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Category Archives: Trader Thoughts

Detroit Economy - Robocop Statue in Detroit


HedgeFundLIVE.com — I’ve been saying it for years and years, “If my hometown ever decides to put up a statue of Robocop, I’m leaving”.

I moved to New Jersey this last week.

Well, its finally happened, Detroit is getting a giant statue of Robocop that will somehow signify the city’s resilience in the face of adversity ( adversity that has lasted 60 years with no end in sight, or even a coherent plan to slow the decline). Bjork’s husband will be building it! Say whaaaaaaaat!?!?! OHH snap!……….Wait. Who is Bjork’s husband? And who the fuck is Bjork?!

Anger control - Waste of money in Detroit

While Detroiters rejoice in their artistic triumph that will last forever, residents from every other major US city, and Canada too, will probably have a good chuckle.

I realize art is in the eye of the beholder, and art has no definition. I get that. But this isn’t art, nor does Robocop represent what these people think he does. He was a cyborg built by an evil corporation to begin their take over of desolate Detroit, in hopes of tearing it down to replace it with Delta city. Please rewatch the movie.

Now I know what you’re thinking, “Bro, you gotta let people express themselves, bro”. Well, here it is, I’m from Detroit and can’t change that, nor would I ever want to. But this statue, by association, now represents me, not just the sci-fi club who paid for it. Its represents every Detroiter, not just the 1500 dingleberrys that got excited and pooled their money. If I pay for a giant statue of Stone Cold Steve Austin and place it on public property is that okay? The 3:16 Man was tough, don’t forget that. He battled in the face of adversity too, but somehow I doubt millions of other people will want that statue to represent them. A guy in cutoff jean shorts, slugging beers shouldn’t be the face of a city. And a half robot, half man that eats a poo-like substance shouldn’t be either.

I have an idea. Take the $50,000+ the statue will cost, and hire two teachers, or one police officer for the city. But if you’re set on building statues here’s a couple ideas: Henry Ford, Steve Yzerman, Mike Illitch, a tribute to Motown…..

Great movie, dumbbbbb statue.



Entropic (ENTR): It’s about Time


HedgeFundLIVE.com -  Benchmark just put out there takeaways from their management meeting with Entropic (ENTR) earlier this week.

Here’s what they had to say:

We recently hosted meetings with Entropic’s management. Following the meetings, we reiterate our “Buy” rating and $14.00 price target. While Broadcom’s should gain some (<25%) market share during CY11, the market for MoCA chipsets continues to surprise to the upside and should help contribute to Entropic’s revenue growth through the foreseeable future. Most important, Entropic is a pure-play on the trend toward streaming networked video within a home as well as the future shift toward IP-based video delivery on the part of cable MSOs.   As a result, we believe Entropic remains a likely acquisition target for companies such as Qualcomm/Atheros, ST Micro, Intel and Marvell.

On Wednesday, DirecTV, Entropic’s largest carrier channel/customer, reported very strong Q4 FY10 results which bodes well for Entropic’s CSS sales as well as the overall MoCA chipset market. However, DirecTV did mention during the Q4 FY10 earnings call that the H25 set-top box will soon ship. Also, the Motorola 3501 settop box will commence shipment primarily to Comcast customers. Because the H25 and 3501 boxes use Broadcom’s integrated MoCA solution, what little market share Broadcom will gain from Entropic during 2011 should occur in a step-like function during Q2 FY11 (June). As a result, we are trimming our Q2 FY11 revenue estimate for Entropic by 3%. We don’t expect Broadcom to gain additional share during 2H FY11, and we expect Entropic’s 2H FY11 revenue to rise meaningfully over 1H FY11 primarily due to normal seasonality.

Our $14 price target assumes shares trade at 17.0x our forward-12-month non- GAAP EPS estimate of $0.83. This P/E multiple is slightly below communication IC peers; however, Entropic should experience much more robust EPS growth relative to peers. We are assuming a lower-than-average PE/growth ratio for Entropic because it is possible Entropic’s valuation will be held back because of looming competition from Broadcom (BRCM).

With this note two houses, Benchmark (today) and Pacific Crest (yesterday) have reiterated their bullish stance on ENTR, Pacific Crest saying buy this pullback.  Well here at HFL we have been trying to buy the pullback and we have been getting our heads bashed in as their have been zero buyers.

