Sunday, September 25, 2011

Gold Turns to Mold, As the World Turns, Other Randoms

Well I did the right thing and double-shorted gold at $1900/oz. Meanwhile, I lose 5K per day in stocks. Dona cara. The dollar is almighty at 2% on a ten year note?? Put mine in the toilet please at that interest.
STOCKS TUMBLE ON DOUBLE DIP FEARS. When did the recession end so that we could double down?
And what in the world does unemployment have to do with the stock market? What a load of bull. Are all of you people living in the street now in the stock market?
Corporate profits built on the back of unemployment remains a facade. Here's the truth CEOs: $ talks but it can't sing and dance unless it's dance macabre.
Problem main is that I can't buy a million shares of anything at one time-too diversified. If you got billions it's impossible to lose money, if you don't it's impossible to make money. Kinda leaves a few of us out.

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Monday, August 22, 2011

Dow Still Too High

Clearly the stock market is now a rich, gambling man's game. No longer is the regular guy involved. While this is certainly dismaying, those of us still along for the ride needn't worry. The DJIA et al. will yo-yo like crazy but will always go back up. Those rich day-traders always will gamble (with our money). If you have time to wait (always 2-5 year cycles) just relax and collect distributions. The Dow still hasn't dipped to 10500, where it belongs. Let it bleed. Don't worry, be happy.
Altria is still my favorite stock. Habits don't break and can even increase in hard times. That makes dividends increase.
American Funds are still my favorite mutuals, long term. They use a team approach.
Russia is still my favorite ETF country. They play no one's games but their's and are resource loaded.
Gold is my favorite thing to short at $2500/oz. For well you know that it's a fool who plays it cool by making his world a little golder.
Final assessment of current market gambling: It is still a better chance than slot machines. You may only lose 1/2 of your money instead of all of it. I might currently recommend blackjack over the stock market, especially single-deck. Craps is definitely favored over stocks if one knows the game. In short, the stock market (specifically growth with no distributions) is now casino gambling, a middle class addiction possibly (but not winnable). 

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Thursday, August 18, 2011

Can you believe, Ezine didn't like this one? Mr. Grammar Person dislikes

Stock Market Volatility My Butt

By: JW
Article ID: 6489206
Article Submitted: August 13, 2011
Category: Finance:Personal-Finance
Article Word Count: 670
Article In Problem Status

Sorry, your article contains grammar, spelling, punctuation, or sentence structure errors.
Your article does not contain appropriate paragraph breaks
Yeah, blah blah blah-most of my articles go to PROBLEM STATUS

 
Commandment: In all facets people must be manipulated by greed and/or fear.
Allrighty then,
Monday Aug. 8, 2011, DJIA -634
Tuesday Aug. 9, 2011, DJIA +429
Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011, DJIA -519
Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011, DJIA +422 and I can therefor afford to play golf. Lousily, but that's not this story.
So duh,what's up? Day trading billionaires, that's what. Monday short, then long, then short, then long. Get it?
There oughta be a law. But the regulators (if there were any conscious) are in someone's pockets aren't they?
What's so hard about common sense? I have no problem with guys selling short, long, or keeping all their money in $30000 per ounce gold. But if someone sells short they shouldn't be able to turn around the next day and go long. Regulators, asleep at the switch, need to institute laws whereby these privileged day traders have to hold their position for 30 days. Then they could get hurt instead of just hurting the general public.
It just breaks my heart to watch these money hungry boogers dissolve the middle class before our eyes. And they are blatant and getting away with it.
Look, they are never going to get me. I'm untouchable. I control my lifestyle and can live on 10K a year.
I will always be debt free (the average family debt is in the area of 200K, look it up).
But I am eternally worried that we will wind up with a 2 class society-haves and have not's. I will be on the outside but I will be crying. It's NOT ABOUT ME. It's about capitalism giving everyone a chance. That's the way it's supposed to be.
Tell me why 8 billion bucks isn't enough. Tell me why someone needs 9 billion instead.
So, this day trading for the rich makes me puke, because if you have a lousy half mil. you are paralyzed and just riding the yoyo up and down. The way it's working now, insider trading might as well be legal if this day trading sure-thing gambling is legal. (Well insiding is for Somebodies. If Somebodies get caught it is a hand slap if Mr. Media doesn't get rough.)
Look, here's an example of what the normal guy can do: in 2008, when the market was going up and down 1000 points per day, I bet 8K on the S&P short one day. I made a lousy $800. Do most of you have a lousy 8K to do that with? No. So most of us do not have access to this daily up and down drivel. We buy and hold because there is no choice and because we have been told that it is the right choice. But right now you might as well bet the football over-under. What a load! The BIG GUYS are just gambling with your money, hoping you don't know when to hold 'em or fold 'em. And if you got a stinkin' 50K (that's above average) the BIG GUYS want you plenty worried that they are taking you down to 20K.
Well maybe you haven't made yourself untouchable. That's your fault. We keep hearing that we are all in this together, but only if you understand that the enemy is us. NOT THE PROBLEM: Obama, the Tea Party, the stinkin' Commies, V. Putin. US IS.
Well like I said they'll never get me.
Control your lifestyle, stay debt free, DO NOT TOUCH YOUR INVESTMENTS. Live on what you make! Please, don't let the haves do this to you. Already, 1% of the people have all of the money. It could get worse if we let it happen.
We must retain a middle class, which is the backbone of capitalism.
I've heard enough about public debt problems. PERSONAL DEBT IS THE REAL ISSUE HERE-WAKE UP.
Let's get some regulations on these day-traders. They are ruining the country as we watch.
I gotta go, I can't see because I'm cryin' for my species.
GREED RULES burns in Hades.
Jim William is an avid investor who has made plenty of mistakes.
Visit his website at http://themaven.synthasite.com

