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Jack Walker » Comments » DIA

  • CFTC: The Key to Market Manipulation [View article]
    Avery,

    This is an enlightening expose of market manipulation for the benefit of a few at the cost of society as a whole, well done. It seems as if Goldman’s quarterly profits are being paid, in part, by everybody else through higher commodity prices. This is a financial scandal of epic proportions.

    The second part of the problem is to rid the commodities markets from long-term pension fund participation, which seems entirely inappropriate with their fiduciary responsibility of investing for long-term capital growth and income. The commodity markets are not long-term capital markets, they are price discovery markets intended for a completely different role. The large long-term capital participation of pension funds and trusts is another example of increasing commodity costs of society as a whole for the benefit of the brokers, dealers and Commodity Trading Advisers who have convinced pension fund trustees that commodities are just another asset class to be considered for long -term investing. This is a second scandal of epic proportions.

    Jack
    Jul 30 12:30 pm |Rating: +4 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Geithner's Financial Reform Is Doomed to Fail [View article]
    Steven,

    This is a well thought out article. Now what is the plan to get it communicated to those who could start a meaningful discussion and perhaps get it implemented?

    Jack

    Mar 27 11:50 am |Rating: +3 -2 |Link to Comment
  • The VIX and the 2002-3 Market Bottom [View article]
    Toro,

    This is a well-prepared article showing the relationship between SPX and the VIX. So far, the current downturn looks very much 2002-2003. If it follows the same pattern, it could take awhile yet for the final bottom to be made and retested and we will not see higher highs in the VIX.

    With reference to Russell Napier’s book, Anatomy of the Bear, it seems to me the 1975 low at 62 was also a slow long selling exhaustion affair.

    Jack
    Mar 10 18:46 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Barron's Calls a Bottom [View article]
    Eli,

    How many times has Barron's called the bottom in the last year?

    In the long run equity prices are a function of earnings and there is no confidence in the current earnings projections. Nobody can accurately project earnings in this envoronment.

    Jack
    Mar 10 14:40 pm |Rating: +3 -1 |Link to Comment
  • FAS 157 and Other Regulatory Actions: Good Intentions, Unintended Consequences [View article]
    Frank,

    Nice job documenting and explaining what many of us knew was a significant contributing factor to the banking problem. There are good arguments on both sides of this issue, but why is there no solution to the problem? Are the politicians and bankers unable to resolve this issue or don’t they get it?

    Jack
    Mar 03 12:36 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • John Taylor Clears the Way for an Informed View of the Financial Crisis  [View article]
    Ira,

    Thanks for bringing John Taylor‘s working paper to our attention. If loose monetary policy from 2001 to 2006 was one of the primary contributing factors to the current state of affairs, we appear to be committing the same error once again. What are the chances that his findings will now be incorporated into fiscal and monetary policy?

    Jack
    Jan 23 12:53 pm |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
  • What Will Happen If America Returns to an Historical Savings Rate? [View article]
    Thanks for this very interesting article.

    While there are many factors that have contributed to the current state of affairs one of the most significant as you have appropriately identified is the inability of median family income to keep up with rising costs. Many people used the “House ATM” financial planning strategy since it was the only available means to bridge the gap. Those claiming that stability in housing market is the answer to the nation’s economic problem are missing the basic fundamental cause.

    We should all be dismayed by the lack of attention being given to the real problem.

    Is it inevitable for rising median family income in the developing world to be accompanied by stagnant or declining median family income in the US? Is it a zero sum game and is International Economic Trade Theory all wrong? If so, will the US be forced into trade protectionism?

    Interestingly, while Germany and France have single payer health care systems they seemed to have maintained higher savings rates however, Japan, Canada and the UK with similar health care systems followed the US with declining savings rates. What are the determining variables accounting for this disparity? Are they political, social, economic or some combination all them all?
    Dec 30 14:17 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Fiat Money and a Profligate Congress: A Bad Combination [View article]
    Thomas,

    Thanks for bringing Lehrman & Muller's writings to our attention once again.

    Even if a new gold standard was the right solution how could it be implemented short of a worldwide economic breakdown and chaos? It seems democracies are incapable of important structural changes without a crisis.

    Jack
    Dec 15 16:20 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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