Thursday, March 28, 2013

Gold Update: Marc Faber, says there’s nowhere to hide from Bubblegeddon, not even gold



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The world is filling up with bubbles, and there’s nowhere to hide, not even in gold, said high-profile market bear Marc Faber, editor and publisher of TheGloom, Boom and Doom Report, on Bloomberg “Surveillance” on Wednesday.


The latest bubble is U.S. stocks, which have been testing record highs lately.
“I was relatively positive about U.S. stocks since March 2009,” Faber said. “I haven’t any short positions. I haven’t been shorting any stocks since 2009. But the U.S. 


marches up , consumer confidence marches down, and emerging markets are performing badly relative to the U.S. The dollar is strong indicating a tightening of international liquidity. And so I don’t think that the U.S. market will go up a lot from here I rather think that there’s now considerable downside risk.”

But what about gold? Why isn’t that holding up as a safe haven?

 Faber was asked.  He argued that the money central banks are printing  isn’t flowing evenly into the economies they are trying to help. Instead, it’s  just causing more bubbles like the tech bubble in 2000, housing prices up to 2007, commodities in 2008, and most recently select emerging market stocks indexes and the U.S.

“My concern is that we will have a systemic crisis where it’s going to be very difficult to hide, even in gold it will be difficult to hide,” Faber said

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

How much will you lose in next Wall Street bear...



How much will you lose this time around? Four years ago, on March 30, 2009, our column headline announced: “6 reasons I’m calling a bottom and a new bull.”The Dow fell from 14,164. Hit bottom at 6,547. And Wall Street lost over $10 trillion of America’s retirement market cap. You lost lots. But it’s back up more than 100% since. We forget.

Time for another crash? Oh yes. Remember: Investors Business Daily’s publisher, Bill O’Neil, wrote in his classic, “How to Make Money in Stocks”: “During the last 50 years, we have had 12 bull markets and 11 bear markets … The bull markets averaged going up about 100% and the bear markets, on the average, declined 25% to 30%.” And “the typical bull market lasted 3.75 years and the classic bear market lingered only nine months.”

Today’s bull is over four years old, in dangerous territory.
Yes, you are facing an aging bull. Ready for pasture. But Wall Street’s still gambling with your money. Remember, Wall Street casinos have already lost roughly $10 trillion twice this century. Twice. And soon Wall Street will do it again.

But exactly when? Here’s how to figure “exactly” when. In his classic, “Stocks for the Long Run,” economist Jeremy Siegel studied all the “big market moves” between 1801 and 2001. Two centuries of data. Conclusion: 75% of the time there’s no rational explanation for “big moves” in stock, not up, not down.So stop asking, maybe some technician, quant or high-frequency trader can predict short-term swings. But the “big market moves?” Never.

So “exactly” when? America’s top experts are warning us — it’ll happen before year-end. That’s “exactly” when. Why? It’s obvious. By year-end 2013 our aging bull will be 4 ½ years old, well past Bill O’Neil’s “average” 3.75 years for a bear drop putting a bull out to pasture.
So any rational investor would have to conclude that Mr. Market — as Warren Buffett’s mentor Benjamin Graham called the stock market in his classic “The Intelligent Investor” — would know that a bear drop, a crash, meltdown, or something very painful is coming very soon. Indeed, could happen anytime, maybe even tomorrow, because this bull is old-old by Bill O’Neil’s basic calculations.

Mr. Market will soon lose $10 trillion of your money, repeating 2008 and 2000

So the real question is not when, nor if, but how much will you personally lose in this third crash of the 21st century? Ask yourself: How would a rational investor estimate losses? Simple: a rational investor would logically estimate that Mr. Market could easily drop around 50%, again.
Another way of saying it is that Mr. Market’s latest roller-coaster ride will cost today’s Main Street American investors a new loss of another $10 trillion in market cap. Why? Because the Dow will loses half its value, crashing from today’s roughly 14,400 to 7,200.

That’s a reasonable conclusion by a rational investor, using the Graham-Buffett calculator logic on today’s Mr. Market. Remember: the Dow went all the way down to 7,286 in 2002 after the dot-com crash. Then crashed even deeper to 6,547 in 2009 after the Wall Street credit meltdown.

Handy-Dandy Investors Crash Loss Calculator: 25 portfolio killers

Here’s our little behavioral-economics calculator to help you figure out whether you’ll lose 50% when Mr. Market comes crashing again. Quickly scan through the following list of common investor biases and bad habits. Don’t stop to think rationally about any one. Just keep tabs on roughly how many of the 25 fit some investment decisions you made during the dot-com era and in the years leading up to the recent bank credit meltdown.

