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- American Vanguard Corporation Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Oplink Communications, Inc. F1Q09 (Qtr End 09/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Albany Molecular Research, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
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- Avanex Corporation F1Q09 (Qtr End 09/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- eHealth, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- MIPS Technologies, Inc. F1Q09 (Qtr End 09/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
- Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
- Alkermes, Inc. F2Q09 (Qtr End 09/30/08) Earnings Call Transcript
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Bo Peng
61 Comments
Added Liquidity Part of the Problem, Not the Solution
Added Liquidity Part of the Problem, Not the Solution
Banks are flooded with cash. But such short-term liquidity cash is of no use to most of them. What they need is capital injection. How many will fail before Paulson gets around implementing the bailout plan? It would've been so much faster if the government would follow Buffet's GS model.
Mark-to-Market vs. Mark-to-History
Naked short is another story. It creates float out of thin air. Stock is like currency for the company. While you cannot control directly how others value your currency, you at least must have control over its supply. How would you think if country XYZ starts selling massive amount of phantom USD and keeps on it?
Mark-to-Market vs. Mark-to-History
For individual brokerage accounts, it's simply not feasible to do individualized analysis. There're just too many cases. A cross-the-board rule is the only option. For big accounts such as hedge funds and bank clients and counterparties, it is feasible to do per-case analysis and make per-case decisions on whether to issue margin call or not. In fact, banks do this all the time for their biggest clients and counterparties.
Mark-to-Market vs. Mark-to-History
1. Time decay -- cashflows since historical prices, other known changes such as pre-payments and defaults, shortened time to maturity.
2. Forward discounting
Balance sheet cannot leave any wriggle-room for "professional judgment", otherwise what you get is professional abuse.
I agree with your other points, though.
Mark-to-Market vs. Mark-to-History
The divergence of the two numbers, mark-to-market vs mark-to-history, should be a warning signal. If mark-to-history is much lower, it means the company's assets have appreciated a lot recently. While it's a good thing for now, investors (and management) should give it a second look. If mark-to-history is much higher, investors will need to scrutinize it and decide whether mark-to-market is meaningful.
More importantly, the comparison of the company-specific divergence and the market provides a gauge for assessing the company's assets and exposure.
As to tax, my opinion is that it should be based on realized gain/loss only. Neither mark-to-market nor mark-to-X is relevant.
Mark-to-Market vs. Mark-to-History
The divergence of the two numbers, mark-to-market vs mark-to-history, should be a warning signal. If mark-to-history is much lower, it means the company's assets have appreciated a lot recently. While it's a good thing for now, investors (and management) should give it a second look. If mark-to-history is much higher, investors will need to scrutinize it and decide whether mark-to-market is meaningful.
More importantly, the comparison of the company-specific divergence and the market provides a gauge for assessing the company's assets and exposure.
As to tax, my opinion is that it should be based on realized gain/loss only. Neither mark-to-market nor mark-to-X is relevant.
The Bailout Pork Effect: Short Term Rally, Long Term Disaster
YR Dog, today's market showed that it's smarter than I gave it credit for. It actually appears to be thinking longer term. The short term outlook is further complicated by the mess in Europe, where banks are in even deeper trouble than here. But the report of Europe's disappearance is greatly exaggerated, just as when Bernanke told Schumer et al "if we wait until Monday, there won't be an economy for us to save" (I'm paraphrasing from memory) two Fridays ago. US, Europe, BRIC, we're all in this together. Financial crisis can often hurt economy, but for a financial crisis to become an economic CRISIS, it takes extraordinary ignorance and neglect. I never believed the world would allow the current financial crisis to become a real economic one, even before Paulson started talking about his plan.
Maybe we will have a recession. Maybe we already have if you use the real inflation to adjust GDP. But, in this particular case, it hardly matters to the question of inflation. The surge of capital created by this Bailout Pork Package will drive up inflation even in a recession.
I'm sticking with commodities for at least a few more months.
How Does an Oil Crisis Impact the Dollar?
I suspect this has been a significant factor keeping USD down and commodities up for the past few months.
Dollar's Fall Could Be Limited as Fed Signals Rate Pause
NYSE Short Interest Back Near Record Highs
Options Trader: Wednesday Outlook
Fed Leaves Markets with a Lack of Closure
The commodities bubble has already been fueled by the Bernanke Fed. If its burst is not "too big to stop", just wait for the next try. No lesson will be learned and risk taking will soon lever up, until we get really screwed and even the Bernanke Fed can't bail us out.
Fed Delivers a Steep Yield Curve: A Bull’s Best Friend
The curve had been flat or inverted for years before the current crisis. Yet it'd been a bull market all along.
Look, dude, the poor unwashed are confused and beaten down enough already. Please have mercy. Don't sell them falsehood and scam them more.
Macroeconomic Warning Goes Unheeded
If one used any reasonable inflation adjustment factor as opposed to the openly scandalous "core (my ass) CPI", GDP growth would have been negative since Q4-07, in line with reality.
But with the current number-gaming, we have and will continue having inflation AND recession without realizing it.
The stupidity is mind boggling.