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Showing posts with label recession. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recession. 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



Saturday, March 21, 2020

Q&A Session --- Questions About A Coronavirus Recession


Yo, why is Jadakiss as hard as it gets?
Why is the industry designed to keep the artist in debt?

Why you don't stack instead of trying to be fly?
Why is ratting at an all time high?

Lyrics from Jadakiss --- Why ft. Anthony Hamilton

Q&A with the Lyrics from Why
Let me help my guy Jada out really quick:

Jada Question: Why is the industry designed to keep the artist in debt?

Urbanomics Response: Well Jada the bigger question is why was your song written in 2009 but this question is still applicable even today. Ripped from the headlines: Taylor Swift, Mase, Megan thee Stallion --- all recently complained about contract dealings in the past year. You heard me hear say Jay Z and Master P gave you the blueprint -- independent. Funny you were referring to the music industry but ironically this seems to apply to most every industry I can think off. Let's take the NFL and NBA players who constantly are asking for a fairer share of the total profits as live sports is cable's last hope. We see players as spoiled, rich and entitled but do you find it interesting that someone pays their salary AND no one (main street, public, suburbs, politicians, etc.) ever calls the OWNERS spoiled, rich and entitled? How about the fact that college athletes in America can make universities AND coaches millions of dollars but the players don’t get paid…let alone their are no where near their fair share OR market value of the contribution they made to the profits of the college sports industry. I just saw that disgraced college basketball coach Rick Pitino, who once had a $55 Million dollar at the university of Louisville, is now allowed to coach again at Iona…even though he was the coach during the school’s biggest scandal which uncovered players getting perks and incentives (under the table) to come and play for the school. Did all the players on his team become millionaires during that run -- funny in the business world we have a fancy word called profit sharing. Maybe the NCAA didn't get that economic memo.

Jada Question: Why you don't stack instead of trying to be fly?

Urbanomics Response: Let me help those who are a little challenged by our smooth language --- to stack means to save money. Trying to be fly --- insert: spoiled, rich, and entitled.

 Jada we haven’t even talked about the “economic” industry --- is this designed to keep the aritist public in DEBT? The public continues to take on debt at an alarming rate AND from a young age: Student Loans, Credit Cards, Auto/Car Loans, Home Loans. If the system is working and fair, why is every article about students swimming in debt. Every piece of mail is another company asking me to take my already high credit card debt and “consolidate” it with more debt they are willing to offer me. Wait there’s more --- I can take debt out to purchase my brand new fancy car and of course my home which has more seats and rooms than people in it, respectively.  The US is one of the few developed to offer a 30 year mortgage. What a beautiful concept --- let’s give you debt for something you spend most of your adult life paying for. With interest IF you ever held your home until paid off you likely spent more 40+ years paying for that home. But similar to the whiny NFL players who we complain about --- who are the owners that allow people to take debt out like this?? I could rattle off every company but what’s the point --- the real question is why is main street not taught money, budgeting, debt, savings, retirement, wills, insurance, and how healthcare works?
  
Real Questions I Received this Week
Q: Do you like leverage and is now the time to lever up?

A: For those of you out there, leverage is borrowing debt (money you don’t own) and using it for purposes like investing in assets (home, stocks, etc.). I do not think now or ever is truly the time to borrow money.  Something I learned from Warren Buffet is during tough times, when tide comes in you’ll see who was swimming naked. What he is referring to is debt, and the tide is an economic or financial crisis. When it hits, swimming naked means you are OVER LEVERED --- you have too many debts that cannot be paid.  My motto since my dad required I get a job at 14 was that I would never take on true debt. I sacrificed for the greater good and went to a state school so the fees would be less and I earned scholarships to help with the cost. Was it enough – no I used debt (my credit card) to get me through the lean moments which were usually the last few months of each year. But only because I made a promise that every penny of my summer job would go to paying off that debt.  I treat debt like the Lannisters in the Game of Thrones --- don’t get into debt but when you do always plan to pay if off. While I pay my debts on time, it's because I want to have the privilege to access credit (mainly during bad times to benefit on fire sales). Public Service Announcement: If you are in too deep, see if your lendor/creditor will work with you to forgive some of the debt...do not be ashamed many people do this and many corporations go through bankruptcy all the time (it's easier for businesses).

