Category Archives: Investment

Media megatrends

Flat to Down to Way Down:

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Exerpt from: The Long Tail
See also: Telecom Watchlist / Industrial Evolution

Chinese currency policy

The import textile quota expiration may be a catalyst for political pressure on Chinese currency policy. Non-Chinese emerging markets will threaten to devalue or peg their currencies as long as the US is not punishing that type of behavior.

See also: Renminbi Valuation

Buffet: "I don’t see how the dollar avoids going down"

Forbes reports on Warren Buffet’s currency perspective:

Heed the Sage of Omaha. Warren Buffett, whose investment acumen seems unerring, had a caveat for America: Barring “a major change” in policies, the trade deficit will further undermine the U.S. dollar.

The billionaire spoke in a Wednesday interview with CNBC, the cable TV news channel owned by General Electric (nyse: GEnewspeople).

Without shifting current trade policy, “I don’t see how the dollar avoids going down,” he mused, warning of inflation risks posed by an anemic Yankee currency.

The prairie-born genius also confessed he’s having a “hard time” identifying stocks to buy, and isn’t purchasing commodities. His cash swelled to $43 billion in the third quarter, by one account, because he couldn’t find many investment opportunities.

Buffett, 74, is chairman of Berkshire Hathaway (nyse: BRKa
news
people), the immensely successful investment vehicle that acquired a new–and immensely successful–board member in December: Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFTnewspeople) Chairman Bill Gates.

The latter also enjoys a personal friendship with Buffett, and takes part in his bridge games. (see: “Gates: Buffett’s Pal Bill Elected To Berkshire’s Board“)

2005 is off to a rocky start

This market scares me.

There are always strange internal inconsistencies in markets — efficient markets are a myth — but not usually like this.

6 straight days of down days on the Dow, and the financial news is pinning this on dollar strength and inflation fears. That reasoning does not hold water.

If inflation is the underlying issue, then why are commodity prices falling? Specifically, why aren’t we seeing the flight to quality that normally lifts the price of gold. And if this is a strong dollar story, then why are foreign stock markets falling essentially in line with US markets? And why is the VIX (Volatility index) down? Normally, with trending stocks, the VIX moves up. When the VIX moves down, options prices generally fall.

It’s a strange combination: Stocks down, bonds flat, options down, commodities down, foreign stocks down.

Pure conjecture:

Maybe some big funds had to do some major asset allocation. For example, if i maintain both stocks and bonds at specific percentages of my portfolio, and my stocks went up more than my bonds in 2004, then rebalancing would mean selling some stocks to buy bonds just to keep my asset allocation constant. If the asset allocation included global stocks, bonds, and commodities, then clumsy execution of that kind of trading could lead to the kinds of moves we saw today.

Another possibility might be that large scale selling of global stock markets, commodities, and options (to a smaller degree) by smaller investors is moving capital into US dollar-based cash.

Implications:

Prices are lower and the risks do not seem to have fundamentally changed. However, this feels like a red flag for possible crash in order of 8 to 15%. I’d put those odds at 5% for the next month. If markets right themselves – or at least reestablish their normal linkages – then I’ll feel much more comfortable again, and would overweight international equity beta with a weak dollar emphasis.

International Stock Watch

Exchange traded funds can be a good way to access you international stock markets. This is particularly helpful in markets where you should be seeking broad diversification. EWT and EWH can give you access to the Taiwan and Hong Kong Indices; two markets.

CHU is actually China Unicom. China Mobile is CHL. I hold both, but about 2x as much CHL as CHU. CHU is smaller, more volatile, and between the two, you can cover CDMA and GSM systems in China.

Japan is pretty negative in world view right now, but I still like it very much. I think their currency is overvalued relative to the dollar, and that their stock market is simply not considered by Japanese individuals to be an investment option. Cash is still king there. Also, in terms of international investment characteristics, I think they will become to the rest of Asia in the next 20 years what the United States was to Europe in the last 20 years.

I do like Taiwan. I think that the long term conflict with China will be resolved as China ironically moves more toward Taiwanese policies. They are receiving smart and hard working people like Singapore and Hong Kong. I like all those places. The companies in their indexes probably represent the companies that will be serving major new populations of consumers. These economic centers of influence are the indexes I’m trying to focus on. My time horizon is 10-20 years, though, and I’m sure it will be a bumpy ride.

I sold ECA. I think my positive energy view is really a growth story in electricity, rather than fossil fuels.