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"You Think The Market Isn’t A Casino Now?"

Got this in an email from a reader this weekend, just had to share as it makes just way too much sense…..

Just look at the top 20 stocks traded on Friday.. Most are pieces of Sh…

Citibank trades 1.4 billion shares!!! When I got started in the business in the early 80’s everyone was worried what would happen when the WHOLE MARKET TRADED 100 MILLION!!

This volume is distorting the fact that most investors are doing nothing. This is not healthy volume in terms of sponsorship.. John Hussman of Hussman funds is probably right about this..


Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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"You Think The Market Isn't A Casino Now?"

Got this in an email from a reader this weekend, just had to share as it makes just way too much sense…..

Just look at the top 20 stocks traded on Friday.. Most are pieces of Sh…

Citibank trades 1.4 billion shares!!! When I got started in the business in the early 80’s everyone was worried what would happen when the WHOLE MARKET TRADED 100 MILLION!!

This volume is distorting the fact that most investors are doing nothing. This is not healthy volume in terms of sponsorship.. John Hussman of Hussman funds is probably right about this..


Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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Another Look at Dr. Copper

An update from an article back in March

“Davidson” submits:

It is useful at this time to review “Dr. Copper” and the Baltic Dry Index which many believe offer insight to global economic activity. As I review the multitude of current forecasts there are many which state that the market has over-reached economic reality, others state that while there has been an economic up-tick it will quickly deteriorate to a second dip-the so-called “W”-Shaped recession and a very few see a so-called “V”-Shaped Recovery. Many forecasters point to the short term movements in Comex Copper prices and the Baltic Dry Index to anchor predictions. The net result is a series of “UP” forecasts with up movements in the indices and “DOWN” forecasts with the dips. In some weeks the Baltic Dry Index and Comex Copper are not in alignment and the forecasts are mixed.

My suggestion is to apply Ockham’s Razor and focus on the 3mo trends to smooth out the weekly volatility. Net/net, both of these economic indicators appear to be in up trends.

In my experience there will always be analysts that find a reason to discount market movement. In the current instance their advice is to ignore the trends of Comex Copper and the Baltic Dry Index as being caused by China’s restocking of inventories and that this does not reflect a true increase in economic activity. I disagree! I interpret China’s activity as looking forward to potential needs and making a timely use of excess $US to buy cheaply priced commodities with the marginal cost of production of oil reported in the $70bbl-$80bbl range and for copper the marginal cost of production is reported to be in the $1.50lb-$1.80lb range.

I believe we should view Comex Copper and the Baltic Dry Index in the context of US car and truck sales. US sales turned up months before “Cars for Clunkers” program began and were coupled with anecdotal stories of workers being brought back to factories to replenish inventories. Add to this increased manufacturing activity a story of BYD(the Buffett Chinese electric car company) on August 22, 2009 in which BYD announced its plans to bring its electric cars to the US market in 2010. This is much earlier than previously anticipated.

It seems to me that economic activity is accelerating and that Comex Copper and the Baltic Dry Index are a reflection of this activity. Certainly the activity observed to date does not mean that it will not suddenly stop. But, history supports the notion that once economies begin to turn more positive they generally continue in the same direction even if it appears that government stimulation was involved.

I view this information as positive for investment in stocks and bonds.


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Brookfield Properties Analyst: "No Reason for Material Discount"

For those not familiar with it here is the original investment thesis for Brookfield Properties (BPO)

The report said (emphasis mine):

Dow Jones) TD raises Brookfield Properties (BPO) to hold from reduce, citing a “dramatic turnaround in freely useable liquidity.” Firm says the Canadian office giant recently raised $1B in an equity offering that improved its outlook dramatically. “With our liquidity concerns essentially gone, we no longer see reason for a material discounted relative valuation,” TD says. BPO up 1% at $1.38.

Relative valuation is the key here. The REIT industry is currently trading at a PE ratio of about 14 times earnings. Brookfield, at 6 times. What the report is saying is that Brookfield now should not have a “material discount” it now does to the industry. Simply put, the stock can rally 100% and still trade at a discount to its peers (barring any large earnings surprises).

