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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

The Big Picture

The Big Picture


SNL: Christmas Time for the Jews

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 03:00 PM PST

End of World Predictions Are for Suckers Only

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 10:00 AM PST

 

 

Why do people give these idiots even a millisecond of time?

 

 

Previously:
End of Worlders: Classic Game Theory Error (May 2011)

Source:
Doomsdays
Economist.com, Dec 20th 2012
http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2012/12/daily-chart-11

QOTD: Financial TV

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 08:00 AM PST

Important observations from Doug Kass about FinTV:

“By and large, the media have an agenda that is different from yours. It doesn’t make them bad guys — their objectives of a growing audience and higher ratings are inherently dissimilar to your objective of making money.

Moreover, as I have recently chronicled, the media’s reaction to events of the day (e.g., the sovereign debt crisis, the Presidential election, the fiscal cliff, etc.) is often hyperbolic and simply wrong-footed (from an investment standpoint).

Always remember that they are in the press box, and you are on the playing field.”

Too many investors forget this.

It is worthwhile reminder of the Price of Paying Attention.

10 Monday AM Reads

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 07:00 AM PST

A few reads before you go out to do your last minute shopping on holiday shortened trading day:

Commerce Claus: The behavioral economics of Christmas (TNR)
• Mayan Mindset on the Potomac (Barron’s) see also How can Republicans change their minds? (Economist)
• UBS Libor Manipulation Deserves the Death Penalty (Bloomberg)
• Lessons from a 107-Year-Old Stock Picker (WSJ) see also Any Monkey Can Beat the Market (Rick Ferri)
Farrell: Why we got Facebook and not Mars colonies (MarketWatch)
• Google Ventures in 2012: $300M, 150 companies, and one Nobel Prize (Venture Beat)
• 2013 may look a lot like 2012 (The Buzz) see also Why the Pundits Are Wrong About Big Money and the 2012 Elections (naked capitalism)
Silencing the Science on Gun Research (Journal of American Medical Association)
• Why Louie is the next stage in the evolution of the TV sitcom (AV Club)
• Scientists Report Faster Warming in Antarctica (NYT)

Who’s left on your list?

 

Push for Cheaper Credit Hits Wall  

Source: WSJ

Abe threatens to legislate to increase BoJ inflation target to 2.0%

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 06:00 AM PST

Mr Abe has threatened to introduce legislation which curtails the independence of the BoJ, unless the central bank agrees to announce a policy to “target” inflation at 2.0% at its next meeting on 20/21st January. The BoJ's current "goal" is to rise inflation to 1.0%. Having won a landslide victory in the recent general elections, albeit on a low turnout, Mr Abe’s LDP, together with its coalition partner, control 2/3rds of the Lower House and can secure the passage of the necessary legislation, without the approval of the Upper House, which the coalition does not control. I continue to believe that Mr Abe's proposed policy risks increasing interest rates materially, a serious problem for Japan, as the governments financing requirements to meet its significant budget deficit, (which could well increase if, as expected, the Japanese government pursues aggressive fiscal stimulus), is significant. The situation is even more dangerous as Japan’s debt to GDP is in excess of 220%. However, the quite explicit statement by Mr Abe over the weekend will be hard to retract and will negatively impact the Yen. I remain materially short the Yen. Mr Abe called for a Yen rate of around Yen 90 to the US$;

The Chinese Securities and Regulatory Commission ("CSRC) have agreed to allow smaller Chinese companies to list overseas. The previous restrictions on listing were as a result of the the CSRC becoming worried that a flood of IPO's on the domestic market would depress stock prices. Recently, the US SEC has increased oversight on a number of Chinese companies and, in addition, has questioned the quality and reliability of Chinese accounting firms. A number of fraud charges have been made against Chinese companies listed in the US. It is expected that Chinese companies will favour Hong Kong. It is going to be interesting to see how the regulators in Hong Kong respond;

