Archive for ‘investing’

One of my posts from Market Watch…do you agree?

By , 16 March, 2009, No Comment

With so much money idled on the sidelines, the only people that are terribly interested in the stock market seem to be speculators, which doesn’t bode well for any REAL rally in the near future. Like bottom feeders, we speculators are hovering around the market carcass and catching the scraps that come free.

I’m not much of a believer in capitulation, however, I believe the market is in the final leg down and will end with a fairly spectacular blow-off of panic-type selling.

I respectfully disagree with randymartin about becoming a manufacturing giant again, as our country will head in newer technological directions and continue to outsource manufacturing, though the financing and investment banking sector of our economy will take a decade to recover (if it ever does) as all confidence in their risk assessment ability has disappeared.

In my opinion, the breathtaking astounding pace of this deleveraging based recession will leave the country wounded but not dead, as the overleveraged consumer and coroporation will have been forced to clean up his/her act or perish. Though I don’t think we will have any recovery overnight, I see a slower recovery build toward the end of the year. Of course, I point out these are just my opinions, and are worth just exactly what you paid for them….Zero.

think about this

By , 26 January, 2009, No Comment
Ten Rules for Trader Longevity
This list is for traders but also applies to investors
.

1. Recognize mental blocks. If you believe that the financial markets are rigged, stay away. Bias is blinding. If your ego requires constant feeding and vindication, do not trade. If being right is more important than making money, steer clear of the stock market. If you must be dogmatic, direct your energy into following these rules.
2. There is no needle in the haystack. There’s no reliable way of picking a single winner from the thousands of stocks listed on the exchanges.
3. Resist betting it all on the longshot because the outcome is based purely on luck. Dr. Ziemba explains the mathematics of horse racing. The point is that the bettor is better off with horses that finish the race “in the money”. They don’t have to come in first.
4. Diversify. Spread your bets around. It’s the only way to be on board the winner.
5. Trade small. Bet only a small fraction of your equity on each position. You must take risk to get reward, but ruin is certain if you take insane risk. It’s defined in Fortune’s Formula. Think Adventures in Conditional Probability.
6. Press the winners. You must compound a winning streak.
7. Never throw in good money after bad. Never double down. Ever.
8. Do not rationalize. Down is NOT up. Red is NOT the new black. If the account equity is shrinking, your bets are in the wrong direction.
9. Establish a stop loss. Place it in the appropriate location (except just above the swing high or under the swing low where everyone else put theirs), a place where you can be statistically confident that the move in the present direction is over. Don’t use a tight stop for lack of equity. The market doesn’t care about how much is in your account, so trade a smaller position size and put the stop in the proper place.
10. Use the stop loss. Just do it. Immediately. No excuses. Having a “mental” stop loss is the same as lying. There’s no point, because the longer you let it slide, the deeper the doo-doo.
Observe Rule Nine. Always. Don’t go to the bathroom without it.

Highlights from Nightly Business Report with Warren Buffet

By , 22 January, 2009, No Comment

SUSIE GHARIB, ANCHOR, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT: Are we overly optimistic about what President Obama can do?

WARREN BUFFETT, CHAIRMAN, BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY: Well I think if you think that he can turn things around in a month or three months or six months and there’s going to be some magical transformation since he took office on the 20th that can’t happen and wouldn’t happen. So you don’t want to get into Superman-type expectations. On the other hand, I don’t think there’s anybody better than you could have had; have in the presidency than Barack Obama at this time. He understands economics. He’s a very smart guy. He’s a cool rational-type thinker. He will work with the right kind of people. So you’ve got the right person in the operating room, but it doesn’t mean the patient is going to leave the hospital tomorrow….

SG: But I know that during the election that you were one of his economic advisors, what were you telling him?

