Great Depression Not Imminent, But Inevitable [View article]
The reason the CDS market deflates is it was a bubble in the first place. The whole credit enhancement mechanism was relying on institutions the size of AMBAC and MBIA.... AAA ratings have been exposed to what they are: worth every bit of what they cost to investors, i.e. $0, and great value to those paying for them, the borrowers, or sellers of toxic waste repackaged as "AAA". Left unchecked, this financial Chernobyl could trigger the nuclear winter the author wishes for. The Fed and US/China/others Gov'ts are busy burying it under a concrete blanket. That short SPY position is 1 year past its sell by date.
To think that the Fed is powerless is, to say the least, a bold statement. Credit markets are thawing: see JPM & BAC loosening covenants on $2Bn facility to Macy's (no less, consumer discretionary), money market rates nosediving, VIX plummeting. Have we seen the lows? not for me to say, but the crunch sure relaxes some of its grip. You may remember that stock indices have lost about 50% of their value lately. It takes Armageddon to justify more, and even Armageddon after a while loses its momentum.
Fundamentals Remain Negative This Week [View article]
As regards markets, the issue is not really so much about whether the economy improves or deteriorates. The issue is whether the market has or has not already factored in the likely deterioration. You may remember Keynes' image: It is not about choosing the prettiest lady, it is about picking the lady that the market as a whole views as the prettiest. So we don't care about what you (or I, for that matter) think, we care about what Mr. Market thinks. With the S&P 500 cut in half, dividend yields above bond yields for the first time since 1958, monetary and fiscal policy in full reflation mode, positioning a portfolio for a deflationary outcome means betting heavily against the impact of policymakers on the economy. Could be right, but unlikely. Today's doomsayers are akin to yesterday's real estate or dot com bulls. Remember "they don't make real estate anymore"? "Tech stocks are a safe heaven against interest rates as they're valued differently"? Not calling a bottom here. I think we're in a secular bear market since 2000, probably ending sometime in 2015 or 2020. My bet (that's what it is, just a bet) is that the bulk of the cyclical bear market (S&P down from 1550 to 750 or so) is behind us. So, upside potential far outweighs downside risk today. We may (35% probability?) undershoot, because that's how markets work. It's worth the risk in my best judgment. Isn't it funny that the "smart money" fat cats invested with Bernie Madoff would bail out now, to the point that Bernie's voodoo finance thingy would implode? If they're smart, then you're right. If they're not so smart, then I may have a point.
From Subprime to Meltdown: Is Peak Oil Responsible? [View article]
The sub-prime crisis results from monetary tightening linked to inflation pressures. It would have happened no matter what the source of inflation was. In this respect, the current de-leveraging crisis is no different from that of 1929 or 1990 Japan. The major source of tension results from unsustainable housing price appreciation which triggered voodoo finance to keep the party going. Oil prices were certainly not central to this, just one of the causes of interest rate hikes. As to Peak oil, with prices falling from $147 to $75 in 3 months, it starts looking more and more like the Y2K bug and avian flu to me. (Whatever happened to the avian pandemic, by the way?) JMHO, of course.
Great Depression Not Imminent, But Inevitable [View article]
AAA ratings have been exposed to what they are: worth every bit of what they cost to investors, i.e. $0, and great value to those paying for them, the borrowers, or sellers of toxic waste repackaged as "AAA".
Left unchecked, this financial Chernobyl could trigger the nuclear winter the author wishes for. The Fed and US/China/others Gov'ts are busy burying it under a concrete blanket.
That short SPY position is 1 year past its sell by date.
More Proof the Bear Rally Is Over [View article]
You may remember that stock indices have lost about 50% of their value lately. It takes Armageddon to justify more, and even Armageddon after a while loses its momentum.
Fundamentals Remain Negative This Week [View article]
You may remember Keynes' image: It is not about choosing the prettiest lady, it is about picking the lady that the market as a whole views as the prettiest. So we don't care about what you (or I, for that matter) think, we care about what Mr. Market thinks.
With the S&P 500 cut in half, dividend yields above bond yields for the first time since 1958, monetary and fiscal policy in full reflation mode, positioning a portfolio for a deflationary outcome means betting heavily against the impact of policymakers on the economy. Could be right, but unlikely.
Today's doomsayers are akin to yesterday's real estate or dot com bulls. Remember "they don't make real estate anymore"? "Tech stocks are a safe heaven against interest rates as they're valued differently"?
Not calling a bottom here. I think we're in a secular bear market since 2000, probably ending sometime in 2015 or 2020. My bet (that's what it is, just a bet) is that the bulk of the cyclical bear market (S&P down from 1550 to 750 or so) is behind us.
So, upside potential far outweighs downside risk today. We may (35% probability?) undershoot, because that's how markets work. It's worth the risk in my best judgment.
Isn't it funny that the "smart money" fat cats invested with Bernie Madoff would bail out now, to the point that Bernie's voodoo finance thingy would implode? If they're smart, then you're right. If they're not so smart, then I may have a point.
Analysts, Strategists, Pundits and Fools: Which Ones Are Right About the Markets? [View article]
From Subprime to Meltdown: Is Peak Oil Responsible? [View article]
It would have happened no matter what the source of inflation was. In this respect, the current de-leveraging crisis is no different from that of 1929 or 1990 Japan.
The major source of tension results from unsustainable housing price appreciation which triggered voodoo finance to keep the party going. Oil prices were certainly not central to this, just one of the causes of interest rate hikes.
As to Peak oil, with prices falling from $147 to $75 in 3 months, it starts looking more and more like the Y2K bug and avian flu to me. (Whatever happened to the avian pandemic, by the way?)
JMHO, of course.
On Speculation - Cramer's Mad Money (5/22/08) [View article]
On Speculation - Cramer's Mad Money (5/22/08) [View article]