And do it very fast. Maybe five seconds or so each. When you finish your scanning and have your number (even if it’s just a rough estimate like 12 of the 25) then we’ll go to the last step in our Handy-Dandy Investors Loss Calculator:

Overconfidence bias: You love trading and gambling. You pay little attention to the fees, commissions and taxes, because your know you’ll score big.

Blinders: Investors often stereotype certain companies, stocks and funds as “winners” or “losers” (Dell? Apple?), often missing turning points signaling a change in company fortunes, opportunities and reversals.

Heroics: Irrational investors tend to overestimate their stock-picking abilities, underestimate Mr. Market. Then later exaggerate their successes, talk about the one that got away.

Denial: Once locked in, irrational investors hate admitting they’ve made a bad decision. It’s an ego thing. So they hang on to losers, even refuse to sell losers. It’s un-American. Or means you’re not as manly or as smart as you thought.

Attachment bias : You fall in love with “special” stocks. You exaggerate virtues, downplay problems and then hold on too long.

Extremism bias: Irrational investors have trouble assessing risk, often bet big, and lose big. Probable events become certain. Unlikely events become impossible. So you’re likely to miscalculate your risks.

Anchors: In your mind you tend lock in price targets, like a hundred-buck stock or Dow 15,000, then minimize any data that suggests you’re wrong.

Ownership bias: Once purchased, you value what’s yours even higher, like overvaluing your home. That blinds you to the real value, adds to your losses.

Herd mentality: For all the talk about macho individuality, the truth is, most investors don’t think for themselves and tend to follow the crowd, or blindly track some trend.

Getting-even bias: You lose, then you try to break even taking extra risk, doubling-down. You get overanxious, overreact, and you lose more.

Small-numbers bias: Making decisions on limited data that’s incomplete and likely exaggerated.

Loss aversion: Many cautious people tend to avoid losses more than seek gains. That fear keeps investors out of the market too long, and in “safe” money markets.

Pride: You hate selling losers, hate admitting error. You have a no-talk rule.

Risk averse: You take too little risk after a big loss or a losing streak, get too conservative, don’t trust yourself, and miss opportunities for higher returns.

Myopic bias: You think recent data’s more important than older information. So you may pull back after a losing streak, or ride a winning streak till you lose it.

Cognitive dissonance: You filter out bad news and tend to ignore and discard new information that conflicts with your biases, preconceptions and belief system.

Bandwagon: You disregard fundamentals. You think you understand “momentum.” You conclude that “so many” followers can’t possibly be wrong.

Confirmation: You’re not only critical of any news that contradicts your beliefs, you blindly accept any data that confirms beliefs.

Rationalization: You are superlogical and can marshal lots of evidence to back up whatever you first decide to buy, even if it’s based on limited logic and data.

Anchoring bias: You rely too much on readily available data, just because it’s available, even when you know it could be faulty.

House money: You treat winnings as if they belong to the house or casino. Then you take bigger risks, giving it all back, and then some.

Disposition effect: You tend to lock in gains and hang onto losses, selling shares in an up market, hanging onto losers too long, similar to loss aversion.

Outcome bias: You judge your decisions on results rather than the context when the decision was made. That’ll result in misleading you the next time.

Sunk costs bias: You treat money already invested in a stock as more valuable than future opportunities, so you often hang on rather than sell and reinvest.

Perfect behavioral storm: Separately, each bias is bad enough. Combined, they become bubbles, set you and wipe you out. Either way, quants and behaviorists can easily manipulate you into what they want, blowing bubbles and popping them without you ever knowing what’s happening … manipulating you like a mindless puppet.

OK, you probably have a rough count, and likely not that exact. No problem. Let’s say, for example, you estimate that out of this list of 25 known investors biases, you’ve made investment decisions that were irrationally based on 10 of these bad habits and biases.

So here’s how you can use the Handy-Dandy Investors Crash Loss Calculator to figure your losses in the next crash. Very simple to estimate: If you estimate you exhibited 10 of the 25 bad habits and biases in the past, that suggests a portfolio drop of 40%. And if Mr. Market only goes down 50%, like it did in the 2000 crash and again in the 2008 meltdown, your losses would be between 20% and 40% of your portfolio’s total value.