We saw some strength into the close yesterday after Pacific Crest announced their bullish take following the DTV call.  I have added to my position in ENTR today and although the name has been weak this morning it has been holding $9 and I think it is only a matter of time for traders/investors to start trusting the Analysts.



Socratic Trade Reviews…UNH & WLP


(WLP)

WellPoint is said to start paying dividends in the 1st quarter of 2011. The third major U.S. health insurer declared a quarterly dividend of 25 cents per share, which equates to $1.00 per share, per year. And, based on the closing price of WellPoint on Tuesday, this rate equates to a yield of about 1.5 percent. When compared to Aetna’s current yield (1.6%) and United Health’s yield (1.2%),  WellPoint lands in the middle.

UNH & WLP

(UNH)

According to SeekingAlpha.com, UNH (United Health Group) is amongst 10 Stocks With 10 Years of Revenue Growth for Buy and Hold Investors. UNH- responsible for providing health insurance- has specifically beat earnings expectations for the last 9 quarters.

Check out this Socratic Trade Review from HedgeFundLIVE’s Trader, Jeffrey Tynik, as he goes through 2 successful trades placed (in both UNH & WLP) almost 13 months ago.

www.hedgefundlive.com/content/wlp-unh-1-27-10



So you wan’t to invest in HTC?


First Trust is not the most popular ETF provider on the planet but I thinks that’s about to change.  Last week, First Trust introduced the First Trust CEA Smartphone Index Fund (FONE). Below are the funds top 10 holdings:

Compal Communications Inc:  3.50%
Motorola Inc:  2.84%
Samsung Electronics Co:  2.78%
LG Electronics Inc:  2.74%
HTC Corporation:  2.74%
Celestica Inc:  2.73%
Benchmark Electronics Inc:  2.73%
Wistron Corp:  2.64%
Nokia:  2.64%
Inventec Corp:  2.62%

FONE started trading last Friday, 2-18-11, and so far hasn’t received much attention with an average daily volume of 125,000 shares over the first two days.  I think everyone is nervous of the market and is hesitant to put money into new ideas, especially in Tech which has led the rally, but when the dust settle’s I see FONE as a great place to put money.

My rational is very simplistic but that’s what’s great about it.  FONE is the first ETF that specializes in smartphone’s and the smartphone industry.  At first I didn’t think much of FONE but when I took a closer look at the holdings I noticed the fund gives you a lot of exposure to Asian Companies that the regular Joe would not necessarily have exposure to.  Some of FONE’s largest holdings are HTC, Samsung, and LG which have been rock solid when it come to consumer electronics.  If I’m a retail investor and especially a broker I’m putting some of by clients money into this ETF as it is a new opportunity and a great way to diversify.

FONE has lacked any decent price action but once I see an increase in the average daily volume and uptick in price I will be buying.



Breaking Market New - Bring a Band-Aid!


Hedgefundlive.com -

Markets - Do i have blood on me? Am I bleeding?

The market bled today; Then it bled some more.  Finally, a relief for the shorts!  It has really gotten under my skin how many time I’ve heard “you’d be crazy to short this market”. Well how do you like me now? Seriously now, a pullback is a great relief since valuations have been red hot.  Now is this the great pullback everyone was anticipating? Probably not but it is certainly a good start.  For tomorrow, bring a band-aid just in case!

 



READ: Market Watch from Hedge Fund Live Tuesday 2/22/2011-The Internet Is Mightier Than The Sword


“The Internet is not just a funnel to the world’s database, but it the driving force behind the next evolution of mankind.” -Jeremy Frommer:


BLOG WRITTEN BY JEREMY FROMMER 2-21-11:

I am blown away by the power of the Internet. I do not believe I ever quite understood it until this weekend. I have been glued to Google’s real-time twitter and news feeds of events unfolding on the ground in Libya. There are no reporters, not a single news station

Delusional

has been able to deliver reliable information. The Internet is not just a funnel to the world’s database, but it the driving force behind the next evolution of mankind. It is a weapon, one that we have never seen wielded with such precision as we have these past few weeks. “The pen is mightier than the sword” is a metonymic adage coined by English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1839 for his play Richelieu; Or the Conspiracy.

