• Sex Drive and the Stock Market
    Posted by on August 21st, 2009 at 9:49 pm

    Makes sense to me:

    In the study, conducted by researchers from Harvard University, it was determined that stock market traders saw their profit margins rise on days their testosterone was above its median level and that testosterone could influence how financial wizards often make high risk decisions.
    How did the researchers figure this out? They took saliva samples from a group of men ages 18 to 23 and then had the men play a game having to do with investing. Given $250, they had to choose an amount between $0 and $250 to invest. They got to keep the money that they didn’t invest. If the participant lost a coin toss, their money for investing was lost. But, if they won the coin toss they’d get two and a half times the amount of their investment. At the end of the study, one person was selected by lottery to receive cash equal to their investment, so there was some real incentive. To make a long study finding short, the researchers found that the men with higher testosterone levels invested 12 percent more in a risky investment than the more average men did.
    So, they determined, there is a biological basis why some men are inclined to more risky behavior than others. While that might not sound terribly revealing, the study represents one of the first times that research has determined that typically male behavior extends to the financial world. Say the researchers: “Men may be more willing to take financial risks because the payoffs, in terms of attracting mates, could be higher for them. This is because women value wealth more than men when choosing for a mate.”

    (Via: Carney)

  • Stocks Keep On Rising
    Posted by on August 21st, 2009 at 4:18 pm

    Today was another strong day for stocks. The S&P 500 made another high for the year.
    Our Buy List also made a new high. We’re up nearly 30% for the year which is well more than twice the S&P 500. Every stock on the Buy List was up today, and Cognizant Technology Solutions (CTSH) is closing in on a double for the year.
    Here’s today’s speech from Ben Bernanke from the annual Jackson Hole shindig. It’s long but I recommend reading the whole thing. I continue to think that Bernanke has been an outstanding Fed chairman.

  • Nouriel Roubini, the Prophet
    Posted by on August 20th, 2009 at 2:22 pm

    I think I’ve been too critical of Nouriel Roubini. He’s a very bright guy and well worth listening to. However, as Damien Hoffman points out, Roubini wasn’t exactly perfect on predicting the credit crisis.

    As we can see, in March 2005 Roubini started by predicting a crisis caused by Foreign Central Banks diversifying out of US Dollars. (See: ‘Does Overseas Appetite for Bonds Put the U.S. Economy at Risk?’) In February 2006, Roubini still solely focused on foreigners diversifying out of US Treasury debt and further incorrectly predicted that “our current patterns of spending above our incomes” would cause a crisis by 2013. (See: ‘Taste of the Future‘.) Given that the credit markets (which Roubini never mentions until others show him the light) imploded recently, I think we can conclude that “spending above our incomes” doesn’t have to do the crisis perp walk. During the same month as The Washington Post article, Roubini’s press releases peppered the New Yorker with his message: “Roubini is among those who fear that America’s profligacy will eventually create a crisis of confidence on the part of its creditors, leading to a run on the dollar, an upward spike in interest rates, and a deep recession.” (See: ‘Moneyman’ and ‘Ominous Warnings and Dire Predictions of the World’s Financial Experts’.)
    At a transition point in August 2006 (most likely when Roubini realized he picked the wrong causes), he threw the entire kitchen sink into the center of the causation ring. The USA Today reported, “He [Roubini] spells out a long list of potential risks that could push the country into trouble. Among them: unregulated hedge funds, housing, foreign trade uncertainty, the need to finance the nation’s huge trade deficit, Middle East unrest and the potential for terrorism.” In another article, Roubini added to his laundry list by adding just about everything under the sun: “Among other factors, Roubini cites ‘trade protectionism and asset protectionism; hedgy and trigger-happy investors and rising geopolitical risks; the risk of a disorderly fall in the U.S. dollar; a slush of financial derivatives that are a black box that no-one understands … frothy markets where years of too easy money have created bubbles galore – the latest in housing – that are ready to burst; a bubble of thousands of new hedge funds with inexperienced managers … a housing market whose rout may trigger systemic effects …’” (See: ‘Is Economy Headed to a Soft Landing?’ ‘Surprise: Bears still growling about 1987′ and ‘Recession Isn’t My Greatest Fear’.) How about adding to that list butterflies flapping their wings on the other side of the world, or an attack of the flying space monkeys?

