Enter your Email Address


Useful Links

Know What The Insiders Are Doing!
Stock Trading Software

More Links




[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Prieur’s readings (October 11, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (October 11th, 2009) Writes:

This post provides links to a number of interesting articles I have read over the past few days that you may also enjoy.

• John Authers (Financial Times): Financialisation genie set loose, October 7, 2009. Not long ago, there were three asset classes: stocks, bonds and cash. Some were not even sure if cash counted as an asset class. The last few decades, however, have seen the “financialization” of swathes of the world economy where prices were not previously set by markets, or at least not by markets led by the same investors who also set the prices of stocks and bonds. But financialization has led to controversy since last year’s crisis.

• Randall Forsyth (Barron’s): Away from Wall Street, credit keeps contracting, October 8, 2009. Financial markets party on Fed largesse, little of which flows to Main Street.

• Eamon Javers

...

The Post-Crash Party Continues

Bill Bonner (September 18th, 2009) Writes:

Gold took off yesterday…closing at $1020. Here at The Daily Reckoning, we’re impressed. But we’re not that impressed. Gold, of course, is half of our Trade of the Decade, which we announced almost 10 years ago. We’re bullish on the metal…have been for a very long time. But recent comments in this space have made readers wonder what the Hell is going on…so we will spend a few minutes clarifying.

First, we hope you bought gold many years ago. That would make it simpler. Then, we could say: hold! Gold is an antidote to paper. There is so much paper…and so much more apparently on the way…that the gold play seems like a winner. It’s a bet that the money system that has been around since August ’71 is going to fall apart.

We still think that is a good bet. Our Trade of the Decade remains. Buy gold

...

The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio: The Best Low-Cost, Tax-Efficient Investment System

Investment U (July 30th, 2009) Writes:

The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio: The Best Low-Cost, Tax-Efficient Investment System

by Alexander Green, Advisory Panelist

Seven years ago, I created The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio for The Oxford Club.

The goal was to develop a low-cost, tax-efficient investment system based on the only strategy to ever win the Nobel Prize in Economics.

The portfolio has generated high returns with low risk while doing a complete end run around Wall Street’s high-priced products, self-serving advice and mountain of fees. Yet it is so simple to implement that you can do it yourself in less than 20 minutes a year.

Still, a lot of investors just don’t get it.

A prime example is a Mr. Talmadge O’Neill. Posting a customer review of my book “The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio” on Amazon, he writes that the portfolio “is only going to give you the basic market return. Nothing fancy. We’re not talking endowment returns.”

It’s true that

...

US Outlook Deteriorates, Bond Yeilds Soar

Contrarian Profits (June 9th, 2009) Writes:

The Federal Reserve is puzzled. So are we. The Fed is puzzled that Treasury bond yields are soaring. We are puzzled that the Fed is puzzled. Of course bond yields are soaring! Why wouldn’t they be?

If you happen to be the world’s largest debtor, and you happen to need another $2 trillion of credit from the rest of the world, you should not be surprised that your creditors demand a higher interest rate on the funds they provide. And yet, some members of the Federal Reserve are perplexed by this result.

“The Federal Reserve is not really sure what is driving the sharp rise in long-dated bond yields,” Reuters News reports. “Do rising U.S. Treasury yields and a steepening yield curve suggest an economic recovery is more certain, meaning less need for safe haven government bonds and a healthy demand for credit?…Or does the steepening yield curve mean investors are worried

...

Yale Endowment Portfolio Heavy on International ETFs

ETF Daily News (May 28th, 2009) Writes:

internationalAccording to Bloomberg, Yale’s endowment “was valued at $17 billion in December, a decline of -25% since June 30.” The value of the Harvard endowment dropped by -22% over that period.

As is the case at Harvard, Yale’s endowment owns a variety of alternative investments, but it also has disclosed holdings in a handful of U.S.-list equities. We recently took a look at Harvard’s strategy and noted the prevalence of international-focused ETFs in its portfolio. It turns out that its Ivy League rival Yale appears to be pursuing a similar strategy.

Looking at Yale’s top U.S.-listed holdings at the end of Q1, the endowment’s top position was in ETF iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM). Yale also had positions in ETFs iShares MSCI EAFE Index Fund (EFA) and iShares S&P 100 Index (OEF).

Full Story: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Yale-Endowment-Portfolio-indie-15369280.html?.v=1

The Coming Siege of Austerity

Contrarian Profits (April 17th, 2009) Writes:

It’s a curious symptom of the consensus trance zombifying the American public and its auditors in the media that something like a “recovery” is now deemed to be underway. And, as events compel me to repeat in this space, it begs the question: recovery to what?

To Wall Street booking stupendous profits by laundering “risk” out of bad loans with new issues of tranche-o-matic securitized paper? This I doubt, since there isn’t a pension fund left from San Jose to Bratislava that would touch this stuff with a stick, even if it could be turned out in collector’s editions of boxed sets.

Does it mean that American “consumers” (so-called) are awaited momentarily in the flat-screen TV sales parlors with their credit cards fanned-out like poker hands, ready for “action?” Not too likely with massive non-performance out in cardholder-land, and half the nation’s electronics inventory wending its way onto Craig’s List. Are

...

Newsletter

No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.