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CFM Client Presentation October 15, 2008 Assessment of Economic and Market Down Turn, Outlook and Investment Strategy 1 Assessment of Downturn  In the beginning. . .  Years 2000 to 2003 Stock market bubble 9-11 Earnings scandal – Enron & others All led to Fed keeping interest rates too low for too long  Consumer, corporate and government debt grew     2 Assessment of Downturn  Housing Bubble  Long period of abnormally low interest rates  Politicians push for non-qualified loans via Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (Democrats – we will blame Republicans later)  Wall Street learns how to securitize (sell) subprime mortgage pools  Maturity tranches (slice of pool)  Credit quality tranches  Theory – approach spreads the risk 3 Assessment of Downturn  Continued  Bond rating agencies (Moody, S&P, Finch) give pools high rating  Even though they don’t understand complexity of pools  Paid big fees to approve  Congress appoints rating agencies  Many issues the same as Enron 4 Assessment of Downturn  Continued  Pools sliced and diced and sold throughout US and Europe  Large up-front fees for investment bankers  Mortgage brokers made large commissions on non-qualified borrowers 5 Assessment of Downturn 6 Assessment of Downturn 7 By The Way  CFM has never invested in subprime mortgage pools  PIMCO Mortgage Backed Securities Fund  High quality, qualified mortgages issued by Fannie & Freddie  Backed by US Gov’t and collateral in houses  Fannie & Freddie’s problems are with their stock and subprime mortgages they own 8 Assessment of Downturn  Resulted in unhealthy leverage (debt levels) throughout financial structure  Commercial banks bought subprime pools and were levered 10 to 1  Investment banks levered pools 40 to 1  Fannie and Freddie purchased pools using significant debt (Fannie & Freddie hold 50% of all household mortgages)  Households   Bought houses they could not afford Excess consumer debt – since 1980s consumer spent more than they earned 9 Assessment of Downturn  Leverage in system was not transparent previous checks and balances missing from financial systems (Republicans)  SEC and CPAs (FASB) allowed off-balance sheet accounting  Investment banks financed pools with CCP offbalance sheet (footnote disclosure only)  Rating agencies gave high ratings to investment bank bonds and pools even with 40 to 1 contingent liability that showed up in footnotes  Investment bankers had no equity at risk & structurally flawed deals received upfront fees 10 Assessment of Downturn  Economist and CFM conclusions one year ago without transparency of excess leverage  Housing slow down was insufficient contributor to GDP – would slow economy but not create recession  Subprime and alternative mortgages  Approximately 4.5% of total mortgages  Insufficient to create recession 11 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  Investment banks and others financed their pools using short term commercial paper collateralized by pools (CCP)  One year ago spread between pools and CCP narrowed and then turned negative (Fed began raising rates in 2004)  Non-qualified lending stopped and housing values turned south – homeowners had no “skin” in the game and walked 12 Assessment of Downturn 13 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  2008 Fed again lowers rates dramatically  Europe does not lower rates so dollar weakens further – down 30% over three years  Commodity prices surge  Weak dollar  Emerging markets (China and India) increased consumption  Result - consumer and corporations stressed because of too much debt 14 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  Banks, Investment Banks, Fannie and Freddie particularly stressed by too much debt  Housing values, foreclosures, etc. weigh on value of subprime pools  Complexity and locating toxic portions of pools make valuation impossible  Mark to Market accounting forces huge write downs – values indeterminable 15 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  Asset to debt ratios worsened because of valuation issues  Theory of spreading risk via pools proved incorrect – risk in pools indeterminable (poison particles in the soup – throw it all out)  Banks, Investment Banks quit accepting each others’ CCP  Collateralized by the pools  Liquidity crises begins 16 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  Bear Sterns first to bankrupt  Asset to debt ratio (30 to 1) became insurmountable  No source of even short-term funds because of liquidity crisis  That’s when the public got first glimpse of the huge amounts of off balance sheet debt, greed and mismanagement 17 Assessment of Downturn  Beginning of the end  Value of subprime pools continues to erode forcing recapitalization or bankruptcy by major entities     Fannie and Freddie Lehman Washington Mutual AIG, etc.  Fed & Treasury selective - entities saved, not saved 18 Assessment of Downturn  Culmination  Fed & Treasury allowing Lehman to fail sent shock waves through international markets (A3 rating day before bankruptcy)  Credit markets totally locked up  Slowness of Congress to act and slow implementation of ill-defined plan worsened situation – move from asset purchase only to include capital injection  Became a crisis of confidence (modern day equivalent of a run on the bank) 19 Assessment of Downturn  Culmination  Irrational and rational fear spreads throughout world markets  If banks and other financial institutions continue to fail, wide spread unemployment will drive world economies to 1930s era depression  What’s different than in the 1930s?  Significant government intervention – world governments working in coordination will not allow banks and key financial institutions to fail 20 Assessment of Downturn  Culmination  What’s the same as in the 1930s?  