A: Now is not the time to borrow more debt because the markets are too turbulent and more downside is to come. I do think you should have Money/Capital/Savings set aside to take advantage of the upside when we do get through this crisis. But those funds should rarely ever be someone else’s money --- then you forgot one our cardinal rules --- never take on debt or you may be the one they find swimming naked. What someone giveth, they will taketh and they usually come knocking only when times are bad. Don’t confuse leverage or debt with equity.  For example, I plan to invest during the downturn but I would rather put my rainy day savings to use OR my equity in my home.  If I lose my own money, I have no one to blame but myself. Losing someone else’s money may mean a lot of sleepless nights. I am evaluating using my home’s equity but this does involve risk. If you look back to my posts in 2009-2010, I was one of the few who had savings and no debt during the depths of the crisis.  Unfortunately, there were many home foreclosures and asset repossessions going on. I bought my home on a fire sale from a local bank that similar to many people fell in love with giving people too much debt or the wrong people debt. Revisit that process here (note my house is one of those in the pictures): https://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2010/04/homebuying-101-tour-baby-tour.html

My equity in my home means I have gains since I first made my purchase and I can borrow against that --- but the risk IS your home is the collateral. So to reduce your risk, I advise if you try this approach DO NOT take the full amount of equity in your home. If we are headed for a downturn and your home value decreases that $100K in gains may be more like $50K.

Q: Why is oil going down so much?

A: Haha be happy and take advantage of cheap prices. Prices are so low, someone commented to me I don’t remember the last time prices were below $2. The reason prices went down are primarily because of Saudi Arabia, no conspiracy theory here just market forces at work.  And this IS NOT linked to the coronavirus.  The Saudis increased oil output after they could not reach an agreement with Russia to limit oil production. In economics if you have too much product that you cannot sell --- prices WILL come down and they fell to the floor. The virus has made this worse because if people are being quarantined or staying at home the demand for the oil is now dropping.  Urb Lesson 101 – if supply goes up or demand comes down --- the value of a product usually drops. We have both.  I’ve provided a source here as well:  https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/08/business/saudi-arabia-oil-prices.html

Q: Can you believe it, 3 states have just now issued the shelter-in place strategy that you shared weeks ago were needed?

A: Yeah and many more states have closed schools and are allowing people to work from home. I think this is a well needed step in the plan to starve the virus. People are its host and you need to reduce people being in close contact for extended periods of time to starve the virus. The concern I still have as testing is finally ramping up, what is the damage by not doing this sooner and because it is NOT a true national strategy and states are electing to shutdown individually we all may not resume being productive as soon as we’ve seen in other places.  I think many people are using grocery store pickup and delivery, drive thru’s, Uber Eats, and I’ve seen stocks around meal delivery services popping but I’m not as big on this service for the masses. 

Q: So when I start to process everything I am seeing and hearing is this all a House of Cards?

A: To start, I have never seen the show so I don’t fully know the premise. But I truly understand the disbelief people have in how this has been handled. I think there has been poor leadership and people are panicking, hence the toilet paper craze. I think there are two things at play working separately: 1) Poor leadership results in no trust of the data/information coming from the top. It’s displayed when Trump would rather yell at the reporters than calmly answer the questions we are ALL hoping to hear the plan or solutions too. It’s clear when I get FEMA texts minutes apart from many people that everyone is on high alert and susceptible to hoaxes. That does not happen unless if you don’t TRUST the daily briefing you’re receiving from your CEO or leader. 2) If a virus can bring world to its knees because the fact is revealed that most of us do not have enough saving to cover two weeks of shelter-in place that is a scary proposition.  The new questions that will come are: a) When a family is so far in debt you go into bankruptcy….what does a country do to get out of a mountain of debt? b) If a lot of that debt is used on our medical system why is it being called fragile --- and we only have 400K medical beds nationally?  c) Will every virus, major climate change, and/or recession cause panic and markets to crash like this? d) Who get's a bailout --- it seems this time like everyone needs one? 

