The drive to protect incompetent traders continues:
U.S. prosecutors have joined regulators’ investigation into whether some high-speed traders are manipulating markets by posting and immediately canceling waves of rapid-fire orders, two officials said.
Justice Department investigators are “working closely” with the Securities and Exchange Commission to review practices “that are potentially manipulative, like quote-stuffing,” Marc Berger, chief of the Securities and Commodities Task Force at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, said today at an event in New York.
While regulators previously said they were probing possibly abusive algorithmic trading practices, the attention of criminal authorities ramps up the stakes.
While researching something else, I ran across an opinion piece by Ed Waitzer titled New IIROC plan avoids putting duty on advisors to act in clients’ interest that illustrates the complete inability of professional regulators to analyze the simplest transaction. In talking about the “fiduciary responsibility” issue, he states:
To understand the difference between a “suitability” and “best-interest” standard, think of a student seeking advice at an electronics store about her need for a laptop. The salesperson recommends a highly priced unit with an expensive extended warranty — all designed to generate the highest commission. The laptop is suitable — it will satisfy the student’s needs. It clearly isn’t the best solution and a disclosure obligation isn’t likely to stand in the way of a motivated salesperson. If the salesperson had been bound by a “best-interest” standard, he would recommend a simpler, more reliable and affordable unit.
What utter balderdash. If the salesperson was bound by the “best-interest” standard and was being paid on commission, he would simply ensure that he had a plausible rationale for recommending the more profitable product as being in the student’s best interest. “What if it breaks? You’re on a tight budget! It might break at a bad time! You’re better off buying the extended warranty and fixing your costs. Then you can concentrate on your studies, instead of worrying about malfunctions in your machine.” No purpose would be served by a “best-interest” standard in the presence of commissioned sales except for the – very important, with respect to the employment prospects of some – generation of paperwork and checklists for the electronic consumer goods’ salesmen’s regulator.
I get hate mail whenever I write about the fiduciary responsibility issue – such as January 24 – so all I can suggest is: if you want a fiduciary, hire one. I’m a Portfolio Manager, for instance. I get paid for Assets Under Management, not for transactions. I’m a fiduciary – in fact, I’m legally (OSC) and ethically (CFA) required to be. If you don’t want a fiduciary, don’t hire a Portfolio Manager – hire a stockbroker or mutual fund salesman. It’s really quite simple.
It looks like Berkshire Hathaway has been stung by recent criticism and is now attempting to worm its way back into the good graces of morons by criticisizing investment banks:
Charles Munger, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A) holds $5 billion of options on Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) stock, said the role of investment bankers in helping to mask Greece’s financial troubles was “perfectly disgusting.”
“Wall Street to some extent is deliberately trying to profit from sin, and I think it’s a mistake,” Munger told reporters yesterday after Berkshire’s annual press conference in Omaha, Nebraska. “Why should an investment banker go to Greece to teach them how to pretend their finances are different from what they really are? Why isn’t that a perfectly disgusting bit of human behavior?”
Goldman’s conduct with respect to Greece was discussed on PrefBlog when the issue became fashionable (see, for example, March 1, 2010). I eagerly await Munger’s next pronouncement, which may be on the topic of whether lawyers should represent Bad People. Still, I can’t blame him for chanting the slogan of the ‘finance as a cooperative game’ crowd – the Berkshire / Buffett / Munger mystique is worth what? 10%? 20% of their stock price? Who wants to guess?
The US Administration recently announced drastic measures against a Public Enemy. You know who I mean:

Citing an epidemic of childhood obesity, regulators are taking aim at a range of tactics used to market foods high in sugar, fat or salt to children, including the use of cartoon characters like Toucan Sam, the brightly colored Froot Loops pitchman, who appears in television commercials and online games as well as on cereal boxes.
Regulators are asking food makers and restaurant companies to make a choice: make your products healthier or stop advertising them to youngsters.
“Toucan Sam can sell healthy food or junk food,” said Dale Kunkel, a communications professor at the University of Arizona who studies the marketing of children’s food. “This forces Toucan Sam to be associated with healthier products.”
Walk the plank, Cap’n!

