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Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Inflation | Stagflation | Recession - Either Way Here's How I'm Trading

 


Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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ALL EYEZ ON ME

With a backdrop of rising inflation, down markets, and lots of chatter about recession, here is what I have been trading. First, I have NOT been doing much trading at all. When the market is choppy, treat it like high waves on the beach -- DO NOT GET IN.

I exited a number of traded and YES many of them were performing poorly and trading at a loss. As the song goes, you have to know when to fold them and take your lumps. I recall many years ago I forced myself to learn how to play poker. I hate the thought of putting up money and more importantly losing it, but poker teaches you risk management (how good is your hand), how much to invest (in poker this is your bet), and last but not least how to read a room (in poker this is anticipating your opponent's hand). 

In this market, I had to get back to basics and start playing poker. 

Risk Management -- I sold my "No Scrubs" stocks. They were broke azz stock not doing much for me or I didn't think they had an opportunity to go much higher. Clearly the market's mood (called sentiment) has changed and it's a risky environment.

How to Invest -- I went Coke Zero, Crystal Light, and Michelob Ultra, I started cutting back the sizes of my trades. I can't afford to make big mistakes in a down trending market with talks of recessions every day.


Read The Room -- People are driving less, spending less, and homes are actually staying on the market for a few days. 

So in response, I've been trading stocks that fall into the following categories:

PAIN TRADE - When something hurts, I buy it. I own a Plug-In Hybrid Vehicle and work from home. So I don't even know what the price of gas is and I make a trip to the gas pump about once every 2 months I would say. But I know you're hurting, so I buy the industry that's applying the pain. Oil and Gas stocks are bursting at the seams with cash, and even my old buddy Warren Buffett is in on the act with his investment in Occidental Petroleum. I personally think he wants to buy the entire company...let's wait and see.

OUTSIDERS - I've been an underdog all my life, so I appreciate when high a stock has been kicked down so good, that there still is an opportunity to get up. I've recently traded Snap, Snowflake, Roblox, Teladoc, Zoom, and Coinbase to name a few, for just this reason. They don't align with my goals, but for now I look for underdog prices in a difficult market.

ARB - Short for arbitrage, Twitter and Activision are places where I've stuck money in hopes of the companies getting bought out. A company slid into their DMs and presented them with a ring -- and I hope they get to the alter. There are many risks with this strategy and Elon Musk dissing Twitter and Microsoft needing to get regulatory approval to buy Activision will be no easy path.

Tegna - Is my version of a investor's lotter pick. I bought a large number of shares back in 2019 around the $15 dollar range. I believe media would see it's day again due to the presidential showdown. Tegna has paid off and they too have a company that slid into their DMs.  I hope they get bought out at $24 dollars but risk is on the table. Media unions have come out strongly and made their opinions heard. They are concerned the merger means loss of jobs. I am torn here, I think have these people forgotten we live in a capitalist society. I actually lean towards their perspective and being a person of color, people that look like me are often the first to be let go at many companies. But then I wonder why support for programs and industry groups that support empowering workers is so low? I guess many don't care UNTIL it impacts them. Tegna's CEO has come out and indicated no jobs would be lost as she is a veteran of the media industry and values local media. I don't know what will happen here but as the stock inches up -- my knowledge of Wall Street tells me the deal gets done and someone does a lot of government lip service that stringent due diligence was done. Either way, I think this remains a strong lottery pick because if you look back at my blog, Tenga at one point had 4 suitors. This is a company that will be bought my someone and I just hope it's a happy marriage.





