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Tag Archives: Most Recent Stories

Are Junk Bonds Pointing to Economic Doom?

Share the post "Are Junk Bonds Pointing to Economic Doom?" There is a good deal of worry in recent weeks over the sharp increase in junk bond yields and what they might portend for the future of the economy. I wanted to explore this a bit more closely to see if we can’t decipher what might be going on here. First, it’s important to put the “junk” bond market in perspective: Junk bonds are a relatively young asset class as they were first sold en masse in the mid-80s. The junk bond category...

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Three Things I Think I Think – Martin Shkreli Edition

Share the post "Three Things I Think I Think – Martin Shkreli Edition" Here are some things I think I am thinking about: 1)  Why does the world hate Martin Shkreli?   Christmas came a few days early for the 90% of the world that completely despises Martin Shkreli, the hedge fund manager and pharma CEO who allegedly ripped off investors.  An interesting discussion has surrounded the hatred of Shkreli.  Ezra Klein says he’s a symptom of the system and not the problem.  In essence, Klein...

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Yellen Fears the Boom, Part Deux

Share the post "Yellen Fears the Boom, Part Deux" Last September I talked about how Janet Yellen was more afraid of a boom than a bust.  Basically, she is scared that the US economy is stronger than many think and that the global economy’s weakness won’t persist and so we’ll start to see all of this translate into a stronger overall picture on the other side.  I can’t say that I disagree.  After all, if oil prices and China ever stabilize then inflation comparisons will start to look high...

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Rate Hikes and Roulette Wheels

Share the post "Rate Hikes and Roulette Wheels" In my book I tell a story about a friend in college who claimed to have a foolproof gambling strategy. We would simply watch a roulette wheel and identify a trend in specific spins and then bet against it until we won. The thinking here is that a roulette wheel has about a 50% chance of landing on red or black (it’s actually a bit lower than that depending on where you play and the number of green slots the casino uses to tilt the odds in...

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Three Things I Think I Think You Should be Reading

Share the post "Three Things I Think I Think You Should be Reading" Here are three things I think I think you should be reading: 1) Here’s a very smart piece by Jesse Livermore over at Philosophical Economics.  Jesse questions the validity of backtesting, systematic approaches and the importance of looking into these approaches with a grain of salt.  I’m a big fan of well reasoned skepticism in finance and economics and Jesse always does a nice job of making you think deeply and thoroughly...

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The Macro-ization of the Investment Landscape

Share the post "The Macro-ization of the Investment Landscape" I was intrigued by this recent comment in a JP Morgan piece of research concerning the biggest trends in finance:  The macro-ization of the investment landscape (‘macro” investors have always existed but just as the tech boom and bust created a permanent pool of money that to this day focuses on that industry beyond what its market cap and earnings contribution would justify, the same has happened to “macro” events.  The...

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Three Lessons From The Junk Bond Collapse

Share the post "Three Lessons From The Junk Bond Collapse" The junk bond collapse of the last few months has reminded us of some important lessons going forward.  Here are three that I find most pertinent: 1)  Most investors have no reason to own junk bonds.  As I discussed the other day, junk bonds are basically a crappy version of equity and don’t compare favorably to holding an aggregate bond index.  I said: Since 1985 high yield bonds have generated an average annual return of 8.1%...

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Assessing the Utility of Wall Street’s Annual Forecasts

Share the post "Assessing the Utility of Wall Street’s Annual Forecasts" It’s that time of year when everyone starts preparing for the New Year and Wall Street makes its 2016 predictions.  I’ll get right to the point here – these annual predictions are largely useless.  But it’s still helpful to put these predictions in perspective because it highlights a good deal of behavioral bias and some of the mistakes investors make when analyzing their portfolios. The 2016 annual stock market...

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Revisiting the Destabilizing Force of Misguided Market Intervention

Share the post "Revisiting the Destabilizing Force of Misguided Market Intervention" I’ve spent an excessive amount of time in the last 7 years talking about the various market distortions that QE can cause (I even dedicated a paper to the commodity bubble in 2011).  I would argue that the two primary places where these distortions occurred were in the commodity markets and the corporate bond market (though probably less directly attributable in the commodity market). The thinking relative...

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Three Things I Think I Think

Share the post "Three Things I Think I Think" Here are some things I think I am thinking about. 1 . Wall Street’s Biggest Lie.   Jason Zweig had a piece earlier this week that I highly recommend.  There are a number of good nuggets in there.  He also refers to “The big lie on Wall Street” being the promise that advisors or portfolio managers can conjure the returns needed to meet your financial goals.  This is a version of promising higher returns than most managers or advisors are...

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