I pray we are all patient to get through this together and help each outer out. Because it will be a long drawn out process that is leading to an economic recession.  Next week, news is already coming out that the unemployment numbers will skyrocket to somewhere between 2.5 to 3 Million people. Stay tuned in and stay positive. We'll provide more on how we hold it down during a recession


Thursday, March 19, 2020

POETIC JUSTICE --- Navigating The Storm To Come


If I told you that a flower bloom in a dark room, would you trust it? ~ Kendrick Lamar

You ever get that feeling of Déjà vu?  Well I did and I did not like what I was seeing. That was the rationale back on March 2nd when I first started posting on COVID-19 and the risks it posed to our health, economy, and wealth. I beat the drum beat of quarantine, lockdown, or as they are now calling it --- stringent social distancing because as a risk manager you want to prevent the worst possible outcome. I do that on a daily basis for corporations and it is much better getting yelled at by clients for being overly protective and concerned than witnessing them painfully recover from the depths of something that could have been better mitigated.  For example, I once had a banking client down in the Florida Keys. The Keys is a great location --- think conch fritters, fresh oysters, beautiful water and sites. But I also had a job to do --- what natural disaster quite common in Florida and the Keys: Hurricanes. My job was to ensure not only was their cybersecurity posture adequate --- but for a client in the Florida Keys I paid very close attention to their disaster recovery planning and insurance policies. When I completed my assessment, I wanted to provide some level of confidence is they were adequately prepared.  Yes, a large aspect of my blog is about financial empowerment but more importantly you need to be able to sleep at night knowing you did everything in your power to plan for health, economic, and financial success. And your plan has to be resilient to get you through black swan events just like my client who vigilantly prepares for that next hurricane.  

Does History Repeat Itself
Undoubtedly it does. I think it was Will Smith (don’t quote me) who said anything you can think of has already been done and is somewhere written in a book --- you just have to find it. Maybe not exactly like that but you get my point. So if navigating through a crisis is a class, guys like my big homie Ray Dalio are the excellent teachers to keep up with. He runs the world’s largest hedge fund but ironically often sounds the alarm of the true inequities of people today and having a plan to address then because history will eventually give us a black swan moment that will send us reeling.  If I lost you I apologize, but the point I am trying to make here is I am concerned about the tools our government has to get us out of a crisis may have already been exhausted. I’ve heard Ray and a few other people that I follow echo the same sentiment.  I’ll break it down like this because I write about it often here, when times are good for a family or a country the excess wealth it takes in must be saved for a rainy day.  We did not do that as a nation and it’s not going to make RECOVERING from the economic crisis that ballooned out of the COVID-19 pandemic that much harder.

My other example is: When times get bad, a retail store may resort to providing discounts to get customers in the door to spend and give the business a boost. A federal government uses interest rates similar to how a store uses discounts or coupons. If you reduce the interest rates, money is discounted and people come running through the door.  BUT WHAT HAPPENS WHEN INTEREST RATES ARE ZERO --- OR BETTER SAID WOULD YOU KEEP BUYING IF THE STORE KEPT GIVING YOU EVERYTHING FOR FREE??

If you recall, I posted very little in 2017 and 2018 but when I did I highlighted that I had changed my investment strategy to trading stock option contracts. Again not to overcomplicate things:  I simply had a very hard time finding deals in the stock market so I invoked my sandlot strategy --- I took my ball and went home.  I wasn’t buying any stocks but taught myself how to trade options because I wanted short term-investments that didn’t leave me hanging out to dry when the eventual was to come --- a Recession. We were already in our 10+ year of an economic expansion, one of the longest on record.  My biggest concern is the COVID-19 pandemic lit the fuse for a big drop in market I already thought was running too hot.  If you’re lazy here is a snippet: I explored options for the first time in portfolio and it was a big reason for my investing success this year.  I have been studying it for months, used a fake portfolio of money to test trading strategies out, and implemented BASIC trades that have complimented my LONG-TERM VALUE oriented approach.  I repeat, I was afraid and had never traded an option contract in my life.  This year I’ve executed over 80+ option contract trades in a way that I believe lowers my investing risk, especially considering I’ve told people to be cautious because we are in the 10th year of a stock market rally. “ Feel free to read my comments here:

I want to wrap up here by saying I’m very concerned. Ok yeah I worry a lot, but please put my logic together:

1)  I traded my first option contract on May 30, 2017 and I spent the first half of 2017 learning and practicing something I had no clue about because THEN I thought the market was overvalued.