Stock Ticker Stock Name Industry Target Price REASONS
CVX CHEVRON OIL & GAS $152.50 PAIN TRADE
DVN DEVON ENERGY OIL & GAS $60.00 PAIN TRADE
OXY OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM OIL & GAS $60.00 PAIN TRADE
SNAP SNAP COMMUNICATION SERVICES $7.00 OUTSIDERS
BYND BEYOND MEAT CONSUMER RELATED $30.00 GOOD NEWS
TWTR TWITTER COMMUNICATION SERVICES $50.00 ARB
SNOW SNOWFLAKE TECHNOLOGY $120.00 OUTSIDERS
RBLX ROBLOX VIDEO GAMES $25.00 OUTSIDERS
TGNA TEGNA MEDIA $20.00 LOTTERY PICK
COIN COINBASE TECHNOLOGY $40.00 OUTSIDERS
TDOC TELADOC HEALTHCARE $25.00 OUTSIDERS
ZM ZOOM TECHNOLOGY $85.00 OUTSIDERS
ACTVI ACTIVISION VIDEO GAMES $75.00 ARB



Sunday, May 29, 2022

Why are We Seeing High Inflation? -- The Block is Hot


Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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Inflation is Coming, No Inflation is Here:

I have never really looked back over time to understand when and why I post. I have a feeling it probably aligns over time with when our economy is at its highest and lowest. I've come to conclude that if I put my thoughts in writing and it has a historical time stamp on it, then eventually over time I can change minds (by looking at my past thoughts). I have molded myself over time to being a contrarian...and this means I appreciate going against the grain. I don't try to follow the crowd. The crowd is like a herd and in fact where and when I see a stampede I run away. 

I believe this is how I see risk, protect myself from negative risk, and then eventually use leverage to capitalize on risk. I take these life lessons and simply apply them to the stock market. I try to create habits and repeatable practices that can be applied to the game of life and carry these concepts over to the stock market game. Notice, I purposefully called them a game. There is an ebb and flow to everything in my opinion and you have to know how the game is played. I take time to find, learn, and observe this lifecycle in everything. Whether it's the game of life, the stock market game, sports, or our economy you will notice they all have cycles. Why this repeats OR cycles like a clock is unbeknownst to me, but I'd be a liar in telling you that understanding this concept has made me successful.

I clearly am a broken record because over the years, I've posted about how the economy roughly goes up and down in cycles. From observing the stock market, I can tell you LIKE CLOCKWORK, we roughly have periods of boom and busts that cycle OR repeat every 8-10 years. Read my blog and I think I've thoughtfully documented the following:

  • 1987 - Savings and Loan Crisis | Black Monday Crisis - The stock market (via the Dow) was down 22% in one day
  • 1995 - 2000 Dot Com Stock Market Soars - It gave us Amazon, Semiconductor Stocks
  • 2002 - Dot Com Bubble Busts - Every business added a Dot Com and many did not survive
  • 2004 - 2007 - The Hot Housing Markets Soars - Homes prices and buying skyrocket, and no interest loans become the norm
  • 2008 - Financial Crisis - We lose Lehman Brothers and financial markets are in turmoil; I used this downturn to finally purchase my first house in 2010 thanks to the First Time Homebuyers credit led by the Obama administration; I also started buy stocks again when the Federal Reserve started lowering interest rates
  • 2014 -18 - I wrote in 2014, that the Dow should take a bow. It reached all-time highs. I was starting to plan for a slowdown but then President Trump surprised me and many in 2016 by vocally telling the Federal Reserve NOT to raise interest rates (which slows the economy down) and he doubled down on cutting business taxes which created a Trump era boom after we already had a Obama era boom. Remember unemployment and minority unemployment were at record lows during the Obama presidency and then the set new record lows during the Trump presidency
  • 2019 - COVID-19 Crisis led a to a health crisis, stock market meltdown and the entire globe was under siege
  • 2020 - COVID Stimulus + Payment Protection Program + Child Tax Credits - because the Federal Reserve could not lower interest rates as they were at 0%, Congress stepped in literally made it rain. 

If you look at this historical backdrop that I documented, the Federal Reserve talked about raising interest rates in 2016 as the economy was doing great 8 years after the financial crisis. But when then President Trump vocally broke the separation of powers and vocally told the Federal Reserve in as many words to not raise interest rates...I believe it led to 2 things:
1) Our economy never really cooled down from 8 years of doing well and started to get hot. I remember in my 2017-18 search for my second home getting outbid and racing to find the next house. Only come to find out this would get even worse in 2020.
2) When COVID-19 hit and shocked our economy we could not lower interest rates. By creating all those stimulus programs and most being for businesses who did not have to pay them back, the US economy was flooded with cash. This is equivalent to pouring gasoline on an already white hot fire.