    I didn’t know it a few years, but apparently everyone was predicting a credit crisis. I wish someone had told me.
    Roubini clearly knew something bad was coming — what and when was hard to pin down. Hoffman writes:

    This specific tactic — expanding the “prediction” data set of possibilities — may be the most popular for false prophets and psychics. Usually, there will be a group willing to hang on to the one correct cause out of the many incorrectly asserted. Then, afterward, the charlatan works tirelessly to rewrite history or distract his victims from what was exactly said in the past. It’s like a fake shaman warning the villagers of rain (an inevitable fate) by means of angry gods when in fact the true cause was heavy cloud droplets. Yet, once the rain falls he quickly raises his voice about how he “predicted” the rain. Yes, rain followed the shaman’s warning, but this is not a “prediction” for obvious reasons.

    As I’ve often said, perma-bears and never held to the same level of accountability as perma-bulls. If you want to get a reputation as a prophet, it’s easy — just be very bearish and very vague.

  • Since 1970, All of the Market’s Gain Has Come When Gold is Below $455
    Posted by on August 20th, 2009 at 8:08 am

    I was playing around with some data and I came with an interesting stat: All of the stock market’s gain since 1970 has come when the price of gold is below $455.
    OK, now let me explain a little. I took two monthly files; one with the closing price of gold from 1970 though this past May. The other with the dividend reinvested index for the S&P 500 over the same time period.
    I then looked at how well the S&P did based on the closing price of gold for the previous month. The results show that the index was net flat whenever gold closed the previous month higher than $455.50.
    There were basically three times when gold gave its sell signal. The first was in late 1979 to mid-1981. The second came in mid-1987 to mid-1988 (very good timing there!). The third has been continuous since September 2005. For gold to give another buy signal, it would have to plunge by more than 50%.
    Let me add that I don’t see this as a market-timing tool. I just think it’s interesting how the market has behaved.

  • Google’s Stock Turns Five
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 3:37 pm

    It was five years ago today that shares of Google (GOOG) went public. The stock ended its first day of trading at $100.34. It peaked at $747.24 in November 2007 and is currently at $442.16. Over the same time, the S&P 500 is down by about 9%.
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  • Comrade, Have I Got a Deal for You!
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 1:38 pm

    Line of the day: “There are more brokerage account holders than Communist Party members in China.”
    Something tells me that they’re not mutually exclusive.
    (Via: Kedrosky)

  • Energy Leads Turnaround
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 1:04 pm

    A fairly flat day has suddenly become a good day for stocks, and it’s mostly thanks to energy stocks.
    yhoo081909.png

  • The Whole Foods Boycott
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 12:48 pm

    Earlier this week, Whole Foods (WFMI) CEO John Mackey wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal against President Obama’s health care reform ideas. Some Whole Foods customers are responding with a boycott.
    The opinion expressed was Mr. Mackey’s, not the policy of Whole Foods. I find it deeply unsettling that customers are willing to boycott a company due to the personal political opinions of its CEO.
    The irony lost on the boycotters is that Whole Foods’ customers operate in a market where they’re free to boycott Whole Foods and go to a different store. This is exactly the same principle that critics of health care reform are trying to make.

  • Ewwwwww
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 12:18 pm

    Madoff’s lover goes overboard with TMI:

    He sometimes blinked his eyes uncontrollably, leading her to nickname him “Winky Dink” when she disclosed her affair to some close female friends.
    At the Willard, Weinstein wrote, she learned one of his many secrets that they discussed by telephone a few days later.
    “Bernie had a very small penis,” she wrote. “Not only was it on the short side, it was small in circumference. That he was now pointing it out to me was telling. It clearly caused him great angst. I wanted to be careful how I responded. Men and their penises have a strange and unique relationship.”
    Still, she said: “I liked this man and didn’t want to emasculate him. His tiny penis hadn’t prevented me from climaxing.”
    “On the bright side,” she concluded, because of its size, “oral sex would be a breeze.”

    Insert prison joke here.

  • The first thing we do, let’s kill all the bankers
    Posted by on August 19th, 2009 at 10:17 am

    Imagine a world without bankers.

    Enter Zopa, a website that describes itself as a place “where people meet to lend and borrow money … sidestepping the banks”. The idea is pretty simple. Someone who has money to spare goes online, says how much he’s ready to lend and at what rate of interest – and waits for would-be borrowers to take him up on his offer. If both sides are happy – and Zopa stands for the negotiating term “zone of possible agreement” – then the deal goes ahead. Quite a few of them, as it happens: Zopa has now facilitated £50m worth of loans, from one ordinary Briton to another.
    The theory is that everyone benefits, the lender enjoying a much higher rate of return than he would from a regular savings account, and the borrower paying off his debt at a much gentler rate of interest. That’s not difficult, says Zopa, when the high street banks are being so stingy towards savers and so demanding of borrowers. Current deals on Zopa are running somewhere between 8% and 10%, while savers would be lucky to earn more than a few points in interest and borrowers can be looking at charges in the teens or higher.