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Chasing Value: Toxic Stock Update #2 -- BAC, BP, C, GE, GS, RIG

BP logoA very common refrain among value investors, "my pal Warren" being head of the class, is buy on fear (sell on greed), and it is working with the toxic stock portfolio.

This is the second update to my ranting twelve weeks ago that the six most highly traded stocks receiving the most bad press would be a great contrarian investment, and that this group would outperform the overall market without much difficulty.

It was true earlier, and it is still true today as the DJIA topped 11,000 again. The toxic stocks list includes Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C), General Electric (GE), BP (BP), Goldman Sachs (GS) and Transocean (RIG).

Continue reading Chasing Value: Toxic Stock Update #2 -- BAC, BP, C, GE, GS, RIG

Ray of Light: Risk Appetite Has Increased

Experienced investors know that even the most-sobering economic reports can contain 'gems' or small-but-significant, positive data points.

The U.S. Federal Reserve's latest Beige Book report on the economy is a classic example. The Fed confirmed that the U.S. economic recovery had slowed in the second quarter, with regions reporting uneven levels of growth.

The gem? The recovery, although in low gear, nevertheless remains fast enough for commercial borrowers to service their debt, and this is helping to stabilize the commercial debt market.

Continue reading Ray of Light: Risk Appetite Has Increased

Great, Germans Halt Naked Short Selling

The financial stocks and the overall market continued to get pounded by news out of Europe. This time it was Germany halting naked short selling. Chancellor Merkel's coalition wants to stop traders from buying credit insurance on government bonds they don't own ("naked swaps").

While there has been little support for this measure outside of Germany by governments or financial institutions, I think it is long over due. Many are crying foul, stating that it will increase interest rates, dry up liquidity, and prevent institutions from hedging their risks. I'm not so sure these would be bad things. I can think of good reasons to ban naked swaps.

I do not take this stance without due consideration because I have significant stakes in the financial sector, including positions in Bank of America Corporation (BAC), Citigroup, Inc. (C), E-Trade Financial Corporation (ETFC), General Electric Company (GE), Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS) and Wells Fargo & Company (WFC).

Continue reading Great, Germans Halt Naked Short Selling

45 Days Without a 1% Slide Equals a Coming Correction

This is getting a little too easy! Friday's positive close marked the forty-fifth calendar day that has elapsed since the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index pulled back even a measly 1%. The Dow even briefly reclaimed 11,000 before rolling back a hair away from the milestone figure at the close.

If you were a visitor from another planet, you would be forgiven for concluding that the stock market always goes up. It certainly has seemed that way since February 23, when the market posted its last significant one-day drop.

Continue reading 45 Days Without a 1% Slide Equals a Coming Correction

Cat Bond Impact from Chile Unlikely, but Future to Change

Despite the magnitude of the recent earthquake in Chile – in both physical and financial terms – it's unlikely to trigger a catastrophe bond payout. Catastrophe modeling firms AIR Worldwide and EQECAT offer a range of estimated insured losses of $2 billion to $8 billion, though the dust is still settling. According to insurance securitization blog Artemis.bm, "A similar quake in the right area of the U.S. or Japan would most certainly have triggered a cat bond."

Though there has been cat bond activity in Latin America, none have been issued in the region to cover earthquake risk. Low rates of insurance penetration are likely to keep what will already be a costly situation for insurers and reinsurers from being even worse -- i.e., because not much coverage has been written in Chile.

Continue reading Cat Bond Impact from Chile Unlikely, but Future to Change

Analyst Calls: AGN, AOL, DELL, KMB, MXB, RISK, SNDA, T ...

Analyst Upgrades

  • Keefe Bruyette upgraded MSCI Inc. (MXB) to outperform from market perform on valuation following Monday's sell-off as it views the acquisition of RiskMetrics (RISK) favorably. The firm has a $36 price target on shares. UBS also upgraded MSCI, to buy from neutral, and raised its target to $40 from $34, citing the recent pullback in shares and the accretive acquisition of RiskMetrics.
  • Deutsche Bank upgraded Suncor (SU) to hold from sell on valuation and raised its price target on shares to $28 from $20. The firm continues to prefer Canadian Natural (CNQ) to Suncor, however, and raised its target on shares to $80 from $78.
  • JMP Securities upgraded Grubb & Ellis (GBE) to outperform from market perform based on the improved operating environment and balance sheet, and valuation, among other reasons.
  • Dell (DELL) was upgraded to buy from neutral at UBS.
  • FEMSA (FMX) was upgraded to overweight from neutral at HSBC.
  • Westar Energy (WR) was upgraded to outperform from market perform at Wells Fargo.

