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- IntegraMed America, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
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Matt Blackman
172 Comments
America's On Sale - and the World's Buying
America's On Sale - and the World's Buying
Oh and one more thing.. priced in gold, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen 73% since peaking in 1999...
Roubini Now Says House Prices to Fall 30%
Some ABX Indexes Rise, Fueling Optimism
www.markit.com/informa...
Signs That Foreclosures May Be Peaking
You don't examine the ratio of mortgages defaults due to rate resets leaving us all in the dark.
Wednesday Outlook: Bulls in Command
So here we languish in no-man's land... and earnings will determine whether we stay or whether we go (higher if they get better or lower if they continue to get worse)... If we are at a bottom though, and we rally from here, it will be relatively short-term based on my indicators...
Bubbles Aren't Bubbles - Or Are They?
So how does Fama explain the latest credit bubble, the housing bubble and the internet bubble on the late 1990s after which the Nasdaq dropped more than 80%? Were those markets too big too? What a load of crap. A theory the requires goldilocks conditions (one that's neither too big nor too small, but is just right...) is useless. How can a market only reach efficiency when it reaches a certain size then loss efficiency when it surpasses that threshold? Seems to me that Fama is best at deluding himself like many in his field.
Alan Greenspan Responds to His Critics
I couldn't disagree with you more. In every bubble in history, rules were in place and were broken in the excitement and greed that each bubble engendered. When greed is powerful enough to create mass hysteria, no rules in the world will stop it.
There were very clear anti-fraud rules already in place that both lenders and borrowers blatantly broke (Liar, Ninja loans for example) but when home prices are accelerating, both parties simply ignored those rules. So the solution is to add even more rules to increase the complexity? What is the good of that if they too will not be enforced? In Ohio, 49% of those taking out subprime mortgages never made their first payment. They obviously got caught up in the home-buying hysteria and greed in all the money they were going to make. Whatever happened to personal responsibility?
The US currently has the most strict regime of rules governing markets of all sort and they do not stop abuse when bubbles are in the process of building because those in the know find ways around them or just plain ignore the rules. Create more rules and you create more opportunities for abuse and when markets heat up in the next bubble, people simply ignore them. But you also increase the costs of doing business for all and unfortunately its the smallest companies that pay the price as the regulatory thresholds to entry to markets in the way of excessive legal costs etc. are raised. Sarbanes Oxley is one reason why companies are flocking to European equities markets for this very reason.
As you say in your post, regulator bases have been covered through post facto legislation designed to fight the last war but how do you design legislation for a problem that hasn't occurred yet?
Decoupling: The Theory That Won't Die
Now they would have us believe that stocks are a a significant bottom and they now "represent a once in a generation buying opportunity,' according to Dick Bove. And Greenspan is now trying to tell us that the housing market will bottom this year? I'd love to know what data he is basing this assumption on because every indicator I am following continues to fall...
I conducted some research two months ago to see how global indexes were linked with those in the US, and here is what I found
tradesystemguru.com/co.../
Now is the Time to Buy Long-Term
So in the event we do get some sort of rally from here (which I consider somewhat of a long shot), there will be hell to pay once the election is over, the economic hangover sets in and the bill has to be paid in 2009-10 for the excesses of 2004-2008...
Now is the Time to Buy Long-Term
Given that the subprime and credit problems are exacerbated by falling home prices and that this is severely impacting our economy, how can you say that the worst for stocks is now behind us given that the further home prices drop, the greater the pressure on CDS positions, lender and bank credit ratings etc? Each credit downgrade means banks, brokers and lenders must come up with billions$ more to shore up capital requirements increasing the likelihood of another Bear Stearns or bank failure.
Major indexes tentatively hang in the balance with the majority of participants still sitting on the sidelines. More bad news will engender more selling and this will only be worsened as the economy slows and a recession is confirmed in the next 6 -12 months. This in turn will cause more job losses and push demand and real estate prices lower... Yes there is blood in the streets but as those who jumped back into homebuilders over the last year learned the hard way, this action means that you add yours to the mix. There is good reason why traders call this desperate and dangerous habit trying to catch a falling knife.
So tell me again what mechanism you see driving stocks and earnings (that are also deteriorating at an increasing rate) higher from here other than a desperate hope that real estate prices will bottom next quarter?
Matt Blackman TradeSystemGuru.com
Market Action: Have We Hit Bottom?
By the way, in speaking to the folks at Bespoke, I learned that their research shows that all rallies in the last five years have been driven by short covering which is interesting. I would have thought that short covering was a much bigger factor in bear markets but that is not what they found...
Matt Blackman TradeSystemGuru.com
Ways to Win a Recession-Predicting Contest
It's the bear market that precedes the recession that should be the first and foremost concern. The indicators I follow started flashing a warning more than a year ago and as more confirmed this probability, action needed to be taken. The real melt began in late October but we had two early warnings - May 2006 and Feb 2007. The next major sign was the negative divergence between the Dow Transports and Dow Industrials (see charts in link at tradesystemguru.com/co... )
It is also important to point out that stocks can act like the economy is in recession even though one is never confirmed. For example, the recession that hit the US in 2001-2 never officially hit Canada whose GDP growth hit a low of +0.7% during that period. However, the Canadian S&P/TSX Index dropped 50.2% compared to a drop of the S&P500 of 50.5% over the same period. In other words, stocks acted as if the country was in recession even though one never officially occurred.
Matt Blackman Host www.TradeSystemGuru.co...
Lies, Damn Lies and the Unemployment Rate
The Myth of Gold as an Inflation Hedge
Ben Bernanke wasn't kidding when he asked a couple of years ago why we should worry about deflation as long as we had printing presses and helicopters. It is clear he now running both at combat speed! Certainly no reason to expect the dollar decline to end anytime soon.
Kinda takes the starch out of Price's anti-gold argument doesn't it?