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  • Exploring Relative Strength Systems with These 11 ETFs [View article]
    a) EEP is a typo, should read EPP

    b) The orange S&P line may be considered buy and hold.
    Oct 20 10:43 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Weekly ETF Rewind: Maybe a Short Term Pullback Ahead? [View article]
    It appears SA has reposted an old article, see the blog for this week's. I had some newsfeed problems, which may explain. Anyhow,

    marketrewind.blogspot....

    Cheers, Jeff
    Jul 19 12:00 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Among DB's New Offerings: U.S. Carbon Efficient ETF [View article]
    See GRN for carbon credits. Most of these have otherwise been released for some time.
    Jul 16 12:02 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Hedge Funds Had a Good May [View article]
    That was for the directional index. Equal weighted strategies did about two points lower.
    Jun 10 12:36 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Friday's Volume Down Significantly [View article]
    Hi, I post a mid-day update each and every single day. Sometimes SA decides to post them as if they are stand along works, which clearly they are not. I do not control which ones they select, or how they edit them (sometimes subtly changing meaning even). If the article seems out of context, I'd encourage you to read my whole blog. The volume was the lowest in months. Cheers, Jeff
    May 03 11:51 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Don't Forget: Sell the News [View article]
    Some readers may not understand how SA works. I do not submit articles to them. They comb my articles and decide which ones they want to post. Their editorial ability extends to changing the title and occasionally editing the material itself. Lately they have been picking up some of my intraday posts and changing the title. If it seems illogical/ out of context, I suggest you visit my blog. Cheers, Jeff
    Apr 16 12:07 pm |Rating: +1 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Testing Market Highs [View article]
    SA has decided to you retitle my posts and occasionally include my daily intraday material. If it seems short, or out of context, I suggest you visit the blog directly. Cheers, JP
    Mar 28 21:28 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Santelli's Rant: A Watershed Moment? [View article]
    The real watershed moment was the White House Secretary's respons, IMO.
    Feb 22 11:40 am |Rating: +1 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Weekly Rewind: Signs of a Nascent Recovery? [View article]
    Hey, no disagreement here -- but maybe we get some upside juice into the new year, no? More importantly, the chart above is incorrect (week 39, not 49). Please see blog for correct chart at marketrewind.blogspot...., and sorry about that. Have a good weekend, Jeff
    Dec 07 22:30 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Mini-November Crash Update  [View article]
    Missing?

    Six, as we all know, there is a government sponsored reinflation attempt afoot.
    Nov 22 21:09 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • On a Return to Normalcy: Dow 8,500 [View article]
    So how much overshoot... I tend to think this market is not trading on valuation, though it's probably near fair value on that account. Right now it's a piggy bank providing cash for operations, capital base, and to make good on prior bets to the point of others on SA.
    Oct 11 22:55 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • 2008 Price Targets Higher Than Mt. Everest [View article]
    Hilarious with the cross outs. How about showing a column for how much we have to gain from here to hit their targets...
    Oct 11 22:48 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Devastating Week That Was [View article]
    Also, what happens with all that cash... capital reserve, or put back to work...?
    Oct 11 22:34 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Devastating Week That Was [View article]
    Certainly agree in all respects.
    Oct 11 21:43 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Why 'We've Got To Stick Together' [View article]
    Thanks JCC, a little rough around the edges, but I wanted to get it out in a timely fashion. I share your concern in general vis-a-vis irresponsible parties... but let's take a look at those actors:

    o Homeowners - I tend to think the man on the street relies to some degree on the banker to tell him what he can afford. He may think it is a stretch going in, but when a vaunted "banker" says he's good for it, it confirms his optimistic (if unrealistic) outlook. If he or she mistated assets and earnings, of course that's a different story; it's called fraud. In any event, that home owner has now walked away from 5% to 20% equity. Let's call that $10,ooo to $40,ooo based on typical median US home prices. Not small sums, not to mention the big dings on their credit records and possible bankruptcy status... enough punishment? If anything, the 5% downpayment level (on second homes anyhow), certainly made it too easy for them to walk away, leaving banks with the problem.

    o Mortgage Loan Employees - Well, these guys were on commission and undoubtedly pushed more loans through than were deserved. Of course they were incentivezed to do this by their companies that paid on commission. They certainly had a flush run, but are now universally out of the job... enough punishment? To the extent we are talking about the mortgage bankers and such, look at those Lehman employees paid in stock options... now worthless, enough punishment?

    o Mortage Loan Companies - On the margin, their management was incentivized to keep up with their competitors in terms of market size and share or be punished by the market. And where were the regulators? It wasn't one or two or three banks doing this alone, or even in collusion, to cover that angle, they were all making the best individual decisions to survive within the herd. Plus, it was easy to drink the coolaid that risk was being spread out appropriately anyhow through reinsurance and CDOs. Plus, like the homeowner, their ratings held up, so it "must be OK, right?" Now they are out of business, out of the job, or holding worthless stock, sufficient punishment?

    o Ratings Agencies - Should have been on top of this at least two years ago. Unfortunately, look who pays them! Plus, they also no doubt bought into the notion that risk was spread out and that "real estate has never gone down before." It think this group should be held to a higher standard and realign its incentive structure for their own good reputation, if nothing else. Probably getting the least slack so far, and they deserve more, but will probably get away more or less clean.

    o Regulators/Gov - Should have been on this years ago. Some voices (Greenspan) in the woods, but they were not heeded, and it's politically difficult to step in the way of the "American Dream." Which party to blame - both - even though administrative agencies fall under the Pres., Congress has oversight and failed to either understand or act. Vote them out if you can find better replacements.

    o Reinsurers - These guys should have known they were headed for a train wreck. Again, look at their stock values now.

    Underlying themes are misalignment of incentives, lack of regulatory oversight and/or action, a herd mentality and diffusion of responsibility. It's lame to say no one understood "the complex models," I'm sure they did. The individual models simply didn't consider the possibility of bubble creation through aggregate macro economic effects -- garbage in garbage out. Anyone that stood back and looked at the big picture was likely drowned out by idiots saying, "hey home values have never gone down before."

    This is pretty rough, but you get the idea. I'm sure some individuals will get pilloried, that always seems to happen. But really the blame is diffused among so many actors, alot of pain has already been doled out, and now we all need to share in the pain to keep the system functioning.

    I don't see how any one of the above parties is necessarily being rewarded here. No one that lost a home is going to get it back (unless they repurchase it for pennies on the dollar from the TARP! Maybe they should be disqualified to bid!) Equity values have plummeted and jobs have been lost, and none of those are coming back overnight. One could even argue that those who didn't sell out months ago or go short the financials should be rewarded with a small bounce. Again, if there was outright fraud or collusion proven, that's a different story.

    What do you think?
    Sep 21 17:49 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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