The Big Picture |
- 10 Weekend Reads
- Schools and Stimulus
- Blurred Lines vs. Got to Give it Up
- Succinct Summation for Week’s Events 3.27.15
- Shifting Sands in Middle East
- Interest Rates Aren’t Going Anywhere . . .
- Survey Says…
- 10 Friday AM Reads
Posted: 28 Mar 2015 03:30 AM PDT Welcome to the weekend. Pour yourself a mug of Guatemalan Antigua Valley coffee, settle in for our long form Saturday morning reads:
Be sure to check out our Masters in Business radio show with Charley Ellis, Chair of Yale Endowment, and author of Winning the Loser’s Game: Timeless Strategies for Successful Investing.
How Wall Street Middlemen Help Silicon Valley Employees Cash In Early |
Posted: 28 Mar 2015 02:00 AM PDT
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Blurred Lines vs. Got to Give it Up Posted: 27 Mar 2015 05:00 PM PDT Check out the two songs side by side: Their are some sonic, but not melodic, similarities: Its a bum jury decision . . . |
Succinct Summation for Week’s Events 3.27.15 Posted: 27 Mar 2015 01:00 PM PDT Succinct Summations of week ending March 27th Positives:
Negatives:
Thanks, Mike
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Posted: 27 Mar 2015 11:30 AM PDT |
Interest Rates Aren’t Going Anywhere . . . Posted: 27 Mar 2015 07:00 AM PDT
I have been fairly agnostic on several issues related to where interest rates are heading. It has never been my job to forecast where the 10-year yield will be in six months. Not predicting and not caring are two very different things, however. Rates matter a great deal — to investors, to the economy and most of all to debtors of every kind. You would be hard-pressed to find anyone in finance who would ever admit to believing that rates don't matter. Despite the importance of bond yields and borrowing costs, few seem to have any idea how to analyze them in a way that provides a helpful conclusion. And while many are quick to point out how disruptive the Federal Reserve programs of quantitative easing and zero-interest rates have been to stock and bond prices, that’s a terrible excuse. One would think that something so big, so contentious and so transparent would be easy to insert into traditional economic models. But no. As it turns out, most of the economic community on Wall Street has gotten this terribly wrong. Some have disagreed, such as Jeff Gundlach and Gary Shilling (see this and this) but they are notable exceptions. There are many indicators that keep suggesting that our low, low, low rate world is going to stay this way for a long time. Some of these are turning out to be more significant than many had expected. First . . .
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Posted: 27 Mar 2015 06:15 AM PDT Joseph Saluzzi (jsaluzzi-at-ThemisTrading.com) and Sal L. Arnuk (sarnuk-at-ThemisTrading.com) are co-heads of the equity trading desk at Themis Trading LLC (www.themistrading.com), an independent, no conflict agency brokerage firm specializing in trading listed and OTC equities for institutions. Prior to founding Themis, Sal and Joe worked for more than 10 years at Instinet Corporation, pioneers in the field of electronic trading, and at Morgan Stanley.
Surveys are a data collection tool often used to gather information about individuals, and their opinions on topics. Surveys are generally standardized to ensure that they have validity. Hopefully they are large enough to be statistically meaningful, and hopefully they are created and analyzed objectively – and not subjectively. Often, great care is used in constructing and wording questions, so that they are not leading, and that the responses they elicit are meaningful. Often great care is exercised to make sure the surveys are not biased. Questions need to be asked correctly! For example, the following two questions deal with the same subject matter – and they might yield different results:
Surveys are nice. They allow us to gauge how we feel versus some other representative group. And approaching the one year anniversary of the release of Michael Lewis's Flash Boys, a lot of market structure surveys have been floating around. This morning we want to alert you to three of them: Tabb's Grand Bargain Survey (Mostowfi), Convergex's US Equity Market Structure Flashback Survey, and Liquidnet's Institutional Voice 2015. Tabb's Grand Bargain Survey:
Sayena Mostowfi has been working on this survey for many months. Click on that link to the survey from January. Mostowfi doesn't just ask the questions, She tells you what she and Tabb thinks before you take the survey! In completing the survey, we ask that you consider the following TABB observations:
From Tabb's website, the results are summarized by the statement "Let's Not Throw the Baby out with the Bath Water." According to Trader's Magazine, Mostowfi surveyed 140 industry participants that included bulge brokers, buyside, exchanges, academics, and vendors and consultants that sell technology. 14% of the survey respondents were actually buyside – 20 people. Those are the opinions Themis would especially care about in the Tabb survey. I apologize in advance for not spending $3,000 to find out what those 20 buyside traders think. You are welcome to – here is the link. Convergex'sUS Equity Market Structure Flashback Survey Eric Noll summarizes the survey on the first page:
Generally, Eric points out that you all feel a little better today than versus one year ago. Perhaps it is because the SEC has done much more fining – including fining Convergex. Perhaps it is because an intense regulatory focus on dark pools in the last year has had the effect of cleaning up a thing or two. Or perhaps, according to Nanex, it is because Convergex interviewed fewer buyside traders this year versus last year:
Liquidnet's Survey: Institutional Voice 2015 Liquidnet's surveyed 115 of its own buyside customers, and found that:
Each of these surveys has different degrees of usefulness, from our perspective. We tend to like the ones that talk to more buyside traders rather than fewer. Convergex spoke to 140 (240 a year ago). Liquidnet spoke to 115. Tabb spoke to 20. If you feel better today than you did right after the release of Flash Boys, ask yourselves why. Is it because you made changes to how you trade? Is it because you have asked for, and received, more transparency around your order routing? Is it because the Regulators have been very busy this past year, and are likely to be "shining more light" in the next year? Is your increased confidence in market structure today proof positive that concerns have been overblow in the past, or that your concerns are starting to get addressed! Enjoy the surveys, and as always, make your own judgements.
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Posted: 27 Mar 2015 04:45 AM PDT Where does the time go? Its already Friday, and we present the finest morning train reads in the land:
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