WB: I was telling him business was going to be awful during the election period and that we were coming up in November to a terrible economic scene which would be even worse probably when he got inaugurated. So far I’ve been either lucky or right on that. But he’s got the right ideas. He believes in the same things I believe in. America ’s best days are ahead and that we’ve got a great economic machine, its sputtering now. And he believes there could be a more equitable job done in distributing the rewards of this great machine. But he doesn’t need my advice on anything….

SG: What’s the most important thing you think he needs to fix?

WB: Well the most important thing to fix right now is the economy. We have a business slowdown particularly after October 1st it was sort of on a glide path downward up til roughly October 1st and then it went into a real nosedive. In fact in September I said we were in an economic Pearl Harbor and I’ve never used that phrase before. So he really has a tough economic situation and that’s his number one job. Now his number one job always is to keep America safe that goes without saying.

SG: But when you look at the economy, what do you think is the most important thing he needs to fix in the economy?

WB: Well we’ve had to get the credit system partially fixed in order for the economy to have a chance of starting to turn around. But there’s no magic bullet on this. They’re going to throw everything from the government they can in. As I said, the Treasury is going all in, the Fed and they have to and that isn’t necessarily going to produce anything dramatic in the short term at all. Over time the American economy is going to work fine.

SG: There is considerable debate as you know about whether President Obama is taking the right steps so we don’t get in this kind of economic mess again, where do you stand on that debate?

WB: Well I don’t think the worry right now should be about the next one, the worry should be about the present one. Let’s get this fire out and then we’ll figure out fire prevention for the future. But really the important thing to do now is to figure out how we get the American economy restarted and that’s not going to be easy and its not going to be soon, but its going to get done.

SG: But there is debate about whether there should be fiscal stimulus, whether tax cuts work or not. There is all of this academic debate among economists. What do you think? Is that the right way to go with stimulus and tax cuts?

WB: The answer is nobody knows. The economists don’t know. All you know is you throw everything at it and whether it’s more effective if you’re fighting a fire to be concentrating the water flow on this part or that part. You’re going to use every weapon you have in fighting it. And people, they do not know exactly what the effects are. Economists like to talk about it, but in the end they’ve been very, very wrong and most of them in recent years on this. We don’t know the perfect answers on it. What we do know is to stand by and do nothing is a terrible mistake or to follow Hoover-like policies would be a mistake and we don’t know how effective in the short run we don’t know how effective this will be and how quickly things will right themselves. We do know over time the American machine works wonderfully and it will work wonderfully again.

SG: But are we creating new problems?

WB: Always

From Calculated Risk

By , 28 November, 2008, No Comment

CB Richard Ellis: CRE “Conditions have deteriorated” Rapidly
by CalculatedRisk on 11/28/2008 09:10:00 AM

“Conditions have deteriorated on a scale and with a speed that no one could have predicted just a few months ago. Market conditions of unprecedented strength are roiling the world’s financial markets. The global economy is either in, or close to, recession and 2009 is not likely to be a year of great recovery.”

Brett White, president and chief executive officer of CB Richard Ellis, recent letter to clients, from the LA Times: CB Richard Ellis feels industry’s painAnd a few months ago White wasn’t exactly optimistic:

“Decreased investment volumes have now become evident in all parts of the world. … I can best describe the current environment as being very challenging and still having a high probability of getting worse before we see improvement.” Brett White, president and chief executive officer of CB Richard Ellis, July 30, 2008

Ah…this is truer than you think….

By , 26 October, 2008, No Comment

Used with permission from cartoonist John Ambrosavage at Ambrotoons.com

I’ts been a long week

By , 26 October, 2008, No Comment
Here are this weeks charts, I was in a car accident and had to take some time off….I plan to post the decisionbar charts tomorrow so that you can see the trades I took.