Excessive debt (leverage) at all levels caused the crisis  Housing and subprime loans were the “straw that broke the camels back”  It is still estimated that there are only $225 billion in toxic mortgages (poison pills in the soup) spread among the subprime pools  Contrast that to the $700 billion bailout package – the difference in part is the recapitalization or deleverage process 21 Current Data  Total Mortgages  Total Alt A & Subprime  $10.6 Trillion  $ 1.3 Trillion  11.92% of Total  Troubled Alt A & Subprime  $ 224.5 Billion  17.76% of Alt A & Sub  2.21% of Total Mortgages  National Debt  GDP  Bailout  $10.2 Trillion  $14 Trillion  $ 700 Billion – 5% GDP & 7% National Debt 22 Current Data  Coordinated world wide government intervention  Acquisition of troubled debt to be restructured and sold when markets stabilize  Acquisition of commercial paper  Lender of first and last resort  Direct temporary capital injections – preferred stock, warrants, etc. – US government moved strongly towards this approach last weekend  Coordinated rate cutes (avoid currencies issues)  Deposit guarantees  Etc. 23 Current Data 24 Consumer Debt From 80% - 130% in 20 years 25 Consumer Carrying Cost Consumers maxed out? 26 Current Data  Too much debt  As a nation  As individual consumers  Corporations – particularly financial sector 27 Current Data  The painful process of deleveraging is occurring right now  Recapitalization and mergers of corporations  Financial sector  Domestic auto – 30 years of non-competitive labor structure  Government and foreign money will provide much of the capital  Too much government debt? - Keynesian vs. Freidman Economics  Slower consumer spending 28 GDP Historical 29 GDP Forecast 30 Unemployment 31 Earnings Outlook 32 S&P 500 Valuation 33 Valuation Assumptions  Forward Earnings $87  2009 GDP .05%  Forward Earnings $80  2009 GDP -1.0% Over (Under)  S&P 500 Undervalued (7%)  S&P 500 Overvalued 18% 34 Outlook Positives  International gov. intervention will not allow 1930s style depression  Interest rates low  Still econ resilience – exports  Energy prices down  Globalization Negatives  Huge hangover  Deleveraging  Slowing consumer  Auto industry restructure  Government  Spending – Medicare, Medicaid, SS, etc.  Nationalization – temporary? 35 Outlook  Looking for a stock market bottom  Credit and liquidity crisis will most likely subside over next several months  Probability of recession contributed to credit and liquidity crisis – now recession is a certainty  Automotive sector challenges may culminate soon adding to stock market challenges 36 Outlook  Looking for a stock market bottom  Markets generally do not turn positive in first quarter of recession which will be 4Q 2008  Stock markets do anticipate – so perhaps beginnings of recovery by mid 2009 IF GDP turns positive  There is significant liquidity waiting to enter the market – may be some tactical (near-term) snapback 37 Outlook  Looking for a stock market bottom  Unemployment needs to peak at 8% or less (lagging indicator)  The challenges are significant and fundamentals indicate that it will take 3 to 5 years for stock markets to return to the 2007 valuations  With credit crisis subsiding stock markets should become more stable – volatility with reasonable trading ranges 38 Managing During Downturn 39 Managing During Downturn  Managing risk  Broad asset allocation: stock – bond most important  Time  The beauty of bonds  Hold value much better in downturn  Stabilize portfolio  Source of distributions – 3 to 5 years minimum  Allow time for stocks to recover 40 Managing During Downturn  CFM Investment Policy (Prudent and Fiduciary Investment Standards)  Strategic (stock-bond) allocation – 90% of policy  Tactical (sectors, regions, cap weightings, etc.) allocation – 10% of policy 41 Managing During Downturn  Appropriate strategic allocation (determined prior to downturn)  Based on goals: time-line and distribution rate for each portfolio  Lessens emotional impact – distributions covered 3 to 5 years  Highest probability of successful investing  When investing becomes speculating  Timing – there are no consistent methods to predict the future  Emotions 42 Managing During Downturn  If your emotions are winning  Set an appointment with Gary or Josh ASAP  Re-assess your cash needs for next 3 to 5 years  Compare to cash and bond holdings  Determine if partial move to more cash and bonds is necessary  To cover cash needs 3 to 5 years  To allow you more emotional piece of mind  We do understand the emotional aspects and want to give you all necessary information to make good decisions 43 Fixed Income  Biggest CFM disappointment is the volatility in certain fixed income investments and investment in Lehman  Majority of our remaining bonds of high quality, but we do have exposure in companies in headlines:  GMAC, Ford, American General Finance (AIG) and Morgan Stanley 44 Fixed Income  CFM is waiting for credit markets to improve and bailout/investments to help some companies before reducing or eliminating exposure to these troubled companies  Plenty of sellers, not buyers  Other bond exposure is to the “good” banks and to non financial entities  Mutual Funds utilized have diversification and high credit quality 45 Managing During Downturn  Is it different this time?  http://www.dimensional.com/library/ videos/different/ 46 Healthy Changes  Bank reserve requirements will increase  No more Investment Banks with 40 to 1 leverage – they’re gone!  Fannie and Freddie will be totally restructured  Higher borrowing standards (qualify to get a loan!!)  Bigger mortgage down payments  Lower credit card limits  Transparent and simpler debt structure  Move to on balance sheet accounting 47 Healthy Changes  Greater scrutiny of executive compensation  More oversight of markets & players  Monitor short selling  Viable credit ratings  International coordination of financial systems  Higher long term interest rates – steepen yield curve  Higher taxes and/or bigger deficit  More government 48 Thank you  Thanks for –  Your business  Your trust and confidence  We will strive to constantly earn it  Your financial security is our reward too  Questions 49