.

For Soros, one happy consequence of being in tune with the zeitgeist is that he is taken seriously as a thinker on US public policy issues, particularly to do with the financial crisis. When he, along with the other four highest-earning hedge fund managers, testified before Congress in November, he was treated with respect and even deference - not the prevailing attitude towards billionaire financiers at the moment. Before Soros had even taken his coat off, he was greeted in the corridors by Democratic New York Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney. "Give him a nice office," she told a staffer who was looking for a place where Soros could wait before his testimony. "He creates a lot of jobs in my district and supports a lot of good people."

After the hearing, a lawmaker and a staffer both approached Soros and asked him to autograph their copies of his book.

Being listened to on Capitol Hill is important to Soros. But what matters to him most of all is leaving an enduring intellectual legacy. He describes reflexivity as "my main interest". Even as Soros met with increasing financial and public success through his fund and his foundation, he was deeply frustrated by his failure to be accepted as a serious thinker.

He writes that his first book The Alchemy of Finance was "dismissed by many critics as the self-indulgence of a successful speculator". That reaction still prevails in some circles. Paul Krugman, the Nobel prize-winning economist, devotes half a chapter to Soros in his latest book, characterising him as "perhaps the most famous speculator of all times". He also raises an eyebrow at Soros's intellectual "ambitions", tartly observing that he "would like the world to take his philosophical pronouncements as seriously as it takes his financial acumen".

Another barrier to academic respectability is Soros's self- confessed "phobia" of formal mathematics: "I understand mathematical concepts but I'm afraid of mathematical symbols, because you can easily get lost in them." That fear proved no impediment to success in the quantitative world of finance, but it has hurt Soros's street cred in economics departments. "Among academics, he suffers from the additional liability of not expressing it in the language of mathematics that has become fashionable," Joe Stiglitz, another Nobel prize-winning economist, said. But Stiglitz believes his friend's writing has become more current, partly thanks to the financial crisis: "By those economists interested in ideas, I think his work is taken seriously as an idea that informs their thinking."

In the view of Larry Summers: "Reflexivity as an idea is right and important and closely related to various streams of existing thought in the social sciences. But no one has deployed a philosophical concept as effectively as George has, first to make money and then to change the world."

Paul Volcker, one of Obama's top economic advisers, delivered a similar verdict: "I think he has a valid insight which is not always expressed as clearly by him as I might like." Overall, he said, Soros is "an imaginative and provocative thinker . . . he's got some brilliant ideas about how markets function or dysfunction."

This is as close to mainstream intellectual acceptance as Soros has come in his two decades of writing and more than five decades since he gave up on academia. It feels like a breakthrough. When I asked him if he would still describe himself as a failed philosopher, he said no: "I think that I am actually succeeding as a philosopher." For him, that is "obviously" the most important human accomplishment.

"I think it has to do with the human condition," he said. "The fact that we are mortal and we would like to be immortal. The closest thing you can come to that is by creating something that lives beyond you. Wealth could be one of those things, but evidence shows that it doesn't survive too many generations. However, if you can have an artistic or philosophical or scientific creation that withstands the test of time, then you have come as close to it as possible."

Source.

Filed under  //   Byron Wien   Donald Marron   George Soros   James Chanos   Julian Robertson   Kynikos Associates   Lightyear Capital   Pequot Capital   Quantum Funds   Stan Druckenmiller   Tiger Management  

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The George Soros Rescue Plan

From George Soros, Chairman of Soros Fund Management and Founder of the Open Society Institute

In the past, whenever the financial system came close to a breakdown, the authorities rode to the rescue and prevented it from going over the brink. That is what I expected in 2008 but that is not what happened. On Monday September 15, Lehman Brothers, the US investment bank, was allowed to go into bankruptcy without proper preparation. It was a game-changing event with catastrophic consequences.

For a start, the price of credit default swaps, a form of insurance against companies defaulting on debt, went through the roof as investors took cover. AIG, the insurance giant, was carrying a large short position in CDS and faced imminent default. By the next day Hank Paulson, then US Treasury secretary, had to reverse himself and come to the rescue of AIG.

But worse was to come. Lehman was one of the main market-makers in commercial paper and a large issuer of these short-term obligations to boot. Reserve Primary, an independent money market fund, held Lehman paper and, since it had no deep pocket to turn to, it had to “break the buck” – stop redeeming its shares at par. That caused panic among depositors: by Thursday a run on money market funds was in full swing.

