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Al Capital
69 Comments
Planned, Cautious Buying Amidst This Panicked Selling
Look, it might be unbelievable, but the market reaction to the current crisis is painfully obvious. First it will discount all growth since the housing bubble, basically assigning 5-10 cents on the dollar to mortgage backed securities of that vintage and bringing the Dow and S&P down to 2002 levels. From that point it could get even worse, much worse, so in making choices in this market, realize that the risks are enormous. The VIX alone documents an extraordinary risk level.
That brings me back to your point about "a plan". That plan should also account for the risk and costs of being wrong, meaning that if you are just hoping for a stabilization, or hoping for a bounce, then the plan should be to avoid risk.
Regarding the comment about "buy low and sell high", that works great in retrospect, but today's price might seem low now, but in fact turn out to be very high in a month from now. Don't invest using aphorisms, as you know "a fool and his money are quickly parted".
What Happens When Banks Are Nationalized
CPFF, TAF, TARP, Bailouts and All That Jazz
CPFF, TAF, TARP, Bailouts and All That Jazz
Asset Securitization Crisis: The Butterfly Effect
What is happing in the economy is quite the opposite, it is the result of a catastrophically large change in credit markets and resulting capital deflation (deflation creates further positive feedback causing credit to shrink further). That being said, an optimistic projection for the general market bottom would be 7500 for the Dow, or roughly 2002 levels. However, if things go badly, we could see a bottom at 4000-4500. There is a small chance that the national banks can avert this disaster, however, the risks remain extraordinarily high.
Remember this, if you are using the word "hope" in your description of investments (e.g. "I hope the market improves"), then you are not investing, you are gambling. An investor factors in the risk.
The Cramer Crash?
LDK Solar: Revenues Way Up, Margins Way Down
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Google Advances in Latest Search Data
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Microsoft Wants to Play Nice With Open Source
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The Difference Between Bernanke and Greenspan
Beware Ben Stein's Twisted Math
Once can explain Ben Stein's "data" in many ways, including simple modeling of the stock market (in the context of stocks and flows using MIT systems model paradigms, which is what we use). Certainly Ben Stein's "intelligent design" world outlook spills over to how he looks at the stock market, but like nearly everyone who has been financially hurt, he is reacting emotionally in his own voice.
However, in reacting to Ben Stein's personal and faulty logic, one can easily create the exact opposite, which is another personal and faulty logic. In order to avoid "The Moral Hazard" the market system needs more self-correcting mechanisms (or self-regulating feedback loops) that kick in before the large financial excursions happen.
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Rogue Traders and Economic Capital
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However, I disagree with you regarding the Feds further easing. They have no real choice at this point in time. They need to stabilize the financial markets long enough to unwind things. Then let's get down to talking serious reform.
By the way, I cite your work in that August post.
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Fed's Folly: Fooled by Flawed Futures?
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5 Stages of Market Grief
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Signals of The Next Cycle
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