Paul Volcker Endorses Barack Obama

31 01 2008

Nice endorsement from the most respected living Fed Chairman. A man who fought and won the battle over inflation in the 70’s.

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama won the endorsement of former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.

“It is only Barack Obama, in his person, in his ideas, in his ability to understand and to articulate both our needs and our hopes that provide the potential for strong and fresh leadership,” Volcker said in an e-mailed statement today.

Obama, 46, an Illinois senator, is locked in a tight race with New York Senator Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination. The two will meet head-to-head in more than 20 state primaries and caucuses on Feb. 5 after yesterday’s withdrawal of former North Carolina Senator John Edwards from the race.

“This is a high-profile endorsement that is likely to strengthen Obama’s credibility with respect to economic issues,” said Costas Panagopoulos, director of the elections and campaign management program at Fordham University in New York. “Given the growing importance of the economy as a top issue for voters, the Volcker endorsement can be very helpful.”

Paul Volcker, Former Fed Chairman, Endorses Obama





Wisdom of Crowds? Yeah Right

31 01 2008

Every once and a while I come across something so stupid/crazy that I have to do a little research just to prove to myself that my intuition is still sound. Recently, I read something very stupid/crazy while visiting The Big Picture. (Barry Ritholtz pointed out a Bloomberg story about Barton Biggs’ new book).

The book, “Wealth, War and Wisdom”, tries to argue for the wisdom of crowds. How is this done? Here is a segment of the article.

The “wisdom” in the alliterative title refers to the spooky way markets can foreshadow the future. Biggs became fascinated with this phenomenon after discovering by chance that equity markets sensed major turning points in the war.

The British stock market bottomed out in late June 1940 and started rising again before the truly grim days of the Battle of Britain in July to October, when the Germans were splintering London with bombs and preparing to invade the U.K.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average plumbed “an epic bottom” in late April and early May of 1942, then began climbing well before the U.S. victory in the Battle of Midway in June turned the tide against the Japanese.

I could not believe such wild claims and suspected that Biggs had made the mistake of using “20/20 hindsight” and a poor understanding of the way markets move to reach totally ridiculous conclusions. Ok, there is my hypothesis. What does history say?

Below I have the weekly chart of the Dow 30 during World War II. Let’s follow the time line of events. First you have the invasion of Poland. Due to a treaty, Britain and France respond with a declaration war, but neither want to fight and we enter the “Phony War” period. It looks like the market doesn’t believe that a full-scale war will be fought as the Dow just meanders sideways (So much for the wisdom of crowds here). What happens next is the surprise invasion of France, which is promptly followed by a massive sell-off on huge volume.

This is the point where some understanding of how markets move is required. The most important fact is that markets never go up forever and they never go down forever (quote of Tom O’Brien). The reason why is quite simple. There are only a finite amount of shares and a finite amount of money out there. This fact is reflected in the volumes. When volume dries up at tops there is no more money to buy, when it dries up at bottoms, there are no shares to sell. During fast and furious sell-offs the market can quickly exhaust the amount of shares and bottoms are reached in a short period of time.

Ok, back to the chart. Look at the period after the invasion of France. The volume quickly dries up (selling exhaustion), resulting in bounce. So yes the market rose during the Battle of Britain, but this was merely a counter-trend bounce on light volume back up to the 50 period moving average. More selling would come, especially since the world’s future looked very bleak.

The next big event was Pearl Harbor, resulting in another huge sell-off as America entered the war. All through the early part of 1942, while America struggled to learn how to fight in Africa and the Pacific, the market continued to fall on ever decreasing volume. Just like the markets always do, it started a counter-trend bounce when things look the darkest, this time just weeks before the decisive Battle of Midway. This was an obvious turning point of the war in the Pacific and gradually the markets began to gain confidence.

The funny thing is, the volumes, and thus crowds, do not significantly increase until months after the Battle of Midway. So much for the “wisdom of crowds”. Moreover, the “epic” bottom can only be defined after several years of perspective, well past the point where the outcome of World War II was in doubt. Just because there was an exhaustion in selling pressure and a counter-trend bounce just weeks before Midway does not mean that the markets predicted the war’s outcome.

It almost seems silly to point all of this stuff out because it is so obvious. It looks like Biggs was fooled by randomness.