The gasoline lead to something similar to the Dot Com Bubble, only this time you might call it the Cryptocurrency and Housing rise. Don't believe just look at the headlines:




  1. Gamestop, AMC Theatres, and Crypto ruled the day. haha Gamestop and AMC were virtually closed during the pandemic and they are skyrocketing more than our most valuable companies in the world. Crypto which is backed by nothing and can't be used to pay for toilet paper and groceries is now one of the most valuable currencies in the world? Notice what bubbles and inflation begins to do. It makes the unreal -- real, the unfathomable -- possible, the unrationale -- rational. 
  2. The 10 richest persons in the world are worth more than 40% of the bottom 40% of the world, which is roughly 3.1 Billion people. 
  3. 88 bids were made on one home; 25% of homes in the US were bought by corporations
Pouring gasoline on a white-hot economy did not cause these strange investment scenarios or market inequities...it exacerbated and amplified them. We are now at a point where the only tool we have to slow things down is the Federal Reserve. They pour water on the fire by raising interest rates and this doesn't cause slow burn rather a cold shock. For the last 5 weeks the markets have dropped sharply, convulsing their way down. Interest rates have jumped from 3% to 5%. So I started to dip my toes back into the real estate market to see if I could take advantage of the situation. Nope, the open house I went to was visited by other and I was greeted by the agent telling me this house was already under contract. This tells me the market is still to hot. To change habits, the Federal Reserve will continue to hike rates until it makes you feel sick. 
Crypto hit all-time highs of $60K and now its below $30K
ROKU was at $400 at one point, now decimated to $below $100

 The goal is to raise rates to stop your buying of homes, stocks, crypto which is fueling inflation. 

This is why I moved my retirement funds to inflation - protected investments last year in anticipation. This is also why I'm disappointed in myself when I didn't sell Spotify and ROKU at their highs. I saw it coming and didn't do enough. These stocks have been decimated and are down big time. The funniest is the Federal Reserve told you this is exactly what they wanted to do.

Monday, May 02, 2022

Who's Watching Euphoria - I'm Seeing a Stock Market in Withdrawal


Investing In Yourself – Using Pillars to Build Your Core
Setting Budgets + Saving for Black Swans


How to Open My First Brokerage Account

Diversify your Life (Mind, Body, Soul, + Investments)

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Also Coming Soon - a series on #HowtoInvest. People have been reaching especially after the spikes in Gamestop, AMC, and other stock to learn the basics. I self-taught myself how to invest beginning at the age of roughly 18 and have never stopped. To be a good investor and ensure you are not gambling (speculating), I'll cover (hardest parts of investing in RED):

Budgeting 101 - How to Fund Ur Investments?
Why Stocks as an Investment?
What is Ur Investment Profile + Personality?
How to Pick Stocks?
When to Buy Stocks?
How to Enter My Trade?
How Many Stocks Should I Own?
When to Sell Stocks?
Am I Speculating (Gambling)?

Stock "Euphoria" In Withdrawal

Did you see that episode of Euphoria? While I'm watching the show, I'm really watching the stock market euphoria evaporate. I want to be completely transparent that if your portfolio is NOT down and you are not feeling any pain then you are lying or you need to win stock investing award. One of my first rules is being transparent and my portfolio is down and guess what that is a normal part of the stock market. I'd like to take some credit that I've been calling for the market to top out for a while now. But the reality is even though I was right, no human being will ever get the exact day correct, so my portfolio is getting punished just like everyone else's. Like Rue Bennett on the show "Eurphoria" is in withdrawal, this market is shaking...we call it market volatility. 