I suppose it goes without saying that this was one of the most volatile weeks in the history of the market, and the coming week promises no relief. Tread lightly

It wasn’t a pretty day

By , 15 October, 2008, No Comment

The Wall Street Journal sums up today’s situation nicely:

“Dire economic data knocked stocks sharply lower Wednesday as investors braced themselves for an ugly recession unlike the relatively brief, shallow downturns the U.S. has sometimes suffered over the last two decades…”I don’t just think we’re going to test the lows. I think we’re going to violate them and break lower in a big way,” said Kent Engelke, managing director at the brokerage Capitol Securities Management, in Richmond, Va. Referring to the possible fallout in the broader economy from the credit crisis, he added: “We don’t yet know what that is, because this situation is so unprecedented. Every road sign has been obliterated.”The Dow’s losses accelerated as the closing bell approached, leaving the blue-chip measure down 733.08 points for the day, off 7.9%, at 8577.91, hurt by losses in twenty-nine of its 30 components. The only exception was Coca-Cola, which climbed 1.1% after posting a strong profit report.”

Of course, if you are not a Wall Street Journal Fan, you might read this from Bloomberg:

“The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, jumped 26 percent to 69.25 for the biggest gain in three weeks….Stocks in Europe and Asia fell for the first time in three days, helping push the MSCI World Index, a benchmark for 23 developed countries, to a 7.3 percent decline. Brazilian stock trading was briefly halted after the Bovespa index plunged 10 percent. The index closed down 13 percent after trading resumed.Exxon Mobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips, the three biggest U.S. oil companies, helped lead energy companies to the biggest retreat among 10 S&P 500 industries as crude fell below $75 a barrel for the first time in more than a year. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries cut its 2009 demand forecast for a second month.Some specific triggers for worry. Retail sales fell, which means our consumer driven economy is going into reverse (although the 1.2 percent decline in a month is far lower than analyst Gary Shilling forecast, who has called for a 4-5% fall).

Also from Bloomberg:

The eroding U.S. economy drove retail sales into their longest in at least 16 years, even before this month’s market collapse signaled a deepening recession.Consumer purchases fell 1.2 percent in September, extending the decline to three straight months, the first time that’s happened since comparable records began in 1992, Commerce Department figures showed today. In another sign of weakening demand, prices paid to U.S. producers fell last month on lower fuel costs.Sales are slowing just as merchants prepare for the holiday selling season, on which they depend for the largest share of their revenue. The Wall Street Journal’s MarketBeat blog noted that conditions at leading interbanks have shown only marginal improvement:

Three-month LIBOR rates have started to decline — hitting 4.55% overnight — but the three-month Treasury bill was of late trading at 0.21%, putting the TED spread, a key indicator of market stress, at 3.34 percentage points, not much better than at the beginning of the week. Meanwhile, due to the need for safe credit, the repo markets have become strained — some participants reported not being able to find enough Treasurys in the repo market.

The Fed’s so called Beige Book report not optimistic:

As problems in global financial markets intensified last month, economic activity weakened across all 12 Federal Reserve districts.The gloomy report, prepared ahead of the Fed’s October policy-setting meeting and known as the “beige book,” shows that regions across the U.S. have taken on a more pessimistic view about the economic outlook. Most of the Fed’s 12 regional banks reported that manufacturing has slowed and consumer spending has decreased.”Credit conditions were characterized as being tight across the 12 districts, with several reporting reduced credit availability for both financial and nonfinancial institutions,” the beige book said.

Charts to follow later tonight.

Could someone just slow this roller coaster down?

By , 10 October, 2008, No Comment


Click on image to enlarge
ESZ8 10-10-08

Now let me see, are we down 700, up 200, down 500….we were all these things today and more. The surprising thing to see was actual buyers in the market again. There has been a noticeable lack of buyers in the last couple of weeks. Which is not to say that buyers overwhelmed the market, they didn’t… but there were bona fide groups that appeared to mutual funds trying to find some value.

As for myself, when the market dropped 700 at the open and then roared back to +200, I shut the computer off and went golfing. I don’t have much to tell you about the market, other than it ricocheted around all day and I wanted no part of it.

And my golf game wasn’t much better, but was quite enjoyable.

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