Saturday, December 22, 2007

IN, not DE

Peter Schiff argues the opposite way to Karl Denninger, pointing to the large amounts of US currency held abroad. In paper-money terms, he foresees continuing consumer price inflation, faster than for the assets you hold, so you're going to get poorer. If assets also inflate, we're into hyperinflation. Reasoning this way, he is, of course, a gold supporter.

Righteous wrath

Karl Denninger comments angrily on the failure of authorities to grasp the nettle - issuing warnings instead of downgrading credit ratings, holding back from forcing off-book liabilities back onto the balance sheet.

I've been looking for one of those famous photographs from China's "Great Leap Forward", showing children standing on a field of wheat, such is the success of the Party's new agricultural techniques. Can anyone help me find it on the Net?

For it's certainly a bit like the official-fudged miracle economy we've got now. Except even the peasants have stopped believing in it, to judge by what's happening in the retail outlets.

Green screens

The traders seem to be filling their boots with annual bonuses, as I guessed on 20 November (Red Screens) - or is it just the cyclical winter upswing in the market, as Joseph Dancy shows?

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Hark what discord follows

David Galland rehearses the argument for gold. He points out that, relative to stocks, the gold market is so small that a small shift into it from stocks would massively inflate demand. Against that is the fact that it hasn't happened yet, and that a small market can also be manipulated downwards by suppliers, particularly the central banks. Besides, in a real panic, Joe Average isn't looking to make a killing in commodities, he's trying to pay bills in cash and buy food and fuel ditto. Nice area for speculators with quick reflexes, though.

What is inflation, anyway? Ronald Cooke looks at the damned lies and self-serving statistics that underpin the official Consumer Price Index.

Jim Patterson reads the stockmarket runes and concludes:

Sub-Prime issues have been discounted. With overall market returns compressed the downside is limited. We expect a better market in the weeks and months ahead.

In his slightly starchy prose, The Contrarian Investor agrees with Patterson, up to a point, but also gives a serious warning:

1. In today’s market, the probability of the market going up is higher than the probability of it coming down. Hence, it is rightly called a bull market.

2. But should it come down (which is unlikely), it can collapse at extremely great speed and magnitude.

Hence, the stronger and longer this uptrend continues, the greater in magnitude and speed (as in volatility, not timing) the Great Crash III will be. Hence, the coming Great Crash III is a Black Swan event—an improbable but colossal impact event.

The importance of a particular event is the likelihood of it multiplied by its consequences. Black Swan events are events that are (1) highly unlikely and (2) colossal impact/consequences. One common mistake investors (and many professionals) make is to look at the former and forget about the latter i.e. ignore highly unlikely but impactful events.

Therefore, when contrarians are preparing for a crash, it does not necessary mean that they are predicting doom and gloom. Rather, they see the vulnerability of Black Swans and prepare for them.

Credit default swaps - a line of dominoes, one falls

Karl Denninger reports on the savage downgrading of a credit default insurer from "A" to "CCC" (junk) in one move - essentially a collapse in creditworthiness - and explains the implications for credit and investment markets. His conclusion is crystal clear:

If you're long stocks, bail now.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Stockmarket crash on the way?

Clearly, The Contrarian Investor (2 Dec) thinks it's a possibility. So does Frank Barbera, who looks at the jaded market response to interest rate cuts and says:

All investors take heed, you are staring at a market that is NOT responding well to “Good News.” Markets that cannot rally on Good News tend to accelerate downward on any type of bad news, and that is the kind of market which appears to be taking shape.

Here we go

California's 2004-enacted Proposition 58 requires the State to balance its budget. Revolutionary - how about something like this for the US Federal Government, the UK and its regions?

Now Governor Schwarzenegger is looking for a 10% cut in expenditures across the board, as the San Diego Union-Tribune reports.