Of course the real value of this exercise is not the numbers game. Besides, if you’re gaming the system, it may be impossible to stop. But if you’re ready, then this exercise makes you aware of the fact that Mr. Market really is overdue a crash.

And more importantly, if you lose money again, it’s your fault. Yes, the problem is yours, it’s all in your head, your own behavioral biases, quirks, blind spots and bad habits, and not Mr. Market’s problem. He’s just doing what Ben Graham and Warren Buffett tell us he always does.
So, get your behavioral act together and prepare for the crash that’s dead ahead, with no biases or bad habits.                    


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Asad Rasheed
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News Source: www.marketwatch.com 

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Cyprus Bailout a 'Gift' to US Banks...


Veteran bank analyst Dick Bove says the Cyprus bailout is positive for U.S. banks, because fears that European officials may target depositors in other future bailouts will lead to an outflow of money from Europe and into America.

On Monday, Cyprus and its international creditor's reached a deal to fix the country's banking crisis. The plan included a levy on uninsured deposits of over 100,000 euros in Popular Bank of Cyprus, which is also known as Laiki.

  "It's a gift to the American banks because you've converted Europe into Latin America" Bove told CNBC Asia's "Squawk Box" on Tuesday, referring to capital flights from Latin American the past during their own banking crisis. He added that he expects to see "a slow seepage of funds out of Europe to the American banks."

Bove, who is vice president of equity research at Rafferty Capital, said taking money away from depositors is a bad idea because they, along with bond holders, are the people that supply lenders with money that is later used to make loans and help boost the economy.
"You have to protect depositors in a bank, and protect the bondholders who lend money to a bank because if you don't do that then the depositors will take their money out and the bondholders won't make money available," he said.


  Ed Ponsi, Managing Director of Barchetta Capital Management, agreed that the latest Cyprus developments will trigger "capital flow into US banks," adding that he would "short European banks, [and] go long U.S. banks."

When asked about which U.S. financial institutions could profit from a potential inflow of European capital, Bove named Citigroup as a potential beneficiary.


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Monday, March 25, 2013

Stocks Trade Level for Today



25/03/2013

CF Industries Holdings, Inc.  (Public, NYSE:CF)

Buy@ 190, Stop below@188, Target@ 198

Deere & Company (Public, NYSE:DE)

Discover Financial Services  (Public, NYSE:DFS) 

Sell @Market Price; Stop above@46, Target @43.50

ConocoPhillips  (Public, NYSE:COP)

Sell @61; Stop above@62.40, Target @58.70


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Gold Survey: Solid Majority Of Survey Participants See Higher Gold Prices Next Week...


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Gold Survey: 

Friday March 22, 2013 12:08 PM
Gold prices are expected to climb next week, with expectations that the yellow metal may catch a bid as the situation regarding a possible bailout for Cyprus could attract safe-haven buying.
In the World News Gold Survey, out of 33 participants, 28 responded this week. Of those 28 participants, 22 see prices up, while four see prices down, and two are neutral. Market participants include bullion dealers, investment banks, futures traders, money managers and technical-chart analysts.For those participants who see higher prices next week, nearly all of them cited the situation in Cyprus and whether or not European officials will agree to bail out the near-bankrupt country as the reason for their higher calls. Many expect that Cyprus will get some sort of bailout, which will support both gold and the euro currency.

Carlos Perez-Santalla, precious metals broker at PVM Futures, echoed what many other participants said was another bullish factor for gold. “Although the Cyprus situation has not driven demand up yet, the feeling of insecurity of monetary assets by many Europeans will affect demand soon,” he said.
The majority of participants are bullish, but there a few respondents who said gold’s limited reaction to the Cyprus news this week doesn’t bode well for the metal. They said they were surprised that given news that a eurozone country was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, gold wasn’t able to take out recent highs, which is troubling.

“The key number for gold is $1,625. That’s big resistance. Unless we can close above it, the trend remains down,” said Kevin Grady, president, Phoenix Futures and Options.
The two participants who are neutral on gold said there are too many unknowns about the Cyprus situation to give an accurate read on where prices might go next week.


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Sunday, March 24, 2013

How Cyprus bailout failure would hurt U.S. stocks


Negotiations for a financial rescue of Cyprus extended into late Sunday, leaving investors uncertain as to whether the small island-nation would agree to a bailout of its banking system that averts further turmoil in global markets.