“True, This! —

Beneath the rule of men entirely great,

The pen is mightier than the sword. Behold

The arch-enchanters wand! — Itself a nothing! —

But-taking sorcery from the master-hand

To paralyze the Cæsars, and to strike

The loud earth breathless! — Take away the sword

—
States can be saved without it!

But it is the Internet that has fulfilled this prophecy. The pen has become a metaphor for the power of communication.

Very delusional

The sword empowered one man over another. The pen empowered single men over the masses.  The Internet has empowered us all. No voice unheard. This is evolution. Blood is being spilled this weekend in the name of evolution as much as revolution. Revolution will bring temporary change. New leaders will come and go. But the idea of change, the method by which change occurs has now evolved forever. The sword has proven worthless as dictatorships fall despite there overwhelming military power. They cannot turn to their generals who look to their own children’s eyes and wonder about the future. They turn off the one last hope of their people, the Internet. But to the people, the Internet is no longer a privilege. It is a human right. I breathe, I eat, I twitter. Knowledge is synonymous with Google. To socialize is to Face book, and to communicate is to email. Our language is evolving, our very nature has changed forever. CNBC with a lack of real coverage in Libya has started reporting on tweets. I just heard them post their viewers on a tweet asking about Apache helicopters circling protesters.

Very, very, delusional

So what does this mean for the financial markets? Clearly in the long run, this evolutionary period will be remembered as one of the most important periods of the century. In the same way the decades after World War 2 reshaped the human condition. But we are in a vacuum of information. The Internet is the Nuclear weapon of our generation. We do not truly know how it will affect the world in the short term. What impact the rapid change will bring. I do not mean to compare the two on an actionable level. Clearly a nuclear blast is not the same thing as an Internet blast. But rather let us analyze it from an existential standpoint. The mere existence of the nuclear bomb, though never used, has altered the powers structure of the world. Harry Truman said, “The atom bomb was no “great decision.” It was merely another powerful weapon in the arsenal of righteousness. The Internet’s power, as a catalyst for change has barely been discovered. Obama may owe his presidential seat to the force of the Internet. The Egyptians owe their freedom to it. When the Israelites escaped the tyranny of the pharaoh in Egypt they required a miracle from G-d. Then again, no one has ever been able to tell me exactly who created the Internet. It turned out not to be Al Gore. Though he probably wouldn’t mind the comparison. Perhaps the mere existence of a phenomenon that can topple governments in weeks is a miracle. Perhaps it is more powerful than a nuclear bomb. And perhaps it will take a long time to digest what impact this newfound power will have on the world, let alone the financial markets.

Short term, I believe the stock market will retrace some of its aggressive gains of the last month. Perhaps the S&P will even retest the 1300 level to determine the commitment of the buyers in the most recent Bull Run as the world has so rapidly changed around them, without even the slightest of pullbacks. Oil, as I predicted just keeps going higher, and why not? The Middle East is in turmoil. There is a very real probability that it spreads to Saudi Arabia. The effects of regime change in other oil producing Arab countries, on all commodity prices let alone oil, would be unprecedented. Gold would sky rocket, as the possibility that political revolt could spread to Latin America or even china, would rattle world currency markets. The Bull who plays down these possibilities argues that these other countries have the wealth to control the political challenges. They can pay for peace. Mubarak alone had 70 billion tucked away. Imagine what the rest of his regime has hidden throughout the complex web of interconnected global banks. Could he have paid for peace too? The Bull Run, for the S&P that began in Jan of 09 is over for now. It will take real clarity and an understanding of the future impact on countries yet affected, before the market can resume its unfettered run. Global corporations can no longer asses the value of the deals they cut with dictators, tyrants and princes. Eventually the Libyan crisis will end. Many will die. Questions of how a new Libya and Egypt fit into the geopolitical landscape will pail by comparison to the debates over the future of Iran and China. Worse will be the affect on the world political scene, of the M.A.S.S., the Minimizing of America’s Superpower Status. The silence from the U.S. administration can no longer be tolerated. Israel stands more alone today in the Middle East, than perhaps at any other time in its history. If the West does not take an active role in the geopolitical changes, there is a chance that all the gains we have made in the war on terror could be lost.

