Monday, October 13, 2008

Back from the Heartland

I have returned Sunday afternoon from my hometown in SE Ohio, enduring typically shabby treatment from an airline. My hometown is quite a delightful place to visit and, in fact, to have grown up in as a child and young person. I stayed in a pleasant cabin in the woods - naturally feeling quite at home. Partaking of the local food establishments instead of McDonald's for this trip, I enjoyed fine meals including a particularly good New York Strip steak and accompanying wine at a restaurant. More fine local fare included several chocolate milk shakes, homemade, beer-battered onion rings, a fine pizza at my childhood favorite establishment and a huge breakfast for $4. "Inflation" was nonexistent, as usual.

Since I had no Internet service during the trip and quite limited news exposure, I missed the "fun" of the last half of last week. Ugh ! However, perhaps the ague peaked on Friday.

Of course much colossal foolishness is being slowly exposed by this turmoil. Iceland is a fine example. Apparently billion of Pounds were deposited into its banks by British "investors" - uh ... I guess they were really speculators. Iceland has 300,000 people, fewer than Columbus, Ohio. Who in any rational frame of mind would "invest" billions in banks in such a tiny place ?

The Euro-nations seems to be working together now - that is good.

In case you are wondering why banks and markets need to be supported and preserved by government, I suggest you consider that direct cause and effect relationships exist for about 1,500 years or perhaps even 2,000 years or more connecting prosperity of communities and towns and cities and nations to their having working markets for people to exchange goods and services. Credit is essential for this activity to be extended beyond face-to-face contact.

Why do pundits pontificate on matters on which they clearly have never read a scholarly work ? I heard a fellow on Bloomberg early this morning citing the Panic of 1873 as an analogy. I have read books about every panic of the 19th century and there is no doubt that 1873 bears almost no connection to today.

The Fed has made its dollar swap lines unlimited in size to provide dollars to the BOE, ECB and Swiss National Banks. So this should get the Eurodollar market moving . I have wondered why there has been a shortage of dollars in Europe. Perhaps US banks and money market funds cut back lending there. Or perhaps the Arab and Russian pulled back. Over time perhaps we will learn the cause of this problem, which is really in the center of this maelstrom.

I read in the WSJ and FT that all those "wonderful" over-the-counter derivative contracts in both commodities and credit default swaps are now being moved to central clearing exchanges. I remember that fool, Alan Greenspan aka Elmer, saying how "wonderful" all the liquidity those derivative markets provided. Sheesh.

This morning electronics giant Phillips said it was seeing lower demand and was dropping its stock buyback programs. Sigh ... another example of stupidity and greed - they only do stock buybacks at high prices.

Internet Idiotcy

I have seem now twice an example of false information propagated over the Internet, from completely unconnected people. An email being sent around the world says that a better use of the $85 billion being used to support AIG would be to give it to the US taxpayers and that $425,000 per person could result. Uh ... the writer made a math error ... three too many zeros. The correct math gives $425, being $85 billion divided by 200 million persons. Of course, Bunkerman knows his math and checked the facts.

I wonder if this type of stupid, false commentary is a cause of public antipathy to the Paulson plan ?

Markets

Time to buy. I will be buying stocks today and all week as long as the governments keep working hard and together .. and not bickering.

As far as banks, ... and now there was one .. viz. JPM. And perhaps HBC. It appears these are the last two banks that are well run and do not need government or Warren Buffet's help and are not cutting dividends. So those two will be the ones that will emerge untrammeled by government restriction and not massively diluted. BAC's head cad, Ken Lewis, blew it by overpaying for Merrill Lynch. And C's Victor Pandit similarly blew it on cutting the dividend in bidding for WB. I'd consider investing in WFC, but after it raises the capital that it says it will raise to pay for WB. But one wonders if WFC is overpaying, too.

JPM showed discipline by buying WM for zero. I wonder if it will buy MS ?

Hmmm CHK's CEO got a multibillion margin call and had to dump billions in stock. I read that Sumner Redstone also got a margin call. Interesting.

The Root Causes

Well, I suppose all last week beefers and the rich were panicking and selling all they had. That was the source of all that selling - the deluge. Perhaps it's over now ... or will be soon over.