2)  Debt Levels are very high because our government did NOT save for a rainy day when times were great (10+ years of economic expansion). This does not help thing when in a debt crisis.

3)  Unfortunately President Trump constantly spent the last few years criticizing the Federal Reserve into lowering interest rates. You traditionally raise rates when times are good (we had over 10+ years of good times).  Rates are now at ZERO and that means we have NO MORE TOOLS left to fight an economic battle.  It is the main reason, I recommended going to cash in my Individual Retirement Accounts just a few posts ago.


My next post will break down what happens in a Recession and why I’ve learned from the 2008 crisis --- When I sounded the alarm it was the only other time I’ve ever moved my IRA to cash. Like then, do not try to be a hero in these markets. After 10% down days you may get itchy to buy the dips but prepare to be nimble and get out the next day. Don’t panic, but brace yourself for a bumpy ride down --- and hey if I guess it will be a little Poetic Justice.




Thursday, May 10, 2012

Seasonal Selling or A Top In the Stock Market


If you follow most of the commentary right now about the stock market you will see that a common theme is whether you should "SELL IN MAY".  This is a common seasonal trend in the stock market when trading in stocks becomes thin as more traders head off for vacation.  I guess this is somewhat true as I have to head to London here shortly, but its not exactly for vacation. But soon after that I'll find myself in Las Vegas for a little R&R, so I guess this trader will be off eventually for a few days.  There are a few people that are speaking a little louder and signaling that it may be more than seasonal.  I tend to listen to these voices if I find some of the points that they are highlighting credible.  I also tend to tune into these point of views more as friends and family begin to want to talk "shop" with me.  If my friends are asking me about the stock market and telling me how well its been moving and that they have to get back in because they've missed the move up, I start to think.."Uh-Oh the trend may be the markets will start moving down".  When the average Joe is jumping in its usually to late, the smart money has already pounced.  So I am a pretty average guy, so how does this effect me!  Well when I start to get scared about the markets, I try to do the opposite of my impulse and buy.  When things are getting really rosy, I try to sell even though I don't want to.  When I started getting more people talking shop, I sold a few positions, but to be fair, I added a few more of my PREMIUM ALERT picks. The one caveat is I am adding picks that might survive a tough downturn.
Here is a snippet from a BLOOMBERG article of an investor who's painting a picture that's less rosy. Attached is the link to the full article: 
John Burbank, founder of $3.8 billion hedge fund Passport Capital LLC, said he expects a U.S. economic recession this year or in early 2013, according to a letter to investors.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Market Recession or Rally??

Rally or Recession...

Roughly about a week ago we all were a little queasy after viewing our portfolios and 401K accounts.  The economic picture in the US and in Europe made us all nervous and sent the markets in a spiral downward.  The levels we briefly hit were low, so low that it nearly reached a 20% drop from the peak of where the market were earlier this year.  This dubious drop is typically referred to as a 'Bear Market'.  Since April, the markets have dropped about 17% from its levels at that time and have been rocky since then.  Sooo are we back and is this RALLY for REAL???  Well you may not like what history says about 'Bear Markets'!  Bear Markets are often marked with quick bursts of large gains like we've started to see last week and into this week.  Why the roller coaster ride, maybe its because we (e.g. investors) have no clue each day which direction we think the markets are heading.  And if we are clueless, history has often indicated that reality will often set in and then begins to turn back down.

URB Brief Notes:
- Netflix fumbles and backtracks. They drop separate websites, keep the high pricing and continue to disappoint.
- Sprint tumbles on news that costs are rising. Not to mention they aren't selling the I Phone 4S, which was just released...just the I Phone 4.  I haven't seen David Einhorn bolt from his position so hold tight and double down off the 52 week low.
- I'll be releasing my latest quarterly alerts shortly, an interesting bunch. 

Monday, October 03, 2011

Are You Prepared For a Slowdown?