One last thing, Biggs says that the markets “then began climbing well before the U.S. victory in the Battle of Midway in June turned the tide against the Japanese. ” I really don’t think one month or 20 trading days can be considered “well before” an event, especially when Biggs is defining it as a multi-year bottom. What a joke.





The selling is done

31 01 2008

Here is my current thesis. The selling is done and the bad news is already baked into the market. It will take some time for the leaders to emerge, but buying index funds and market ETFs is a good strategy right now. Be ready, because when those new leaders emerge some serious money will be made.

Here is a great quote from Tom O’Brien during his conversation with Ken Shrieve of Investors Business Daily.

“Its Armageddon everywhere, but we’ll see if the market cares about Armageddon at these lows.”





DePaul Basketball

30 01 2008


I will not be posting anything tonight as I went to see Syracuse beat DePaul tonight. It was an ugly game with poor officiating but, overall I was entertained.





Tom O’Brien is a giddy bull

28 01 2008

“The bullhorns are out!”

These are the words of Tom O’Brien, a man who has been bearish since March 2007. What was funny is that the day before he flipped bullish he sounded about as grim as I have ever heard.

Tom is not only looking for a Dow 15,000, but he also predicts that Ben Bernanke will trade in his helicopter for a fleet of B-52’s to drop cash.





TLT Short

27 01 2008

I have been watching the meteoric rise of bond prices and have been looking for a spot to get in on the short side. The 20 year bond ETF, TLT, has finished a TD Sequential sell signal and recent price action has indicated that we are at some serious resistance. That resistance is much clearer in the long term chart below.

I would honor a stop loss if the price closes above 97.05.





Futures Blowup

27 01 2008

By now you have probably seen this guy. He was long 10 Russell 2K contracts into the MLK weekend. Here is a pretty funny remix of his own video post. I guess he sold for a 31K loss just minutes before the Fed emergency rate cut. 31K isn’t all that much, but it was obviously too much for him.

Here is his blog. http://highprobability.blogspot.com/

The dude in the video is getting tired of all of the attention and it reminded me of this REM vid.





Politics on Saturday

27 01 2008

Congratulations Barack Obama and South Carolina. I was absolutely convinced that, while disgusting and shameful, the Clinton’s tactics would prevail. Such negativity just always seems to work (especially in South Carolina) and this time it backfired. Thank God.

Who would have thought that the state that instigated the Civil War would be the state that restored my faith in American democracy.

The bottom line: I now consider myself a former Bill Clinton fan and will either vote for the Republican candidate or not vote at all if Hillary Clinton wins. Lets hope it doesn’t come to that.

If you happen to be undecided about which candidate to vote for on February 5th, just take a look at the breakdown of Obama’s and Clinton’s constituency. I don’t know about you but, if you take out the gender difference, I wouldn’t want to be grouped together with Hillary Clinton’s voters.

The contest from now on, Layman said, will be “a battle between distinct and fairly evenly-matched constituencies….with Obama doing better among blacks, men, younger voters, better-educated people, and independents (in open primary states), and Clinton doing better among whites, women, older voters, lower income and less-well-educated voters, and staunch Democrats.” The results he said, are likely to “be just as confused on the night of Feb. 5 as they are right now.”

No wonder why Bill’s efforts to pin Obama’s as “the black candidate” failed. All of the ignorant bigots were already voting for Hillary.

Source: This Now Becomes A Real Delegate Fight





The market’s new and old leaders

24 01 2008

Two days up does not make a new bull market. We need to watch for an IBD style follow-through day and watch for breakouts from sound bases. This market needs to prove itself so don’t get too comfortable.

This doesn’t mean that it is time relax, however. Keep a look out for new leaders and stay away from broken down former leaders. Take for example the two charts below. Chipotle (CMG) has held up reasonably well and looks to be forming a nice base.

Flotek Industries (FTK) is a different story. I know this company very well as I owned it way back in June 2006 and sold around February 2007 (Yes it was painful watching the run that followed). I had to laugh though when I read that they blamed their recent earnings warning on “bad weather”. That is what they said just before that big dip in 2006. It looks like the market will once again punish FTK severely. This is going to take a long time to recover (probably over a year) but I wouldn’t be surprised to see it hit 55 again. Flotek went too far and too fast and I think the management started to believe their own hype for a little bit.





This is a trade…repeat, this is only a trade

24 01 2008

I bought the QLD @ 73

Sell at 94 with a stop loss of 65. I am risking 8 points with a possible reward of 21.