August 2009 Archives

Double Dip Recession?

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ddip.GIFThere have been some grumblings about a possible double dip recession.  The bears argue the recent drive up in the market has been over done and while some aspects of the economy are improving, it will tank again.  The recent bounce will only be short term.  The S&P getting hit about 1% today supports their contention.

I've said this a hundred times and I'll say it again, future forecasting is extremely sketchy.  As the time period gets further and further away, the less reliable the forecasts are.  Some short term prognistication can have better than random results, but long term forecasting is futile unless you're Paul Tudor Jones or Warren Buffet.

With that aside, my economist hat says the possibility of a double dip recession is so minimal the fears are misplaced.  There are many indicators that point to a less bleeding economy.   Sure.  Things can change at the drop of a hat, but I'm just following the momentum, the rate of change, the first order condition.  

Historically, September months have been terrible for the markets.  It's the only month out out of the twelve that averages a losing percent in the S&P.  Perhaps in some way, the September gloom is fueling the fears of a double dip recession.

I'd hate to buck such a strong historical pattern in September. If there are more declines in September,  I'll see it as a good time to long the overall markets.


Disclosure:  I am not currently long in any markets.

Would You Politely Shut the Fuck Up

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2195597.jpgArnold Snyder wrote an excellent post about talkative players at the poker table a while back, entitled Shut the Fuck Up.  Some poker players just don't realize that educating the fish makes the game harder.

People's propensity to talk too much exists in all forms of advantage play and investing.  A fine delicate line exists between sharing ideas among private individuals and shutting down the game.

A couple of years back one could have taken simple algebra and made a lot of money gambling online through the various bonuses.  The returns on some of these games were equivalent to a ROI of 100% for about 10 minutes worth of work.  No kidding.  That was precisely how I built my small fortune with a couple of hundred dollars.  

The first popular site to discuss these ideas decided to shut down its message board because of the information leaks.  Another site popped up to replace it.  The leaks weren't as bad as the previous site, but that site shut down too.  The current most popular site has a new owner that does not understand the value of silence.  Any and all ideas are discussed and talkative bitches have killed the game.  Where ROIs of about 30% were common, now the most common ROIs are about 1%.  The game is dead after factoring in the risk of having one's funds stolen.

What most people don't realize is that excess returns are proportional to the flow of information.  A broad interdisciplinary understanding between information theory as it relates to gambling, investing, and maximization of wealth would clearly illustrate this.  If you care to explore this idea further I'd recommend the book Fortunes Formula by William Poundstone.

By writing this very post I am also guilty of contributing to the information leak.  I'd like to believe that my contribution is much more minimal.  I don't mention too many specifics and have not discussed the strategies or the ideas behind these opportunities, but the very act of mentioning them is a leak.  I maintain this blog so that I can crystallize my thoughts into a concrete form.  The value from forcing me to organize my thoughts exceed the slight leak it might cause.  I apologize for that.  If at anytime I feel this site is hurting my profits, I'd shut it in a heartbeat.

Relating this to the investment world, people with high Investor Quotients (IQ) don't discuss their methods.  Rather than proving to the world they're right and the Efficient Markets Hypothesis is wrong, they'd rather make millions and billions.  If that much money is on the line, they know how to the STFU.

If you spot an investment opportunity, $100 lying on the floor, or a game that can be beaten, don't tell others.  STFU and take the money.  It sounds simple enough, but people can't keep their mouths closed in real life.

Some People Just Don't Get Statistics

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I've met many bright legal minds.  Probably some of the sharpest people on this brown and blue planet.  Unfortunately for many attorneys, they're not very sharp when it comes to math and statistics.  I suppose that's the reason why they are lawyers and not engineers.  