While we have just finished corporate earrings’ season and economic numbers while not powerful indicators have shown a steady

Disguised for Escape

recovery. It is the kind of recovery that can be thrown rapidly off course by sky rocketing oil prices. I have been raising a red flag on inflation for some time. The event overseas will accelerate this process. We stand on the verge of government shutdowns and municipality insolvencies. Pouring more leveraged money into this market is foolhardy. There is only one logical trade for Tuesday. Take risk off the table, and short the market if you have free hands. I am reasonably short. While I am looking for a pull back, I will use any bounce in the market as an opportunity to further short the market. I believe we are at a significantly overbought level, ignorant of the realities that have been swirling around us.



Market Watch from Hedge Fund Live Tuesday 2/22/2011-The Internet Is Mightier Than The Sword


I am blown away by the power of the Internet. I do not believe I ever quite understood it until this weekend. I have been

Delusional

glued to Google’s real-time twitter and news feeds of events unfolding on the ground in Libya. There are no reporters, not a single news station has been able to deliver reliable information. The Internet is not just a funnel to the world’s database, but it the driving force behind the next evolution of mankind. It is a weapon, one that we have never seen wielded with such precision as we have these past few weeks. “The pen is mightier than the sword” is a metonymic adage coined by English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1839 for his play Richelieu; Or the Conspiracy.

“True, This! —

Beneath the rule of men entirely great,

The pen is mightier than the sword. Behold

The arch-enchanters wand! — Itself a nothing! —

But-taking sorcery from the master-hand

To paralyze the Cæsars, and to strike

The loud earth breathless! — Take away the sword

—
States can be saved without it!

But it is the Internet that has fulfilled this prophecy. The pen has become a metaphor for the power of communication.

Very delusional

The sword empowered one man over another. The pen empowered single men over the masses.  The Internet has empowered us all. No voice unheard. This is evolution. Blood is being spilled this weekend in the name of evolution as much as revolution. Revolution will bring temporary change. New leaders will come and go. But the idea of change, the method by which change occurs has now evolved forever. The sword has proven worthless as dictatorships fall despite there overwhelming military power. They cannot turn to their generals who look to their own children’s eyes and wonder about the future. They turn off the one last hope of their people, the Internet. But to the people, the Internet is no longer a privilege. It is a human right. I breathe, I eat, I twitter. Knowledge is synonymous with Google. To socialize is to Face book, and to communicate is to email. Our language is evolving, our very nature has changed forever. CNBC with a lack of real coverage in Libya has started reporting on tweets. I just heard them post their viewers on a tweet asking about Apache helicopters circling protestors.

Very, very, delusional

So what does this mean for the financial markets? Clearly in the long run, this evolutionary period will be remembered as one of the most important periods of the century. In the same way the decades after World War 2 reshaped the human condition. But we are in a vacuum of information. The Internet is the Nuclear weapon of our generation. We do not truly know how it will affect the world in the short term. What impact the rapid change will bring. I do not mean to compare the two on an actionable level. Clearly a nuclear blast is not the same thing as an Internet blast. But rather let us analyze it from an existential standpoint. The mere existence of the nuclear bomb, though never used, has altered the powers structure of the world. Harry Truman said, “The atom bomb was no “great decision.” It was merely another powerful weapon in the arsenal of righteousness. The Internet’s power, as a catalyst for change has barely been discovered. Obama may owe his presidential seat to the force of the Internet. The Egyptians owe their freedom to it. When the Israelites escaped the tyranny of the pharaoh in Egypt they required a miracle from G-d. Then again, no one has ever been able to tell me exactly who created the Internet. It turned out not to be Al Gore. Though he probably wouldn’t mind the comparison. Perhaps the mere existence of a phenomenon that can topple governments in weeks is a miracle. Perhaps it is more powerful than a nuclear bomb. And perhaps it will take a long time to digest what impact this newfound power will have on the world, let alone the financial markets.

