1. If you own stocks which were the top recipients of bailout money.
2. If you want to take advise from a billionaire whose company Berkshire Hathaway overall stock performance is down 10% over the last three years.
3. If you need a folksy patriotic advise from someone whose own personal life investment horizon might be measured in days but has a personal fortune of more than 45 billion.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Saturday, February 26, 2011
How Investors Have Done:Source QRiskValue
QRiskValue Analysis | ||||||||
Since Jan 1 2008, how on average, trend, bargain hunters, and buy the dip investors have done. Data QRiskValue.com | ||||||||
Economic Slowdown
U.S. economic recovery threatened by events in Midwest, Middle East
Washington Post Neil Erwin and Michael A. FletcherJust when the economic recovery seemed to gain momentum, two new threats have emerged that could undermine it. One has flared in the Midwest, the other in the Middle East. (Entire Article)
Friday, February 25, 2011
Government Shutdown
Policy Paralysis
By Jonathan BernsteinUp until now, a government shutdown because of a stalemate over the budget was a strong possibility, but it didn’t appear inevitable. That’s because House Speaker John Boehner stands to be badly hurt by the train wreck a shutdown would be, and I’m confident—from what he’s said and because he was around the last time it happened—that he realizes it. But his decision last week during House consideration of the must-pass spending bill to open up the floor to unlimited amendments reframed the issue in a way that gives Boehner much less room for compromise.
(From The New Republic) Entire Article
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Bull Market Now 18 Months Old

Bull Market now about to enter its 19th month matching almost exactly the oscillation extension created at the end of the Bear run. If the top is in, it is a long way to to flat line. That is before you enter a Bear phase. (Data from QRiskValue.com)
Monday, February 21, 2011
Price Headwinds Data
Rank | Stock | Fat | P/E |
1 | F | 215% | 7.3 |
2 | AAPL | 160% | 19.26 |
3 | IBM | 54% | 14.17 |
4 | GOOG | 31% | 23.62 |
5 | GS | 10% | 8.7 |
6 | MSFT | 0% | 11.32 |
7 | PFE | 0% | 26.29 |
8 | CME | -4% | 0 |
9 | BAC | -60% | 0 |
10 | C | -80% | 0 |
The Data above provided by QRiskValue shows percentage (FAT) gains or losses of 10 stocks from the price point where accumulation or liquidation began over the last 3 years. The P/E Ratio is shown to demonstrate how many dollars it takes to buy one dollar of return. Ford has been the best bargain but like AAPL is clearly a brand stock and more likely to attract investment dollars. Unfortunately, price headwinds develop because it gets harder to advance the stock when longs have such powerful gains. On the other hand, BAC and C have damaged brand names but ultimately less resistance although they might have less opportunity without crowd appeal.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Valuations
A scary reality lurks beneath the fantasy
By James Mackintosh
Published: February 20 201 (FT.com)The US cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratio, which measures share prices relative to the 10-year average of inflation-adjusted profits, is very high. It stands at 23.7, way above its 16.4 average over the past century or so.
It is now almost exactly at the level reached at the peak of equity valuations in 1966, and very close to the 25 reached in 1901. Only twice has it been higher: in the mania of 1929, and during the dotcom bubble and the ensuing decade. (Entire Article)
Friday, February 18, 2011
Revisiting The Economic Crime Scene
Rethinking the Great Recession
by Robert J. SamuelsonWe Americans turn every major crisis into a morality tale in which the good guys and the bad guys are identified and praised or vilified accordingly. There’s a political, journalistic, and intellectual imperative to find out who caused the crisis, who can be blamed, and who can be indicted (either in legal courts or the court of public opinion) and, if found guilty, be jailed or publicly humbled. The great economic and financial crisis that began in 2007 has been no exception. It has stimulated an outpouring of books, articles, and studies that describe what happened: the making of the housing bubble, the explosion of complex mortgage-backed securities, the ethical and legal shortcuts used to justify dubious but profitable behavior. This extended inquest has produced a long list of possible villains: greedy mortgage brokers and investment bankers, inept government regulators, naive economists, self-serving politicians. What it hasn’t done is explain why all this happened. (Entire Article)
The Lady Doth Protest Too Much, Methinks
Bernanke defends QE2 on global stage
Fed is not cause of destabilizing capital flows, he says
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Stung by criticism about the negative spillover effects on the global economy of the Federal Reserve’s $600 billion bond-buying program, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke issued a strong defense of the policy Friday as central bankers and finance ministers gathered in Paris for this weekend’s Group of 20 meeting. Entire Article
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