Can he do it?

Greg Norman 072008 I don’t think so, but I sure will be pulling for him. We mid-50 year olds have to stick together.

If Norman can pull it off, his victory should put to rest one of the cruelest golf jokes of recent lore:

Q: What is the English pronunciation of Jean Van de Velde, the Frenchman who blew the 1999 British Open at Carnoustie by taking a triple-bogey 7 on the final hole and then losing in a playoff?

A: Greg Norman

Daniel Wexler passes along the following analysis of Norman’s remarkable career from The Book of Golfers:

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New Movie Time

My boys are dragging me to the The Dark Knight this weekend and, based on early reviews, I’m reasonably sure that it will be quite good. But truthfully, I’m looking forward more to the new Coen Brothers movie, Burn After Reading:

The Usual Suspects

Bear Market Given the recent turmoil in the financial markets, it’s a bit hard to keep up with the morality plays and the villains.

After the Enronesque fall of Bear Stearns, the villains of the moment were the two Bear Stearns executives who were indicted for not throwing in the towel timely.

Then, over the past several weeks, speculators who facilitate markets to hedge energy costs became targets of the demagogues.

And now this week, with the demise of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox issued an emergency order attempting to curtail naked short-sellers of the stock of the embattled government sponsored entities and also the stocks of Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley.

What on earth is Christopher Cox, a supposedly sophisticated securities lawyer, doing issuing orders that hinder the efficient functioning of markets?

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Beijing = "People’s Republic of Houston"?

Bejing smog "Beijing is flat and sprawling and smoggy and jammed with traffic and nearly all new, which is why an American friend who’s been working there for the last couple of years calls it ‘the People’s Republic of Houston.’"

That’s the opening of From Mao to Wow! by Kurt Anderson of Vanity Fair. He goes on to say that a more accurate comparison is Beijing now with New York City of a century ago.

Southwest Airlines’ legacy of good news

Southwest_Airlines_l071508 Gosh, it’s such a drag reading about business and the economy lately. So, what the heck, let’s take a quick look at a perennial source of good news, Clear Thinkers favorite Southwest Airlines.

Southwest’s discount model of operation has kept it profitable in the notoriously unprofitable airline business for 35 straight years. Even during these turbulent times, Southwest’s aggressive hedging program for its fuel costs and efficient operations have allowed the company to accumulate $3.7 billion of cash and generate a market capitalization of $9.9 billion. That market cap is now greater than the combined market value of the six largest legacy U.S. airlines. WallStrip’s Julie Alexandria provides a clever overview on one of Texas’ true treasures:

Stros 2008 Season Review, Part Three

Ed Wade Inasmuch as Major League Baseball is taking a break for the All-Star break, I decided to post the third part of five periodic reviews of the Stros’ 2008 season a game or so early (previous parts for the 2008 season are here). Although they were able to keep it together a bit longer than the 2007 club, the 2008 Stros (44-51) fell apart during the third 20% segment of the 2008 season.

The Stros went 12-19 during the third segment and spiced that effort by being trounced 10-0 on this past Friday evening by the team with the worst record in MLB, the Washington Nationals (36-50). That’s a far worse record than the club had during either the first fifth or second fifth of the season, but consistent with my pre-season forecast that this Stros club looked like a 75-win outfit. The Stros are in in last place in the National League Central, 13 games behind the Cubs (57-38) and 8.5 games out of the National League Wildcard Playoff berth. Given that the Cubs net RCAA/RSAA total is 113 (43 RCAA/70 RSAA) and the Stros is -42 (-41 RCAA/-1 RSAA), it’s surprising that the Stros aren’t even further behind.

Nevertheless, the first 60% of the season has been an instructive lesson in how risky it is to make conclusions about baseball based on small sample sizes. The Stros stumbled out of the gate with 12 losses in their first 18 games and looked completely lost. Then, stellar 1B Lance Berkman (52 RCAA/.443 OBA/.653 SLG/ 1.097 OPS) warmed up and the club bounced back with a 23-10 stretch that put them seven games above .500 at 30-23 and just one game behind the Cubs on May 27, prompting the mostly clueless Chronicle sports reporters (Zac Levine excepted) to babble about a possible playoff berth. However, since then, the Stros have lost 29 of 43 games to drop into the NL Central cellar and decisively expunge any theoretical playoff aspirations. The Stros now have to win 31 of their final 67 games just to equal my 75 win pre-season prediction. That is by no means a sure thing.