The panic then spread to the stock market. The financial system suffered cardiac arrest and had to be put on artificial life support.

How could Lehman have been left to go under? The responsibility lies squarely with the financial authorities, notably the Treasury and the Federal Reserve. The claim that they lacked the necessary legal powers is a lame excuse. In an emergency they could and should have done whatever was necessary to prevent the system from collapsing. That is what they have done on other occasions. The fact is, they allowed it to happen.

On a deeper level, too, credit default swaps played a critical role in Lehman’s demise. My explanation is controversial and all three steps of my argument will take the reader to unfamiliar ground.

First, there is an asymmetry in the risk/reward ratio between being long or short in the stock market. (Being long means owning a stock, being short means selling a stock one does not own.) Being long has unlimited potential on the upside but limited exposure on the downside. Being short is the reverse. The asymmetry manifests itself in the following way: losing on a long position reduces one’s risk exposure while losing on a short position increases it. As a result, one can be more patient being long and wrong than being short and wrong. The asymmetry serves to discourage the short-selling of stocks.

The second step is to understand credit default swaps and to recognise that the CDS market offers a convenient way of shorting bonds. In that market the asymmetry in risk/reward works in the opposite way to stocks. Going short on bonds by buying a CDS contract carries limited risk but unlimited profit potential; by contrast, selling credit default swaps offers limited profits but practically unlimited risks.

The asymmetry encourages speculating on the short side, which in turn exerts a downward pressure on the underlying bonds. When an adverse development is expected, the negative effect can become overwhelming because CDS tend to be priced as warrants, not as options: people buy them not because they expect an eventual default but because they expect the CDS to appreciate during the lifetime of the contract.

No arbitrage can correct the mispricing. That can be clearly seen in US and UK government bonds, whose actual price is much higher than that implied by CDS. These asymmetries are difficult to reconcile with the efficient market hypothesis, the notion that securities prices accurately reflect all known information.

The third step is to recognise reflexivity – that is to say, the mispricing of financial instruments can affect the fundamentals that market prices are supposed to reflect. Nowhere is this phenomenon more pronounced than in the case of financial institutions, whose ability to do business is dependent on confidence and trust. That means that “bear raids” to drive down the share prices of these institutions can be self-validating. That is in direct contradiction to the efficient market hypothesis.

Putting these three considerations together leads to the conclusion that Lehman, AIG and other financial institutions were destroyed by bear raids in which the shorting of stocks and buying of CDS amplified and reinforced each other. Unlimited shorting was made possible by the 2007 abolition of the uptick rule (which hindered bear raids by allowing short-selling only when prices were rising). The unlimited selling of bonds was facilitated by the CDS market. Together, the two made a lethal combination.

That is what AIG, one of the most successful insurance companies in the world, failed to understand. Its business was selling insurance and, when it saw a seriously mispriced risk, it went to town insuring it, in the belief that diversifying risk reduces it. It expected to make a fortune in the long run but it was destroyed in short order.

My argument raises some interesting questions. What would have happened if the uptick rule on shorting shares had been kept, in effect, but “naked” short-selling (where the vendor has not borrowed the stock in advance) and speculating in CDS had both been outlawed? The bankruptcy of Lehman might have been avoided but what would have happened to the asset super-bubble? One can only conjecture. My guess is that the bubble would have been deflated more slowly, with less catastrophic results, but that the after-effects would have lingered longer. It would have resembled more the Japanese experience than what is happening now.

What is the proper role of short-selling? Undoubtedly it gives markets greater depth and continuity, making them more resilient, but it is not without dangers. As bear raids can be self-validating, they ought to be kept under control. If the efficient market hypothesis were valid, there would be an a priori reason for imposing no constraints. As it is, both the uptick rule and allowing short-selling only when it is covered by borrowed stock are useful pragmatic measures that seem to work well without any clear-cut theoretical justification.

What about credit default swaps? Here I take a more radical view than most people. The prevailing view is that they ought to be traded on regulated exchanges. I believe they are toxic and should be used only by prescription. They could be used to insure actual bonds but – in light of their asymmetric character – not to speculate against countries or companies.

CDS are not, however, the only synthetic financial instruments that have proved toxic. The same applies to the slicing and dicing of collateralised debt obligations and to the portfolio insurance contracts that caused the stock market crash of 1987, to mention only two that have done a lot of damage. The issuance of stock is closely regulated by authorities such as the Securities and Exchange Commission; why not the issuance of derivatives and other synthetic instruments? The role of reflexivity and the asymmetries identified earlier ought to prompt a rejection of the efficient market hypothesis and a thorough reconsideration of the regulatory regime.