The following are comments about the expected value for a contestant on Who Wants to Be a MIllionaire.  (Above the Law)

Back From My Road Trip

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There were some incredibly beautiful things I saw on my road trip through the Southwest.  There were many stories and many incredible memories that I will never forget.  If you're contemplating a trip through the southwest I highly recommend it.  Here's a list of awesome things that I did or places that my friends and I explored: 

*Las Vegas
*Scariest roller coaster ever in Primm
*$.99 Shrimp cocktails
*Star gazing in Zion National Park
*Grand Canyon
*Arches National Park
*Had a drink in Utah that required ordering a meal first
*National Monument Park
*Petrified Forest
*Colorado
*Rocky Mountains
*Navajo Reservations and Indian Gaming
*Mesa Verde Cliff dwellings
*Chinle Valley
*Made fools of ourselves in front of an "Indian Princess"
*Cave exploring
*Four Corners
*Meteor crash site
*Sedona
*The original London Bridge
*Donut Man (Peach filled donuts are awesome)

The journey has given me a renewed sense of who I am.  Along the drive, I was able to contemplate what I truly want out of my investment/gambling strategies and what leverage, if any, I should take.  Sometimes you need to take a pause and re-evaluate yourself before you can take a leap forward.


Road Trip through the Grand Canyon

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I'll be gone for a couple of weeks on a road trip through the Grand Canyon.  I'll be going with a bunch of lawyer friends.  Exciting.

In the meantime, chew on this.  I hate technical analysis systems.  As an "Economist" I've been corn fed the random walk (w/upward drift) nature of the markets.  

After doing some own statistical testing, I've come to the conclusion that some technical analysis systems are just as valid as card counting or sports betting.  I won't go into too much details, because I hate people who post on the internet who talk too much.  I guess I'm a self-hater.  

Anyway, one of the most basic things I've found is that a Simple Moving Average Crossover system with a short period and a long period have statistically significant benefits of reducing losses in the S&P.  Coupled with one of those Ultra leveraged funds, well, you get the idea.  (Further Reading)

Face the Ace Results

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Continued from my post on the first episode of Face the Ace, it looks like hindsight's 20/20 vision shows that I'm correct.  Don lost the $1 million tournament against Gavin Smith.  Instead of walking away with a guaranteed $200,000, all he has now is a T-shirt from the show and a story to tell.

Even if Don won the $1 million, it was still a stupid bet from a bankroll perspective.  Read my previous post.  Don will always live a life of regret.  "It could have been".  "Should have been".  "Would have been".  It's cold and it's callous, but that's how losers think and talk.

Why I Don't Currently Like Gold

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I'll defer twelve very good points to an older article at Seeking Alpha:

If you're a self-professed "Goldbug," feel free to read no further. Or at least spare me your hate mail. Because no matter what I say today, I know you'll cry foul... or something much more colorful.

But for those of you with an open mind - especially after my last three contrarian predictions proved dead accurate - read on.

Because it's time to start shorting gold!

You won't find many, if anyone else, making this case. But as the first reason of 12 below reveals, that's precisely why you should give it more credence.

12 Reasons To Start Shorting Gold

  1. It's decidedly contrarian. If a contrarian investor is someone who deliberately decides to go against the prevailing wisdom of other investors, shorting gold certainly fits the bill. Right now, everyone else isbuying gold, or at least recommending it. If you have any doubt we've reached such fever pitch levels, consider No. 2.

  2. The infomercial factor. The best indicator of a turning point for any investment, in my experience, is infomercials. If an investment gets so popular it invades the pre-dawn hours with non-stop but-wait-there's-more offers, it's time to get out. And that's exactly what's happening now. So much so companies like Cash4Gold.com are invading primetime television. They even splurged for a Super Bowl ad spot. And they recruited washed-up celebrities Ed McMahon and M.C. Hammer to boot. In case you forgot, the Hammer filed bankruptcy in 1996. And Eddie boy almost lost his 7,000 square-foot, $6.5 million Beverly Hills pad to foreclosure. No offense, if you take investment cues from these two, you deserve to lose money.
.........

The excellent article just about sums up most of what I want to say.  From a more generalist perspective, there appears to be a bit of bubble mentality going on.  When cash4gold is a familiar household name, people are having gold parties, and it's being featured on nightly national news program -- talk about non-rational valuation.

For the gamblers, consider selling gold.

Disclosure:  I am long on DZZ which is a double leveraged short ETF on gold.