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Be careful, Mr. Wagoner

General Motors General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner made some interesting public comments this past week in Dallas regarding the besieged automaker’s bankruptcy prospects:

"Under any scenario we can imagine, our financial position, or cash position, will remain robust through the rest of this year," Mr. Wagoner said Thursday while in Dallas to speak to a business organization. He said the company has plenty of options to shore up its finances beyond 2008, although he declined to outline them.

The comments failed to boost investor sentiment as GM shares fell 6.2% to $9.69 in 4 p.m. New York Stock Exchange composite trading Thursday. The stock has been trading at its lowest levels in more than 50 years as concerns mount about the company’s financial position amid a steep decline in U.S. sales.

GM and other U.S. auto makers are reeling as the slow U.S. economy depresses sales and as high gasoline prices push many would-be buyers to small, more-fuel-efficient vehicles and away from the higher-margin SUVs and trucks. Through June, for instance, GM’s U.S. sales slipped 16%, more than offsetting strength in overseas markets.

GM has about $24 billion in cash but is burning an estimated $3 billion a quarter, prompting talk that it will need a significant cash influx to get to 2010.

"We have no thought of [bankruptcy] whatsoever," Mr. Wagoner said in response to an audience question during the Dallas event.

Now, I am not involved with GM, but I have been involved over the past 30 years in my share of big company reorganizations. Contrary to Wagoner’s statements, GM has almost certainly "thought" of bankruptcy and GM management probably continues to examine whether a reorganization under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code makes sense for the company, which it just might. Frankly, not to examine such alternatives would be egregious mismanagement. Any seasoned investor knows this and the market is clearly pricing that risk by lowering the company’s stock price.

So, despite all that, if GM ends up in bankruptcy, is Wagoner at risk of being indicted for misleading investors regarding the company’s ongoing bankruptcy analysis? Stated another way, will Wagoner be indicted for breaching the obligation to throw in the towel?

Dr. Michael DeBakey, R.I.P.

Debakey071208 Dr. Michael DeBakey (previous posts here) died late Friday at the age of 99. One of the most influential men in Houston’s history, Dr. DeBakey was the world-famous cardiovascular surgeon who researched, developed and initially implemented not only a variety of devices that help heart patients, but also such now-common surgical procedures as heart-bypass surgery. Two of the Chronicle’s finest reporters — Science reporter Eric Berger and Texas Medical Center reporter Todd Ackerman — provide this outstanding article on Dr. DeBakey’s remarkable life, and Eric provides an audio file of his 2005 interview of Dr. DeBakey here. The New York Times’ article on Dr. DeBakey’s death is here.

As with my late father, Dr. DeBakey was one of the leaders of a talented generation of post-World War II doctors who embraced the optimistic view of therapeutic intervention in the practice of medicine, which was a fundamental change from the sense of therapeutic powerlessness that was widely taught to doctors by their pre-WWII professors. As noted earlier here and here, that seismic shift in medicine has changed the course of human history.

But the tremendous impact that Dr. DeBakey had on medicine is exceeded by the massive effect that he had on Houston. When Dr. DeBakey accepted the president’s position at Baylor College of Medicine a few years after the end of World War II, the Texas Medical Center was a sleepy regional medical center. Over the next two decades, Dr. DeBakey was one of the key leaders who transformed the Medical Center into one of the largest and best medical centers in the world. Dr. DeBakey was the catalyst who established the culture within the Texas Medical Center of cutting-edge research, productive competition but also widespread collaboration, quality care for patients and good, old-fashioned hard work that attracted the best and brightest physicians, teachers and students from around the world to the Medical Center.

This massive importation of intellectual capital over the last 60 years of Dr. DeBakey’s life generated enormous wealth and benefits for Houston. Today, the medical facilities of the Texas Medical Center are the largest aggregate provider of jobs in the Houston area, even greater than the local jobs provided by the energy industry.

That’s quite a legacy in my book.

Incompetence Masquerading as Demagoguery

oil_drill_dollars.jpgUniversity of Houston finance professor Craig Pirrong (blog here) does a nice job in this Wall $treet Journal op-ed on Friday of explaining how speculation in oil and gas markets helps all of us deal with rising energy prices:

Restricting these speculators won’t reduce the price of oil — but they are likely to make consumers and investors worse off. Futures and swap markets facilitate the efficient management of price risks, and speculators are an important part of that process.