We bought shares at $9.54 and will hold them as this is a class management team whose company is trading a a large discount to its true value…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long BPO, none

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Wall St. Media 8/20

Talking ti Doug about Brookfield Properties (BPO), Natural Gas (UNG), Yankees/Red Sox and thanking @tejcc for hooking up the Sullivan boys as bat boys at Friday’s Portland Sea Dogs game


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long BPO, UNG

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Wall St. Media 8/20

Talking ti Doug about Brookfield Properties (BPO), Natural Gas (UNG), Yankees/Red Sox and thanking @tejcc for hooking up the Sullivan boys as bat boys at Friday’s Portland Sea Dogs game


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long BPO, UNG

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AutoNation"s Jackson on "Cash for Clunkers"

Mike Jackson CNBC 8-19-2009 from http://marccannon.vox.com/


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Dow’s SmartStax Looks Like a Blockbuster

Folks have wondered why I am so high in Dow Chemical’s (DOW) Dow Ag division. Came across this while on vacation:

From Bloomberg:

Monsanto Co., the world’s largest seed maker, plans to charge as much as 42 percent more for new genetically modified seeds next year than older offerings because they increase farmers’ output.

Roundup Ready 2 Yield soybeans will cost farmers an average of $74 an acre in 2010, and original Roundup Ready soybeans will cost $52 an acre, St. Louis-based Monsanto said today in presentations on its Web site. SmartStax corn seeds, developed with Dow Chemical Co., will cost $130 an acre, 17 percent more than the YieldGard triple-stack seeds they will replace.

“Our pricing has the flexibility built in to ensure the grower captures the greatest return from his seed investment, irrespective of market volatility,” Chief Executive Officer Hugh Grant said today in a statement.

Grant is introducing new modified seeds that boost yields as part of a plan to double gross profit from 2007 to 2012. The new soybeans, which resist Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide, produce 7.4 percent more soybeans per acre than the older version. SmartStax kills insects in multiple ways, reducing the amount of conventional corn that must be planted to deter insecticide resistance.

“SmartStax pricing is higher than we initially expected,” Vincent Andrews, a New York-based analyst at Morgan Stanley, said today in a report.

Monsanto rose $1.57, or 1.9 percent, to $84.03 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have gained 19 percent this year.

Acreage Forecasts

SmartStax corn seed will be planted on as many as 4 million acres in 2010, its first year on the market, with a potential for as many as 65 million acres in the U.S. eventually, the company said. The new seed boosts yields 5 percent to 10 percent compared with other products, partly by reducing the amount of land that must be planted with conventional corn to 5 percent from 20 percent, Monsanto said.

Pricing for SmartStax is at the high end of expectations, Laurence Alexander, a New York-based analyst at Jefferies & Co., said by telephone.

You see, Dow Ag is already growing earning 15%+ a year, without this product. This is a product, it needs to be noted that has every making in no uncertain terms of a blockbuster. It is a JV with Monsanto (MON) so it has the selling/marketing and research arms of two multi-billion dollar companies behind it.

It also has the EPA’s blessing and has shown to improve yields for farmers 5%-10%, huge. Here is a .pdf of the Monsanto/Dow announcement from 2007

Look for more color on sales in Q4 2009 Q1 2010. It is gonna be big….unless we somehow find more farmland or need to feed less people…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, none

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Dow's SmartStax Looks Like a Blockbuster

Folks have wondered why I am so high in Dow Chemical’s (DOW) Dow Ag division. Came across this while on vacation:

From Bloomberg:

Monsanto Co., the world’s largest seed maker, plans to charge as much as 42 percent more for new genetically modified seeds next year than older offerings because they increase farmers’ output.

Roundup Ready 2 Yield soybeans will cost farmers an average of $74 an acre in 2010, and original Roundup Ready soybeans will cost $52 an acre, St. Louis-based Monsanto said today in presentations on its Web site. SmartStax corn seeds, developed with Dow Chemical Co., will cost $130 an acre, 17 percent more than the YieldGard triple-stack seeds they will replace.

“Our pricing has the flexibility built in to ensure the grower captures the greatest return from his seed investment, irrespective of market volatility,” Chief Executive Officer Hugh Grant said today in a statement.

Grant is introducing new modified seeds that boost yields as part of a plan to double gross profit from 2007 to 2012. The new soybeans, which resist Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide, produce 7.4 percent more soybeans per acre than the older version. SmartStax kills insects in multiple ways, reducing the amount of conventional corn that must be planted to deter insecticide resistance.

“SmartStax pricing is higher than we initially expected,” Vincent Andrews, a New York-based analyst at Morgan Stanley, said today in a report.

Monsanto rose $1.57, or 1.9 percent, to $84.03 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have gained 19 percent this year.

Acreage Forecasts

SmartStax corn seed will be planted on as many as 4 million acres in 2010, its first year on the market, with a potential for as many as 65 million acres in the U.S. eventually, the company said. The new seed boosts yields 5 percent to 10 percent compared with other products, partly by reducing the amount of land that must be planted with conventional corn to 5 percent from 20 percent, Monsanto said.