Now that the bankruptcy of Lehman has had the same shock effect on the behaviour of consumers and businesses as the bank failures of the 1930s, the problems facing the administration of President Barack Obama are even greater than those that confronted Franklin D. Roosevelt. Total credit outstanding was 160 per cent of gross domestic product in 1929 and rose to 260 per cent in 1932; we entered the crash of 2008 at 365 per cent and the ratio is bound to rise to 500 per cent. This is without taking into account the pervasive use of derivatives, which was absent in the 1930s but immensely complicates the current situation. On the positive side, we have the experience of the 1930s and the prescriptions of John Maynard Keynes to draw on.

The bursting of bubbles causes credit contraction, the forced liquidation of assets, deflation and wealth destruction that may reach catastrophic proportions. In a deflationary environment, the weight of accumulated debt can sink the banking system and push the economy into depression. That is what needs to be prevented at all costs.

It can be done – by creating money to offset the contraction of credit, recapitalising the banking system and writing off or down the accumulated debt in an orderly manner. They require radical and unorthodox policy measures. For best results, the three processes should be combined.

If these measures were successful and credit started to expand, deflationary pressures would be replaced by the spectre of inflation and the authorities would have to drain the excess money supply from the economy almost as fast as they had pumped it in. There is no way to escape from a far-from-equilibrium situation – global deflation and depression – except by first inducing its opposite and then reducing it.

To prevent the US economy from sliding into a depression, Mr Obama must implement a radical and comprehensive set of policies. Alongside the well-advanced fiscal stimulus package, these should include a system-wide and compulsory recapitalisation of the banking system and a thorough overhaul of the mortgage system – reducing the cost of mortgages and foreclosures.

Energy policy could also play an important role in counteracting both depression and deflation. The American consumer can no longer act as the motor of the global economy. Alternative energy and developments that produce energy savings could serve as a new motor, but only if the price of conventional fuels is kept high enough to justify investing in those activities. That would involve putting a floor under the price of fossil fuels by imposing a price on carbon emissions and import duties on oil to keep the domestic price above, say, $70 per barrel.

Finally, the international financial system must be reformed. Far from providing a level playing field, the current system favours the countries in control of the international financial institutions, notably the US, to the detriment of nations at the periphery. The periphery countries have been subject to the market discipline dictated by the Washington consensus but the US was exempt from it.

How unfair the system is has been revealed by a crisis that originated in the US yet is doing more damage to the periphery. Assistance is needed to protect the financial systems of periphery countries, including trade finance, something that will require large contingency funds available at little notice for brief periods of time. Periphery governments will also need long-term financing to enable them to engage in counter-cyclical fiscal policies.

In addition, banking regulations need to be internationally co-ordinated. Market regulations should be global as well. National governments also need to co-ordinate their macroeconomic policies in order to avoid wide currency swings and other disruption.

This is a condensed, almost shorthand account of what needs to be done to turn the global economy around. It should give a sense of how difficult a task it is.

These are extracts from an e-book update to The New Paradigm for Financial Markets – The credit crisis of 2008 and what it means (Public­Affairs Books, New York). Source.

Filed under  //   AIG   Credit Default Swaps   Federal Reserve   George Soros   Soros Fund Management  

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View of the Day with Jim Rogers

The pound is a currency with no underpinning and should fall against the dollar and the euro, says Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings and co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros. He says his view reflects the UK's dire economic situation: "It's simple. The UK has nothing to sell."

Mr. Rogers says the two main pillars of support for sterling have been North Sea oil and the strength of the UK financial services sector, in particular, the City of London's role. But Mr Rogers says just as North Sea oil is running out, so London's standing as a financial centre is set to suffer: "I don't think there is a sound UK bank now. At least, if there is one I don't know about it."

"The City of London is finished, the financial centre of the world is moving east. All the money is in Asia. Why would it go back to the west?" says Mr. Rogers. Mr. Rogers thinks the pound is more vulnerable than the dollar or the euro. He says the UK housing market is arguably in a worse state than that of the US, given pockets of strength in the US and prices that are sliding across the board in the UK.

Meanwhile, he says, the UK is in worse shape economically than the eurozone, where most countries are not big debtors and do not run huge trade deficits. "If the UK discovers more North Sea oil, I might change this view," he says. "But I don't see that happening." Source.

Filed under  //   George Soros   Jim Rogers   London   United Kingdom  

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