Showing posts with label janet yellen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label janet yellen. Show all posts

Sunday, August 24, 2014

I'm Betting on a Rising Stock Market

The belief that the stock market will go up forever is  a bubble psychology that goes back to the South Sea Bubble, which fooled even Sir Isaac Newton. Since 2009, and especially since President Obama's reelection in 2012, the stock market has been going at a tear. The tear will continue. The editorial page of the New York Times proves it.  The Times wrote this yesterday: 

On one side is a small yet vocal minority of Fed officials who want to head off inflation by raising rates sooner rather than later. On the other is a majority that thinks a near-term rate hike would stifle growth and, with it, any chance of restoring health to the labor market. That group includes Janet Yellen, the Fed’s chairwoman, and most members of the Fed’s policy committee…The economic evidence indisputably favors Ms. Yellen, who has indicated that rate increases should not begin until sometime next year, at the earliest. It will take until then to be able to say with confidence whether recent improvements in growth and hiring are sustainable.

The reason that the Times's editorial is important is that the nation's hierarchy of decision making with respect to interest rate policy is as follows:

Investment banker cronies--> Ochs Sulzberger family-->The New York Times--> public opinion among Democrats --> President Obama's opinon --> Janet Yellen's opinion --> Federal Open Market Committee decision

If a Republican were in office, the Wall Street Journal would play the equivalent role.

Rates will be lower, or will increase less, than stock market participants expect because the Democrats have a commitment to boosting the stock market. The Times goes on to make the curious claim that keeping interest rates low will improve real wages; that real wages have declined while interest rates have been kept at historically low levels for the past 43 years does not deter them.  Recall the old saying about insanity.  

 Seeking Alpha says that George Soros is currently hedging the S&P 500. I'm sure that there is a logical or statistical basis for his tactic  because all evidence says that the stock market is high now.  The support of the Fed will continue to keep the market at high levels into next year, though.  I'm not buying the S&P short ETF, SH, just yet. However, I have about 1% of my portfolio in the VIXX index and an interest rate short index, both of which have declined and are near all-time lows. The VIXX index measures market volatility, and it goes up when the stock market goes down.  It is at all-times low, which is an indicator that the stock market will go down.  

From a policy standpoint the New York Sun's Seth Lipsky continues to offer a still, small voice of financial sanity among the Sodom and Gomorrah of the American media.  Sadly, Paul Krugman will have to turn into a pillar of salt before any change in America's addiction to print-and-spend economics ends. 

For now, I'm buying a little more Chicago Bridge and Iron (CBI).  It's gone up a few percent since Buffett bought a second set of shares; according to Seeking Alpha several other hedge funds are piling in.  The sharp decline due to rumors about improper accounting and the firm's president's illness seems to have offered Buffett and other hedge funds a buying opportunity; including pension fund holdings, Berkshire may own 25%. 





Thursday, April 3, 2014

Millionaires Thank Krugman, Yellen, Obama, and the Democratic Party


As the Dow Jones industrial average nears its all-time high, those who are rich need to take a moment to praise the Democratic party and its supporters.  It is advantageous to have clever advocates, and who can be a better advocate for millionaires than those who claim that they dislike them?

The elite Democrats of academia, those who advocate taxes out of one side of their mouths and monetary expansion out of the other, are  the millionaire's best friend.  The Republicans aren't because they claim to favor the wealthy and those who work, and the public and many of the wealthy have yet to understand that the wealthy are not so because they work; they are wealthy because they own.

When Janet Yellen and the Fed reduce interest rates, the value of assets is increased, and the rich become richer.  What else can matter to the wealthy? Do gay rights, global warming, great  causes, gross income inequality, or a stagnant real wage matter?

All are distractions to the one issue that matters, the one issue about which the news will ever remain silent: the expansion of the money supply, the reduction of interest rates, the inflation of asset values, the suppression of  real wages, and the increment to the  portfolio.

On behalf of the world's millionaires, I thank Paul Krugman; I praise Janet Yellen; I sing hallelujah to Barack Obama.