An Excellent Quote Worth Repeating

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Most of us don't have the discipline to stay focused on a single goal for five, ten, or twenty years, giving up everything to bring it off, but that's what's necessary to become an Olympic champion, a world class surgeon, or a Kirov ballerina.  Even then, of course, it may all be in vain.  You may make a single mistake that wipes out all of the work.  It may ruin the sweet, lovable self you were at seventeen.  That old adage is true:  You can do anything in life; you just can't do everything.  That's what Bacon meant when he said a wife and children were hostages to fortune.  If you put them first, you probably won't run the three-and-a-half-minute mile, make your first $10 million, write the great American novel, or go around the world on a motorcycle.  Such goals take complete dedication.  

-Jim Rogers

Some Household Gardening

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In my last post I looked over the results from my four guesses.  I only looked at their returns which were great returns, but I did not consider their applicability for the future.  I'd hate to make four new guesses on four very different topics under such a time constraint, but I do want to pull out the "weeds from the garden" as Peter Lynch would call it.

I'll officially stand by guess #1.  China in the form of a GXC or FXI will still be a good bet.  No further opinion on the greenback, TIPS, and the short term market performance.

The worst of the stock market is over and now is as good of a time as any to get back into the market.  I don't like buying into market rallies like what we've experienced recently but if you can get back in at low DJIA 9's, that would be a good price.  We've seen some very real signs the economy is recovering and I think they're legitimate.

Paul Tudor Jones might disagree with my rosy outlook.  In a letter to Tudor investors, Tudor Investments is of the opinion the current market rally is a bear market rally.  They have doubts about the sustainability of the current rally.  I'd like to think that a billion dollar private equity fund managed by a trading genius would have a better opinion than me.  It probably does, but I try to be as honest and as objective as possible.  Can the same be said about any company's statements?  I don't know.

Four Guesses, Four Results

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Good investors try to be grounded in reality and tend to learn more from their mistakes than from "getting it right".  I've made some predictions over the past few months and now is as good of a time as any to test their accuracy.


Guess #1:  The investor says to invest in China through a broad based indexed ETF like GXC or FXI  (April 22)

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This has been an unequivocal successful gamble.  GXC was going for about $50 a share when I made my guess.  It's now worth about $70.  In my own personal position I've made an approximate 40% return on this wager in the past 4 months.  


Guess #2:  For the investors, a good diversified portfolio should contain some bond holdings like TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities).  (April 24)

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This one is a small loss.  TIP went from $101 took a nose dive and fluctuated to about $100.  A small loss of less than 1% would hardly be considered a loss by many, but the small loss is a fact.  TIPS yields are typically very slow and this did not prove to be any exception.

There are a wide ranging universe of possibilities as to why TIP hasn't made me any money.  My best guess is the recessionary deflation pressures are slightly stronger than the inflationary pressures from increased government spending.   


Guess #3:  For the gamblers, USD is not very attractive.  (April 25)

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This was an unequivocal success.  FOREX traders trade on leveraged currencies.  I don't trade FOREX and I honestly don't know what leverage ratio I would use, so I can't estimate what my returns would be.  Further, my predictions were just a general knock on the US dollar but I did not explicitly mention which currency would be stronger than the USD, so I just picked EURO.  Either way, this was a gangbuster correct guess.


Guess #4:  I'm starting to think this current rally might have been a bit too much and too soon.  (June 11)

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Out of all my guesses, this one is one that sticks out the most to me.  Not just because the S&P zoomed from 944 to a 1000, but because I took the entire month of July off.  

This one is tricky and I'll chalk it up as a 6% loss.  The S&P pretty much followed as I predicted until July when it turned around and zoomed up.  Unfortunately, I was busy preparing for the Bar Exam (which I never took) and so I haven't paid much attention to the market.  