Mr Monti resigned as PM on Friday and over the weekend announced that he would be prepared to serve as PM following the impending general elections, expected to be called for 24th February. Unsurprisingly, he rejected the call by Mr Belusconi to head up a coalition of centre right groups to fight the upcoming elections, though did not totally dismiss the idea of running for PM as head of other centre right parties. However, such parties may just gain 15% of votes, with the centre left party lead by Mr Bersani at around 30%. Mr Berlusconi's party is thought to be supported by just 15% of the electorate. Italian politics is traditionally highly Machiavellian and all I can say is expect the situation to change, possibly quite frequently;

It looks as if the EU will relax rules designed to force countries to meet predetermined budget targets – Spain and France are rumoured to be the beneficiaries of such largesse, with France's target raised to 3.5% this year, from 3.0% at present (and 3.0% in 2014) and Spain given a further 2 years to meet their 3.0% target. They were never going to meet their targets anyway, though the concessions will concern the ECB who want their support to be linked to EZ countries reducing their budget deficits;

The UK and Germany seem to be moving to a plan to link pensions to life expectancy, rather than set a predetermined age, as is currently the case.

Outlook

Asian markets closed flat on the day (Japan was closed for a public holiday), as did European markets, with Germany closed. The politicking over the fiscal cliff continues – its getting as bad as the EZ. However, I remain positive on equity markets, as I expect some sort of deal will be fudged in respect of the fiscal cliff, most likely in the new year.

Gold is trading flat at US$1659, with February Brent lower at US$108.33.

The Euro is trading at US$1.3215 and should rise further if a deal on the fiscal cliff is reached – likely – some suggest to around US$1.35. The Yen is weaker, given Mr Abe's comments over the weekend – currently trading at Yen 84.45. The A$ is trading at US$1.0392. Closed my short at just above break even, as the A$ should rise on a risk-on trade, assuming a resolution of the fiscal cliff. I will wait till the A$ rises to well above US$1.05/06+ before I even think of shorting it again – its been a particularly tough trade this year.

Please note that there will be no further newsletters until the 2nd January.

May I just take this opportunity of wishing you a very merry Christmas and a particularly prosperous and happy New Year.

Kiron Sarkar

24th December 2012

Amazon $2 MP3 Albums

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 05:32 AM PST

 

Every now and again, Amazon runs a dirt cheap promotion — this is one of those examples: Amazon $2 Albums

They are running a variety of new mp3 albums for $1.99

Norah Jones, Little Broken Hearts

Paul Mccartney, Kisses On The Bottom

Taylor Swift, Red

Rihanna, Unapologetic

No Doubt, Push And Shove

As well as a bunch of best of / greatest hits type discs.

The Full list is here

Merry “Look Out Below” Xmas Eve Day

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 03:58 AM PST

click for updated futures

 

Futures appear to be continuing their Friday sell off — which you may have noted closed significantly better than the worst levels of the day.

A few random thoughts on these things:

Thin: It doesn’t take a lot of cash to push the futures around — the emini SPX contract generates a huge bang for the buck. Looking to manipulate things? Eminis  (rather than InTrade) is how the pros do it.

Misleading: At one point, the post-GOP revolt, Thursday night futures made it appear we were heading to a minus 3% day; instead US markets closed down less than 1%

Noise: I repeat ad nauseum:  98% of the time, day to day action is meaningless.

Rookies manning the terminals: During holiday weeks when the big boys are away, even thinner trading allows for markets to get pushed around even further. Thanksgiving and Xmas week are classic examples.

Witchy: Be aware of days like last Friday that are quadruple witching (futures, stock index options, stock options and single stock futures) all expire at once. Some traders closely watch strike points to see where prices get temporarily pinned (my timeline is long term so I no longer pay attention to that).

That’s all from the sunny, chilly North shore of Long Island — where I will be throttling back, posting less, and enjoying the holidays.

(Yeah, there’s a reads coming later)

Chrysler 200 Named 2012′s Worst Car; Boxster S Best

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 03:23 AM PST

Bloomberg News’ Jason Harper discusses the best and worst cars of 2012. He speaks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.”

Source: Bloomberg, Dec. 19 2012

The Return on U.S. Direct Investment at Home and Abroad

Posted: 24 Dec 2012 03:00 AM PST

.

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