The Big Picture |
- The Beastles: Ill Submarine
- How You Can Change Your Decision Making
- 10 Monday PM Reads
- Job Fair Shocks Fed Governor Raskin
- US Housing Realty Check
- Shorter WSJ: Beware Target Date Funds
- 10 Monday Reads
- The Latest Fuckery from FINRA
- Monday Morning Melt Up
- Batman vs Superman Box Office Battle
| Posted: 18 Jun 2013 02:00 AM PDT Dig it: Published on Jun 6, 2013 Audio mixed by dj BC. Video by Thriftshop XL. From the album “Ill Submarine” www.thebeastles.com |
| How You Can Change Your Decision Making Posted: 17 Jun 2013 04:30 PM PDT I like the thought process here:
Read the full piece at Think Twice |
| Posted: 17 Jun 2013 02:00 PM PDT My afternoon train reading:
What are you reading? |
| Job Fair Shocks Fed Governor Raskin Posted: 17 Jun 2013 01:30 PM PDT Raskin starts at 3:30 Federal Reserve Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin:
Hat tip Reuters |
| Posted: 17 Jun 2013 11:30 AM PDT |
| Shorter WSJ: Beware Target Date Funds Posted: 17 Jun 2013 09:00 AM PDT Missing the Target
You may have missed the WSJ’s takedown on Target-date funds this weekend. Its a must. The idea of target date funds are a form of auto-pilot that automatically shifts allocations into more bonds less stocks as the investor ages. Target date funds now manage about $550 billion dollars. The problem with these funds — aside from high fees and higher-costs — is how out of phase its been with the markets for retiring babyboomers. Many of them have found they are selling equities into weakness and buying bonds into a 30 year bull market which is looking kinda old and shaky. Anyone with a 401k or who uses these funds should definitely give the article a read.
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| Posted: 17 Jun 2013 07:00 AM PDT My morning reads:
What are you reading?
Euro Becomes the Port in a Storm |
| Posted: 17 Jun 2013 04:30 AM PDT
I have throughout my career in finance, studiously avoided having much to do with FINRA, WallStreet’s woefully corrupt self-regulatory entity. I never got into trouble when I was on the Sell Side (i.e., series 7 licensed individual), so I never experienced their crony-flavored version of justice. But I was very much aware of their role in screwing investors — out of their legal rights to a trial (via mandatory arbitration) and thus out of their monies. If you want a primer on this, check out William Cohan’s series on FINRA arbitrations. It is astounding. The latest nonsense from this wholly self serving cesspool of corruption is detailed by Susan Antilla, in Dealbook’s A Rise in Requests From Brokers to Wipe the Slate Clean. It turns out that bad brokers can have their records of misdeeds, if not expunged, well then cleaned up quite a bit. Try doing that with a felony or even misdemeanor if you are not a juvenile. I cannot begin to express my disdain for this organization, which serves the interests of wirehouses and not investors. Indeed, I believe they have done immeasurable damage to individual investors over the decades — through their kangeroo (non)courts, and by the way the “Self” regulate, an inherent contradiction in terms if ever there was one. Don’t take my word for it. Read Cohan’s series, and do some digging into their formation and background. Just don’t have a large meal first . . .
Sources: See also: Wall Street's Captive Arbitrators Strike Again Time to shut down Finra’s arbitration panels |
| Posted: 17 Jun 2013 03:15 AM PDT
Good Monday morning, and welcome to the melt up. Japanese stocks are bouncing 2 – 3% after getting schmeissed last week and month. From a 96% twelve month gain, we saw the yen strengthen. Not coincidentally, the Nikkei Dow fell over 20%. Last week saw the Yen’s biggest weekly advance in four years. That counter trend rally seems to have reversed, and once again the Yen is falling — its down nearly 0.5% versus its 16 most-traded counterparts today. This week we have the Federal Reserve meeting, and you should, if you have any situational awareness whatsoever, already know the outcome of that meeting. Bernanke to Hilsenrath to anyone-who-is-paying-attention is the FOMC version of baseball’s Tinker to Evers to Chance. I believe it is an analysis of the facts and history, and not a forecast, to suggest that the FOMC will stand pat. Anything can and will happen — Humans are involved — but the odds are very much against it. And if you want even more bullish data, Bloomberg reminds us that “equities tend to rise when the Federal Reserve begins reducing efforts to stimulate the economy.” ~~~ Back shortly . . .
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| Batman vs Superman Box Office Battle Posted: 17 Jun 2013 03:00 AM PDT Who wins in the battle of the box office between Superman and Batman? Bloomberg’s Nejra Cehic pits the superheroes against each other as the latest offering in the Superman film series rakes in $113 million on its opening weekend. Bloomberg June 17 2013 Superman returns to movie theatres this week, with “Man of Steel” making its U.S. debut on Friday. It’s projected to open with sales of a hundred-and-15 million dollars in North America. But even with Superman and Batman on their team, DC Comics movies still lag far behind the earnings of the rival Marvel super-heroes. Bloomberg’s own Man of Steel Paul Allen explains. Source: Bloomberg June 14 20013 ~~~ Dan DiDio and Jim Lee, co-publishers at DC Entertainment, talk about the Superman comics and the newest film based on the series, Warner Bros.’ “Man of Steel.” They speak with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.”
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