The "root cause" of all this pain is the collective beefer community - the trillions put into speculative hedge funds and or run by aggressive advisors for the rich who wanted a "free lunch" of "steady returns in good or bad markets. That is and was known to be impossible in such size. So a huge bubble was created by the rich and their quacksalver advisers in their greed. That is why the credit derivative market was created ... why the subprime market could grow so large ... and is why the over-the-counter trading in commodities could grow so large to cause an oil bubble.

The massive leverage that pundits cite which must be cut back resides in hedge funds as the counterparty to the banks. And it's being liquidated.

Gigantic pools of money simply need to be massive restricted. Period.

The stock market could never become a grand new, bull market without the breaking of those pools, whose trading nonsense weighed on markets and diverted massive sums from production investment. Now they are dying and perhaps, as the death of the dinosaurs freed the world for mammalian development, a new wave of diverse growth led by the free peoples of the world can now be develop and persist.

Word of the Day

"Ideocratic" - adjective [$10,000 ???] this word appears in no dictionaries. But its related word, "ideocracy", does appear in Dictionary.com in Webster's New Millenium dictionary.
Ideocracy means rule or government based on an idea or theory.
Ideocratic means of, or related to, or derived from ideocracy. Compare to theocratic, democratic, timocratic, etc.
Sentences:
Original usage - [from Reflections on a Ravaged century, by R. Conquest, pg. 89] "The full pathology of an Idea is to be seen in pure form in, for example, the whole lethal activity of the Khmer Rouge. ... We shall consider the content, and the history, of these ideocratic movements and States in later chapters."

Current Usage: The untrammeled ability of huge pools of money to be created and run rampant around the world's financial markets further facilitated creation of dangerous derivative markets. All this occurred because governments and regulators were smitten by, and run according to ideocratic notions of pure libertarianism and "free" markets.

41 comments:

Bunkerman said...

sheesh, weekly charts - even monthly charts - look like they got impaled.

Bud said...

Bman what is your forecast for unemployment next 12 months ?

i think that is the key.....the economy has discounted the housing crash......but as long as people can keep their jobs.......we may have seen the worst of this recession

forget inflation.........deflation is the story of 2009

Bunkerman said...

Haven't thought about, Bud - I think it depends on how this government plan works and how onerous Obama will be and how much damage was done by those republican fools in voting thte plan down at first.

That vote-down and this panic definitely tapped on the breaks of economic momentum - but how much is unclear.

I suppose 7% is possible.

True that if people have jobs, they will spend.

I'll follow this closely.

mfl59 said...

Aubrey K. McClendon liked to boast that he hadn't sold a single share of Chesapeake Energy Corp. in years. As the company's founder and chief executive, he was a frequent buyer, borrowing against his holdings to accumulate more as the natural-gas company boomed. The value of his stake soared above $2 billion. Then came the stock market meltdown and, last week, the calls on those loans. After a series of rapid-fire sales, Mr. McClendon now owns less than $32 million in Chesapeake shares. And investors are hoping the company, the nation's largest and most aggressive producer of natural gas, doesn't suffer a similar comedown -

Spin-em said...

Tommy: Let's think about this for a sec, Ted, why would somebody put a guarantee on a box? Hmmm, very interesting.
Ted Nelson, Customer: Go on, I'm listening.

Tommy: Here's the way I see it, Ted. guy puts a fancy guarantee on a box 'cause he wants you to fell all warm and toasty inside.

Ted Nelson, Customer: Yeah, makes a man feel good.

Tommy: 'Course it does. Why shouldn't it? Ya figure you put that little box under your pillow at night, the Guarantee Fairy might come by and leave a quarter, am I right, Ted?

Ted Nelson, Customer: What's your point?

Tommy: The point is, how do you know the fairy isn't a crazy glue sniffer? "Building model airplanes" says the little fairy, well, we're not buying it. He sneaks into your house once, that's all it takes. The next thing you know, there's money missing off the dresser and your daughter's knocked up, I seen it a hundred times.

Ted Nelson, Customer: But why do they put a guarantee on the box?

Tommy: Because they know all they solda ya was a guaranteed piece of shit. That's all it is, isn't it? Hey, if you want me to take a dump in a box and mark it guaranteed, I will. I got spare time. But for now, for your customer's sake, for your daughter's sake, ya might wanna think about buying a quality product from me.

mfl59 said...