If you're like me, you've probably been keeping a close eye on the wallet nowadays.  I wanna believe that things are getting better but I need proof.  Unfortunately, part of my everyday routine is to search for clues to as to when the economy is going to get better and I didn't like what I heard.  I was listening to an economist named Lakshman Achutan and he had some interesting data to share last week.  He is predicting that America is heading into a recession after analyzing different indicators on the direction of our economy.  This is just one view of things, however; I would definitely take the time to be cautious until things get a little bit brighter.  Click the link to see the video:

Monday, May 09, 2011

Notes from the Matix - April Download Pt II

Pharma
Pharma is short for pharmaceuticals and this has traditionally been an industry that I have shied away from as I’ve tried my best to incorporate a rule that I have learned from Warren Buffett and Peter Lynch awhile ago: Invest In Things That You Know

This is at odds at times with the strategy that I’ve been harnessing over time and that’s being a MACROVALUEQUANT. Often, my screens lead me select a stock that I believe has positive momentum (QUANT) and I further weed out these stocks if they are not trading at a low valuation (VALUE) and support my general view on what industries and sectors should do well in the current global economic environment (MACRO). My screens recently led me to 2 pharma stocks (See Pharma Premium Alerts Post) and I was very reluctant to nibble at the bait.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

My Take On Things

My goal today for posting is similar to Nike’s slogan of “Just Do It”. I am just going to write and pretty much relay what’s on my mind. As you can tell from the gap in my postings, this has been a busy last few months. I have been impacted by many of the things that all Americans are facing with the downturn in the economy. Job loss has hit close to home and impacted my family members, I am working more hours and seem to be stressed out more, and time seems to keep ticking in the back of my head like one of those old grandfather clocks. Literally (because I reside in the Midwest) and figuratively, its grey outside and it appears that a year ago I was looking into the abyss of what I truly believe is the closest thing that we will experience in our lifetimes to an economic depression. And my goal is not to be depressing, but to keep it real. So I am going to flashback and flashforward in this posting on where I believe our economy WAS and where I truly believe things stand TODAY as it relates to my life. This hopefully will hit home to you and help you understand how all of the things that we hear, read, and see…such as the big Wall Street bonuses, TARP, cash for clunkers and the homebuyer’s tax credit are ALL RELATED but from a regular guy’s perspective like mine (and yours).

Where the Economy Was ~
Depending on how far we go back (let’s say 2.5 years ago), there was jubilation amongst everyone. I seemed to be eating out everyday, throwing bring your own booze ‘BYOB’ events at different restaurants and traveling to either Vegas or South Beach at least twice a year. And I never thought to ask why but before it used to be a small trip between me and my friends that managed their finances well (fiscally conservative) and then it blossomed to the guys that didn’t always manage their finances but who could now make the trip. And I never thought much about the phenomenon but our trip of almost 10 people for a sun filled trip to Miami could have been an indicator of things to come. Where did everyone get the money (steady jobs, bonuses, easy credit) to be able to go all of a sudden…especially when a round of Patron in S. Beach cost each person over 80 bucks??? I didn’t think about that at the time but the other event I did find strange was home buying activities in Chicago. I recall a few years back that everyone was asking me when I was going to buy. So I stuck my toe in the water and found out that buying a home in Chicago was easily going to cost me almost 3x as much as it did in Indiana. And on my average joe salary the numbers didn’t match up??? So what did I do…I BLOGGED about this phenomenon over and over and some people got it, while many others didn’t (see http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2006/02/huff-puff-blow-houses-down.html . My only mistake with housing was assuming that most of the inventory was being bought by speculative investors with deep pockets, but read on because the investors were average people like you and I caught up in the frenzy…of flipping houses and retiring early. But what I didn’t see was the tsunami effect that was to come of too much easy debt to buy houses and obtain loans, credit cards, etc. I didn’t watch TV outside of sports and the occasional Law and Order episode. If I would have clicked a little bit further I would have known that there were new shows cropping about how to “FLIP That House”, “Buying Tons of Property with Lines of Credit”, and I appreciate Suze Orman’s segment of “Can I Afford It”. I wasn’t in tune to the fact that the nation was building a culture of people that were just buying things with no regards as to whether they could afford it. My rule of thumb is if you have to call into a show to ask whether you can afford something then you probably should not be buying it! And to be fair these tv shows should show both sides by doing a “Where are They Know” segment: helping us understand how long those flippers had to hold that property before they ran out of money or were foreclosed on and their dreams where swept away. That would have been Real TV and not just the happy story of flip every home and make a minimum of $35-50K of each flip in no time.