The question that bugs me is, would I have pulled the trigger in July to get out this losing position?  On about July 15th, it occurred to me that I did not check the July June ISM numbers.  The ISM numbers were surprising for me, because it showed an undeniable decline in shrinkage -- meaning the economy was showing real signs of improvement.  Would I have pulled the trigger?  This question still bugs me, but I'll chalk it up as a loss.  The lesson to be learned is that if I want to trade professionally, I will have to devote full time to the markets.  I can't compete against the market on a hobbyist basis when I'm competing against people who live and breathe the market 24/7.


Overall:  Not bad guesses.  Maybe studying economics wasn't such a bad idea after all.  

MGM Bankruptcy Watch p.19

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I'm a little bit slow in the updates, but I blame it on being away.  

MGM May Cut Condo Prices to Close Sales.  This is really to address the concerns on p.15 with buyers upset with declining prices.  


So much for the old adage gambling is recession proof.
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If you missed the premiere showing of Face the Ace over the weekend, it's an interesting show.  It changes the standard ESPN and cable TV poker show formula by injecting an element of game show flair.  If you stripped it to its core, it's nothing but a very generous NL tournament freeroll for amateur players against professional players.  The format is one-on-one with rising blinds that are unknown to the TV audience.

Based on last night's show, there appears to be asymmetric risk/rewards between the amateurs and the professionals.  For the amateur players, they are risking very real money and are playing to the best of their abilities.  The professional players have no direct financial risk in playing the one-on-one tournament.  The pro players are playing for a $10,000 donation to the charity of their choosing, an admittedly weak incentive.  I suspect the pros are not playing their A game.

I won't recap much of Saturday's show since it's available on Hulu, but the portly by lovable Don "the Basement Dweller" won a few favorable showdowns against Erick Lindgren and Howard Lederer. Don knocked both Lindgren and Lederer out of the tournament for a $200,000 win.  Don has to make the difficult decision of whether or not to risk $200,000 for $1 million dollars against one more pro.

Lederer gave his opinion on whether Don should proceed.  My chin shot straight up as Lederer strongly recommended Don continue with the tournament.  He reasoned that Don's skills, while below that of the professionals, are decent enough that there will be value for Don to continue on.

For those of you who have read my previous Poker Romps, I am nowhere near the level of pro poker player.  If I were to play against the pros they would cut me up.  (Well, maybe they wouldn't cut me up.  In cash games, I'd play maybe like the top 5% hands.  There's no way I can out poker the pros.  I'd fold everything but my top premium hands and defend my blinds against late positions with 10% hands.  I wouldn't bleed very much with such a virgin tight strategy, but I digress.)

Anyway, Lederer is very correct to say Don has good value in risking $200,000 to go for $1 million dollars.  It's very likely that Don does have positive expected value in risking $200,000 for $1 million.  Even though Don isn't as skillful as the pros, the luck factor in being dealt good cards should give him enough positive equity.  

Assuming a very conservative estimate that Don has a 30% chance of winning the tournament and the Pro has a 70% chance of winning the tournament:


EV  =  $800000*.3    -   200,000*.7
EV  =  $100,000


If the game is worth maybe $100,000 why shouldn't Don take the gamble?  One word:  Bankroll.  It's very likely that Don will lose the last match up and there are no further games with such a positive advantage.  Following the maximization of logarithmic wealth, aka Kelly Criterion, one should only risk approximately the fractional percentage of their edge adjusted for variance.  Don's expected return is nowhere near 100% and there's considerable variance in the wager.  If he'd risk it all, he's over betting and would never reach the "long run".  He'd bust out before then.

To frame it in a more accessible way.  Don is no longer playing with some "imaginary house money".  That money is his.  If instead of using his recent winnings, he had to write a check for $200,000 from his bank account to wager it for a 30% chance to win an extra $800000, should he do it?

Dumbing things down even further.  $200,000 is life changing for a man of modest means like Don.  He's a truck driver making $60,000 a year.  $200,000, after taxes is about $100K+.  That would be more than enough for a down payment for a house, a nice vacation, and a good start on his retirement plan.  $1 million dollars is even better, but he's risking all of the nice things possible with $200,000.  

That was an overbet.  Lederer should not have advised Don to continue with the tournament.  It just doesn't make for good gambling sense.