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Following a near melt-up
in share prices at the beginning of this month, markets have suddenly
become unstuck. Rattled in part by disappointing results from the likes
of Intel, General Electric and Citigroup, as well as jitters over Iran
and sharply higher oil prices, many investors are looking to take money
off the table and head for safety.
Unfortunately,
there are signs that some exits are becoming blocked. What that means
is, those looking to cash out in the months ahead may soon discover that
they are trapped -- with little or no way out.
Take
last week’s debacle in Japan. When word of an investigation at former
high-flyer Livedoor unleashed a wave of selling by small investors,
volume surged. That forced officials at the Tokyo Stock Exchange to halt
trading early because of capacity constraints, despite the fact that the
internet company’s sub-$10 billion value paled in comparison to the $4
trillion capitalization of the overall market.
Then
there are the problems in Germany. Since last month, two real estate
mutual funds, with assets totaling $8 billion between them, have been
forced to temporarily shut their doors to prevent runs by nervous
investors. Under that country’s rules, funds investing in property
need only hold five percent of their assets in cash -- no doubt a
problem if too many decide, as they have recently, to bail out all at
once.
Doors
are closing elsewhere, too. According to a recent report, one $12
billion U.S. hedge fund -- among others -- recently started enforcing
longstanding policies designed to penalize investors seeking to withdraw
more than a predetermined amount at one time. The reason for the sudden
intransigence? Fears that investor nervousness over poor performance
will spur a mass exodus.
In
addition, several managers are using a loophole in new rules requiring
hedge funds to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission as
an excuse to tie up investors’ assets for long periods of time. By
capitalizing on a provision that allows funds with “lockups” greater
than two years to be exempt from registration, these advisors end up
killing two birds with one stone. And, perhaps, leaving investors high
and dry.
Combine
all this with the widespread and wide-eyed rush to invest in private
equity funds, over-the-counter derivatives, thinly-traded securities,
and a host of other illiquid assets, and it is not hard to see how
numerous investors have struck something of a Faustian bargain.
That
is, they have accepted the prospect of marginally higher returns in
exchange for much greater risk -- and increasingly limited access to
their money.
With
the friction of higher interest rates, excessive leverage, volatile
geopolitics and numerous earnings disappointments ratcheting up the
temperature in world markets, what might once have been viewed as
nothing more than a temporary inconvenience may turn out to be something
else: a liquidity fire trap.
Let’s
hope no one gets too burned in the rush for the exits.

© 2006 Michael J. Panzner
Michael
Panzner is author of The
New Laws of the Stock Market Jungle: An Insider’s Guide to
Successful Investing in a Changing World
and a 20-year veteran of the stock, bond and currency markets. He
is currently at work on a book about global financial risks.
Contact
Information
Michael
J. Panzner
P.O. Box 115
Manhasset, NY 11030
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