For instance, a producer of oil may want to lock in the price at which he sells his oil in the coming months in order to hedge against fluctuations in its price. He can do so by selling a futures contract at the prevailing market price. Similarly, an airline can protect itself against price increases next summer by buying today a futures contract that locks in a purchase price for next July.

Producers and consumers who want to “hedge” in this fashion cannot wave a magic wand to make the price risks they face disappear. The oil producer has to find somebody to sell to, and the airline must find somebody to buy from — and that somebody is often a speculator. Restricting speculation would increase the costs that producers, consumers (such as airlines), and marketers (such as heating-oil dealers) pay to manage their price risks by reducing the number of traders able to absorb the risks they want to shed.

These higher risk management costs would result in higher prices at the pump or the airline ticket counter for consumers, and less investment in new productive capacity — which would keep prices high into the future.Participation in these oil markets by pension funds and other investors .  .  . is also not a problem.

By adding commodity futures to their portfolios, i.e., by diversifying, these investors can reduce their risks without sacrificing returns, and without impacting physical inventories (or prices). Consumers are the ultimate winners when risks are borne as efficiently as possible in these markets.

The unprecedented run-up in oil prices is painful for consumers around the world. But the focus on speculation is misguided, and represents a convenient distraction from an understanding of the real, underlying causes of high oil prices — most notably continuing demand growth in the face of stagnant production, supply disruptions and the weakening dollar.More restrictions and regulations of energy markets, in the vain belief that such actions will bring price relief, are counterproductive. They will make the energy markets less efficient, rather than more so.

One really need look no further than the most profitable U.S. airline — Southwest — to understand how robust speculation in energy markets benefits a company’s employees, its investors and its customers.

However, apparently the CEO of a far less profitable airline — Craig Steenland of chronically unprofitable Northwest Airlines — has not noticed how beneficial futures markets can be for his company and its customers. He is busy lobbying Congress to enact strict regulations against precisely the type of markets that Southwest Airlines has used to beat Northwest’s performance like a drum over the past five years:

The battered airline industry took its concerns about rising fuel costs to Capitol Hill Monday, urging Congress to address widespread speculation in the energy markets.Making the case for the industry was Northwest Airlines CEO Doug Steenland, who argued that energy market speculators have pushed oil prices to unprecedented levels and harmed the airlines that saw some recovery in 2007.

[.  .  .]”I cannot overstate the importance to my company and the entire U.S. airline industry of immediate congressional action to halt excessive speculation in oil futures markets,” Steenland said.

Specifically, Steenland sought more regulatory power for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), a prohibition on pension funds from investing in energy commodities and law changes that would remove loopholes and increase oversight of speculators.

Jeff Matthews sums up the absurdity of Steenland’s witch hunt on the energy speculators perfectly:

Remember what I said about Mr. Steenland being named CEO of Northwest in October, 2004?

Northwest Airlines did not start hedging its jet fuel needs until 2008.

That’s right.

Unlike, say, Southwest, which hedged most of its jet fuel needs when prices were low, Northwest didn’t bother until oil had spiked to $100 a barrel. [.  .  .]

Of course, when a big corporate CEO like Mr. Steenland makes a gross error of judgment like not hedging his single biggest cost of doing business, he naturally takes full responsibility and ask shareholders and customers for forgiveness.

We’re kidding!

He blames speculators instead .  .  .

Northwest emerged from Chapter 11 in May 2007. Northwest equity holders got nothing. Mr. Steenland got a package worth $26.6 million at the time.

Too bad Northwest didn’t use some of that $26.6 million to hedge itself.

I guess the only thing to do now that it’s too late to do anything useful is…blame speculators.

Yep, that’s the ticket…for an airline that doesn’t know much about hedging, anyway.

I rest my case.

An Enron "hero" is looking for work?

Sherron-WatkinsThis JoAnn Greco/Portfolio.com article bemoans that “famed Enron whistleblower” Sherron Watkins is having a hard time finding a job. Those dastardly employers just don’t trust honest employees such as Watkins, now do they?

On the other hand, perhaps the reason that Watkins can’t find a job is that prospective employers do more research than Ms. Greco bothered to do for her article and discover that Watkins wasn’t really a whistleblower even though she disingenuously presented herself to Congress, the mainstream media and the public as one.