Pricing for SmartStax is at the high end of expectations, Laurence Alexander, a New York-based analyst at Jefferies & Co., said by telephone.

You see, Dow Ag is already growing earning 15%+ a year, without this product. This is a product, it needs to be noted that has every making in no uncertain terms of a blockbuster. It is a JV with Monsanto (MON) so it has the selling/marketing and research arms of two multi-billion dollar companies behind it.

It also has the EPA’s blessing and has shown to improve yields for farmers 5%-10%, huge. Here is a .pdf of the Monsanto/Dow announcement from 2007

Look for more color on sales in Q4 2009 Q1 2010. It is gonna be big….unless we somehow find more farmland or need to feed less people…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, none

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Rep. Ron Paul on Fed Transparency at CATO Institute

The Cato Institute hosts a discussion on increasing the public transparency of the Federal Reserve featuring Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX); with comments by Gilbert Schwartz, Partner, Schwartz & Ballen LLP, Former Associate General Counsel, Federal Reserve; and Bert Ely, President, Ely & Company, Inc. Moderated by Mark Calabria Director, Financial Regulation Studies, Cato Institute.


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Wall St. Media 8/18

A quick conversation with Doug regarding Brookfield Properties (BPO) from 4,000 ft. above sea level in New Hampshire’s White Mountains……Skype is pretty awesome…


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Wall St. Media 8/18

A quick conversation with Doug regarding Brookfield Properties (BPO) from 4,000 ft. above sea level in New Hampshire’s White Mountains……Skype is pretty awesome…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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Buffett: Inflation a Real Threat

I’m guessing Geithner/Bernanke will not be quoting Warren anymore in front of Congress…Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Buffett on what he sees as a potentially huge problem lying in wait down the road.

Full Op-Ed:

IN nature, every action has consequences, a phenomenon called the butterfly effect. These consequences, moreover, are not necessarily proportional. For example, doubling the carbon dioxide we belch into the atmosphere may far more than double the subsequent problems for society. Realizing this, the world properly worries about greenhouse emissions.

The butterfly effect reaches into the financial world as well. Here, the United States is spewing a potentially damaging substance into our economy — greenback emissions.

To be sure, we’ve been doing this for a reason I resoundingly applaud. Last fall, our financial system stood on the brink of a collapse that threatened a depression. The crisis required our government to display wisdom, courage and decisiveness. Fortunately, the Federal Reserve and key economic officials in both the Bush and Obama administrations responded more than ably to the need.

They made mistakes, of course. How could it have been otherwise when supposedly indestructible pillars of our economic structure were tumbling all around them? A meltdown, though, was avoided, with a gusher of federal money playing an essential role in the rescue.

The United States economy is now out of the emergency room and appears to be on a slow path to recovery. But enormous dosages of monetary medicine continue to be administered and, before long, we will need to deal with their side effects. For now, most of those effects are invisible and could indeed remain latent for a long time. Still, their threat may be as ominous as that posed by the financial crisis itself.

To understand this threat, we need to look at where we stand historically. If we leave aside the war-impacted years of 1942 to 1946, the largest annual deficit the United States has incurred since 1920 was 6 percent of gross domestic product. This fiscal year, though, the deficit will rise to about 13 percent of G.D.P., more than twice the non-wartime record. In dollars, that equates to a staggering $1.8 trillion. Fiscally, we are in uncharted territory.

Because of this gigantic deficit, our country’s “net debt” (that is, the amount held publicly) is mushrooming. During this fiscal year, it will increase more than one percentage point per month, climbing to about 56 percent of G.D.P. from 41 percent. Admittedly, other countries, like Japan and Italy, have far higher ratios and no one can know the precise level of net debt to G.D.P. at which the United States will lose its reputation for financial integrity. But a few more years like this one and we will find out.

An increase in federal debt can be financed in three ways: borrowing from foreigners, borrowing from our own citizens or, through a roundabout process, printing money. Let’s look at the prospects for each individually — and in combination.

The current account deficit — dollars that we force-feed to the rest of the world and that must then be invested — will be $400 billion or so this year. Assume, in a relatively benign scenario, that all of this is directed by the recipients — China leads the list — to purchases of United States debt. Never mind that this all-Treasuries allocation is no sure thing: some countries may decide that purchasing American stocks, real estate or entire companies makes more sense than soaking up dollar-denominated bonds. Rumblings to that effect have recently increased.

Then take the second element of the scenario — borrowing from our own citizens. Assume that Americans save $500 billion, far above what they’ve saved recently but perhaps consistent with the changing national mood. Finally, assume that these citizens opt to put all their savings into United States Treasuries (partly through intermediaries like banks).

