The Big Picture |
- Japan
- Discuss: Is Anything Cheap?
- 10 Monday PM Reads
- Google’s Mobile Business
- Dividend Yield vs 10 Year Bonds to 1877
- 10 Monday Reads
- Spotify vs. Pandora
- As Serious as Daylight Savings Time . . .
- Number Crunchers & the Big Data Revolution
| Posted: 12 Mar 2013 02:24 AM PDT Japan
Japan is on a tear. After two decades of financial repression and deflationary suffering, a new government has changed policy in a fierce way. Japan now seeks inflation. It will get it. It seeks higher asset prices. It will get them. It seeks economic growth. It may get it if there are reforms to allow it. The yen will head over 100 and to 115 to the dollar in the shorter term. Longer-term it may get much weaker still. The Japanese stock market is rallying, after endless malaise. Disclosure: we are in that market, using DXJ, the Wisdom Tree currency-hedged ETF, to participate. In the near term the Japanese central bank will be the catalyst to take the G4 central banks' total assets above $10 trillion. The G4 currencies are the yen, dollar, pound, and euro. The Fed and the UK will boost that $10 trillion even more, and the ECB will struggle with what to do but eventually succumb. We expect the G4 total to top $11 trillion by yearend. Zero interest rates are bullish for asset prices. There is more ahead. ~~~ David R. Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer, Cumberland Advisors |
| Posted: 11 Mar 2013 04:00 PM PDT
All of the major markets have had a huge run off of the lows (though they are barely flat since the 07 peaks). What does this mean? Are markets too expensive, or are they better priced than last time? What say ye?
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| Posted: 11 Mar 2013 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reading:
What are you reading?
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| Posted: 11 Mar 2013 11:30 AM PDT |
| Dividend Yield vs 10 Year Bonds to 1877 Posted: 11 Mar 2013 08:30 AM PDT Equity Index Dividend Yield vs 10 yr Bond to 1877
With nearly every major developed country in the world and their central banks — FOMC, ECB, BOE BOJ, etc. — have driven their interest rates to zero, investors are hunting for yield. (Maybe someone can securitize risky mortgages or sumpthin’). Really interesting long term chart looking at the plight of investors hunting for yield. The chart above looks at the US, France, Germany and Spain and their respective Equity Index Dividend Yield vs 10 yr Bond to 1877. Note there are times when these countries go their own separate ways — what’s up with Spain? — but when global events hit like inflation in the late 1970s, they react similarly.
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| Posted: 11 Mar 2013 06:45 AM PDT My morning reads:
What are you reading?
Employment Report: A terrible chart that gets a little better each month |
| Posted: 11 Mar 2013 05:00 AM PDT click for ginormous graphic |
| As Serious as Daylight Savings Time . . . Posted: 11 Mar 2013 04:17 AM PDT I never use an alarm clock (never have). I don’t seem to need much sleep, and I let my body wake me up whenever it wants to. Daylight savings means I start getting out of bed at about 5 instead of 4. And who doesn’t like more sunlight at the end of the day? But not all is well: It turns out that Heart Attacks rise following daylight saving time. And, by the statistically significant amount — about 10%. (The opposite is true when falling back in October — they fall by 10 percent). Staying up late to finish off a disc of Californication when I wasn’t sleepy never helps either. According to Science Daily, “Sleep deprivation, the body’s circadian clock and immune responses all can come into play when considering reasons that changing the time by an hour can be detrimental to someone’s health.” This is really a long winded way of saying I am running late. Be back shortly . . .
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| Number Crunchers & the Big Data Revolution Posted: 11 Mar 2013 04:00 AM PDT The ‘Big Data’ Revolution: How Number Crunchers Can Predict Our Lives Reviews:
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