  




Friday, August 5, 2011

Capitalism-IT Works For MIGHTY Few

Why care what S&P or Moody's says? They had Lehman rated AAA the day that the Bros. went under. And B.S. too.
Here we go again boing ga boing, big market swings. Where -300 is a good day. Remember those good old days?-well not so long ago.
While I do admit that Italy's (Italy is in the top 10 in public debt to GDP ratio at over 100%) and Spain's debt issues are a huge problem, Mr. Market's reaction here at home to what usually is a mere procedural issue (our debt ceiling increase) is ludicrous. As personal debt remains the real problem, not public debt (we are not Zimbabwe remember?), the circus show in Washington, DC is just another attempt to steal investment equity from the regular guy. And it's working like always-you are all in that .001% money market running scared, right? Do not worry grasshopper, the rich will get richer again. The rich honestly think IT IS THE WAY. They must believe it because wealth=brains they tell me. Go capitalism. It doesn't work for you unless you can switch a billion dollars from long to short side at the blink of an eye. It does however suck for you. Big Business hoards cash=no job for us'uns.
Anyway, try not to fall for this ploy being tried (and true) by Mr. Monopoly. 10,500 DJIA is a fair number to look at reevaluation. We've been due for a correction as the market is still overvalued. Corporate profit on the back of unemployment is a charade-don't bite the hook. 10,500 is about where we should be freaks.
And don't forget, the last hour of trading is the measure of the market.

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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Flogging China New Borun & Other Sino-Stocks

BORN: IBD "Pump and Dump"? (A lot of people, like I, bought this stock on IBD's recommendation.) Sham or facade stock? In the murky waters of Chinese investing through American boards nobody knows. All of this ilk have been getting hammered. Maybe it's just current China inflationary pressure currently. Or are all Chinese interests listed on our stock exchanges junk? After all, capitalism curtailing in the Chinese government is what they are all about. Anyway, yeah, I bought into BORN at $13 and $9. It is now lucky to tread water at $4/share. Oh well, it's not the first or last "Pump and Dump" for me on the high end. Win in Russia, lose in China. That's me. Talk about volatility, BORN's 52 week range is 3 1/2-20 1/2. I think that for my part I'll just hold. I think a few wild plays for a couple grand are okay if one can afford them. Bet these weirdo things with winnings. Any way, China New Borun makes some kinda corn booze I guess, sold to Chinese citizens. If they are like us, the tougher things get, the more they will drink. IF it's even a real company. Well the P/E on this baby is 2+ and they beat "expected" earnings per share for their last quarter. Whatever, buy in and pump the price up for me. UNDERVALUED is my analysis. I'm in trouble on this one, I see that you don't trust me. Oh by the way, IBD likes them RIGHT NOW!

