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12 Comments
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The Only Chart True Investors Need to See
The next phase, through the 1929 crash to the New Deal is similarly politically oriented. We had a technology boom...the industrial boom. Creative destruction got us both the roaring 20's and the depression later. Boom and bust. It took the combination of the New Deal and winning WW 2, that again allowed the US to write history and establish bedrock capitalist roots throughout Europe and Asia. Again, the US was the key benefactor. Look at the growth curve from the end of WW2 through the 70's. You don't have to be a genius to understand the US led the world and our economy boomed.
What about more recent history? We finally won the cold war and unleashed another wave of capitalism. Remember the peace dividend? Then we had another revolution, the information technology revolution, that sparked another extraordinary economic boom. However, like the industrial revolution before it, creative destruction begat the dot.com bubble. The difference to me is rather than deal with the issues regarding the dot.com roaring 90's, we rolled the problem into the real estate bubble. What's changed to alter the view of the chart?
My fellow alpha readers are right to point to, energy, currency valuations, (a function of global markets for goods,) and maybe the other chart not viewed, political leadership.
The current housing/credit crisis will be more difficult to solve because the US will have difficulty generating the equity required to liquify both our banking/credit system AND consumer balance sheets.
If we get another big leg up from here it will be because politically we reach agreements with key global powers, think OPEC for energy and China for industrial production, and trade agreements. We have to win the wars we are currently waging and prevail at the bargaining table on multiple trade treaties. If not, we could endure years of below par growth.
Why Congress Blames Index Speculators
Here's an example. I know of one index and fund that has identified the 22 most liquid futures contracts, with the exception of the SPX. Eleven commodities, six currencies and five bonds, no equities. Each of the 22 gets a constant 4.5%. Through a defined model once a month the manager makes a single long/short call. Therefore the portfolio is only traded 12 times a year; consider it re-balancing monthly. The fund could be 20 long and 2 short, or eleven long and eleven short, or any permutation based on methodology. An investor captures returns from long term trends, not trades. Is this not a more logical approach to capturing returns from futures markets?
Long only indexing is a problem under the observation rule. Observing an event alters the event. Long only commodities funds do impact futures markets. However they are not villans, just slow plodding investors likely to post gains then give them back.
As for Congress, they gave away control of financial markets with the creation of the SEC, a Commission born out of panic. Sound familiar? With the exception of a few Members and Senators, no one on the Hill has any interest in financial markets because the system runs through the SEC. And what a great job they've done!
Remarkably Congress knows more about commodities than it does securities. After all, every farmer knows how to compute ag futures. Dont kid yourself, plenty of these guys know exactly what's going on. Consider that corn is not grown in the Middle East, a point well made in this article. Where is the outrage over inflation caused by ethanol, and the subsidies locked into king corn? Did anyone on Alpa post an article on the Ag Department's inflation projections for next year? It was not a pretty picture. But don't worry, the federal system specifically de-links food and energy from its inflation calculation. And you guys think the feds don't know what they're doing...
These are indeed strange days.
Troubling Aspects to the GSE Bailout Bill
Trade of the day, buy Fannie and Freddie debt, not the equity, and short the long Treasury and US Dollar as more paper will have to be floated to make implicit explicit
Dollar Falls to Record Low Over Fannie and Freddie
Some of KL's observations are accurate and some data points valid. However, sometimes the logic that jumps from a series of observations to a trade/strategy is dubious. Current markets are perhaps the most challening ever. I have commented on articles talking about recent statements by Jamie Dimon where he says that the complexities of the markets are difficult for him to deal with. He's the head of JPM, and he's confused? I agree that posters need to be careful with their logic strings, but that as readers we should also be as postive as possible to advance accurate information as we seek alpha.
The Future of Radio Is Online
Local franchises in traditional radio do have value. Satellite and internet radio also have their drawbacks. Here's one, fidelity. Both sound thin. We live in a world of high def, yet when it comes to radio, we're going in the other direction. I don't get it. Ipods have less fidelity and dynamic range than a good traditional fm signal. Pop in a cd, (remember those,) and fidelity jumps. Cars come equiped with sophisticated amplification systems and dozens of speakers putting out sound that you can get of AM radio.
There are times when a radio listener must have local traditional radio. Other times that same listener will gravitate to a national feed. Circumstances will dictate that choice and given the technical upgrades of autos, consumers will be able to listen to all of them.
Sovereign Wealth Funds - Energy Futures Speculators?
IF pension funds/institutional investors had to speculate the way alpha readers speculate, there would be no problem. I say this because the allocation would itself be hedged and the bias towards high price would be limited due to risk calculations.
The best way to deal with the manipulation debate is to force ALL investors to assume the same risk...long and short...then devise strategies to limit the inherent risk. The very same institutional investors, defined as index fund speculators, would then use their capital to provide liquidity on both sides of the market.
The commodities markets do not suffer from too much speculation. Instead they suffer from too much speculation on one side of the trade. Make the speculators play long and short and the problem goes away.
Why is it that Masters, Soros, and all the other so-called experts never mentioned this concept.
I call on alpha readers to tell me if I'm right.
best to all during these difficult times,
rr
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best to all my fellow alphas.
rr