You may wonder what I'm doing in response. The simple answer is I've moved out of stocks in my retirement portfolio. You can call cap (or my bluff) but I too was surprised that I made the decision to move one quarter of my retirement portfolio in October of 2021 to safety. I chose the PIMCO Inflation Protected Bond Fund. One quarter did not stop my portfolio from declining but what it did mean that I declined less than the what the market did and I calculated my retirement account was down from it's peak by roughly 10%. I like to periodically review my portfolio's quarterly and just logged in last month. The next thing I did was analyze the current situation. I think the economy is doing well despite what you see on the news. It's pretty hot and INFLATION is up big time. How do I know, because I want to buy a 3rd property and I no likey any of the prices I'm seeing. The only price I like is the inflated value I see on the properties I own. Funny how that works ehh. 

Why is this happening? Well, the Federal Reserve is committed to taming inflation and the only way to do this is to slow demand. Take your Starbucks coffee shop, if they keep selling out of everything the store will eventually conclude they may need to raise prices because the demand is so hot. A good business operation will raise prices until the demand slows down to something manageable. That is EXACTLY what the Federal Reserve is doing at the moment. They are raising interest rates and that is making mortgage rates and the cost of obtaining cash harder to come by. The goal is to SLOW down the economy as everyone is flush from stimulus and spending like crazy now that the think COVID is over. If you need a visual, think about Rue as she was going through withdrawal, it's NOT a pretty picture. So guess what, I'm taking my ball and going home. In my retirement account I put all of my cash into inflation protected investments for the mean time. I like to play games I can win. My personal stock investing account is still in stocks and it's not pretty. I still have a lot to learn about how to better hedge my investments as some of my high fliers came down to reality. ROKU, SPOTIFY, and UBER really don't want me to retire even earlier. Those #$#$#!!

I'll write more about what I'm doing in my personal stock account to try to reduce the amount of risk and volatility. My cybersecurity business is holding up well so I'm fully investing my time there but I'll keep you guys posted on how to continue investing in stocks for a brighter future.

Saturday, January 22, 2022

Release The Pressure - Stick to the Pillars

 Happy New Year's to all my readers out there. I am wishing that everyone has a blessed and prosperous 2022.  For the last few months, I've posted less because I've been focused on a growing technology consulting and training business that is thriving. I have clients across the country and globe, and I train cyber consultants to help those companies increase their security hygiene.  I don't mind when my business efforts take me away from my typically successful trading efforts because while its challenging and rewarding to trade for yourself, there is NOTHING comparable to building something from scratch that makes a difference in people's lives. I get to choose my mission and its pressure packed but it also rewarding to see people and my client's grow.

Speaking of pressure, I have discussions with many people about the obstacles they are hearing and seeing. However, one piece of advice I give is that we must remain eternal optimists, laser focused on risks to our families, business, and life.

2022 will be filled with many pressure points, so I want to help you navigate your investments, your journey, and your goals. To combat pressure and stress it often takes having a plan, practicing it, and then sticking to the plan. I liken this approach to when I played sports, you practice shooting free throws in practice when you're tired, so when the game is on the line you've practiced taking and making the winning shot. For my international readers, imagine being chosen to kick the winning goal in football (soccer in America). To succeed in the face of insurmountable pressure, you much approach it like you've been there before.

Here are some things we are up against:



What am I listening to: "Pressure" by Ari Lennox





Sunday, November 21, 2010

QE2 is like a Pay Per View Fight...

Quantitative Easing part 2 (or QE2) is the Federal Reserves attempt to stimulate the economy through the printing and purchase of roughly $600 Billion dollar's in bonds. The Fed has two primary responsibilities and that is achieving maximum employment and price stability. So we've all been watching closely as I'm personally curious as to how this latest experiment will turn out. Of course, if you're the Fed you probably don't want to hear me calling it an experiment. This is why the discussion of the Fed's actions have been much like a prize fight. There are many economists that have pulled out the punching bags and are calling the Fed's actions a waste of money, devalues the dollar, and wishful thinking. Oddly, the Fed has openly punched back and noted that their actions are to jump start a stagnating economy which continues to lead to high unemployment and very low inflation.