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Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Bollinger Bands

I find that these guys can calm my nerves when my stock is down. If you don't know what I'm talking about, go to Yahoo Finance.
1) put your stock symbol in "Get Quotes"
2) go to "Basic Tech. Analysis"
3) go to "Bollinger Bands"
If your stock falls below the lower grey line, it's still a good buy according to this Bollinger guy. My stocks that I'm losing my butt on usually qualify as good "buys".
Who knows with fickle "Mr. Market"?

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Darn That Kha daffy Duck

HERE WE GO. Dow up 190, down 176 the next day. 1 1/2% daily changes are emotion charged and are unhealthy for the market.
The Dow continues to lag the other benchmarks', although forward compensation on that front looks good. I'm looking for just a nice 20 or 30 point bump per day for a few weeks. We need to settle this upset Mr. Market in a hurry as we only have a few months left until "SELL IN MAY".
Not ready to 2X short gold yet. Stay away from any (benchmark) stock index ETF's right now. Opportunity to double down (see SDS) is coming. Patient, may be a few years yet. Double up (see SSO)  is way gone. What can you make, a lousy 40% maximum? (That would be in a 20% DJIA increase to an all time high.)

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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Ad Infinitum We Hope-The 3 Ring Circus Comes to Town

Three's a charm.
1) As January goes so goes the year. Well we just had our best January in 14 years!
Dow +2.7%, Nasdaq +1.8%, S&P +2.3%.
2) The year after mid-term elections is a winner.
3) The 3rd. year of a President's term is a winner.
#2 or #3 is 70% of the time and the other is 90% of the time. Who cares which is which? So all of the stars are aligned.

Still, I have worries: The S&P is outpacing the Dow consistently. One day last week the S&P was actually the bigger points gainer. Weird! The norm is if the Dow is up 60 the S&P should be up like 6. So buy the Dow as undervalued? I just dunno.

Let's see, Pfizer outperformed expectations but was still down at the open today.
Nobody likes Big-Pharm I guess. I see now they are finally up today.

BP reinstates their dividend. Oh boy, 7 cents in the fourth quarter. And Bank of America never did away with theirs. A penny per quarter! Good news all around.
Jump back on those high yield bank stocks.

Let's wait and see.

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Monday, January 24, 2011

Dow 12000, Eli's coming, and waiting for Godot

MIDDLE CLASS, if you are still there, since you have recently hinted at investing here are some thoughts.

Although I love American Funds management style they are cumbersome to manage in downturns. I would lean toward mutual fund companies which are no load and have only a few funds to choose from. Some that come to mind: Appleseed (1 fund), CGM (3 available), Amana (3), Fairholme (1 avail. under 25K). Obviously less funds are easier for management to concentrate on. Again, big companies like Fidelity and Vanguard, although no load, are cumbersome to manage. Mutual funds should only be looked at for their 10+ year performance for those under 40 years of age. You are buy and holders. Regarding mutual funds, you might consider a free 14 day trial with Morningstar Premium to see if you like it. I USE NO SUCH SERVICES.

I love big tobacco stocks (like Altria, practically a fund unto itself). Big dividends due to stigma. Investing is not ethics. Therefor I find large oil tanker stocks to be interesting, e.g. FRO, SFL. They are a necessary evil with big dividends (but extremely volatile obviously). I like the ever evil HAL to get into and out of occasionally. I rue selling MA at $65/share. The poisonous DD I sold too early. For safety I like prices of $15-$30/share with P/Es of 9-15 and dividends of 3%+. Analysts will throw all kinds of other criteria at you, but my formula is simple. All formulas get burned sometime. Unfortunately, this strategy will leave out mid-cap and small-cap (entrepreneurial) stocks which can have gigantic gains more often. They also go to zero value more often. I currently love Russian and Latin American ETFs. I prefer their smaller expenses over relative mutual funds.

Be aware that this rally can not hit full throttle minus reemployment. On the other hand, it's good to see the Dow gaining traction after being spanked by the S&P and Nasdaq so far in the recovery. Don't forget that the Nasdaq is already higher than at the height of the buying frenzy pre-recession (2007).

One final word: YOUARETOOLATE (Investing was timely at Dow 8500).

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