Monday is the deadline for Cyprus to reach a deal on how it will raise 5.8 billion euros ($7.5 billion) so that it can receive a €10 billion rescue package from international creditors. The Cyprus economy could collapse without an agreement.

The European Central Bank said it would cut off emergency liquidity for Cyprus’s banks unless the country reaches an agreement to shore up its troubled financial sector. Follow streaming coverage of the Cyprus banking crisis.

The country took some steps in the right direction as the weekend began, passing legislation to impose capital controls and set up a “solidarity fund” to help raise the money. New reports suggest Cyprus was considering a 25% tax on savings accounts over 100,000 euros.   

 Failure to reach a deal for a bailout would mean that U.S. stocks “will open down pretty big on Monday,” said John Canally, chief market strategist at LPL Financial, who expects an agreement. “If we don’t get a deal done there, it does reintroduce some risk,” that could lift gold prices and the dollar, pull Treasury yields lower, and result in “anything associated with risk being sold off.”

The latest flare-up in the long-running European debt crisis comes as U.S. stocks reach record or near-record levels and as a number of analysts have raised their targets for the S&P 500 index SPX +0.72%  for the year. Gains in stocks have been supported by improving economic data and liquidity supplied by the Federal Reserve’s monetary stimulus measures.

Quincy Krosby, market strategist with Prudential Financial, said she’ll be monitoring credit-default swaps in Europe as well as yields on Spanish, Portuguese, Greek and Italian debt ahead of Monday’s deadline.

“If Europe is worried, the cost of credit-default swaps will rise, you’ll see sovereign yields rise,” and widening in the 10-year swap spread, “a picture of counterparty risk,” she said. “All of those will manifest before the [U.S.] markets open.”

The euro EURUSD +0.14%  on Friday rose as high as $1.3009 against the U.S. dollar, with investors appearing to anticipate a deal for Cyprus.Yet if that sentiment reverses, it would trigger “a savage, negative reaction” for the euro, said Richard Franulovich, chief currency strategist at Westpac Institutional Bank. A decline to the $1.27 to $1.28 level is possible and “it’ll keep dribbling lower and lower.”

The major concern for many investors is that if Cyprus’s banks become insolvent and can’t get help from the ECB, that could result in a run on the banks by depositors and possibly force Cyprus to exit the shared European currency.A subsequent drop in spending by consumers and businesses in Europe — at a time of already dismal growth expectations — and slower hiring could spill over to other economies worldwide, “and that’s where you get your contagion effect,” Canally said.

“We’re a week into this and we haven’t seen that yet, but that would be your worst-case scenario...that your average person in Spain and Italy and Portugal are worried about their bank deposits,” he said.
As long as the market believes that the Cyprus problem is “not terminal, then the market can continue in [it’s] trajectory,” said Krosby.

Investors will watch for any remarks about Cyprus and the European debt crisis by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke when he speaks on a panel at the London School of Economics on Monday. Also Monday, William Dudley, president of the New York Federal Reserve and a voting member of the Fed’s interest-rate-setting committee, will speak in New York.

The trading week will be shortened by the Good Friday holiday.
U.S. equities rose on Friday, reflecting optimism about the Cyprus situation. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (TICKER:DJIA) jumped 91 points to 14,512.03, bouncing back from its biggest drop in nearly a month.

Sentiment on Friday was also helped by better-than-expected results from Nike Inc. NKE +11.06%  and Micron Technology Inc. MU +10.69%  as the new earnings season approaches. The lineup of quarterly results due next week is light, though BlackBerry BBRY -7.74% , will release fourth-quarter results on Thursday.

The S&P 500 index SPX +0.72%  and the Nasdaq Composite COMP +0.70%  each gained 0.7%, and Friday’s advances helped all the benchmark indexes narrow their losses for the week as Wall Street prepares to wrap up the first quarter.

“The market has become almost immune — whether it’s Washington, D.C. or the E.U. — to these deadlines,” said Krosby. “We’ve been conditioned to believe that in the 13th hour, either the issue is pushed to the next day or to the next week....and the market moves on,” she said. “So I don’t think things will change with Cyprus, at least next week.”

Krosby said she’ll also watch the performance in the futures market of shares in U.S. banks that are perceived to have a significant presence overseas.If the picture doesn’t look good for Cyprus, expect to see a climb in Wall Street’s so-called fear gauge, the CBOE Volatility Index VIX -3.00% , she said.
“But the real question becomes for American traders and investors is if Europe’s not worried about it, why should we be worried about it?”

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News Source: www.reutuers.com