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Posts Tagged ‘Market Comments’

I Was Wrong

October 30th, 2009

I was just reviewing and reorganizing my “…for further study” page and I tripped upon this quote. I had to post it again because I am still baffled and befuddled by what this means.

Maybe what it means is what he says? Is it even reasonable to postulate that our current economic conundrum is the simple result of one man’s mistaken economic theory? Could it all be that simple? 

REP. HENRY WAXMAN (D-Calif.): And my question for you is simple: Were you wrong?

ALAN GREENSPAN: And what I’m saying to you is, yes, I found a flaw….a flaw in the model that I perceived is the critical functioning structure that defines how the world works, so to speak.

REP. HENRY WAXMAN: In other words, you found that your view of the world, your ideology, was not right, it was not working?

ALAN GREENSPAN: That is–precisely. No, that’s precisely the reason I was shocked, because I had been going for 40 years or more with very considerable evidence that it was working exceptionally well.

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Utility Stocks: Ain’t Misbehavin’?

October 19th, 2009

Utility Stocks (as a group) have forsaken me this year by advancing only about one-fifth of the amount of the S&P 500… which can act as a real short-term boat anchor in your portfolio if you own any quantity at all. Yet, my passion for the sometimes stodgy “dividend machines” still burns hot.

UtilityTruckWhy?  First, there’s the cash flow.  My favorite utilities ETF, the Utilities Select Portfolio (XLU) is spinning off a 4.31% dividend yield in an environment where a half a percent is doin’ good on your money market. That’s worth taking a little bit of market risk.

Then there’s long term performance. The Dow Jones Utility Index has outperformed the S&P 500 by 4.4% PER YEAR over the last 10 years. This puts the DJUI in positive territory for the last 10 years, whereas the S&P 500 is down almost 20% for the same period. And we are supposed to be long term investors, right?

Then… What’s the problem? Why the dismal performance?

To answer the questions, I think we have to look at it in context of what utility stock underperformance might be saying about the economy in general. The last time we emerged from a recession, the utility averages advanced about 25% in the first year of the recovery (2003). This time, they have only advanced about 4%. My opinion is that there’s nothing wrong with utility stocks per se, but they might be telling us that there is still something wrong with the economy.

BenHelicopterMix this in with the failing dollar, gold hitting all-time price highs, and oil’s recent jump back to the $78 per barrel neighborhood and there’s plenty of evidence afoot to suggest that all is not “right” in the realm.

There are so many variables out there that even Helicopter Ben doesn’t have a real clue. Bernanke (at the moment) must be contented to just dump cash on the U.S. economy and hope for the best… while walking the tightrope.

We have the early indicators of inflation that gold, oil and utility stocks might be showing us on the one hand while we have the deflationary pressures that come with collapsing employment, a housing value slam with a possible double-dip and consumer spending that has all but evaporated.

So, I think utility stocks really ain’t misbehavin’… I think they’re trying to tell us something about the economy. And if I’m hearing them correctly, I think I’d rather lie with my lovable dogs (of late), than to be all loaded up on or still chasing after “recovery” stocks.

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Did You Hear That?

August 14th, 2009

Remember when I wrote the “Market Timing for Dummies” thing? It was in December of 2008 and my little chart that I showed in the post indicated that, at that point we’d been out of the market for a year and we might be out of it a while longer too.

long-term-timing-chart

Click to enlarge

We’ll, we’ve been out of the market another 8-plus months since then. Guess what? While you weren’t paying attention, we slipped into a bull market! What? Yes, it’s true… here’s the chart from almost a year ago brought up to today’s date.

Before you defrost those little wieners-on-a-toothpick that you’ve been saving for this party, here’s what it means and what I’m doing about it and what I think you should do…

Ready? Here’s the answer: “ATTITUDE SHIFT”. Since 75% of all stock price movements are in the direction of the overall market, we can begin to think that price situations will begin to resolve in our favor now, instead of assuming that everything’s going to immediately go into the crapper the instant we buy it like the last almost two years. That’s an attitude shift.

Before buying anything, make sure the financials are right and good… and that the chart looks favorable… and that you’re only putting an appropriate amount of your dough in each situation… and that you protect yourself against too much loss. (I like 10%).

As the rally continues to mature and goes through a couple of “tests” and subsequently continues to keep the wheels on, you can add to successful positions, start adding additional positions, etc. etc…. all the while limiting your risks.

So, it’s an attitude shift to where you would begin the process of investing in stocks when they look right. Moving all at once to a fully invested position could end up being a mistake if things take a sudden turn for the worse.

I remind all that you cannot predict the future.

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Yes We Can!

February 25th, 2009

In the last two paragraphs of my last post, I chastised “The Great Orator” (BHO) for being so down in the dumps and putting forth what I feel was an excessively pessimistic view as a part of an agenda to get his stimulus package passed.

This past weekend I was sitting with my Grandson, eating Cocoa Puffs together on the sofa and watching on the boob tube the Yes We Can!kinds of stuff that appeals to your average five year old…. and that’s when I heard it… that fimiliar refrain… “Yes We Can”

That’s where BHO got it! That’s where he got it all, the chant and the building stuff about putting the American people back to work in construction jobs! This has to be the genesis, the root, the seed of the Great Economic Recovery and Ego Act: “Yes We Can!”

On a serious note: I was, in fact, a little less distraught at last night’s speech. It seemed more hopeful and “Rooseveltian” now that he’s gotten the package passed. I think the hopeful message that he put out there is a bit of the salve that Americans need at the moment.

As usual, I just wasn’t finding much substance to the whole thing. The FDR flashback is a very popular faddish image at the moment for “pseudo-economists” to grab a hold of, but the problem is that most serious students of economic history concede that FDR’s plan didn’t really work.

The market’s action since early January when the plan started to come to light seems to be saying that BHO’s plan may not work any better. Back in Roosevelt’s day, the whole world at war finally snapped us out of it. Although it worked, nobody wants that kind of a stimulus plan.

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Don’t Confuse Reality With The Stock Market

December 10th, 2008

A little followup on my post from 2 days ago. The situation with my expectation of a Bear Market Rally (BMR) has not changed. As in, I still expect that we are setting up for the possibility for a BMR.

My language regarding my expectations has not changed and I continue to couch my posts in such vague terms as “maybe”, “possibility” etc. Keep this in mind… these are early signs and jumping the gun and buying early can be disastrous. So, be patient.

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