Archive for March, 2009

  • The Prime of Mr. Nouriel Roubini
    , March 18th, 2009 at 11:48 am

    Portfolio profiles Nouriel Roubini:

    Not only has Roubini been a professional downer for years, his reasoning has frequently been off. He first predicted, incorrectly, that there would be a bust as a result of Hurricane Katrina, and later, again incorrectly, that the economy would tank as a result of trade imbalances. The collapse was initially triggered by subprime-credit problems, and he initially underestimated how devastating they would be. More than a few economists are convinced that Roubini’s call was less a matter of his genius and more about the simple fact that if you forecast a recession often enough, sooner or later you’ll be vindicated. “Nouriel Roubini has been singing the doom-and-gloom story for 10 years,” says Nariman Behravesh, chief economist for IHS Global Insight. “Eventually something was going to be right.”

    To pick up on my earlier criticism of fixcnbc.com, the manifesto that wants CNBC to hire “people who have a track record of being right about the economic crisis.”
    Not only is that wrong, it’s the opposite of what CNBC ought to do. Their assumption is that economic forecasting is similar to shooting foul shots—just get someone who’s good and don’t use someone who’s bad. Easy.
    Forecasting, if it has any merits, doesn’t work that way. The type of person who’s more likely to be correct on something like the current economic mess will probably have been totally off on their previous 20 predictions. That’s both a reflection on their nature and the nature of the credit mess.
    Mainstream economists are very good at relaying the conventional wisdom. But when a crisis occurs, those well-known patterns and trends often break down, and those marginal voices are more open to seeing different outcomes. Their benefit is that they’re misaligned with the rest of the crowd.
    What CNBC ought to do is have a variety of commentators reflecting a broad spectrum of views. If you’re looking to purge those who were incorrect, you’ll soon run out of economists.

  • FactSet Research Systems Reports 20% EPS Growth
    , March 18th, 2009 at 10:06 am

    Yesterday, FactSet Research Systems (FDS) delivered solid earnings for its fiscal second-quarter. EPS came in at 71 cents, two cents more than estimates. That’s a 20% jump over the 59 cents in made in last year’s Q2. Revenue rose 11.6% to $156.5 million.
    For the current quarter, FDS sees EPS coming in between 72 and 74 cents which is higher than the Street’s current consensus of 70 cents.
    For the last three months, FactSet saw a net decline of just 12 clients to give them a total of 2,067 clients. The company has 38,700 users after a quarterly decline of 1,500 users.
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  • The Onion: U.S. Economy Gunned Down In Gas Station Robbery
    , March 17th, 2009 at 11:48 pm

  • Why Do People Make Market Forecasts?
    , March 17th, 2009 at 11:58 am

    Yesterday, Joe Wiesenthal criticized the idea of Nouriel Roubini making stock market forecasts. Felix Salmon jumped to his old boss’ defense by saying that forecasts are indeed worthless, but the reasoning behind the forecasts can be very interesting.
    Then why did Roubini make a forecast in the first place? His audience just expected it? Hmmm. I think I have an answer and it’s not a complicated one.
    The dirty secret is that stock market forecasts are fun.
    It’s odd that people ignore this basic insight. Markets are a lot of fun. Sure, every serious person is seriously concerned over market forecasts because they’re not serious. Still, people do it anyway. Why? It’s damn fun.
    The worst moment of Stewart V Cramer was Stewart saying that finance isn’t a “game.” Oh please! Cramer may deliver his advice in a clownish way, but the advice is serious (in his mind). The thing I hate about Jon Stewart is that he combines too much self-righteousness while being too little informed. The two reinforce each other. Stewartism is really an invitation to ignorance. As long as you have that smug, knowing attitude, who needs to actually understand the issues?
    Finance is and has always been a game. I’ve noticed that over the past few years the look of ESPN and CNBC has become steadily similar. That’s not an accident. They’re both graphics heavy, fast-moving, male-oriented and a datanaut’s dream. Heck, the indexes are nothing but a scoreboard. All that’s missing is Gary Glitter blasting away.
    Picking stocks and seeing which way the markets go every day is one of the best things about investing. You get to pick a thesis and see if you’re right in real time, and you can make money while doing so. Look, we’re not allowed to do anything anymore. The country has been reduced to be a bunch trans-fat-less, non-smoking, Happy Holidays ninnies walking through airports in our socks. Don’t take this one simple pleasure from us.
    I always enjoyed telling a client that the stock they bought last week at $20 is now at $28. That’s an amazing feeling. You made money with your money. I often hear people, professors especially, say that indexing is the only way to invest. Dear lord, these people can take the sex out of anything. They tell us that it’s impossible to beat the market consistently (curiously, they leave out the other side of the argument which is it should be impossible to lose to the market as well).
    Put aside the arguments for or against EMT, people will still try to beat the market because it’s a frickin’ blast. I would even argue that the amount that would be lost versus the market is more than made up for by the participant’s enjoyment factor. There’s also no reason to buy a luxury car. That’s a complete waste of money yet people do it. I won’t judge them. If they enjoy it, good for them. The amount of money wasted on a luxury car probably exceeds what many folks would suffer by not indexing, assuming it would cost them anything.
    Have you ever shorted some worthless stock and had it pay off? Man, that’s a great feeling. Who needs heroin when you have Advanced Micro?
    In his book, An American Hedge Fund, Tim Sykes talks about how exciting he found the stock market while he was in college. Soon, his investing activities overwhelmed his college activities. Of course it’s addictive because it’s fun. Trading or forecasts aren’t harming people. Investing and risk-taking is good for a society. Obviously people should know what they’re getting into, but that’s why I started this blog.
    I’ll leave it to the professional worriers to grand-stand over the rollicking style of finance. But I’m having a blast.