Short term, I believe the stock market will retrace some of its aggressive gains of the last month. Perhaps the S&P will even retest the 1300 level to determine the commitment of the buyers in the most recent Bull Run as the world has so rapidly changed around them, without even the slightest of pullbacks. Oil, as I predicted just keeps going higher, and why not? The Middle East is in turmoil. There is a very real probability that it spreads to Saudi Arabia. The effects of regime change in other oil producing Arab countries, on all commodity prices let alone oil, would be unprecedented. Gold would sky rocket, as the possibility that political revolt could spread to Latin America or even china, would rattle world currency markets. The Bull who plays down these possibilities argues that these other countries have the wealth to control the political challenges. They can pay for peace. Mubarak alone had 70 billion tucked away. Imagine what the rest of his regime has hidden throughout the complex web of interconnected global banks. Could he have paid for peace too? The Bull Run, for the S&P that began in Jan of 09 is over for now. It will take real clarity and an understanding of the future impact on countries yet affected, before the market can resume its unfettered run. Global corporations can no longer asses the value of the deals they cut with dictators, tyrants and princes. Eventually the Libyan crisis will end. Many will die. Questions of how a new Libya and Egypt fit into the geopolitical landscape will pail by comparison to the debates over the future of Iran and China. Worse will be the affect on the world political scene, of the M.A.S.S., the Minimizing of America’s Superpower Status. The silence from the U.S. administration can no longer be tolerated. Israel stands more alone today in the Middle East, than perhaps at any other time in its history. If the West does not take an active role in the geopolitical changes, there is a chance that all the gains we have made in the war on terror could be lost.

While we have just finished corporate earrings’ season and economic numbers while not powerful indicators have shown

Disguised for Escape

a steady recovery. It is the kind of recovery that can be thrown rapidly off course by sky rocketing oil prices. I have been raising a red flag on inflation for some time. The event overseas will accelerate this process. We stand on the verge of government shutdowns and municipality insolvencies. Pouring more leveraged money into this market is foolhardy. There is only one logical trade for Tuesday. Take risk off the table, and short the market if you have free hands. I am reasonably short. While I am looking for a pull back, I will use any bounce in the market as an opportunity to further short the market. I believe we are at a significantly overbought level, ignorant of the realities that have been swirling around us.



LED’s Down Again


Just two day’s after Illinois based Rubicon (RBCN) beat the street’s estimates and leaped twenty percent  every LED investors favorite analyst was out again downgrading VECO and AIXG.  Friday morning while Jefferies was initiating CREE as a buy and the stock was up 2% premarket Citigroup analyst Timothy Arcuri was downgrading both VECO and AIXG citing the end of China’s MOCVD subsidy.

Arcuri downgraded VECO in late 2010 which lead to a sell off and we saw weakness across the whole space on Friday as the Jefferies initiation was short lived and CREE quickly went negative on the day.  In his not Arcuri is cited saying “We are convinced subsidies are effectively over”.

In Arcuri’s downgrade in late 2010 he had comments from Yangzhou about the end of its subsidy program. Now,  he is saying “our new checks in Wuhu — the other big LED manufacturing area  support a similar conclusion. To that end, we are convinced there have been no new subsidies awarded over the past several months and that the current China order pipeline starts to run dry in Q3. While utilization is directionally improving in Korea/Taiwan, it is hard to see it making up for a big falloff in China.”

Aixtron shares were down by 5% on Friday. Veeco shares were down more than 6%.

Aixtron shares were up 12% year-to-date, while Veeco shares were up 17% year-to-date before Friday.

With RBCN beating last week I felt good about the prospects for LED names as CREE started to show some strength after weeks of dead money following disappointing earnings, but this downgrade has got me thinking.  VECO has had a hell of a run following earnings as it has traded from 43 to 54.50 and i think this downgrade will put pressure on the stock for the next couple of weeks.   There is a rumor of a $40 bid out there so if it trades down anywhere close to $40 I’ll be looking a buy as I still like the longer term prospects for VECO and anything LED.

CREE has been beaten up following earnings so putting on a CREE/VECO (Buy CREE, Short VECO) spread might be a smart and interesting way to play these names for the next few weeks.  The RBCN/AIXG spread has been a great trade, that is if you could find a borrow and I think the CREE/VECO spread could work out nicely as well.