Well the Fed's buying has begun and I have honestly been paying attention to the war of words a little too much. I got a little jittery as their has been more volatility over the last few weeks and I got to portfolio watching. But at the end of the day, I believe the Fed will get what they are looking for and that is more velocity. I think the move is actually to get the average investor that has been hedged (like me) or burned (like many) to move from their large bond positions back into stocks. As you have seen my writings here I believe that this is the gradual approach to take. I don't think you go crazy and just remove your bond positions but you begin to reallocate away from this great trade over the past few years. The other thing that may happen with more money in circulation is higher inflation. Well I doubt that will have a serious immediate action because if you're still thinking like me I am waiting for retailers to continue to drop their prices or they aren't getting my dollars. If I have this perception, many others do and the threat of inflation is real but not coming right away. Note...if it does we are slowing building a portfolio that has exposure to TIPS and commodities which will do well against inflationary pressures.

Note: This article was started in Nov and finalized on Dec 09

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Bailout / TARP Abandoned

Here goes another I told you so. The bailout money allocated to buy distressed assets was abandoned by the Treasury Department. I wrote here early, that this program was flawed for so many reasons. The biggest reason: "There was no way they could value the bad assets, manage them, or dispose of the assets correctly!!!"



Fundamentally I agree with the fact that a bailout is needed but I have noted that the government needs to address both the supply and demand side of our economy. On the Supply side, I don't mind the Treasury department injecting cash into banks but I do think that one of the strange things is that but private investors like Warren Buffet are brokering better deals then the GOVERNMENT is. Part of the problem is no oversight or poor oversight because these banks are not lending to the public! This would begin to address the demand side, however the banks are getting the cheapest money ever made available and using it to MAKE INVESTMENTS like buying other banks...SEE PNC Bank's acquisition of National City.


What the Government Should Require:

- All common stock dividends should be taken away
- Force banks to lend to consumer
- Punitive terms of the banks (firing managers)
- Goverment must get Main Street bank on their feet through mortgage adjustments, incentives for homebuyers to acquire homes, addressing unemployment, and some sort of stimulus (tax cuts/credits)



Where do we go from here:

The markets will continue to trend lower for remain in a trading pattern. When I first spoke of actions to take to address the direction of the markets I recommended most folks get a majority of their money out of the market and into bonds. Then the Dow Jones Industrial Average (basket of the 30 large stocks representing the US economy) was trading around 9000 and my guess was that we would head lower and test recession like lows. The last time we could compare lows like this was in roughly 2002-2003 when the market hit lows of roughly 7700 (I believe). My assumption is that this will be the prudent time to begin to reallocate your portfolio back into the market. Again that is an assumption because I don't really think that this last time can be effectively compared to now. We are facing a local recession, rising probability of a global recession (in most areas except for China), and if these conditions exist we could be facing a depression due to deflationary pressure. This could be the one area that I initially got wrong...I thought we would be facing inflationary pressures or rising costs but that appears to be far down the line. Right now deflation is running wild and that is evident is the sharp decline of prices across the board. Gas is down from $4.00 to now roughly $2.00 and everything is falling with it, stocks included. If this trend continues deflation could lead to an extended recession and Dow 7700 may not even be a legitimate floor for the market.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Dark Knight ~ The Economy

Or should I saw dark nights and days are hovering above the economic horizon (the only idiot that can't see this is Larry Kudlow...who thinks this is just a blip in an economic "Goldilocks" rally) What do I mean by this...well I won't act like the politicians and keep telling you about my record on how I got this right (but if interested see my last post)! Because at this point in the game, pats on the back won't do because I believe we are in a seriously bad spot right now in the economy. I am going to continue to break course from my usual buy and hold mantra and say that we are in turbulent times and with the actions taken by the federal government make it difficult to take a historical perspective and apply it to today's situation. The fact of the matter is things are changing very rapidly...in ways that we haven't seen before and even your smartest people are having trouble getting this right.

