Public not coming back??

Discussion in 'Trading' started by countrydog2, Feb 4, 2009.

  1. Not being argumentative, but I''ve yet to hear anyone use objective criteria to define "green".
     
    #21     Feb 4, 2009
  2. Think you guys better do more research.

    NYSE has a little "New Exchange" where funds can trade Big Block orders with out showing Size and without Dealing with the "Floor" or "Retail" brokers. This is not the 4th market, its even better and allows the "Banks" Funds, etc to hide their orders.
     
    #22     Feb 4, 2009
  3. Brandonf

    Brandonf Sponsor

    I agree 100%. We are going to have an entire generation of people who feel the same way about banks and the stock market as our grandparents generation did. That will obviously have some meaningful impact on what we do.
     
    #23     Feb 4, 2009
  4. capmac

    capmac

    The Stock Market is for suckers…

    By Mark Cuban

    I wanted to respond to Tom Hawks comments. Someone I respect a lot, but who i disagree vehemently on this topic.

    Tom I stand by what I said. You can have as long a term horizon as you want, but like most other long term plans we have, most peoples lives dont match up to their “horizons”. Its amazing how life intervenes. Kids, whatever. its a fortunate few that can just shell it away and never touch it. Your “horizon” hits a dead end when you have to put money into a checking account. I have never seen any investing research that deals with random withdrawls that represents real world. And boy oh boy, if life hits you hard when the market is down, you make a withdrawl and you wont ever catch up.

    But thats just the start of the problem. Lets say you buy into what the brokerages and funds are selling. Buy and hold, or whatever. How do you pick from the 17k funds ? By reading some websites ? By talking to some friends ? By watching the commercials ? By selecting among the options your company gives you in their plan ? Which of course was the result of a salespitch that the fund company put together to the person offering the plan to your company. Everyone is getting paid on the gravy train, except for the guy putting in the money at the end.

    Wall Street has done an AMAZING job of creating conventional wisdom . “Buy and Hold ” is the 2nd most misleading marketing slogan ever, after the brilliant “rinse and repeat” message on every shampoo bottle. We as a country have fallen for it. Every message from every marketer of stocks tell us. Young or old, if you can hold for the long term, things will work out for you.

    That is total bullshit. Its for suckers.

    Ive traded stocks for almost twenty years now. IM good at it. When i work at it. And it takes a lot of work. Not just reading all the 10K/Qs and corporate websites and product managers, or talking to people at the outskirts of the company where management doesnt reach. It takes often knowing the market for a company’s product better than the company does. After all just because a company is public doesnt mean a thing other than someone has , and continues to make money buying and selling the stock as their own product.

    If you are going to trade stocks, you just have to follow one rule and remember one thing. That rule is always have a definite knowledge advantage about the company you are trading, and always remember that every stock transaction has a sucker, and you have to know whether its you or the person on the other side of the trade. No one buys a stock from your, or sells one to you knowing they are leaving money on the table.

    The bottom line is that unless you plan on making it a full time job to do your research and put yourself in a position to have an advantage, you are going to get your ass kicked at some point by someone who does. You just have to hope that it doesnt put a big financial hurt on you when it happens

    The same logic applies to funds. Funds are in the business of making money for themselves first. You 2nd.

    First check what the heads of some public mutual funds are making. Someone help me out, I cant find the link right now .Was it Mario Gabelli who not only paid himself more than his fund earned for its shareholders in a year (forget the people with money in his funds), but he was paying himself from like 3 companies at the same time ? Get me the links and I will update them here.

    Then you should check the turnover of fund managers some day. You know where the good ones go ? To start or manage their own funds.

    Then there is the portfolio turnover. How often they completely turn over the stocks in their fund. last numbers I saw was that on average funds turnover their portfolios 85pct every year. Thats not investing. Its fund managers doing whatever they can to beat their peers, knowing that if they dont, they are out of a job. Their bosses know that if they dont beat their peers, the money flows out, and that is a HUGE problem for any fund. So many funds take chances they shouldnt, with your money . We never see any headlines for funds that close. Why is that ? We never see any headlines for fund managers who get fired. Why ?

    But even if performance sucks, rather than saying how bad it is, they pick the short stint when it wasnt so bad. Forbes did a nice job reviewing this little marketing habit of funds and referencing some manager turnover issues at Fidelity.

    As far as ETFs. Which one ? Remember, the Dow and S&P are marketing tools. They change the indexes. Look at the stocks in there today, vs what was in there in years past. You are not buying a passive investment that tracks the economy. You are buying the stock pickers at those respective indexes. Last time I looked, both Dow Jones and McGraw Hill are for profit companies. They want people to think their DJ 30 & S&P 500 indexes are powerful indexes that can be reported daily as a reflection of market action. So they change the stocks when they think they need to. To help them with their product.

    Ive said a lot of this before. The stock market is by definition a ponzi scheme. As long as money keeps on coming in, then there is someone to take the stocks from the sellers. If the amount of money coming in is reduced, the stocks, indexes, et al go down. What if, for who knows whatever reason, the amount of money going into stocks declined significantly ? Who would buy stock from the sellers. I mean goodness gracious, you could see something disastrous happen. Like the Nasdaq dropping from 5000, to under 2000 in just a few years. Its happened before, it can happen again.
     
    #24     Feb 17, 2009
  5. kipster

    kipster

    Just like after the dot com bust 2002-2003, volatility slowed tremendously.

    the public stayed away from the market after getting burned so badly.

    This will happen again
    In a few years all will be forgotten and the public will return
     
    #25     Feb 17, 2009
  6. They will return because they think they have to. I had dinner with a retired friend yesterday. His savings got hit pretty hard by the downturn and that makes him wary of equities.

    Yet he says that he must get 10% annual return or be forced go back to work.

    Hmmm.... I wonder what he'll do to make 10%?
     
    #26     Feb 17, 2009
  7. TGregg

    TGregg

    Yep. There's even a trading show on WBT, a Charlotte AM radio station (a big one for the AM band). They also have investing shows, but trading? That's a sign that there are WAY too many people in the markets.

    Some company (eTrade?) was running a commercial about how you could buy and sell stocks from your web enabled phone. You know how you're waiting in the doctor's office and just have to short GM and go long GOOG right now.

    It's not too bad in and of itself, but it does add to the point that too many non-professionals are trading.
     
    #27     Feb 17, 2009
  8. Mvic

    Mvic

    I think that I see it too, the basic indicators like stochastics seem to be working strangely well the last few weeks possibly because there rae so many noobs in the market using them now.
     
    #28     Feb 17, 2009
  9. PPL will always com back to the market. The dow used to be a 50 in the depths of the great depression and even then people eventually came back.
     
    #29     Feb 17, 2009
  10. dave74

    dave74

    That article by Mark Cuban is great. Of course, some people do make money in the market consistently, but these people are only the top 95%.

    You can hate Cuban all you want, but the guy is brilliant, and easily smarter than almost anyone on this board. I think it's wise to listen to at least some of what he has to say.

    The stock market looks deceptively easy. For all intents and purposes, yes, the stock market is for suckers, and it is dangerous for average people.
     
    #30     Feb 17, 2009