September 2nd, 2008 by
reality
I don’t get into politics much on this blog, but I have to mention the tumult surrounding John McCain’s choice of Sarah Palin as his vice-president. Now, as a libertarian, there are many issues on which she and I must disagree. But she strikes me as a person of character and principle, unlike especially Obama and Biden, career lawyer-politicians whose only objective has been to be elected and enjoy the perks of public life. Experience? Neither of them has any executive experience, they’ve never even held a real job. Nor is there any principle. Obama himself says “I serve as a blank screen on which people of vastly different political stripes project their own views.” Sounds like the classic from the South Seas Bubble: “scheme of great benefit, but no-one to know what it is.” At least Palin isn’t a blank screen. I may not like the picture, but at least I know what I’m getting. If I had to pick a President out of the four, I would pick her. As it is, I’ll be voting for Bob Barr, in the absence of Ron Paul. Although that is more of a protest vote, thankfully there is no chance of Barr actually being elected, which would be a disaster.
My protest is against the “two-party system,” which somewhere along the line replaced “democracy.” The two entrenched parties control the ballot and the media to effectively trivialize and exclude all others, while they divide the spoils between themselves. This oligarchy is ruining the US. I expect hope the coming depression will force change.
Edit: From the NYT:
“Let me tell you something,” said Luanne Van Werven, a Republican delegate from Lynden, Wash., as the convention closed late Thursday night. “I secretly think Hillary loves Sarah Palin.”
Why?
“Because she wants Barack to lose, so she can run again, of course!” Ms. Van Werven said with a laugh. “I just bet Hillary was watching Sarah’s speech on T.V. Wednesday night and cheering, ‘You go, girl!’ ”
Luanne, I think you understand ol’ Hill pretty well. As Napoleon said to Talleyrand, “Vous êtes de la merde dans un bas de soie”
Posted in Government, Rogues and Rascals, Truth and Trivia |
2 Comments »
May 14th, 2008 by
reality
Back from trip to Greece, visiting with our friends who gave us a wonderful tour of the Ionian. Perfect weather, great scenery, hospitable people and great company. Many beautiful little harbors whose main business is the summer yachting trade, mostly chartered sailboats from bases in the areas. Few powerboats, diesel at €1.35/liter might have something to do with that. Each harbor has its collection of tavernas on the waterfront, serving excellent Greek dinners from gleaming, spotless kitchens. Somehow, the bill always came out to €70 for the four of us, including wine and gratuity. Water temperature was 20C, discouraging swimming, but crystal clear - one could easily see the bottom in 30 feet of water. Exploring meant hill-climbing, but was rewarded with gorgeous views and Greek towns that look just like the tourist brochure.
Athens, well, another story. Dirty and crowded, but still a must see for the connection with the past. Not just the Acropolis and the Agora, the National Archeological Museum is amazing with artifacts from the region that are up to seven thousand years old. The Metro is a cheap and easy way to get around, the airport trip costs only €10 each way for two people, and trips in the city center are only 80¢. But still, the most personal connection was in the museum at the Agora, from the beautiful little oil lamps from the classical era, still smudged with soot where they had been used 2,500 years ago. Just brought up images of someone blowing out the lamp and going to sleep, so long ago.
Didn’t miss a thing in the markets, it appears. OK, I’m back, let’s get the bear thing on again.
Posted in Truth and Trivia |
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April 7th, 2008 by
reality
In combat, ambiguity and confusion about the enemy’s intentions, dispositions, capabilities and so forth is common. Every military force seeks to confuse the opposition as much as possible so that it obtain strategic and tactical advantage.
It is the same in investing and speculating. Participants seek to confuse others about prices, values, intentions, positions and so forth so that they can obtain profit from the unwary or less well informed.
One of the best-known myths in financial history is the story that Nathan Rothschild received early notice of Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, but then sold consols (British Government bonds), causing a panic in the market. Traders believed that he indeed had early warning, and that his selling indicated a British defeat. At which point he is supposed to have turned around and bought back his position, to make huge profits when Wellington’s dispatches arrived the following day. The story isn’t true, ironically. In fact, he did have early warning, but he passed the information to the British government and it was also published in a daily gazette. He wasn’t believed. There was a market panic as rumors of defeat went around, but Rothschild was a consistent buyer in the panic. He did make huge profits. The irony is that nobody believed that a trader like Nathan would tell the truth!
As the protagonist of my favorite television program, “House”, says - everyone lies. Some lie deliberately, but more commonly others are ignorant, misinformed or careless or simply cling to ideas and beliefs that aren’t true, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
This has seldom been clearer than the present time. I see four distinct camps of belief or opinion.
- The recession that hasn’t begun yet is over. The bottom is in after a brief and mild correction in the stock market. Swift and deft action by the Fed has stopped a credit problem from affecting the broad economy, and the fiscal stimulus programs soon to come into effect will put consumption and property prices back on a growth track. Supply will respond to demand, and the commodity inflation that has recently plagued the US will gradually disappear. The dollar’s decline will soon reverse itself, if it has not done so already, as growth accelerates once more. The recent pullback in the market has created a wealth of buying opportunities in “beaten-down” shares, notably in housing, financials and technology.
- A recession has begun, which may be prolonged, due to falling consumer demand in the US. It may be just a growth recession, as although recovery will be slow, the recession will not be very deep. Unemployment may reach 6 or 7%, but the powerhouse Asian and European economies will keep global growth strong, and the US will be able to turn to exports for the resumption of growth, fortified by a falling dollar. Precious metals, commodities and overseas investments will be useful to protect wealth. The stock market probably has further to fall, likely to around 1100 on the S&P 500 to complete a cyclical bear market.
- A recession has begun, which will be long and deep. Deep enough to be considered a depression, with US GDP falling 10-15% or possibly more and unemployment rates in the teens. Asian and European economies will not “decouple”, and will be pulled down along with the US. Deflationary pressures will be strong, and the major currencies will come back towards PPP. Demand for commodities and precious metals will fall as the world economy slows, and so will prices. Company earnings will fall, and shares fall even further, as years of bubble overvaluation come to an end, probably as low as the 400s on the S&P 500. Growth will only resume after the US has cleared the debt bubble and households have resumed saving.
- A recession has begun, which will become a major depression, similar to, if not worse than, the 1930s. The financial system will crumble, and persistent attempts by the US Federal government to reflate the economy will cause hyperinflation, devaluing the US dollar to the point of worthlessness, along the lines of Weimar or Zimbabwe. Massive unemployment and shortages of food and energy will lead to civil unrest and wars. Commodities and the stock market will soar in nominal terms, but owners will not keep up with inflation. A gold-based currency will be seen as the only reasonable basis for renewed growth, and only holders of gold will be able to preserve their wealth as the price of gold soars to accommodate the need for hard currency.
Of course there are variations on the above. But these are the major themes that I see. Pick one you like and trade that way. I’m in #3. I’d be happy to hear other scenarios.
Posted in Rogues and Rascals, Strategy & Scenarios, Truth and Trivia |
5 Comments »
January 20th, 2008 by
reality
I’ve installed Akismet, an anti-spam tool, and turned off comment moderation (except for comments with links).
Edit: Wordpress is still queuing comments for moderation. Sorry, I’ll try to get it fixed.
Posted in Truth and Trivia |
1 Comment »