Tuesday Market Expectations From Jeremy Frommer - 7 Reasons the Stock Market is Suffering From Narcissistic Personality Disorder


The Stock Market is Screwed Up, and So Am I

After writing a number of articles about the market being delusional and then a number of articles about me being a little delusional I finally sat down with my wife to get what always promises to be a dose of reality coupled with simple but incredibly valuable insight. Unfortunately the conversation was precipitated by 3 days of intense yoga followed by 3 days of alcoholic binging that made me wonder if it was time for me to call Betty Ford and look up my old psychiatrist, Dr. Prazin. My wife diagnosed me and in doing so helped me diagnose the entire financial community, and even more specifically the stock market.  She said she had been doing some research and has determined that I suffer from Narcissistic personality disorder. Determined to heal my self and improve my trading, I decided I would try to better understand my disorder and at the same time better understand the market.

Narcissists have an inflated sense of their own importance. Check there for both the market and me.

Behind the mask of ultra confidence lies a fragile self esteem, vulnerable to criticism. Check there for both the market and me.

But that doesn’t mean that the market and I are true Narcissists as defined by the mayo clinic. It may just be that we have healthy confidence in our opinions, high self esteem. I don’t value myself more than I value others, (a key component of narcissism) though I often dream of having zero responsibilities, packing a bag and going off grid for a while…. In truth I look around me, and am blessed to be surrounded by great people who are invaluable to me.

The market though, is another story. The market has been behaving like a certifiable narcissist. The market seems to have little concern for the value of others. It wasn’t always this way.

Lets review 7 symptoms of narcissism.

1. Is the market expecting constant praise and admiration? “The S&P 500, up 4.2 percent so far this month, has doubled in less than two years, the quickest 100 percent jump since the Great Depression.” This headline is all over the net. “I’ve never seen a market like this,” said Paul Mendelsohn, chief investment strategist at Windham Financial Services. A market watcher for 35 years, he is taking profits in every area but commodities.” The market is thriving on these headlines.

2. Is the market exaggerating its achievements? “Slowly, but at least so far surely, bullish sentiment continues to grow. It is now perilously close to dangerously high levels.” Say Mark Hulbert of MarketWatch. In the short term this should be bad news for stocks. But the market just seems to ignore these sentiment indicators.

3. Does the market believe it is special and acting accordingly? “The rest of the world has an interest in the US recovery because of its stimulating policies, Mr. Bernanke argued in prepared remarks he plans to deliver in Paris as finance leaders from the Group of 20 nations gather.” Mr. Bernanke seems to think we are special according to newsystocks.com.

4. Is the market taking advantage of others? Reuters Feb 17th “Energy shares gained alongside

Narcissistic Personality Disorder starts at the top

crude oil prices, which climbed 1.5 percent on fresh tension between Israel and Iran. The tension added to concerns about unrest in the Middle East, which could lead to supply disruptions.” Many energy stocks are hitting multi year highs. But on the flip side “California’s average price for a gallon of regular gasoline hit $3.50 Thursday for the first time since 2008, driven higher by the impact of Middle Eastern turmoil on the oil market. California’s average gas price has jumped 8 cents in the past week and now stands at 35 cents above the national average, according to the AAA automotive service. San Francisco‘s average has reached $3.57, while drivers in San Jose are paying $3.53 per gallon. Not since October 2008 has California’s gas prices been this high. In June of that year, the state’s average set a record of $4.61 before the economic collapse pushed gas prices into a tailspin.” Says David Baker from chronicle news service. I fell taken advantage of when I fill my tank up at the station. Really think about it, do you ever come out of a gas station lately feeling good. The oil companies can poison our waters, get away with it, and the funnel clean up costs through inflated prices masked in middle east tensions.

5. A classic Narcissistic symptom is ones inability to keep healthy relationships. It is months now where individual stocks seem to dominate the indexes but broad stocks don’t seem to participate in the movement of the indexes. No one can tell me what the value of overbought or oversold indicators are, since all the market does is power forward. In fact Goldman Sachs market watcher Noah Weisberger had this to say on the phenomenon, in a recent note.