Continue reading Analyst Calls: AGN, AOL, DELL, KMB, MXB, RISK, SNDA, T ...

Alien sightings, government cover-ups, and investment risk

Let's talk about investment risk and alien sightings. How do you assess risk? What is your exposure? What are the odds? What kind of fact checking do you do? What return is appropriate for what level risk? What is your time frame? Do you ask yourself the hard questions?

An ex-astronaut claims that the aliens have landed on earth. According to CNN: former NASA astronaut Edgar Mitchell and other UFO enthusiasts are concerned, the real story is happening elsewhere. Mitchell, who was part of the 1971 Apollo 14 moon mission, asserted Monday that extraterrestrial life exists, and that the truth is being concealed by the United States and other governments.

All of this alien talk is baloney. The "government" could not keep a secret if the entire universe were at risk. The odds that multiple governments could keep a common secret and that not one person would provide the slightest conclusive evidence are microscopic.

Continue reading Alien sightings, government cover-ups, and investment risk

Sunday Funnies: Feds could buy GM & Ford

In a high stakes game of chicken this past week, the Senate GOP and UAW leadership could not agree on setting a date certain for cutting members wages and the hard-line senators would not accept anything less. (See Auto 'support fund': Senate & UAW clash.)

One of the ironies of the proposed, and not passed, Federal bailout, or support fund, as I have begun to call it, depending on your point of view, is that the proposed $14 billion is more than the value Wall Street currently places on the two companies.

General Motors (NYSE: GM) closed Friday at $3.94, down $0.18 or 4.37%, with a capitalization of $2.4 billion. Ford (NYSE: F) closed at $3.04, up $0.14 or4.83%, with a capitalization of $7.04 billion. The combined value therefore is $9.44 billion; yes folks, another Washington bargain!

While world markets sank on the news of the failed talks, U.S. investors yawned and were unimpressed with activity in foreign markets -- all three of the major indices ended up for the day. Perhaps that's because temporarily propping up the two companies by spending more than they're worth made no sense to anyone outside Washington D.C. or Detroit.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture and planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Disclosure: I do not own shares of GM or Ford.

No. 3: Rich people know the foundation for all returns is risk

This post is part of a series where personal finance expert Dan Solin looks at money secrets that help the rich stay rich. See them all.

What if you went to Las Vegas, sat down at your favorite slot machine, and very time you dropped in $1, you got back $2? I'll bet you would never leave!

This is the holy grail. Great returns without any risk.

It doesn't work that way in Las Vegas. Why do you think investing is any different?

The foundation of returns is risk. The higher the risk, the greater the potential for returns -- or for losses.

You can achieve returns without risk. However, to do so you need to invest in what are known as "risk-free" investments. These include FDIC-insured Certificates of Deposits and Treasury Bills.

The problem with "risk-free" investments is that they generate relatively low returns. The historical returns of Treasury Bills is 3.7%. After inflation and taxes, there is little profit remaining.

Most people want higher returns than they can get with "risk-free" investments. To do so, you need to invest in the domestic or foreign stock markets (preferably both) and in bonds, which can vary in terms of safety.

Continue reading No. 3: Rich people know the foundation for all returns is risk

The great leadership disconnect: I bet the farm and you lose

Any smart gambler, amateur or professional, knows that you only risk what you can afford to lose. That may be $1, $100, $500, or even a million dollars in a real estate or other major transaction. But only a fool bets the farm. Only a fool risks all.

What made so many bright minds all around the world foolishly bet the farm? One after another, that is what they did. Now we are all paying for it, some more than others. It was not just greed. It was something else.

How did this happen? I call it 'The Great Disconnect'.

When the managers of public companies do not suffer the same fate or consequences as their shareholders you have a disconnect! When politicians give lip service to understanding the pain of their constituencies but accept huge contributions from the enterprises they are supposed to regulate and oversee creating gargantuan conflicts of interest, you have a great disconnect.

When investment houses create financial instruments that are so complex that they cannot fathom the risk and the ratings agencies put candy coated frosting on them, you have a great disconnect!

I would propose that legislators not be allowed to accept any contribution creating a conflict of interest based on the committees they sit on. $700 billion reprise: Conservative bankers? Surely you jest!

I might even consider creating an independent committee of citizens selected from the willing, be placed in a position to review such matters.

Continue reading The great leadership disconnect: I bet the farm and you lose

Investment banks said to be developing credit derivatives clearing house

Deutsche Bank and other investment banks are apparently working on plans to develop a clearing house for the credit derivatives markets, in an effort to allay rising regulatory concern and investor skittishness about counterparty risk, The Financial Times reported Friday.

Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB) and other banks are apparently trying to develop a plan that would allow only institutions with strong capital bases and credible trading histories to clear trades in the credit default swap markets with a central counterparty, The FT reported.

The derivatives market has experienced explosive growth in the past decade, with the instruments' value totaling $350-$450 trillion, depending on the methodology used. At the same time, the credit default swaps market has grown to $45-50 trillion.

Global clearing house

Economist David H. Wang told BloggingStocks Friday that, ideally, a global derivatives clearing house should take the form of a public, international organization administered by member nation states. Failing that, he'd like to see a private international organization administered by the major investment banks.

Continue reading Investment banks said to be developing credit derivatives clearing house

Another Wall Street worry: A (potentially) flawed risk formula

You can add another item to the list of things the market has to be worried about.

In this month's Portfolio magazine, Michael Lewis wonders if the Black-Scholes formula -- the formula used to calculate and manage risk throughout the financial world, including determining the risk of trade positions and hedging strategies -- is flawed.

The Black-Scholes formula is an advanced mathematical formula generally credited with revolutionizing options pricing. Its assumptions are the basis for short trades and options designed to protect a trader against losses, no matter how much the market falls.

However, as Lewis outlines, while the formula has been good, it is not perfect, as evidenced by the October 1987 stock market crash, when traders and institutions learned that even with Black-Scholes techniques deployed, when the market is crashing and no one is willing to buy, it's impossible to sell short. The outcome? On "Black Monday," the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 508 points or 22.6% on October 19, 1987.

Continue reading Another Wall Street worry: A (potentially) flawed risk formula

Robert Shiller: Why most couldn't see the housing bubble for what it was

Robert J. Shiller's Irrational Exuberance is the classic book for understanding the stock market bubble of the late 1990s and early 2000s. His contribution to the study of real estate is equally compelling. The House Price Index used to track our real estate market was co-developed by Mr. Shiller -- and is innovative in that it adjusts for the quality of homes involved in transactions.

So given his expertise in bubbles and real estate, he is probably the guy to listen to when it comes to the topic of the real estate bubble.

In a column in this Sunday's New York Times, Shiller gives an interesting possible explanation for a question that hasn't gotten a lot of attention: Why were Alan Greenspan -- and a lot of other presumably intelligent people -- unable to see that real estate bubble for what it was given that, in retrospect, it seems so obvious?

The answer may lie in a psychological phenomenon known as information cascade. Be sure to read Shiller's column for an explanation of how this may have applied to the real estate market. It's fascinating stuff.

And understanding why the bubble wasn't widely detectable is key to understanding why it happened. As Shiller writes, "The failure to recognize the housing bubble is the core reason for the collapsing house of cards we are seeing in financial markets in the United States and around the world. If people do not see any risk, and see only the prospect of outsized investment returns, they will pursue those returns with disregard for the risks."

The Dow corrects: Now what?

Now that the Dow has fallen 10% from its October 2007 peak of 14,164 to 12,743 -- i.e. now that it officially qualifies as a correction, it's a good time to summarize the investment landscape, fundamental and technically.

Although numerous fundamentals (high energy prices, subprime mortgage defaults and subprime-asset losses, housing sector slump, slowing U.S. consumer spending) suggest U.S. economic growth will slow up ahead, and hence that more selling is ahead for the Dow, that, in fact, may not be the case.

If limited to roughly 10%, the Dow's decline constitutes solely a correction. Keep in mind also that the Dow is a lead indicator that always points to economic conditions 6-9 months ahead. Hence, investors, if they believe that measures being taken are addressing important concerns, could conclude that economic conditions will improve and hence send the Dow rising very soon.

Continue reading The Dow corrects: Now what?

Option update: Washington Mutual (WM) and Merrill (MER) volatility up into guidance

Washington Mutual (NYSE: WM) had assets of $312 billion on 6/30/07.

  • WM is recently trading at $34.96 in pre-open trading, below its close of $35.28.
  • WM says: "Weakening housing market and disruptions in the secondary market through the end of the third quarter will result in a decline in net income of approximately 75% from the prior quarter."
  • WM will announce full EPS on 10/17.
  • WM overall option implied volatility of 35 is above its 26-week average of 30 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price fluctuations.

Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) is recently trading at $73.70 in pre-open trading, below its close of $74.78.

  • MER says: "Challenging credit market conditions will have an adverse impact on its net earnings for the third quarter. The company expects to report a net loss per diluted shares of up to $0.50 cents, resulting form significant negative mark-to-market adjustments."
  • MER October option implied volatility of 44 is above its 26-week average of 30 according to Track Data, suggesting larger risk.

Daily options Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com

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DJIA+32.9612,834.19
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Last updated: February 13, 2012: 10:56 AM

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