I don’t know what kicked things off but the house of cards crumbled. Was it finally that the market ran out of easy buyers and found the one’s like me that asked “How Can I Afford This” or “Why Are You Giving Me So Much Debt”? There must have been a peak when the banks realized that the uninformed buyers were running out OR that we had stretched them too thin. Who could keep up with inflated mortgages, debt to furnish this gigantic house, and debt to finance their new life of upgrades (i.e., cars, clothes, dinners, vacations). I am guessing the first realization came as banks began HALTING credit lines à No more borrowing against your home (Home Equity Lines of Credit) and no more extensions for your credit card which has reached it limits. So guess what this halting of initial credit does, it crimps our lifestyles and people stop making extravagant purchases. My first clue was the Recreational Vehicle (RV) market and their predictions of a slowdown. Think this is the ultimate purchase for people with excess money a lavish vehicle to travel around in and still feel at home. Then most people stopped spending on themselves and stopped buying clothing, jewelry, cars, and holiday trips to warm places. This pullback caused all these industries – Retail, RV, auto, transportation to start to cut jobs to match the lack of demand. And hell breaks loose when anyone (but especially overextended people) starts to loose a job. Why, because there is a mountain above your head of things to pay. Let’s start naming them: mortgage/rent, car bills, utilities, credit card, school loans, insurance, and medical bills. And when jobs are cut across entire social classes you begin to realize that even rich people have huge mortgages, autos, boats, vacation properties to keep up with.

For me and my family, the downturn in the economy hit hard and hit fast. It rattled our conservative little family because our family’s employment history represents the entire workforce via construction, legal, business, technology, healthcare, and education. And the first shoe to drop was the construction section and we had a member of our family unemployed. I began writing even further that this wasn’t your normal recession and not to drink the Kool-Aid from all the people on Wall Street like Larry Kudlow who told you to keep waiting for the goldilocks rally that never came as the Dow Jones Industrials dropped from 10K to below 7K. This recession was hitting college educated people in growth fields like construction. And I didn’t believe the hype when they were telling you that this is where capitalism kicks in and the great trickle down effect of rich people spending money would bring us back see http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2008/03/hey-i-cant-swimand-neither-can-wall.html . This time I wrote it seems different, because this was not like other bubbles and it wasn’t just people on the lower end of the social spectrum being hit with job losses or their dollar not stretching as far. But what they didn’t realize what that the folks of every class where being impacted because everyone was trying to keep up with the next level up.

If you recall, I wrote about conservation and a prudent evaluation of your entire financial landscape. Reassess everything and get rid of excess debt (see http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2008/07/mystery-market.html & http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2008/05/hot-topics-oil-housing-economy.html ). For me, I had caught the bug slightly and often bought stocks on margin…what a mistake that was. When you use someone else’s money and the value of your investment goes down, not only do you have to pay them back in full but with interest. So in some ways I felt want the homeowner or credit card borrower was going through. I don’t want to sell while the value was dropping and ohhh great…money has to come out of my bank account to get rid of this extra debt. This prompted me to start taking my lunch to work, and going out less, and shopping less…and buying groceries. There were no vacations this year except for weddings and family get togethers. And that’s when I thought about what would turn this economy around…I didn’t know then but I summed up my hunch saying that it would take a mix of things to stimulate people from “pulling back” (see http://urbanomics.blogspot.com/2008/10/bailout-what-this-means-to-you-plus.html) And I remember saying let’s help the people that have pulled back on spending and can pull no further and need help with daily responsibilities. And while I was right then, I missed the fact that all the temporary band-aids (tax cuts, clunker) only work for so long… and the ultimate area of assistance has always been with JOBS. If there are no jobs, this pull back continues…because while again others may use the phrase “90% of Americans are still working and therefore consuming” they may be a little bit out of touch with the real world. The real world knows that its more that 10% unemployment and it also knows that many of the “90%” are like me and don’t and won’t consume much until things start looking better for the people around us.