Brilliant spin.....lmaooooooooooooo

Who says you can't learn anything by watching tv?

Bunkerman said...

hmm what show is that from ?

I always figured I could learn all I needed about modernity from South Park.

mfl59 said...

did Acorn try to recruit you to vote while you dined at the local pizzareia bunkerman?

Spin-em said...

Tommy Boy....a movie Bunk...2 thumbs up

Bunkerman said...

uh .. Acorn is ???

The pizza was take-out, btw.

Spin-em said...

hey laura..its columbus dayyy....lets have that fella from itleee over..

Spin-em said...

always have Etalin dressin on my salads when we go to the ranch...dont mess with Texas

mfl59 said...

www.acorn.org

always looking for donations.....

Bunkerman said...

added to CVX, DVN, FCX, BHP, RIG, GNK, DRYS, EXM, JOYG in past hour.

back to 150% long.

no adds to AAPL, GOOG, MBI or JPM.

Wishing I hadn't missed last Friday washout.

Spin-em said...

buyin up 500 bunk?? real buyers afraid of missing the pocket rocket ship to the moon?

Spin-em said...

Mrs B prolly reading a book or raking leaves with her wallet in the safe??......

Spin-em said...

like they say in golf....you cant win the tournament on the first day...butcha sure can lose it....Im just sayin...lol

Bud said...

ari needs to go to the claw

Bud said...

where's 44-6 today ?? or shud is say 27-17


sea-pigoens suck

Spin-em said...

HankyBenanky new AMTD Account kickin azz today...lets light this candle Ben

Spin-em said...

I thought it was a good putt..but that chip???omg... come onnnnn... too quick Ari..soft hands

Spin-em said...

Frost mia after last week.. prolly hung up his tradin shoes and put the "gone fishin" sign on his door...nonono gas money for the SEADUCER prowler...walked to the river with pole in hand...lool

mfl59 said...

I think he bladed the chip....Id have liked him to maybe bump a hybrid there to avoid such a shot

mfl59 said...

lol he either bladed it or used a 4 iron....

Spin-em said...

Phil can goto hell as far as Im concerned..... lol

mfl59 said...

Phil was really stiff in the beginning...he loosened up towards the end...

I agree though spinny...he's as fake as they come...

Bunkerman said...

actually Mrs. B is buying some stocks. They are cheap enough.

Bunkerman said...

no, spin, re my buys, compared to early last week, they are cheap enough, too

heck I left off some like AAPL because I even have profits.

mfl59 said...

any hints on what Mrs B is buying? gotta think she is heading back to the consumer staples area....

Bunkerman said...

She bought a few of those like KFT, MCD, KO, not all. Some industrials [UTX, MMM, BA... plus HBC, JNJ, XOM, ABT, and a few more odds & ends.

These are not "trader" stocks.

She found lots of solid companies with PEs of 10x and dividends over 3% and good LT growth.

Many are at 30% off sales, as she thinks about it.

She looks at them every few months or when her broker calls with idea.

Bunkerman said...

this is all new money, btw. Cash being deployed.

Bunkerman said...

odds & ends were ADP, EMR, ITW, MDU, VZ.

did not buy some consumer staples that were not on sale enough, like PG.

Spin-em said...

thanks bunk

mfl59 said...

good stuff thanks Bunkerman...

Mern the Super Bowl champs play tonight sir...

Spin-em said...

Italiano's never letcha down......

Spin-em said...

everybody thinkin tonights a walk....no way boys.....keep em focued Eli.....

Spin-em said...

MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

thanks guys....
have a great weekend




oh wait its only monday...lol

Bud said...

no walk........but GEEEEEEEEEmen are the best team in the nfl

eli manning.......next stop....canton ohio

Spin-em said...

YAZ

Manny(get lost who needs ya)

Fisk

Schilling??????(I think so)

GOOOOOO SAWWWWWWXXXX

Spin-em said...

Rams beat skins
Cards beat boys
49ers almost Donny

Jerky McKinny this morning on cnbc
mfl bringin his Rutgers taint
Bud..Eli shrine

nononono.....Rebublican guard on alert Defcon 2

Bud said...

huh ???


wtf are you talkin about


did 44-6 dictate that post??


PS......i f'ng hate the rays !!!!!!