It was another mixed day for the Canadian preferred share market, with DeemedRetractibles bouncing back (a little, anyway) from a sub-par month of April: PerpetualDiscounts lost 1bp, FixedResets gained 13bp and DeemedRetractibles won 31bp. The badly beaten up DeemedRetractibles from insurers were prominent on the performance highlights table. Volume was good. And now it’s time to watch the election news…
| HIMIPref™ Preferred Indices These values reflect the December 2008 revision of the HIMIPref™ Indices Values are provisional and are finalized monthly |
|||||||
| Index | Mean Current Yield (at bid) |
Median YTW |
Median Average Trading Value |
Median Mod Dur (YTW) |
Issues | Day’s Perf. | Index Value |
| Ratchet | 0.00 % | 0.00 % | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.5562 % | 2,438.2 |
| FixedFloater | 0.00 % | 0.00 % | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.5562 % | 3,667.0 |
| Floater | 2.47 % | 2.26 % | 38,192 | 21.62 | 4 | 0.5562 % | 2,632.6 |
| OpRet | 4.91 % | 3.20 % | 59,032 | 2.04 | 8 | 0.0626 % | 2,416.4 |
| SplitShare | 5.21 % | -2.23 % | 77,671 | 0.62 | 6 | 0.0750 % | 2,497.1 |
| Interest-Bearing | 0.00 % | 0.00 % | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.0626 % | 2,209.6 |
| Perpetual-Premium | 5.78 % | 5.65 % | 116,502 | 1.11 | 8 | 0.0149 % | 2,054.6 |
| Perpetual-Discount | 5.57 % | 5.58 % | 147,548 | 14.40 | 16 | -0.0119 % | 2,126.6 |
| FixedReset | 5.17 % | 3.44 % | 218,609 | 2.89 | 57 | 0.1330 % | 2,295.7 |
| Deemed-Retractible | 5.22 % | 5.04 % | 314,948 | 8.12 | 53 | 0.3083 % | 2,100.9 |
| Performance Highlights | |||
| Issue | Index | Change | Notes |
| GWO.PR.I | Deemed-Retractible | 1.00 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 21.13 Bid-YTW : 6.62 % |
| SLF.PR.B | Deemed-Retractible | 1.06 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 22.94 Bid-YTW : 5.93 % |
| TD.PR.C | FixedReset | 1.10 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2014-03-02 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 26.70 Bid-YTW : 3.10 % |
| SLF.PR.E | Deemed-Retractible | 1.14 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 21.36 Bid-YTW : 6.49 % |
| SLF.PR.D | Deemed-Retractible | 1.14 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 21.26 Bid-YTW : 6.49 % |
| BNS.PR.O | Deemed-Retractible | 1.21 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2017-05-26 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 26.00 Bid-YTW : 4.88 % |
| SLF.PR.C | Deemed-Retractible | 1.24 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 21.30 Bid-YTW : 6.47 % |
| PWF.PR.A | Floater | 1.25 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Limit Maturity Maturity Date : 2041-05-02 Maturity Price : 23.19 Evaluated at bid price : 23.49 Bid-YTW : 2.20 % |
| MFC.PR.C | Deemed-Retractible | 1.28 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 21.37 Bid-YTW : 6.50 % |
| BAM.PR.O | OpRet | 1.44 % | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Option Certainty Maturity Date : 2013-06-30 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 26.05 Bid-YTW : 3.20 % |
| Volume Highlights | |||
| Issue | Index | Shares Traded |
Notes |
| BNS.PR.O | Deemed-Retractible | 81,675 | Nesbitt crossed 50,000 at 26.01. YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2017-05-26 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 26.00 Bid-YTW : 4.88 % |
| BMO.PR.L | Deemed-Retractible | 69,173 | Nesbitt crossed 60,000 at 25.85. YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2017-06-24 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 25.76 Bid-YTW : 5.18 % |
| TRP.PR.C | FixedReset | 36,135 | Scotia crossed 25,000 at 25.54. YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2016-02-29 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 25.55 Bid-YTW : 3.90 % |
| TD.PR.G | FixedReset | 35,911 | RBC crossed 25,000 at 27.25. YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2014-05-30 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 27.16 Bid-YTW : 3.36 % |
| HSB.PR.E | FixedReset | 35,406 | RBC crossed 25,000 at 27.35. YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Call Maturity Date : 2014-07-30 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 27.35 Bid-YTW : 3.76 % |
| BMO.PR.Q | FixedReset | 31,060 | YTW SCENARIO Maturity Type : Hard Maturity Maturity Date : 2022-01-31 Maturity Price : 25.00 Evaluated at bid price : 25.02 Bid-YTW : 3.85 % |
| There were 37 other index-included issues trading in excess of 10,000 shares. | |||
| Wide Spread Highlights | ||
| Issue | Index | Quote Data and Yield Notes |
| TRI.PR.B | Floater | Quote: 23.05 – 23.72 Spot Rate : 0.6700 Average : 0.4321 YTW SCENARIO |
| FTS.PR.G | FixedReset | Quote: 26.26 – 26.73 Spot Rate : 0.4700 Average : 0.3457 YTW SCENARIO |
| BAM.PR.X | FixedReset | Quote: 24.63 – 24.96 Spot Rate : 0.3300 Average : 0.2165 YTW SCENARIO |
| NA.PR.N | FixedReset | Quote: 26.15 – 26.50 Spot Rate : 0.3500 Average : 0.2617 YTW SCENARIO |
| CIU.PR.B | FixedReset | Quote: 27.68 – 27.94 Spot Rate : 0.2600 Average : 0.1733 YTW SCENARIO |
| NA.PR.P | FixedReset | Quote: 27.75 – 28.05 Spot Rate : 0.3000 Average : 0.2141 YTW SCENARIO |