  • Happy St. Patrick’s Day
    , March 17th, 2009 at 6:42 am

  • Just Say No to College
    , March 16th, 2009 at 5:07 pm

    This past weekend’s episode of This American Life had an interesting vignette (Act One). One of the NPR guys was upset that his cousin DJ had dropped out of college. He was trying to change DJ’s mind so he called one of his friends, a labor economist at Georgetown, to speak with DJ.
    After talking with him, the professor did something very refreshing. She took DJ’s side.
    For many Americans, college is a raw deal. I find it amazing that so many young people are forced to take on huge amounts of debt and get so little in return.

  • FixCNBC.com
    , March 16th, 2009 at 4:52 pm

    The liberal group Media Matters for America has a new website up, fixcnbc.com, which is demanding changes at CNBC.

    You screwed up badly. Don’t apologize – fix it!
    CNBC should publicly declare that its new overriding mission will be responsible journalism that holds Wall Street accountable. As a down payment, we ask you to hire some new economic voices – people who have a track record of being right about the economic crisis and holding Wall Street executives’ feet to the fire.

    Oh boy. Neither CNBC nor Jim Cramer are responsible for the credit crisis. If you think they are, then you don’t understand the crisis.
    The idea that they need to hire “people who have a track record of being right about the economic crisis” is laughable. No economist predicted what happened because no economist could have predicted it. Some people got parts of it right, but were way off on many, many other aspects. And being right on one prediction doesn’t mean much about your next prediction.
    One more thing. You can only ask for a down payment if you own something and someone else wants to buy it. Ironically, it was people who didn’t understand the concept of a down payment that Media Matters should be upset with. They can blame themselves.

  • Guess How Many Building Permits Massachusetts Issued in January?
    , March 16th, 2009 at 4:28 pm

    One.

    The sharp downturn has ended a prolonged building boom that was fueled by easy credit and a strong housing market. Now, constraints on lending are preventing developers from getting money to start work. In January, one building permit was issued in Massachusetts for a residential complex with five or more units, according government housing data. Homeowners are also feeling the pinch, delaying renovations and other odd jobs that have helped sustain construction workers during previous downturns.

    Something tells me that despite less work, the government agency wasn’t downsized.
    (Via: Blodget).

  • Wells Fargo Chairman Calls Stress Test “Asinine”
    , March 16th, 2009 at 12:12 pm

    Richard Kovacevich, the Chairman of Wells Fargo has unkind words for the stress test:

    “We do stress tests all the time on all of our portfolios,” Kovacevich said. “We share those stress tests with our regulators. It is absolutely asinine that somebody would announce we’re going to do stress tests for banks and we’ll give you the answer in 12 weeks.”

  • Ben Bernanke on 60 Minutes
    , March 16th, 2009 at 10:34 am