“Within the U.S. market, where we have the richest set of metrics, we find that both implied average stock correlation and implied average sector correlation have declined sharply so far this year. Mechanically, the decline in this metric is a function of a combination of falling index volatility and rising sector volatility (in the case of implied sector correlation) or rising single stock volatility (in the case of implied stock correlation). These measures reached historic highs during the depths of the 2009 sell off. But in the “post-crisis” era, both stock and sector correlations peaked in mid-2010 (at a whopping 0.9 for average implied sector correlation and 0.7 for average implied stock correlation) and both measures have been falling in fits and starts ever since.”

6.  Narcissists set unrealistic goals. Zacks investment research Steve Reitmeister says in answer to the direction of the market “I strongly believe the answer is that we are due for more gains. Not just because there is no double dip. More importantly, there are sound fundamental reasons for the market to continue its advance.” So do many of his peers. Stock markets to not continue to advance indefinitely without healthy reversals.

7. Arrogance and haughty behavior often accompany a diagnosis of narcissism.

A. Headline MSN money Feb 4th: Ignoring Egypt, markets roar on. The political crises sweeping the Middle East join the risks of unresolved economic issues at home. Yet speculators continue to run wild.

B. Reuters Feb 10th: (Reuters) - Investors are often told not to fight the Fed, but in the U.S. Treasuries market taking the opposite stance to the Fed has been a winning strategy in the past six months.

C. FTMdaily reports: Stocks Ignore Growing Inflation Concerns

Arrogance and Haughtiness are acts of ignoring other’s opinions. to hold their opinions in disdain.

I have felt there was something wrong with the stock market for at lest the last couple of weeks. But I could not put my finger on it. But it is no relief to now know that one thing I had come to rely on for my livelihood, is so very ill.

The Mayo Clinic says, “It’s not known what causes narcissistic personality disorder. As with other mental disorders, the cause is likely complex. Some evidence links the cause to a dysfunctional childhood, such as excessive pampering, extremely high expectations, abuse or neglect.” I could find evidence of all of the in the history of the stock market.

Complications of narcissistic personality disorder, if left untreated, can include depression and even suicidal thoughts. I think the flash crash was the first indication there might be something wrong with the market, but I hope my research help you better understand what is truly going on with today’s stock market. And when the market falls into a brief state of depression, and correction, don’t be surprised. We are dealing with a classic Narcissist and there is no real cure. I expect depression to set in on tuesday, and suicidal thought by friday for the Stock Market. Buyers Beware.



Is Timing Everything in Trading?


The old saying is timing is everything and of course timing in trading is important but is it everything? Another old saying is you cannot pick tops and bottoms so how can these two statements co-exist? The answer to both of these is through sizing your positions properly. Let’s look at these two questions individually and see how my answer changes the question around.

Timing your trades is important but as a trader it is a small part of being successful. Think of it this way, you can be early and small sized or you can be late and big sized. I think this bears repeating, EARLY AND SMALL or LATE AND BIG. If you are early and big you will lose a lot of money waiting for your trade to work, and you had better have a lot of money or you will liquidate at the worst point in time. I have seen it many, many times.

If you are early but you are small you will be able to sustain through that “irrational” period and get big when the proof of your thesis starts to play out. The trader who decides to wait for that proof and then hits it big with size may miss the first couple of percentage points but will have so much size that they can make that up through proper leverage or higher beta names.

Clearly you can see how the proper size here makes all the difference in the world. Small keeps you in the trade when you are early, big gets back what you may have missed being a little late to the party.

Picking tops and bottoms is very difficult but we tend to do a good job of that here because we are entering at multiple levels with multiple share sizes. Just recently we bought X (US Steel) at $56.48 which was 15 cents off the lows and the stock is currently trading at $63.65, 15 cents to make $7 that is a pretty good tradeoff.

This strategy directly fits in with the above thesis as well, enter small early and get big late. In this case late is right at the most advantageous level with a close stop out. By using the right size you can enter at great levels.

I want to wrap up this blog with one more point and that is being a trader means supreme planning skills. You must have a detailed plan for your entries, your sizing and for your timing. Is this a one minute trade or a one year trade? Do you want to be small and early or big and late? The choice is yours but have it planned out. Do not ask why the markets are going against you, accept that they are irrational and that for the moment you are incorrect but be able to be there when you are correct.

Happy Trading!