And for my flashforward ~ To be continued

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Trying to Catch My Breathe...

Or better yet, "Let Me Clear My Throat". I am trying to catch up to a few things so far. For example, I wanted to follow-up on a previous post and I'd like to respond to a reader's comment left recently and of course I want to drop my personal thoughts on something that I nailed right on the head.

Follow-up to My Previous Post

First thing, is I wanted to briefly follow-up on my previous post that I was just now able to get around to. I really like Radisys (RSYS) at these levels and even in this volatile market...I stray away from posting a new Superman Price, but if I were it would go a little something like this. I am sticking to my original price point of $12.25, but I would Superman RSYS @ $11.85. Hopefully you'll remember some of my writings on price points because as I become better reading charts I really like using these points to determine my buys and most importantly my REPEAT BUYS. My real life example is today my limit order for RSYS filled at 11.85 and that is my repeat buy.

Next matter on hand, China Digital Holdings (STV). Warning, this is a very volatile stock so those with queasy stomachs beware. I will need to continue to monitor this one close but I stick to my earlier price points from my previous post. I bought at $21.50 and noticed quick profit taking at resistance levels of 22.70, maybe 23. Since then I have purchased and sold at the prices described here. And to show that I stand by my points I had a limit order fill today at roughly $21.50, and I will sell again at 23. Note: Although volatile, I believe this will continue to trade in this range for awhile. As noted I have already bought and sold this stock in the range and I will keep doing so for small but effective 5% gains. The first time it took two days to reach my 5% target and today when my 2nd limit order filled, I was please to see that our target hit again on the same day! I will be selling STV, very likely by tomorrow and looking to buy again and continue picking away at the 5% target.



Reader Response

Click here for my Reader Response to: Subzero Mortgage Freeze
That nasty word...RECESSION:

and stay tuned for why I called the recession awhile back!

Disclosure: I own shares of RSYS & STV

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Welcome to the Good Life

I go for mine, I got to shine...Now throw you hands up in the sky! This is the third track off of Kanye West's "Graduation" album featuring T. Pain. Now this is the jam, but I am not sure what life Kanye was referring too. It's interesting I find myself not writing as much whenever there is a lot of turmoil in the market. This usually also reflects turmoil in the world, which then reflects itself through the market. Let's see, we have major financial companies, Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, and Wachovia Bank all getting hammered by the weakness in the credit markets and the mainly through the bad investments that were made. Add to that the mortgage crisis in the US which has led to homeowners everywhere defaulting on their homes. All the companies in these areas, which were once living the "Good Life" are singing the blues and laying people off. Then there is that pesky thing called energy...it currently sits at levels that are unthinkable. Oil is reaching levels of roughly 90 dollars a barrel and predicted to continue to rise. Now maybe I am too young to really know what I'm talking about but there has been the "R" word thrown out by some analysts and that would be RECESSION and from what I am seeing in the markets I don't think that some of the whispers are too far off.

I am no mathematician but poor financial markets + bad consumer debt + rising foreclosures + declining property values + layoffs = something is wrong (possibly RECESSION). I am not comfortable with the volatility in the market because as companies are beating earnings or being upgraded they go up and then immediately the market brings them right back down due to all the negative news. Now Warren Buffet wouldn't care because he's in it for the long haul (and he's rich), so for the rest of us that were out there speculating its time to take gains were it makes sense and build on our recession proof stocks...like dividend stocks. I like buying stocks that make products that we continue to buy even when times get tough and I still like technology. You'll appreciate the following updates:

Advent Software (ADVS) - reported positive earnings today; (technology)
Radisys (RSYS) - upgraded by Cantor Fitzgerald, price target raised from 11 to 18 (technology)
Emcore - coverage initated with BUY by Roth Capital (technology)
Burlington Northern (BNI) - reported positive earning (transportation)

They have a few things in common being technology plays and one defensive plays. I think this will be the direction to go for awhile.