Backdrop:

And I know that you are often told if you are young investor then just weather the storm and it will be alright. But as a 20 something that has seemed to be ahead of the curve of the direction of this unbelieveable storm that is now upon us, my interpretation is to head to safer ground until the storm passes. Why because we've been ahead of the game a few times now: I have written posts using logic and my very basic understanding of Econ 101 to identifiy the potential for a housing bubble...then we were ahead of the curve when we combined the everyday realities ofsoaring energy and food prices to point out that the average person on MAIN STREET (i hate this term) was already feeling the effects of inflation!

The Federal Reserve finally caught on and to their credit took some action to combat the inflationary pressures of soaring food and energy prices, however, one problem was still left unaddressed and that was the housing bubble. Limited action was taken to help main street solve the mortgage crisis which spilled over into Wall Street. Wall Street felt the effects through deteriorating mortgage backed securities and a rising waves of credit default swaps (basically insurance to investor when toxic securities began to crumble). You may call it karma but our inability to help main street has seriously crippled wall street. In my last post, I tried to highlight this problem and indicate that I believe that even with a much needed bailout package we haven't truly explored all of our options to begin to resolve this crisis and a 360 degree approach my be needed. To make a long story short, I believe the Fed now sees the need for some of the points that were raised in the last post, such as stepping in and being an intermediary for short term lending to companies (basically being a bank & lending companies money b/c the banks don't to and can't do it right now).

If you weren't aware companies are having trouble getting short term loans (for supplies, payroll, etc) and many get their loans through a market called commercial papers. We have previously raised a point in the previous post that the Fed may need to "act" as a direct lender and today, the Fed, concerned that the commercial paper market has dried up look to breathe life back into this market by basically providing companies with short term funding.

Current Environment:

I believe the storm is just setting in because of the aggressive and unprecedented steps that the Fed (some listed above) has had to take along with the most recent words from the Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke. I know you don't think words are important but when one of the most financially informed persons on the earth believes that the economic outlook has "worsened", economic activity is likely to be "subdued", and the financial turmoil may "lengthen weak economic performance" we must all take heed. I am hear to tell you that the Fed Chairman never wants to scare us but he must paint an accurate picture...and when he uses words like subdued economic activity then we are probably going to experience some serious economic pain for a period of time.

Supporting Evidence:

~ Fed Chairman's recent words
~ Today's global rate cut by the US and other major central banks
~ Commercial paper markets (corporate short term funding) has dried up and the Fed has announced that is will step in and create a market to revive this much need source of funding
~ The economic slowdown and financial crisis is spreading GLOBALLY
~ The bailout will take time help financial firms solve their liquidity problems
~ Rate cuts along with other things historically push INFLATION higher

Problem Solving (Only my recommendation):

~ If you are an older person nearing retirement, you are in a very difficult situation and I don't have many solutions here

~ Middle aged people and people with children: you have a few other responsibilities that will need your immediate attention, so capital preservation will be very important (see below).

~ Young people, I am going against the grain and telling you to be concerned and focus on capital preservation also! Move 401K balances, IRAs and brokerage accounts into safer grounds and due to inflationary concerns that appear to be surfacing I would reallocate your portfolios in this order (if possible):

  • Gold (as fears continue this is a global safe house and great inflation play)
  • Treasury Inflation Protection Securities (this security give you the Treasury yield and accounts for the rise in inflation)
  • Treasury and Money Market Securities (safest investment out there, but inflation will eat away at your savings, eventually)
  • Bonds (even bonds have lost money but obviously a better option than stocks)
  • Smart Dividend and Value Stocks - At this point I am recommending this only for your brokerage account and don't go for the highest yielding firms b/c they may be the first to cut their dividend (i.e., Bank Of America), which means that stock will then fall sharply. Look for the the stocks that will continue to pay a dividend and increase their payments (Kinder Morgan - Jim Cramer pick, Enterprise Partners - Urb pick, GE - Urb pick are names that will help you pay yourself during this tough economic period)

I'm Out!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

I Am Investor

Now I am no Will Smith in I Am Legend, but by being one of the few non-believers of the rapid rise of the real estate market I often felt like I stood alone. This was often documented here at Urbanomics and my lone bad investment that reminded me to always stick to my judgement was in New Century Financial. So is being Legend easy, actually yes just pick up the Wall Street Journal. Yesterday's paper confirmed my recent post about INFLATION, which continues its rise and has reached its highest level in 27 years.

