The Credit Crisis Financial Stocks Short Journal

Discussion in 'Journals' started by Daal, Aug 14, 2008.

  1. Daal

    Daal

    One thing about my view of the US stock market is that the more I'm told I'm wrong for even consider shorting it the more bearish I get, I'm not sure that is good. I do it because it shows that people psychology are getting affected, with the overall bullishness taking over, and people feeling invencible, that nothing can take the market down, that is what momentum mini-bubbles are made of. Matt Simmons was back in 08 saying 'there is no reason for oil to go down' just a bit before it topped

    In fact I even think some of the 'fundamental' investors have turned into momentum players here, they know its quasi bubble that will pop but they keep going along for the ride because its just too irresistible. This where I differ a bit from the hussman theory, it happened with oil last year too when key oil players started to hold back oil in tankers because they thought the price would rise enabling them to sell higher, and these guys never heard of moving averages, so the fundamental guys can turn into specs too
     
    #811     Oct 12, 2009
  2. #812     Oct 13, 2009

  3. like the thinking. i am in the same boat here. i think that way one can build substantially larger position when compared to risk, than with just sell and sit. Discipline .... its hard.... I still dont feel that bull confidence you talking about which will be sign to reverse. I am a good sample of idiot and -reverse- signals are quite reliable. At present have buy signal for resources going. this play works out, will increase my size for this system.
     
    #813     Oct 13, 2009
  4. Daal

    Daal

    “I’m the north pole of inflation hawks,” Bullard said. “But we are trying to describe optimal policy, some optimal outcomes in an environment where inflation is below target -- we have an implicit target of 1.5 to 2 percent -- and you have the specter of a Japanese-style outcome, which I have worried about and some other members of the FOMC have worried about.”

    If this hawk is worried about Japanitization, I wonder what Bernanke is thinking
     
    #814     Oct 13, 2009
  5. Daal

    Daal

    I'm not sure when this will end, good thing I dont have too. I'm watching the trendline from the March and July lows, it hasn't been tested yet(it came close in the last sell-off). It it breaks after putting some kind of bounce I will get short with a tight short
     
    #815     Oct 13, 2009
  6. Daal

    Daal

    Krugman is also dovish for the next two years
    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/11/when-should-the-fed-raise-rates-even-more-wonkish/

    However there a many ways to use the Taylor Rule, depending on the inputs(and specially when you use forward data) you can get different outcomes. In fact, Taylor himself is calling for hikes in early 2010. So I wouldn't pay too much attention to this, except to say that the 2000-2004 cycle was marked by the Fed keeping rates lower than what John Taylor suggested to cut off Japanese tail risk, so I'm not too worried about Taylor's bitching
     
    #816     Oct 13, 2009
  7. sub0

    sub0

    Goldman Sachs downgraded and down pre-market. Bank stocks down on the FTSE. JNJ reporting this morning, INTC after close.
     
    #817     Oct 13, 2009
  8. Daal

    Daal

    #818     Oct 13, 2009
  9. Daal

    Daal

    From the nytimes.com article
    “It’s quite significant, because small businesses generate significant job growth,” said Andrew Tilton, a senior economist at Goldman Sachs. “And small businesses rely more on bank financing, whereas large businesses have the alternative of raising money in the capital markets.”

    Looks like a 90-94 repeat where "Big businesses were able to tap other sources of funds, such as innovative debt markets that had sprung up on Wall Street...But small and midsize manufacturers and mer-chants all over America were finding it hard to get even routine business loans approved. And that, in turn, made the recession unusually difficult to snap out of" - age of turbulence book

    That lead to one of the slowest job recoveries on record
     
    #819     Oct 13, 2009
  10. sub0

    sub0

    There was an interesting article that came out recently on when should the fed raise rates. In the article it pointed out just how incredibly difficult it is to lower unemployment just by 1 percentage point. It said based on the standard rate increase formula which factors in unemployment and inflation, rates should be a -5%!

    That's insane and scary to hear that we may be at 10% unemployment for a long time. Some are now saying we should all get use to it.
     
    #820     Oct 13, 2009