Even with these heroic assumptions, the Treasury will be obliged to find another $900 billion to finance the remainder of the $1.8 trillion of debt it is issuing. Washington’s printing presses will need to work overtime.

Slowing them down will require extraordinary political will. With government expenditures now running 185 percent of receipts, truly major changes in both taxes and outlays will be required. A revived economy can’t come close to bridging that sort of gap.

Legislators will correctly perceive that either raising taxes or cutting expenditures will threaten their re-election. To avoid this fate, they can opt for high rates of inflation, which never require a recorded vote and cannot be attributed to a specific action that any elected official takes. In fact, John Maynard Keynes long ago laid out a road map for political survival amid an economic disaster of just this sort: “By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens…. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.”

I want to emphasize that there is nothing evil or destructive in an increase in debt that is proportional to an increase in income or assets. As the resources of individuals, corporations and countries grow, each can handle more debt. The United States remains by far the most prosperous country on earth, and its debt-carrying capacity will grow in the future just as it has in the past.

But it was a wise man who said, “All I want to know is where I’m going to die so I’ll never go there.” We don’t want our country to evolve into the banana-republic economy described by Keynes.

Our immediate problem is to get our country back on its feet and flourishing — “whatever it takes” still makes sense. Once recovery is gained, however, Congress must end the rise in the debt-to-G.D.P. ratio and keep our growth in obligations in line with our growth in resources.

Unchecked carbon emissions will likely cause icebergs to melt. Unchecked greenback emissions will certainly cause the purchasing power of currency to melt. The dollar’s destiny lies with Congress.


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“Davidson” on the Investing Noise

This is a great piece of advice from my friend “Davidson”.

The term Ockham’s(Occam’s) Razor is attributed to a Franciscan Friar William of Ockham:

William Ockham (c. 1285–1349) is remembered as an influential nominalist but his popular fame as a great logician rests chiefly on the maxim attributed to him and known as Occam’s razor: Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem or “Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily.” The term razor refers to the act of shaving away unnecessary assumptions to get to the simplest explanation.

The great mass of material that is presented to us each day on investment analysis could benefit in my opinion by “…shaving away unnecessary assumptions to get to the simplest explanation” There is much more information presented in a single day than any single individual could possibly hope to digest in a lifetime. Most of it is designed to encourage a high level of trading based upon momentary headlines that in most instances are of little long term significance for most of us. This is information overload in the extreme!!

I advise that most are better served by applying Ockham’s Razor. This forces one to step back far enough to gain a wider perspective of market history, manager performance and the actions one can take to monitor and offset risk once it has been identified. The investment process becomes one of locating successful managers and letting them attend to the details while we monitor the broad cycles, historical Return/Risk relationships and parse the deluge of daily reports for specific commentary and investment activity of insightful investors known for their keen sense of investment valuation. Then, by rebalancing vs the Return/Risk assessment as it evolves from our broad analysis, portfolios can be adjusted as the situation appears appropriate.

Even with leaving much of the detail to others, continuously monitoring the market keeps me busy each and every day. In this effort, it is not necessary to perfectly identify market “Bottoms”/”Tops”, it is not necessary to make split-second decisions and determine whether a particular issue is or is not owned by a particular manager. These are details that do not determine manager selection or the Return/Risk characteristics of an asset class. In the portfolio management process the focus is on larger issues, namely the on-going Return/Risk relationship of each asset class.

However, examining the details of our manager portfolios as to what is selected and when does provide some insight to their investment decision making. Understanding the manager’s investment style is important to manager selection. I do the same for a select group of individual company CEOs as to which of these corporate managers are best to monitor for their investment insights. Together the selected group of portfolio managers, CEOs and private investors comprise approximately 300 individuals which is continuously tracked. This information can be used manage an all cap US portfolio depending on individual needs and desires as the US portion of a globally balanced portfolio.

The amount of investment commentary available is enormous. Taking the Ockham Razor approach greatly simplifies the investment process. By allocating the detail to others who have proven themselves skilled, the larger and more important allocation decisions can occur with less attention to the daily market static.

With many calls for the market correcting in the near term, the longer term evidence supports remaining positive and disciplined within this context.


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Wall St. Media 8/14

Talking about Brookfield Asset Management (BAM) and Brookfield Properties (BPO) that were first featured in this post

Go to Wall St. Media for more video

Note: Late Friday Monish Pabrai disclosed a stake in Brookfield Properties


Disclosure (“none” means no position):none