Next, we discussed Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and their sharp decline. Freddie recently auctioned more of its debt as rumors continue to swirl about a possible government bailout. If the government steps in to bail out shares at very low prices current investors could basically be left with nothing.

Oil & Gas has rebounded today and saw gains of roughly 5%. This is largely due to the disruptions between Russia and Georgia. Our position in natural gas pipelines should fare well during these times.

The last point I will discuss is one that I believe will continue to play out in the retail sector. I believe that a number of the retailers benefitted from the economic stimulus plan and many had really good quarters. I have already highlighted retailer, Big Lots, who I think like Wal-Mart benefitted from this factor. Notice that Wal-Mart noted that they see future weakness and Target also see declines. I will closely watch the retailers and look to short players like Big Lots when they rebound and closely reach their 52 week high.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Do you have hops? - Price Hops

I am sitting back, watching a basketball game and I would never ask Kobe Bryant this question..."Hey man you got hops?" Because he and anyone within 100 feet would probably come running up to me, smack me, and then ask why the hell I would ask a dumb question like that. Of course Kobe has hops, he can jump out of the gym!

Well that is not the only thing that has hops lately. For example, most of the things people buy on a daily basis have experienced a term I call "Price Hops". That means that the price has been skyrocketing, off the chain, through the roof, or flat out way too expensive. Take a few basic staples - cheese, milk, eggs, bread, and gas and you tell me that when you go shopping or driving that the you are pulling out more cash. I call it "Price Hops", but you might here the market call it INFLATION.

This definition was provided by Investorwords.com:

Inflation - The overall general upward price movement of goods and services in an economy, usually as measured by the Consumer Price Index and the Producer Price Index. Over time, as the cost of goods and services increase, the value of a dollar is going to fall because a person won't be able to purchase as much with that dollar as he/she previously could.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Urbanomics Constant Reminder: Don’t dismiss the facts that are in front of you (trust yourself)

I came up with a term called "Price Hops" and its no wonder that the price of the things that you are buying on a regular basic are costing you more. Inflation is on the rise and market is taking notice by watching the Producer Price Index. And even if you take food and gas out of the measurement, the index would still rise.

Some of the factors affecting inflation:

The price of oil keeps rising - Upcoming inventory data and weather are big factors

The demand of steel, copper, wheat (commodities) is rising (Wheat is at an time high)

The prices of things America imports are up roughly 13% (highest levels since the 80s)


How to profit during a tough economic period (follow the industry buzz):

Buy Large Cap companies, especially Multinational Companies
Buy the Commodities that keep rising - precious metals, mining, wheat, oil
Buy the Equipment Maker of agriculture and oil refiners
Buy the stuff people buzz about even in tough times

I know you want names:
- AK Steel (NYSE: AKS) - great play on the rise in steel
- Celanese (NYSE: CE) - roughly 2/3 of sales come from outside of US
- Use Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) - JJN, USO, GAZ (examples of funds for nickel, gas, oil, gold, steel)
- Buzz items - No matter how tough the economy is people can't do with those darn flat tv's, dvd's and entertainment programs; I picked up on Zacks.com momentum picks...and for two days in a row they recommended Liquid Crystal Display providers:
AU Optronics (AUO)
Corning (GLW)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
URB UPDATE: The beauty of DOLLAR COST AVERAGING pays off and Avid Technology (recent rise allowed me to recoup all of my loss and I sold my entire position to break even. (More to come on how we turned a bad stock into one that didn't hurt us)
Disclsoure: I sold AVID